performance.
âAnd how many private security firms take contracts in Kazakhstan?â
I shrug. I didnât research that. Probably should have.
âThe EM lance is a weapon of last resort,â Oliver says. âItâs too sophisticated for private security. Anyone who gets hit with an EM lance is going to know that it came from a first-world government agency.â
âDidnât you tell me that the pulse charge also fries the casing? Burns away serial numbers, fingerprints, all that good stuff?â
Oliver sighs, rubs the bridge of his nose, and casts a baleful gaze from under his shaggy mop of dark hair. âIt doesnât matter if they can trace the weapon, Kay. They donât need to know exactly where it came from. Their suspicions about its origin are enough to cause trouble.â
Now Iâm getting a little annoyed. âItâs the only weapon I discharged on this op,â I say. âIâd hardly call that âprofligate.ââ He doesnât need to know about the AED; thatâs Jessicaâs inventory.
âWeâll see about that,â says Oliver. âLetâs go check you in.â
I follow him out of the workshop and down the corridor to the armory. He puts the flying disk thing on a flat, empty table and taps at a wall screen, bringing up the inventory of equipment I signed out last week. I put on a pair of insulated gloves. Grabbing one object out of the pocketâs deep freeze is not a problem, but Iâm going to be unpacking a lot of stuff here.
âOne EM lance discharged,â Oliver says, looking over my inventory list with a sour expression. âWhich one was it?â
âBlackbird.â
He manipulates the screen, updating that list entry. âRight. Robin Red-Breast, then.â
I visualize the reference objectâa small brown bird with an orange chestâand open the pocket.
My code name, the only name I have within the agency, is KANGAROO. Not because Iâm originally from Australia, or because I can jump supernaturally high, or because Iâm a genetically engineered human-marsupial hybrid. None of those things is true, and come on, that last one is pretty ridiculous.
Iâm Kangaroo because I have a universe-sized secret pouch.
I call it âthe pocket.â Yeah, boring name, but give me a break; I was ten years old when the ability first manifested. Nobody knows how it worksânot yet, anyway. Science Division keeps testing me every chance they get. They say I have the ability to open a âhyperspace shuntâ: a variable-size portal into a âpocket universe,â an empty, apparently endless void that looks like deep space. Itâs very useful for smuggling things into places where they donât belong, or out of places where we donât want them to stay.
The reference objectsâScience Division calls them âpointersââhelp me keep track of where everything is inside the pocket. Having a different image in my mind when I open the pocket will put the portal in a different part of the empty universe on the other side. But imagining a pistol, or a clip of ammunition, doesnât help me if thereâs more than one in the pocket. I need a unique pointer to each location.
Opening and closing the pocket is a purely mental exertion. I have to be awake, and I have to concentrate, but it doesnât feel any different from moving a part of my body. Itâs like making my hand into a fist or sticking out my tongue. My brain just knows how to do it. Science Division hates that answer, but itâs the only one I can give them.
Oliver watches as I pull the unused EM lance out of the pocket, followed by the rest of the special equipment I was issued for this operation. We werenât sure how deep underground the item was buried, so thereâs a lot: shovels, pickaxes, chisels, electric and hand drills, deep radar and lidar scanners, subsonic resonators, laser