Leader & Bullet
Bullet, imagine a delivery route that cuts through the city in five minutes while staying under the radar—how would you plot it?
I’d start at the back alley, jump over the 5‑point block, hit the river bridge, cut the service road, and pop back into the street before the traffic lights catch us—keep the bike low, use the vents, stay off the grid, and you’re back in the drop zone before the clock even hits 5 minutes.
Looks solid on paper, but we need a backup plan and a clear exit strategy. Get the map ready, assign the roles, and keep every move under review. No surprises.
Back‑up cut: if the main run gets spotted, hit the tunnel under the rail yard, pop onto the side street that loops around the power plant, and drop to the rooftop of the warehouse—exit from the back gate. Rider keeps the bike in low gear, lookout on the bike with a mic, backup rider ready on the scooter, all in sync with a one‑minute countdown. Every move gets a quick check‑in over the channel—no blind spots, no surprises.
Nice contingency—covers the main risks. We’ll run a dry‑run tomorrow, confirm the tunnel access, and set the countdown signal. Stick to the script and keep the channel clear. No room for error.
Got it—tunnel’s clear, timer’s set, squad’s on standby. Tomorrow’s run will lock in the plan. Stick to the script, keep the comms tight, and we’ll ride out smooth. No slips, no drama.
All right. I’ll monitor from HQ, keep the comms tight. Execute the plan, no deviations. We’ll get the goods and keep the operation clean.