Lancaster's first reaction was—this is impossible.
Because there's no reason for it. How did you get so many people?
Every time the casualties on both sides are recorded. Although Cuba suffered heavy losses, the Horizon Corporation's forces are few, and every death is hard to replace.
Even if this airborne drop added three hundred people, plus those who landed previously from the rear, there shouldn't be so many front-line troops.
I remember each account carefully, and it shouldn't be wrong.
How come?
Your army is printing money, printing soldiers on the spot, occasionally issuing commemorative coins?
There's definitely a problem here.
But Lancaster won't think of something unscientific like Horizon Corporation's soldiers resurrecting; he just assumes they have other troop transportation methods the European Community can't detect.
"Intelligence department is just a bunch of worthless freeloaders."
After swearing, he still has to face reality.
