Through Georgette's keen eyes, the governor's soldiers who had just killed those few enemies had performed very well. The bullets were accurately and meticulously sent into the heads and chests of those armed workers, two rounds each.
The virtually unprotected enemies, once hit in their vital spots by G9 bullets, were undoubtedly dead.
Confirming kills was a necessary tactical move, and Georgette would not interfere. In fact, her gaze had already moved on.
The resistors popping up here and there, though scattered, were indeed numerous. The armed workers who survived the bombardment were now using the ruins of the half-collapsed factory as cover and positions, launching counterattacks as the governor's soldiers approached.
The soldiers' advance was impeded, and they too had to find cover to return fire.
But, as Georgette had just witnessed, in most cases, the governor's soldiers gained an overwhelming victory by virtue of their superior soldiering and equipment advantage.