The feed from Echo shows the members of the California Army moving briskly up the rocky cliff, sticking to cover where it's available. The immediate vicinity still appears to be clear.
Mouse crouches next to the unconscious corpsman, recoiling at the stench of sake and dried sweat. She (grudgingly) pats the folds of his fatigues, looking for a commlink. Upon finding nothing but a crumpled pack of Yeheyan cigarettes, Mouse surmises the commlink must be implanted. She flips through broadcast comm channels and is greeted by the harsh feedback of generated static, which confirms that the signal jammer is still active and that there is no way the corpsman could have phoned home. Her mind quiets as she switches back to the peer-to-peer, encrypted comm channels used by her team.
The sudden appearance of the commlink's icon would imply that Heizo had switched the device off or concealed it. Mouse sincerely doubts the soldier intelligent enough to perform such an act of subterfuge, but figures it could be standard military procedure under capture. Nevertheless, Mouse knows that most implanted commlinks will automatically reactivate if their owner falls unconscious, to be operable should a subroutine need to call for emergency services. Fortunately, with the signal jammer still active, that's not a concern. An intriguing thought strikes her: if they had murdered the corpsman, they might not have had this opportunity.
Mouse taps the AR icon of the corpsman's commlink with an index finger. Information flits across her field of vision: firmware versions, object identification data, and other technical errata. For military-grade gear, the firewall looks to be pretty paltry. It seems someone needs to invest more nuyen in their IT department.