Hello once again! I know it’s been a long time since the last update, but with a new job and several ongoing projects (both written and other things as well) I haven’t had anywhere near as much time as I’d hoped for these two, even though they’re my two favourite projects! Anyway, enough with the excuses – this afternoon I took some liberties, and used my time at work to get some more done on the Ramides Cluster Crusade, which quite nicely adds to the last section I wrote about a month ago. I’ll post them both up here, but as they’re more-or-less first drafts, they’re subject to change!
As always, enjoy!
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With a creak, the aged camp bed finally gave up under the thrashing weight of Colour Sergeant Rae Cade, and deposited the sweating man on the floor of his tent. With a strangled gasp he awoke and began frantically scrabbling amongst sweat-soaked sheets that had twisted about him in his aggravated sleep. He freed his head, and sucked gratefully at the cool, dry air of the Plains. With a muttered curse he kicked the treacherous camp bed off of him, and extricated himself from the sodden mass of his bed clothes.
The flap of his tent twitched, and he could make out a head, silhouetted against the floodlights outside “Sarge? You alright?” Though he couldn’t see the mans face, he could imagine him squinting into the darkness of the tent.
“I’m fine Kenrick. Damned camp bed kicked me off is all” he stood, and moved to the small lamp unit that sat on the ammo crate that served as his one other piece of furniture in the tent – being the senior Sergeant in the regiment got him a tent on his own, and a camp bed – for all the bloody good it did me! – but not much else. The lamp came to life, filling the tent with a soft yellow glow “I think I’ll stick to my bedroll like the rest of you. Safer than that contraption” he said, gesturing to the collapsed bed and forcing a grin.
Kenrick smiled at the senior sergeant “Good idea sarge.” The Rifleman hesitated. Kenrick was a smart lad, very observant. But Cade didn’t need him being smart or observant right now.
“Anything else Rifleman, Or can I get back to sleep? I’d invite you in, but you’re not my type” He said gruffly. Kenrick almost blushed.
“Sorry sir. G’night sir” His head disappeared from the flap, and Cade watched his silhouetted figure walk away, probably headed to his own tent, shared with other members of his squad.
Righting the camp bed, Cade sat carefully down on it, and ran his hands back through his close-cropped brown hair. Brown and grey now you old git, he thought to himself. True enough, there was a sprinkling of grey amongst the brown now, and hard lines creased his face, as much proof of his years of service as the faded scars he wore, one across his right cheek, from his mouth to his ear, given to him by a filthy cultist years earlier on Cabride, when he’d fought with Grove and the 25th. He’d been sergeant of an Armoured Fist squad back then, and one of the few to make it out of that hell storm alive, and manage to stay alive.
He thought he’d seen it all; Cultists, cursed renegade Marines, and Dark Eldar raiders. A lifetimes worth of enemies, fear and hatred given form. He’d fought them all, las-gun in hand. And he’d do it all again if he had to. But these nightmares were something else. How could you fight something that was inside your head? He’d been to see the preacher that had been assigned to the Regiment since Cabride, and received numerous blessings and benedictions. He hadn’t dared tell the old preacher about the nightmares, especially here on Merghast where the Inquisition was so closely studying the planet for corruption. If they new the contents of his dreams, he’d be facing questioning from here ‘til the Emperor walked.
He knew the smell, the one in his dream that assaulted his sense every time before he died. He’d smelled it on Cabride, as he fought the followers of the Dark Gods. He smelled it as they’d butchered his friends and comrades. He’d smelled it on himself afterwards, despite scrubbing his skin raw. That smell was the smell of Chaos. The stench of Warp corruption. And it was in his dreams. It was in his head.
He picked up the sweaty sheets from the floor and tossed them on the end of the bed, then reached out to his uniform tunic that hung from a peg mounted on one of the tent poles. After fishing around in the pockets he found his wrist horologe and glanced at the glowing green digits. Roughly middle of Merghasts night time. Sunrise should be in another five hours or so. Really he should go back to sleep, get some rest before his duty tomorrow… he looked grimly at the sodden sheets and the creaking bed, but it wasn’t them that made him pull on his boots and finish dressing – he slept in his uniform trousers, a habit he’d found useful in his earliest days as a soldier – it was the thought of closing his eyes and confronting the darkness that waited there.
He pushed his way through his open tent flap as he fastened his brown leather pistol belt around the grey fatigue tunic. It felt odd to be clad in grey fatigues after so long back in the 3rd’s regimental reds, but the Munitorum had finally shipped in their urban camo, and the mottled grey helped here in the granite of the mountains. A cool breeze tugged at the tent flap as he looked around at the primary mustering point for the 3rd’s siege of the Gerhanna Mountains. Stretching away behind him, into the plains were the rows of tents and small hab domes that housed the men stationed here. The glow of fires and the raucous sounds of drunken Guardsmen fractured the cool dark of the otherwise unbroken Plains. The voices were few, and the fires fewer still, as many of those off duty had retired already. If the last hardy souls hadn’t joined them in an hour or so, Cade decided he’d come back and make sure they got at least some rest tonight. The men needed to let off steam, but not so much that they were useless the next morning.
Ahead of his, and scant few metres from the front of his tent ran main road into the mountains. Originally a paved causeway laid in centuries passed, it had since been covered in hardpan. The later layers of grey-black had worn away after years of traffic and neglect, and patches of the original flagstones showed through here and there. Stablights illuminated the road for the entire distance it ran though the encampment, bathing it in constant daylight. As he stood there, a half-track growled past, headed into the Mountains with a dozen or so Riflemen aboard. A mile or so into the Mountains the road became little more than a dirt track with only the occasional cracked flagstone to indicate it had ever been anything more. Cade had heard it mentioned by someone that originally the road had been laid for pilgrims making their way to temples secreted in the peaks. Whatever it had been built for, gave the 3rd an ideal entry point into the treacherous valleys and crags.
He walked across the road, squinting slightly as his eyes adjusted to the harsh light after the relative gloom of his tent. He nodded at troopers as he passed them, not realising where he was headed until the smell of incense reached him on the breeze. He stopped in his tracks, eyeing the patched canvas tent that served as a chapel here. He didn’t want another damned benediction- get many more and you’ll be able to swap sermons with that pious git Nove! And he didn’t want to have to put up with the preachers tern eyes again, not right now. He turned on his heel and headed past the main command building, an abandoned dwelling of some sort that had been hastily repaired with flakboard and plastek sheeting. High gain Vox masts blinked in the night sky above it, and an almost constant stream of Riflemen and officers passed in and out of the temporary HQ.
He walked on past sentries who didn’t need to straighten at his approach, but tried anyway. He allowed himself a small smile as he returned their crisp salutes. A bastard company they may be, but they were as good Guardsmen as any. In the shadow of the HQ stood a large tent, by far the largest in the encampment, it’s walls re-enforced with flakboard and sandbags. Even with the hum of activity around him, the rumble of engines and the sounds of thousands of men living and soldiering, he could hear the air scrubbers and purifiers working away. The scent of disinfectant and antibac carried on the breeze as he approached on of the tents side entrances, a door fashioned from a flap of canvas held rigid by poles. He pushed inside and was immediately slapped in the face figuratively by the sterile, cool air inside the medicae tent, and more literally by the plastek strips that hung over every external door.
Cade made his way through the rows of beds, nodding or sharing a few words with those he recognised and were awake. There weren’t many wounded at the moment, since the fighting had been little more than skirmishes so far, but looking at the rows of empty cots it was easy enough to picture them full of wounded Riflemen. This siege is going to be long and damned bloody. Shaking his head he silenced the morbid thoughts and carried on towards one bed he knew would be occupied. Sure enough, as he approached he could see the curtain that divided the beds had been pulled half way ‘round, and voices could be heard issuing from behind it. Voices apparently having a disagreement.
“…any harder and I’ll be back under your bloody knife!”
“If you sat still sir then it’d be a lot easier for both of us!”
“I am fragging sitting still you ham-fisted grox lover!”
Cade stepped around the curtain and smiled at the tableau within.
In the bed, complaining vociferously was the man he’d come to visit; Cavalry-Lieutenant Terri Eckol. Struggling with the bandages that covered half his head was one of the corpsmen attached to the 3rd, a young man named Glyss who was most definitely getting the rough side of Eckol’s tongue. Mid way through one of his tirades at the apparently inept and ‘sadistic’ corpsman, Cade cleared his throat loudly.
“If I’m interrupting I can leave you two alone and come back later” he said, smirking. The two looked around, startled. Cade laughed “I know what it’s like with you young couples…”
Glyss blushed hotly, and Eckol pushed his hands away “I’ll ‘interrupt’ you in a minute” growled the older man, hastily tying off the loose bandage that wound around his head. “I’ll interrupt your damn breathing!” Cade laughed harder, and Glyss blushed redder before pulling back the curtains and scurrying away, muttering about letting him bandage himself.
Cade dragged the chair from the end of the bed alongside and dropped onto it, taking in the state of the wounds around the Cavalry-Lieutenant’s head and face. After his Chimera had been disabled, it’d been pounded into submission by a retreating band of Kroot, and Eckol had been lucky to escape the wreck alive. According to the Medicae’s, he had third degree burns to his feet and lower legs from the fire in the crew cabin, and they’d removed no less than twenty-eight pieces of metal from his head, neck, and shoulders. They were still waiting to see if his left eye would recover any sight – Eckol wasn’t keen on augmetics.
“So, can I take it from the way you’re abusing the staff that you’re not feeling any better about your time off?” asked Cade with a grin. Eckol was on forced medical leave, and hated it. Cade had taken to referring to it as his ‘time off’ just to annoy his old friend. The Cavalry officer grunted sourly, and grimaced.
“They keep telling me to rest. Then when I do, they bloody well come and wake me up to try and strangle me with these damn bandages!” He shot a venomous look at another corpsman passing by, but the woman failed to take any notice “Wish they’d make up their damn mind” Cade chuckled gently.
“I’d have thought that with all the meds they give you for them” he gestured at Eckols legs, or more precisely at the raised blanket that covered his legs “you’d be out cold”
“Hmph, I can barely feel my legs – which I’m grateful for, ‘cause if they hurt anything like they look, I’d rather not know – but the rest of me’s just fine” A frown creased his brow, and he looked at the horologe on the small bedside cabinet “Isn’t this a bit late for you Rae?”
“What, I got to be tucked up in bed by now?”
“No, but people don’t normally come visiting their invalid friend in the middle of the night” He fixed Cade with a hard stare “Unless they’ve got something to tell them. You come to tell me they’re going to amputate?!”
Cade was taken by surprise by his friends conclusion-jumping “What? No, don’t be stupid! You’re gonna have those ugly legs of yours for a long time yet! I just couldn’t sleep, and thought I’d come see you” because it’s better than seeing that damn Preacher again! Eckol didn’t seem convinced, and Cade didn’t think he could convince him, so he changed the subject.
“So, you and Corpsman Glyss…” He said with a forced grin.
The Half-track sped along the illuminated roadway relatively smoothly, and with little concern for other traffic. There were few vehicles or pedestrians on the track at this time of the night, and thanks to the lights, they’d see anyone or anything coming a long way off. Outside the corridor of light little could be seen. The lights of the command building and the central area of the encampment, a few well lit vehicle pools or fuel dumps. But no people. Even though he was sat in the open-topped transport with a driver and a dozen troopers of the 3rd, and passing through an encampment currently housing thousands of others, he felt a sudden sense of loneliness. He peered into the darkness beyond the lights, hoping for some sign of life out there, but was greeted with only unbroken darkness. They’d left the main encampment, and in another few miles would reach the end of the illuminated stretch of road. Then they’d be on their own, on foot, in these hostile mountains…
“Major?” A voice from one of the troopers next to him brought him back to the moment, and out of his dreary thoughts of dark stone and sudden drops. Major Han Greer looked around at the trooper, McKinney, who had attracted his attention. The man held a battered hip flask in his hand and was proffering it to him. Greer arched a brow and accepted it. He sniffed at the flask, and recoiled at the harsh scent of crudely brewed moonshine. He looked to Sergeant Hake, whose squad he was accompanying tonight.
“Sergeant, are you aware that one of your troopers has just handed a superior officer an illegal alcoholic substance?” He asked crisply. He always spoke that way – thanks to his education, which had been considerably more than most of the troopers in the 3rd – and it rankled some of the other officers and Riflemen alike. But not Sergeant Hake. The bald-headed Sergeant smiled.
“Yes sir. I instructed Rifleman McKinney to pass said beverage to you once he ‘ad taken a swig sir” replied Hake, in his city-slur accent. Greer nodded, and took a swig. The moonshine burned at his throat, and nearly made his eyes water. He coughed, and handed the flask back to McKinney.
“Are you also aware” he said hoarsely, which made several of the troopers grin “That it tastes like fermented piss?”
“Sir, I tend not to enquire as to Rifleman McKinney’s distilling techniques”
“I can well see why Sergeant” Greer finally smiled, and there was a wave of laughter from the other men. All except McKinney, who looked inexplicably proud as he handed the flask to the next trooper in line.
Greer was new to command – straight from the Royal Academy on Arcadia. He came from a wealthy family who had a strong martial tradition, and so had enrolled at the Academy on his thirteenth birthday. Now at the tender young age of twenty three he had his first command assignment – 3rd Platoon. This was his first combat assignment, and he was worried that he hadn’t gelled with the men under his command very well during the voyage here. Well, except for Hake and his squad. The older Sergeant seemed unofficially to have taken the younger senior officer under his wing. Greer was thankful for that, and genuinely liked the bald Sergeant. But he hoped by all that was holy that the rest of the officers never found out.
He already knew that it was a commonly held sentiment in the regiment that he was too young, and not to be let off the leash. All his major orders so far had merely been official announcements of ‘suggestions’ made by the regiment’s other officers. They were made subtly enough, just men voicing in a friendly way what they would do, but it was clear to Greer that the other officers felt he needed them to tell him what to do. If they ever found out that he was grateful for the sergeant’s discreet guidance, he’d probably be demoted to a desk post back on Arcadia. If they didn’t find some way to drum him out of the regiment entirely.
Unconsciously his hand moved to the bulky pistol at his hip. Realising his hand gripped the weapon, he pulled it from its holster, and checked the slide. He smoothly ejected the clip, checked it, and slapped it back into place. The weapon was a very expensive one, bought for him by his father from Smith-Sousson Armouries back home, and presented to him when he’d received his commission as commanding officer of 3rd Platoon. It was a slim model bolt pistol with a sickle magazine, finished in polished nickel. It had earned more than a few admiring glances when he’d first fired it at the range on the outward voyage, and more than a few sneers – many of those officers that had climbed through the ranks to theirs commands saw it as shiny toy gun for the boy playing at being a soldier. He’d considered stowing the gun and using the standard las-pistol he’d been issued with his uniform, but the power of the weapon persuaded him otherwise. It kicked like an angry Rhinox – he’d been unable to fire any weapon for days after the first time he used it – but it had a stopping power that most las weapons couldn’t hope to match.
Re-holstering the weapon, he looked ‘round at Hake, who had his standard issue Mk IV Lasrifle tucked between his knees as he idly cleaned the flash suppressor at the end of the barrel “Sorry sir, don’t think I’ll be able to get it as shiny as yours” he quipped with a grin. Greer smiled back “Keep trying Sergeant. You never know, maybe McKinney’s drink will help”.
Hake and the others nearest laughed. Hake had never said a bad word against the gleaming pistol. He’d fired it once on the range, and had voiced his surprise power of such a slim model, but he’d made a point of letting Greer see him cleaning his own weapons – the rifle, his standard issue pistol, and the stubber he kept in a boot holster – and commenting that he’d never get them as clean as Greers’ whenever the Major handled his weapon.
The hatch in the back wall of the drivers cabin slid open, and the trooper who would man the roof-mounted weapon if they came under attack called out to Greer.
“We’ll be reaching the drop-off in about two minutes sir”
Greer nodded, and the hatch slid shut. Moments later he heard the roof hatch clang open, and the upper body of the gunner appeared through the roof as he cycled up the heavy bolter mounted there. Greer turned to Hake again.
“Two minutes Sergeant. We should be passing the perimeter in less than that. Eyes sharp” Hake nodded, then stood, bracing himself with one hand on the bare roof bars. He slung his rifle on it’s shoulder strap with the other before addressing the squad.
“Defensive positions! One minute to arrival boys, then we get to take a walk in some fresh mountain air. Look sharp, unless you want to be some Kroot’s dinner!” he called. Immediately the men rose from their seats, and the benches folded flat against the low walls of the half-track. As the vehicle slowed at the outer defences, their rifles bristled around the edges of the flatbed. Greer stood beside Hake as the vehicle stopped. A junior officer trotted over to them, data-slate in hand, and saluted when he saw Greer.
“Good evening sir!” he called in a city-slur similar to Greers’ “heading out?”
Greer nodded “Yes lieutenant. Recon patrol. 1st squad, 3rd platoon”. The young officer looked at his slate, then nodded.
“Good hunting sir” he called, before stepping back from the roadway and snapping another salute. Greer thumped on the cabins wall, and the half0track started forward towards the armoured gates that blocked the roadway. As Greer watched they opened with a hiss of hydraulics, revealing the darkness of the road ahead. The half-track roared forward through the now half-open gates and left the illumination of the defenses behind. Glancing back, Gree could see the rockrete walls that ringed the mountain range, and the spotlights stabbing out into the darkness inside that defensive wall. Behind it, mortars and other heavy weapons waited, supported by the handful of armoured vehicles that could be mustered by the regiment and the local PDF. Nothing was escaping these mountains. But nothing seemed to be trying to.
As the darkness enveloped them, the headlights of the half-track blazed to life, illuminating the roadway ahead. Greer closed his eyes to aid them in adjusting to the darkness. When he opened them again the halftrack was once again slowing to a halt. The gunner on the roof had his spotlight on and was panning around the broken ground that surrounded the roadway here in the mountains, and before Greer could say anything, Hake kicked open the gate at the back of the flat bed, and leaped down, rifle up and scanning for targets. The rest of the squad followed in quick order, making no sound except the thud of their boots dropping to the ground and scuffing on the roadway and the scree beside it.
Greer dropped to the ground and closed the tailgate, drawing his own pistol. No sooner was the tailgate closed than the engine of the halftrack revved and the vehicle swung around. In moments it was speeding back along the roadway, back towards the illuminated defence wall. Greer thought he saw the gunner wave, but he didn’t bother to signal back. Instead he turned to face the mountains, their bulk like darker shadows against the night sky. Head already briefed Hake on their route, before he’d decided he would join them on this patrol.
“Take us in sergeant”.