Troop transport Princess Seladon
Adrantis Centrum jump point
Operation Viper, they were calling it. The Imperials had speared out from Baraspine towards Tranch, Marioch and Coseflame, leaving the local PDFs hard pressed - but what they did not know was that the bulk of the Adrantean Rapid Reaction Force was mustering here, ready to counterattack.
Captain Kreoss was a man of faith, like all in his Menoth regiment, but he was also of the opinion that faith manifested through deeds rather than words. He took a less than charitable view of the Tephainian cardinals, who six months after the revolution still seemed unable to offer their unanimous and full-throated support of their war against Imperial aggression.
It made a pitiable contrast with the black-armoured Nebula troopers tramping off the shuttle in perfect lockstep, to the fanfare and cheers of the assembled infantry. These were men of deeds - the soldiers who had rescued the subsector governor at great cost, the soldiers who had saved Kreoss and his men on Baraspine.
The governor’s own Nebulas, fighting beside us once again as we start the counterattack.
The Nebula company unfolded into the hanger bay, like a black rose with thorns of adamantium. Leading them was the Hero of Siculi, her helmet cradled under one arm so that her blonde hair lay free about her shoulders. Alicia Tarran’s face was a tightly drawn mask, seemingly impervious to the cheers thundering across the muster deck.
She is modest. Kreoss thought approvingly.
Watching the stony-faced figure at the head of the column, Kreoss decided that the Warp could take the cardinals. He knew who his faith lay in.
+ + + + + +
It took a sizeable amount of supplies to keep a demolitions expert like Herkja in business. The Adranteans had promised them all kinds of fuel and ammunition for the next operation on Marioch, but only a single transport had pulled alongside so far, and the amount it had parcelled out to the Jotunhel left much to be desired.
“Look at this shit.” Herkja complained, thumping her fist down on a half-empty fuel barrel for emphasis. “We might be mercenaries but you’d think they’d bump us a few places up the priority list after we got some of their best troops off the Glom.”
Dolf was lackadaisical, watching with his boots propped up atop a case of demo charges. “Maybe we’ll have to fight smart then, rather than strapping kraks to our heads and trying to simply headbutt the fuckers into oblivion.”
The diminutive captain folded her flame-tattoed arms. “And what’s your great plan?”
"Sneak past them and fuck ‘em up the arses. I’ll do it all myself if you want. I could probably pass for a Mariochi.”
Herkja smirked. “Uh huh?”
“Just need someone to stamp on my face first, so it's not as conspicuously pretty."
"Up your arse, mate. My dad had a grox back home that was prettier than you."
Dolf laced his hands behind his head and leaned back on a stack of flak vests. "That's no way to talk about your mother."
+ + + + + +
Starolf probably wouldn’t have picked a Tephanian to play cards with, but unlike 90% of colonel Tanaka’s rangers, lieutenant Beck seemed to lack his comrades’ snooty disdain for the mercenary units that were helping to make their glorious revolution possible. He also lacked any kind of skill at Hearts, but made up for it with enthusiasm and a seemingly bottomless supply of ration chips to lose, which made his company tolerable.
“I only hope they don’t want you to waste time shepherding the locals out again.” Beck was saying as he played a Ten of Tiles, which if he had been paying attention he would have known was a suit that Starolf had already exhausted two hands ago.
“You can’t blame them for wanting to get away from those Imperial bastards.” Leif said carefully. He squinted at the Ten suspiciously for a moment, and then threw away a Nine of Clover.
Beck placed his cards carefully face down. “Take it from a Tephanian who’s been watching those cultist sympathisers crawl into our starports for years. Letting them come would only encourage more people to risk their lives in the journey.”
“Uh huh.” said Starolf, who couldn’t have given a damn about the Mariochi either way.
“Besides,” Beck went on in an authoritative tone, “You can bet half of these people aren't refugees, just pilgrims or migrants looking for work now the sector economy's tanking."
Starolf grunted another noncommittal reply, and slapped down his Queen of Pikes.
Beck blinked down at it for a moment, cursed, and then laughed and handed over another ration chip.
+ + + + + +
Enginseer Brandt sat upon an overturned cargo drum in the cavernous storage bay, awaiting the pleasure of magos Krypter. His six caliper-fingers clicked rhythmically as he turned his personal icon machina over and over before his lowered eyes.
The Fifth Law: Sentience is the basest form of Intellect.
The icon turned slowly in his dexterous metal pincers. On one side the half-mechanical skull was proudly embossed; on the reverse, the concave stamp caught the shadows of the bay lights and almost seemed to snarl.
The Tenth Law: The soul is the conscience of Sentience.
He raised his gaze to the milling crowd of magi and menials that shared the space with him. The Mars-faithful whom he had nominally saved, by his bargain with magos Krypter.
The Sixteenth Law: To break with ritual is to break with faith.
He prayed to the Machine God that he had not simply condemned them to a worse fate.
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