Page 10 of 10 FirstFirst ... 8910
Results 91 to 95 of 95

Thread: [M] War in the Dirt - Imperials IC

  1. #91
    The Last Remembrancer
    dakkagor's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    the luminous Aether
    Favourite Roleplay Genres
    Modern times or Sci-Fi games.
    Posts
    2,047
    Mentioned
    65 Post(s)
    Rep Power
    201

    Default

    Hange watched the scopes, the feed, her tactical links.

    The goal now was force preservation. Hector was folding up the skitarii line, compacting and withdrawing through the shattered out-habs. She was providing covering fire, eliminating enemy armour when it approached the Skitarii line too closely, but there was only so much she could accomplish. There would, inevitably, be losses.

    She focused on the last reported location of Vonuoe and the intelligence she carried. A boiling firefight was consuming several blocks and yards about a kilometer from her position. Tanks were pushing in now.

    +I want this sector resolved. Make it happen+


    + + + + + +

    "By your command Princeps" Hector Rho canted. He had taken a Scorpius to the flash point, but the broken streets and cramped, poorly planned urban warren of the hive out-sprawl had slowed his arrival. Noospheric and haptic links were degraded by shield noise (now thankfully absent) and particulate contaminate in the atmosphere. Hive War always put a strain on the Onmissiahs chosen. It levelled the playing field somewhat for the unaugmented, not reliant on these advanced tools. Still, he used the signal boosts provided by the Scorpius larger comm array to draw his forces back under the cover of the Titans, shrink his line and preserve his forces. Except for the company with him now.

    He pushed his forces forwards with haptic goads and binahric prods. The servitors would go in first to clear the way, then the skitarii would follow up and finish the job. The angels will would be served, and through them, the Omnissiah.

    + + + + + +

    He didn't remember a lot of things. His name was one of them. Surely he had had a name, once? Everyone had a name. Reaching for it caused hot spikes of pain in his head. He could remember other things. Jagged flashes of a hab unit, a woman with a warm, tired smile, two children. . .

    ::UNIT KATAPHRON BREACHER ALEPH-22670-1 PROCEED TO MARKED WAYPOINT AND ENGAGE FIRE-FREE PROTOCOLS::

    ::I HEAR AND OBEY::

    The words left his mouth and his brain at once, but didn't seem to his shattered mind to come from either. The tracks that made up his lower body. . .

    Tracks. Tracks?!?! He started to panic. Tracks?! Where were his frakking legs?! Where was his arm, for that matter, or . . .

    He trundled by a shattered shop front, glass half blown out. He caught sight of his reflection, and it made him want to scream. But the metal grille welded over his lower face only emitted a binharic blurt of garbage code.

    WHAT HAD THEY DONE TO HIM? He was some kind of metal monster, a freak with a plasma gun bolted to his body, encased in heavy armour plates and welded to a track unit. The reflection passed, and he prayed, to who he wasn't sure, that this was some awful nightmare.

    ::WAYPOINT REACHED, FIRE-FREE MODE ENGAGED ::

    The plasma cannon charged to full, angry life, and the heat and radiation from it seared his remaining flesh. Troopers wearing colours he didn't recognise scuttled for cover at his approach, las shot zipping down the roadway towards him and his networked squad. The voice, the machine voice, spoke.

    ::SEPERATIST TROOPS INDENTIFIED.::

    Seperatists. . .he was a seperatist, on the. . .orbital! He remembered that. Standing proudly, with his freshly stamped rifle in his void-hardened uniform, feeling in control of his own destiny.

    How could he remember that, and not his own name?

    The fire intensified, and the plasma gun that was now his whole purpose for being fired with a painful arc-flare blast. An enemy, no, an ally, was blasted to ash midstep.

    Stop it! He willed. Stop firing, he desperately screamed at the machine voice as its hammering, neon words identified targets and directed his body to eliminate them. Eliminate his comrades! He screamed, he begged, he cried as the battle raged, as they killed more, as the Seperatist line collapsed, as he ground screaming, wounded soldiers under his tracks. The machine voice didn't listen. The machine voice didn't care. It logged the minor feedback errors from its organic components as a rounding error, a flaw in its construction for later remediation. He was not a flaw, he raged as the plasma gun fired, and fired, and fired. He was a man, a human being, not a machine! He felt liquid running down his face, and the machine logged his tears as a coolant leak.

    The tank, a leman russ, the machine voice told him, surged towards his squad, tracks churning, guns blazing, as the rest of its allies fell back. A round caught one of his mangled squad mates and tossed her shattered body infront of him. He had enough time to identify the face, twisted in horror and agony, as the one with the tired smile from his memories, before the tanks treads devoured her broken form, crushing it into the ground in a spray of oil and blood.

    He howled in agony, lost in rage and horror, and machine took that noise and turned it into a binharic blurt of nonsense, because it did not understand emotion. It drove him forwards, firing the plasma gun at the tanks flanks, scoring glowing lines along its armoured skirt. More of kataphrons joined him, harrying the tank like dogs baiting a bear. Why was he even here, was what he wanted to know. The cogboys had taken everything from him, why did they need him to see it? Why did they trap him in this nightmare? Was it a punishment for his crimes? Or simple sadism on the part of those who had taken him? He didn't remember why they had taken him, or when. He just knew that once he had had arms, and legs, and a family, and now all of that was gone.

    The leman russ exploded, peppering him with shrapnel, and they repositioned, a long line of Kataphrons, pushing back through the flaming hellscape of urban war. It seemed to ALEPH-22670-1 that this might be what the preachers called hell, that he was already dead, forgotten by the Emperor for his crime of treason.

    He begged for forgiveness as he ground through the dead and the dying, Skitarii stalking in his wake and administering ruthless kill shots to enemies and allies too damaged to be saved. He begged for forgiveness as his plasma gun blasted more people to ash, to blazing skeletons. He begged as heavy autocannon fire thundered from a broken building, taking more kataphrons, and he wished the shells would reach out and take him, too.

    An explosion lifted his chassis, and dumped him down like a broken toy. Hive-guard units, elites, stormed forwards to cover the retreat and redress of the line. A trooper in heavy carapace put a hellgun muzzle to his broken, bleeding face as his tracks spun futilely and his plasma gun drooled coolant, lying a distance from his shattered body.

    He managed to mouth a 'thank you' before the lasblast silenced the machine voice and the suffering man it was yoked to forever.

    In orbit, a Domina noted the sub-optimal performance of ALEPH-22670-1. Unneccessary bio-feedback. She sent a reprimand and review code stack to a minor tech-priestess responsible for the conversion. Hurried by the need for deployment, she had missed some nerve endings and ganglion clusters that should have been properly cauterised. A minor mistake, but one to be corrected, in the name of efficency.

    + + + + + +

    Hector allowed himself a moment of satisfaction. The expenditure of disposable servitor units had allowed his Skitarii to finish the fight at the flash point, objectives achieved. He withdrew his own forces back, with covering fire from what artillery assets they had. Preservation of force and non-replaceable assets was all. A few bulk converted servitors raised from dissidents were of as much concern as the bullets his forces fired.

    He opened a link to Hange, and sent a simple code statement:

    ::Sector resolved::

    Hange responded just as curtly, focused as she was on other, important sectors of the battlefield.

    ::Ave Omnissiah::
    Last edited by dakkagor; 12-22-2024 at 01:29 PM.

  2. #92
    The Replicant
    Azazeal849's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    UK
    Posts
    7,714
    Mentioned
    85 Post(s)
    Rep Power
    484

    Default

    Spoiler: Legio Sirenia and Shepherd of Light, Tranch 
    Spoiler: My RP links 

    PM me for novelised versions of any of my RPs, or ones that I have participated in. Set by the awesome Karma.


  3. #93
    June MotM 2014
    Jarms48's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2012
    Location
    Australia
    Favourite Roleplay Genres
    Sci-fi
    Age
    31
    Posts
    19,686
    Mentioned
    31 Post(s)
    Rep Power
    2045

    Default

    (Holding post for Cadian Starport attack - Part 2)

  4. #94
    June MotM 2014
    Jarms48's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2012
    Location
    Australia
    Favourite Roleplay Genres
    Sci-fi
    Age
    31
    Posts
    19,686
    Mentioned
    31 Post(s)
    Rep Power
    2045

    Default

    100th Adrantean infantry attaches & 2451st Cadian armoured - Campaign 1 - Epilogue Part 1
    The Long Halt

    The tanks of 2nd Company lay dormant, their machine spirits resting as the fires of the starport burned into the night. The rear elements fought the blazes in an attempt to minimise the damage as much as possible, while repair crew worked extensively to ensure full operation resumed as soon as possible. Out in the distance members of the Cadian infantry regiments worked the airstrips, clearing what remained of the Patriot minefield.

    1st and 2nd platoon were passed out for the night. Their campfires crackled with embers as the fuel burned out, puffs of smoke rose into the sky only to be lost in the dark clouds gathering from the starport's own flames. The crew of My Fair Lady and 3rd platoon had drawn the short straws, they had the first watch. Little did the company know, but Antheia had rigged the draw. In her eyes, this was perhaps the best way to get acquainted with their newcomers as well as chat with their attaches who had camped with them.

    Antheia sat, recaf in hand. Her back pressed against My Fair Lady, her eyes staring into their own campfire. The flicker of flames dancing across her purple eyes. It never gets easier. She thought to herself, lost in her own world. The Captain rubbed her chin with her free hand, as if to ensure she was still there. She took a sip, her hand trembled and she had to fight off the sensation.

    Pity reached over and patted her shoulder, it grounded her. Antheia forced a smile, but found it difficult to bring out her usual vibrant personality.

    “Alright, boys and girls.” She began, her voice cracked as she talked showing her true emotions. Regret. Sadness. “I know we went through hell today. I know what we saw might trouble you. It troubles me too.”

    The Captain shot a glance at their transferred tankers. She took in each of their faces and their reactions. They were nervous, maybe even afraid. As much difficulty as today’s proceedings caused her, she knew it hit them worse. These were their people. Maybe some were friends or family. These loyalists chose to stay with the Imperium, to fight against this rebellion. Only to be rewarded with more death and hatred. It made Antheia sick to the core. It didn’t feel right, nothing about today felt right.

    “Dragomir, Madeline, Ruben, Antonius, Antonio, Katherine.” Antheia tried her best to remember their names, looking at each of the transferees as she spoke.

    “I wanted you to know that I respect you. That all of us here respect you.” Some of the other 3rd platoon members nodded in agreement. “I want this to be an open forum, just a chat. Anything you say, I won’t hold it against you. I’m not just your Captain, I want you to consider me a friend too. We’re tankers. We live together, fight together, die together.” There was a sincerity and vulnerability in her voice.

    The invitation to speak freely was initially met with silence by the Adranteans, although she heard a soft, perhaps positive, exhalation from their preacher as he stared into the embers. Antheia caught the flickering, melancholic look on the swordsman’s face out of the corner of her eye, as she carefully watched her new crew react to the conversational olive branch. The conversation she was going to have with Preacher Dieter would keep until this was done.

    Midnight’s young Tephanian gunner (Madeline) tensed, and somehow managed to sit even straighter. Speaking freely, and even being at ease, seemed to be as Xenos a concept as The Greater Good to the tightly wound girl. The notion of personal space was as well, by how close she sat next to her new partner in the turret, Loader Dieter, on an empty munition crate.


    “Maddie,” loader Dieter began. Making absolutely sure not to call her Madeline again after they did drills while Matchlock and Midnight remained back at the rail-head as the rest of the company assaulted the starport.

    They had drilled for hours, bringing the tank transferee up to speed with how Dieter operated. He had fast hands, a tendency to lap load, and the initiative to bring rounds from storage into the ready-rack at each opportunity. Loader Dieter knew he could maintain a load rate of 4-5 seconds for the first minute or two, perhaps slightly faster as adrenaline and experience took over. Though that rate slowed after Maddie reached over the breech and punched his arm after he called her by her full name, he still felt a twinge of pain now. Bringing up a bemused smirk as he recalled the event, despite the somber mood around him.

    “You alright?” loader Dieter asked. Her closeness could have been considered intimate at first glance, a part of him appreciated the warmth her proximity provided in the cool night breeze, the other, more sane, part of him understood the simple reality. She was nuts. He wondered if it was a facade, a mask to protect a more vulnerable side, and she’d mellow out eventually.

    “I’m fine.” Maddie answered, as quickly as she turned to face him. Her intense green eyes flashed with concern as her expression became serious. “What makes you ask, Dieter?”

    Loader Dieter shrugged, and waved his hands at her defensively when he caught her stare. Though he assumed Maddie was lying, judging by the rapid intensity of her reply. “Was just a feeling I had. Call it gunner-loader intuition.”

    The Tephanian stared at him for a moment, considering, before she slowly nodded. “Right. Gunner-loader intuition. We need to work on that. We’ll talk about what we can do about it.”

    The loader didn’t know what to think about that. Midnight being damaged and only recently repaired, crewmates KIA, and the heavy on-foot fighting at the rail-head had him at wits end, the pressure weighed heavily on him and he was sure he was suffering from shell-shock. Yet, something about a one-on-one chat with Madeline terrified him.

    The older Baraspini driver (Dragomir) noticed his young peer’s disquiet, and reached over from his perch on a smaller munition crate, to squeeze her shoulder with almost paternal gentleness. Madeline relaxed by the barest fraction, maybe, at his touch. Antheia had noticed how he had ceased working through an Omnissian version of prayer beads, made of cabled wire and hex nuts, and how his lips seemed to press tightly behind the dull metal of his cogwheel stamped faith mask - exactly like those worn by the Divs.

    The last of Midnight’s new blood (Ruben) was leaning against the tank, beneath his new post. He had been staring adoringly up at an Aquila which he had wrapped around his heavy bolter, as it swayed in the night’s breeze. He stared with greater intensity at the icon, which glinted in the firelight, as he touched its mirror image draped around his neck. He uncomfortably scratched at the bristles of a five o’clock shadow that Antheia wasn’t certain he’d had mere hours ago, when she’d first been told of and met the Adrantean tankies.


    Muller stood beside him, sipping at his canteen and offered his new hull gunner a drink. Midnight's sergeant neglected to mention that his canteen was more alcohol than water at this point. The battle was over, the night was young, and the sergeant had liberated a bottle of liquor from the crumbling starport lounge.

    The Tranchite nodded with reflexive, absentminded gratitude as he accepted the canteen and drank. No sooner did the liquid touch his lips did Ruben’s eyes widen, as he registered it was alcohol - good alcohol. Imported for the up-spire shits good, at that. He slowly, warily lowered the vessel as he glanced at Muller. Only after a subtle nod of encouragement, did he take a much more modest sip than the indifferent swig he’d been ready to take.

    “Thanks, sergeant.” Ruben stated with genuine gratitude as he passed the canteen back.


    “Just don’t go telling anyone, Ruben.” Muller replied. He remembered when he was a hull gunner, they were often treated as the black sheep of the crew.

    “Tell them what, exactly?” Ruben responded, playing dumb in the fine universal and eternal tradition of the enlisted soldier, as he casually resumed his slouch. That’s the spirit. Muller took another, long, sip. He needed this drink after today. He would have offered it to Dieter as well, but the man seemed more focused on their new gunner. Had she not been wound tighter than the tanks tow ropes Peter might have found her cute, or maybe that was just the alcohol. He let the thought fade away and had another needed swig from his canteen.

    Antheia looked around, and could see the new gun duo (Antonius and Antonio - Throne, that was going to be hard to keep straight) for Matchlock as they sat, the shorter one (Antonius, gunner) on and the taller (Antonio, loader) against a cracked Basilisk barrel as they shared a lho.

    The Siculian boys were looking at one another, and having a silent conversation by exchanging a complex series of expressions, brow twitches, and head tilts. Antonius inhaled from the lho, before holding it out for Antonio to lean over and pinch it between his lips for a draw. The duo widened their eyes, and slowly exhaled smoke together into the burning night.


    “Do none of you wish to speak?” Antheia asked, a hint of disappointment and sadness in her voice.

    “Unlike those PBG’s, poor bloody guardsmen (she wasn’t sure if they were aware of the Cadian Army Groups slang for the infantry), us tankers share a closer bond. Five people trapped in cramped confines, like a family sharing a single room in a hab-block. If you don’t feel comfortable, I will understand.” The Captain tried to sound reassuring.

    There was an anxiousness creeping across her form. A part of her wished she didn’t ask for their opinions in the first place, she felt like a fool. She barely knew these people, but now they were under her charge and she wanted some validation they weren’t going to hold resentment against her company for what happened with the frateris. The other part of her wanted them to know they were a part of her family.

    Antheia heard the clinking tumble of chain links in the uncomfortable silence, as Preacher Dieter subtly shifted. She knew he was looking at her, but Antheia did not look at him in turn as she kept her gaze solely on her soldiers - old and new. She had started this conversation, and however it turned out? It was on her. From her peripheral vision, Antheia saw him offer a nod - which from the measure she had of the man, she knew meant she had his support.

    She glanced over to Mandator, then back to the members of 3rd platoon. Antheia knew the transferee's previous company commissar was a particularly harsh one. Against her better judgement, the Captain thought the Loyal Legions affectionately called Mustachio wouldn’t survive this war claimed by an accidental las bolt in the back. The Captain was reminded of Katherlin, from the 2433rd, infamous for fragging their attached commissar by the end of the Telfus reclamation. She never knew what became of her, but she recalled Captain Jacktious had fought for her release with tooth-and-nail. Maybe the Legionaries just needed some assurance, they didn’t have to suffer under Mustachio anymore.

    “Commissar Heinold isn’t so bad, he gives us free reign. Sure, he may still bring us up for petty little things but he’s not the type to dish-out corporal punishment.” Antheia said, trying to remove any lingering fears the transfers may have had for their previous political officer.

    “Sod it, I’ll bite. Not everyday an officer gives permission to speak freely.”

    The voice of the final new transfer (Katherine) came from where she’d been lounging on Matchlock’s rear trackguard, head resting on her muscled arms bared as she stared into the Baraspini sky and watched the constellation of Imperial Navy voidships in low orbit. She leveraged herself up and off the tank with an emphatic grunt, and a clap of her boot soles on the tarmac as she landed. Silica dust crunched as she almost sauntered over to the circle.

    “Might as well make the most of an opportunity.”

    “I...” The young Tephanian gunner started, paused, and then frowned as she continued. “I never thought an officer would offer that.”

    “Rarely.” The older Baraspini stated, his gaze firmly set on Alda’s broken skyline - and Antheia had to wonder whether the veteran was seeing the damage of the present war, or the Dominion War. His thick, blessed oil stained fingers resumed working his prayer nuts.

    “Most officers don’t want us speaking, period.” Antonio opined, around the lho in his mouth. He took another quick draw on the smoke, before he offered it up to his shorter companion.

    “We can’t imagine why.” Antonius continued, frowning thoughtfully as he stared at the lho.


    “No, not at all…” Selene interrupted, the Andy’s new TC had already experienced their close relationship first hand. Though in reality Matchlock was the best vehicle for them, Selene and Hera shared a similar bond. Even the name of their tank held a hint of irony to the Andy’s closeness.

    “That’s ‘cause you boys can only speak out of each other’s arses.” Katherine answered.

    “I can talk about your arse, Kattie.” Hera returned, half a joke.

    “Only if I can talk about yours, Hera.” The Mariochi sallied back, half a joke, as she deftly reached over to pluck the lho from Antonius’ fingers as he brought it towards his mouth.

    “Hey.” Antonius flatly complained, as he fixed her with an unbothered side-eye while she took a luxurious pull from her purloined lho. “Rude.”


    “Someone has to balance out this testosterone overflowing from you guys.” Hera teased, as she opened her hand and gestured for a smoke.

    “Rude.” Antonio complained, too.

    “Why ours?” Antonius grumbled, even as he fished in his jacket pocket for his lho pack. The taller boy struck the bottom to knock loose a couple of tubes, and grasped them in his mouth before he nevertheless closed the pack and tossed it overhand to his new crew mate.


    “Cause you love me more than other Andy here, don’t ya, Andy? Please and thank you.” Hera replied, answering his half-heartedness with an over-dramatised flutter of her eyes. She took an lho, grabbed her lighter from her uniform pocket, then savoured the flavour as it filled her lungs.

    Antonius muttered something that might’ve been that’s a damn, dirty lie, which prompted an agreeing hum and firm nod from Antonius, around the lhos pinched between his lips, as he distractedly reached into the same pocket to find his lighter. He muttered what was surely a swear as he began to grope around in other pockets as the lighter remained elusive.

    Hera gave him a knowing nod as she took another long drag. Placed her light into the pack of lho’s and gently tossed it to him. Antonius deftly caught it, and nodded back as he set about lighting his and his buddy’s sticks.

    “See? Sharin’ is carin’, boys. Now, quit the bitchin’ an’ make with the scoochin’.” Katherine muttered, exhaling a dragon’s plume of smoke as she alternatively nudged his hip and Antonio’s shoulder with her boot to prompt them to move over for her.

    The Siculian boys grumbled, yet nevertheless they shuffled aside so the muscular Mariochi could sit between them on the discarded artillery barrel. She made no effort to move for them, as they now had to reach around her to get their own smoke situation squared away.

    “At least my main man’s got me covered.” Antonio grumbled in turn, as he reached over to ease away one of the lho’s from Antonius’ mouth as he gently tossed back Hera’s lighter.

    “Always, my good sir.” Antonius affirmed, as the two Siculians began an intricate handshake.

    “Well, aren’t you boys just friggin’ adorable.” Katherine saccharinely quipped, as she quickly curled her arms around their shoulders to drag them close to her by their necks. Resistance lasted until their cheeks were held firmly against the older woman’s chest, while she gave them each a mocking kiss on the crowns of their heads before shoving them away.

    The Siculians exchanged another of their wordless expression conversations, and smoked.


    “Oh Kattie, I think you’ll find the company of Selene and I more accommodating than those love birds.” Hera returned, a mischievous smile on her lips.

    Katherine’s brows raised, interest and imagination well and truly piqued by Hera’s less than subtle - my kind of girl, this chick implications about Matchlock’s crew situation. Fucking. Jackpot.

    “Hera!” Selene exclaimed, with a gasp.

    “Calm yourself.” Matchlock’s sergeant stated, clearly not approving of her driver's bashfulness. Selene held her head low in embarrassment. She guessed Hera instantly took a liking to their new hull gunner, who watched their interaction with acceptance - and a wolfish, anticipatory grin.

    “Aye, sarge. I‘ll cool off.” Hera’s tone dropped from playfulness to professional like a spinning coin. The driver leaned back, looking to the stars, simply enjoying the rest of her smoke.

    “Point of order, so we’re all clear from the jump?” Antonio interjected, as he pointed at himself and over to his buddy Antonius. “We’re not lovers.”

    “What?” Madeline queried, from across the campsite. She blinked hard with confusion as Katherine barked out a laugh, and shoved her hand against her mouth to stifle the rest.

    Riiight...suuure…” Hera doubtfully opined, with an even more dubious look.

    “Honest!” Antonius exclaimed, and held a hand over his heart. “Swear to the Emperor!”

    “Genuinely, we promise, we’re not grox-shitting you.” Antonio assured, palms raised.

    “You’re absolutely not making yourselves more believable.” Selene flatly stated.

    “Just ‘cause you boys like havin’ your faces in ta-ta’s?” Katherine commented, mouth pinched around the lho, as she yoked the boys around their necks for a return visit to her undervest clad chest, before she shoved them back, again. “Don’ mean you ain’t screwin’.”

    “We arent!” The Siculian duo exclaimed in perfect tandem.

    “You should be who you were meant to be.” Dragomir chimed in, the sincerity in his tone had to compensate for his masked visage. The prayer strand linked around his fingers clinked softly as he gestured between the boys. “There are no flaws in the Omnissiah’s designs.”

    “The Emperor loves you unconditionally - unless you’re a Xenos, heretic, or a filthy twist.” Ruben solemnly added, his expression anything but pious as he slid against Midnight’s hull to lean over and add onto the dogpile - at least until he spoke the word twist. He spat reflexively, with a look of vehement disgust, at the invocation of mutation.

    The boys offered a heartfelt groan at their devout comrade’s acceptance.

    “I have had zero physical interest in him, or any other men, ever.” Antonius bluntly stated.

    “Uh huh. Never even a twinge by either of us for the other.” Antonio effusively seconded.

    “Groxshit.” Katherine challenged, feigning it as a cough.

    “If we were, you don’t think we would’ve been hitched already?” Antonio countered, and jerked a thumb at Antonius. “You think I’d not put a ring on the love of my life?”

    “Do we seem like a couple of bashful wallflowers, eh?” Antonius added, as he jerked a thumb back at Antonio. “It’s a bummer that I have zero interest in my damn soulmate.”

    “The gentlemen do make a point.” Preacher Dieter interjected, neutrally with finality as he remained sat with crossed legs and his sheathed sword balanced on his knees by the fire. “Now perhaps we might take them at their word?”

    “Sure, why not,” Katherine agreed, seemingly only for the benefit of Preacher Dieter, as she gave the boys a lopsided grin while she flicked off some lho ash.” What’s really going to be a bummer is when one of you gets serious with a chick. There’s no way some gal’s going to be okay as second love to this bromance of a lifetime thing that you’s-two’s got going.”

    “Not unless we date the same gal.” Antonius sagely refuted, with a shit eating grin.

    “Uh huh.” Antonio nonchalantly agreed, with an eyebrow waggle at Katherine. “Sharing is caring, as you said.”

    The muscular Mariochi opened her mouth to reflexively argue the point, and then paused as she processed what the Siculian duo had said. She closed her mouth, and [/i]hmm’d[/i] thoughtfully as she considered the argument, and conceded to it with a wordless lho drag.

    “Got her!” The boys called out in tandem, as they exchanged a press of knuckles.

    “You’re both still up each other’s arses.” Katherine stated, as she expelled another coil of nicotine. The traces of a pleased smirk about her crew situation lingered alongside the smoke as she leaned forward to rest her elbows on her knees as she looked around the fire.

    “Well, since we’re already speaking freely, and we’re going to be one big happy armored warfare family, might as well call me Katie - ‘cause being called Katherine makes me think I’m about to be switched like I was in schola for no justifiable reason, of course.”


    “I prefer Kattie, cause that cat has claws.” Hera’s voice was almost a whisper, trying her best to follow Sarge's orders.

    Antheia resisted the urge to roll her eyes. As long as they did their jobs, she didn’t care whose bits they preferenced. Despite their somewhat man-child behaviour she was glad they were beginning to relax and open up.

    “Maddie.” The tightly wound Tephanian promptly volunteered for her nickname, with a side look of emphasis at her partner Loader Dieter. “More efficient, when we’re in action.”

    Loader Dieter rubbed his still bruised shoulder. Then mumbled to himself. Probably wouldn’t be saying her name in action anyway. His training kicked in and he thought about the loader phrases in the LR instruction book. He had half a mind to leave the group and go join Peter and Ruben, but Madeline seemed stuck to him like glue. He imagined she’d follow him everywhere, like a lost puppy.

    “Efficiency is a virtue, so Drago is more than fine.” The thickset Baraspini consented.

    “My name can’t really be contracted…so…Ruben it is.” Ruben superfluously stated.

    “You can call us Tall Andy and Short Andy, for clarity.” Antonio offered, brushing his fingertips along his moustache.

    “Otherwise you might have trouble telling us apart.” Antonius agreed, as he too ran his fingertips across his matched facial hair.

    The two Siculians remained straight faced, expressions sincere as the blessed saints and martyrs in a stained glass window as they sat (almost) next to one another, as aside from the names and moustaches - and both being full of a tremendous load of grox shit - the boys were a study in extreme contrasts in appearance, with Tall Andy being pale skinned and light of hair and eye color, while Short Andy was comprised of a symphony of brown hues.


    “Short Andy is corporal Andy now,” Selene corrected. “Gunner is the second rated position. Congrats on the promotion Short Andy, oh, and sorry Tall Andy.”

    “...damn.” The Andy’s responded in stereo.

    Selene chewed her cheek in thought. The sergeant assumed Hera might have harboured a bit of jealousy. The Siculians simply had far more experience in their respective positions, besides, it wasn’t her choice to begin with. If it had been up to her she’d have crammed the Andy’s in the hull and had Hera up in the turret basket with her. The woman deserved it after today.

    Loader Dieter sighed. He hadn’t made the connection until Selene mentioned it. Then he looked to Madeline.

    “Probably save time calling you corp too, considering you’ve gotten the same promotion as Short Andy.” Midnight’s loader begrudgingly admitted, not out of hatred for the woman he was just afraid of what she’d do with a taste of power. The thought shook him to the core.

    “Okay.” Maddie acknowledged the expected promotion as if he had merely said there’d be rain today. He was beginning to suspect that’d be the same reaction to a charging Waaagh.

    “Less syllables that way. More efficient, when we’re in action.” He repeated her early statement, in a playful mock. For the first time tonight he lit up with a genuine warm smile, he seemed to enjoy attempting to rile up the tightly wound gunner.

    “Okay. Good.” Maddie said with a stiff nod, seemingly oblivious to the teasing. “That’s the sort of practicality we need to work out between us, before the traitors start shooting at us.”

    “Maybe we should have that talk…” Dieter suggested, as quickly as that smile came it faded instead concern crept in. Not even a rise out of her, so far the only true reaction they shared was him saying her full name and the unwelcome bruise on his arm.

    “We definitely should.” Maddie agreed, with another stilted nod. “I’m ready if you are.”

    “Perhaps this is a conversation for the morning, after you have both had the opportunity for rest and reflection?” Drago questioned. “Perhaps with others involved, as well?”

    “No…this should be between us.” Maddie declined, softly, with an almost apologetic look at the older Baraspini. “The sooner we have it, the better I think we’ll start working together.”

    “Just…be careful, please?” Drago asked, with a fractional slump of his broad shoulders as the younger Tephanian declined, his voice cautionary as his expression was hidden behind his faith mask - the same as those worn by the Divs they’d spent the day killing, and being killed by, Dieter couldn’t help but being reminded - as he looked at the two of them.


    * * * * *

    “Look at them, Manon. Getting all familiar.” Wilhelm jested to his gunner, speaking in Cadian gothic and his tone low so the other tankers couldn’t hear nor understand him.

    The Lieutenant of 3rd platoon sat atop the turret of Moxie. His legs dangled and swayed over the side, his lascarbine in hand. Manon stood beside him and leaned over the open cupola hatch. They’d also been chosen for company security for their long halt. Martin, Moxie’’s driver, crouched low on the top hull. He’d thrown open the engine louvers and was inspecting the automotives. Raymod, their loader, mirrored Fausta and was engrossed in his duties. Lascarbine slung over the loader's shoulder and a pair of binoculars sat at eye level as he surveyed the terrain. Nestor, their hull gunner, rummaged through the turret stowage baskets pulling out tarps and tent poles. Preferring to sleep in shelter instead of out in the elements like the members of 1st and 2nd platoon, shelter held another benefit for him, he was a light sleeper and didn’t want to hear Lieutenant Linus pull out his acoustic guitar. The commander of 1st platoon was a complicated man. Often rude, quick to anger, gruff, but there was a softer side to him that escaped in his music.

    Wilhelm simply enjoyed the people watching, thankful for the low in the fighting. He considered hoping down and standing by the Captains side in solidarity, but decided against it for the time being. In the end, they were just as much his responsibility as they were hers. Maybe Antheia struck the right cord, or maybe something clicked in the transferees as they began to open up.

    Then his mood turned sour.

    “Lieutenant Marcellus kicked the bucket far too early.” The recently promoted Wilhelm lamented, his gloved hand left the stock of his lascarbine and warmly touched the repaired hull of Moxie. He just hoped he could live up to the man’s ability. God-damn hard bastard led them through hell on Telfus, now it was his turn to lead these new guys through something worse.

    * * * * *

    ”Thank you.” Antheia chimed in, appreciating the transferee’s first steps in joining her open forum. Her apprehension faded, replaced with gratitude and relief.

    Colour Sergeant Consus and Specialist Fausta, who had currently been silent, focused solely on overwatch and security. Consus sat in My Fair Lady’s cupola, his hands resting on the stubber. While Fausta stood on the engine deck, binoculars in hand as she scanned the surroundings.

    Fausta was the first to act, she briefly lowered her binos and turned to face them. Giving the huddled group a friendly two fingered salute, then went back to her task at hand. Consus remained resolute, acting on discipline. Instead he just raised a hand and gave a backwards wave, in an attempt to welcome them into the company.

    The Cadian Captain turned her head, looking to their Loyal Legion attaches. She was proud of them. Despite their lack of equipment, the distrust and hatred they faced, they showed their mettle today.

    With the beginnings of comradely (and perhaps otherwise) bonding amongst the Cadians and their new Adrantean crewmates underway, Preacher Dieter (Throne, am I now starting to qualify myself?) stood and stretched to ease the stiffness brought on by protracted inactivity after the day’s protracted activity. He ached, and knew pains recent and lingering, but he welcomed them all the same. Pain was inconsequential to deed and duty - and it had been a blessing to have his blade in hand again, and use it for His purposes.

    The swordsman had refrained from being a proactive voice in the conversation amongst the tankers, as at the end of the day - Ministorum preacher or not - he was not himself a tanker. This was Captain Antheia’s company, and she needed to be the one who set the tone with her soldiers for their unified future. He was pleased to consider her efforts a success, and as he turned towards the Cadian officer, he met her violet eyes and nodded respectfully.


    “Preacher Dieter, you have my personal thanks. Your actions saved the lives of my crew today.” She said, with genuine gratitude.

    “I am His humble servant.” Preacher Dieter answered, and the chain which bound him to his sword rattled as he crossed his forearms over his chest. The swordsman’s mouth twitched, as if he knew exactly how trite he sounded, as he swept his gaze along the flank of My Fair Lady. “I must confess that I have never had the honor of bodyguarding a tank before.”

    “With a fucking sword too, preacher. Isn’t that a bit archaic?” She asked, amused. A laugh escaping her lips. Her typical personality broke through to the surface, for the first time in hours.

    “If a sword was good enough for His Champion, a sword is good enough for me - and an innumerable host of Astartes, Sororitas, and officers of the Guard and Navy.” Preacher Dieter responded, although this time he openly smiled as he duly played his role as a priest.

    “Good enough for pioneering too.” Antheia smirked. The Captain shared a glance with Pity, who was now awkwardly looking at the pile of collected wood next to their fire.

    “Can’t say I know where my chainsword is right now though. It’ll be a dark day if you ever catch me trying to use it.” She admitted, her smirk not fading. She wasn’t going to try convincing him he was wrong, at least not in public.

    “Surely the more appropriate target for your barb would have been my choice in armor?” The swordsman queried, his smile remaining, as he continued to defend the honor of bladecraft.

    The Cadian conceded the point with a soft hum. He wasn’t wrong. She had absolutely intended to tease him about how ridiculous it was to wear leather armor while participating in mechanized warfare on a Hive world…at least until he had removed it, and the black and white vestments of his order for maintenance while they camped, and she saw how ridiculously well he wore those leather breeches. She found it not so objectionable, now.

    “Yes, but it’s so much more enjoyable to see how defensive you get about your sword.” Antheia said as truthfully as she lied by omission.


    * * * * *

    Men and their swords. Matchlocks driver thought to herself. Half a smile on her lips as she smoked another lho.

    Katie had decided to remove herself from the Andy’s as the began to bicker like the married couple they claimed they’d never be about Short Andy’s promotion, and took a moment to enjoy being closer to the fire for a minute as she killed off the lho she’d pinched off her new corp. She flicked the filter into the fire, and pulled the one of the smokes she’d yoinked off him - when he’d otherwise been distracted by a headlock, and tits, twice - from where she’d surreptitiously tucked it behind her ear. It was the least she deserved.

    The Mariochi grinned as she listened to her new captain and the preacher man from her old company go back and forth about swords - the innuendo of it all not lost on her in the slightest…and she was there for it, even though she wisely avoided wading into it. Yeah, they were hot. Yeah, she’d do either, or both together, in a heartbeat - and, yeah, she’d watch if she ever caught them doing it. Not that that was going to happen.

    Instead, Katie focused on the possible as she casually moseyed her way towards Hera. She caught the other woman’s eye as she made her approach, and added that extra little sway to the hips to check and see how serious her new hull buddy and probable fuck buddy, by how flirty their banter had been was about talking arses as she closed in.
    The driver took notice, a coy smile on her face as Katie approached.

    “Hey, Hera.” Katie greeted, her grin widened more than a little bit as she wiggled in no way meant to be suggestive, honest her fingers around purloined lho. “Can I bum a light?”

    “Come to steal my smokes too?“ Hera paused, hand reaching for her lighter as the other brushed a strand of brown hair behind her ear. “Or, do you want me to light your fire?”

    “Primed and ready for ignition, girlie.” Katie cheerfully responded, as if they were actually talking about a lho. She invited herself onto the plastek bench Hera occupied, surely pleb seats torn from any of the many transit hubs in this district, crossing knee over knee as she slid in. The smooth surface incidentally made her nudge hips with Hera. Oopsie.

    The Mariochi nonchalantly snaked her muscular arm across the backrest behind the Cadian, as she leaned close for Hera to light her lho. The proximity brought their thighs firmly into contact, and the driver’s arm was squarely nudged by breast. Incidental, of course. Katie didn’t make an issue of it, as physical contact like this was to be expected when five Guard fit humans shared a confined space. You simply had to grin, bear it, and soldier on.

    “Now as for your smokes, I absolutely wouldn’t try to steal them.” Katie assured, audibly, before she brought her lips close to Hera’s ear for some sultry murmur action. “‘Cause unlike with the boys, when you're face first in my tits…my fingers won't be playing lift a lho, babe.”

    Katie withdrew and craned her neck to look at Hera in her violet eyes. She moistened her lips with a leisurely swipe of her tongue still nothing suggestive there, folks before she raised her freshly lit lho, her mouth set in a half smirk as she took an indulgent first draw.


    “Sharing is caring…” The driver repeated the woman’s earlier phrase, her voice a purr. Hera flicked her half smoked lho and turned her attention to her next target of stress relief. She leaned back into Katie’s arm, “and I think we’re going to do a lot of sharing.”

    “Lookin’ forward to it, babe.” Katie murmured as she exhaled out the side of her mouth, and openly curled her arm around Hera’s shoulders as she nestled in. The Mariochi plucked her lho out, and gazed around the campsite. The big, beautiful battle tanks, crewed by new and interesting and some fuckable, already down to fuck comrades from the most renowned world of soldiers so sayeth the propagandists in the Imperium…and zero Mustache.

    Katie considered how her fortunes had changed. Warmed by the fire, the lho and the woman under her arm and the thoughts of all their sharing to come, she sighed contentedly and squeezed Hera tighter. She’d had the single best day of the crusade.


    * * * * *

    The swordsman adopted a wounded expression, undercut by his lingering smile, as he cradled his sheathed weapon protectively against his chest. He clicked his tongue, and gestured to the las pistol in its synthetic fabric holster affixed incongruously on the intricately worked leather of his sword belt. They were both clearly the first issue to any Guard’s eyes.

    “I was bequeathed a sidearm when I was ordained a Preacher, for what that is worth.”


    “I know we tried requesting supplies for your men, I didn’t know the situation was that desperate.” Antheia jested.

    “If we are ever in a situation that desperate - where the combined courage, firepower and skill of second company’s armor and fifth company’s infantry - depended on an additional las pistol?” Preacher Dieter questioned rhetorically, and chuckled. “My faith is in Him, and I will trust my sword to have a more providential outcome for us all.”

    Pity smirked, and slapped Adelbert’s, My Fair Lady’s driver, arm in amusement. Adel glanced at the loader Dieter and rubbed his arm, feigning pain. Dieter just mouthed a silent fuck you.

    Loader Dieter shifted his gaze to Pity then brought his hands together, and made a slashing motion. He saw the man cutting off table and chair legs with the Captain’s chainsword for fuel for their fire. Pity just returned the same silent insult.

    “Next time Preacher, just ask. You can have some of our PDW’s. I doubt Commissar Heinold would lash us for it, too much.” Pity added, gesturing over to Mandator parked on the other side of the camp. Commissar Cadet Remus stood on watch while the others slept.

    “While I appreciate the offer, I must decline - and not merely to spare you all from the lash.” Preacher Dieter sighed, and gave the Cadians an almost apologetic look. “I am, I must confess, an absolutely terrible shot. I never even bothered to unholster my pistol today.”

    “What’s the old mantra? Any Cadian who can't field-strip his own lasgun by age ten was born on the wrong planet. Come on, Preacher. You can’t be saying we were better shots than you in our pre-pubescent years. How quick can you even field-strip that pistol, anyway?” Adelbert quipped.

    “Not quickly enough.” The swordsman allowed after a considered pause.

    “Can’t have a pre-pubescent Cadian beating a crusader, can we Preacher? Though, to be fair on the flipside, the Preacher here could probably best any of us in a duel.” Antheia said, with a warm laugh. “I’m happy to show you some pointers, during our halts. Stances, hand movements, and grip.”

    “I would welcome that.” Preacher Dieter agreed as he held her gaze with a genuine smile.

    “Uh, excuse me. Ma’am and sir.”

    Preacher Dieter blinked and chided his inattention to his surroundings with a hmm as he swiveled his head towards the voice. Ruben stood at a slightly too respectful distance, caught indecisively in-between attention and at ease stance. He could see in the man’s stare that he was in some acute distress, but he had summoned the courage to break into the conversation. The sword brother took as a positive sign under the circumstances with any of the legionaries. He bid the man relax with a low wave of his hand, and speak with a nod.

    “My apologies for the intrusion…but…might I ask for you to bless my heavy bolter, Preacher Dieter?” Ruben asked, with a stilted side-jerk of his head back towards Midnight - and relative privacy. Undoubtedly, there was a further ask to come beyond the prayer.

    “It would be an honor, Ruben.” Preacher Dieter affirmed, and assured he meant it to the legionary with a smile. He turned towards the knot of Cadians. “If we do not speak again tonight, have a good evening. Thank you for your service to Him and the Imperium today.”

    The preacher marked the Aquila points, the length of chain which bound him to his blade jangling sympathetically as he made the holy symbol. He sketched a measured bow, one hand clasped around his sheathed sword while the other rested a hand on Ruben’s back, as he walked with the Tranchite across the campsite to have a conversation by Midnight.


    The Cadian Captain watched as the preacher retreated, her gaze lingered for longer than she thought. Maybe it was the banter, maybe there was a hint of regret for the private conversation she was going to pull him into once he was done, maybe it was the unwavering support and validation he gave her, or maybe it was just his damn physique. She took a deep breath, then pulled herself up. Everyone was talking now, a sense of contentedness washed over her. It was finally time to have something to eat, she had a B ration Verdikine stew with her name on it.

    * * * * *

    “Cadet Remus!” Wilhelm called out, raising his hands to form a cone around his lips.

    When the Commissar Cadet noticed the Lt, Wilhelm waved him over. Solon approached them, apprehensive. A stern look across his face. Lascarbine in hand from the past hour of sentry duty, finger outside the guard in good trigger discipline. As Solon approached, he eyed over the intermixed Cadians and Loyal Legionaries still awake. The Cadet cleared his throat, then glanced daggers at Wilhelm.

    “While Commissar Heinold sleeps, I’m acting regiment Commissar. Please address me as such.” Solon said coldly.

    “Yes, Commissar.” Wilhelm returned, before adding. “I just wanted to ask you a personal question.”

    “I don’t think that’s appropriate, given our charges.” Solon replied, his tone unchanging. Some of the Cadians had found it difficult to take the young man seriously. His soft features simply didn’t match the uniform he wore. Solon paused, thinking of what Commissar Heinold might do.

    “Given your heroism today, however, I’ll allow it.” Solon finally answered, his voice suddenly warmer.

    “That sister hospitaller, the one in the field hospital. Her name is Remus, any relations?” Lieutenant Wilhelm asked, politely.

    Solon nodded.

    “Older sister, second eldest in my family. Her name is Roxanna. Haven’t seen her in years.” The Cadet Commissar stated, despite his warmer tone his voice still had that same stoicism that Heinold was known for.

    “A family reunion on Adrantis then!” Lt Wilhelm exclaimed. Some of the 3rd platoon's tankers laughed, Solon only rolled his eyes.

  5. #95
    The Last Remembrancer
    dakkagor's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2011
    Location
    the luminous Aether
    Favourite Roleplay Genres
    Modern times or Sci-Fi games.
    Posts
    2,047
    Mentioned
    65 Post(s)
    Rep Power
    201

    Default

    “Captain.” a message runner reported, sketching a sharp bow before handing over a data slate detailing the offensive forces still aboard the titan tender. “Equerry Savic requests an update. Our orders?”

    "Tell Equerry Savic we are engaging the Seperatist Hulk, and have him pray for us."

    Chao leaned over the hololith, data spooling. She needed more of everything. Time, resources, safety, guns. Machine God, just more guns would be a miracle.

    "Shipmistress, Sensori has identified the groundside coordination point for the orbital defenses. Intermittent vox transmissions identify a tower on the Primary hive."

    "Has there been a transmission of surrender? Any sign of the guns being safed?"

    "No, ship mistress."

    "Kill the spire. And get the Amazonium back on board. All of them. Top priority."

    + + + + + +

    The bombardment cannon thundered. Three shells, each one tipped with an armour piercing warhead with a delayed action fuse, controlling a plasma warhead rated in the 5 megaton range.

    The spire, an armoured spike reaching into the poisoned skies of Tranch, was home to several million people beyond being the hub of the orbital defenses. The first strike caused it to shiver and distort like melting glass, crumpling inwards. The second strike burrowed deeper with mechanical precision, gouging deep into the reinforced inner layers. The third found the new weak points and dug deeper yet, finding the geothermal sinks, capacitor arrays, and vast reserves of volatile fuel and ammunition.

    Each shell exploded at the same time for maximum sympathetic impact. The tower didn't so much explode as disintegrate, the other structures around it channeling the phosphor-white blast upwards in a howling column of released energy. Two more towers, poorly maintained, collapsed from the shockwaves. Fires and secondary explosions ravaged the lower hive, chaining off vulnerable fuel pipes, reservoirs and chem-silos. Power died across the continent sized city as black-outs ran rampant. Three billion souls where plunged into the dark as air and water filtration shut down. Millions more would die, unregarded in the suffocating stillness of the lower hive, before enginseers could restore life support functionality.

    Compared to a full bombardment, it was surprisingly precise. The fabric of the hive survived, and people could always be replaced. The next few years would be remembered as surprisingly prosperous, as the bodies of the dead would feed the living, and there would be room to grow in the vast, polluted rat-like warrens of the hive.

    The outhive sprawl felt Shepherds wrath next as the broadside guns turned the outhabs into smouldering, hot glass. The main spine punch blasted entire companies of hive defenders to skeletons in their defensive positions. Tanks were thrown like toys, entire companies of artillery obliterated by counter-battery fire there was no response to. It made the Titans heroic efforts earlier look almost comical.

    Under that apocalyptic death, delivered without pity, remorse, or emotion of any kind, the Titans and their foot soldiers withdrew to their ships. In fast gunships, their elites, the Amazonium and as many Skitarii as could be packed aboard, raced for the Shepherd. She would hold position, for now.

    + + + + + +

    Fire, then darkness. The lights of the hive went out, leaving the hive as a blackened, poisonous mountain. An anthill filled with terrified, screaming humans.

    "Broadcast, all channels."

    "Comms to your station, Ship Mistress."

    Chao picked up the mic, and held it close.

    "This is Shipmistress Chao of the Shepherd of Light. The destruction of the Spire 3/7, responsible for coordinating the orbital defenses, was conducted such as to minimise overall casualties in the Hive proper. However, I also consider it an act of divine vengeance, for the cowardly destruction of the Convent of the Silent Vigil by the Nebulas tech abomination hulk. I do not offer terms of surrender. I demand the total surrender of all patriot forces. There can be no negotiation with traitors."

    She killed the comms.

    "Make sure the flight decks are kept clear. And have the crew prepare for close action."

Page 10 of 10 FirstFirst ... 8910

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •