So someone over at boot camp wanted me to expand on the single page bit of crap i wrote about my mercs, so today i did. Be warned that the language and punctuation will both be simple and rough 'cos this is first draft and i haven't proof read it yet but anyway, read and comment.
Just another job
The ready room was bustling with activity. With enough space to comfortably accommodate twice the number of men in it, the room would?ve looked empty if it weren?t for the stacks of ammunition, grenades, tube charges, batteries and other supplies taking up the bottom half of it. The room had a large cargo door at the top end with a high ceiling and cold steel walls, it clearly wasn?t designed for comfort but the occupants didn?t mind one bit. <?
Spaced along either gunmetal grey wall of the bare room were 8 men checking weapons and equipment, a large pack laying open on their temporary bunks with various items spread across the floor from it. Looking out of place in their jungle fatigues and black body armour, these 8 men were the first squad of the Blackhawk mercenary company, the room was on their looted cobra class destroyer and they were preparing for planetfall.
Master Sgt Tanhauser sighed to himself as he methodically checked his kit.
Plasma pistol clean and charged? Check.
Power sword same? Check.
I?m tired of this. He thought to himself.
All plasma bottles full? Check.
Fresh batteries for microbead, tactical illuminator and whatever else needs them? Check.
It should be over by now. He continued to remind himself. The colonel said it would be over by now. He made us renounce our oaths, our emperor for his revenge and it still isn?t over.
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All pouches secure? Check.
7 years. It?s been 7 years since we started this and we are still going. I?ve saved enough to buy myself a nice piece of land on Seleca 3, maybe open a pub with Draken and Morley, but he won?t let us stop ?til he?s had his revenge.
The ?he? he was referring to was Colonel Grim, leader of the Blackhawks and the ?revenge? was the murder of the now General Kirsk, who sold the unit out all those years ago on Massil. The colonel had vowed to hunt him down and kill him to honour the regiment. Unfortunately that had been harder than expected and the unit, previously known as the 5th storm trooper special ops battalion had been forced to undertake various side missions for contractors to pay for ammo and supplies on the black market. The longest of those jobs was working for the bizarre tau race in the defence of one of their colonies from a space marine assault. That had taken 2 years and resulted in the famous ?immaculate indent? awarded to them at the end of the engagement. The tau had used their advanced technology to gift the colonel whatever he wanted for the men.
At the time many thought he might simply ask for land to settle down and be done with the constant fighting but he did not. Instead he asked for improved body armour, augmetic neural enhancements and customised autogun/linear accelerator hybrid weapons.
Master Sergeant Tanhauser sighed. He was a tall man in his mid forties, with wide shoulders and a muscular frame. He wore his greying hair shaved close to the skin and his hooded green eyes were those of a vastly experienced soldier, somehow seeming both determined and dead at the same time. Like every other members of his team, Sergeant Tanhauser had spent his entire life as a soldier, being brought up an orphan in the Schola progenium to be a storm trooper. He felt he had suffered everything the Galaxy had to throw at him, and was nearing the end of his patience.
He looked across the room made eye contact with Morley, who gave a barely perceptible nod in acknowledgement. The veteran vox operator was a tall, well built man in his late forties, his grey hair shaved high and tight in a severe military crew cut. He sat on his bunk, smearing his face and bare arms with cam cream. Morley never wore sleeves, he said they restricted movement.
Morley was Tanhauser?s closest friend, they had been comrades since a young age when they first met in the schola and had been the only other member of the company to openly oppose the colonel?s heresy. Tanhauser was no fool, he knew that the colonel had put them in the same team to keep an eye on them. It was the same reason they were team 1.
The teams were numbered according to the colonels preference, with a team?s number changing based on performance. This served a number of purposes, it gave the colonel a solid core of troops he knew he could depend on in a pinch and it kept the teams sharp, always trying to out do each other as the higher you ranked, the better jobs you got. It was a simple system and it worked well.
The colonel had made Sgt Tanhauser team 1 to keep him sweet, hoping that flattery would keep his dissident nature in check. As Tanhauser would grudgingly admit, it worked. He didn?t want to lose his premier status any more than the other Sgts wanted to get it.
Next to Morley was Draken. The heavy gunner was in his mid thirties, was another long term friend of The Sarge, and was even taller and more heavily muscled than Morley. His blonde hair was cut in the same way as Morley?s, an old school military cut and his handsome face was marred with a deep scar running horizontally across his cheeks underneath the eyes. Draken checked his heavy bolter, cycling the powered ammo hopper over and over making sure the mechanism ran smooth as he tracked the barrel from left to right. The autosense link on his headset overlayed a transparent image from the weapons optics in front of his eye, allowing the big man to accurately fire the cumbersome weapon on the move.
At the other end of the room were delta fireteam, the other 4 members of team 1 going through the same checks. Tanhauser?s second in command, Marcus Harkon raised an augmetic thumb in greeting, the mouth on the half of his head that was still real splitting into a big grin. The dark skinned warrior had lost his left arm and part of his head to a bolt round against the astartes Partway through the Tau contract. His speech suffered as a result but otherwise he was still an excellent leader, a career soldier through and through. The three other members of his team were nearly ready, ?Gunnar? the team?s light gunner slammed a fresh drum mag into his support variant assault carbine and Hawkins Checked the scope on his sniper rifle, the heavy calibre weapon settled on the end of his bunk with bipod legs extended. The slim man?s camo cloak was rolled up and sat neatly on top of his webbing, ready to be deployed at a moments notice. Drennen connected his underslung grenade launcher to the lug on his assault carbine, the single shot tube locking into place with a loud click. Team 1 was very heavily armed for a unit of it?s size, toting enough firepower round for round to match a space marine force of equal numbers. The assault carbine was easily a match for a bolt gun, a small linear accelerator increasing the lethality of a standard issue autogun round a hundredfold. Coupled with mobile heavy bolters, grenade launchers, sniper rifles, plasma pistol and all manner of other weaponry, the Blackhawks did not take to the field under equipped.
Finally, Tanhauser looked at the man next him and felt a chill run through him as he engaged eye contact. After a lifetime of war, pain and death, seeing things that would drive a lesser man insane, fighting all manner of foul enemies from orks to daemons, nothing scared the Sarge.
Except Corporal Nathan Krause.
Krause was striped to his waist, his wiry, well muscled torso covered in numerous scars, both from combat and surgery. Team 1 joked behind his back that Krause was a marine wannabe as he spent practically every penny he earned on surgical upgrades. He got a taste for it after the Tau contract when the whole regiment was upgraded with neural enhancements to increase reflex speed. For Krause this had proven to be merely the start. He had gone far beyond that initial operation, getting his body implanted with strength enhancers, titanium bone plating, nocturnal optic membranes and all manner of other enhancements on the black market. As a result his bones seemed unusually prominent and his muscles constantly twitched in a seemingly random pattern giving him a disturbing, inhuman quality. Wearing his black hair in a short mohican, Krause?s grey eyes seemed to be stuck in a permanent stare, glaring menacingly from his gaunt face. Krause was busily checking his kit, robotically going through the motions at speed, kneepads, thigh plates, thigh pouches, vest, combat jacket, body armour, assault rig, gloves and camo all being readied in seconds.
Tanhauser didn?t like Krause because the lead scout, for all his admirable skill, was clearly psychotic. The man lived for war, caring for nothing but bringing death to whatever was deemed his enemy at the time. He always carried an immense amount of ammo for his carbine and bolt pistol, his augmented body barely registering the weight of the ammo pouches strapped all over his body, as well as a short barrelled combat shotgun slung down his back. For a short term op it was SOP to carry six rifle mags, 2 grenades and 3 bolt pistol mags, Krause carried at least double this. Fully kitted up in under a minute, the corporal?s furious activity stopped as suddenly as it started. His head turned smoothly to one side and looked at Tanhauser as though he was a sentry turret locking onto a target ?Ready Sarge.? He stated bluntly.
Krause was one scary son of a grox.
Tanhauser glanced at his chronometer.
?ok men, make your way to deployment bay 5 while I have a final talk with the boss. We drop in 15, make sure your good to go.?
Seven voices chorused in acknowledgement.
Sgt Tanhauser couldn?t help feeling uneasy about this, after all it was not every day that you went back to the place your regiment died.
Massil.
This was going to be a strange one.
Second Lieutenant Keltsin gulped as he took in the sight of the Inquisitor and his retinue. A slight man in his early twenties, Keltsin was the latest in a long line of Departmento munitorium officers from his family line. He didn?t really like the job, he never wanted to follow in his father?s footsteps as a practitioner in logistics but he had had no choice in the matter. Looking uncomfortable in his stiff grey Dress uniform, Keltsin and the 2 guardsmen next to him Saluted awkwardly as the inquisitor approached.
Inquisitor Fellon, A tall, powerfully built man with hawkish features and a shaven head stood still in front of the young officer, waiting for the departing dropship?s engine report to fade into the distance away before speaking.
Wearing a long leather coat which covered the tops of his knee high black boots, the inquisitor was remarkably unremarkable in his appearance, the only hint of his immense authority being a tiny inquisitorial symbol fastened to his coat lapel. Inquisitor Fellon did not need to appear threatening to impose his authority, the two huge, power armoured space marines flanking him performed that task admirably. Rain dripped freely from their polished black armour, as they stood perfectly still, boltguns held at a position of attention. Stood behind them was a heavily augmented scribe, two men in simple robes clutching large books who Keltsin took to be priests and a sinister looking young man dressed to look like an identical copy of Fellon.
?Lieutenant Keltsin.? Fellon said loudly, raising his voice over the rising storm. ?let?s get inside out of this weather shall we?? He continued, gesturing to the firebase with a gloved hand.
?Certainly sir, right this way? Keltsin replied nervously, eying the marines warily as he keyed in the access codes to the outer bulkhead of his firebase. ?Lord, im honoured that you chose My firebase to conduct your inspection?? Keltsin begun as he led the way inside, feeling thankful to be out of the rain. ?My team have prepared accommodation for you and a late meal is available in the mess for you an<st1
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?there is no need for any of this, Keltsin.? The inquisitor interrupted. ?just show me to the vault so I can begin my work.? The young Lieutenant looked flustered for a moment, then regained his composure.
?Yes of course, my lord.? He said with a smile, bowing slightly as he spoke.
?And make sure nobody disturbs me, failure to do this will not be taken lightly, do you understand?? The Inquisitor drew out the last three words to emphasise their importance.
?ye, yes sir.? Keltsin stammered. The group Made their way to the vault without another word being spoken. For the love of the throne. Keltsin thought to himself. The sooner this is over the better.
Inquisitor Fellon smirked to himself as he read the blunt?s thoughts, ironically enough it would be over for all of them soon if his suspicions were correct.
Tanhauser was cold and wet. Despite the muggy atmosphere and warm temperature, lying motionless on the sodden jungle floor eventually took its toll. Taking another look through his pocket scope, Tanhauser observed the track fifty metres to their front as the patrol advanced towards his position. They had been observing for 4 hours now and the sun was beginning to set. This was the third patrol he had seen in that time and they had not been at regular intervals, this was a surprisingly combat savvy tactic for a bunch of rear echelon logistics troopers. Indeed, why did a firebase perimeter need to be patrolled so frequently in a supposed friendly environment over 150 klicks behind the front line? Tanhauser checked that the suppressor on his stub pistol was locked tight and gestured for his men to do the same. While still feeling a general sense of unease at the situation, Sgt tanhauser decided that now was the time to act as he was getting impatient and felt like getting out of the weather. As the ten man patrol moved across the concealed men?s path, Tanhauser reached down to his throat mic and scratched it twice.
This was the signal to move.
6 hours earlier:
The sgt strapped himself in and got comfortable in the heavy duty dropship seat before looking at his data<st1
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?You know the basics of this mission already so I?ll not go over it again. Here is some additional intel for you to analyse before you hit the ground.? With that, he handed the Sgt a dataslate and left.
Indeed, Tanhauser did know the basics of the mission, hardly enough to deploy with but it was enough. That was the nature of fastball ops, you had to make much of it up on the ground. The mission history went something like this:
The planetary commander is making huge gains in the war against the orks, working in conjunction with imperial commanders to retake Massil. Tacticians predicted that the war would be over by next candlemas and all that was left was the mopping up of smaller, isolated ork tribes that were left behind in the fighting. Deep in the jungle there is a firebase which has been fitted with a long range vox as well as higher than standard grade security equipment at the command of the planetary commander. Seismic surveys show that this base also has a second, subterranean floor below the main complex, consisting of extra troop accommodation and a large room that is resistant to all known types of scanning equipment. While the placing of the firebase was nothing out of the ordinary as there are many small ?magazine? type firebases dotted across the continent, this one was unusual. Although attempts were made to carry out the construction of these extra facilities in a clandestine matter, they did not escape the attentions of the local inquisitorial representative. The planetary commander, who remains nameless for opsec (operational security) reasons found out hours ago that inquisitor Fellon intended to inspect the facility.
Coincidentally, (yeah right, was Tanhauser?s reaction) Massil?s largest criminal family has employed the Blackhawks to take out Inquisitor Fellon plus retinue and make it look like an Ork attack, obviously taking out the entire firebase?s crew in the process.
Wondering what the hell was in that underground chamber, Tanhauser browsed through his data<st1
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ersonName>slate as the dropship cycled through it?s launch procedure. Apparently the firebases main defence came in the form of an automated, twin<st1
ersonName w:st="on">-</st1
ersonName>linked heavy bolter turret mounted above the main entrance. This turret was armoured and its independent machine spirit was resistant to jamming. Patrols were frequently seen searching the base?s perimeter for enemy activity and were saved from a gory death via heavy bolter by IFF tags around their wrists, identifying them to the turret as friendlies. The firebase itself had one entrance other than the 3 feet thick hardened plasteel main door, and that was a small maintenance hatch for the vox array on the roof. No rear security was necessary as the only possible approach route was via the tarmaced road leading to the entrance. The rest of the perimeter was surrounded by intensely thick vegetation, which in turn was saturated with booby traps so anyone approaching from any other way would be picked up miles away by the base auspex sensors as they crashed through the undergrowth.
Or blown up.
The data<st1
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Tanhauser mused to himself as to where this intel had come from as he passed the slate round for his comrades to study. Seemed to him that the only people with access to that stuff would be the site manager or planetary commander.
Oh well, hopefully the weather will be nice and warm.
He thought, keeping his spirits up before the inevitable heart stopping covert drop and long march in.
Unfortunately, the area was suffering the worst rains for 7 years.
Fellon wasn?t expecting this. The huge, heavily armoured door to his front stood defiantly closed, his inquisitorial access codes having no effect on the cogitator controlling the locking mechanism. Luckily for him his scribe Caruthal was adept at bypassing security systems, a by product of an augmented brain, and was making slow but steady progress at the data terminal. Fellon paced back and forth, impatient to get inside and confirm his suspicions.
Pashus, the twenty year old interrogator and Fellon?s first trainee, was not used to seeing his master like this. The inquisitor stalked back and forth, eyes fixed on the door, muttering under his breath. Having no warp<st1
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?Fellon, you should be patient, Caruthal will succeed. He always does.?
Fellon?s eyes met Pashus?s with a hard stare before replying.
?You have yet to understand the magnitude of this situation Pashus, do not give advice when you do not hold all the facts.?
Pashus was abort to retort when Fellon cut him off
?I cannot let you know the secrets of this vault until I am certain I am right. If I am wrong, I would rather that you are shielded from this threat for now, lest it taint your young mind.?
Fellon continued to pace as Pashus looked on. The Adeptus Astartes stood motionless, observing the door.
Colonel Grim was alarmed, to say the least. Teams 2 and 4 were formed in a semi circle, training their assault carbines on the small robed figure to their front. 16 red dots danced over the head and torso of the covered individual as he stood motionless in cargo bay 3 of the Cobra.
No ship had been detected approaching and there was no physical evidence of any other craft within 200,000 miles. This was simply unexplainable.
?Who are you, and how did you get on my ship undetected?? Grim asked the figure as he aimed his plasma pistol at the thing?s head area.
The creature, it?s features completely hidden by it?s robes, took a step forward. Instinctively, all the Blackhawks took a step back at the same time.
?Surely the question should be why I am currently on your vessel.? The creature said in a quiet, almost soothing voice.
?You need to know what I?m about to tell you, Colonel Grim. Its importance is paramount to the survival of this sector of imperial space.?
The Colonel wanted to respond, but found he couldn?t. His mouth simply refused to move.
?As ironic as this may seem that I am entrusting a unit that has forsaken their emperor with this knowledge, I had no choice as you are in the best position to act.? Every fibre in Grim?s body wanted to blast this abomination from the deck of his ship but he felt compelled to listen.
?Leave.? Said the creature.
The blackhawks retreated in perfect unison, leaving the cargo bay empty but for Grim and the visitor. Grim thought that they probably didn?t leave willingly.
?Wheels have been set in motion on a scale that you will find hard to comprehend so I will not bother you with irrelevant details. Just know this, in 500 years a man known as Khygor Sorphus will be born. He will be a psyker of rare ability and will ally himself to the ruinous powers. These forces will persuade him to destroy the emperor?s presence in this sector. The next hour will decide whether he succeeds or not.?
Somehow Grim could not help but believe the thing?s wild claims, feeling only the urge to serve the best he could.
?What do I need to do?? The colonel asked, suddenly able to speak again.
?Your task is simple and you are already in the process of completing it but I must reiterate its importance.? The creature said, locking Grim?s body and mind rigid again with it?s words, his only possible reaction being to listen.
?The vault under the firebase must not be opened. Fellon must be despatched, lest his bloodline be used unwittingly to assist the chaotic vermin. Even if it means destroying the base and your own team from orbit, that door must remain closed. You will contact your team to relay the importance of this, do you understand??
Grim nodded.
Trooper Halp puffed furiously on his L<st1
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This detail?s completely pointless
He thought to himself as he took another drag, the red cherry glowing brightly in the evening gloom. He had a point, the complex sensor array would pick up any intruder way before he saw them in the dark, and with the torrential rain he couldn?t hear anything either so it was pretty stupid to have him out there. The HB turret rotated rapidly to the left, locking onto something Halp couldn?t see. ?Emperor damn this place!? A voice shouted out of the darkness, accompanied by a series of splashes. Trooper Coldwin stepped up onto the track and joined Halp under the turret. Having just completed a perimeter check, Coldwin?s waterproof gear was slick with wet mud and he shivered in the comparative cold. Halp handed him the L<st1
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?Least you?re outta here next week.? Halp said grumpily.
?I got another 2 months ?fore my rotations up.?
Coldwin Chuckled as he handed the stick back.
?Yeah, but what am I going back to? Every where?s like this now.? He gestured out into the sinister looking jungle.
Coldwin gazed out into the trees for a moment then turned to speak again. Halp?s L<st1
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Squinting in the darkness, Coldwin could just make out the dark shape of a body lying there.
?What th<st1
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Before the body had hit the floor, Krause had holstered his pistol and stalked forward in a combat crouch, scanning his arcs with his carbine. The rest of the team, all wearing IFF tags taken from the patrol, followed and took up defensive positions around the doorway covering a 360 degree frontage. Morley moved up to the door access terminal and switched off the mobile jamming function on his Tau manufactured vox unit. It needed to be off for his gear to work, and it was only for a minute or so. Yanking the small maintenance hatch open under the door terminal, Morley jacked his palm top unit into the main socket of the panel. A dull green display lit up on his palmtop as the sophisticated xenos tech deciphered the relatively primitive Imperial cogitator?s access codes. After about 20 seconds there was a loud click as the simple system gave up and the base door slowly slid open. Switching his jamming gear back on, Morley gestured to Tanhauser to move, he in turn ordering the team to move in with Draken on point. Like a well oiled machine the small unit changed formation and silently advanced into the complex.
?Whoa, what was that?? Ellis said, nearly jumping out of his seat.
?What was what?? Lieutenant Keltsin asked, striding across the ops room to have a look.
Ellis pointed to his auspex display.
?Monitor showed 8 blips outside the main entrance for a second, then nothing.
In fact, come to think of it, it?s not even showing the sentries now, sir.?
Keltsin thought about telling the inquisitor, then remembered his instructions and thought better of it.
?It?s probably nothing. I?ll detail 2 men to check out the main entrance and ask for a tech adept to come and check our ?most holy? equipment in the morning.?
This was just typical, the equipment just had to start going wrong when an inquisitor was conducting an inspection.
Keltsin hoped that this wouldn?t affect his promotion prospects.
Inquisitor Fellon stood stock still, the muscles in his jaw clenching and unclenching rhythmically.
Caruthal had just informed him that the second of three security seals had been bypassed, the third would be finished in a matter of minutes.
Grim tried to contact the team for the fourth time in as many minutes. He knew that they were using jamming equipment so it would be a useless effort, but he had to try anyway.
He turned around to inform the creature that he would keep up the attempts but he was no longer there.
well that's it so far.
Darkchild