Around the fire sat the remnants of the once-proud
and planet-wide famous Regiment, the Catachan XXI, the 'Blackblades', named for
the infamous knives they carried of their deathworld homes. Trooper Danth
counted 10 men in all, from a number that should have been another 10 times
that. The figures, dressed in shabbily kept and rapidly deteriorating green
fatigue uniforms kept huddled to the fire, huge mounds of scrap around them
blocking out the winds that howled in the night. Colonel Ripley had said to
keep the men to the inner piles at the Quay, to better fend off whatever might
come at them. Looking over, Danth saw Trooper Storm asleep beside the crackling
warmth of the flames, reminiscent of the burning fires that leapt from the
monstrous heavy flamer unit he was using to prop his head up off the
rubble-strewn ground. No matter. Orks, Chaos worshippers, Eldar... A squad of
10 guardsmen was easy pickings. Danth held no illusions that either the Emperor
was testing them, or they were truly alone.
The most perceptive of those not engaged in idle chatter, or asleep, a dull
'clunk' of metal caught the attention of his ear. He tilted his head slightly,
eyes diverting to the makeshift tent that Ripley had set up, and was coming out
of then. Ripley was impressive. A hulking man, even by Catachan standards, he
filled the suit of Adeptus Astartes power armour he had ripped from one of the
heretic's corpses with nothing but a rippling bulk of muscle, bulging arms left
uncovered by the heavy and restricting armour. His jaw as always was set
determinedly, a cigar stub that was perpetually unlit clamped between his
teeth. In the darkness, Danth could just make out the Ork-hide eyepatch over
the Colonel's left eye - a little souvenier from Ghazzghkull Thraka himself. He
was 67, and greying hair alone wasn't the only sign to that. Face haggard and
lined with a look of having borne all the cares in the universe since the dawn
of the Imperium, Ripley was hardly a handsome man. But then, Danth conceded, it
was not a place to be a handsome man.
"You hear that?" he barked across the campsite, half the men still
oblivious to the grating of their commander's voice, the other half too tired
or drunk to care.
Danth made his reply short and concise, as the Colonel liked it. "Yessir.
Came from over the pile there, skimmer parts. Too small for Ork... Maybe
Grots?"
Ripley's face screwed up, merely lining the pitted skin further. "Equip
yourself. You'll come with me. Point."
With that said, Riply disappeared into his tent again, presumably to prepare
for one of the forays into the scrap that would often be heralded as the wily
old Colonel's last mission. Bets were being placed amongst the belligerent
Troopers even as Danth scooped up his Triplex-pattern lasgun.
"Emperor's teeth, you lot disgust me," he spat violently, the
liquid projectile hissing in the flames like an Ork on the business end of a
plasma cannon, "get off your plague-ridden behinds and come out to do
something. You're Guardsmen, not Hivers. Act like it."
It was the same routine every night. The Troopers merely gave the ranking Grunt
a one-fingered salute and sent him on his way.
* * *
Ripley raised a brow slightly as the pair - he and Danth, as it always was -
stalked through the rubble of the once proud and prosperous Quay. During the
Ork's invasion, it had been one of the primary targets, even the shattered
husks of buildings left standing could testify to what must have once been a
great place, trading posts, manufactoriums... Now, just a hunk of tinfoil in
the dirt. Using every scrap of cover - Catachans they were, jungle fighters by
nature, but cover is cover - they advanced together on the source of the noise,
Danth with his lasgun raised to his shoulder, Ripley with a belt-fed bolter
held at hip-level to spray whatever came at them with .50 calibre death.
The pair approached the last rise, and looked over... There were no Orks,
Grots, Chaos cultists... A lone teen from one of the few human settlements
could be seen to stagger his way aimlessly around the garbage, looking for
them, Danth knew. The Blackblades were famous, and this one was like the rest:
Come to add his name to the list of legends. If like the rest, he was pounded
into the dust in his first fight, there was no loss. If like Danth, he lived,
he would rise - perhaps to become even like the great Colonel Ripley. Said
Colonel let out a gruff chuckle and tossed his bolter to Danth, the ammo belt
clinking like fine silverware on some upperhive dining table, stepping out over
their encroachment. The boy practically ran over, throwing a moderately
respectful, if not totally pathetic salute to both Ripley and the Trooper with
Ripley.
"You out here all by yourself, son?" asked Ripley, his tone ever-acid
and as condescending as he could manage.
"Yessir!" chirped the youngster all too quickly. Another yes-man.
Danth had seen three of them go in as many months. "I want to be a
Blackblade, jus' like my Dad, Ripp Storm!"
Danth couldn't help but snort derisively, until Ripley shot him a look. Let the
child have his heroes. "What makes you think you're ready, son? There's a
lot that needs to be done in a Freedom Fighter's unit... You've got to be able
to shoot straight, shut your trap when we're trying stealth tactics, and most
of all-" he jabbed a glaived hand into the youth's chest, "keep a
uniform looking respectable."
Danth straightened up, pulling his shoulders back. The youth jutted his chin
out indignantly, "If that's all you want me to do, I'll make Sergeant in a
week!"
Let him try, mused Danth.
