And the Story EDs
"Through space and time
Coast
to coast
You are always with me
A Holy Ghost
As You follow
And trust in me
So
I shalt follow
And believe in Thee
I go to
battle
Holding high Your torch
With its Holy
Fire
The enemy I'll scorch
With the
Slayer's sword
In my hand
I strike down the
enemy
Their tainted blood searing the land
'Tis
the blood of daemons
Creatures forlorn
Upholding
my promise
The blood oath I swore
In battle
the wounds
Scar my face
Before I fall
I
give over to Your Grace
The Dark Lord's soul
In
its unholy might
I grant to You
Then I descend
into the Light
Son of Eagle, Son of Wolf
Slew
the enemy from youth
I am the Slayer of Daemons
The
Warrior of Truth"
--Warrior
of Truth, written by Sebastian Yarrick, Imperial Commissar
Actually
penned by Cerion...
Data Log entry: Bastion
Yarrick
Chairman of the Civilian High Council
Date:
734.435 IF/001 NI
Personal Journal
Enter
password:
"I can hardly believe it's been an
entire month since the Necron threat ceased to exist. The Imperium
lives on, despite heavy losses. I honestly believed that the
celebrations that started that day would never end, but it has now
died down and the rebuilding has begun.
"On
that fateful day, my mother, Commissar General Tanya Yarrick
sacrificed herself for the better of the Imperium. Through the help
of the Eldarain, her body has been recovered, as well as the Yarrick
family sword.
"Now all that
remains to do, is something I wish I never had to do."
Bastion put down the data-slate as he
heard a soft knock on the door. He knew that knock.
"Come
in," he said and watched as Commissar Colonel Alexander
Demontfurt entered the room, clad in full dress uniform.
"It's
time, isn't it, Alex?" Bastion said with a sigh.
"Yes,"
Demontfurt simply replied. "Shall we go?"
Bastion
nodded, and then slowly shook his head. "I need a few moments to
collect myself, Alex. Get my emotions in control. You don't mind, do
you?"
"Not at all." Demontfurt
walked over to Bastion. "I won't say I understand how you feel,
sir, but I can say I have something of a similar feeling in my
heart."
Bastion looked up at the tall
and powerful political officer. He stood up slowly and then embraced
Demontfurt. Demontfurt tried hard not to shrug from the young man. He
answered the embrace, although reluctantly.
After
a few moments, Bastion detached himself and walked out of his office,
Demontfurt in tow.
They caught a transport to
a very familiar place, at least for Bastion Yarrick. It was a farm
yard, out in the fields of County Invas of Callidus. A long time ago,
Bastion knew, a madman had burnt the farm to the ground, but it had
been rebuilt not many years later. It was the Yarrick family
property. Where the main living house had once stood, a shrine had
been erected. It was small, the size of a village church and made in
a sober architecture very typical to Callidus.
Bastion
and Demontfurt entered it.
The shrine served
as the Yarrick family tomb now. Many of the family Yarrick were now
laid to final rest here, and one more would now be added. They went
towards the burial place of Bastion's father. When they got there,
Bastion looked sadly at the two sarcophagi. One of them held the
remains of his father. The other one was empty, but not for much
longer. Soon, his mother would join his father in the eternal sleep.
Together again, after so many years apart.
Bastion
checked that everyone was there. The Terrans, McKenzie, Charleston,
McGranth and Masterson. He hadn't wanted a huge burial. That would've
made his grief even harder to bear.
The
ceremony began, led by Demontfurt. The coffin, an ornate thing made
of mother of pearl and gold, was brought in by servitors that rolled
along on soft wheels. They slowly put the coffin in the sarcophagus
next to Bastion's father's.
Bastion didn't
quite listen to what Demontfurt said. He was busy focusing his mind
on something else. His eyes fell on the many statues in the
shrine-tomb. One statue or bust for every member of the Yarrick
family. They were innumerable. The largest one was of Hrodwulf Le'man
himself, and it dominated the Altar of the Aquila.
Bastion
wasn't the only one with his attention elsewhere. McKenzie was
thinking hard about the things that had happened lately. He threw a
glance at Masterson and read the man's mind, as softly as he could.
The sturdy commissar seemed quite beat down. McKenzie couldn't
believe what he felt from the man's emotions. McKenzie's surprise
made him incautious and Masterson noticed someone was reading him. He
turned and shot McKenzie a devastating glare.
Demontfurt
finished his part and motioned to Bastion to rise. The young man did
so, took Demontfurt's place and began to speak.
"My
dear friends, because that is how I see you all, I thank you
thoroughly for coming here at my request and joining me as we put my
mother, Commissar General Tanya Yarrick to rest. I could probably go
on for ages, saying what an asset she was to the Imperium etcetera,
but I won't. Because you already know all this. No, I want to tell
you about Tanya Yarrick, the mother.
"She
took care of me, although she had a hard time doing so. What amazes
me is that she decided to have a child, despite being a commissar. I
can't even begin to fully understand what drove her to that decision,
though, as I've read some of Commissar General Rolf Yarrick's
memoirs, I've begun to understand at least a little of it.
"But
I wasn't her only child. She saw all her soldiers as her children,
and treated them with the same love and concern a mother would show,
but for all that she wasn't indulgent. Quite the contrary. In all she
did, she was loving but also stern. I think that is what made her
such a good leader, and mother. She had an innate grasp of psychology
and knew well how to use it. Although she never admitted it, she was
a better politician than I can ever hope to become."
Bastion
stopped and stifled a sniff of sorrow.
"I'm
sorry. It's just... It's been over a month, and in my heart I know
she's gone forever, but my mind... it can't accept it. I had so much
more to do together with her, to ask her and to learn from her.
There's no chance for that now. I can't and won't blame anyone. I
won't even blame the Necrontyr. All I can say is, that my mother
showed the greatest kind of love anyone can show.
"She
died to save the Imperium, because, being a commissar, she loved that
more than anything; more than me or father or anyone alive."
Bastion bowed his head quickly to disguise
the tears that had welled up in his eyes.
"Thank
you for listening."
He walked back to
his seat and sat down. Demontfurt tried to comfort him, but was
shooed away. Quietly, for being him, Masterson managed to get the
others outside as the servitors placed the lid of the sarcophagus in
place. As they walked out, McKenzie heard Bastion whisper "Good-bye,
Mommy," to the coffin. The Master Lexicanum quickly turned away,
shutting the young man's sobs out. The full brunt of all that emotion
could kill him if he wasn't careful.
Half an
hour later, Bastion had recovered enough and went outside and walked
up to the Terrans, now back in their own clothes. Bastion's eyes were
puffy from tears, but he tried to keep his face up.
"Now,"
he said as he approached the Terrans, "I think it's time for the
second ceremony of the day, something a bit more cheerful."
"Aw," Eddy sighed, "do we have
to?"
Bastion laughed, but it sounded
forced.
"Yes, Eddy," he replied.
"You have to. Come on."
They
returned to Vindaree with the transports. Bunkered up as they were in
Chimeras APCs, the Terrans had no idea of where they were, until they
got unloaded. They stepped out into a large square. The Eds
remembered it from their first time here. This was the spot where the
high anchor harbour of the Cardinal Boras had been. Obviously, the
sky-scraper was gone. This was some sort of ground zero.
In
the centre of the square, there was something big, hidden by a large
piece of dark green cloth.
"Now,"
Bastion said and turned to McKenzie, Charleston and McGranth, "on
to business. First, you three."
Bastion
walked over to the three Marines. McGranth didn't seem to like what
was happening, and neither did Bastion, apparently.
"Grand
Commander McGranth, Commander Charleston and Master Lexicanum
McKenzie," Bastion began. "You have fought in the Name of
the Emperor and for the Emperor since times untold. Because of this
it is my duty, and my pleasure, to officially declare you Heroes of
the Imperium and bestow upon you the status of Holy Defenders of
Mankind."
McGranth silently rolled his
eyes.
"Are we done yet?" he
muttered.
"You are," Bastion
replied with a smile. Charleston and McGranth removed themselves from
the group, but McKenzie remained. "Now, for the rest of you."
The Terrans looked around sheepishly, trying to avoid each others
gaze and finding a friend's eyes at the same time. They did not
exactly like this idea.
"You have
shown," Bastion began, "that even the smallest of worlds
can produce the greatest of heroes. Today, I have three more duties
to perform. Firstly, I will award you these." An aide stepped up
next to Bastion, holding a purple velvet box. The aide opened the lid
of the box, revealing ten gilt, double eagle medallions on purple and
gold bands. Each one of the Terrans received an eagle medallion
around their necks. Bastion then stepped back to survey them
all. He nodded one single time in approval of what he saw.
"You
are Outlaws no more. From this day on, the High Council, the
Neo-Inquisition and the Commissariat officially recognises the Omega
Squadron as Imperial Warriors and a part of the vast Imperial Army.
After your return to your home world, a new phalanx is going to be
formed within the Imperium. A phalanx of specialists that are to
respond to any threat against the Imperium, alien or domestic. And
they shall be named the Omega Squadron.
"And,
speaking of your home world, Terra, which you have fought so bravely
to defend alongside the Imperium... I hereby award you, on the
mission of the High Council, with the title 'Defenders of Terra'.
Wear it proudly, Omega Squadron. Your world will one day join the
Imperium in all its glory, but until it does, I leave the safety of
Terra in your hands.
"And finally, my
last duty for today, is to do this."
Bastion
made a gesture and the present servitors removed the green cloth. As
the cloth slid away, a statue, cast from rockcrete, was revealed. It
showed the ten members of the current Omega Squadron, standing ready
to defend themselves with a resolute look on their faces.
"May
this statue stand as long as our glorious Imperium does. In that way,
we shall never forget our comrades from beyond the borders of
Imperial Space."
Eddy gawked at the
large thing. "Oh brother... was all that really necessary?"
"Yes, Eddy," Bastion smiled. "The
warp gate has been prepared, so it will soon be time for you to
return to Terra. Master Lexicanum, if you would?"
McKenzie
stepped forward, carrying a wraithbone staff, a last gift from the
Eldarain. He walked past Bastion and towards a spot in between the
wreckage that once had been a skyscraper. He brushed away the dirt
from the warp socket and started to chant in Eldar. The staff began
to glow. Brighter and brighter until it almost hurt to watch it.
McKenzie then raised the staff over his head, calling out to the
Eldar god Asuryan and drove the staff home into the socket. Quick as
lightning he turned it a quarter of a turn and stepped away. A bright
beam of multicoloured energy shot out of the staff and into the sky.
Then there was sudden silence.
"What
the frekk was tha-" Masterson began but the psychic beam
returned with a scream that drowned out all other sound. It struck
down into the wraithbone staff, shattering it into a thousand tiny
shards.
As the dust settled, a swirling
kaleidoscope of colour denoted the presence of the warp portal.
Eddy
sighed.
"Man... I can't believe this is
it. After all we've been through... This is really the last time,
right?" Eddy walked towards the swirling portal.
A
low rumbling was heard as Charleston and McGranth came driving up
with an unarmed troop-carrier.
"Hey!"
McGranth called. "Hold up a minute!"
Eddy
turned to look at his physical copy. "What's this?"
McKenzie smiled in that impish way only he
could. Eddy reflected it was strange to see Edd's features like that.
"Well," McKenzie began as he moved
to the back of the troop carrier, "we wouldn't want you guys to
leave empty-handed, now would we?" He threw down a hatch at the
back and pulled out some crate-like oblong boxes. "These boxes
contain your respective swords, the lightning claw glove, the power
fist, Niire and this bag contains Yarrick's greatcoat and cap."
He showed them that the boxes were tagged with names.
"I
don't understand," Edd said. "Why are all these things
here?"
"We had a bit of a chat
amongst ourselves," McKenzie said as he handed Edd his force
sword, "and we all decided that you couldn't leave without
souvenirs. So that you can remember us and what you've done."
"I got permission from the High
Council," Bastion inserted. "You can take them with you,
but only if you wish."
"I don't
know about this," Kevin said dubiously as he hefted the box
containing his power fist.
"Go on,"
Charleston beamed. "Their yours. So you can do whatever you like
with them."
"But, McKenzie,"
Johnny said nervously, "I can't take Niire."
"Yes,
you can, Johnny," McKenzie said and smiled softly at the boy.
"It's yours. I gave it to you as a gift, remember?"
Rolf
had opened his bag and was looking down into it, at Yarrick's coat
and cap. For some reason, he felt very uneasy about them. "I
don't know," he said slowly, "these things don't really fit
me anymore."
Bastion looked at him. "I
want you to have them, Rolf. My mother would have wanted you to."
Rolf merely nodded his agreement to this.
McKenzie
ignored Rolf and Bastion and walked up to Nazz. "I wouldn't want
to forget this now," he said and pulled out Saint Nazerine's
Crozius Arcanum from one of his leg pouches and hung it around Nazz's
neck.
"McKenzie, I-" Nazz began,
blushing ever so slightly.
"No,"
McKenzie cut her off, "it's back where it belongs now."
Nazz's blush deepened.
"Alright... I
guess..." she whispered. McKenzie smiled and stepped back to
survey the Terrans.
"I believe you're
all ready to go now. Just one more thing. A small favour to ask; can
you keep an eye on our bikes back there?"
"Sure,"
Eddy replied with a smile. "We'll take good care of them."
McGranth appeared next to McKenzie. "Well,
I can't say it's all been fun... mostly a lot of running, shooting
and screaming... but I don't regret a minute of it!"
Eddy
grinned, but there was sadness in it. "We're gonna miss you
guys."
"Oh, don't get weepy on me,"
McGranth admonished. "Just take care, and I'll be happy. I hate
long farewells so off you go now." McGranth shooed the Terrans
jokingly towards the portal, making them laugh and loose some of the
tension that had built up. When Kevin stepped up to the swirling
maelstrom of the warp-portal, he gulped.
"Oh
no," he muttered, "not this again."
Eddy
pushed Kevin slightly in the back. "Get over it. It's the last
time. Ready? Go for it!"
The Omega
Squadron of Terra/Earth, Space Outlaws and Alienhunters, their
souvenirs with them, stepped into the swirling portal, disappearing
from view and going back to their world and time. McKenzie uttered an
alien sounding phrase which closed the maelstrom shut.
Bastion
started to move away from the spot. "Come on, you three,"
he called over his shoulder. "One last bit of business to
settle." McGranth and Charleston walked after Bastion, but
McKenzie remained where he was.
"McKenzie!"
Bastion called, thinking the psyker was perhaps lost in thought.
"You go first," McKenzie called
back. "I have a... thing to settle fisrt."
"What
thing?" Bastion asked.
"Psyker
business. Nothing you should worry your little head about, Bastion.
I'll join you later."
As the others
drove off, McKenzie followed them with his eyes for a while until he
finally turned and looked at the lone attack bike and its owner. As
the dust settled, Commissar Masterson's face became visible. McKenzie
smiled.
"Something on your mind, Tomas?"
he asked.
"Yes," Masterson replied.
"Quite a lot, in fact. You could almost say I need advice."
"I thought you were going to chew me out
for reading you back at the funeral," McKenzie said and raised
an eyebrow.
"No... I was to, at first,
but now... I can hardly be bothered. I know you can't read thoughts.
Just emotions. You know what I felt there."
"Yes,
it quite startled me. The depth of your grief... I don't want to
probe it further, if that's what you want me to."
"Heck,
no! No... I might as well tell you; Tanya's late husband was my
brother. Thus, Bastion is my nephew. My only nephew. My brother,
bless his soul, meant very much to me, being a civilian. When he
married Tanya, I respected that. Although I'd wanted him to marry
someone with a slightly less... 'provocative' profession. But...
emotions can't be steered. Not by normal people at least."
"I
see where you're getting at," McKenzie snapped rather irritably.
"Did Tanya know you were her husband's brother?"
"That's
the tricky bit. I was stationed elsewhere when they got married. I
found out months later. So I planned on going to see them as soon as
I could. As I travelled to meet them, nearly a year later, I was met
by the message that my brother had been killed by the first wave of
the Necrontyr. He'd died a mere month after Bastion's birth. I feared
then that Tanya would break under this pressure but I'd clearly
underestimated her. The result was that she fought the Necrontyr with
an almost unerringly keen hate."
"Did
you get to see her and tell who you were then?"
"No...
I was stationed at the front and she was pulled back to organise the
defence from Callidus and Ichar. After all, she was the most senior
officer in the Commissariat in that sector at that time. I was an
ordinary line commissar. And when I many years later got stationed in
her staff, Bastion had almost grown up and Tanya managed better than
ever. I didn't want to mess their life up again. To make her
emotionally dependent again. She'd suffered enough."
"So
you never told either of them?"
Masterson
shook his head.
"You loved her, didn't
you? And you love Bastion too?"
"Yes,"
Masterson sighed.
"I think it's selfish
of you not to come forward and inform Bastion that he has family
still alive. He could use it. So, fess up and start acting like the
uncle you are!"
"I don't want to be
a burden to him McKenzie. He has a great responsibility on his young
shoulders."
"You won't be, trust
me. It is my firm belief that the thing that makes Humanity so strong
is our ability to love. Matter of fact, I think it was love the made
Rolf Yarrick so strong and unrelenting in his defence of Humanity
against all enemies it could face, alien or heretic. He always
surrounded himself with people he held dear in some way. And I think
I have figured out why. It was so he would never forget what he was
fighting for.
"So tell Bastion who you
are, Tomas. Tell him and he'll most likely fight harder than ever to
rebuild the Imperium, as he has something to lose if he doesn't."
"I understand," Masterson said and
smiled sadly. "Maybe we should go after the others, so they
don't worry about us?"
As Masterson
mounted his attack bike, McKenzie made an apologetic cough. "I
think I'll have to hitch a lift with you, commissar. It seems my
brothers have left me without a means of transportation."
Masterson laughed out loud and gestured to
McKenzie to hop into the sidecar.
Using
McKenzie's psychics to find the way the others had driven, they
pulled in by what used to be a star-port. Bastion, McGranth and
Charleston were waiting for them.
"Now
then," Bastion exclaimed, "you might have time for me, all
three of you Space Marines. Follow!"
McKenzie,
McGranth and Charleston followed Bastion, Masterson lagging behind a
bit. The walked to one of the smaller hangars and went into it.
Inside, under the light from glow-globes was a red painted
Thunderhawk.
Charleston made a double-take
when he saw it. "Waitaminnit... Isn't that-"
"The
Thunderhawk you pockmarked Secondus surface with, yes." Bastion
finished for him. "The Night Hawk, I believe you called it."
"But," Charleston said
suspiciously, "I thought it was totalled."
"Amazing
what a few good Tech Priests can do, isn't it?" Bastion mused.
"And I believed the Death Angels' Legion wanted it back in
tip-top shape."
"Huh?"
McGranth exclaimed. "But our legion is no more... It's been
disbanded."
"Well, I can't have you
sitting around here all the time, can I? Also, to make sure you are
out of my hair, I give you this." He handed a wrapped document
to McGranth, who was so swept up in the moment he simply accepted it.
"It's a Carte Blanche, giving you full right to travel with any
Imperial Navy vessel you want," Bastion explained.
"Is
that so?" McGranth said and smiled a lopsided smile.
"So,"
Bastion asked, "what will you do now?"
"Firstly,"
McGranth said, "we'll go back to Ichar and do a spot of spring
cleaning, you could say. And then... who knows? There's plenty still
to do for three old Space Marine commanders. Maybe we'll gather a
band of surviving loyal Marines and tow the Galaxy as Outlaws. For
your protection."
With that, McGranth
suddenly saluted Bastion and made to board the Night Hawk. McKenzie
and Charleston followed suit and Masterson and Bastion Yarrick left
the hangar as the ship powered up for lift-off.
The
Thunderhawk made its way through the vastness of space back towards
Ichar a few hours later. Charleston sat lost in though for a moment
as he surveyed the coordinates one last time.
"What's
up with you?" McGranth asked after a while, having watched his
old friend.
"Well," Charleston
began, "I was wondering. After all that's happened, don't you
think we'll stop doing this someday? Fighting, I mean."
"I
suppose so," McGranth said scratching his chin. "I mean,
even Space Marines have to die, eventually."
"Speak
for yourselves," McKenzie remarked with a wry smile.
"Personally, I plan to live forever."
McGranth
and Charleston just stared at him, which made McKenzie laugh out
loud. After giving McKenzie a reprimanding look, McGranth turned to
Charleston. "Hit the boost already..."
Charleston
did as ordered and the Night Hawk sped up, leaving Callidus behind
it.
Back down on Callidus, Bastion
Yarrick had returned to his family tomb. He wasn't quite done with it
yet, but what he was about to do was something he wanted kept as
secret as possible. The Imperium's safety hung on it, in a way.
He
stood in front of the Altar of the Aquila, facing the statue of
Hrodwulf Le'man.
"So, I guess it all
comes back to you. I get the feeling it was always meant to be this
way," Bastion whispered to the statue.
The
statue of Hrodwulf was standing tall, hands clasped over one another
in front of the stomach, as if resting on something poleshaped.
Bastion had seen the tiny slit in the rockcrete of the floor earlier
and realised the purpose of the statue. Could Rolf Yarrick have
foreseen this day? How was that possible? If not...
"McKenzie,
you weasel..." Bastion muttered silently as he removed the
Yarrick sword from his back and slowly unwound the red velvet that
was wrapped around it. The Imperial Navy had been able to recollect
the sword against all odds in the blackness of space. Of course with
a little help from the Navigators on board.
The
last strip of cloth was removed from around the sword and fell to the
ground with a hush-like noise. Bastion carefully fitted the sword
into the slit and in between Hrodwulf's hands.
Bastion
stood back to get a better look. The sword looked strangely small
wedged into the statue, but he figured it was because of the scale.
The statue was larger than Hrodwulf had been in life, after all.
"May this sword protect us, as it always
have. And may we never have to use it again," he said and turned
to walked towards the entrance.
"Bastion?"
a voice suddenly called from one of the pews. Bastion turned sharply
and saw Masterson standing in shadow of one of the other statues,
Caspar Yarrick, Bastion saw.
"Tomas,"
Bastion said, "what brings you here?"
"A
long story," Masterson said and approached Bastion. "However,
if you have time, I'll tell it to you in its entirety."
The
two men walked out of the Yarrick Chapel, Masterson talking. As they
left, they closed the door behind them, leaving the Yarrick sword in
the hands of Hrodwulf Le'man.
++New Imperial year 521, five hundred years after the destruction of the Necrontyr++
That same door opened again and a man walked in,
followed by a small group of people. There were a few Imperial
Guardsmen and a pair of Sisters of Battle. The leader wore the black
coat and peaked cap of the Commissariat. His skin was slightly tanned
and his black hair had a shade of blue to it.
He
walked up to the Altar of the Aquila and stood in front of the statue
of Hrodwulf Le'man. He studied the sword in the statue's hands, dusty
from many years of not being used. There wasn't the slightest speck
of rust on it.
"So," the commissar
said, "the legend is true. The deamon slayer sword is real."
He picked it up and hefted it slightly in his
hand, testing its weight. The blade glowed faintly as he touched the
hilt.
Suddenly, the door to the tomb-chapel
was thrown open and small band of heretics and mutants entered. The
saw the Imperial and gave off a shrill battle-cry.
The
commissar calmed his comrades.
"The
taint still lingers on this holy place, but we are not alone! The
Legends of Old are with us today! For the Emperor!"
The
Imperial soldiers echoed the last three words and charged the Chaos
filth. The commissar, wielding the sword, leads them.
And thus the Legend of the Eagle, the Wolf and the Hound of Chaos continues...
