Vainglorious, p.1

Vainglorious, page 1

 

Vainglorious
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Vainglorious


  More tales of the Astra Militarum from Black Library

  OUTGUNNED

  Denny Flowers

  STEEL TREAD

  Andy Clark

  HONOURBOUND

  Rachel Harrison

  • CIAPHAS CAIN •

  by Sandy Mitchell

  CIAPHAS CAIN: HERO OF THE IMPERIUM

  (Contains books 1-3 in the series: For the Emperor, Caves of Ice and The Traitor’s Hand)

  CIAPHAS CAIN: DEFENDER OF THE IMPERIUM

  (Contains books 4-6 in the series: Death or Glory, Duty Calls and Cain’s Last Stand)

  CIAPHAS CAIN: SAVIOUR OF THE IMPERIUM

  (Contains books 7-9 in the series: The Emperor’s Finest, The Last Ditch, The Greater Good and the novella Old Soldiers Never Die)

  Book 10: CHOOSE YOUR ENEMIES

  CIAPHAS CAIN: THE ANTHOLOGY

  (Contains the novella Old Soldiers Never Die and thirteen short stories).

  • GAUNT’S GHOSTS •

  by Dan Abnett

  Colonel-Commissar Gaunt and his regiment, the Tanith First and Only, struggle for survival on the battlefields of the far future.

  THE FOUNDING

  (Contains books 1-3 in the series: First and Only, Ghostmaker and Necropolis)

  THE SAINT

  (Contains books 4-7 in the series: Honour Guard, The Guns of Tanith, Straight Silver and Sabbat Martyr)

  THE LOST

  (Contains books 8-11 in the series: Traitor General, His Last Command, The Armour of Contempt and Only in Death)

  THE VICTORY: PART ONE

  (Contains books 12-13 in the series: Blood Pact, Salvation’s Reach and four short stories)

  THE VICTORY: PART TWO

  (Contains books 14-15 in the series: The Warmaster, Anarch and two short stories)

  Contents

  Cover

  Backlist

  Warhammer 40,000

  Vainglorious

  Editorial Note

  One

  Two

  Three

  Editorial Note: Conditions on Eucopia

  Four

  Editorial Note: Importance of Eucopia

  Five

  Six

  Seven

  Eight

  Nine

  Ten

  Eleven

  Editorial Note: Hidden Enemy

  Twelve

  Editorial Note: The Proving Grounds Massacre

  Thirteen

  Fourteen

  Fifteen

  Sixteen

  Seventeen

  Eighteen

  Nineteen

  Twenty

  Twenty-One

  Twenty-Two

  Twenty-Three

  Twenty-Four

  Twenty-Five

  Twenty-Six

  Editorial Note: Implications

  Twenty-Seven

  Twenty-Eight

  Twenty-Nine

  Thirty

  Notes

  About the Author

  An Extract from ‘Steel Tread’

  A Black Library Publication

  eBook license

  For more than a hundred centuries the Emperor has sat immobile on the Golden Throne of Earth. He is the Master of Mankind. By the might of His inexhaustible armies a million worlds stand against the dark.

  Yet, He is a rotting carcass, the Carrion Lord of the Imperium held in life by marvels from the Dark Age of Technology and the thousand souls sacrificed each day so that His may continue to burn.

  To be a man in such times is to be one amongst untold billions. It is to live in the cruellest and most bloody regime imaginable. It is to suffer an eternity of carnage and slaughter. It is to have cries of anguish and sorrow drowned by the thirsting laughter of dark gods.

  This is a dark and terrible era where you will find little comfort or hope. Forget the power of technology and science. Forget the promise of progress and advancement. Forget any notion of common humanity or compassion.

  There is no peace amongst the stars, for in the grim darkness of the far future, there is only war.

  Editorial Note:

  Although Cain encountered the necrons on relatively few occasions throughout his decades of service to the Imperium, he did so far more frequently than most – especially given that the vast majority of sentient life forms who have such an experience do so only once, and not for very long. Unsurprisingly, these incidents seem to have made quite an impression on him, and none more so than his first encounter, which he refers to in passing many times over the course of his memoirs. (The fact that he lost two fingers to a glancing hit from a gauss flayer probably went some way towards lodging it in his memory.) Since his activities on Interitus Prime make up one of the shorter fragments of those already edited and disseminated to the gratifyingly large number of my fellow inquisitors who have expressed an interest in perusing them, I see no reason to reiterate them now.

  Instead, I’ve chosen to devote the current volume to a much later incident, in the closing years of the last millennium, shortly before his retirement from active service to take up the post of tutor to the commissar cadets at the Schola Progenium on Perlia. Those of my readers who have already seen the volume detailing his activities there during the Black Crusade may find it a little odd, as did I, that he makes no reference therein to the events of this newly prepared tranche of his memoirs – but since he is no longer around to ask, I can only speculate that the circumstances at the time reminded him more strongly of his earlier encounters with the ambulatory metal horrors on Interitus Prime and Simia Orichalcae than the more nuanced interaction he describes here.

  With that in mind, I turn to his typically idiosyncratic account of the founding of the forge world Eucopia, and the part he played in uncovering a hidden threat there which, left unchecked, would have had incalculable consequences for the entire sector. It’s probably no exaggeration to say that without his intervention, our beleaguered little corner of the Imperium would be in straits even more dire than they currently are – if, indeed, it had managed to survive this long at all.

  As usual, I’ve tried to leave Cain’s account of events as close to how I found it as possible, apart from the interpolation of other material to add context to his typically self-centred narrative, dividing it into chapters for ease of reading, and the addition of footnotes to clarify the odd reference or correct the occasional inaccuracy.

  Amberley Vail, Ordo Xenos

  ONE

  I’ve seen a fair few worlds in my century or so of rattling around the galaxy, though few indeed could be described as ‘fair’, bearing in mind how close I came to losing my life on most of them. For the most part these visits were as short as I could manage, given that wars or other unpleasantness were the main reasons for my presence, and being where people or other things aren’t doing their best to shoot or dismember me is, on the whole, more congenial.

  It’s hardly surprising, therefore, that return visits to any of them have been few and far between, and with the exception of Perlia, where I’ve finally found some semblance of a home,[1] distinctly unwelcome.

  The other exception, of course, was Coronus,[2] through which I passed so often I lost count of the number of occasions quite early on in my career. Given the number of regiments typically quartered there, not to mention the plethora of warships floating about the system,[3] I felt as safe on Coronus[4] as anywhere in the galaxy – which is probably why I let my guard down at a crucial moment, with almost fatal results.

  Ironically, I was in a particularly good mood at the time, which doubtless went some way towards blunting my habitual paranoia. I’d recently arrived back from Fecundia, where my single-minded attempts to preserve my own skin had somehow been interpreted as crucial in preventing a strategically and logistically vital forge world from disappearing down the gullet of a tyranid hive fleet, and had reported in to the office of the Commissariat with my usual sense of vague trepidation. The trouble with having a reputation like mine is that people tend to believe it, with the unenviable result that every time a particularly foolhardy or suicidal assignment cropped up, my name was at the top of the list of gung-ho idiots to try and palm it off on. As the official commissarial liaison officer to the lord general’s staff, I was able to sidestep most of these attempts at giving a Hero of the Imperium a suitably glorious and messy demise, of course, regretfully citing the pressure of my diplomatic duties, but I was uncomfortably aware that that particular excuse was going to wear pretty thin before very much longer.

  ‘Cain. Welcome back.’ The familiar, faintly querulous tones of Lord Commissar[5] Mavin greeted me as I entered, and my heart made a distinct shift in the direction of my boots. I knew him of old: an unimaginative plodder well into his second century, who would probably be found in a quiet corner of the office one day by someone wondering why they hadn’t spoken to him for a couple of weeks, and where the smell was coming from. Which isn’t to say that I didn’t envy him a little too – fortune had favoured him with an undemanding desk job about as far from a combat zone as it was possible to get, which had been my overriding ambition since the day I first tied my scarlet sash.[6]

  ‘Lord commissar.’ I arranged a smile on my face, and shook a hand which felt like a desiccated sparrow’s corpse. ‘A pleasure as always. Still minding the fort, I see.’

  As usual, the flattery sparked an answering twitch which might have been a smile, or perhaps a sign of dyspepsia.

  ‘Someone’s got to keep the files in order while you youngsters go gallivanting around the sector putting the fear of the Emperor into the unholy,’ he responded, in what, for him, was quite a friendly fashion. Resisting the temptation to point out that I was almost a centenarian myself, despite the odd juvenat treatment over the years leaving me looking considerably younger, I took the proffered chair. As I sat down, Mavin pottered over to one of the filing cabinets lining the walls and extricated a thick wodge of documentation. He dumped it on the cheap flakboard table between us with a resonant thud, and began leafing through it. ‘The Quadravidia thing went off all right?’

  ‘I got diverted,’ I said, wondering how much of it he was actually reading. ‘To Fecundia.’ Throne help us, if he really needed bringing up to speed on my activities since the last time I was on Coronus we’d be here for hours. I began to regret turning down the hot grox bap my aide, Jurgen, had offered me that morning – typically, it had vanished into one of his webbing pouches ‘for later’ as soon as I’d finished shaking my head, although I suspected when it emerged again only one of us would find it even close to palatable.

  ‘Indeed.’ Mavin paged on. ‘Quite a coup for you, it seems. Got the t’au to withdraw, formed an alliance against the encroaching tyranids, saw them off with no help I can see from the little grey heathens, and it seems the truce is still holding.’ A remarkably succinct summation which missed practically everything significant. ‘And got the cogboys[7] owing us a favour into the bargain.’

  ‘I can hardly take much credit for that,’ I said, knowing that refusing to do so would simply make whatever kudos was going round adhere more tightly to me.

  ‘Nevertheless.’ Mavin closed the file with an audible snap. ‘We feel that a success on this scale leaves you perfectly placed to take on another challenge. One which, in its own way, you might feel is even more daunting.’

  And here it came, the fool’s errand guaranteed to crown my career with a glorious last stand and a hero’s death – although a coward’s life had always seemed a far better option from where I was sitting. No point panicking before I even knew what I had to weasel out of, though, so I plastered an expression of polite enquiry across my face, and raised an eyebrow.

  ‘We?’

  ‘Our entire complement,’ Mavin said. ‘We’ve discussed it at length, and everyone feels you’re the perfect man for the job.’

  ‘How gratifying,’ I said, my last hope that at least some of my colleagues might be persuaded that I wasn’t the right man after all vanishing as fast as the contents of an unattended smorgasbord while my aide was around. ‘And this job would be?’

  ‘You’ve been to Perlia, I believe,’ Mavin said, changing direction as abruptly as Jurgen at the controls of a Salamander. I nodded confirmation, trepidation beginning to give way to bafflement.

  ‘Not for a long time. About sixty years, give or take.’ A disquieting possibility occurred to me. ‘The orks aren’t back, are they?’ Because if they were, who better to see them off again than the man everyone believed[8] had ensured our victory the last time.

  ‘Not that we’re aware of,’ Mavin said, looking faintly surprised at the question. ‘No more than usual, I suppose.’

  Pretty much anywhere the creatures had once infested was prone to the occasional outbreak of marauding warbands, but I’d have thought the local planetary defence force would be more than capable of dealing with them without calling for Militarum assistance; one thing the experience of a full-scale invasion would certainly have left them with would be an almost Valhallan level of expertise in killing greenskins.

  Malin paused, inserting a dry little cough, probably for dramatic effect. ‘The job we have in mind would be a vital one, ensuring the future of Imperial rule in the Eastern Arm for generations to come.’

  In other words, a suicidal foray against overwhelming odds, which probably meant some desperate attempt to head off a newly detected tendril of the tyranid hive fleets. Unless the t’au were already taking advantage of the instability to further their own agenda, in spite of the assurances they’d given – Throne knows, we’d do the same in a heartbeat if we thought we could get away with it. Or perhaps the Great Enemy was up to something, which never ended well, particularly if daemons were involved.

  Such speculation was pointless, though, so I suppressed it firmly, before I pitched myself into an even greater funk.

  ‘My duties to the lord general’s office–’ I began, adopting a tone of polite regret, in an attempt to prepare the groundwork for a plausible excuse when the time came to deliver one. To my surprise, however, I got no further before being interrupted by a wheezy chuckle.

  ‘I told them you’d dig your heels in,’ Mavin said, in the faintly smug manner of a cantankerous pedant who’d just been proved right. ‘Retirement’s never going to sit well with a man like Cain, I said. We all know you’d rather go down swinging a chainsword when the Emperor calls you to the Golden Throne at last, but perhaps you’ll at least hear me out?’

  ‘Retirement?’ I said, blinking like Jurgen trying to assimilate some strange and alien concept, like the possibility that socks could be changed before they were capable of standing up by themselves. ‘What do you mean, retirement?’

  I must have spoken a little more forcefully than I’d realised, because Mavin looked quite disconcerted, and the tone of his voice became almost excessively conciliatory.

  ‘No one’s doubting your fitness for active service, far from it, and we all appreciate your reluctance to lay down your arms while you’re still capable of wielding them so effectively. But sometimes the path of duty takes us in directions we’ve never considered, or would prefer not to go.’

  ‘That’s certainly true,’ I agreed with feeling, because I’d spent most of my life being taken in directions I’d rather have run away screaming from. Then, conscious of the sort of thing the sort of man he thought I was would probably say at this juncture, I added, ‘No offence taken, I was just somewhat surprised. I’ve never shirked my duty before’ – which was one of the most barefaced lies even I’ve ever told – ‘and I’ve no intention of starting now by ignoring the advice of a colleague whose counsel I’ve always valued.’ The fact that I hadn’t valued it particularly highly was neither here nor there; the implied flattery smoothed over any lingering awkwardness, and if he felt he’d done a good job of persuading me when I took him up on the offer, that would be no bad thing either.

  You have to remember, I was quite genuinely astonished at the proposal: retirement was something I’d literally never expected to live to see, not least because it so seldom happens to anyone in the Astra Militarum. No one ever asks for it themselves, because the Inquisition tend to regard such a request as shirking one’s duty to the Emperor, and therefore treasonous,[9] so it’s an honour, or privilege, which tends to arrive entirely out of the blue, invariably with some kind of price tag attached. Since the price was unlikely to include being shot at so often, or spending quite so much time in a state of bowel-freezing terror, I adopted an expression of polite interest and waited for him to continue.

  ‘Perlia has changed a good deal since you saw off the orkish invasion,’ Mavin said, giving me far too much credit – although since that was pretty much everyone’s impression of the incident, I’d long since learned to live with it. ‘A huge amount of resources have gone into the reconstruction effort, and the Munitorum has reinforced its defences considerably.’

  ‘That seems prudent,’ I said, doing my best to recall where the hell the system was in relation to us, and, more importantly, the ’nids and the t’au.[10] To the best of my recollection it was comfortably far from the tyranid line of advance, and sufficiently removed from the t’au border, to be as safe from either as anywhere was.

  ‘Quite,’ Mavin agreed, doing a pretty poor impression of actually caring. ‘But of more interest to us is the establishment of several new Imperial institutions on Perlia, to improve its strategic and tactical value at a subsector level.’

  ‘I see,’ I said, nodding politely and wishing he’d get to the point. ‘From which I’m to infer the Commissariat intend to establish a presence there?’ An administrative posting to a relative backwater would suit me down to the ground, although I couldn’t for the life of me see why they’d bother; any Imperial Guard units in-system would bring their own commissars with them, and local militias don’t need supervising that closely.

 

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