Fiction

Discretion is the better part of valor

Barad Mine troops1

Imperial Guard and conscript militia form a ragged firing line in the battle for the strategically important Barad Mine. Barely visible in the top-right corner can be seen the back of Imperial hero Commissar-Major Rael Dracos.

As Commissar-Major Rael Dracos pulled himself to his feet, he knew the battle was lost.

The last thing he remembered before losing consciousness was a huge ork smashing its battle axe into his chest. Despite his carapace armor, the blow knocked  the breath from his lungs and sent a lance of pain through his chest. Then … blackness.

Only seconds before, it seemed, Dracos had been surrounded by conscripts—poorly trained and terrified to be on the front lines. Put behind fortifications in the hopes that their resolve would be strengthened, the troops had fired fired volley after volley at the vast horde of greenskins that was before them.

Then the xenos had charged, advancing on the soldiers while bellowing an animalistic roar of rage and bloody-minded madness. Many orks fell, but many more reached the fortifications—and then the slaughter began. Men were torn apart with blade, tusk, and claw.

Now Dracos was alone. No doubt his prone form had  gone unnoticed amidst the dead. He put a hand to his throbbing chest and looked around him. He saw nothing but corpses, a few orks but mostly men. Hundreds of lifeless men.

Gunfire, screams, and the constant roar of orks sounded to his left, and as he looked in that direction, he saw a tide of green surrounding the regimental command post, the last apparent bastion of Imperial defenses. Thousands of orks were swarmed around a tiny circle of Chimeras, interspersed with thin firing lines of desperate—and doomed—troopers.

Commissar-Major Rael Dracos

Commissar-Major Rael Dracos

It’s a fiasco, Dracos thought, looking elsewhere on the battlefield and seeing only small knots of Imperial troops retreating into the distance. We’ve lost yet again. First the Iron Spires. Then the Tarak Mines. Is Hegira lost?

“Form up! Form up, guardsmen!” he heard. One hundred meters behind him, he saw a young lieutenant struggling to form a ragged band of survivors into an organized force. Draco stumbled toward the men.

As he walked, he listened to the sounds of battle. There was plenty of lasgun fire, he realized, but it was ragged—and drowned out by ten times the number of xeno weaponry.  It was what he didn’t hear that told the scale of the disaster. There was no roar of battle cannon. No ugly “thump-thump” of heavy bolters firing into the enemy ranks. No sound of mighty battle cannons roaring with righteous thunder.

If it would serve any purpose, we’d fight to the last man, Dracos thought. But I won’t waste men on a lost cause. What was the ancient saying? Discretion is the better part of valor? 

He finally reached the lieutenant and the two dozen men he’d managed to gather into a coherent force—and returned the nervous salute they offered.

“You!” Dracos snapped, pointing to a voxcaster. “Order all remaining units to begin an orderly withdrawal, falling back in alternating firing lines, supporting one another. Units that run will be executed en masse.”

An empty threat, Dracos realized. Running is a time-honored response for a trooper who has seen his superiors make a mess of things. Still, perhaps the thought of a firing squad will persuade some men to maintain military order. They’ll need their wits to make it across the desert. 

He turned to face the lieutenant. “Don’t just stand there, man. Get your men marching. Once those xenos are done with the command post, they’ll be looking for fresh meat.”

***

The next 12 hours were a horror—an exhausting march interrupted by sporadic attacks by small mobs of orks still eager to spill blood.

It was spring in Hegira and, at night, the air temperature dropped below freezing. The wounded died first; then the weak. Despite the ache in his chest, Dracos kept moving one foot forward, then another. Many times he wished to simply lie down and let darkness take him.

But he kept going. So did many other men. The regimental command post held out for two hours, drawing the bulk of blood-crazed xenos into a horrific battle of attrition that could only end in defeat for the brave guardsmen—but that bought crucial hours for those fleeing for their lives.

That time still wouldn’t have been enough. But, once night fell, many of the xenos lost interest in chasing the defeated, and those that did pursue were discouraged by bombing and strafing runs by Valkyries equipped with night-fighting auspices that allowed them to identify ork targets by their body heat.

Eventually, even the most blood-frenzied orks gave up the chase and, with the dawn, a column of Chimeras appeared over the horizon to take Dracos and his men to safety. Almost 2,000 men—or 15 percent of the original Barad Mine defense force—were eventually rescued.

***

IMPERIAL VOXCAST, 3 110 736.M41—”Imperial authorities report that sizable numbers of troopers have escaped the lost battle for the Barak Mine, and they will prove invaluable in bolstering the new Imperial defense line outside Susa City, our moon’s capital.”

“Further evidence that the Imperial defeat was not as serious as irresponsible rumor-mongers claim is that one of the survivors of the battle is the famed Commissar-Major Rael Dracos, who proved an inspirational figure during the organized withdrawal from the fighting . . . .”

Click here to read the battle report of the Imperial defeat at the Battle for the Barad Mine.

The Corvus Cluster is a hobby blog chronicling our adventures in the Warhammer 40K universe of Games Workshop.

 

1 reply »

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.