‘Your understanding has no bearing on your instincts, brother.’
‘No,’ Preco said after a minute. ‘It does not.’
‘You are not abandoning them. They are buying us the chance of victory. If we fought for them now, we would be throwing away their effort.’
‘Their sacrifice, you mean.’
‘Yes. Their sacrifice. A price your Chapter Master is willing to pay. If we are successful, I hope we will bring an end to the cost. Whatever happens, he has my thanks, as do you.’
Preco gave him a curt nod. ‘As I said, I understand the necessity of this course of action. It is still difficult.’
I know what it is to lose brothers, Koorland thought. He said nothing. His losses did not matter in this moment. It was important that Preco express his unease in leaving the field while his company fought. Important to acknowledge that pain, so the Exemplar could focus all the more keenly on the goal ahead.
Take us to the primarch, Koorland thought, and we will end this war.
The Thunderhawks climbed. The inferno of Laccolith dropped away. Preco swung around the worst of the struggles, and even then, crackling anti-aircraft energy slashed at the gunship.
‘They want us contained as badly as we wish to hold them,’ Koorland said.
‘A good sign,’ said Preco.
They left Laccolith behind. They flew east, then angled north as they approached a plateau. Fires guttered below. Koorland caught a glimpse of a ruined wall. Another settlement below, then, passed too quickly to tell if anything remained of it.
Preco used the twin volcanoes as beacons. Sporadic fire continued to track them from the jungle.
‘They’ve left sentries,’ Preco said, veering sharply to starboard as another gun targeted them. ‘Since when do orks stay behind when the main army moves?’
‘Since Ardamantua. Since these greenskins arose. Expect the worst always, brother. I’ve seen the worst, and I still underestimate their tactical acumen.’
Koorland hoped the orks were as desperate as they seemed. The force left behind would have been enough on its own to take a militia-defended city. When the flames rose high, Koorland saw the silhouettes of tanks, the rush of warbikes. A large mass of infantry.
The Thunderhawks drew nearer. The confused actions of the orks became clear. There was no front line. There was no position they were attacking, and no opposing army. There were circular movements. The orks centred their attacks on a point, and the point kept moving. It cut slashes of destruction through the ork formations. Massive concussions, greater than any artillery shell, rippled out from that point.
‘Is that…?’ Preco began. He spoke softly, awed by something that could not yet be seen.
‘It must be,’ Koorland said, just as quiet. ‘That is where we must strike.’
‘We can’t land.’
‘We are prepared.’ Koorland had ordered the two squads of the Last Wall to equip jump packs. ‘Come in as close and low as you can. We’ve had enough of attacking them from the outside. This is the epicentre. The enemy has expended great effort to keep us from there. Let the orks’ defeat begin with that failure.’
Preco dropped the nose of the gunship. The black shapes of the foothills rushed in.
Koorland voxed orders to the troops in both Thunderhawks. ‘Open the side doors. We jump into the midst of the cauldron.’
A line of energy cannons opened up at the foot of the last slope. They put up a coruscating wall of destruction.
‘They
Smoke entered the cockpit. Koorland blinked through the squad readouts on his lenses. The runes were steady green across the board. To port, the
Preco looped the
‘How long can you stay aloft?’
‘For as long as necessary. You’ll have air support.’
‘My thanks again, Brother Preco,’ Koorland said. He pulled the door of the cockpit open and joined the squad for the leap.