Authors: Dan Abnett
Then Gaunt warmed his numb fingers and threaded surgical cord into a fresh needle. He handed Rawne his dagger. Bite the hilt.
Rawne did so and stayed silent as Gaunt sewed the torn flesh together.
Gaunt bit off the cord and tied it, wrapping a dressing over the wound. Rawne spat the dagger out.
Gaunt packed the kit away and then settled a kettle pan over the flames, dropping a scoop of ice into it.
Seems to me Typhon has levelled us, major, he said after a while.
How so?
The high-born commissar, with all his airs and graces and rank, his schola training and his expertise; the low-life Tanith gangster with his wiles and tricks and diversions its put us on a level. Equals. Both fighting the same hostility with the same chances.
Rawne didnt manage his retort. His tongue was too swollen and sore. He managed to spit again.
Gaunt smiled and watched the ice-water boil in the pan.
Good. Maybe not. If you can still spit at me and hold me in contempt, were not equal. I can lower myself down towards your level to help you
Feth, save you. But the day were both on a level, your level, Ill kill myself.
Is that a promise? Rawne asked.
Gaunt laughed. He dropped some dehydrated food cubes into the bubbling pan and stirred them. Dry-powdered bean soup puffed and formed. He was still laughing as he poured the soup into two tin cups.
The wind rose as night fell. It howled outside the mouth of the cave, raising the volume and intensity of the screaming They sat together in the dark, watching the fire. There were only four fuel-blocks left to feed the blaze and Gaunt was being careful.
You want to know some other differences between us, Rawne?
Rawne wanted to say No, but his tongue was now too swollen and useless. He spat at Gaunt again instead.
Gaunt smiled and nodded down at the spittle freezing on the ice.
Theres one: this place might be a ball of frozen moisture, but you wont see me going around losing body moisture like that. The wind will freeze you dry in a few hours. Conserve your body water. Stop spitting at me and you might live.
He held out a bowl of tepid water to Rawne and after a moment, the major took it and drank.
Heres another. Its warm in here. Warmer than outside. But its still close to zero. Youre half-stripped and youre shivering.
Gaunt was still dressed in his full uniform and his cloak was pulled around him. Rawne realised how numb he had become and began to pull his vest and cloak around him again.
Why? the major asked thickly.
Why? Because I know
Ive fought through cold zones before.
Not that
why? Why would you want to keep me alive? Gaunt was silent for a while.
Good question
he said at last. Given that youd like nothing better than to see me dead. But Im a commissar of the Imperial Guard, charged by the Emperor to keep his fighting legions able and intact in the face of battle. I wont let you die. Thats my job. Thats why I saved you here, thats why I saved the Tanith from the destruction of their world.
There was a long silence, broken only by the crackling chemical bricks of the fire.
You know Ill never see it that way, Rawne said, his voice cold and small. You left Tanith to die. You didnt let us stand and fight. I will never forgive you that.
Gaunt nodded. I know. Then, after a moment, I wish it wasnt so.
Rawne rolled himself up into a cleft of the ice cave and pulled the cloak around him. He felt only one thing. Hate.
Somehow, somewhen, dawn had come up. Thin, frail light poked into the cave.
Gaunt was asleep, huddled down under his cloak, covered in frost. Rawne slowly got to his feet, fighting the ache in his bones and the almighty cold. The fire had long since gone out.
He edged around the cave, staring down at Gaunt. Pain ebbed through his sewn leg, his shoulders, his mouth. The pain cleared the fuzziness of his head and made him sharp. He picked up his Tanith knife, wiped the frost from it, and knelt to place its blade against Gaunts throat.
No one would know. No one would ever find the body. And even if they did
Gaunt shuddered in his sleep. He spoke the name of Tanith twice as his eyelids rolled and flicked. Then he spoke, curling up on himself: Wont let them die! No, not all of them! In the name of the Emperor, Sym!
Then his voice died away into mumbling. Rawnes hand tensed on the knife. He hesitated.
Gaunt spoke again, his dreaming voice a low monotone. No, no, no, no
its burning
burning
I would never
I would never
.
Never what? Rawne hissed, about to pull the dagger up in a quick killing slice.
Tanith
In the name of the Emperor
Rawne twisted where he crouched. He pulled the dagger up, not in a killing slice but in an arc that threw it across at the mouth of the cave and impaled the throat of the ork creeping inside towards them.
As it fell back, gurgling, Rawne heard raucous baying from outside. He kicked Gaunt in the ribs to rouse him and swung up his lasgun, firing wildly at the cave mouth.
Theyre on us, Gaunt, you bastard! he screamed. Theyre on us!
Eight fierce, wordless minutes, weapons spitting and cracking in their hands. Gaunt roused from deep, troubled sleep to combat readiness with the speed of long experience. Six orks had come right up to the mouth of the cave, and without cover could do little but shoot and die. Caught in the mouth of the cave, the two Imperial soldiers had better cover and the advantage of the slope. Huge carcasses fell and slid, smoking down the crimson ice.
Rawne dropped the last of them and turned to find Gaunt scanning the valley floor with his scope.
We cant stay here, the commissar said. That exchange will bring them from all around.
We have cover here, Rawne argued.
Gaunt kicked the ice at the cave mouth. All we have is a tomb. Get enough of them around to pen us in and theyll bring the ice-cliff down and bury us. We have to move. And fast.
They ditched bed rolls and anything else it would take too long to repack. Gaunt prioritised ammo, food, Rawnes small satchel of tube-charges, their cold weather gear. In less than a minute they were fleeing down the slope outside, cloaks flying, into the dawn chill.
Twelve kilometres away, the steep angles of the rising sun lit the far wall of the valley, but they were in twilight here, a frosty darkness in which the scarlet ice around them glowed and shone like marble. Or meat in a butchers shop. Distantly, the crump of weapons fire. They hugged the valley wall, using ice rocks as cover as the wind wailed and agonised around them.
A kilometre or so from the cave, they rested, sweating in their insulated fabrics, crouched down in the cover of a block splinter fallen from high above.
Rawne wiped the ork blood off his knife and cut a hank of cloth from the edge of his stealth cape. Hed lost a glove somewhere, and his hand was aching and raw with the cold. He bound the cloth around his hand, tying it tight like a mitten.
Gaunt touched his shoulder and pointed back the way they had come. Lights, big gleaming lamps, bobbed and bounced along the valley floor: vehicles. The wind was too loud to make out engine notes.
Come on, said Gaunt.
From shelter, a scoop cut in the ice floor, they watched the vehicles pass five hundred metres away. Lour big ork machines, black and pumping blacker smoke from crude combustion engines. Thick-treaded tyres with chains gave the front end of the machines traction, and the rear sections were carried on sled runners or tracks. Each vehicle carried at least two other warriors beside the driver, and hefty weapons on pintle or turret mounts. They howled past, spraying up sheets of ice particles, close enough for the men to see the tribal markings on the battered flanks of the machines and smell the stink of their burning oil.
Once they had passed, Gaunt made to continue, but Rawne pulled him back.
They know how fast we can run, he said. Sure enough, a roar reached them over the howling wind a minute or so later and the vehicles sped back past they way they had come, searching back over the ground to see what they had missed. One pulled away west and two more raced onwards. The fourth curved around in a spray of ice and moved towards them to search along the wall of the valley.
They were trapped. They could not run because there was nowhere to run to without exposing themselves to the orks if they rose from the scoop. Huddled low, they watched.
The ork half-sled slowed and one of the burly warriors jumped down, running alongside the vehicle, firing into caves along the valley wall. The other warrior traversed the heavy weapon of the trundling vehicle from side to side. Closer
Gaunt turned to Rawne and nodded to his lasgun. More range, better sight. Take the weapons operator.
Not the driver?
If his gunners dead, all he can do is drive. If he dies, the gunner can still fire. Target the gunner
and when youve got him, re-aim on the foot soldier.
Rawne nodded and breathed hard on his sight to warm the lens. He clicked in a fresh energy clip as quietly as he could. Though the wind was screaming, the hard metal clack would carry like a shot.
He saw Gaunt carefully doing the same with the sickle-pattern magazine of his bolt-pistol.
The motor sled turned their way, its harsh lights catching the lip of their ice scoop, making the scarlet ice translucent and all the more like fresh meat. Rawne took his aim. He knew he was no marksman like Larkin or Elgith, but he was passable. Even so, he let the sled slip closer in before he felt confident of a shot. His only target, the silhouette of the vehicle behind the lights. Closer
almost on them. Rawne fired.
His blazing shot hit the black shape behind the lights. There was a double flash and then a series of loud, fierce explosions, like gunshots. The sled veered sideways, bumping to a halt. Rawne realised they had been gun shots. He had hit the gunner squarely, but his shot had passed through the weapon mount on the way, exploding the heavy bolter and igniting the ammo drum. The gunners smoking corpse hung from the burning weapon and, even as they watched, stray rounds super-heated and went off like fireworks. The driver was also dead, the back of his skull and neck riddled with shrapnel from the exploding ammo.
Gaunt and Rawne leaped up out of the scoop and ran towards the motorised sled. The ork left on foot was running their way, firing from the hip. Bolt rounds whizzed and sang around them, fizzling into the ice. Yelling as he charged the advancing ork, Rawne fired on full auto, his lasgun bucking as he carried it low against his side. Two laser shots spun the monstrous ork off his feet and dropped him on the ice, where he lay twitching.
Gaunt reached the sled, screwing up his nose at the smell of burning flesh. The gun and the gunner were still burning, but fire had not spread to the rest of the machine. He stepped forward, but darted back as another round went up. Then it was quiet.
He leaped up onto the tail-boards and put a point-blank round through the gunners back, though he was sure the ork was dead. He had heard too many tales of the greenskin resilience to injury. Gaunt pitched the cadaver off the platform onto the ice, then grabbed hold of the smouldering, ruined weapon. There was a handle release to free the gun and its drums from the mount. He heaved on it, his hands slipping in thick grease. No human strength had tightened this latch. He put his weight behind it, cursing and grunting, expecting another round to explode in his face at any moment.
The latch gave. With a gasp, and an effort that tore ligaments in his back and arms, he hefted the entire gun and ammo carriage off the metal bars of the mount frame and tipped it over off the vehicle. As it landed, three more rounds went off, one scudding across the surface of the ice in slithering jags like a phosphorescent sprite.
Gaunts gloves had caught fire from the red-hot metal and he jerked them off, throwing them aside. He clambered forward onto the drivers position and tried to pull the drivers body out of the cockpit. Nearly four hundred kilos of dead weight refused to budge.
He looked back at Rawne, in time to see him finishing the fallen footsoldier with his blade. Gaunt yelled him over, his voice lost in the keening wind.
Together they pried the drivers corpse free and flopped it into the ice. It had already begun to freeze and fell like a sack of rocks. Gaunt got into the cockpit, felt the space roomy and too big for a human operator. It stank of sweat and blood in the enclosed cabin. He tested the handlebar grips and found the foot pedals. His first tries at control revved the engine to a scream and then braked the sled in a jolt that threw the cursing Rawne onto his back in the troop bay behind him. Then he had the measure of it. It was a crude version of the landcars he had driven with his father back home, years ago. There was a foot throttle and also a foot brake, though that did little but dig a massive spike down from the underside into the ice to retard motion. The anchor would only work in conjunction with de-throttling. With the engine racing, the spike would shatter and pull the guts out from under the motor sled. The gears, three of them, were set by a twist on the left handlebar grip. There were gauges on the crude dash calibrated in greenskin script which he couldnt read or understand, but he began to measure the way the juddering needles spiked and dipped.
Hold on, major! he warned and raced them off towards the distant end of the valley. Rawne, in the back, clung on tight, the wind whipping his face and neck.
Gaunt focussed all his will into control. The massive machine bucked and jinked on every irregularity in the ice, but Gaunt quickly came to judge the way ahead, and knew what conditions would skid them round, or slide them, or make them spin treads. There was no power assist to the steering, and he fought it. It was beyond his strength to keep the steering true and he realised that he would never be able to drive the machine as fast as the stronger orks could. It fought too much and his strength was human, not inhuman.