The next extract of the Cain Archive
which Amberley Vail has chosen to edit and release may strike her
colleagues in the Inquisition as an odd choice, since she is dealing
with Ciaphas Cain's second visit to Nusquam Fundumentibus, before
disseminating the details of his first. However, Vail defends her
decision by explaining that the first visit, while instructive
enough, was nowhere near as significant as this one...
Part One
Over a regicide game with Lord General
Zyvan, Cain learns of the Valhallan 597th's newest assignment: their
second deployment to Nusquam, being menaced by Orks yet again.
Colonel Kasteen and the rest of the Valhallans are predictably
excited, though Cain's enthusiasm for visiting a battle zone
(especially one on an Ice World) is as great as it's ever been.
Cain gets ominous vibes from the Fires
of Faith, the run-down merchant vessel commandeered as the regiment's
transport to Nusquam, but the captain, Mires, assures him that the
ship is sound.
However, a few weeks later, when the
ship translates from the Warp, the poorly-maintained Geller field
fails for an instant - just long enough to let a mischievous Daemon
slip on board and possess the body of one of the bridge servitors.
Havoc erupts, and though Cain, Jurgen, and the regiment's Chaplain,
Tope, are able to banish it, the bridge controls are all but
destroyed. Without engine or maneuvering control, the ship has become
a deathtrap. They can't assume orbit over the planet, nor can they
slow down enough to dock with any shuttles; and they have nowhere
near enough saviour pods to debark the whole regiment.
In the frantic weeks as the ship
hurtles toward Nusquam, Mires comes up with a desperate plan: if they
can fire up the engines, they may be able to accelerate into a rough
orbit. When they try it, however, they clip the planet's orbiting
dockyard, and, instead of achieving orbit, hurtle down into the
planet's atmosphere. By a miracle, they have just enough thruster
ability to make a controlled crash, creating a fair-sized lake of
boiling water in the ice instead of a smoking hole. The regiment is
padded down in the central holds, and survives with minimal
casualties, though several of the crew, including Mires, are killed
in the crash (saving Cain from having to decide whether or not to
shoot him).
Part Two
Thanks to Nusquam's freezing
temperatures, the ice reforms around the ship quickly enough to stop
it sinking into the newly-formed lake. But as the Valhallan proverb
has it, "things can always get worse." As soon as Captain
Federer blasts a hole in the side of the hull that will let the
regiment out, they see an Ork warband speeding towards them,
attracted by the Valhallans' not-so-inconspicuous arrival. The
Valhallans fortify the entrance, but are boxed in, with no way to
deploy effectively before the Orks reach the ship. However, Cain sees
a downed Kopta crash through the ice, which is still relatively thin
on top, and gets an idea.
Unfortunately, having the idea makes
him the obvious choice to carry it out. Using the winch from one of
the Scout troop's Sentinels, Cain and Jurgen are lowered to the
surface of the ice, carrying demolition charges. Federer has advised
them that they need to be under the ice to have an effect, so Jurgen
creates holes in a few strategic spots with his melta gun. Just as
they are finishing, they are set upon by a stray band of Orks. Badly
outnumbered, they commandeer one of the downed Warbuggyz and speed
clear of the lake.
Federer detonates the charges to
satisfying effect, cracking the ice and drowning nearly all of the
Orks. At the edge of the frozen lake, Cain looks into the water and
thinks he glimpses something, but it is gone too quickly for him to
be sure. He and Jurgen speed away from a group of Orks that escaped
the lake, but the pursuit cuts off abruptly. Heading back cautiously,
they find the Ork vehicles abandoned, and the orks gone without
trace. They head back to rejoin the regiment, but Cain is unable to
shake the fear that something else is on the planet that neither the
Imperials nor the orks are aware of.
Part Three
The 597th establishes its headquarters
in the capital city, Primadelving, and gets "stuck in" to
the Orks with all the enthusiasm and competence of any seasoned
Valhallan regiment. Their success is extremely galling to the PDF and
the green companies of the newly-formed Nusquam 1st Guard regiment,
who have been battling the Orks with as much enthusiasm but rather
less competence. Kasteen butts heads with the Nusquans' newly-minted
Commissar, Forres, who seems determined to prove herself by
encouraging her troops to charge the greenskins head-on as often as
possible.
Cain smoothes things over by pointing
out that the Orks' numbers have been thinning on all fronts. Since
the concept of retreat is anathema to greenskins, this makes it more
than likely that they are consolidating for a major push against one
of a few strategic targets.
A few days later, the Governor is
alarmed when the city loses contact with two strategic sites well
behind the Imperial lines, apparently attacked by Ork Kommandos. One
of these, Mechanicus Adept Izembard warns, is a geothermal power
station that, if left unregulated, could trigger a volcanic explosion
within the next few hours.
Since Forres has already volunteered to
lead the first wave of Nusquans sent in as reinforcements, Cain can
hardly decline the invitation to lead the Valhallan contingent. He
tries to make the best of it, flying with Sergeant Grifen's squad in
a Valkyrie to the Shrine ahead of the platoon traveling overland.
When they arrive, the Shrine is
deserted, and undamaged to a degree unheard of whenever Orks are
involved. Cain is expecting the worst, but the squad double-times to
the central control room and Cain starts to manipulate the controls
according to Izembard's directions. But in one corner, the troopers
find a heap of gory metal parts, as if something swallowed the Tech
Priests at the Shrine and threw their bionic parts back up. In
horror, Cain yells for the troopers to get away from the walls, as
Tyranids erupt from the fissures.
Cain and the Valhallans make a fighting
retreat to the Valkyrie. But instead of ordering them back to
Primadelving, Kasteen diverts them to the other strategic objective,
informing them that Forres and her troops are also under attack.
The second fight is even harder, since
the swarm includes genestealers, but with a little ingenuity on
Cain's part, they manage to defeat the swarm and extract Forres's
surrounded party. With the Nusquans' Chimeras wrecked, they climb
aboard a large cargo hauler and plough their way out the front door.
Driving back to Primadelving, Cain
catches a glimpse of a few scattered hormagaunts, led by a Warrior,
digging in the ice. Knowing it is virtually unheard of for Tyranids
to move in such small numbers, he is worried enough to check it out.
Just as they are peering over a snowdrift, the ice cracks, and a
Tervigon rises. Cain and Jurgen leap aboard the crawler and speed
away, but the vehicle hits an inconvenient crevasse and throws one of
its tracks, leaving the Guardsmen no option but to make a stand.
Their lasguns are fairly useless except against the Termagants being
spawned by the monstrous creature, but Jurgen is able to critically
wound it with two blasts from his melta.
In her enthusiasm, Forres charges
forward to finish it off, and Cain, keenly aware that all eyes are on
him, runs forward to restrain her. He stops Forres from being bitten
in half by the creature's death throes, but falls down a pit in the
ice created by its fall. Looking around, he is horrified to see
hundreds, if not thousands, of still-dormant Tyranids lodged in the
ice. If they all wake up, the Guard will not stand a chance.
Part Four
Knowing they are outnumbered, Kasteen
has already sent astropathic calls for help, but reinforcements from
Coronus wil take more time to arrive than they have. Cain adds that
he has also sent a discreet message to Amberley Vail, and that a
detachment from the Bone Knives Space Marine chapter is also on its
way.
Since no Hive Ships can be detected in
orbit, where the Tyranids came from is a mystery that nags at the
Governor and several others. Magos Izembard announces that, based on
his analysis of the specimens Cain brought back, the Tyranids have
been frozen in the ice for about seven thousand years - they had no
reason to thaw out and wake up, until the Fires of Faith ploughed a
boiling hole in the ice. The Tyranids' current numbers and their
likely movements are all but impossible to discern, but one thing he
can say with certainty is that they will be attacking Primadelving -
the planet's biggest population center - before long.
An extract from Jenit Sulla's memoirs
clarifies that the Govenor evacuated as many civilians from the
outlying habitats to Primadelving as possible, allowing the Guard
forces to consolidate their defence, but the Tyranids snapped up many
of the slower-moving ones, and the Orks had, in the meantime, managed
to re-group and renew their offensive.
Since many of the civilians are
refusing to leave their homes, Kasteen asks Cain to accompany one of
the evacuation convoys, hoping that the sight of him will convince
the rest of the city that the convoys are safe, and preferable to
staying behind and being gobbled up. Cain has no objections to
leaving the primary theatre for a few days, even if doing so requires
him to ride with Sulla.
As usual, trouble finds Cain regardless
of where he is or how he got there. After several hours, the
passenger crawler he is riding in is attacked from underneath by a
Mawloc, which punches through the viewport nearest to Cain. With a
press of screaming civilians at his back, Cain takes the only route
he can to avoid being swallowed whole - leaping out of the window a
split second before the Mawloc strikes. The Valhallan Sentinels
escorting the convoy quickly neutralize the Warriors controlling the
Mawloc, but Cain is briefly on his own. Remembering that the beast is
vibration-sensitive, Cain improvises: Jurgen tosses him a krak
grenade, and Cain shoves it into the barrels of spare promethium
lashed to the deck, then cuts them loose. Feeling the thump of the
barrels, the Mawloc senses food and swallows them all, just before an
explosion guts it. Cain is safe, though exasperated that he is now
the hero of the hour yet again.
When the convoy arrives in Underice
(the planet's second-largest city), Cain is looking forward to a few
hours, or days, of rest, but is shocked to see a series of
orbit-capable shuttles parked outside the city. Sulla investigates,
and informs that, since the shuttles were intended to ferry the 597th
from the Fires of Faith, the Administratum automatically listed them
as lost after the ship was destroyed. But because the shuttles were
still parked at the spaceport at Primadelving, the Administratum
ordered them to clear off and find somewhere else to be "lost."
As grating as Cain normally finds Sulla's company, he cannot help but
share a moment of rapport with her, as they both mull over the
indefatigable stupidity of the bureaucratic mindset.
Sulla brightly informs Cain that she
has requisitioned the shuttles, which can take the Valhallans back to
the main theatre that very night, without having to waste another
long overland journey. Cain tries to sound congratulatory.
Part Five
Back in Primadelving, the shuttles have
greatly speeded up the evacuation, although the Governor is
stubbornly refusing to let Kasteen declare martial law and "convince"
the last few holdouts to leave the city. On the battlefront, things
are steadily getting worse, as the Tyranid swarms attacking the city
are steadily becoming both more numerous, and much better
coordinated. Kasteen, Broklaw, and Cain speculate that some kind of
Node is gradually awakening, allowing the Tyranids to act as one.
Magos Izembard announces that he has
pinpointed the exact age of the Tyranid specimens Cain brought back.
No one considers this very important, but Izembard begs to differ:
the Tyranids' arrival on Nusquam coincides more or less exactly with
the date when the comet responsible for much of the local geography
struck the planet - which means there was no comet, and what hit the
planet seven thousand years ago was a full-fledged Hive Ship, which
is still buried in the ice and has been gradually re-animating since
the Valhallans arrived. Based on the progress of the Tyranids'
cohesion, Izembard estimates that they have only hours before the
Hive Ship is fully awake, at which point the Tyranids will not only
be poised to overwhelm them, but it will send out a psychic call that
will draw any nearby Hive Fleets to overrun the entire sector. Cain
quails at the thought that, even if they escape the planet, there
will be nowhere to hide.
However, he sees an option: a small
element of the Imperial forces is stationed outside the city walls,
guarding the last functioning geothermal power station on the
continent. If they can deliberately induce an overload, of the kind
that claimed the other one, the resulting volcanic explosion will
destroy the Hive Ship (and the now-all-but-empty city, but that's
unavoidable). Once again, Cain, as the idea man, lacks a plausible
excuse to duck the job of leading the force.
Cain and Jurgen lead a combined unit of
Valhallans and Nusquan Rough Riders mounted on Bikes through the
tunnels, fighting off any Tyranids they encounter. But soon they find
their way blocked by a Hive Tyrant, accompanied by a full escort of
Guards. Under its direction, the Tyranids in their path are as
impassable as a wall, and the force at the power plant, being led by
Forres, is blocked off. At first, Cain is tempted to call off the
mission and run back to the shuttles, but he sees a group of
Pyrovores in the Tyrant's escort, and inspiration strikes. The Guard
re-target their weapons, and rupture one's stomach, causing a chain
reaction as its contents burst into flame and ignite the other
Pyrovores, immolating the Tyrant and its Guards. Unfortunately, there
is now nothing stopping Cain's force from pressing on.
Arriving at the power station, Cain
links up with Forres and they disable the station's safeties and set
demolition charges to induce the explosion. But as they are about to
evacuate, they are attacked by a fresh wave of Tyranids, led by a
Trygon that burrows out of the rock walls. The Trygon is killed, but
a rockfall traps Cain and Jurgen in the power station, with Forres
and the other Guardsmen on the other side. Grimly, she confirms that
they can't tunnel them out. Cain tells her to evacuate with the
others, even as he hears yet more Tyranids speeding towards them.
Cain and Jurgen pick up two fallen
Bikes and take the only exit available: the tunnel made by the
Trygon. This is a near-suicidal risk, but for Cain the choice between
certain death and near-certain death is always an easy one. Relying
on speed and his natural sense of direction underground, Cain leads
Jurgen on a snaking path away from the station, and finds a surface
exit, emerging into safety just before the tunnel belches flame from
the volcanic eruption. Cain and Jurgen turn and see the Hive Ship's
death throes as it is caught in the explosion.
Epilogue
Cain and Jurgen pick up their bikes and
prepare for a long, cold drive to Underice, but it turns out to be
unnecessary. Cain notices a transport circling overhead, and signals
it. When the ship lands, he is surprised to recognize it as a
Thunderhawk gunship; the Space Marines have arrived at last.
He is even more surprised when the ship
whisks them into orbit intstead of reuniting them with the regiment.
Above the planet, they see Amberley's private star yacht orbiting
alongside the Marines' Strike Cruiser.
Cain's debriefing with Amberley is a
pleasant affair, accompanied by a change of clothes, a hot bath, and
a gourmet meal. Over dinner, Amberley questions him closely about
Izembard's findings, and is deeply troubled. The Imperium's first
official contact with the Tyranids was in 745.M41, while the more
complete records maintained by the Ordo Xenos suggest contact with
Tyranid bio-forms as far back as M35. But the Hive Ship on Nusquam
has been there for at least a thousand years longer, which raises the
disquieting possibility that the Tyranids have penetrated much
farther into the galaxy than previously thought, and there is no
telling how many other hidden hives are scattered around, just
waiting for another fleet invasion to awaken them. Cain tries to
minimize the blow, reasoning that the chances of another major Hive
Fleet invasion are minimal (adding ruefully with hindsight that he
was wrong not once, but twice over).
Amberley asks him if the 597th needs
him back right away, and he says no, they will likely be engaged in
cleaning up the remnants of the Tyranids and Orks on Nusquam for
several months. With a smile, Amberley says Cain (and Jurgen) should
be able to help her with another "little problem" she
has...
Vail ends the narrative there, deciding
that Cain's response was both irrelevant and unfit for publication.
Orks and tyranids. Lots and lots of both. Mayhem and death. Lots and
lots of both. At this point things kind of feel old hat. Cain and the
597th have faced both in large numbers and while the
setting has changed here, it felt like a retread.
I say that like it’s a bad thing and sometimes it is, but these
WH40K books are franchise fiction and as such there is a formula and
the writers stick to it and it works (most of the time. Series like
the Horus Heresy that go on for 50books without a resolution, well,
that’s just a money grab). I enjoy the badguys getting slaughtered
and I enjoy the close shaves and I enjoy the action.
I only have one more Ciaphas Cain novel left (there is one more after
that but I can’t get a hold of it) and then I have two random
Warhammer 40,000 standalone novels and then I’ll be done. After
that, I think I’m going to take a break from WH40K and use the time
to investigate to see if there are any other characters/authors I
might want to try.