
Terry surveyed his surroundings carefully. The shipping‑container Voidship was smoking behind him inside a shallow crater. His ears still rang from the loud boom of the crash landing and it was a miracle that all three of them had somehow survived.
Grimskarg, clad in full battle gear, was retrieving a pair of choppas from the Voidship when he suddenly spun around. He had sensed hostiles nearby. Slowly, his nature took over and he could feel battle rage rising within him.
Estrenelle was also in battle mode. She had donned her helmet and, like Grimskarg, sensed enemies upon them. She crouched behind a large rock and beckoned Terry over. Terry scurried across and retrieved a pair of binoculars from his breast pocket.
From a distance, Terry spotted a small crowd of humanoid lifeforms moving directly toward them.
The group advanced slowly. At the front were about thirty humans dressed in rags, followed by strange beings behind them. Through his binoculars, Terry could just make out the silhouettes – third arms protruding from their forms.
“Damn,” he muttered. “Genestealers…”
He trained his binoculars further toward the rear of the procession. A rugged, rusty tank came into view. Its hatch was open and Terry spotted its commander staring back at him through his visual aid. The commander pointed in his direction and shouted to his troops. The whole detachment picked up speed and Terry saw glimmers as the infantry drew their weapons.
Terry ducked back behind the rock and did a quick calculation. They were up against perhaps fifty enemies and a tank. Not exactly a battle they could win.
He glanced at Estrenelle crouching beside him. Her battle armour was bony grey. A Shuriken pistol was strapped to her thigh and a long spear was tied across her back. She turned to look at him.
“Do you reckon they’re up for… urm… talking?” Terry asked.
“Don’t think so,” replied Estrenelle. “Are you going to be doing the usual with him?” She nodded toward Grimskarg.
Grimskarg had retrieved his weapons and was slowly moving toward the advancing adversaries. Once he was like this, there was no talking, no reasoning – only fight. Orks were Orks, after all.
Estrenelle stepped in front of Grimskarg, blocking his path. She leaned closer and said, “You see that tank over there?”
“Yeh, I’z gonna chop dat up!” snarled Grimskarg. “Git outta me zoggin’ way!”
“Leave that to me,” Estrenelle said firmly. “Later, that tank WILL explode and you can handle the rest of the infantry. More kills, yeah?”
Terry observed the exchange. He noticed Estrenelle was hinting heavily at the “will” part of the tank exploding as if it were already a foregone conclusion. Before he had time to dwell on this, Grimskarg’s patience had run out and he began to charge toward the advancing enemies.
Terry chased after Grimskarg and leapt onto his back. His legs fit snugly into a pair of leather boots sewn directly onto the Ork’s shoulder garb. He reached over his back and readied his Lasgun.
“E’re we go!” bellowed Grimskarg as he charged headlong into battle.



