He bled from uncounted wounds. His arm was malfunctioning and his pale hair was dripping on filthy water, red blood and who knew what else. He had lost all feeling in his right foot and he'd lost the spare pair of boots he had liberated from the dead marine from Carmine. His rifle was lost, carried away by the currents of the sewer, and his wounds were beginning to show signs of infection. He had been going for 41 hours without so much as a wink of sleep and even an rest of any form. The closest he'd gotten to was monitering radio traffic, and that required far too much mental concentration to be relaxing. His leg was a mess and he was limping heavily, favouring his left side. From his one working hand, his right one, his signature weapon hung loosely.
Colt Python .357 Magnum with enough attachments to consider it highly illegial on Earth and most of it's colonies. It had been his father's. He looked like the Devil himself, with pale, blood-soaked skin, slick white hair and blazing red eyes -his implants were stuck on infrared- and a gaunt figure that still stood tall, slowly making his way through the muck. Even greviously wounded as he was, he managed to retain his dignity. Of course he did, he was a Darkblade. He'd been raised in the old school of soldiery, and had been taught to inspire as well as to fight. Looking back through his blood-line, he was the military equivalent of nobility, and it showed in his stance, in the confident way that he looked around himself, haughtily taking in his surroundings.
Even as the sewers fell apart around him as the first stages of the bombardment became, he excuded an aura of calm, of competence. This was a man that made you feel that everything was really going to be okay. And for once, they were. His first ever mission with true command, and it had been a resounding success. He had more than enough reason to wear that faint, grim smile that graced pale, filth-caked lips. The uniform and armour stained with shit and gore, it was clear that he'd been through hell. And yet he still stood tall. The latest -and only- surviving member of the Darkblade line, Malus surveyed the results of the recent batttle with satisfaction. Carmine had aquitted himself well in his baptism of fire. He'd fought with the ferocity and determination to make an ancient War Daemon shudder.
"All remaining human forces. This is Commander Malus Darkblade of Weyland-Yutani Corporation We are evacuating this city. Report to the nearest Weyland-Yutani base camp for extraction. This goes for everyone, civillian, marine, or merc. I don't care if you have left your teddy or your grandmother's ashes. In the name of all that is holy, we are purging this city. Report to your nearest evacuation stations. It is safe to come out." He spoke, after thumbing on his micro-bead. His faint Australian accent echoed throghout the city as his call was repeated over every single PA speaker in the entire city. Everyone heard the soft-spoken man announcing that they were leaving the place that they had all fought so hard to protect.
He knew that it had to be done. If a single contaminant escaped, it would happen again. Twice as bad, because Earth would still be rebuilding. Still be weak. Unprepared for a second assault, that perhaps not even Malus culd defend against. No. He would not risk it. It ended here, in this old German city. There was no way in hell that the bugs were getting out of this alive. Not a single one. He would turn this city into glass. Because he had to. It was a desicion that perhaps a Marine could not make, but a Corporate could. He was not a hero. He was something else. He did what had to be done.
And if people blamed him for it, then that was a price he would pay. He would frankly be glad that there were people left to blame. So as he tenderly kneeled by the wounded soldier beside him and gently picked him up, cradling him with one arm as the other reached to the trophy that the young Mercenary so truly deserved, and started walking. He sloshed through the shit with a determined look on his expression, his soldier on one arm and the bug at the other. "You did your duty, Darman Carmine. You did it well, let me take it from here now." He said softly, unsure of whether or not Darman could even hear.
The young soldier had done something that only the bravest of individuals could hope to achieve. It wasn't medals. It wasn't trophies. It was far rarer, and far more valuable. He had earned the respect of Malus Jay Darkblade, a man for whom respect was a dirty word.
And so as he climbed from the sewer and walked up the boarding ramp of the Waffle parked right next to the sewer enterance at his request. He strapped the wounded soldier into the medbay seat and signalling for Vevlaa to get him stabilised by any means nessecary, he also dragged the bug into the cargo bay. It's blood had long evacuated it's shell, and had eventually oxidised on it's own. Placing the trophy next to the other one the man had earned, Malus saw Delta advance in his wake, a trophy of his own in hand. Mal inclined his pale head to the fellow veteran in professional respect, and friendship. "Look at all these bug corpses. Dead. All dead. Now That, gentlemen, is what I like to see." He growled softly, placing his good hand on Delta's armoured shoulder before turning to look at Mark.
"We all did what we had to out there. We did our duty, and I ask no more of my soldiers than that. It wasn't pretty, but it never is. We lost good people out there. Look at what you have done. You just saved the world. I don't care what Kidd or Saysell or any self-righteous Jarhead says, you have all proved yourself heroes this day. Every single one of you." He said this in his usual soft manner, looking them all in the eye, each in turn. He then turned and exited the ship, and watched as it took off without him. He raised a single, battered hand, waving a temporary goodbye, his malfunctioning left arm hanging limply by his side, spent by the effort of dragging the dead Xeno.
As it flew towards the stars to drop off the victorious soldiers in the USCM battleship that had only now just come into orbit around Earth, he knew that thiers was the true face of heroism. The people who don't fight the Good Fight, but fight the nessecary one. They took the fall, they did all the dirty things that no-one should do, because someone had to do it, an they were willing. They were not the kind of soldiers you would hear of in fairy tales and heroic propaganda. They were real heroes, who paid for thier medals in blood and sweat. The tears always came after. And tears would be shed, for those whom had fallen.
He turned towards his own ship. The Grim Reaper. Also once his father's. It was his pride an joy, his home and his legacy, all in one. And now it was packed with civilians and marine survivors. As he stepped on board, everyone moved out of his way. They were afraid of him. He sighed, knowing that it was the way things were. It wasn't fair, but it was the way they were...
[FIFTEEN HOURS LATER]
The city of Nuremberg was no more. Reduced to rubble by the orbital bombardment that the battleship USS AUSTRALIS had laid down on the city. Any survivors whom had been unwilling or unable to leave were dead now. He'd signed thier death warrant. A many lives for all of humanity. It was a choice that every man dreaded making. Even Malus. He stood at the bridge of the ship, his soldiers by his side, all wearing bandages and splints and eye-patches. None of them, not even Malus, was medically fit to stand here. But stand here they did. Side by side. Carmine, sitting in his wheelchair, gazing out at the firestorm with cold, disturbed eyes. Delta and Vevlaa, watching the sight with muted reverence, heads bowed. They'd seen planetary destruction before. But not on Earth. Thankfully, it was not on this scale. Still, it was humbling. An ancient city, rich with history and honour, ripped assunder by the order of one man.
Floating in front of them were the bodies of twelve Colonial Marines, all in thier caskets. And one Corporate Mercenary. Private Gene Wells, posthumously promoted to the rank of Private First Class. He'd gotten the corpses out. As many as he could. They deserved a proper funeral. Now, thier bodies floated on through the void, thier bodies consigned to the blackness of space and thier souls hopefully gone on to paraidse. Well, all the souls but one. The cloning process was going well. Another few days and Gene would be back with them.
A Marine Corporal, one of the soldiers whom Carmine and Hope had rescued from the main building, looked at the firestorm stoically, bearing both his abandonment by her superiors and her grevious wounds with an inner conviction that impressed even Malus. The young woman turned towards the Mercenaries, studying them intently. They were a grizzled, silent group, as diverse as they were deadly. Every single one, with only two execptions, had once been a marine. The former had been a cop. The latter...well, no-one was entirely sure. He kept pretty tight-lipped about his past. "What happens now?" She asked, her voice quiet, knowing that this was a silence to be broken gently. She was wearing the Weyland-Yutani Patch on her uniform, replacing the old USCM one. After what she'd seen, she'd cast her lot in with them.
"The only thing we can do." Malus replied so softly that he could barely be heard, not taking his eyes of the firestorm he had created. "We do what humans have always done after a catastrophe of this scale. We survive. We rebuild. We get back on our feet and wait for the next punch that will knock us down. It will come. And when it does, We'll be there to punch back." He whispered solemnly.