Sunday, November 23, 2025

Colonel Lord Alaric Pembroke-Valen- Commandant of the 88th Vermilion Regulars



Origins and Family Lineage

Lord Alaric Pembroke-Valen hails from one of the oldest noble houses on Valoris Prime, a lineage steeped in military tradition. His family traces its honor directly to Sir Hadrian Pembroke-Valen, a junior officer who served with distinction in the Macharian Crusade and is listed by name in the marginalia of the Lord Solar’s own muster rolls.

Where many noble families merely claim connection to the Crusade, the Pembroke-Valens can produce authenticated relics—oath-scrolls, duelist’s commendations, and even a battered fragment of the original regimental standard. Such provenance carries immense weight among the aristocracy of Valoris Prime and sets expectations for every child born into the line.

Alaric was no exception.

He is the seventh Pembroke-Valen to command the 88th.



Early Career

Alaric’s path to the colonelcy was traditional:

  • Educated at the Valoris Prime Officer Academy, where he excelled in history, swordsmanship, and battlefield theory.
  • Served as a platoon commander in the 88th’s 5th Company, earning a reputation for icy calm under fire.
  • Rose to company captain, commanding with impeccable discipline and a gift for maintaining formation integrity even under grueling fire.
  • Chosen as heir to the commandant’s mantle after the death of Colonel (Lord) Severin Pembroke-Valen, his uncle, during the Gethos Reclamation.

His ascent was not the result of dramatic heroics but of competence, steadiness, and an unbroken record of achieving objectives with minimal disruption to doctrine—qualities the 88th values above all.


Personality and Command Style

Lord Alaric is, first and foremost, a professional soldier.
Not flamboyant, not ostentatiously charismatic—simply authoritative, disciplined, and deeply, almost spiritually committed to the traditions of the regiment.

He is often described as:

  • Measured in speech
  • Unshakeably calm
  • Exacting but fair
  • Impeccably mannered
  • Quietly proud
  • Politely intolerant of disorder

He avoids theatrics, preferring a sharp word, a colder stare, or a pointedly raised eyebrow to correct subordinates. His disapproval is legendary, not for volume but for precision.

In battle, he is deliberate and methodical—never rash, never flamboyant, always positioning his lines with clinical care. When forced into close combat, he shows flashes of the Pembroke-Valen duelist tradition, wielding his power sword with controlled, economical efficiency.


Relationship to Regimental Tradition

Alaric is the living embodiment of the Vermilion ideal.

He is not a fanatic, but he is a believer—deeply so—in:

  • Lineage
  • Uniform discipline
  • Formation warfare
  • The dignity of the regiment
  • The unbroken chain to the Macharian Crusade

He conducts the annual Macharian Day remembrance personally, wearing the crimson dress coat of the founding era. He inspects the regiment’s relics weekly. He knows, verbatim, long passages from the regimental chronicle.

Yet he is not blind to the demands of the current age. He permits innovation—but only if it is orderly, tested, and does not threaten the regiment’s identity.

He is the reason the 88th’s traditions continue not as empty ceremony, but as living doctrine.


Opinions of Other Regiments

Lord Alaric is never openly insulting—but his opinions are unmistakable.

On the 13th Necromunda (“The Rat Catchers”)

He would never criticize them directly, but he tends to phrase observations like:

“Ah. Yes. Their… enthusiasm is commendable.”

And:

“The 13th exhibit an unusual aptitude for… adaptive logistics.”

He respects their courage, but their disorderliness puts him in physical discomfort.

On the Azure Auxilia

“Reliable fellows. Rough edges, but earnest.”

On the Green Company

“If only they would remain still for inspection.”

On the Onyx Guard

“Somber, but dependable. One always knows where they stand—usually in a straight line.”


Field Reputation

Among the 88th, he is seen as:

  • A master of defensive and attrition warfare
  • The ideal Vermilion officer
  • A direct continuation of the Macharian-era ethos
  • Someone who would rather die than break formation

Across wider Imperial forces:

  • He is respected but considered very “old school”
  • His regiment is known for unwavering discipline
  • His lines are famously difficult to dislodge
  • He is often requested for holding actions, siege lines, and parades

No one questions his competence.
Some quietly question his flexibility.
But his results speak for themselves.


Equipment

  • Power Sword: An heirloom dueling blade, converted into a masterwork power weapon. Its hilt includes a micro-engraved family lineage going back over a millennium.
  • Plasma Pistol: A rare, impeccably maintained weapon gifted by the Governor Militant of Valoris Prime as a symbol of office.
  • Dress Coat: Vermilion of the deepest dye, said to follow the exact pattern used during the Macharian Crusade.
  • Signet Gorget: Bearing the motto “Iure Stirpis, Facto Igne.”

Closing Summary

Lord Alaric Pembroke-Valen represents everything the 88th prides itself on:

  • Discipline
  • Lineage
  • Precision
  • Restraint
  • Tradition
  • Unshakeable bearing

He is not a caricature or a tyrant—just a man who embodies a regimental culture centuries in the making.
A commander who believes deeply in the values that made the 88th great and intends to pass them, unsullied, to the next generation.

A Wellington of the 41st Millennium.
With a plasma pistol.

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