Galaxy in Flames

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Galaxy in Flames Page 12

by Ben Counter


  The drop is in a few hours,’ replied Rylanor. There is little time,’

  Yes, I have left it too late and for that I apologise, but it concerns Captain Odovocar,’

  'Captain Odovocar is dead, killed on Isstvan Extremis,’

  'And the Legion lost a great warrior that day,’ nodВ­ded Tarvitz. 'Not only that, but he was to function as Eidolon's senior staff officer aboard the Andro-nius, relaying the commander's orders to the surface. With his death there is no one to fulfil that role,’

  'Eidolon is aware of Odovocar's loss. He will have an alternative in place,’

  'I request the honour of fulfilling that role,’ said Tarvitz solemnly. 'I knew Odovocar well and would consider it a fitting tribute to finish the work he began on this campaign,’

  The dreadnought leaned close to Tarvitz, the cold metallic machine unreadable, as the crippled warВ­rior within decided Tarvitz's fate.

  'You would renounce the honour of your place in the speartip to take over his duties?'

  Tarvitz looked into Rylanor's vision slit, strugВ­gling to keep his expression neutral. Rylanor had seen everything the Legion had gone through since the beginning of the Great Crusade and was said to be able to perceive a lie the instant it was told.

  His request to remain aboard the Andronius was highly unusual and Rylanor would surely be suspiВ­cious of his motives for not wanting to go into the fight. But when Tarvitz had learned that Eidolon was not leading the speartip personally, he knew there had to be a reason. The lord commander never passed up the opportunity to flaunt his marВ­tial prowess and for him to appoint another in his stead was unheard of.

  Not only that, but the deployment orders Eidolon had issued made no sense.

  Instead of the normal, rigorously regimented order of battle that was typical of an Emperor's Children assault, the units chosen to make the first attack appeared to have been picked at random. The only thing they had in common was that none were from Chapters led by Eidolon's favoured lord commanders. For Eidolon to sanction a drop withВ­out any of the warriors belonging to those lord commanders was unheard of and grossly insulting.

  Something felt very wrong about this drop and Tarvitz couldn't shake the feeling that there was some grim purpose behind the selection of these units. He had to know what it was.

  Rylanor straightened and said, 'I shall see to it that you are replaced. This is a great sacrifice you make, Captain Tarvitz. You do the memory of Odovocar much honour with it,’

  Tarvitz fought to hide his relief, knowing that he had taken an unthinkable risk in lying to Rylanor. He nodded and said, 'My thanks, Ancient,’

  'I shall join the troops of the speartip,’ said the dreadnought. Their feasting will soon be complete and I must ensure that they are ready for battle,’

  'Bring perfection to the Choral City,’ said Tarvitz.

  'Guide us well,’ replied Rylanor, his voice loaded with unspoken meaning. Tarvitz was suddenly cerВ­tain that the dreadnought wanted Tarvitz to remain on the ship.

  'Do the Emperor's work, Captain Tarvitz,’ ordered Rylanor.

  Tarvitz saluted and said, 'I will,’ as Rylanor set off across the Hall of Rites towards the banquet, his every step heavy and pounding.

  Tarvitz watched him go, wondering if he would ever see the Ancient again.

  The dormitories tucked into the thick walls running the length of the gantry were dark and hot, and from the doorway Mersadie could see down into the engine compartment where the crew were indistinguishable, sweating figures who worked in the infernal heat and ruddy glow of the plasma reactors. They hurried across gangways that stretched between the titanic reactors and

  clambered along massive conduits that hung like spider webs in the hellish gloom.

  She dabbed sweat from her brow at the heat and close confines of the engine space, unused to the searing air that stole away her breath and left her faint.

  'Mersadie,’ said Sindermann coming to meet her along the gantry. The iterator had lost weight, his dirty robes hanging from his already spare frame, but his face was alight with the relief and joy of seeВ­ing her. The two embraced in a heartfelt hug, both grateful beyond words to see each other. She felt tears pricking her eyes at the sight of the old man, unaware until this moment of how much she had missed him.

  'Kyril, it's so good to see you again,’ she sobbed. 'You just vanished. I thought they'd got to you. I didn't know what had happened to you.'

  'Hush, Mersadie,' said Sindermann, 'it's all right. I'm so sorry I couldn't send word to you at the time. You must understand that had I a choice, I would have done everything I could to keep you out of this, but I don't know what to do any more. We can't keep her down here forever,’

  Mersadie looked through the doorway of the dorВ­mitory room they stood outside, wishing she had the courage to believe as Kyril did. 'Don't be ridicuВ­lous, Kyril. I'm glad you made contact, I thought… I thought Maloghurst or Maggard had killed you,’

  'Maggard very nearly did,’ said Sindermann, 'but the saint saved us,’

  'She saved you?' asked Mersadie. 'How?'

  'I don't know exactly, but it was just like in the Archive Chamber. The power of the Emperor was in her. I saw it, Mersadie, just as sure as you're standВ­ing here before me. I wish you could have seen it,’

  'I wish that too,’ she said, surprised to find that she meant it.

  She entered the dormitory and stared down at the still form of Euphrati Keeler on the thin cot bed, looking for all the world as if she was simply sleepВ­ing. The small room was cramped and dirty, with a thin blanket spread on the deck beside the bed.

  Winking starlight streamed in through a small porthole vision block, something greatly prized this deep in the ship, and without asking, she knew that someone had happily volunteered to give up their prized room for the use of the 'saint' and her companion.

  Even down here in the dark and the stink, faith flourished.

  'I wish I could believe,’ said Mersadie, watching the rhythmic rise and fall of Euphrati's chest.

  Sindermann said, 'You don't?'

  'I don't know,’ she said, shaking her head. 'Tell me why I should? What does believing mean to you, Kyril?'

  He smiled and took her hand. 'It gives me someВ­thing to hold on to. There are people on this ship who want to kill her, and somehow… don't ask me how, I just know that I need to keep her safe,’

  'Are you're not afraid?' she asked.

  'Afraid?' he said. 'I've never been more terrified in my life, my dear, but I have to hope that the Emperor is watching over me. That gives me strength and the will to face that fear.'

  'You are a remarkable man, Kyril,’

  'I'm not remarkable, Mersadie,’ said Sindermann, shaking his head. 'I was lucky. I saw what the saint did, so faith is easy for me. It's hardest for you, for you have seen nothing. You have to simply accept that the Emperor is working through Euphrati, but you don't believe, do you?'

  Mersadie turned from Sindermann and pulled her hand from his, looking through the porthole at the void of space beyond. 'No. I can't. Not yet,’

  A white streak shot across the porthole like a shooting star.

  Another followed it, and then another.

  'What's mat?' she asked.

  Sindermann leaned over to get a better look through the porthole.

  Even through his exhaustion, she could see the strength in him that she had previously taken for granted and she blink-clicked the image, capturВ­ing the defiance and bravery she saw in his features.

  'Drop-pods,’ he said, pointing at a static gleaming object stark against the blackness and closer to Isst-van III. Tiny sparks began raining from its underside towards the planet below.

  'I think that's the Andronius, Fulgrim's flagship,’ said Sindermann. 'Looks like the attack we've been

  hearing about has begun. Imagine how it
would be if we could watch it unfolding,’

  Euphrati groaned and the attack on Isstvan III was forgotten as they slid across to sit beside her. Mersadie saw Sindermann's love for her clearly as he mopped her brow, her skin so clean that it pracВ­tically shone.

  For the briefest moment, Mersadie saw how peoВ­ple could believe Euphrati was miraculous; her body so pale and fragile, yet untouched by the world around her. Mersadie had known Keeler as a gutsy woman, never afraid to speak her mind or bend the rules to get the magnificent picts for which she was rightly famed, but now she was something else entirely. 'Is she coming round?' asked Mersadie. 'No,’ said Sindermann sadly. 'She makes noises, but she never opens her eyes. It's such a waste. Sometimes I swear she's on the brink of waking, but then she sinks back down into whatever hell she's going through in her head,’ Mersadie sighed and looked back out into space. The pinpoints of light streaked in their hundreds towards Isstvan III.

  As the speartip was driven home, she whispered, Token…'

  The Choral City was magnificent.

  Its design was a masterpiece of architecture, light and space so wondrous that Peeter Egon Momus had begged the Warmaster not to assault so

  brutally. Older by millennia than the Imperium that had come to claim it in the name of the Emperor, its precincts and thoroughfares were soon to become blood-slick battlefields.

  While the juggernaut of compliance had made the galaxy a sterile, secular place, the Choral City remained a city of the gods.

  The Precentor's Palace, a dizzying creation of gleaming marble blades and arches that shone in the sun, opened like a vast stone orchid to the sky and the polished granite of the city's wealthiest disВ­tricts clustered around it like worshippers. Momus had described the palace as a hymn to power and glory, a symbol of the divine right by which Isstvan III would be ruled.

  Further out from the palace and beyond the architectural perfection of the Choral City, vast multi-layered residential districts sprawled. ConВ­nected by countless walkways and bridges of glass and steel, the avenues between them were wide canyons of tree-lined boulevards in which the citiВ­zens of the Choral City lived.

  The city's industrial heartland rose like climbing skeletons of steel against the eastern mountains, belching smoke as they churned out weapons to arm the planet's armies. War was coming and every Isstvanian had to be ready to fight.

  But no sight in the Choral City compared to the Sirenhold.

  Not even the magnificence of the palace outВ­shone the Sirenhold, its towering walls defining the

  Choral City with their immensity. The brutal batВ­tlements diminished everything around them, and the sacred fortress of the Sirenhold humbled even the snow-capped peaks of the mountains. Within its walls, enormous tomb-spires reached for the skies, their walls encrusted with monumental sculptures that told the legends of Isstvan's mythiВ­cal past.

  The legends told that Isstvan himself had sung the world into being with music that could still be heard by the blessed Warsingers, and that he had borne countless children with whom he populated the first ages of the world. They became night and day, ocean and mountain, a thousand legends whose breath could be felt in every moment of every day in the Choral City.

  Darker carvings told of the Lost Children, the sons and daughters who had forsaken their father and been banished to the blasted wasteland of the fifth planet, where they became monsters that burned with jealousy and raised black fortresses from which to brood upon their expulsion from paradise.

  War, treachery, revelation and death; all marched around the Sirenhold in endless cycles of myth, the weight of their meaning pinning the Choral City to the soil of Isstvan III and infusing its every inhabiВ­tant with their sacred purpose.

  The gods of Isstvan III were said to sleep in the Sirenhold, whispering their murderous plots in the nightmares of children and ancients.

  For a time, the myths and legends had remained as distant as they had always been, but now they walked among the people of the Choral City, and every breath of wind shrieked that the Lost ChilВ­dren had returned.

  Without knowing why, the populace of Isstvan III had armed and unquestioningly followed the orders of Vardus Praal to defend their city. An army of well-equipped soldiers awaited the invasion they had long been promised was coming in the western marches of the city, where the Warsingers had sung a formidable web of trenches into being.

  Artillery pieces parked in the gleaming canyons of the city pointed their barrels westwards, set to pound any invaders into the ground before they reached the trenches. The warriors of the Choral City would then slaughter any that survived in careВ­fully prepared crossfire.

  The defences had been meticulously planned, protecting the city from attack from the west, the only direction in which an invasion could be launched.

  Or so the soldiers manning the defences had been told.

  The first omen was a fire in the sky that came with the dawn.

  A scattering of falling stars streaked through the blood-red dawn, burning through the sky like fiery tears.

  The sentries in the trenches saw them falling in bright spears of fire, the first burning object

  smashing into the trenches amid a plume of mud and flame.

  At the speed of thought, the word raced around the Choral City that the Lost Children had returned, that the prophecies of myth were coming true,

  They were proven right when the drop-pods burst open and the Astartes of the Death Guard Legion emerged.

  And the killing began.

  PART TWO

  THE CHORAL CITY

  EIGHT

  Soldiers from hell

  Butchery

  Betrayal

  Thirty seconds!' yelled Vipus, his voice barely audible over the screaming jets as the drop-pod sliced through Isstvan Ill's atmosphere. The Astartes of Locasta were bathed in red light and for a moment Loken imagined what they would look like to the people of the Choral City when the assault began – warriors from another world, solВ­diers from hell.

  'What's our landing point looking like?' shouted Loken.

  Vipus glanced at the readout on a pict-screen mounted above his head. 'Drifting! We'll hit the target, but off-centre. I hate these things. Give me a stormbird any day!'

  Loken didn't bother replying, barely able to hear Nero as the atmosphere thickened beneath the

  drop-pod and the jets on its underside kicked in. The drop-pod shuddered and began heating up as the enormous forces pushing against it turned to fire and noise.

  He sat through the last few minutes while everyВ­thing around him was noise, unable to see the enemy he was about to fight and relinquishing conВ­trol over his fate until the drop-pod hit.

  Nero had been right when he said he had preВ­ferred an assault delivered by stormbird, the precise, surgical nature of an airborne assault far preferable to a warrior than this hurtling descent from above.

  But the Warmaster had decided that the speartip would be deployed by drop-pod, reasoning –rightly, Loken admitted – that thousands of Astartes smashing into the defenders' midst without warnВ­ing would be more psychologically devastating. Loken ran through the moment the drop-pod would hit in his mind, preparing himself for when the hatch charges would blow open.

  He gripped his bolter tightly, and checked for the tenth time that his chainsword was in its scabbard at his side. Loken was ready.

  'Ten seconds, Locasta,’ shouted Vipus.

  Barely a second later, the drop-pod impacted with such force that Loken's head snapped back and sudВ­denly the noise was gone and everything went black.

  sti

  Lucius killed his first foe without even breaking stride.

  The dead man's armour was like glass, shimmerВ­ing and iridescent, and his halberd's blade was fashioned from the same reflective substance. A mask of stained glass covered his face, the mouth represented by leading and filled with teeth of gemВ­like triangles.

  Lucius
slid his sword clear, blood smoking from its edge, as the soldier slumped to the floor. A curved arch of marble shone red in the dawn's early light above him and a swirl of dust and debris drifted around the drop-pod he had just leapt from.

  The Precentor's Palace stood before him, vast and astonishing, a stone flower with the spire at its cenВ­tre like a spectacular twist of overlapping granite petals.

  More drop-pods hammered into the ground behind him, the plaza around the palace's north entrances the main objective of the Emperor's ChilВ­dren. A nearby drop-pod blew open and Ancient Rylanor stepped from its red-lit interior, his assault cannon already cycling and tracking for targets. 'Nasicae!' yelled Lucius. To me!' Lucius saw a flash of coloured glass from inside the palace, movement beyond the sweeping stone panels of the entrance hall.

  More palace guards reacted to the sudden, shockВ­ing assault, but contrary to what Lucius had been expecting, they weren't screaming or begging for

  mercy. They weren't even fleeing, or standing stock still, numb with shock.

  With a terrible war cry the palace guard charged and Lucius laughed, glad to be facing a foe with some backbone. He levelled his sword and ran towards them, Squad Nasicae following behind him, weapons at the ready.

  A hundred palace guardians ran at them, resplenВ­dent in their glass armour. They formed a line before the Astartes, levelled their halberds, and opened fire.

  Searing needles of silver filled the air around Lucius, gouging the armour of his shoulder guard and leg. Lucius lifted his sword arm to shield his head and the needles spat from the glowing blade of his sword. Where they hit the stone around the entrance it bubbled and hissed like acid.

  One of Nasicae fell beside Lucius, one arm molten and his abdomen bubbling.

  'Perfection and death!' cried Lucius, running through the white-hot silver needles. The Emperor's Children and the Palace Guard clashed with a sound like a million windows breaking the terrible screamВ­ing of the halberd-guns giving way to the clash of blade against armour and point-blank bolter fire

  Lucius's first sword blow hacked through a halВ­berd shaft and tore through the throat of the man before him. Sightless glass eyes glared back at him, blood pumping from the guard's ruined throat, and Lucius tore the helm from his foe's head to better savour the sensation of his death.

 

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