Soul Drinkers 06 - Phalanx

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Soul Drinkers 06 - Phalanx Page 26

by Ben Counter


  Sarpedon let out a long breath. ‘Then that is the way it must be,’ he

  said. ‘You have argued for a reckoning since you arrived on the

  Phalanx. You will have it, if that is what you truly want.’

  Reinez crouched down into a guard, hammer haft held across his

  body. He flexed and bounced on his calves, judging distance and

  winding up for the strike.

  Sarpedon knew that Salk’s squad had all their guns trained on

  Reinez. They would not fire. Perhaps they would if Reinez killed

  Sarpedon, but by then it would not matter.

  Reinez darted forwards, faster than Sarpedon remembered him

  moving. Sarpedon whirled and swung the Axe of Mercaeno around,

  slamming the head into Reinez’s side. He discharged a blast of

  psychic power through the force blade and though Reinez caught the

  worst of the blow on the haft of his hammer, the explosive force was

  enough to throw him from his feet and into the flakboard side of the

  fake church. The wall buckled under his weight, but Reinez rolled to

  his feet and swung his hammer at ankle height as Sarpedon charged

  to follow up.

  Sarpedon leapt up. He scuttled along the wall, talons clinging to the

  flakboard.

  Reinez tried to get his bearings, unused to fighting an enemy who

  could climb walls like a spider.

  ‘Now!’ yelled Reinez. ‘Now! Fire! Fire!’

  From every direction, bolters hammered. Muzzle flashes betrayed

  hidden firing positions around the far side of the mock village. Bullet

  fire ripped into the flakboard around Sarpedon, and a flash of pain burst

  through one of his back legs. Sarpedon ran up the wall and onto the

  roof of the church, volleys of fire chewing through the church all around

  him. In the lee of the church tower he found a semblance of cover, the

  flakboard tearing apart and the tower sagging above him.

  ‘Contacts everywhere,’ voxed Salk. ‘It was a trap. Engage!’

  ‘Who are they?’ demanded Sarpedon.

  ‘It’s us,’ came Salk’s shocked reply. ‘It’s Soul Drinkers!’

  Sarpedon could glimpse purple armour among the debris and

  gunsmoke of the firefight erupting across the village. Iktinos’s Flock,

  the Soul Drinkers who were loyal to the Chaplain first and Sarpedon a

  distant second, whose allegiance Sarpedon had been too blind to

  question.

  ‘You are too honourable, Soul Drinker!’ yelled Reinez from

  somewhere below. ‘Too quick to give a sworn enemy a fair fight! Now it

  will be the death of you all!’

  Reinez clambered up the wall and vaulted onto the roof. Sarpedon

  lunged and the two fought, axe and hammer flashing, blows parried

  and driven aside as bolter fire shrieked around them. Sarpedon hacked

  a chunk out of Reinez’s shoulder armour. In response, Reinez

  stamped down on Sarpedon’s wounded leg to pin him in place and

  crunched the head of his hammer into Sarpedon’s chest. Sarpedon

  was faster than Reinez but the Crimson Fist had prepared for this fight

  for many years and this time he had the advantage of numbers.

  Iktinos’s Flock comprised many more warriors than Salk’s squad and

  among the Flock were those with good enough aim to pick out

  Sarpedon from the melee. Bolter fire slammed into the tower behind

  Sarpedon or sparked from his armour, knocking him back a pace or

  throwing him off-balance.

  Sarpedon powered forwards, a desperate move more suited to a

  rude brawl than a duel to the death. Forelegs and arms wrapped

  around Reinez, forcing him down under Sarpedon’s greater weight.

  ‘What have you done, Reinez?’ growled Sarpedon.

  ‘Iktinos promised me a chance to kill you,’ replied Reinez, voice

  strained as he fought to burst Sarpedon’s hold on him. ‘There was

  nothing else anyone could offer me.’

  ‘Iktinos is the enemy! He is the source of all this suffering.’

  ‘Then I will kill him next,’ snarled Reinez.

  Sarpedon picked up Reinez and threw him down, putting all his

  strength into hurling the Crimson Fist off the roof. Reinez landed badly

  and Salk’s return fire drove him into the cover of a ruined building

  adjoining the church.

  The Flock were moving across the village. More than twenty of them

  had survived the breakout from the Atoning Halls, double Salk’s

  numbers. Sarpedon recognised Soul Drinkers he had called brothers,

  who had been stranded when their officers were killed. Iktinos had

  taken them in and Sarpedon had been grateful that the Chaplain was

  willing to give them spiritual leadership. But Iktinos had been warping

  them, finding their sense of loss and turning it into something else, a

  devotion to the chaplain alone that meant they followed him instead of

  Sarpedon. The chapter master had been confronted with many results

  of his failures as a leader, but none of them had struck him as sharply

  as the sight of the Flock did then, moving with murderous intent

  across the town square to batter Salk’s squad into oblivion.

  Salk’s Soul Drinkers were falling. They were surrounded and

  outgunned. Salk himself leaned out from cover to fell one of the Flock,

  and in response a cluster of shots knocked him out of sight in a

  shower of blood. Sarpedon’s twin hearts felt like they were tightening

  in his chest, all the heat squeezed out of his body to be replaced with

  cold and dust.

  Sarpedon leapt down from the church into the centre of the village.

  He landed in the heart of the advancing Flock. Faces he had known for

  years, since before the first Chapter war, turned on him and saw

  nothing but an enemy. Sarpedon saw nothing in them any more, no

  brotherhood, no hope, none of the principles that had made them turn

  on the old Chapter’s ways. He was their enemy, and they were his.

  Suddenly, it seemed simple.

  Sarpedon knew the closest Soul Drinker to him was Brother

  Scarphinal, one of Givrillian’s squad. Givrillian had been Sarpedon’s

  closest confidant and best friend, and he had died on a nameless

  planet to the daemon prince Ve’Meth. There was nothing left of

  Givrillian’s command in Scarphinal now. His eyes were blank and his

  bolter turned towards Sarpedon without hesitation.

  Sarpedon struck Scarphinal’s head from his shoulders with a single

  shining arc, the Axe of Mercaeno slicing through the Space Marine’s

  neck so smoothly the blood had not yet begun to flow when

  Scarphinal’s head hit the floor.

  Something dark and prideful, a relic of the old Chapter, awakened in

  Sarpedon. The love of bloodshed, the exultation of battle. Sometimes,

  those places locked away in his mind could be useful, and it was with

  a strange sense of relief that he let the bloodlust take him.

  Sarpedon roared with formless anger, and dived into the carnage.

  Chapter 11

  The Phalanx had been designed – whenever it had been designed,

  before the Age of Imperium – to survive. Any hostiles who boarded the

  immense ship might find themselves trapped in the tight, winding

  corridors of the engineering and maintenance areas just beneath the

  hull’s skin, separate
d from the ship’s more vulnerable areas by

  hundreds of automated bulkhead doors and whole sections of outer

  deck that could be vented into hard vacuum with the press of a control

  stud.

  The hostiles currently on the Phalanx had bypassed every design

  feature intended to contain them. They had been disgorged directly

  into the ship’s interior, spilling through cavernous shuttle bays and

  swarming into crew quarters, riding torrents of blood through

  automated cargo motivator systems. The Phalanx had no way to stop

  the daemonic invaders.

  So it was up to the Adeptus Astartes instead.

  Chapter Master Vladimir stood at the threshold of the Sigismunda

  Tactica, and looked out across the battlefield. It spanned the barracks

  deck and was a kilometre and a half wide. This was the vulnerable

  heart of the Phalanx, the ground across which an invader could charge

  with impunity from the lost starboard docking bays towards the

  engines and reactors. The Forge of Ages anchored one end, beyond

  which was a tangle of engineering areas and power and coolant

  conduits. The other flank terminated in the Rynn’s World Memorial, an

  amphitheatre of granite inscribed with the names of the Crimson Fists

  lost in the infamous near-destruction of their fortress-monastery.

  Beyond this memorial were the steel catacombs, tight nests of

  cramped candlelit chambers where generations of crew members were

  laid to rest in niches scattered with bones. The conduit decks and

  catacombs would slow down the invaders’ advance, funnelling them

  through the open areas of the barracks, chapels and hero-shrines

  rolling out in front of Vladimir.

  ‘I can smell them,’ said Captain Lysander, emerging from the

  Sigismunda Tactica behind Vladimir. ‘The enemy are close.’

  ‘Of course you can smell them,’ said Vladimir. ‘I wonder if we will

  ever get the stink of the warp off my ship.’

  ‘Borganor is in position at the Forge of Ages,’ continued Lysander.

  ‘Leucrontas and the Ninth will hold the memorial.’

  ‘And everyone else will take the centre,’ finished Vladimir. ‘Can it be

  held?’

  ‘Our Third and Fifth are enough to hold anything,’ said Lysander.

  ‘You realise you will stake your life on that belief?’

  ‘We all will, Chapter Master. If this line breaks, everyone on the

  Phalanx will die.’

  ‘Tell me, captain. Is it wrong that I have dreamed of a day like this?’

  Vladimir drew the Fangs of Dorn from the scabbards on either side of

  his waist - twin power swords, their blades broad for stabbing, their

  hilts semicircles of glinting black stone. ‘That I have knelt at the altars

  of Dorn and prayed that one day I would face the enemy like this, in a

  battle that will decide whether my Chapter lives in glory or is banished

  to a penitents’ crusade in disgrace? I have begged the Emperor to give

  me such a battle, toe to toe, no retreat, everything at stake. Is it wrong

  that I feel some joy in me that it is here?’

  ‘We all see something else in battle,’ replied Lysander. ‘Perhaps it

  is a mirror in which we see a reflection of ourselves. I see a grim task

  to be completed, something ugly and crude, but an evil necessary for

  the survival of our species. You see something different.’

  ‘Most Imperial Fists would simply have said “No”, captain.’

  ‘Well, that’s why you made me a captain.’

  Among the complexes of barracks cells and the shrines to longdead

  heroes, the Third and Fifth Companies of the Imperial Fists were

  taking up their battle positions. Low buildings formed the anchoring

  points beneath the grey sky of the ceiling. Battle-brothers knelt to

  icons of past captains and Chapter Masters, their home suddenly

  transformed into a battleground.

  The Tactica itself was one of the most defensible buildings on the

  deck. It was a circular building of black stone, its arched entrances

  leading to dozens of map tables on which famous past battles of the

  Imperial Fists had been recreated. The buildings over which Imperial

  Fists had fought and died were scrimshawed from alien ivories and laid

  out on miniature battlegrounds of polished obsidian. In the Tactica,

  named after Sigismund, one of Dorn’s greatest generals and the

  founder of the Black Templars Chapter, Imperial Fists officers could

  contemplate victories of the past, dissecting the battle plans the

  Chapter’s leaders had enacted and the follies of the enemies who tried

  to stand against them. If the Imperial Fists and the other Adeptus

  Astartes on the Phalanx could prevail, perhaps the Tactica itself would

  be recreated on one of those ornate maps.

  Lord Inquisitor Kolgo was walking among the map tables, casting

  his eye over the Imperial Fists history. He wore deep red terminator

  armour embellished with silver symbols of the Inquisition, giving him

  the same bulk as a Space Marine in power armour. His Battle Sisters

  retinue kept a respectful distance, Sister Aescarion waiting patiently

  with power axe in hand.

  ‘I take it,’ said Vladimir, ‘that you know rather more about the forces

  of the warp than can be entrusted to lesser minds like ours.’

  Kolgo looked up, as if he had not expected to be interrupted, to see

  Vladimir walking through one of the Tactica’s lofty archways. ‘It is a

  burden we Inquisitors must carry, Chapter Master,’ he said.

  ‘If there is anything we could do with knowing, then now is the time

  to tell us.’

  Kolgo took a set of Emperor’s Tarot cards from a silver case set into

  his breastplate. On one of the map tables, one which represented a

  volcanic battlefield where the Imperial Fists had shattered an assault

  by the xenos tau, he laid out three of them in a row.

  ‘”The Silver Ocean”,’ said Kolgo, pointing to the first card. ‘One who

  cannot be grasped or comprehended, as subtle as quicksilver. An

  unknowable foe. The second is “The Altar”, a symbol of majesty and

  glory. But it is inverted, and followed by “The Plague”. The enemy is

  inscrutable and majestic, but that majesty is false and conceals an

  ocean of foulness beneath its beauty. It is a vessel of corruption in the

  form of something wonderful. I see the hand of the Lord of Change in

  the enemy we face, but the foe is its own creature, driven by its own

  desires.’

  ‘You know what it is?’ said Vladimir.

  ‘I have my suspicions, which I will not share until they become

  certainties, especially where the God of Lies is concerned.’ Kolgo

  gathered up the cards and put them away. ‘This is more than a battle

  over your vessel, Chapter Master. That is all I am willing to say.’

  ‘Then keep your own counsel, lord inquisitor, as long as you fight

  alongside us.’

  Kolgo smiled. ‘Have no fear on that score.’

  ‘Chapter Master,’ came a voice over the vox-net. The rune signifying

  Castellan Leucrontas pulsed against Vladimir’s retina. ‘The enemy is

  sighted.’

  ‘What is their strength, castellan?’ demanded Vladimir.

  ‘Hundreds
,’ came Leucrontas’s voice. ‘They are advancing on two

  sides. Holding position.’

  Vladimir strode out of the Tactica. His own Imperial Fists were in

  position among the shrines and barracks, and he spotted the colours

  of the Silver Skulls and Angels Sanguine among them. ‘Lysander,’ he

  ordered. ‘Be ready to counter-advance on the castellan’s flank. Keep

  the memorial from being surrounded.’

  ‘Yes, Chapter Master,’ said Lysander. ‘Other orders?’

  Vladimir did not reply. Instead, he was looking past the Imperial

  Fists positions ahead of him, towards the steel horizon broken by the

  spires of hero-shrines and the fluttering banners of the mustering

  grounds.

  The daemon army was advancing. The horizon seethed, a mass of

  iridescence bleeding into view like a bank of incandescent gas. The

  sound of its music washed over the Imperial Fists lines, an awful

  cacophony of a thousand shrieking voices. Shapes towered over the

  lines, winged masses surrounded by mountains of daemonic followers

  tumbling over one another like insects swarming from a hive.

  ‘The Emperor has granted you your battle,’ said Lysander. ‘Now is

  the time to give thanks.’

  ‘There will be opportunity for that when the victory is won,’ said

  Vladimir. ‘Kolgo! Get your Battle Sisters to the lines! We are attacked

  on all fronts!’

  From the daemonic horde emerged another winged monster, this

  one bathed in light as if Kravamesh’s light was falling in a bright shaft

  onto its pale, haloed form. It was framed by feathered wings and its

  skin was so pale it seemed to burn, like ivory lit from within. Its perfect

  face projected its beauty and authority even as far as the Tactica.

  Even Vladimir found it difficult to tear his eyes away from it, as if it was

  a vision that originated inside his head and burned its way outwards.

  ‘Behold, your future!’ the monster bellowed, its voice tearing across

  the battlefield like a razored wind. ‘I am the end of empires! I am the

  woes of men! I am Abraxes!’

  Sarpedon skidded across the blood-slicked surface, the Axe of

  Mercaeno smouldering in his hand.

  Brother Nephael faced him. Nephael’s bolter magazine was empty,

  his last few shots fired wildly through a storm of his own battlebrothers,

  and he had no time to change the magazine. He snatched

 

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