gyros in his shoulder and elbow joints lock to deal with the strain.
Next to him, Seltharis was replacing his helm after spitting black bile at one of the dead bodies. ‘Just kill the piggish creature. We need to return to orbit. Something is wrong.’
Torgal shook his head. ‘Nothing is wrong.’ He did his best to ignore the girl’s weeping protests. ‘But we must commune with the Chaplain at once. If this is the ordained hour, we must–’
‘What?’ Seltharis was almost laughing. ‘What must we do? I am hearing a spirit laughing inside my skull, while my blood boils hot enough to burn my bones. We have no plan for this. None of us truly believed it would ever come.’
‘Leave my world!’ the matriarch insisted. ‘Leave us in peace!’
Torgal sneered at her behind his faceplate, loathing her down to the wretched, alien fish-stink of her sweating skin. What abominable event in this world’s past had led to such deviancy? What could make such desecration – the corruption of the human genome with alien genetics – a necessary reality? These people seemed no stronger, no more enlightened, no more industrious than any other human culture. In truth, they were less advanced than most.
‘Why did you do this to yourselves?’ the Astartes asked.
‘Leave my world! Leave!’
He threw her aside. The fleshy pile crashed to the ground, her dynasty ended by a broken neck.
‘Burn everything,’ ordered Torgal. ‘Burn it all, and summon a Thunderhawk. We stand at the ordained hour. I will report to the Crimson Lord.’
The Crimson Lord surveyed the courtyard. Empty, but for the grounded gunship.
He lowered his claws.
Torgal reported the monarch’s downfall almost an hour before, but Argel Tal’s fervour had faded even before the announcement. With the echo of that silent scream still drifting through his skull, he stood in the shadows of his Thunderhawk,
Most were voxing questions to one another, coating the communication network in a buzz of aggressive, amused voices. The words
Aquillon had followed him, which was the first thing he expected, and the very last thing he needed. The four Custodes were scattered among the Word Bearers assaulting the palace. They had surely seen everything, and that was going to become a problem sooner rather than later.
Argel Tal watched the man he would soon be ordered to kill, and wondered if he were capable of the act, both physically and morally.
‘I have no answer for you,’ Argel Tal told him. ‘I do not know what happened. A momentary weakness played over me. I forced it back. That is all I can tell you.’
The Custodes sighed through his helm speaker. ‘And you are well now?’
‘Yes. My strength returned quickly. There has been no moment of similar weakness.’
‘My men report similar incidents,’ the Custodian said. ‘Many of the Gal Vorbak fell as if struck by unseen hands, at the same moment you lapsed yourself.’ Aquillon removed his helm in a gesture of familiarity. It was a gesture that went unreturned. ‘We have detected no enemy weaponry capable of creating such an effect.’
He could only meet Aquillon’s gaze with his own eyes guarded by the lenses of his helm.
‘If I knew what had afflicted me,’ Argel Tal said, ‘I would tell you, brother.’
‘We have to consider that this is some previously unknown flaw in your Legion’s gene-seed.’
Argel Tal grunted a vague noise that may or may not have been affirmation.
‘You understand,’ the Custodian continued, ‘I must report this to the Emperor, beloved by all, at once.’
Behind his faceplate, Argel Tal was drooling blood again.
‘Yes,’ he said, licking his lips clean. ‘Of course you must.’
At first, he believed the scream was returning. Only after listening to its ululating wail for several moments did he turn back towards the palace walls.
‘Do you hear that?’ he asked.
This time, Aquillon nodded. ‘Yes. I do.’
When the siren started, almost all of the Word Bearers requested confirmation of its origins. The Colchisian rune flickering across hundreds of retinal displays told a blunt, stark tale, but it was a story that made no sense.
Even among the Gal Vorbak, the red-clad warriors hesitated in their fire-bearing purges, voxing to the orbiting fleet for immediate confirmation and explanation.
In the courtyard, Argel Tal and Aquillon boarded the