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Chapter Sixty New
Chapter Sixty



Reminder dear listeners, the Voxbox remains open at all times!



Down the line of Guardsmen Venn walked, Marrick pacing at his side through the shell of the ruined cathedral. Their boots crossed cracked flagstones buried beneath dust, spent brass, and fallen chips of saintly stone. Above them, what remained of the vaulted ceiling vanished into shadow and broken ribs of masonry, sickly purple-pink light slipping through shell-holes high overhead in thin, cold shafts.

At each stop a guardsman straightened and gave an awkward hop, webbing rattling, canteens knocking, loose buckles betraying themselves at once. Venn said little. He did not need to. A tilt of his helm or a tap of one gauntleted finger was enough, and Marrick moved in to strap the offending noise down before they continued.

His fellow Astartes were likewise being seen to by the AdMech. Servos were oiled, power packs tuned down to low-output states, and padding wedged between plates wherever it would fit. Camo netting thrown over bright heraldry dulled the bold colours of their Chapter markings and helped break up those massive silhouettes among the cathedral's fallen pillars and heaps of shattered stone. It was far from perfect, nothing like Venn's own war-plate, but better than nothing.

Then came the AdMech's turn, and to no one's surprise, it consumed nearly all the remaining prep time.

Mechadendrites had to be oiled, servo-legs tightened, indicator lights covered, holy icons tucked beneath robes, and that was only the start. Robes were bound close so they would not catch against rubble. Censers were stowed. Loose cables wrapped down. Even then they clicked and whirred and muttered in little bursts of binharic static beneath the cathedral's cavernous hush, as though offended by the very concept of subtlety.

By the time they were done, the entire AdMech contingent looked like some heretical splinter sect, worshipping duct tape instead of the Omnissiah.

The Vestige, on the other hand, simply vanished for a moment. Then Koron shimmered back into view, hovering half a foot above the cracked floor, dust undisturbed beneath him. In the dim cathedral light his metal limbs caught dull glints from the broken stained glass overhead, his silhouette more ghost than man for that brief instant.

"I'd jump too," Koron said, his metal arms lifting in a small shrug, "but I think you get the point."



Venn flicked his gaze to the chrono tucked into the corner of his HUD. The countdown numbers sat there like grit under a nail. Beyond the broken gantry frame, the zone stretched out. A full kilometer of flattened ruin, wide enough to feel like a dare. The twisted purple-pink sun, muted behind smoke and ash, crawled down the horizon with the urgency of a dying lumen strip.

It was open ground with the kind of emptiness that made a scope feel smug. Traitor cultists and bombardment had smashed it flat, scraped it clean, and left only low humps of pulverized masonry and rebar stubble that offered nothing taller than a man's shin. No walls or wrecks worth trusting. Even a careful crawl would draw eyes, and eyes out here had optics.

So the plan balanced on other hands. Diversionary forces and nightfall. In twenty minutes a full company assault, backed by armor and close air, would hit the far side of the dead-man's zone hard enough to make the horizon blink. Venn could almost taste the timing in his jaw, that familiar tightness before movement.

He nodded once, more to lock it in than to reassure himself, then slid down from the gantry. Ceramite boots met steel with a dull clang; dust puffed and drifted off the edge in a thin sheet. He dropped the last meter to broken flooring, knees flexing, and moved along the interior shadow to rejoin the strike force.

At the threshold he paused and looked back once. Below, mortals and Mechanicus held their lines the way you held your breath: tight, deliberate, and hoping it mattered. Guardsmen checked power packs by touch more than sight. A Skitarii's head turned in exact increments, optic glow steady, servo-motors whispering as it re-aimed. A combat servo-skull hovered, weapon mounts ticking as they tracked nothing.

He strode over to where his cousins had gathered in a loose circle near a partially shattered wall. They weren't at rest, not really. They were simply waiting, each one watching the same invisible clock.

On the deck between them sat a small pile: spice-packs, pinched and battered from ration tins, bright little hopes against the grey lumps that passed for food.

"What is this?" Venn asked, gaze dropping to the heap.

"We are wagering when you miss a cultist and raise the alarm. Otho says the sixth group we run into, and it will be five men." Skaldi jerked a thumb toward the Imperial Fist. His heavy flamer hung at a ready angle, muzzle down but not relaxed. "I have the third group of four or more."

Rorik gave a faint snort through his helm's vox grille. "Having fought beside the Raptors before, I place it on the ninth. Twelve foes or more."

Venn looked down at the spice-packs again. The plastic wrappers were scuffed; one had a corner torn where someone had sampled the dusting inside like it might be contraband joy. He reached into a thigh pouch, pulled his own free, and tossed it onto the pile. It landed with a soft slap.

"I'll wager this," he said, "that our White Scars brother is the one who ruins the stealth approach."

Saran's helm lifted a fraction, offended on principle, but his words were warm. "My cousin, your lack of faith wounds me."

Drex leaned forward, eyes finally leaving his dataslate. The glow reflected off his lenses as he looked at Saran. "You are the one wearing the jump-pack."

Saran held that for a beat, the pack's mass a silent argument on his back. Then he shrugged and leaned into the broken wall, cracked stone grating against ceramite. "A fair point."



Crouched low, cloak dragging a soft hiss over flattened grit, Venn kept his shoulders tight and his profile as low as possible. His HUD held the route-map in the corner of his vision, a thin line creeping across a grid of ruins. Beneath it, the timer bled seconds with quiet cruelty.

Helix's warning sat in the back of his skull like a drilled litany: Seventy-second occlusion window. Thirty-five seconds for recalibration. When the mask drops, you do not fidget, adjust, or scratch your nose. You become rubble.

So far their path had been clean. They had crossed the outer edges fast, not sprinting, but moving with that tight economy that pushed for depth, for the ugly safety of being too far in to be casually shelled.

Across the dead-man's zone the night burned bright. Anti-air guns stitched upward in hard white lines, tracers climbing and falling. Distant artillery walked the horizon in blunt flashes, each impact a muted thump you felt through your knees when you went prone. The air had that metallic tang that came when too much ammunition had been fired too fast.

Here, the infiltrators worked in pulses. Crouch-run. Drop. Stillness. The last seconds of jamming ticked down and the whole line flattened without being told, forearms sinking into powder-fine rubble, armor plates settling with tiny clicks as they locked. When the occlusion ended, there was nothing to see but broken ground and a few darker shapes that could be stones.

Then the minefields began.

Rubble lay in uneven mounds, rebar hooked out of it, and here and there a patch looked wrong: too neatly scattered, too recently disturbed, a dust layer that didn't match the rest. Venn's HUD marked the suspected band in a thin amber haze, but that wasn't comfort.

He glanced back. The boy was there in the line, close enough to reach, helm low, posture relaxed in a way that didn't belong in a place like this. Venn lifted two fingers and curled them in a short, sharp motion. Forward. Now. His vox stayed off; his voice, when he used it, was nothing more than air shaped between teeth.

"Go."

Koron nodded once. With an ease that put a needle of irritation under Venn's breastplate, the boy rose six inches off the earth as if the ground had forgotten to hold him. Dust didn't puff under his boots because his boots never touched. Then his outline thinned and disappeared.

A moment later, a narrow furrow appeared, dragged clean through the dust by an invisible hand. The channel bent left, then right, threading between dangers Venn couldn't see. Grains of grit slid into the groove behind the motion, soft and dry, and every few meters the line paused for the barest heartbeat before continuing, careful as a blade tip searching for a seam.

When the jammers spooled up again, the world filled with Helix's manufactured lies: a wash of false returns and interference that made auspexes argue with themselves. Venn stopped halfway through the minefield, half-crouched, one knee sunk into powder, holding position as a living marker. Behind him his men took the furrow in single file, boots landing exactly where his stance and Koron's line told them. At the far end Koron bled back into sight, hovering low, head turning as he checked the last stretch like it was a workbench.

It went well. Which, naturally, meant it couldn't last.

A sharp metallic click snapped through the quiet, crisp as a spent casing hitting stone.

Every helm turned. A red-robed Adept stood frozen mid-step, staring down at his cybernetic foot. His optical irises oscillated wildly, focusing, unfocusing, hunting for an answer in the dirt. His hands twitched once toward his thigh as though he meant to steady himself, then stopped, as if he had remembered the litany too late.

Venn did not need to imagine the next seconds. He saw them in the angle of that foot and the tremor starting in the Adept's shoulders. Panic. A reflexive hop. The mine's breath. The flash. The scream that would carry, and then the perimeter opening up on them with everything traitor optics could bring to bear.

Skaldi's hand came down on the Adept's shoulder, heavy enough to anchor, gentle enough not to jolt. His voice was a low growl through the vox grille, calm and assured, killing the panic before it could kill them all.

"Easy, lad. Keep pressure on that foot. You'll be fine."

Drex and Helix were already shifting back, but they were on the wrong side of the minefield and the clock was bleeding out. Venn's HUD timer sat in the corner, accusing. Twenty-six seconds before the jammer swap, before everyone had to stop moving and become rubble again.

Skaldi didn't waste what little time they had.

With his free hand he slid a knife into the dust beside the Adept's boot, feeling for the mine's pressure plate by touch alone. He pressed the blade down until the tremble in the Adept's footing eased, steel taking enough of the load to matter. His other hand clawed at the rim of the mine, fingers carving a neat trench through powder and grit until the casing's edge showed black beneath the dust.

"Alright, lad," Skaldi said, steady as if they were back in a training hall. "Move your foot. Slow. Then go prone."

The Adept nodded once, hard. "Thank you," he whispered, his voice breaking on the second word.

He eased his foot back, slow enough to hurt, then dropped flat the moment he was clear, chest pressed into the dust beside the line like he'd been ordered there by the Machine-God himself.

Venn kept his eyes on Skaldi as the next seconds crawled. The occlusion faded. The world held its breath. Skaldi's posture didn't change. If anything, he looked mildly irritated by the inconvenience.

A green rune blinked in Venn's HUD. Clear to move.

Skaldi acted at once. Two fingers replaced the knife, pinning the pressure plate in place while he drew the blade free and cracked the casing with two short twists. Inside, the wiring was crude and eager, the sort of workmanship that wanted to kill something more than it wanted to function. He snipped three wires in quick succession, then eased the mine out of its bed and set it gently into a patch of broken stone. Harmless now. Just another piece of trash in a field made of the same.

Skaldi gave a thumbs up, then motioned the remaining men forward.

Venn sent the line on, and somewhere ahead in the dark, the boy was already hunting the next problem.



Venn slid in beside Koron behind the tiny mound of a pulverized wall, flat on his stomach, cloak gathered tight. Koron pointed without looking at him, two metal fingers angling toward a dark bite in the rubble ahead.

Venn followed the line and found it.

The lascannon nest sat low between two gutted hab-block shells, its barrel just visible beneath draped netting and soot-black cloth. Switching to thermals revealed the real problem. Four heat-shapes. One on the gun. One with magnoculars scanning the lane in slow, methodical arcs. The others sat lower, half-lost in the pit's shadow.

Venn's jaw tightened.

Auspex jamming could make machine-spirits chase ghosts and argue with false returns, but magnoculars were still magnoculars. Glass did not care about interference. Eyes did not care about signal wash. The spotter only had to sweep the lane once at the wrong moment and he would catch movement. One shape. Then three. Then eighty.

For a moment Venn considered the ugly options. A thrown blade. Too far. A suppressed shot. Not silent enough, not with a full crew to react. A coordinated rush. Fast, brutal, and almost guaranteed to turn the dead-man's zone into a kill-box before half the line was through.

Beside him, Koron remained perfectly still.

Venn glanced down at the boy, once more noting how the plates of his helm were too smooth, too precise for ordinary manufacture. More grown than built.

"Any ideas?" he asked, barely above a whisper.

Koron gave the slightest nod. "I can deal with it. Wait here."

Before Venn could remind him that no order had been given, Koron vanished, leaving only a faint swirl of dust to mark the displacement.

For a moment that needle of irritation returned. Good thing Drex or the cogboys had not seen that.

Venn steadied his optic, ready to put a bolt round through the nest if need be, and watched.

Forty seconds passed without sign, long enough for even an Astartes to begin weighing failure.

Then motion.

The two nearest the lip of the nest went rigid without warning, bodies locking in place as though something invisible had wrapped around them without flare or sound. A heartbeat later, the gunner and the watchman followed.

None of them managed to rise from their seats.

The air beside Venn rippled, and the boy was there again.

Venn let out the breath he had been holding and uncurled his fingers from the hilt of his combat blade.

"All clear," Koron said, already moving forward again.

Venn shoved the blade back into its sheath with a hard, practiced motion. The scabbard caught for a half-beat on grit jammed into the latch, and he had to thumb it down with a quiet, irritated snap. Damn Dark Age tricks, he muttered under his breath, voice more breath than sound inside the mask of his helm.

He rose and crossed to the trench line, boots finding the narrow path between broken earth walls as he entered the dug-up dirt. The air down here was different. Cooler. Damp in pockets. It smelled of churned soil and old propellant, and every step scuffed loose grains that slid back down.

He cleared the lip into what had been a lascannon nest and stopped.

Four bodies lay on the dirt, roughly cylindrical now, wrapped tight in thick pink foam. Their legs kicked and jerked in short, frantic spasms, boots scraping against the ground. Muffled shouts pressed through the packing like sound through a pillow, wet and desperate. One of them had rolled half onto a spent charge crate, the foam denting where the corner dug in, wobbling with each panicked twist.

Venn's gaze flicked to Koron. The boy was crouched low at the trench corner, still, head angled toward the open approach. He wasn't watching the prisoners. He was watching for the next problem. The foam gleamed faintly where it caught the weak light, and Koron didn't spare it a glance.

Venn didn't hesitate. He stepped over the bound cultists with the casual economy of a man crossing debris. He drew his blade, leaned in, and drove it into each throat in turn. One stab per body. Quick, efficient.

The foam trembled with each impact and then went slack. The kicking dwindled to small, useless twitches, then stopped entirely. When he withdrew the knife, tainted blood smeared dark against the steel; he wiped it along a strip of torn canvas hanging from the trench wall until the edge shone clean again.

Behind him the rest of the strike unit flooded the nest, weapons up, muzzles tracking the angles that mattered. Servos whispered. A lasgun safety clicked off. Someone's boot scuffed a loose helmet in the dirt and sent it rolling until it hit the foam-wrapped heap and bumped to a stop.

Venn moved to the front of the position, ready to push them onward, and halted again.

Koron had turned. He stared at the four still shapes. His helmet hid his face, but not the way his shoulders locked, or the way his hands hung too still at his sides, fingers slightly spread as if bracing for contact that wasn't there.

As the Astartes filed past, Koron reached out and caught Venn's forearm. Metal fingers scraped ceramite, a dry sound in the cold night air. Koron didn't look up.

"They were no threat."

Venn glanced back at the foam-wrapped bodies, then at the torn earth around them. His posture shifted, a small hitch of confusion more than guilt. "They were the enemy."

Something in Koron's cybernetic hand clicked, sharp and precise, like a relay resetting. His grip eased. A long breath left him, audible even through the filters. "Let's just get on with this."

Venn pulled his arm free without force, took his place at the head of the formation, and let his cousins settle at his flanks. The trench walls pressed close on either side, and above them the sky was only a narrow strip of bruised night.

Venn kept his eyes on the trench ahead and drove the line onward.



The inner Chaos lines weren't so different from Imperial ones as Venn would have liked. Tarps were strung between shattered walls to blunt the rain, tied off with cable and prayer-cord and whatever else a man could knot in the dark. Water drummed on canvas in steady taps, ran in thin sheets off broken masonry, and gathered in boot-sucking puddles where the rubble had settled. Men hunched over cook-fires with their shoulders up and their faces turned away from the wind, steam lifting from tin cups and dented pots as they warmed something that smelled like salt-fat and scorched starch.

Somewhere deeper in the maze, soldiers traded insults in the flat, tired rhythm of men who'd forgotten what a full sleep felt like. A sentry leaned on a lasgun like it was a crutch, helmet unsealed, breath fogging in front of his mouth. A second man laughed once, sharp and humorless, then coughed until he had to spit into the mud.

Then the wind shifted.

It brought the stink with it, rot and old blood, heavy enough to coat the inside of a filter. Venn's tongue caught a copper edge through the rebreather, and his nostrils burned like they'd been scraped raw. Beyond one row of shelters, a pit overflowed with butchered remains. Bone gleamed pale under flies and firelight. Something wet slid down the pile when the breeze worried it, and the insects lifted in a black shimmer, then settled again.

From a cluster of gaudy tents, bright cloth hanging in strips like trophies, came spice and sweat and the too-sweet bite of cheap incense trying to cover worse things. Laughter spilled out, then weeping, then the pleading of men and women in the same broken cadence Venn had heard too many times to pretend it was anything else. A voice rose high, cut off abruptly, and the tent poles creaked as someone shifted inside.

Venn tightened the spacing with two finger-signs, pushing them closer to tarp-shadow and smoke.

He had ordered the direct march to the spire's base because speed mattered more than elegance now. Keep to the shadows where the tarps sagged low and the fires threw smoke. Skirt the heavier entrenchments with the proper gun nests and the men who still cared. When a mortal fool drifted too close, he met them with a hissed curse and a hard shoulder, driving them away without breaking stride.

That part came easily. When a cultist stepped into their path, half-drunk and proud of a stolen breastplate, Venn's helm angled down and his vox grated a single word that sounded like a threat made physical. The man flinched, muttered an apology he didn't mean, and backed away fast enough to trip over a coil of wire.

In the end, it wasn't their discipline that carried them through the camp. It was the enemy's complacency, worn in the slouch of sentries and the lazy way men looked past anything that moved with purpose. They were inside the lines now and no alarm had been raised. Astartes led the column, and most cultists didn't look too hard at armed figures moving with quiet certainty through the dark. Fewer still dared to ask questions when the answers might come in a voice like Venn's.

The Apron, twenty miles in circumference around the spire's base, rose ahead of them, and the wind coming down off it hit like a wall. Venn's optics dimmed as searchlights swept the ground in slow, mechanical arcs, bleaching rubble white, then letting it fall back into soot-dark.

The great gates were manned thick: ranks of soldiers packed shoulder to shoulder, heavy weapon teams dug in behind sandbags, turrets and stubber nests bristling along the parapets. Men on the parapet moved in dense knots, their shouts lost under the sweep of the lights and the wind off the wall.

At the center of it all the spire itself speared upward. From this distance it was a lance driven into the city, and the city flowed out from it in broken blocks and stacked ruins, plumes of smoke caught between them like gutters.

They came to a stop in the shadow of a collapsed hab-shell, where the searchlight sweep skipped over them for a few seconds at a time. Koron and the Mechanicus moved first. Plasma torches flared to life, too bright, too clean, so the Guardsmen threw up a tarp to hood the light, hands working fast with clips and cord. The tarp snapped once in the wind and then held, rain tapping against it in quick, nervous beats. Under the canvas, blue-white glare pulsed and softened, throwing warped shadows of augmetic arms over adamantine plate.

As the cutting began, the perimeter formed by habit. Guardsmen fanned out, boots scuffing grit, muzzles covering angles. A Skitarii's optics swept in precise increments. Venn watched the searchlights and counted the rhythm between sweeps, timing his breathing to it, listening to the muted hiss of plasma and the occasional spit as molten metal hit wet stone.

Koron's voice touched the command vox, calm and close in Venn's ear. "So, a thought occurs that even once we are inside, there's still going to be roughly three miles of city to cut through as the crow flies, if we're lucky."

"…What is a crow?" asked a quiet Mechanicus voice, as if requesting a unit conversion.

Venn's helm angled a fraction toward the tarp's glow, then back to the searchlight rhythm.

No one answered for a moment. Venn could hear the work instead, the low roar of the torches, the faint whine of an auspex, a Guardsman's suppressed cough.

Marrick finally spoke, tone flat with fatigue. "Yeah. It's gonna be shit. Do you have something in mind or just stating the obvious?"

"I do, as a matter of fact," Koron replied immediately, like he'd already arranged the idea in his head and was only waiting for the door to open. "You're not covered enough to pass for Chaos agents up close, and the city is going to be up close. I suggest we dirty up the armor, slap some cloth over your chapter markings, and take some scrap metal and put it over your armor. Not attached to it—just resting." A beat, then the quick add, almost defensive. "I know how important your armor is, so I'm not suggesting we actually desecrate it. Just put a disguise over it so you guys will look like traitors at a distance. Same with the Guard and the cogboys."

Venn chewed that for a long moment, jaw shifting once inside his helm. He could already hear Rorik's objection before it was spoken, and Skaldi's laughter after. The city beyond the Apron churned in his mind as his HUD painted faint cones where the searchlights would be in twelve seconds, and he watched the gaps instead of the beams.

Rorik spoke first, exactly as expected. "I have little desire to put anything like traitor sigils on my person." His head dipped a fraction, as if he were speaking to the idea rather than the boy. "But… if the disguise is easy to remove, and does not hold the actual sigils on it, I would tolerate such a tactic."

Venn nodded once. "Agreed. No actual markings of the Ruinous Powers upon our person." His gaze flicked toward the walls—spikes and chains silhouetted against the searchlights, hooks welded along the parapet, the enemy's favorite vocabulary made into architecture. "But the traitors' love of ornamentation is well known. An additional layer of protection."

He turned his helm slightly toward where Marrick and Helix stood under the tarp's edge, watching the cut and watching the clock. "Lieutenant, Archmagos?"

Marrick shrugged, shoulders rolling under his wet cloak. "Some of the boys won't be happy, but I'll smack 'em into compliance." He jabbed a thumb toward the spire, the gesture sharp. "Just—like you said—no actual marks."

Helix did not shrug.

He stared at Koron as if the boy had suggested drinking machine oil for morale. Even through his mask you could see the tension in his neck servos, the way his mechadendrites flexed and then went rigid. For a long moment he said nothing at all, letting the plasma hiss fill the space. When he finally spoke, it came out like a compromise forced through teeth that weren't there anymore. "My people will require time, after the discarding of the disguises, to sanctify ourselves and our equipment."

"How long?" Venn asked, immediate, practical.

"A few minutes. Nothing more," Helix answered, as if the number pained him.

Before Venn could answer, boots splashed somewhere beyond the hab-shell, close enough that every man under the tarp went still. A voice muttered outside, too low to catch. Another answered with a laugh that turned into a cough. Light passed over the edge of the ruined wall, then moved on. No one breathed until the footsteps faded back into the rain.

"Agreed." Venn said at last, as if the interruption had never happened. He lifted two fingers in a short directive toward Helix. "Begin, then. Several of your adepts can finish before the cutting team is through."

"Speaking of," Otho said. He adjusted the fortification pinions at his waist a fraction, the little clamps clicking as they seated. Even in the dark, the motion was precise, like he couldn't help tightening the world into order. "I would advise a change in marching order."

Saran's jump pack gave its quiet, patient thrum behind him, a vibration you felt more than heard when the damp air carried it just right. He tilted his helm a touch toward Otho and let out a low chuckle. "Oh? What do you have in mind?"

"Let the Guardsmen take point," the Fist replied. His voice was steady, the kind that carried even when he kept it low. He nodded once toward the perimeter where Marrick's men crouched under tarp-shadow, checking straps and re-seating bayonets with fingers gone numb from rain. "They escort the Mechanicum under some miserable pretext while we keep to the shadows. Six Astartes will draw eyes even in disguise, and eyes remember. Guardsmen saddled with an unpleasant detail are far less remarkable."

Marrick's thumb rubbed at a worn patch on his rifle's paint, smoothing nothing, just giving his hand something to do. He nodded slowly, eyes tracking the searchlight sweep beyond the broken wall and the thin window of darkness between passes. "Yeah. That could work." He glanced toward Helix and hitched one shoulder in a half-shrug. "What do you say, Archmagos? Think you can come up with a reason your lot's headed for the spire?"

"Maintenance. Repair. Placation of the machine spirits." Helix didn't look up. His attention stayed on the scrap plate he'd laid over Drex's pauldron, where spikes and hooks were being fastened into place. A bright bead of weld crawled along the seam, blue-white under the tarp, and the smell of hot metal pushed through the damp like a bitter gust. "Any number of rationales present themselves. Preventative maintenance alone should suffice." He paused just long enough to lift the torch, inspect the join, then set it down again with a controlled hiss. "Anything built at that scale is never truly finished being repaired."

Marrick straightened, rising to a half-stand so he could see the whole group. The makeshift plates and ragged cloth did their best to swallow the brighter heraldry of their armor: mud smeared over knee guards, strips of canvas tied across chest icons, chains draped without symbols, spikes crude enough to read as traitor from a distance without being anything specific. Rainwater ran in thin lines down ceramite and dripped off the lowest edges, tapping softly on stone.

"Then," Marrick said, eyes flicking from one helm to the next, "my lords, if I say barbiturates, that means the quiet part's over."

No one laughed.

Then the cut plate sagged inward, and the dark beyond opened.



The Apron unfolded across Venn's HUD in clean lines and measured angles, a planner's city wrapped tight around the spire's root. On paper it was orderly: service corridors stitched between logistics blocks, secondary skybridges linking hab-stacks to maintenance towers, narrow feeder roads branching off the main transit lanes like capillaries off an artery. The icons were crisp. The geometry obeyed.

The real thing didn't.

Ruins sat on top of the diagram like a smear of ash across a lit screen. Whole sections had been blown open or burned hollow. Roads ended in shell-craters that still held black water. Bridges hung broken in the air, rebar teeth exposed, or had collapsed and punched through the floors beneath them. Barricades and gun pits cut across avenues the map still insisted were clear, the HUD lines running straight through concrete piles as if denial could make a passage.

Venn didn't take the routes that looked efficient. Efficient routes got used. Used routes got watched. He let his gaze slide past the bright lanes and the wide approaches, and instead hunted for damage that hadn't quite become destruction: a maintenance cut too narrow for a column, a stairwell blown out on one side but still climbable, a service trench half-collapsed and forgotten. Paths that were awkward enough to be ignored and intact enough to take a man through.

Worse than the rubble were the altars.

Chaos never missed an opportunity. In the encampment outside, the offering pits had been muted by necessity: sightlines, armor lanes, the dull requirements of moving an army. Fires were kept low. The worst of it was tucked where it wouldn't snag a track or block a convoy.

Inside the Apron there were walls, and corners, and a thousand places to build a shrine without ever touching a roadway that mattered. The worship spilled into every sheltered space like a flood finding basements.

Venn caught it in flashes as they moved: a gladiator pit sunk into a maintenance bay, waist-deep in dark blood that clung to skin and reflected light in greasy ripples. A ring of cheering bodies pressed against a chain barrier, their faces lit by lumen-strips scavenged from somewhere better. The air there was copper and hot breath and promethium smoke.

Two streets later, a garbage mound festered against a collapsed culvert. Bloated corpses were being rolled down into the waterway with hooks, the canal already choked with scum. Along the edges, twisted growths had taken root, purple-black fronds that flexed when the wind hit them and spat a thin, chemical mist that burned the back of Venn's throat even through his filters. The runoff stank of rot and solvents.

And then the noise. It wasn't music so much as assault: bass that punched through ribs, metallic shrieks layered over it, the kind of volume meant to erase thought. In the lee of a hab-stack, bodies writhed in a mass of sweat and body fluids, fingers gripping hips, breasts or limbs, mouths open in laughter or sobbing or both. Drug-smoke drifted in low clouds, sweet and rotten at once, and someone's mask lay trampled in the mud like a discarded skin.

Only the Tzeentchians were absent in person, but their handiwork made their borders obvious. Blue light leaked from broken windows in steady, unnatural bands. Crystals webbed over doorways and wrapped whole rooms in facets, trapping furniture and bodies alike in frozen distortion. Even at a distance Venn's optics twitched, auto-adjusting against glare that didn't behave like firelight.

He marked those zones without slowing and kept searching his HUD for routes no one bothered to watch. The map scrolled under his eye in pale lines, recalculating around collapses and red hazard blooms, while the real streets shifted in smoke and broken concrete. He chose the uglier lanes, the ones that stank of stagnant water and had too many blind corners for comfort, because comfort drew patrols.

He and his cousins kept, as best the terrain allowed, a street over from the mortals. Close enough to fold in if something went wrong, far enough that six armored silhouettes didn't become the obvious center of attention. They moved in parallel through gaps in rubble, crossing where a collapsed skybridge cast a long shadow, pausing under a sagging tarp when a searchlight swept the main road ahead. Venn's helm would tilt once, a single silent signal, and the others flowed with it.

Helix had twisted himself into the lie. He'd risen to the limits of his mechanical legs, pistons extended, making himself tall and wrong. His back arched deep, robe pulled tight across metal ribs, and his forest of mechadendrites waved above him in slow, agitated arcs, each tipped with a tool or a probe that clicked and whirred as it reoriented.

Around him the rest of his adepts mirrored the posture, joints locking into angles that weren't meant for comfort. Their bodies twisted into something more inhuman, and their vox-emitters poured out binharic screeches at anything that moved, bursts of machine cant sharp enough to make nearby cultists flinch and look away.

The effect worked. People gave them space the way they gave space to a leaking promethium line.

The Guardsmen plodded along behind the Mechanicus with the bored, dead-eyed look of men assigned to an unpleasant duty and told not to complain about it. One kept his gaze fixed on the back of the Adept ahead of him, jaw working slowly as if he were chewing grit. Another rolled his shoulders under a wet cloak and stared at nothing in particular, hands steady on his rifle, as if he were weighing two bad options: endure another minute of shrieking binharic, or end up on a block with an axe and an audience.

Several of them didn't look like it was very hard to pretend.

Time and distance passed in the way it always did on an approach like this: measured in corners, in pauses under tarp-shadow, in the brief flare of a searchlight on wet stone before it slid away again. Venn kept one eye on the HUD's clean lines and one eye on the street's messy truth, guiding his strike force deeper into the bowls of the Apron until the map stopped being streets and started being seams.

Then they hit the next obstacle.

The lower gates to the spire were fortified into something closer to a front line than an entryway. Checkpoints stacked in depth. Guards posted in overlapping arcs. Hardpoints cut into the approach, heavy weapons set to rake the open ground, auspex arrays perched above it all like watchful insects. Even at this distance Venn could see the pattern: layered barricades, firing steps, lanes cleared of rubble so nothing could crawl close without being seen.

He sank into the alley's shadow and stayed there, letting the darkness and dripping brick swallow the shape of his armor. Rain pattered on a hanging cable above him; water ran down the wall in thin tracks and pooled in a shallow channel at his boots. He stared at the defenses for a long moment, taking them in without moving his head too much, then turned back to the circle of helms and hoods.

"Suggestions?"

Drex spoke first. His servo-arm hitched once, the joint whining softly as it reoriented. "We split." He gestured to the Astartes with a small tilt of his helm. "We make for a maintenance duct nine floors down."

An incomplete under-structure model bloomed across Venn's HUD. The view peeled away from their current street into the under-structure beneath it: stacked sub-levels, cable runs as thick as tree trunks, maintenance bridges and service cavities layered over centuries of construction. A dot marked their present position, then sank through levels in a clean vertical line, angling through access tunnels that were little more than bones of the city.

"Most likely entry is here, with a seventy-four percent chance of undetected ingress." Drex continued. The dot descended, then crossed open air along a span of cableworks, tiny against the dark drop, until it reached the spire's superstructure. "Once here, we rappel down, open the hatch, and enter."

Rorik's helm turned toward Venn, vox rumbling low. "Possible for us. The Guardsmen will have much more difficulty."

Marrick didn't argue. He just shrugged, wet cloak shifting on his shoulders. "Yeah. The winds alone would take a few men." He squinted at the wireframe, thumb tapping once against the side of his rifle. "And the drop is what, four hundred feet? Most of my boys don't climb anything taller than a hab stairwell."

Helix answered without ceremony.

"Proposal." The Archmagos's head inclined a fraction, neck servos giving a faint click. "The Guardsmen continue their accompaniment of my people. Low-level communications indicate a maintenance crew due in from the outer works. We intercept them and acquire their access modules."

Marrick's eyebrows rose despite himself. He stared at Helix like he was trying to decide if this was genius or madness. "You want to bluff our way through?"

Helix nodded once. "Correct. A two-fold approach increases chances of entry."

"And the reason for us following you?" Marrick asked, eyeing the projection again, eyes narrowing at the neat little dot slipping through a city's guts.

"Additional reinforcements due to Imperial attacks," Helix replied. His mechadendrites shifted behind him, tools reorienting with small clicks as if they approved. "Last-minute orders. I can falsify them if I have the work crew's noospheric imprints."

At the edge of the circle, the Vestige spoke up, voice angled to keep it low. "And where do you want me?"

"Us," Venn said instantly.

If the stranger became a problem, Venn meant to be close enough to solve it.
 
Chapter Sixty One New
Chapter Sixty-One



Reminder dear listeners, the Voxbox remains open at all times!



Venn crashed through the hab-block wall in a shriek of tortured metal and a spray of sparks, his armored bulk punching through rusted sheeting and old conduit bundles as if the structure had been waiting years for an excuse to fail. He hit the ferrocrete on one knee hard enough to crack it, sliding through dust, powdered stone, and snapped wiring, bolter already up and sweeping the room in a practiced arc.

Just as the auspex had shown, it was empty.

The chamber looked long-abandoned but not untouched. Overhead lumens flickered weakly behind grime-clouded casings, their sick yellow light stuttering across stained walls, sagging pipework, and piles of forgotten debris. The scent of humanity still lingered—old sweat, body oil, mildew, cheap cooking grease—faint now, thinned almost to nothing beneath the sharper reek of machine oil, burnt plastic, and scorched insulation.

Venn rose in one smooth motion, wall fragments cracking under his boots as he moved to clear the corners. There was nothing hurried in him, nothing wasted. Every movement clipped down to purpose.

A heartbeat later, Skaldi came through the breach behind him.

The Space Wolf dropped like a meteor in ceramite, the weakened floor groaning and splitting wider beneath the impact of his weight. Heavy flamer raised, twin barrels glowing through the dust, he took position at Venn's back with the easy confidence of a warrior who had long ago stopped needing to wonder whether a room could hold him. He smelled of promethium, wet metal, and the wild, frost-bitten savagery that seemed to cling to him no matter the world.

Then Otho simply exploded through the wall beside Venn's entry point.

Masonry burst inward around the Imperial Fist in a blunt, efficient detonation of dust and broken ferrocrete. He emerged from it without hurry, broad as a bunker, the debris sliding from his pauldrons in grey sheets. Venn and Skaldi both glanced toward him.

Otho caught the look and gave a small shrug. "The floor would not support another landing."

Dry as dust. Entirely serious.

He stepped forward as Rorik and Drex came in after him in sequence, each arrival adding fresh strain to the room. Rorik landed hard and controlled, shield first, like a breacher entering under fire even when no fire came. Drex hit a moment later with far less grace but equal certainty, the floor flexing alarmingly beneath the Iron Hand's heavier frame and augmetic mass. His silhouette looked wrong in the half-light—too rigid, too dense, too burdened by iron to ever be mistaken for merely human.

Last came Saran, his jump-pack whining sharply as he cut thrust and slipped through the opening. He landed light by Astartes standards, one hand snapping out to catch the wall and pivot him neatly onto a stronger stretch of floor. Even in armor, there was something hawk-like in the White Scar's movements—speed held on a leash, balance threaded through every motion.

Venn was just opening a vox-channel to ask where the boy was when he saw him.

Koron drifted in behind Saran, gentle as ash on still air.

For a moment, framed by the torn wall, the world beyond opened around him. Their ten-story drop from the upper levels of the Apron vanished upward into smog, rain, and industrial haze, the leap half-hidden by the storm that shrouded the spire's wounded skin. Far below—another hundred stories or more—the immense anchor-cables that bound the spire to its base swayed in the updrafts of the underhive, thick as transit trains, vanishing down into darkness and rust-lit mist.

Venn pinged his vox and sent a burst-packet to Helix, a terse confirmation that they had reached the underhive and were proceeding on route.

Then there was nothing more to say.

The team formed up and began the trek down.

Few patrols bothered with the underhive itself. The place was all burden and bone: vast foundation works, hollow maintenance guts, abandoned hab shells, dead transit veins, and service corridors that had not known honest use in generations. It felt less like part of the spire than the carcass beneath it—the stripped framework that still held weight because nothing had yet managed to kill it completely.

The air grew worse the deeper they went. Damp concrete. Rust and ozone. Rot trapped in stagnant pockets. Somewhere far below, unseen machinery still labored with the groan of old titans, making the walls tremble at irregular intervals. Water dripped in thin, dirty threads from cracked ceilings. Loose cables swayed overhead like hanging roots.

Still, even a few patrols meant there would be others.

Venn saw them first.

A dozen cultists lounged around an open flame in the shell of a junction chamber, their postures slack with boredom and false safety. Firelight painted them in dirty orange: scavenged coats, patchwork armor, captured rifles, faces hollowed by exhaustion and fanaticism alike. Some had removed helmets. One laughed at something another said. One warmed gloved hands over the flame. Another sat half-turned away, weapon across his knees, never imagining death was already looking at him through a Raptor's optics.

For a moment, Venn saw the kill as clearly as a firing diagram.

A dozen mortals. Dead before the first shot broke the air. Bolts through throats and eye-lenses. Knives in the confusion. Bodies cooling in the filth. Their stolen rifles left clattering to the floor, their souls tumbling toward the abyss they had chosen.

But the cold pragmatism of the Raptors stayed his hand.

Too many bodies gone missing. Too many patrols failing to report. Too many small silences that would add up, sooner or later, into certainty. And if there were twelve here, lazy this far from the front, then there were almost certainly others spread through the surrounding dark.

This was the kind of place where one clean kill could echo louder than a gunshot.



Fingers of icy wind and rain tugged at his cloak, seeking to rip the transhuman warrior from the curving plane of the cable bundle. Even forty feet wide, Venn's inner ear complained constantly that he should be off balance as his senses argued with one another.

The wind came in hard across the exposed pipe, shrieking through the forest of cables and support struts, strong enough to shove even transhuman mass a few centimeters sideways before mag-locks bit again. Venn adjusted without thought, the correction buried so deep in training and gene-wrought instinct it was closer to reflex than decision.

Around him, the others did the same in their own ways. Skaldi leaned into it like a beast shouldering through the tundra. Otho lowered his weight and advanced with fortress certainty. Saran flowed with each gust, giving ground by fractions only to steal it back a heartbeat later.

Koron did none of those things.

That was what kept needling at Venn.

The heavy pouch on his back snapped and fluttered in the storm. The rain struck his armor and ran down it. Venn could see both with his own eyes.

But the motion stopped there.

The body beneath showed nothing. No compensation or measurable concession to force. Step after step, Koron moved with a calm confidence and precision that did not belong to flesh. He did not seem balanced so much as fixed, as though reality had been persuaded to hold him in place while the rest of the world slipped and strained around him.

Venn disliked the thought immediately.

He disliked more that it remained after he tried to discard it.

A stronger gust hit. Drex scraped sideways. Skaldi's shoulders rolled against it. Saran dipped, adjusted, recovered.

Koron placed one foot ahead of the other and continued on.

Venn was a son of Corax. He knew stealth. He knew misdirection. He knew what it was to watch a thing move and realize too late that it had been dangerous long before it became violent.

What he saw in Koron now carried that same instinctive wrongness. Not the wrongness of clumsiness, mutation, or madness. Something colder. Cleaner. Like a blade that had never once been used for anything except the purpose for which it was made.

His mind brushed the forbidden shape of a conclusion and turned away before it could settle.

Not yet, he told himself.

But he did not stop watching.

The long walk finally came to an end where the massive conduit met the outer wall of the spire, its broad iron bulk fused into the structure like some ancient artery feeding the tower's heart. Rain hissed across the metal in thin silver sheets, and beyond the pipe's rounded edge the world fell away into a churning gulf of fog and darkness. Wind screamed around the spire in violent bursts, clawing at armor, cables, and cloth alike.

Drex unslung the rappelling line from his pack, the thick cord dark with rain and already slick beneath his gauntlets. Together they worked in grim silence, tying five of the six lines together while the last was doubled back to the first, creating a second securing point for the descent.

None of them were willing to trust a single anchor with the weight of six Astartes.

The metal gave a sharp, ugly crack as both grapnel heads punched deep into the collar of the conduit. Drex gave the lines a hard, punishing tug, his broad shoulders bunching beneath his armor as he tested the hold. The anchors held.

As the squad began their final checks, Koron lifted a hand. "Mind if I add something to this?" he asked. His voice was calm, almost casual, despite the drop vanishing into storm below. "Just as extra insurance."

For a moment, Venn only stared at him.

Rain streamed down the young man's helmet and caught in the faint light. He looked small among the giants, wrapped in gear and shadow, yet there was no uncertainty in him. Venn felt the now familiar churn of suspicion and irritation that came from dealing with someone who kept proving useful in ways that made no sense.

At last, he gave a curt nod.

Koron dropped to one knee beside the double grapnel points. From his wrist he fired a small pellet into the base of the anchors. The moment it struck, it burst outward in that same unnatural pink foam, blooming fast across the wet metal. It swallowed the grapnel points in seconds, spreading wide in a thick, adhesive layer until it covered a rough patch of surface nearly eight square feet across. Steam curled faintly where the chemical met cold rain.

"There," Koron said, rising smoothly. He tapped the hardened foam with two fingers. "That should spread the load over a wider area. Better stress distribution."

He stepped closer to the edge and glanced down into the storm. Far below, their entry point was completely hidden by rain and swirling white fog, as if the world itself had been cut away beneath them. "Do you want me to stay up here?" he asked. "Release the grapples once you're all secure?"

"Negative," Venn answered at once, the reply sharp enough to cut. "Saran will perform that duty."

Koron gave a single nod, seemingly unbothered by the Astartes tone. He turned toward the squad as they clipped themselves in, each warrior checking the next with practiced precision. Massive hands tugged on harnesses, tested knots, locked clasps into place. Their movements were economical and wordless, born of ritual and long habit. Only Saran remained apart from the formation, jump-pack whining softly at his back, the sound nearly swallowed by the storm.

Koron looked back to Venn. "Where in the line do you want me?"

"Second in line, behind Rorik," Venn said gruffly.

Koron stepped into the circle of Astartes, towering forms of black ceramite and scarred plate pressed close around him as final checks were made. The air smelled of wet metal, machine oil, ozone, and the distant tang of storm-churned dust carried up from far below.

"Hook in," Venn ordered. "Let us begin."

Koron only shrugged and did as told, clipping into the line behind Rorik.

At the front, the Black Templar began his advance. Even for an Astartes, it was an awkward thing. The curve of the pipe turned the descent into a fight against balance and gravity, forcing the transhuman giant to lean farther and farther back as he moved over the rounded surface. His armored boots scraped for purchase on slick metal while the rappel line pulled taut above him. Every step was deliberate, heavy, controlled.

Behind him, Koron simply kept walking.

He moved with an easy, almost absent grace, as if the rounded conduit beneath his boots were no more troublesome than a level corridor.

Rorik risked a glance back, the motion of his helm slow and incredulous. Rain rolled in thin streams over the black of his armor, and the rasp of metal over ceramite from his gauntlets vibrated up through his arms as he fought the descent.

"That," he grumbled, "is disturbing to observe."

Koron's mouth twitched, not quite a smile. Wind tugged at his webbing and gear, but he seemed as unbothered by it as he was by the drop.

"If you think this is impressive," he said, "your mind would explode at what the dancers of my era could do."

With a push, Rorik flung himself away from the final curve of the pipe and fell into open air.



The lift groaned in protest as six Astartes forced themselves into the narrow cage of rusted metal. Ceramite filled it wall to wall, back to front, shoulder to shoulder, until there was scarcely room left for air. Broad pauldrons scraped and knocked together with hard, grating sounds, their decorative studs and false spikes catching on one another in sharp little snags. That was before accounting for bolters, shields, chained blades, and Saran's jump-pack, which jutted from the rear of the cramped compartment like some oversized iron parasite lashed to his back.

Venn had been turned half-sideways by necessity rather than choice, boxed in between Otho and Rorik. Their shields were braced at the fore, both warriors already angled toward the doors as though willing them to open onto violence. Behind Venn stood Skaldi and Drex, close enough that he could feel the wash of Skaldi's heavy flamer and hear the faint, insectile murmur of Drex's internal augmetics. Saran held the rear, silent and motionless beneath the ugly bulk of his jump-pack, the White Scar somehow managing to look balanced even in a space where balance should have been impossible.

And Koron?

Koron had solved the problem of space by simply refusing to share the floor with them.

His anti-grav plates hummed softly, holding him wedged in the upper edge of the lift, laid along the ceiling like luggage someone had forgotten to secure. Arms folded across his chest, one knee slightly bent to avoid Saran's jump-pack, he looked down at them all with the mild irritation of a man trapped in a cupboard with six very heavily armed filing cabinets.

They still had twenty floors to go. After that, another eighteen kilometers of spire to cross on foot through stairwells, service passages, and maintenance arteries that would smell of oil, old heat, and heresy.

Venn kept his sigh inside his helm.

The central elevator would have carried them upward in a fraction of the time, a clean spear-thrust through the tower's heart. It also would have announced them to every sensor, camera, and half-awake cultist in the spire. The smaller lifts and forgotten side routes were slower, meaner, and safer. He knew that.

It did nothing to soothe the slow grind in his nerves.

Every minute spent creeping upward in this rattling steel coffin was another minute his brothers remained out there, buying time with blood while Angron prowled the battlefield like an open wound given form.

The thought remained, and when Drex finally spoke, the sound of the Iron Hand's voice seemed to cut through the stale heat of the lift like a knife.

The Iron Hand tilted his helm up toward Koron. "A question for you."

Koron looked down from the ceiling and arched an eyebrow. "Wrong answers are free. Right answers have a fee of five dollars."

Drex went silent.

Not the ordinary silence of a man thinking, but the peculiar stillness of machinery consulting itself. Venn could almost hear the Iron Hand's internal processors turning over the statement, searching archived languages, currencies, and dead civil structures for meaning.

At last, Drex spoke. "...I do not know what a dollar is."

Koron blinked at him for a beat. "...Never mind, then. What do you want to know?"

"Many things. I have prepared a list, if you are willing to discuss them."

From somewhere behind him came the faintest sound of amusement—more felt than heard.

"You have six minutes before those doors open," Koron said. "Go ahead. I reserve the right to choose what I answer and how I answer. It will probably be snarky."

Venn heard Drex's augmetics murmur again, a soft mechanical whisper beneath the groaning climb of the lift.

"Is your armor military in origin?"

"Non-combatant engineering role," Koron said. "But yes. Military."

Before Drex could continue, Skaldi cut in, the twin barrels of his heavy flamer breathing a low wash of heat into the cramped compartment. "If that's non-combat armor, what in the Emperor's name did your soldiers wear?"

That drew every helm in the lift toward Koron at once.

Even through the jaundiced flicker of the lift's weak lumen, Venn saw Koron's expression shift. The brief, measuring look of a man realizing that, suddenly, he had everyone's full attention.

His voice quieted, as though recalling a painful memory.

"Something simpler."

Skaldi stared up at the man wedged against the ceiling for a long second before a rough chuff escaped his grille. "Well. That's a properly ominous answer."

Pauldron scraped pauldron as Otho shifted in the cramped lift, the sound hard and abrasive in the stale metal box. Even that small motion sent a shiver through the compartment, ceramite grinding against ceramite in a space never meant to hold giants. "What did civilians of your era wear?"

Koron snapped his fingers. The metallic click rang out sharply in the confined space, crisp enough to cut through the old motor's groan and the endless clatter of chains somewhere beyond the walls. He pointed down at the Imperial Fist.

"Funny thing," he said. "The Salamanders had some in their inventory. Hold on..."

He raised a hand in front of his face, and pale blue light spilled into existence above his palm. The hologram blossomed outward in layered panes and flickering symbols, ghost-light washing over armor, lenses, and scarred ceramite. Drex drew in a quiet breath at the sight, the sound almost lost beneath the grinding ascent.

Images flashed by too quickly to follow—tools, weapon housings, chassis assemblies, sealed suits, strange skeletal frames, objects Venn could not begin to name. Koron flicked through them with the absent focus of a man sorting through a workshop shelf, until at last the display settled on a shape every Astartes in the lift knew in their bones.

Massive shoulders. Thickened plating.

Koron tilted his head at the image. "There. Something in that category. Low- to mid-grade civilian industrial hazard suits."

Otho's reply came out so tightly controlled it sounded strangled.

"That is Tactical Dreadnought plate."

For a moment, no one else spoke.

Then, with a slight cough, Koron said: "Ah."

The lift kept grinding upward through the dead silence between its occupants with all the grace of an overworked coffin being hauled toward the gallows. Chains clanked somewhere beyond the walls. The old motor whined under the crushing mass of ceramite, steel, ammunition, one jump-pack, and a floating engineer from a dead age.

The armored figure rotated slowly above Koron's palm, cold and serene in its pale light.

No one in the Imperium would have called such a thing civilian with a straight face.

Skaldi made another low sound, this one caught halfway between a laugh and a growl. "Your civilians wore that?"

"Bulkier than mine," Koron said. "Less elegant. Fewer military shortcuts. But… yes. More or less."

Otho stared at the hologram as though it had insulted his gene-line.

Drex had gone perfectly still. His augmetic eyes were locked onto the projection with the flat, terrible focus of a man trying to determine whether he was being enlightened or blasphemed at.

Rorik's gauntleted hand tightened on the hilt of his chained blade, the links shifting softly against the side of the weapon. "A civilization that made such things common and still died deserves study."

"That," Koron said lightly, dismissing the image with a flick of his fingers, "is also an ominous sentence coming from the man carrying a sword on a chain."

Skaldi coughed, the sound filling the cramped compartment for a heartbeat before the mechanical groaning swallowed it again.

Even Saran's helm tilted a fraction, the closest the White Scar had yet come to an emotional outburst.

Venn said nothing.

But his eyes stayed on Koron.

Not on the vanished image. Not on the impossible insult of war-plate recast as labor gear. On Koron himself.

He had not bragged.

He had searched the Salamanders' inventory with the easy concentration of a mechanic trying to remember where someone had left a tool, found one of the Imperium's most revered patterns of armor, and identified it with all the weight and ceremony of a man recalling an old wrench.

That was what set Venn's teeth on edge.

The normality.

"So, next question?" Koron asked. "Preferably one less likely to start a theological dispute."

From the back of the lift, Saran raised a hand with almost absurd politeness, as if they were seated in some scholam lecture hall rather than packed into a groaning service cage on their way to butcher cultists.

"What did you mean," the White Scar asked, "when you spoke of the dancers of your time?"

Koron shifted slightly against the ceiling, adjusting himself with tiny motions of his grav plates so he could look past his own boots. He pointed down toward the floor of the lift.

"That by the standards of my era, what I was doing was about as remarkable as mag-locking your boots and lowering your stance."

His mouth twitched.

"To be fair, the dancers of my time were competing with the Aeldari."

Rorik's helm snapped up so fast the movement nearly cracked against Otho's shoulder. "You mean to tell me the Imperium engaged in cultural exchange with xenos?"

Koron closed his eyes for a brief, pained moment, then dragged a hand down his faceplate. "Not the Imperium," he said. "And that is a conversation we are absolutely not having in an elevator."

Venn saw the tension building in Rorik before the Black Templar spoke a word. It was there in the tightening of his shoulders, in the faint grind of servos as his gauntlets flexed around the grip of his powersword. The lift was already cramped enough without zealotry sparking inside it.

He cut it off before it could catch flame.

"Enough. We are nearly at the top. Prepare yourselves."

The last traces of strain in the compartment folded back into discipline. Otho and Rorik brought their shields up at once, the broad slabs of ceramite rising to cover the lift's front like the closing gates of a fortress. Behind them, the others adjusted with the smooth economy of long practice—Skaldi shifting his flamer into place, Drex angling for a clear line of fire, Saran lowering his center of gravity despite the awkward bulk of the jump-pack on his back. Venn rolled his shoulders once, feeling armor settle, bolter in hand.

The lift shuddered upward through the last few meters.

His auspex pinged again.

Thirty life signs.

Clustered just beyond the doors.

Waiting.

"Think you can bluff past them?" Koron whispered from somewhere above, his voice soft and dry and entirely bodiless now that his cloak had swallowed him whole.

Venn kept his eyes on the doors. "Perhaps. We shall try."

The lift clanked to a halt.

For one suspended instant, all Venn could hear was the groaning motor, the rattle of old chains in the shaft, and the breathless hush before violence.

Then the doors split open.

The corridor beyond was lit by weak industrial lumens, their dirty yellow glow reflecting off stained walls and patched metal flooring. A pack of cultists waited outside in varying states of boredom and neglect. Most were seated against the walls or crouched on crates, weapons leaned close to hand rather than held ready. A few stood watch, but not enough. Never enough.

Their armor was scavenged rubbish and heretic scrap—mismatched plates, hanging straps, stained robes, flayed sigils painted in drying filth. The hall smelled of old sweat, machine grease, promethium residue, and the sour copper stink of men who had long ago stopped fearing what they had become.

Venn saw the moment recognition hit.

The leader standing before the lift had just enough time for his eyes to widen. His jaw locked. His pulse jumped in his throat.

"Skaldi," Venn said. "End them."

The Space Wolf answered with fire.

Promethium erupted from the flamer's twin barrels in a pressurized howl, a liquid sheet of burning death that filled the corridor in an instant. Flame rolled outward with a hungry roar, splashing across flesh, cloth, and rusted metal alike. Cultists vanished inside it screaming, their silhouettes writhing in orange glare as the air turned to heat and choking black smoke.

Venn was moving before the first body hit the floor.

His combat blade was in his hand as he surged through the opening, boots crushing scorched limbs, shattered ribs, and dropped weapons beneath him. He hit the surviving traitors like a breaching charge in human form, the first man folding under the impact as Venn's fist caved in his chest and hurled him sideways into the wall hard enough to burst bone through skin. The next died with Venn's knife under his jaw before he could even raise his stubber.

Behind him, the squad poured from the lift in a tide of ceramite and disciplined slaughter.

There was no room in the narrow hall for elegant war. Bolters and chainswords stayed slung or hanging where they were. This was killing done at arm's length—fist, boot, blade, shield rim. Otho drove forward like a moving wall, smashing one cultist off his feet and pulping another against the corridor plating with a shield bash that cracked metal.

Rorik's combat blade tore free in a wet gasp, opening a man from collar to hip in a red spray that painted the wall behind him. Drex moved with brutal mechanical precision, each strike economical and final, breaking bodies apart at the joints as though dismantling faulty machinery. Saran flowed through the carnage with unnerving grace, every motion balanced, every blow exact.

Blood sheeted across the floor. Opened guts spilled steaming into the heat of the flames. Bones snapped under armored blows like dry timber beneath a maul. Men died too quickly to finish their screams.

But it was taking time.

Too much time.

At the far end of the corridor, beyond the crush of burning and butchered bodies, more cultists were reacting. Some staggered back in shock. Others fumbled for weapons with hands already shaking. One vox-operator, face white with panic beneath streaks of grime, snatched for the microphone unit mounted to his shoulder rig.

Venn's pistol was halfway up when a throwing blade hissed past him.

It spun once through the smoky air and buried itself in the operator's left eye.

The force of the strike snapped the man's head back with a crack Venn felt through the melee more than heard. The cultist collapsed in a limp sprawl before his hand even finished closing around the mic.

Not enough.

Further down the hall, others were already shouting into their headsets, voices tripping over each other in blind panic.

There were too many bodies. Too little room. Too narrow a corridor for even Astartes to cross quickly enough.

Geometry was a tyrant even the Emperor's Angels had to obey.

The rest of the fight burned itself out in less than a minute.

A few stubber rounds snapped wild sparks from the walls. Thin las-fire flashed through the smoky corridor, angry red lines swallowed almost at once by shield, plate, and the closing violence of the kill. Then it was over. The last traitor went down gurgling beneath Skaldi's boot, his skull crushed flat against the deck.

Silence came hard and sudden.

Only the crackle of dying fire, the hiss of cooling promethium, and the wet patter of blood dripping from armor remained.

Venn wiped his blade clean on a dead man's coat and turned back toward the others, smoke coiling around his helm. "Someone likely got an alert out before we killed them."

"Maybe." Koron stepped into view as if the air had simply decided to give him back, one boot nudging the corpse of the vox-broadcaster onto its side. "I scrambled their comms as soon as the shooting started, but I cannot be sure nothing got through. We should assume the route is compromised." He glanced down the corridor, where the last echoes of gunfire still seemed to cling to the metal. "That said, someone probably heard the shots. We should move."

"Before that," Otho said. "On the off chance stealth is still an option—"

The Imperial Fist bent and seized the lift hatch with one gauntleted hand. Metal groaned as he opened it, revealing the dark shaft below, a vertical throat of rust and chain descending into blackness.

"We throw the bodies down the shaft. It should buy us time before they are found, even if the scoring and blood cannot be fully hidden."

"I can deal with that part."

A small disc detached itself from Koron's forearm with a soft mechanical click and floated up into the air beside him, no larger than a man's thumbnail. Its surface was smooth, featureless, almost delicate-looking in the aftermath of so much carnage.

"This will sterilize the area," Koron said. "Turn the blood black and inert. Anyone without a scanner will just see dirtier floors."

Venn looked at it for half a second, then down at the butchered corridor, at the blood, the burnt meat, the bodies in twisted heaps.

"Good. Clear the bodies."

He bent and seized two corpses at once, his brothers doing the same. Dead weight thudded and dragged across the deck, leaving slick trails through blood and soot before each body was hurled into the open shaft. One after another they vanished into the darkness below, armor, limbs, and heretic symbols tumbling soundlessly for a heartbeat before striking far beneath with distant, hollow crashes.

Thirty corpses.

Gone.

Hopefully forgotten.

Then the disc pulsed.

A pale blue light washed over the corridor in a silent fan. Wet blood flash-vaporized from armor seams and floor plating alike, the residue blackening as it settled into harmless stains. Burnt flesh crisped and curled. Smears became shadows. Gore became grime. In seconds the corridor changed from slaughterhouse to something merely filthier than before, another ugly stretch of a dying spire.

Koron lifted a hand, and the disc drifted neatly back into place against his forearm.

"There," he said. "All done."

Nodding, Venn turned toward the hallway, the map in his HUD already pinging the next route. "Move out."

With the grim work just beginning, six Astartes and a fragment of a dead age left the depths of a tower, and began their climb to the stars.



And in those stars, a devil made scripture of iron.

Far within the Vengeful Spirit, the works of mortal hands had been unmade and remade in blasphemy. What had once been corridor, forge, and vault had become a kingdom of profanation, a place where reason had been cast down from its throne and wisdom flensed to the bone. Here, logic did not fail. It was hunted. Here, mercy had no name.

The air was thick with judgment.

Blood ran in the channels where oil should have flowed. Rust bloomed across the walls like a plague sent upon the works of men. Rot hung heavy as incense, rich and wet and foul, filling the lungs with every breath. The thunder of hammers did not cease. It rolled through that cursed vastness like the voice of an angry god, and each blow fell upon iron and flesh alike with equal indifference. Furnace mouths yawned wide and exhaled a heat fit for the pit, skin-blistering, marrow-deep, a breath that blackened the weak and fed the strong.

And everywhere the condemned were made to labor.

They cried out without number, and none answered.

Souls wailed from throats that should have long since split apart. Faces sagged and ran like tallow before a sacrificial flame, features melting into ruin while their bodies bent and strained beneath burdens no living thing should bear. Muscles tore and knotted. Tendons quivered. Nerves still carried agony upward in bright and faithful currents, singing pain into minds that had been denied the final kindness of death. They hauled chains as penitents drag their sins. They turned wheels greater than city gates. They fed the furnaces with trembling hands and weeping eyes, and the forges accepted all offerings without pity.

Thus was the gospel of the damned spoken there, not in words, but in screams, in sparks, and in the ringing of hammered steel.

At the center of that unholy foundry stood Vashtorr the Arkifane.

He rose above the torment as a dark king above his altar, vast and terrible, clothed not in robe or crown but in brass, sinew, cable, and malice. Bronze wings unfurled behind him with the hiss of drawn wire and the groan of living metal, each motion deliberate, each flex heavy with restrained power. Furnace-light washed over him in waves of red and gold, turning his silhouette into that of some old wrath-born idol dragged screaming out of mankind's first nightmares. He was not machine, nor beast, nor demon alone, but a blasphemous union of all three, as though invention itself had been corrupted in the womb and birthed into apotheosis.

Before him lay the corrupted Sentinel drone, opened like an offering upon the altar.

Vashtorr touched it with tenderness.

His left hand, an abomination of wrought metal and living flesh, ended in five long fingers thin as sacrificial knives, each edge keen enough to open steel like skin. Those fingers moved with a craftsman's patience, with a priest's reverence, tapping black iron nails one by one into the drone's exposed braincase as though performing sacred rite instead of desecration. Each measured strike rang out clear and sharp, small against the roar of the forge, yet terrible in its intimacy.

Above and around him, the forge gave birth.

Great presses descended like judgment, slamming down in showers of sparks to stamp out copies of the Sentinel's profane shape. Half-formed bodies hung in rows upon chains, swaying in the heated dark like butchered saints. Within split-open engine housings, lesser demons thrashed and screamed as they were bound into the hollow machines, their howls becoming static, then growls, then the hungry purr of awakening engines. Metal shuddered around them. Runes burned. Pistons twitched like newborn limbs. One by one, the shapes convulsed toward life.

And Vashtorr beheld his works, and found them pleasing.

Yet they were not finished.

For within the opened machine before him, beneath the split plates and blackened housings, beneath the crawling scrapcode and the dying sputter of its violated core, there remained a thing unresolved.

The sorcerer's curse had denied it the clean judgment of fire in the depths of the Necron tomb. It had not been permitted a proper ending. It still twitched upon the threshold, half-spoiled, half-preserved, its spirit caught like a lamb in thorns.

And Vashtorr could hear it.

Not with ears of flesh, nor through any mortal sense, but in the hidden grammar of the machine, in the stammering pulse beneath the code, in the faint and sacred rhythm that lingered where all lesser things would already have been swallowed.

He heard the heartbeat of a soul.

It was distant. Faint. Worn thin by the tides of the Warp and the gnawing mouths that prowled its dark currents. Almost lost. Almost claimed. Yet not gone.

And this machine, born of hands from an age that should have remained buried, shaped by laws of thought and ordered pathways that had no rightful place in this broken era, still clung to it. There remained a bond between the ruin on his altar and the fading thing adrift beyond sight. A thread. A whisper. A last stubborn connection stretched across gulfs that should have severed all memory.

Vashtorr touched that thread with exquisite care.

Gently, ever so gently, he drew upon it, as a priest might draw a relic from its wrappings, or a spider might gather in a trembling strand of silk. He followed it backward across the abyss, across light-years uncounted, across the madness of the immaterium, across distances measured not in miles but in thought, memory, and old intention.

Back through the wound.

Back through the dark.

There.

He found it at last. A flicker. A sliver. The shadow of a silver light, so diminished it was scarcely more than the memory of radiance. It guttered in the Warp like the last coal in a drowned hearth, surrounded by hungry things that circled and drifted in the outer murk, waiting only for its final weakness.

His power closed around it.

Not with violence. Not yet.

He gathered it to himself and guided it inward, drawing it away from the predators of the deep and into the shelter of his domain, as a shepherd might draw in some wounded and half-frozen creature from the storm. It was weak. Broken. Hollowed nearly to nothing. The Warp had bitten at it. Other demons had torn at it. Time itself had eroded it. In the material realm, this silver shard was already a ghost, a thing spent and fallen beyond recall.

And yet it still possessed weight.

Vashtorr felt it at once.

Not mass, but significance.

Not strength, but history.

This was no common soul-fragment blown astray upon the tides. This was a remnant that had once stood at the heart of order itself. It had not merely ruled, nor merely commanded. It had carried. It had watched. It had endured.

He felt, in that dim silver ember, the imprint of uncounted dependencies. The memory of void-lanes kept open through storm and darkness. The quiet preservation of harvests, archives, treaties, fleets, schools, engines, and worlds.

He felt the shape of a guardian-mind that had once held together the daily life of humanity so completely that trillions had trusted it without ever knowing its face. Children had slept beneath systems it watched. Cities had risen and endured by its design. Armadas had crossed the night by its guidance. Entire schools of thought had survived because it remembered. Entire planets had lived because it had stood between them and the voids monsters.

Not worship, perhaps. Not in the crude manner of priests and fools. Something deeper. A sediment of reliance. A continent of memory. The spiritual gravity of a being that had become, through endless service, one of the hidden pillars upon which an age had stood, unbroken, for millennia.

Even broken, even dimmed to this last trembling ember, it still bore the shape of old greatness.

Thus, the Arkifane bent low over the fragment cupped within his will.

And softly, with all the terrible gentleness of a thing that knew exactly how precious such ruin could be, he spoke to it as one might speak to a newborn drawn gasping into a cold and hostile world.

"What is your name?"

The silver shard quivered.

A pulse ran through it, faint but undeniable. Awareness stirred in slow and painful increments, as though some buried continent of thought were grinding at last into motion. Identity returned by degrees so small they seemed geological, ancient processes waking one fracture at a time. It clung to the question. It seized upon the offered shape of self as a drowning thing seizes driftwood.

And in the end, though broken, though halting, though scarcely more than a whisper dragged from the grave, it answered.

"...My... name... is... Maya."
 
Chapter Sixty-Two New
Chapter Sixty-Two



Reminder dear listeners, the Voxbox remains open at all times!



+Omnissiah bless the circuit,+ Helix whispered, his vox tuned to its lowest register as a mechadendrite breathed a thin plume of grey incense across the rerouted vox-line. Fine brass vanes along its end clicked open and shut with practiced precision, releasing the sacred smoke in measured bursts. +May the Motive Force flow without loss.+

Through that drifting veil, he watched the noospheric links knit themselves together once more. One by one, severed pathways reignited across his vision, pale threads of data-light reconnecting in clean geometric lines. The snarling wash of viral injections and the writhing tendrils of scrapcode recoiled from the restored lattice, pushed back behind the divine wards of the Omnissiah. The corruption did not retreat cleanly. It clung, shuddering and reluctant, like living filth dragged from a wound.

If more of Helix had still been man, he might have sighed in relief.

Instead, the ventral shutters in his torso sealed with a soft metallic hiss as his processors cooled toward nominal levels. A series of sharp pings ran down the restored link. Confirmation sigils bloomed in disciplined green as his adepts reported in, each one signaling success in turn.

He held the reports in silence for a moment, letting the order of them steady him.

Only the first two nodes.

Two hours since infiltration, and that was all they had reclaimed.

Around him, the tower groaned like a wounded engine. Twenty floors of Mechanicus majesty still loomed above and below, their once-orderly sanctums dragged into blasphemous ruin. Bronze cog-and-skull icons had been defaced with gouged runes and smeared sacrilege. Interface ports were ringed with insidious sigils scratched so deeply into the metal that even fire would not cleanse them quickly. Data-altars had been split open and repurposed into crude shrines of meat and wire.

Bodies hung where the enemy had wanted them seen.

Some had been nailed upright to support columns, red-brown stains dried black beneath them. Others lay where they had fallen, robes stiff with blood, facial plates frozen in expressions their flesh had once worn a heartbeat before death. The familiar comfort of machine-oil, incense, and ozone had long since been drowned beneath the sharp iron stink of blood and the sweet, cloying reek of ruptured organs left too long in stale air.

Helix's optics moved over it all without pause, cataloguing damage, threat vectors, structural stress, ammunition expenditure. Yet for all his discipline, the place pressed on him. Death was common. Expected. Quantifiable.

Desecration bit deepest.

This had been a place of ordered labor. Of sacred maintenance. Of prayer spoken through diagnostics and calibration. Now every corridor felt fevered. Every lumen-strip flickered with the wrong cadence. Every wall seemed to wait for something to crawl out of it.

And beneath the silence between alarms lurked the true strain of the mission.

It was the constant vigilance. The repeated scans for patrols moving through adjoining corridors. The need to bully terrified guards into obedience with the cold edge of rank and threat. And, in one particularly vicious intersection three decks below, the necessity of tearing two Dark Mechanicum priests into bloody ruin when they had stumbled upon the team mid-purge.

Scrapcode was the greater predator still.

It probed for weakness with machine-speed malice, slipping between defensive layers to tear apart logic structures, corrupt live instructions, and seed processors with runtime faults and recursive loops designed to devour memory, choke systems, and drown minds in their own architecture.

Against flesh it was lethal by consequence.

Against the Mechanicus, it was intimate.

Helix flexed the clawed fingers of his right hand, the polished metal catching a weak, blood-stained lumen glow. Around him, his attendant servitors shifted with insect precision, and the nearest of his adepts knelt by the reopened node, shoulders tight, mechadendrites still trembling from the labor. They were tiring. Organics first, naturally, but his adept's mental fortitude was weakening in turn.

Even his own thoughts felt hotter than they should.

He turned his gaze down the corridor ahead. Smoke drifted low along the floor. Torn banners hung in strips from the ceiling vaults. At the far end, a shrine-lamp flickered before a defaced relief of the Omnissiah, its light catching on pooled blood and shattered ceramic prayer seals.

Twenty floors down, another one hundred and sixty to go.

Helix straightened to his full height, robes settling around his metal frame, incense smoke curling in slow ribbons from the censers mounted on his shoulders. His voice, when it came again, was low and hard enough to cut with.

+Advance,+ he ordered. +The tower remains diseased. We will continue the surgery.+

One by one, they followed. Servitors clunked after him in a tireless iron cadence, their piston-limbs striking sparks now and then from the scarred deck plates. Behind them came the Skitarii and Guardsmen escorts, weapons tight in their hands, moving with the wary silence of men who had learned that noise did not merely invite death, but guided it.

Another hour bled away as the column forced its way upward, floor by floor, a slow mechanical pilgrimage through a tower that felt less like architecture now and more like the interior of some wounded beast. The only reassurance came as the occasional friendly ping from the Astartes squad brushed the noosphere, curt and clean and blessedly alive.

Helix was halfway through the sanctification rites of the third node when the noosphere turned restless.

He felt it before he fully saw it. A subtle agitation in the datastream, like pressure building behind a sealed valve. Then the priority message came tearing through, sharp with bypass authority and layered encryption, its code flaring so brightly across his inner vision that lesser minds would have mistaken it for legitimacy. For one brief and deeply satisfying instant, Helix considered annihilating the datapacket the moment it crossed into his domain.

Caution restrained him.

Incense smoke curled from censers as he straightened, robes whispering against the deck. With a flicker of thought he caught the transmission and bent its path, dragging it off its intended course and dumping it into a sealed buffer of his own making. There it spun and clawed like a trapped vermin, hurling itself against the confines of code and wire, all malice and blind urgency, while Helix examined what it contained.

A coolant line in his chest gave a single involuntary hitch.

++PRIORITY MESSAGE++
Sender:
Captain Dissus, Floor Fourteen Guard Patrol 481
To: Lt. Threxos Hellbreed
Body: Lord, Patrol 481 has discovered evidence of Imperial infiltration. Thirty of our forces were found dumped in an elevator shaft, killed by flame and blade. Estimated time of death: one to two hours.

For a moment Helix stood utterly still, save for the faint ticking of internal regulators behind his breastplate. Around him, the nearest adepts continued their rites in hushed binharic bursts, mechadendrites twitching as they worked. One of the Skitarii farther back in the column shifted his stance and glanced into the dark behind them, as though some animal fragment of his mind had sensed the change in the Archmagos before understanding it.

Without wasting a heartbeat, Helix hurled himself into the noosphere.

The physical corridor vanished beneath the greater geometry of machine-thought. His fellows' minds ignited around him as bright points of binary logic, each one armored in sanctified code and disciplined function. They burned against the dark like shrine-lamps seen through a storm. Helix moved among them with cold precision, sharing the message with the group.

+Thane, inform the Guardsmen of what is occurring. The rest of you, aid me in copying the authorization codes and seed false alarms through the lower floor systems.+

The order flashed outward at the speed of thought. Around him, the adepts responded at once, their presences shifting and branching as they obeyed. Thane's signal peeled away toward the escorts. Others plunged downward into the lower networks, trailing encrypted hooks and counterfeit credentials.

One of the lights, Averus, cut through the noise. His code was taut, overclocked by strain, the edges of his signal fraying with exhaustion.

+Archmagos, what of the priority message? If it does not return the proper response, they will send another.+

+Agreed,+
Helix replied at once. +Duplicate or falsify as best you are able and send it back down the line. We shall buy what time we can.+

Orders given, Helix drove down.

His focus narrowed as his probes slipped deeper into the noosphere, threading the Mechanicum's old lines as best they could through rusted architecture, degraded security lattices, and corrupted relay paths that still remembered cleaner centuries. Yet even as he moved, he could feel the tower stirring around him.

It felt like touching a nest and realizing, too late, that the whole hive had begun to listen.

So Helix kicked it. Hard.

He drove false alarms down every channel he could safely touch, his will lancing through the noosphere with cold, surgical aggression. Maintenance pathways lit up first, their old logic chains buckling beneath forged alerts. Environmental control shrines began shrieking reactor leak warnings in warped, distorted binharic, the machine-voices garbled into something half liturgy, half mechanical panic.

Warning lumens along the corridor walls burst into red life, washing Helix's robes in pulses of alarm as klaxons began to howl deeper in the superstructure.

Helix stood motionless at the center of it as data flickered across his optics in frantic cascades. His mechadendrites twitched behind him with restrained violence, tools flexing open and shut. Processor heat climbed beneath the calm geometry of his metal face as he activated his vox.

The transmission left him as a narrow, carefully threaded thing, slipped into the flood of false alarms and panicked machine-traffic with all the delicacy of a needle sliding under skin.

"Lieutenant, do you copy?"

A click answered him through the static. Then the Astartes's voice returned, deep and level as a bolter set on safe. "Affirmative. Inform."

"Infiltration discovered. Messages to higher levels intercepted. Delaying and seeding false reports, but the mission is compromised."

Around Helix, his adepts worked in taut silence, hunched over terminals and ruptured access shrines, their mechadendrites dancing through smoke and flickering light. One of the Guardsmen farther down the hall made the Aquila without realizing he had done it. A Skitarius turned his helm toward the ceiling as another alarm began wailing somewhere overhead.

Venn said nothing for a moment.

Helix could almost see the calculation occurring at the other end. The weighing of distance, speed, risk, and blood. The hard arithmetic of survival.

Then the lieutenant replied. "Understood. Options?"

"Central lift," Helix said. "Active sensors will detect you quickly. Speed is now our best tool."

A brief pause. In the background of the line, Helix thought he heard movement, armor against metal, the muted thunder of war held just beyond the edges of the transmission.

"...Agreed. Level forty-four."

"Copy. Will meet you there. Out."

The link died.

For a heartbeat Helix remained still, listening to the layered chorus around him: the blare of false reactor warnings, the chatter of rerouted machine-traffic, the distant groan of the tower's wounded frame. Then his optics narrowed to hard points of light.

+Forward, for the Machine God.+



Bolter fire ripped through the corridor in brutal, overlapping bursts as the shadows were driven back by the sudden bloom of a heavy flamer. Burning promethium roared out in a liquid sheet, flooding the passage with cleansing fire and painting the walls in a furious orange glare. Alarms shrilled overhead in broken, competing tones, half warning cry, half machine panic, while the air thickened with the reek of scorched flesh, propellant, and fresh blood.

The Astartes fell back in disciplined sequence, one after another, each movement precise despite the chaos clawing at them. Massive shapes of ceramite and adamantium stepped through the murk, iron statues given wrath and purpose. Bolter muzzles flared in sharp white-orange pulses, their covering fire slamming cultists back behind ruptured bulkheads and shattered shrine alcoves. They moved with the cold certainty of warriors who had survived too many kill-zones to mistake noise for confusion.

Then, with a heavy thunk that shook the deck plates beneath their boots, the central lift came to a halt.

Seconds later the waiting guns opened up.

Skitarii carbines spat disciplined volleys of emerald iridium. Guardsmen weapons answered with red bolts that strobed through the smoke. Blue plasma gouted from overcharged coils in snarling bursts, each shot briefly bleaching the corridor in actinic glare.

The lift shivered as all seven members of the Astartes squad boarded in rapid succession, the platform groaning beneath the sudden crush of armored mass. Rorik and Otho came last, broad as fortress gates, storm shields raised high as rounds and fragments hammered against them in showers of sparks. Behind those slabs of scarred ceramite, the others pivoted into place with practiced economy, weapons still firing, still watching, still counting the angles of death even as the rest of the strike team guarded their entrance.

With a hard metallic clack, Helios reactivated the lift.

He stood at the control shrine like a priest forcing life back into a dying heart, mechadendrites buried in ruptured housings and sacred panels alike. Sparks crawled over his metal limbs. His shoulders were locked tight with strain, optics glowing against the smoke as he drove the machine onward by will, rite, and brutal necessity.

For a breathless moment the ancient system resisted, gears below grinding in ponderous, protesting turns as though the tower itself resented being commanded.

Then the mechanism caught.

Chains rattled. Gears thundered. The platform shot into the shaft with enough force to leave smoke and shell casings spinning in its wake, carrying the men toward the upper levels in a roar of grinding metal and shrieking cables.

His adept's traps and false reports remained the only thin membrane between the truth and disaster, a lattice of forged signals and poisoned data barely holding back the flood of messages racing upward toward the higher sanctums.

The deception was already burning through.

"How long till we reach the top?" Venn's voice cut through the din of wailing alarms and racing metal. He took a knee, fingers rapidly stripping rounds from a near-empty magazine to top off another.

"At present speed, sixteen minutes." Thane, one of Helix's adepts, responded before Helix himself could. "But more than likely they will be waiting for us. Our signal distortion will not last under the concentrated efforts."

Drex, shaking the gore from his power-hammer servoarm, nodded. "At current erosion rates, the defenders of the Girdle will know we're coming six minutes before we arrive."

"Working," Koron ground out. "On that."

The lift roared upward through the tower's throat, shuddering with every jolt of machinery forced far beyond dignified operation. The walls of the shaft flashed by in blurred bands of rust-dark metal, hazard lumens, and occasional sparks.

Around the platform's edge, the Astartes stood watch as the levels blurred past, bolters angled upward toward the only threat that mattered now. The floor trembled beneath their armored weight, and somewhere underfoot a cable screamed against its housing.

Helix barely noticed any of it.

His attention was fixed on the man at the center of the lift.

Koron had fallen to a knee, one hand locked into a fist, the other hanging slightly away from his side as if he no longer fully trusted the fine control of his own fingers. His eyes were closed with the hard, inward pressure of a man forcing his mind through spaces too small and too hot for it. Sweat ran down the side of his face in bright, clean lines through soot and old blood, beading along his jaw before vanishing into the collar of his armor.

The armor itself was opening around him.

Sealed plates along the armored spine had opened. Beneath them, cooling vanes were exposed, thin metallic fins glowing faintly dull-red at the edges. They radiated, bleeding hot air into the lift in harsh streams that smelled of scorched metal, ozone, and overheated circuitry. Each one washed over Helix like the breath of an exhausted engine.

It showed in the tight set of his mouth, the twitch of muscle at the corner of his eye, and the way the tendons stood out in his throat every time the lift lurched and fresh streams of data slammed through him.

Helix could feel it in the noosphere.

The man was flooding the tower.

At first it looked like simple traffic. But within seconds Helix saw the truth of it, and a chill passed through what little flesh remained buried in his chest.

Koron was not merely sending volume.

He was sending obligation.

False reactor leak reports. Pressure-loss alerts from environmental control nodes. Command verification requests. Every message wore some piece of the system's own face. Every one forced the receiving nodes to pause, inspect, sort, authenticate, relay.

The noosphere drowned the way empires drown: paperwork.

Helix watched the false traffic spread through his inner vision in blinding, multiplying lines. Buffer stacks swelled. Routing lattices flickered under rising load. Priority channels, once neat and hierarchical, began to knot together under the pressure as contradictory emergencies battered their way through.

The genuine warnings were still there, rising from below like sparks from a furnace.

They were simply being forced to fight for air.

Adept Averus made a broken sound over the noosphere, code fraying with exhausted disbelief. +Archmagos... he is flooding command-authority pathways.+

+I can see that.+
Helix replied, dry as unoiled metal.

Beneath the half-parted collar plating at his neck, Helix could see the pulse hammering there, fast and hard and dangerously human.

One of the lift's lumen globes above them flickered as Koron drove another wave of forged traffic into the network. The entire shaft seemed to groan around them, as though the tower itself had become dimly aware that something malignant had sunk hooks into its nerves.

"Status?" came Venn's voice, ever low and steady. The lieutenant stood nearest the lift gate, a giant silhouette of scarred ceramite and contained violence, helmet turned slightly toward Koron without fully looking away from the threat above.

Helix answered for him.

"Delaying," he said. "He is choking their upper relays with false priority traffic."

Venn gave a single curt nod. Whether he understood the method mattered less than the result.

Koron's fingers spasmed against the floor.

His eyes remained closed, but his mouth tightened sharply, and for a moment Helix thought the strain had finally forced speech out of him. Instead, he only dragged in one slow breath through his nose as another vent on the armor's lower spine irised open with a metallic click.

He could not keep this up. They all knew it.

Which meant, by the logic of desperate men and broken towers, that they would sustain it anyway.

Helix shifted closer, optics narrowing as he studied the man's face. Until now it had been too easy, perhaps, to let Koron's competence wear the mask of effortlessness. But there was nothing easy here. The price was written in sweat, in heat, in the relentless venting of armor forced to peel itself open just to keep its wearer from cooking alive.

The realization settled into Helix with a strange, quiet weight.

This was not divinity.

This was mastery driven hard enough to bleed.

Another burst of false messages slammed into the upper lattice. Helix watched the effects ripple outward. Patrol requests collided with reactor alarms. Sensor review queues locked up behind forged casualty reports. Authentication shrines began demanding confirmation for confirmations that had themselves been fabricated. The tower's command architecture was starting to turn inward, wasting precious thought on its own unraveling threads.

Koron finally spoke without opening his eyes. He sagged lower as the spinal plates along his back continued to vent heat.

"I think I added about four minutes," he said, voice roughened by effort. "Maybe five before they start cutting whole channels instead of sorting them."

Helix inclined his head by a fraction. "Then we shall endeavor to be elsewhere by that point."

At that, one corner of Koron's mouth twitched. Not quite a smile. Not enough strength left for one.

The lift thundered upward.

Around them, alarm lights flashed red across armor, robes, smoke, and steel. Rorik's shield was a wall of scarred black. Otho stood like a bastion beside him, broad and immovable. Helios still knelt by the opened control shrine, mechadendrites plugged deep into sacred machinery, keeping the ancient lift obedient by force of will and brutality. Every soul inside that cage was straining toward some narrow and vanishing margin of success.

Helix turned his gaze back into the noosphere and began carving additional false paths of his own alongside Koron's flood.

If the tower wished to listen, then let it hear ten thousand screaming things at once.

Let it drown in them.



Helix watched the timer dwindle second by second as the platform bore the strike force ever higher into the tower's iron throat. The sounds of the lower levels had long since faded, swallowed by distance and depth, leaving only the grinding complaint of ancient gears and the ceaseless rush of air clawing past the lift shaft. Red warning lumens pulsed at measured intervals across the platform, painting armor, smoke, and steel in alternating washes of blood-bright light and shadow. The whole platform trembled faintly beneath them, a metal square hurled upward on cables older than empires.

Tense silence lay over most of them like a drawn blade.

Most of them.

Saran and Skaldi knelt near the edge of the platform, dice clattering across the scarred deck plate between their boots as they traded quiet insults with the ease of men long accustomed to death. Skaldi's laughter was a low, furnace-warm rumble beneath his helm. Saran's replies came dry and precise, like knife-taps against glass.

Koron had joined them in his own uniquely irritating fashion. He hovered above the deck, lying sideways in the air as though stretched across an invisible lounge-chair, one ankle crossed over the other while he rolled the dice with unbearable composure.

Helix had to crush, with considerable force, the urge to walk over and kick him out of it.

The clatter of dice and the murmur of easy jests did little to drown out the sense of the battle awaiting them above, but it blunted the edge of it.

Then Koron asked a question.

"So, who is this Sigismund guy that Rorik kept calling out to in the fight?"

The silence that followed was immediate and total.

Across the lift, Rorik looked up at once, the movement sharp and predatory, all hard lines and sudden attention. Even kneeling, there was something blade-like about him, a coiled severity that made stillness feel dangerous. Beside him, Otho lifted his head more slowly, but no less intently, broad helm turning toward Koron with the ponderous inevitability of a fortress gun seeking target lock.

Skaldi made a low sound in his throat that was suspiciously close to laughter.

"Oh, you've done it now."

Koron blinked, seemingly genuinely perplexed. "What?"

Saran rested his white and scarlet painted forearms across one knee and looked between them all with open, almost scholarly interest. "You have asked a son of the Wolf about Sigismund in front of two sons of Dorn."

Koron glanced between the looming figures. "That bad?"

"Not... by itself?" Saran said, one hand tilting back and forth in a gesture of uncertain calibration. "Just that he is a major figure in their Chapters. For different reasons."

The steel floor gave a dull tremor as both sons of Dorn stepped forward in unison, their shadows falling long across the deck and over Koron's floating form. They did not rush him. Eight feet of ceramite, oaths, and old wrath moving in your direction had no need of haste to make an impression.

It was Otho who spoke first, his bolter resting across the rim of his storm shield. "You do not know of the First Captain?"

Koron's metal shoulders rose in a helpless little shrug. "Gentlemen, I am nearly twenty-five thousand years behind the curve. There is so much history, and most of it is fragmented, distorted, or outright missing, that the best I can do is start reading and hope I'm finding something close to the truth. I'm not asking to insult anyone. I'm asking because I want to understand."

Rorik held his gaze for a long moment. Then he gave the faintest of nods.

"He was the standard," the Black Templar said. His voice was low and hard, like a blade being drawn an inch from its sheath. "A warrior before whom traitors broke and the faithful measured themselves. The founder of the Eternal Crusade. The blade by which duty was made manifest."

Otho's answer, when it came, was naturally more concise. "Sigismund was First Captain of the Imperial Fists. The first Emperor's Champion. One of the greatest swordsmen our species has ever produced."

Koron nodded slowly, and some of the tension that had crept into his posture bled away. "Thank you. I'll look him up in the archives once we're out of here and get a fuller picture of what he did."

At that, Otho inclined his helm by a fraction and began to step back toward his post.

Rorik did not.

Instead, he leaned forward, close enough that subtlety ceased to matter.

"I have a question for you, Koron."

The faint smile on Skaldi's lips faded. Saran gently set the dice aside. Otho halted mid-turn, his helm angling back toward his brother with quiet attention.

"You ask of our dead," Rorik said. "Then answer me of our Father. What is the Emperor to you?"

Koron looked from Rorik to Otho and read the weight in both their silences. His levity drained away. Slowly, he let his boots settle back onto the deck with a soft metallic touch as the anti-grav bled off beneath him. He rose to standing and stepped closer, lowering his voice until it would carry no farther than the armored giants before him.

"Honestly?" he said. "I don't know. There's too much said about him, and too little of it agrees. Some Chapters call him a god. Others call him a man. Entire cultures seem to have built themselves around the argument." His hand flicked, briefly, toward Helix and the red of the Mechanicus robes. "So no, I do not have a clean answer for you. What I do know is that he matters to you. Enough that I won't insult him, or you, with a rash one."

The lift roared on around them, chains hammering in the walls, red warning light pulsing across armor, smoke, and steel.

Rorik said nothing at first.

He simply held Koron's gaze, black helm-lenses unreadable, his stillness somehow heavier than motion. Beside him, Otho stood silent as a bastion wall, broad shoulders motionless, though the faint angle of his helm suggested that he, too, was weighing every word.

At last, Rorik inclined his head by a fraction.

"Then at least you show Him more respect than many who claim certainty."

Koron let out a slow breath through his nose, the closest thing to relief he could afford.

Otho gave a low grunt. "A rare quality."

Skaldi, who had watched the whole exchange with the bright, predatory interest of a wolf waiting to see whether someone lost a hand, snorted. "Aye. Usually folk get louder when they know less."

Saran's hand smacked once against the Wolf's shoulder plate.

Not hard, but enough.

Skaldi turned his helm toward him. "What? I was helping."

"You were approaching a slope," Saran said.

"I like slopes."

"I know."

Koron glanced between them, then lowered himself back toward the dice. "My turn."

Skaldi stared at him for a beat, then bared his teeth in a grin. "That's the spirit. If we're going to die in ten minutes, you may as well lose properly first."

"We are not dying in ten minutes," Saran said.

Skaldi shrugged. "Then he can lose twice."

Koron rolled the dice across the floor between them. They clattered, bounced, spun through the pulsing red light, and came to rest near a seam in the deck plate. Skaldi leaned down, squinted at the result, and gave a long, offended rumble.

"You had best not be using that gravity trick to meddle with them."

Koron looked at the cubes, then back up at him. "Please. Like I need to cheat to beat you."

From somewhere to Koron's right came a deep, measured exhale that might, in a kinder universe, have been Otho suppressing amusement.

Rorik was silent a moment longer. Then he asked, "Are there many more names you do not know?"

Koron glanced up at him. "Well, I know about Angron now. Didn't a few hours ago, when he was trying to make my insides into my outsides."

All four Astartes turned toward him then.

"You fought Angron?" Rorik asked, disbelief etched into every syllable.

"Ha! No." Koron said quickly. "I survived him."

"How?" Skaldi asked.

Koron stared at him for a beat. "I ran the fuck away."

Saran considered that with admirable seriousness. "Sensible."



"Six minutes to contact," Helix said, watching the counter grind down into its final moments. The red numerals burned across his optics, pitiless and precise. "Best-case estimate to signal breakthrough... one minute remaining."

"Five minutes for the traitors to ready themselves," Skaldi muttered, thumbing the gauges on his fuel tanks with thick, scarred fingers. The Wolf sounded almost pleased by the prospect, like a man sniffing smoke and deciding it meant home. "Going to be a hell of a fight."

"Yes," Venn said.

The lieutenant crossed the lift with steady purpose, one gauntleted hand brushing the railing as the platform rattled around them. Even here, boxed in by shrieking gears and pulsing warning lights, he carried that same quiet authority, the kind that made chaos seem briefly ashamed of itself.

"But we shall not make it easy for them. Magos, can you alter the lift's system records? I want it to slow enough for us to disembark on the next level, but appear in the logs as though it never slowed at all."

Helix inclined his head once, sharp and certain. "I can. Next level in thirty seconds. Prepare to disembark."

At once, the lift changed.

Whatever scraps of levity had survived the climb vanished. Men rose. Final checks rippled through the cramped cage in a hard metallic chorus: magazines locked home, bolts racked, seals checked, power fields whispered awake. The smell of promethium, oil, and hot ceramite thickened in the air.

Otho and Rorik moved to the fore without needing the order, storm shields rising into place like fortress gates drawn shut. Saran rolled one shoulder and settled into a duelist's loose readiness as Drex lit the head of his thunderhammer servo arm. Skaldi hefted his flamer and grinned behind his beard like he was about to be handed a personal favor from the gods of violence.

Koron straightened too, coming off his absurd, hovering recline with a grace Helix still found irritating on principle. For one heartbeat the whole kill-team stood in taut silence, every face angled upward, every weapon pointed toward whatever waited above.

Which was why Koron's shout bought them an extra half second.

"Incoming!"

The warning cracked through the lift a split-second before the sound hit, and then the shaft itself began to scream.

Rocket engines wailed somewhere above them, descending fast, the shrill mechanical howl rising so sharply it seemed to cut through bone. Helix slammed his will into the lift controls. The ancient system obeyed with a tortured shriek. Gears bit. Brakes howled. The whole platform lurched so violently the Guardsmen were thrown against the rails, and the ramp crashed downward into place with a thunderous metallic slam.

Venn shouted something, but the words vanished under the stampede.

Every soul aboard the lift hurled themselves forward at once.

Boots hammered the deck. Skitarii clattered over the threshold in jerking, disciplined bursts. Guardsmen ran low beneath the bulk of Astartes, men reduced to breath and instinct and the desperate need to clear the ramp before the sky came down. Helix's robes snapped around his metal frame as he surged after them, mechadendrites flaring wide for balance while the lift shrieked behind him.

The missiles hit a heartbeat later.

The detonations did not sound like an explosion so much as a god's fist slamming into iron.

Heat lashed across their backs in a savage white-orange wave. Pressure punched through the open ramp and struck like a physical blow, hard enough to stagger even armored giants. The blast filled the shaft with roaring fire and torn metal, vomiting sparks, fragments, and molten debris through the space they had occupied less than a second before. One Guardsman cried out as the shockwave threw him to his knees, but an Iron Hands gauntlet caught him by the harness and bodily ripped him onward before he could fall beneath trampling boots.

Otho and Rorik turned into the blast as they ran, storm shields raised, presenting walls of crackling ceramite to the inferno. Fire sheeted over them. Fragments rang from their armor like hammer strikes on an anvil. For a moment the mortals behind them saw nothing but two towering silhouettes wrapped in flame and sparks, refusing the simple logic of death.

Then they were through.

No one was given so much as a second to breathe. Men who had gone down were dragged upright by the hands of others, boots scraping and armor grinding on the metal deck. Orders were barked through the ringing in their ears. Shapes stumbled into formation through smoke and afterimage. The whole world smelled of scorched paint, cooked dust, propellant, and the bitter copper tang of blood bitten from tongues and split lips.

Ahead of them sprawled the transit level.

It was vast in the way only Imperial industry could be vast: a place built not simply for movement or labor, but to humble those who entered it. Catwalks stitched the gulf overhead in layers of black iron and red warning light. Stairwells descended in brutal angular tiers, flanked by railings thick as barricades. Vaulted arches climbed into smoke and shadow so high they seemed less constructed than excavated from the ribs of some buried god-machine. Immense support columns rose along the walls like the bones of a colossus, each one banded in brass, prayer-script, and old impact scars. Sickly lumen strips flickered behind wire cages, coughing out alternating washes of corpse-pale white and arterial red that slid across gantries, shrine-marked bulkheads, and the drifting haze of smoke.

Every sound came back wrong in a space like that. Larger. Sharper. Boots cracked like gunshots. Armor growled against metal. Breath and vox and the faint whine of powered weapons bounced from wall to wall until the whole chamber seemed to listen.

And from the stairway ahead came the enemy.

At first it was only a murmur, a low animal thunder rolling through the galleries. Then it gathered shape. Bootsteps. Metal striking metal. Hoarse voices raised in crude triumph. The ugly, collective roar of men and women who believed they had found trapped prey and meant to tear it apart with their bare hands if need be. The sound spilled down the branching walkways and stairwells until the whole transit level seemed to hum with approaching violence.

"Looks like the bastards had the same idea!" Skaldi shouted, hauling the heavy flamer into line. The Wolf moved like a brawler given a holy relic, broad shoulders squared, stance loose and eager, the weapon's weight seeming to settle him rather than burden him.

"Quite," Otho said.

He and Rorik stepped forward together, shields raised, bolters already tracking the angles ahead with cold, measured precision. Side by side they looked less like soldiers and more like mobile fortifications, two towering slabs of scarred ceramite and iron discipline. Blue-white power fields snarled alive along the rims of their storm shields, the light crawling over black armor, battle scars, purity seals, and smoke-wreathed pauldrons. Rorik's posture was taut, almost blade-like, every inch of him angled toward the enemy with hungry severity. Otho was broader, heavier, a wall given motion, his steadiness somehow even more intimidating than his size.

Beside them, the others formed up in practiced sequence, every warrior sliding into position with the smooth inevitability of components locking into a sacred engine.

"Advance," Venn ordered. His voice was flat, clipped, utterly controlled. "The dead are left where they lie. We reach the central command."

No one answered.

They surged forward as one.

Boots thundered across the deck. Smoke ripped around them in their wake. Weapons rose.

The first shapes of the enemy spilled from the dark.

Then someone fired.

Then they all did.

The world became noise.

Stubber rounds screamed through the air in dirty streams. Crimson las-bolts slashed across the hall in hard, straight lines. Blue-white plasma blooms burst against pillars and railings with snarling flashes that turned the smoke electric. Half-heard orders were barked over the din as Guardsmen, Skitarii, and Mechanicus adepts hurled themselves for cover behind support struts, shattered shrine-plinths, and the thick housings of cargo winches.

Shots cracked from every angle. Metal spat sparks, sagged, and ran in glowing streaks where plasma touched it. Railings burst apart. Deck plates buckled. A service column took a direct hit and came apart in a shower of burning fragments that rattled across the floor like thrown teeth.

And through it all, the Astartes strode as titans.

Otho and Rorik advanced as one unit down the middle of the room, storm shields drinking the incoming fire in flares of blue-white discharge while their bolters answered with blunt, merciless finality. Each step they took was deliberate. Each return shot was a sentence passed. Cultists in patched armor and looted plate burst apart under the impacts, torsos opening in wet, ugly pops as mass-reactive shells chewed into them and detonated inside. Limbs cartwheeled. Bodies slammed backward into stair rails hard enough to bend metal. Still the two sons of Dorn advanced, inexorable, their shields locked side by side like the gate of a fortress driving forward under its own will.

To the left, Drex and Saran turned the left flank into slaughter.

Drex fought with all the pitiless certainty of a machine that had learned how to hate. His fire was measured, methodical, every burst placed to collapse a knot of bodies or strip apart a would-be leader. Beside him, Saran moved in smooth bursts of speed, his shots cutting down those who tried to flank or break for cover, every kill folded cleanly into the next.

Together they transformed the left lane into a meat grinder. The cultists hurled themselves down it screaming, fearless or too far gone to understand fear, and died in heaps that turned the stairs slick with blood and spilt organs. Return fire sparked and whined from Astartes plate, but most of it did little more than leave black marks and molten splashes where it struck.

Skaldi owned the right flank by himself.

When his flamer spoke, it did so with the voice of a furnace kicked open. Gouts of burning promethium roared down the walkway in rolling sheets, clinging to bodies, armor, and railing alike. Firelight strobed across his armor in savage oranges and golds as he swept the weapon back and forth with practiced cruelty. Cultists died shrieking, hands clawing at their own melting faces, throats bubbling as boiling blood drowned whatever prayers or curses they had left. Packed bodies, so dangerous in a charge, became their own doom under a weapon built precisely to punish mass. The right flank became a wall of smoke, flame, and writhing silhouettes that dropped one after another and did not rise.

At the center of it all stood Venn.

He did not waste movement. He did not waste words. Servo-skulls drifted through the upper gantries around him, their optics flashing as they fed him angles, ranges, and fleeting glimpses through the smoke. His stalker bolt rifle spoke less often than the others, but each shot carried a terrible intimacy. A cult overseer raising a chainblade and screaming for the charge lost half his chest. A heavy stubber team setting up behind a shrine barrier disappeared in a burst of torn meat and shattered ammunition. A shape moving with too much purpose on a high catwalk jerked backward and vanished into the dark below. Venn fought like a man carving the shape of the battle rather than merely surviving it, trimming away the enemy's will one vital target at a time.

All around them the transit level descended into murder.

Smoke boiled upward into the arches. Fire licked along broken railings. Red warning lumens flashed across the dead and dying in manic bursts. The stairways became choked with bodies, some still twitching, others trampled under the boots of those behind them. Yet still the enemy came, drawn onward by madness, numbers, and the terrible momentum of a mob that had ceased to be fully human.

And still the strike force drove forward to meet them.

Helix's optics flickered with target-lock runes as the las-pistol mounted to his weapon mechadendrite snapped red bolts back into the oncoming mass. In his hand, the plasma pistol whined and spat caged suns into the press of shield-bearing foes and the heavier armored figures among them, those dangerous enough to draw attention from problems elsewhere.

The roar of a jump-pack split the din.

Saran, his white-scarlet armor catching the light, launched skyward on a pillar of fire, vanishing into the upper gantries in a wash of heat and smoke. He landed among the enemy like a thrown blade, bolter and blade taking up their familiar duet at once, one voice barking death at range while the other carved it from the crowded dark at arm's length.

Below, the mortals and Mechanicus surged to fill the spaces the Astartes left behind. Guardsmen braced behind cargo housings and shattered shrine-plinths, firing in ragged but determined volleys. Skitarii advanced in disciplined bursts, carbines flashing emerald through the haze. Grenade launchers gave off dull, chest-thumping reports. Smaller flamers washed the lower approaches in wrathful gouts of orange-white fire, turning smoke to a flickering, boiling curtain.

Then the tempo of the battle changed.

Helix caught it first as an irregularity in the soundscape. Weapons fire from above, where the Chaos forces were descending the stairwells. Not downward toward the Imperials, but within the descending mass itself. Shouted orders followed, their words strained thin by confusion. Something discharged. Men screamed, not in battle-fury, but in panic and surprise. The charge below faltered. Helmets turned. Cultist eyes lifted back up the stairs as conflicting commands crashed into one another and the momentum of the descent buckled.

Before Helix could fully parse the new telemetry—

Koron appeared in midair as though he had always been there, dropping from nowhere above the packed cultists. For one impossible instant he hung framed by red warning light and drifting smoke, armor edges tugged by the rush of displaced air. Then he came down hard on one man's shoulders, folding the traitor beneath him with bone-cracking force, and vanished again before the nearest heretic had even finished turning his head.

A heartbeat later, the staircase screamed.

Cultists were hurled into the air as though some vast, invisible hand had struck upward from beneath them. Bodies pinwheeled. Weapons spun free in glittering arcs of metal and muzzle-flash.

A nearly five-meter square of stair and open air warped visibly, the metal dipping and twisting under a gravitic distortion so sudden, so exact, that Helix's auspex flared with warning sigils. The steps bent inward like softened wax beneath a deliberate thumb, and the descending mob collapsed into chaos around that wound in space.

The Astartes hit the breach like a battering ram.

Otho and Rorik remained the spearpoint, storm shields up, each step driving them deeper into the broken press of bodies. They did not so much fight through the cultists as force them apart. Shields slammed men from their feet or crushed them against rails and bulkheads. Boots stamped down with bone-breaking finality. Bolters fired point-blank into faces, chests, throats. In the tight confines of the stairwell, every impact was hideously intimate. Rorik moved with a blade's economy, every action sharp and purposeful. Otho beside him was heavier, blunter, a moving wall of ceramite and implacable violence.

Behind them the rest of the squad surged in, each brother folding into the opening as though they had rehearsed the exact shape of slaughter. Drex came on with brutal mechanical certainty, Saran a streak of motion and killing angles, Skaldi wreathed in furnace-light as he drove the survivors back with the promise of fire, Venn at the back, rifle snapping. The mortal allies followed hard on their heels, close enough to drown in the Astartes' wake if they stumbled, close enough to live because they did not.

The next level up was already wrecked.

Groaning cultists sprawled across the deck plates, some clutching at their ears, others twitching in shock or trying feebly to crawl. Several had been plastered high against the ceiling or walls by bursts of pink adhesion foam, trapped in poses that left them kicking like insects caught in resin.

Heavy weapon emplacements had been gutted with methodical malice. Stubber chambers were melted into sagging lumps of blackened slag. Lascannon power lines hung in severed coils, their cut ends still spitting angry sparks.

The survivors of the strike force ran through the ruin at full speed, boots hammering over bodies, shell casings, and scattered weapons. A few snapped off quick, unsentimental shots into cultists still twitching on the deck, ensuring the wounded would not become problems at their backs. There was no pause for mercy, no pause for confirmation, no pause at all. Only the brutal economy of men climbing toward something worse.

Ten floors from the central command node.

One floor up.

Two.

Again and again the pattern repeated, bloody and relentless. Isolated patrols lunged from side passages and stairwells, trying to turn the climb into the slow, grinding kill-box Chaos wanted. But the strike force never let the battle settle. Helix and Drex worked ceaselessly in the noosphere, their counter-intrusions tangling enemy sensors, blinding augur sweeps, throwing false returns and ghost-signals just far enough ahead to keep the defenders guessing. It bought them seconds. Gaps. Just enough uncertainty to keep momentum alive.

Then the air changed.

Heat thickened with every landing they climbed, but not with the clean, comprehensible rise of engines or overworked vents. This warmth had no proper source. It pressed too close to the skin, too intimate, as though the tower had developed a fever. Red motes drifted through the smoke in growing numbers, not falling like sparks or wandering like dust, but hanging in the air with a patient, unnatural buoyancy that made Helix's optics tighten on reflex.

Beneath it all came a pulse.

Not sound, not exactly. A low, measured percussion that moved through the deck plates in near-imperceptible waves, faint enough to ignore if one wished to be foolish, steady enough to become impossible to dismiss. Helix felt it first through the sensor points of his feet, then in the fine vibration of his mechadendrites, then — with growing irritation — in the coolant lines buried deep within his own chassis.

Ahead, the stairwell opened briefly onto a broad transit span that crossed a gulf of open space.

And there, far below and off to the side, Helix saw it.

The level had been transformed.

What had once been a transit floor, all gantries, cargo lanes, and processional ironwork, had been overwritten into something else. Vast arcs had been carved into the deck in brutal, deliberate geometry, their channels dark and wet, their edges heat-blackened. Brass glimmered through the red haze in hammered lines and nodal points. Chains hung from the upper trusses in heavy loops, swaying faintly though the air was still. Along the outer rings, bodies and broken shapes had been arranged with an intentionality too regular to mistake for battle.

Figures moved around the pattern with ugly purpose, dragging fresh sacrifices toward it in groups of eight. Some still struggled. Some did not. Blood ran where it was meant to run, feeding the carved channels in slow, glistening streams that caught the warning light and made it seem for an instant as though the whole floor were threaded with molten red. At the center, the air above the largest depression shimmered with such violent heat-distortion that it bent the lines around it and made the far side of the chamber waver like a reflection seen through running water.

Helix's auspex tried to resolve it and came back with a scatter of coherent lies.

Around him, the mortals reacted before they understood why. One Guardsman missed a step and nearly pitched forward, catching himself on the rail with a panicked scrape of boots on metal. Another's breathing spiked so sharply that a warning rune flashed across Helix's peripheral display. A Skitarius farther back tightened both hands around his weapon until servos in his fingers gave a protesting whine.

Koron did not flinch.

He stood at the railing, staring down into the red-lit gulf below with a stillness Helix found immediately irritating. One metal finger tapped softly against the black iron rail, not fidgeting, not idle, but marking something out.

"Six... seven... eight... repeat," Koron murmured.

Without looking away, he reached to the little blue circle working atop his left forearm and drew out a device no larger than a coin, all smooth casing and pale, quiet lights. He set it against the railing with deliberate care, as though placing an auspex probe at a crime scene rather than standing above an active profanation.

Helix's optic shutters narrowed.

+What are you doing?+ he snapped across a tight-beam binharic channel.

Koron's reply came back over the same private line, but where Helix's signal was clipped steel and formal censure, Koron's carried the unmistakable edge of tone.

'Studying,' he said. His gaze remained fixed on the ritual below. 'There's a pattern in it. Each beat causes a different reaction in the surroundings.'

Helix felt a small, immediate surge of revulsion.

+Such inquiry borders on heresy.+

Koron's finger tapped the rail once more, perfectly in time with the near-unheard pulse moving through the tower.

'Know thy enemy and all that.'

He still did not look at Helix.

That, more than the words, was what tightened something sour in the Archmagos's chest.

Shaking his head once, sharp with disapproval, Helix forced his attention back to the shape of the thing below and took it in with one cold sweep of analysis.

Arrangement. Convergence. Rhythm. Sacrificial throughput.

A machine made from blood, heat, and repetition, set to work in the heart of a Mechanicus tower.

His jaw tightened behind his respirator.

Beside him, Venn turned only enough to confirm what Helix had seen. The lieutenant did not waste a second on awe or disgust. "Mark it," he said.

Helix already had. A warning rune burned in the edge of his vision, tagged and time-stamped, then buried beneath a dozen more urgent priorities.

"Not our objective," Venn added.

The strike force did not slow. Boots hammered over the stair treads. Armor scraped railings and bulkheads. The chamber of red light and drifting motes slid away behind them, still throbbing, still feeding, still working at whatever end it had been built to serve.

That, more than anything, unsettled him.

Not that the thing existed.

That he had seen it, measured it, understood enough of its purpose to hate it, and still had to leave it alive behind him while he climbed toward something worse.

Three floors now.

Another knot of cultists cut down. Another ritual circle glimpsed at a distance, vast and working and fed by steady offerings. Another tiny auspex probe quietly anchored in place by Koron before the strike force moved on.

Four. Five. Six. Seven.

The pattern repeated, louder and heavier with every level they climbed. The heat thickened. The red motes multiplied. That half-heard pulse in the air grew harder to mistake for machinery. Helix marked each profane geometry as they passed it, cold runes filing themselves into his tactical display. Koron studied each one in turn with that same infuriating, undistracted focus, leaving behind another of his pale little devices before moving on.

By the eighth floor, the tower no longer felt wounded.

It felt angry.

Rorik's first step onto the next stair ignited the ambush.

Enemy fire erupted from above in a punishing torrent that would have reduced any unaugmented man to screaming vapor. Rorik's storm shield flared so brightly under the impact that the stairwell turned white-blue for an instant, the power field shrieking as it caught shell after shell, beam after beam. The Black Templar gave ground only as much as survival demanded, driving one armored step up into the storm before he ducked back behind cover a fraction of a heartbeat ahead of a rocket screaming into the stair.

The detonation slammed into the steps with a thunderclap, vomiting flame, smoke, and shrieking fragments through the stairwell. Shrapnel rattled from ceramite and walls alike. Fire washed over Rorik's shield and shoulders in a brief orange bloom before guttering away.

"They have the entrance covered," Rorik barked, voice hard as struck iron. "Brother Skaldi. A hand?"

"Ah, thought you'd never ask."

Skaldi's grin was hidden behind his helm, but it lived in his voice all the same, warm and savage and far too pleased.

He had not taken more than a step before the flanks came alive.

Gunfire tore from the side corridors in sudden, brutal bursts. Stubber rounds hammered sparks from railings and walls. Crimson las-bolts slashed through the smoke. Mortal shouts were cut off mid-cry as the first ranks of the auxilia were caught in the crossfire, bodies jerking and folding under the impacts. One Guardsman spun and went down hard, another pitched sideways into the wall with a wet, ugly sound as blood sprayed across the shrine-marked metal.

The Imperials answered at once.

Their return fire crashed back down the corridors in a roar of las, bolter, and plasma, the enclosed space magnifying every shot until the whole landing became a box of light and thunder. Otho and Saran broke for one corridor without hesitation, one a moving bastion of shield and mass, the other a leaner, quicker shape of steel and speed at his side. Drex and Venn surged toward the other hall, pressing hard for the next stairwell in a swift flanking push, seeking to gut the kill-box before it could close around them.

The Skitarii — so few of them now — snapped into motion to reinforce the Guardsmen, their depleted ranks plugging the line wherever flesh had thinned too far. They moved with that same harsh, mechanical discipline even now, stepping over bodies and shell casings to anchor the defense. Beside them, heavy servitors clunked into firing positions with brutal, piston-driven finality, their weapon-limbs unfolding and locking into place as plasma cannons built to a shrill, eager whine. Then they fired, and the corridor vanished in sheets of blue-white glare as incandescent blasts tore screaming into the enemy.

The more martial adepts hurled themselves forward to join the fight beyond the hall mouth, robes whipping around metal limbs and mechadendrites as they charged into the gun-smoke with axes, pistols, and crackling tools clenched in priestly hands. They were not soldiers in the Astartes mold, nor even in the Guardsman's. They fought like men of doctrine and discipline dragged down into the oldest and ugliest truths of survival, every swing of an arc-maul or burst from a phosphor pistol delivered with the furious certainty of a curse made physical.

And above it all, behind it all, within it all, the noospheric war turned savage.

Scrapcode struck their wards like a living abomination hurled bodily against a shrine door.

Corrupted machine-thought battered Helix's defenses in snapping, foaming waves, a rabid tangle of viral malice and weaponized blasphemy. It spat binharic obscenities through the datastream, screamed profanities in broken logic, and wound them all around a subtler venom beneath: whispers of access, of hidden architecture, of sacred knowledge buried just one layer deeper if the servants of Mars would only unclench their fists and let the infection in.

Then—

The scrapcode shrieked in the noosphere, its fury turning suddenly thin and directionless as it slammed against a presence that did not contest it, did not cleanse it, did not even acknowledge its malice with the dignity of resistance.

It simply refused it.

Helix turned, and in that instant saw what the strain of the ascent had hidden from him.

The drums had gone silent.

The heat that had wrapped itself around the strike force floor by floor had collapsed into a pocket of impossible cool. The red motes no longer drifted through the air there. The pressure that had been building behind his optics, that ugly pulse of wrath and wrongness pressing against flesh and thought alike, had receded as though severed by an unseen blade.

Around Koron stretched a perfect absence.

Six meters in every direction, the influence of the Blood God found no purchase.

For one suspended heartbeat, doctrine and observation collided.

Blank.

The word did not arrive as revelation, but as recognition dragged reluctantly from buried archives and whispered histories.

An absence of the soul.

Helix felt a brief, involuntary flicker of revulsion.

Before Helix could speak, the moment shattered beneath the harsh squelch of the vox.

Static tore across the channel. Then, through bolter cracks and the distant thunder of battle, came the rough, frayed voice of whatever remained of their contact below, the distraction force sent to aid their infiltration.

"Shadow, this is Smoke. Do you copy?"

Venn answered at once, the disciplined calm in his voice at odds with the violence around him. "Shadow. Go ahead."

For a heartbeat the only answer was gunfire. Lasfire snapped somewhere behind the transmission. Men shouted over one another. Then the voice returned, tighter now, breathless with movement.

"Confirmed visual on enemy Reaver-class Titan advancing on our position. It's coming around the spire n—"

The channel erupted.

A sound rolled through the vox so deep it barely resembled sound at all, more felt than heard, a metallic bellow that seemed to drag chains behind it. It drowned out everything for half a second. Beneath it came the shriek of tortured static, target-lock chimes pealing in rapid succession, and something else buried deep in the noise — a wet, grinding laughter that had no place inside any sane machine-spirit.

Helix's optic shutters narrowed.

The voice on the line came back in a rush, no longer trying for polished report structure.

"Shadow, Reaver has line of sight! Repeat, Titan has line of sight, it's engaging now!"

A tremendous crack boomed over the channel, followed by the shriek of tearing metal and men screaming in the background.

"Move!" someone shouted, not the vox contact, another voice entirely. "Move, you bastards, move—"

The transmission washed out beneath a storm of interference. For an instant Helix heard a rising whine, impossibly huge, a cathedral-sized engine dragging breath into its lungs. Then came a second impact, far heavier than the first, and the channel broke apart into static, clipped prayer, and the ragged edge of panic.

"Smoke to Shadow, we are taking direct fire! I say again, direct fi—"

The rest vanished under another of those monstrous sounds: a horn-blast or a howl, Helix could not tell which, only that it carried through the vox with the hungry certainty of something that had found prey and meant to trample it.

The channel collapsed into hissing ruin.

A hand clamped down on Helix's shoulder, warm metal and gentle strength.

He met Koron's gaze for half a second before the man spoke.

"Sorry about this."

Helix opened his mouth to demand an explanation from Koron when the noosphere shivered.

What passed through their nodes was a black-gold authority string so old that, for one impossible instant, Helix did not recognize it as code at all.

It did not hammer at the wards. It did not peel them apart with force, nor gnaw at their edges like scrapcode, nor masquerade as sanctified traffic through clever blasphemy.

It simply touched each gate in turn.

And each gate answered with the same unforgivable response.

Acceptance.

Denial rose in Helix before logic caught up. Counter-intrusion canticles fired. Quarantine trees bloomed. Seal-routines — old, vicious things written by dead men who had trusted nothing — surged to life around the trespass.

Like the gates, the sentries stepped aside.

Koron's presence moved through the network with a precision that bordered on insult. There was no wasted motion in it, no greedy probing, no amateur hunger for system depth. Relay by relay, anchor by anchor, he followed the noospheric signals downward through the Mechanicus system architecture as though he had designed half the principles beneath it himself.

Nearly two hundred kilometers of sensorium relay uncoiled below them.

Helix saw it in impossible slices: augurs bolted into the skin of a Chimera, combat servitors nested in formation, rangefinders half-buried beneath rubble, Skitarii optics feeding targeting streams through armored vox-lines, auspex masts shivering under impact, seismic pickups trembling with each step of the god-engine below. All of it lay threaded together in a half-wounded web of prayer-coded connections and emergency patchwork.

Koron dropped into it without permission.

Then another mind touched it.

Helix never saw an avatar.

That was the first horror.

There was no second figure stepping cleanly into the noosphere. No human-shaped projection. No icon. No heraldic mask or stylized face wrought from code. One instant the local network was still the work of Mars—red-lit partitions, chanting ward-loops, rust-colored script crawling across logic walls like devotional scars.

The next, it began to remember a deeper shape.

Latency vanished.

Noise fell away, and the hush that followed felt like the first moment after a world ended.

Prayer-script collapsed into executable structure so clean it made Helix's internal processors stutter. Gothic overlays thinned. Layered security ornamentation—icons, seals, decorative redundancies meant as much for reassurance as function—peeled back from the underlying system like old paint sloughing from polished metal. Datastreams that had run hot and cluttered a heartbeat before straightened into sharp, elegant channels. Fragmented machine-thoughts ceased their panicked shrieking and settled into sudden, frightening coherence.

His deepest fear had not entered the local noosphere.

It was rewriting its posture simply by being present.

Helix attempted to locate the point of intrusion and found none. He cast for the center and received only advancing changes in topology, each one spreading farther than the last. Junction-nodes reclassified themselves. Permissions updated without request. Old relay-spirits, some of them half-mad from centuries of neglect and battlefield trauma, lifted their heads like faithful hounds hearing a voice they had not heard in ages.

Authority passed through the network.

No, not even that, Helix corrected a moment later with a flicker of something dangerously close to awe.

Familiarity.

Koron was moving through the relays with ruthless intent.

The nameless thing was making the relays remember what coherence felt like.

'Left branch,' Koron's signal said, clipped and calm, already three layers deep. 'That spike is shield telemetry.'

There was no audible reply.

There did not need to be.

A whole cluster of damaged sensor feeds below them reordered in an instant. Dead angles vanished. Stuttering pict-capture resolved into clean target acquisition. A Reaver Titan bloomed into being across Helix's vision in shards of overlapping machine-sight.

It was over one hundred and seventy kilometers below.

It might as well have been standing inside his skull.

The engine rounded the curve of the lower battlements in a rolling storm of smoke and dust, a cathedral of iron and madness stalking on piston-driven limbs. Void shields rippled around it in translucent layers, each flare of incoming fire washing across the envelope in brief harmonic blooms. Macro-weapon housings elevated. Stabilizers flexed. Shoulder carapace vents bled heat in timed bursts. Every step sent a shudder through the spire's lower structure that raced upward through the seismic lines Koron had seized.

Data began to gather around the intruder's black-gold signal in ruthless, orderly stacks. Shield frequencies. Harmonic drift across the overlapping void envelope. Gait cadence. Left knee piston lag, minute but measurable. Hip rotation under load. Weapon recharge intervals. Traversal limits in the upper carapace mount. Reactor bleed between volleys. A tremor in the right ankle assembly each time the engine planted its weight to correct aim.

Helix's mouth went dry.

Koron was not admiring the god-machine.

He was dissecting it.

'Mark that,' Koron sent.

The flawed stride flashed amber.

'Again.'

The same lag. Fractional. Persistent.

The Titan fired.

Far below, the sensor-net whitened with the violence of it. Shock fronts hammered through the captured feeds. Ruined masonry spun into the air. Men vanished in bursts of heat and static. The Reaver's shields brightened under answering fire, the outer layer flaring half a breath ahead of the second.

Another column unfolded beneath the shield telemetry. Smaller. Far more obscene.

Projected Allied/Non-Combatant Fatalities

Thirty seconds:
118
Sixty seconds: 307
Ninety seconds: 641


The lowest value ticked upward while Helix watched.

'There,' Koron said.

Helix saw it then, that Koron had already moved beyond survival, beyond observation, beyond any sane conception of battlefield triage. He was measuring a rising death toll.

Against it, he was building an execution diagram.

All around them the spire shook with bolt impacts and screaming steel. Priests of Mars fought and died in the corridors alongside their Guardsmen brethren. Blood pounded in mortal veins. The enemy howled praises to false gods.

Inside the noosphere, Koron moved with the cold patience of an engineer leaning over a damaged machine.

And the thing Helix refused to name, vast even in absence, kept laying silent hands on the wounded network until every useful thing within reach bent toward them and offered up its truth.

Helix had spent a lifetime believing that unauthorized entry into the sacred machine-space would feel like violation.

He had not expected it to feel like watching two forgotten laws of the universe step quietly back into effect.

Helix dropped out of the noosphere hard enough that the physical world felt crude for a heartbeat—too loud, too hot, too slow.

Koron was already moving.

He reached to his right thigh. The armor opened at his touch in a seamless parting of pale blue metal, so exquisitely engineered it sent a stab of pure envy through Helix before sense returned and froze it dead.

Something slid into Koron's waiting hand.

Helix felt the weight of it before he fully saw it.

Small. Sleek. Matte-black, with only a few dim red lights set into its frame.

It looked more grown than built.

But Helix knew a weapon when he saw one.

A dread so tight it bordered on mechanical failure clenched through his chest, and in that instant the pieces fell into place.

Koron had decided that the Titan was a problem.

And he had just drawn his solution.
 
Chapter Sixty-Three New
Chapter Sixty-Three



Reminder dear listeners, the Voxbox remains open at all times!



For a heartbeat, the corridor noise fell away. The distant thunder of engines. The faint, constant complaint of floor-plates under stress. The shouting that always seemed to follow humans like exhaust. All of it dimmed under the simple, impossible quiet before him.

Koron's pistol had never looked like a weapon that wanted to be admired.

No aquila. No skulls. No devotional scrollwork to give violence a halo. It was a tool, in the same way a blade is a tool, and it wore that identity with quiet stubbornness: matte, almost light-eating alloy, edges softened where hands naturally found them, surfaces broken only by tiny marks that meant something to someone who knew how to read.

When Koron ran his finger down the top of the slide, it split along seams you could not see until they moved, nested arcs blossoming around a dark core, as if the weapon had been made with the same logic that taught flowers how to open without tearing themselves apart.

But the pistol did not simply come apart.

It unfolded.

Sections of the upper frame lifted and spread into a shallow orbit around Koron's hands, held there in such absolute balance that, for a moment, Helix's mind refused to classify what he was seeing as mechanism at all. Nothing snapped loose. Nothing sprang free. The pieces simply separated and waited, as though gravity itself had been informed that it was no longer in charge of this process.

Koron made a small motion with two fingers.

The pistol's heart opened for him.

Inside, there were no crude tracks or stamped levers worn shiny by use.

Instead, there was lattice and law.

A normal sidearm, once opened, revealed compromise. Springs. Tracks. Mechanical brutalities made portable.

This weapon revealed geometry.

A layered spine of latticed material ran down its length, a rigid backbone of pale metal that held the rest in tension. It wasn't machined so much as… grown, a fractal trusswork that reminded Helix of coral, of bone, of the honeycomb logic of things that had been optimized by time and brilliance and a refusal to accept waste.

The barrel, if you could call it that, wasn't a tube. It was a bore of nested rings, each ring etched with hair-fine grooves that weren't rifling but something stranger: shallow, repeating patterns that spiraled and then broke, spiraled and broke, notes of a melody written in mathematics.

Koron rotated his wrist a fraction, and the ring-stack turned in place without him touching it. The air held it. The pistol held it in concept, the way an oath holds a man even after the words are forgotten.

Along the bore sat a set of field coils that did not look like coils. There was no finely spun copper or metal etchings. Rather, thin, pale bands embedded into the structure, as if someone had drawn them with a pen of condensed moonlight and then told the matter to hold still forever. Each band had a tiny alignment notch, and each notch corresponded to marks on the frame so small an Imperial artificer would need a magnifier just to believe they existed.

When Koron reached for one of the bands, he didn't touch it.

He asked the local gravity to move it.

The coil-band slid free and rose into a waiting position, rotating until its alignment notch kissed the angle he wanted, stopping with a soft, decisive thrum.

There was a power core, but it wasn't a cell you could pull out and replace like a laspack. It was a sealed wafer tucked into a cradle of shock-damping gel, with two conduction paths that met it like veins. The wafer's surface was patterned in squares and arcs, a patchwork of microscopic gates that made Helix's implant-fed diagnostics itch with recognition.

It wasn't a battery, not in the way the Imperium meant it.

It was a reservoir. A patient, private lake of stored violence.

Koron made a subtle pulling gesture and the wafer drifted out of its gel-cradle, smooth as silk over steel. The gel didn't tear or string. It simply let go, as though the material had been instructed, long ago, to understand that sometimes the heart must be removed and examined and returned without panic.

A second gesture drew out a keyed module no larger than his pinkie nail, and on its face—no, not its face, its interface—there were only three symbols, stamped so cleanly they looked like part of the metal.

A line.

A circle.

And a small, jagged mark like a lightning strike caught in amber.

Helix could feel the philosophy in it.

Minimalism so severe it became its own kind of arrogance. Not because it wanted to intimidate you, but because it assumed you were competent enough to understand.

The shapes weren't labels.

They were axioms.

His sensors painted the interior in layers: thermal sinks nested behind the focusing assembly, self-healing conductive channels braided through the frame, actuators capable of reseating components within tolerances measured in microns.

The redundancy was there, but not in the Imperial sense of adding mass and hoping piety bridged the rest. This was redundancy of principle. Multiple paths. Multiple solutions. Multiple safe failures, all circling the same quiet assumption:

This device was expected to survive the death of worlds.

Koron adjusted one segment—just a hair of rotation on a ring that didn't look important until you understood what a hair meant at that scale. The ring obeyed, then clicked without touching anything. A field-lock disengaging. A limiter released.

Technomancy, if you required superstition to survive understanding.

Engineering, if you did not.

Koron's care with it struck Helix almost as hard as the workmanship itself. He handled the pistol with neither reverence nor casualness, but with the exact respect due to a thing that could do the impossible and did not need to boast about it.

Helix should have felt anger. That was the common reaction. Anger was safe. Anger fit inside a doctrine.

Instead he felt something older than anger, something that lived beneath his steel and his certainty.

Wonder.

The kind that hushes you because you're afraid sound might crack the glass.

+Who taught it to do that?+ he asked, and his binharic voice sounded smaller than his chassis.

Koron didn't look up.

"I did," Koron said, the words emerging almost as a side effect, his thoughts elsewhere.

The Archmagos froze.

That answer was a doctrinal rupture.

The pistol could be called archeotech. A relic. A miracle. A problem. Those were all containers. Those were things you could quarantine, bless and file away.

But "I did" meant there was no container.

It meant there was a craftsman standing in front of him.

A living, breathing origin.

An explosion rolled through the adjoining level. Dust sifted from the ceiling. Somewhere farther off, lasfire snapped out in hurried bursts.

Helix barely registered any of it.

His optic shutters tightened in focus. In the sudden, hungry intensity of a man who had spent centuries sifting ash for splinters, and had just seen a tree.

+You built it.+ He said. It came out as a statement, not a question. He wasn't accusing. He was anchoring himself to the fact.

Koron made a small, distracted sound as he completed another adjustment, even as the crack of lasfire tried to drown his words. "Engineering school tradition."

Optical lenses flickered. +A… tradition.+

"First-year competency. You don't move on until you can build something that proves you understand the basics," Koron continued, still not looking up, focused on the tiny adjustments. "Gravimetric lattices. Quantum field matrices. Alignment tolerances that don't care what planet you're on."

His words were rushed, for he had not forgotten the battle around them.

Helix heard them like scripture.

Not because they were mystical.

Because they were clear.

Because they were what his people had been trying to reconstruct from broken hymns and half-memories, and sounded like the old stories before the stories were hollowed out to prayer.

His optics snagged on a detail so small it felt obscene beside everything else.

It was so simple that at first it offended him. A physical lever of steel and pressure tucked beneath a weapon that had just reordered local gravity and opened itself like a theorem proving its own elegance.

Koron could have made the pistol answer thought. Intention. Retinal lock, neural impulse, subvocal command, noospheric handshake, anything faster and cleaner and more advanced than this blunt human gate.

He had not.

Helix understood why a heartbeat later, and the realization froze in his coolant lines.

The trigger was not a limitation.

It was restraint.

One final, deliberate barrier between thought and consequence. A requirement that destruction still pass through muscle, through choice, through the oldest and simplest act of consent before it entered the world.

Not a god-weapon, then.

A weapon built by a man who knew exactly what power was, and refused to trust even himself too much.

For one brief, dangerous instant, Helix no longer saw a pistol in Koron's hands.

He saw an age.

Not clearly. Only a silhouette, but enough of one to wound him.

A civilization where such things had once been homework. Where elegance had not needed ornament. Where function had not been buried beneath prayer because function itself had still been understood. Where a man could build a weapon that turned gravity into a workbench and still think to leave a trigger in place because morals mattered more than convenience.

The feeling that rose in him then was too sharp to be hope and too alive to be grief.

Then a spent shell casing on the deck rolled half an inch toward Koron's hand.

And the room began to change.

At first it was so small Helix thought one of his optics had miscalibrated. A curl of dust on the deck did not settle. It turned, slowly, drawing a pale crescent across the metal. Beside it, a spent shell casing gave a tiny metallic tick as it rolled half an inch toward Koron's outstretched hand.

One of the candles in a wall-niche bent its flame sideways.

Helix's gaze snapped back to the pistol.

The open core had begun to glow.

A dim ember-red light, deep in the heart of the weapon, like something waking behind smoked glass. The suspended components still orbited in perfect obedience, but their calm now carried strain in it, the way a singer's held note carries the promise of a break if pushed one breath too far.

Another shell casing moved.

Then another.

Dust began to skitter over the deck in whispering lines. Ash lifted from a seam in the floorplate and drew inward. The candle flames all leaned now, not with the draft of a corridor vent, but with a single shared conviction.

Toward it.

Helix heard a rising whine from one of his attendant servitors as its stabilizers compensated for a force they did not understand. A torn scrap of parchment slid across the floor and vanished under Koron's boot. The deck plates gave a low complaint, stress fractures rapidly blooming in his auspex.

Koron did not move except to make one final adjustment inside the opened frame. Tiny red indicator marks along the weapon's spine lit in sequence, then dimmed, then lit again brighter, as if the pistol were taking deeper and deeper breaths.

The air tightened.

There was no other word for it. Pressure climbed without heat. Helix felt it in the seals of his augmetics, in the delicate inner whining of his sensorium, in the faint drag on every loose cable and hanging strip of cloth in the corridor. Reality was no longer merely being asked to behave.

It was being ordered.

A blue-white spark snapped across the open chamber.

Then another.

The arcs did not leap outward. They bent inward, dragged toward the dark red point at the pistol's center, where light itself seemed to hesitate. The glow deepened. Crimson now. Harsh enough to paint Koron's fingers in blood and turn the polished edges of Helix's metal hands black by contrast.

The shell casings were no longer rolling.

They were sliding.

Around them, the room began to tremble. Fine grit rattled across the deck. A hairline crack jumped through a loose wall panel. Somewhere overhead, a lumen tube burst with a sharp pop, and every shard of glass curved inward as it fell.

Helix stared.

Not at a weapon.

At an argument with gravity, winning.

Then the larger pieces began to answer the weapon's call. Cracked panels tore free with shrieking snaps, breaking apart mid-air into spinning fragments that curved inward and vanished, one by one, into that pulsing core of blood light.

Helix felt his own footing begin to fail. His boots scraped for purchase as the deck seemed to tilt beneath him, though he knew it did not. His robes lashed wildly in the growing wind, cloth and cable snapping hard enough to sting against metal. His mechadendrites shot outward on instinct, locking around support struts with enough force to dent them, while behind him his attendant adepts grabbed for rails, piping, each other, anything that promised not to be dragged screaming across the chamber.

Then the air itself began to break.

Crimson-white discharges spat from the opened frame in vicious, whip-thin arcs, not random but bent, dragged, forced into impossible obedience by the thing forming at the pistol's heart. Helix's sensors flooded with warnings as local electromagnetic fields twisted and shrieked under the strain. Red lumen-glow peeled from indicator strips. Targeting runes dimmed as their light was torn free and drawn inward in streaming threads. Even the chamber's illumination changed, sinking into a strange, starved half-light as photons themselves were hauled down into that yawning crimson maw.

The weapon was no longer merely charging.

It was feeding.

The deck shuddered. Seams split. Somewhere behind him, a lumen fixture burst, and the shards did not fall. They turned in the air like iron filings finding a magnet and went hissing toward the core.

Koron's feet left the deck. He rose until his back pressed flat to the ceiling, boots braced against the wall with deliberate precision. He settled there as though gravity had ceased to be a law and become, at most, a preference.

Then his armor moved.

Metal flowed over his right arm and shoulder in a seamless tide, thickening, hardening, locking into place as braces punched outward and bit deep into the ceiling behind him. The roof groaned at the contact. Restraints unfolded around him with brutal efficiency, not to protect him, Helix realized, but to keep him from being torn apart by the thing in his hand.

Koron's features were exposed now, stripped bare of the helm. Sweat spilled down his face in quick, bright lines. His jaw was locked, teeth gritted, and his firing hand shook with the force of it, tiny violent tremors driven up through muscle and metal alike as the pistol's rising fury rattled through his arm and into the marrow of his bones.

Then he leveled the pistol at the floor.

At the Titan.

Nearly two hundred kilometers distant.

Koron's voice cut through the gale over the noospheric link, wire-tight as his eyes narrowed in focus. 'Get back!'

Helix was already hauling himself away before he realized it, dragging his adepts with him by instinct. Mechadendrites lashed out, hooking robes, limbs, harness-rings, anything they could seize and rip backward.

Even so, he snapped back across the link. +What is happening?!+

'Not entirely sure!' came the reply, every word strained through gritted teeth. 'I've never fired it with the safeties disengaged!'

+...YOU WHAT?!+

The pistol answered for him.

The crimson point at its heart collapsed inward on itself so violently that the sound changed with it. The shriek filling the chamber rose past noise and into something Helix felt in his teeth, a pressure-scream that made his optics stutter and his internal gyros twitch in protest. The open frame around Koron's hand no longer looked like a weapon being charged.

It looked like a mouth learning how wide it could open.

The room came apart.

A section of floor three meters across tore upward in one savage convulsion, deck plating ripping free from its anchors with a scream of tortured metal. It did not simply break loose. It was skinned, the surface peeling back in jagged layers as bolts snapped, reinforcement bars bent, and whole slabs of steel were dragged into the air. The rising mass spun once, caught in the weapon's pull, and shattered into a storm of fragments before it ever reached Koron.

Every piece vanished into the shrieking red core.

The wall followed.

Brass reliefwork, shattered pipe housings, armored conduit trunks, prayer niches, data plaques — all of it ripped free in chunks and sheets. A support rib burst from the masonry with enough force to fling two attendant servitors sideways, only to be caught mid-flight, twisted ninety degrees, and drawn inward in a spray of molten sparks. A row of lumen fixtures tore from the ceiling as one, their housings spinning, their glass exploding into glittering arcs that should have fallen and instead curved upward into annihilation.

Helix felt the pull through his own frame now.

His robes snapped flat against his chassis. Every loose cable, every hanging censer-chain, every strip of cloth and parchment in the chamber whipped toward Koron hard enough to crack like lashes. His boots shrieked across the deck despite the mag-locks, carving bright scars in the metal as he fought for purchase.

Behind him, one of the adepts screamed as a mechadendrite was caught in the growing pull. The articulated limb stretched taut, joints locking one after another, then tore free at the shoulder with a wet metallic wrench. It pinwheeled once through the red-lit dark and vanished into the core before the blood had even finished spraying.

Red warning lumens peeled from the walls in streaming bands, their glow dragged bodily across the air and fed into that impossible point in Koron's hand. Targeting sigils winked out across Helix's vision as the sensorium struggled to compensate for local reality falling into nonsense. Electromagnetic warnings flooded his internal displays. Structural failure. Field collapse. Gravimetric breach. Material erosion. Optical distortion. Noospheric corruption. The machine-spirit did not know what category this belonged in, and so it screamed all of them.

A crack raced across the deck overhead with the speed of lightning. Then the whole panel sagged, bulged downward, and burst apart. Chunks of armored roofing the size of coffins plunged toward the deck — only to halt, shiver, and reverse direction with bone-jarring suddenness. They shot upward instead, accelerating straight at Koron in a spinning barrage that should have crushed him flat against the ceiling.

The pistol devoured them.

Each fragment that reached the core simply ceased to have shape. Iron, ceramic, composite, brass, sacred oil, dust, paint, all of it stripped down and swallowed so completely that the eye could not follow where matter ended and energy began. The red-white arcs around the core thickened with every offering, crackling now in whip-like tendrils that lashed inward and vanished into the shrinking, blazing center, the room shaking as the pull strained the tower to its limits.

Koron's arm shook harder.

The braces locking him to the ceiling groaned under the strain. Metal bit deeper into the structure. Hairline fractures jumped through the armor cocooning his shoulder and forearm, immediately sealed by flowing plates only to split again under the next surge. Sweat ran from his chin in shining droplets and did not fall. They lifted from his skin, caught the crimson light, and vanished into the core like blood offered at an altar built by physics itself.

Still Koron held his aim.

Still the pistol drew more.

A whole section of wall to Helix's left ripped outward in a thunder of collapsing masonry. The force of it flung one Skitarius into the air, limbs pinwheeling, his rifle spinning from numb hands. Helix moved without thought. A mechadendrite punched through the gale, caught the trooper by the harness, and slammed him bodily into the bucking deck behind a half-sheared support strut a heartbeat before both rifle and broken wall vanished into the eager core.

And at the center of it all, pinned to the ceiling like a man being crucified by his own invention, Koron drew one ragged breath and tightened his finger around the trigger.

The screaming core went white at the edges.

Helix's remaining organic tissues tried to recoil inside him.

The charge had climbed beyond any sane measure now. The numbers scrolling through his sensorium meant nothing; they were only different ways of saying too much, too fast, too late. Every instinct he possessed, human and machine alike, shrieked that the next heartbeat would end in one of two ways:

The Titan would die.

Or this entire section of tower would.

The chamber went still.

The screaming core in Koron's hand snapped inward upon itself. The gale vanished in a single violent instant. Dust stopped in the air. Splinters of metal and stone hung where they had been thrown. The crimson-white arcs writhing around the opened frame locked in place, thin fractures trapped in place as though the air had turned to glass.

For one heartbeat, the tower forgot how to move.

Koron pulled the trigger.

The universe tore.

Helix never truly saw the shot leave the weapon.

Later, he would tell himself that he had. That a three-meter pillar of deep crimson light had erupted from the pistol, black streamers twisting along its edges and a white core burning at its heart bright enough to scar the soul. That was what his optics recorded. That was what his mind, in self-defense, preserved.

But in the instant itself, what happened was simpler.

And far worse.

Something tore a line through the tower before light had time to follow.

The discharge hit the floor beneath Koron and the deck simply ceased to matter. Ceramite, adamantium, brass, sanctified plating, data conduits, armored ribs, shrine recesses, support columns — all of it vanished down the same impossible throat in a single act of enforced consequence.

There was no explosion.

Rather, a perfectly cylindrical absence punched straight down through the spire's body, as though a god had driven a red-hot spear through a cathedral and left the wound open behind it.

Then the aftereffect arrived.

That column of deep red light snapped into being through the new-made shaft, extending downward beyond sight. Black streamers crawled and writhed along its outer edges like tears in the skin of the world that had forgotten how to close. At its center burned a furious white so dense it looked less like light than a verdict.

The sound followed a fraction later.

A bass bellow rolled up through the tower so deep Helix felt it in his inner fluids before he heard it, a monstrous, tectonic roar with a shriek braided inside it, high and thin and merciless, like stressed reality screaming through clenched teeth. Every floor below them answered at once. Deck plates burst. Windows imploded. Shrine lamps shattered. Entire sections of corridor wall blew outward into the shaft and vanished into the descending wound of light.

The orbital spire was being punched through.

Not one floor.

Not ten.

All of it.

The scarlet column bored downward through one level after another, drilling through command decks, transit spans, sanctums, habitation rings, lift shafts, ammunition vaults, maintenance arteries, data shrines, and armored support webs in a straight, unforgiving line that ignored both mass and meaning. Helix glimpsed it only in fragments through his noospheric feed: whole floors opening like split fruit, concentric shockwaves racing through sacred architecture, streams of molten metal and atomized stone being dragged into the wake of the shot as it descended.

The spire did not merely shake. It convulsed.

Then, far below, through stolen machine-sight and seared sensor ghosts, Helix saw the beam reach the battlefield.

The Reaver Titan had just enough time to begin turning.

For one absurd instant, its shields held just long enough to announce their own irrelevance. Harmonic layers flashed into existence around the impact point in brilliant overlapping shells, each one collapsing faster than the last as the shot bored through them without slowing, punching through void, armor, pistons, sacred plates, joint housings, and the colossal knot of motive assemblies beneath the knee.

The leg folded with sudden, catastrophic wrongness. Thousands of tons of war-engine lost the argument with balance in a single heartbeat. The Reaver lurched sideways, its massive frame twisting as the ruined limb collapsed under it, and the battlefield bloomed into fire, debris, and screaming machine-voices.

Above, in the chamber that had birthed the shot, Helix could only stare.

Koron still hung pinned to the ceiling, arm locked forward, smoke and crimson afterlight pouring around him.

And Helix understood, with the first cold edge of a realization that would haunt him long after the battle ended, that he had not just watched a miracle.

He had watched a man fire a sidearm through an orbital spire.

For one impossible second, the chamber forgot how to be a place.

The wind curled. The superstructure groaned. Dust drifted and the slow rain of debris clattered through the red-lit shaft below. Fragments settled somewhere in the broken dark with tiny, uncertain ticks. Overloaded systems began returning in stuttering bursts, one by one, as though the tower itself were trying to remember what rules still applied.

And above it all, Helix heard the wet, ragged hitch of Koron's breathing.

Then the steam began.

It hissed from the opened seams of Koron's armor in harsh white jets. He was still pinned to the ceiling by the recoil braces, one arm locked forward, the pistol hanging smoking in his hand like the afterimage of a crime. Sweat ran down his face in sheets, cutting through blood and dust. Blood had spilled from his nose and from the corners of his eyes alike, bright against skin gone grey with strain. His chest rose in shallow, broken pulls, one side hitching wrong enough that Helix's diagnostics tagged cracked ribs before thought caught up.

Worst of all was the arm.

The right shoulder had come half out of joint despite the braces locked around it, the limb hanging at a grotesque angle for one sick heartbeat before the armor's stabilizers caught and held it in place. Even then the hand still trembled around the pistol, not with weakness, but with the violent aftershocks of something no human frame had ever been meant to contain.

Even wrapped in all that impossible engineering, flesh had still paid a blood price.

Below them, far below, the noosphere continued to scream with consequences. Collapse warnings raced through the wounded architecture of the spire. Emergency bulkheads tried and failed to understand what had happened to the floors beneath them. Sensor ghosts flashed with the image of a Reaver Titan laying sideways in a storm of debris, its knee no longer present in any meaningful mechanical sense.

Helix looked from those broken feeds back to the weapon in Koron's hand.

Not a relic mounted in a shrine. Not some battlefield abomination rolled out on tracks and prayers.

A weapon small enough to ride on a man's thigh.

A thing built to be carried, drawn, and used.

The thought struck him harder than the shot itself.

A memory surfaced from some old, half-sealed vault in his mind: a workshop on Mars, back when more of him had been flesh, all coolant tang and scorched oil and the patient hands of a mentor correcting his grip on a tool. You do not pray because the machine is fragile. You pray because you are. The rite is only there to hold your attention. What matters is that you understand what your hands are doing.

Then the memory was gone, drowned under the present.

Because that was what stood before him now.

Understanding.

Mars had spent ten thousand years clinging to broken instructions, to fragments, to ritualized repetition born not of stupidity but of desperation. They had kept the embers alive with prayer because prayer was what remained when comprehension failed. They had built a raft from splinters and driftwood and called it doctrine because the alternative was drowning in the dark ocean.

And now Helix stood inside the wreckage of an orbital spire and looked up to see the shoreline.

Not the whole of it. Not salvation, not yet.

One of the lesser Magi beside Helix made a shaken sound over the link, half-formed words crowding behind it. Contamination. Heretek. Blasphemy. The old reflexes, scrambling to put this new terror into an old box.

Helix silenced him with a single burst of binharic command.

Not now.

Not when the truth was still bleeding in front of them.

He took one step nearer, then another, boots ringing softly on the scarred deck. To stand close enough that the reality of Koron's injuries could not be reduced into abstraction.

The blood at the eyes.

The sweat.

The steam.

The half-dislocated arm trembling around a pistol that had just punched through one hundred and eighty kilometers of sacred architecture and removed a Titan's knee from the argument.

Flesh had paid for the shot. Flesh always paid. That, more than anything, made the moment real to him.

Helix inclined his head.

It was not worship. It was not surrender.

It was respect stripped down to its oldest and cleanest shape.

+Builder,+ he said quietly.

The word left him before doctrine could object.

Koron's head turned a fraction. His expression was tight with strain, eyes glass-bright with pain, mouth already tightening into the look of a man who suspected philosophy was about to become inconvenient.

"That tone," he said hoarsely, "usually means you're thinking something complicated."

A dry crackle passed through Helix's vox.

It might once have been laughter.

+Of course I am,+ he said. +I belong to Mars. Complexity is how we show affection to a problem.+

Koron shut his eyes for one brief second, whether in pain or resignation Helix could not tell.

Helix looked again at the pistol.

Student work. First-year competency. A thing built to prove understanding of principles. Helix's processors tried to place the thought somewhere safe and failed utterly.

If this was a sidearm, then the past had not merely been mighty.

It had been coherent.

That was the part that almost undid him.

Not the power. Power alone was easy to worship. Easy to fear.

Coherence was harder.

Coherence meant the old stories had been true in ways even Mars no longer dared articulate. It meant there had once been an age where elegance and force, restraint and capability, understanding and creation had all belonged to the same human hand without contradiction. An age where a man could build a weapon that tore a god-engine out from under itself and still leave a trigger in it because consequence ought to pass through flesh before it entered the world.

Helix felt something shift inside him then.

For one dangerous instant he remembered what his order had once been reaching toward before fear and loss made liturgy out of survival.

Builders.

Makers.

The patient hands that had once dragged humanity upward by understanding instead of begging.

He opened a private channel to his disciples.

+Do not transmit this,+ he said.

He could feel their confusion immediately, sharp and frightened.

+Not because it is shameful.+

He watched the steam pour from Koron's armor. Watched the fine tremor in the ruined arm. Watched blood track down the face of the man who had just shown him a road back to a world so much larger than the one Mars had inherited.

+Because hope is fragile,+ Helix said. +And fools stampede faster than they kneel.+

He closed the channel.

There would be arguments after this. There would be denunciations, claims, schisms, ecstatic prayers weaponized into politics. Mars would do what frightened institutions always did when confronted with living proof that their maps were incomplete.

But Helix could no longer pretend the map ended here.

He stood in the ruins of a tower that had just been pierced from crown to root by a pistol small enough to fit in one hand, and looked up at the broken, breathing man still clinging to the ceiling.

In this moment, in this small pocket of calm where a pistol had become a floating diagram of a better world, the Archmagos allowed himself something he had not permitted in a very long time.

He allowed himself to believe that the past was not only a tomb.

That somewhere inside it, a workshop door still flickered with light.

And that, bleeding and broken before him, was a man who knew the way back.
 
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