An explosion made his head snap up and his spy mask’s optics located the thermal bloom in the corner of his vision, surrounding it with indicator icons. A vehicle had apparently been blown up by an exchange of gunfire. He wondered who would be foolish enough to shoot back at an Astartes just as a roar of engine noise swept over his head. Kell shrank into the cover of a partly-collapsed wall as a heavy, slate-coloured aircraft thundered around the habitat tower on bright rods of thruster flame – a Stormbird in the livery of the Sons of Horus.
For a moment, he feared the Astartes had detected his firing hide; but the Stormbird swept on and down into the city, passing him by unnoticed. Kell looked up into the early morning sky and saw more raptor-shapes falling from the high clouds, trailing streamers of vapour from atmospheric re-entry. Whoever it was that Kell’s kill-shot had executed, the Warmaster’s warriors were coming in force to avenge him.
When he was sure the Stormbird was gone, Kell backed off and then ran at the hole in the wall. He threw himself into the air and felt the rush of the wind as gravity claimed his body. For agonising seconds, the streets below rose up towards him; then there was a sharp jerk across his shoulders as the sensors in the descent pack triggered the release of the parafoil across his back. The iridescent curve of ballistic cloth billowed open and his fall slowed.
Kell dropped into the sounds of terror and violence, searching for an escape.
Every deck of the
Nearby, system boats in service to the PDF’s space division were either turning to flee from the ships of the Warmaster’s fleet, or else they were already sinking into their home world’s gravity well as flames crawled down the length of them. The
The
The tall viewing windows of the Lupercal’s Court looked out over the bow of the
Beyond the doorway there was a shadow. ‘Equerry,’ it said.
‘First Chaplain,’ Maloghurst replied. His disfigured face turned its perpetual scowl at the Word Bearer, dismissing the rest of the serfs with a flick of his clawed hand. ‘Do you wish to speak with me, Erebus? I had been told you were engaged in your… meditations.’
Erebus did not appear to notice the mocking tone Maloghurst placed on his question. ‘I was disturbed.’
‘By what?’
The Word Bearer’s face split in a thin smile. ‘A voice in the darkness.’ Before Maloghurst could demand a less obtuse answer, Erebus nodded towards the far end of the chamber, where Horus stood observing the motions of his fleet.
The lord of the Legion was magnificent in his full battle gear, his armour striped with shining gold and dark brass, hides of great beasts lying off his shoulder in a half-cloak. His face was hidden in the gloom, highlights made barely visible by the cold glow of the data consoles before him.
‘I would ask a question of the Warmaster,’ said the other Astartes.
Maloghurst did not move. ‘You may ask me.’
‘As you wish.’ Erebus’s lip curled slightly. ‘We are suddenly at battle alert status. It was my understanding we were coming to this world to show the flag in passing, and little more.’
‘You haven’t heard?’ Maloghurst feigned surprise, amused that for a change he knew something the Word Bearer did not. ‘Brother-Captain Sedirae was given the honour of standing as the Warmaster’s proxy on Dagonet. But there was an… incident. A trap, I believe. Sedirae was killed.’