His head snapped up, catching sight of a white-and-green shape dropping down
through the mist. Something flashed in the open hatch and Spear jerked away on
reflex.
A bullet creased the surface of his daemonflesh face like a razor blade, opening a
ragged gouge that spat out a fan of ebon fluid; the tainted blood spattered over the
half-drawn glyphs, ruining the pattern. Spear stumbled. A fraction of a second slower
and the bullet would have struck him between the fathomless black pits of his eyes.
Tightening the muscles in his arms, Spear put up his palms with a snap of the
wrist, and the daemonflesh grew new orifices. Long spars of sharp bone clattered into
the air in a puff of pinkish discharge.
“Watch out!” Tariel called, stabbing at controls to throw the flyer into a half-roll that
showed the belly of the aircraft to their target.
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Kell staggered, losing his balance for a second as he clung on to his rifle. Koyne,
surprisingly strong for wearing a body that seemed insubstantial, grabbed him and
held him up. Nearby, Soalm hung on for dear life, shivering in the cold draught
billowing through the open hatch.
Bone shards peppered the hull of the flyer and punched through the metal
fuselage. Kell flinched as several impacted his chest and buried themselves in the
armour there. Koyne cried out and as the aircraft righted itself, the Callidus fell
backwards, a circle of bright crimson blossoming through the material across the
shade’s thigh.
Kell swept a hand over his chest, flicking the shards away. As they fell to the
deck they denatured, becoming soft and pliant. To the Vindicare’s disgust, the shards
began to writhe like blind worms. He stamped them into patches of white pus and
brought the Exitus up to his shoulder. “Tariel! Bring us around!”
The flyer had come in upwind, their approach masked by the clouds and the
thunder from the shelling of the capital. Now they were circling the parked shuttle,
the livery of the Eurotas Consortium clear as day across the hull. What Kell saw
through his targeting scope was disturbing; he had faced humans of every stripe,
mutant creatures, even xenos. Spear was unlike any of them. Even from this distance,
it exuded a tainted menace that sickened him to look at.
“It’s making for the cockpit,” Tariel called out.
The marksman saw the blur of the assassin-creature as it ran; the thing hazed the
air around it like waves of heat rising from a searing desert, making it hard to draw a
bead. His finger tensed on the trigger. There was a high-velocity Splinter round in the
chamber—on impact with an organic target it would fracture into millions of tiny
hair-like fragments, each a charged piece of molly-wire. The wires would expand in a
sphere and rip through flesh and bone like a tornado of blades.
It would do this, if he hit his target. But Kell had missed with the first shot. Even
from a moving platform, through rain, against a partly-occluded target, he should
have found the mark.
The Vindicare made a snap decision and worked the slide of the rifle, ejecting the
unspent Splinter bullet, in one swift motion thumbing a red-tipped round from a
pocket on his arm into the open chamber.
“What are you waiting for?” Koyne shouted. “Kill it!”
The breech of the Exitus closed on the Ignis bullet and Kell swung the longrifle
away from the target. He ignored Koyne’s cries and his scope filled with the shape of
the fuel bowser.
The incendiary compound in his next shot hit the main promethium tank and
combusted. A fist of orange fire flipped the shuttle over and engulfed it in flames.
Shockwaves of damp air struck the flyer and the aircraft was forced down hard, the
impact of the landing snapping off the undercarriage.
Kell got up as bits of hull metal clattered out of the sky, bouncing off the runway.
For a moment, all he saw was the jumping, twisting shapes of the flames; but then
something red and smoking tore itself out of the wreckage and began to run for the
star-port terminal building.
The Vindicare snarled and raised the rifle, but the weight of the gun told him the
magazine was empty. He swore, slamming a new clip into place, knowing as he did
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that it would not matter. When he peered back through the scope, Spear had
vanished. “He’s gone for cover,” he began, turning. “We need to—”
“Eristede?” His sister’s voice stopped him dead. She lay on the deck, and her face
was waxy and dull. There was blood on her lips, and when she moved her hands he
saw a jagged length of bone protruding from her chest.
He let the rifle fall and ran to her, dropping into a crouch. Old emotions, strong
and long-buried, erupted inside him. “Jenniker, no…”
“Did you kill it?”
He felt the colour drain from him. “Not yet.”
“You must. But not out of fury, do you understand?”
The cold, familiar rage that had always sustained him welled up in Kell’s
thoughts. It was the same burning, icy power that had spurred him on ever since that