Each breath he took felt tainted and metallic. Thick fluids congested at his throat
and he swallowed them back with a grimace. The smell in his nostrils was no one’s
blood but his own, and while the painkillers he had injected into his neck had gone
some way towards keeping him upright, they were wearing thinner by the moment.
An indicator rune on the control console flared green;
sight signal from the drive unit. Out there in the wreckage-strewn orbits, the drive
module was awakening, stealthily turning power to its warp engine and sublight
drives. In moments, the astropath and Navigator on board would be roused from their
sense-dep slumber. The
other section of the ship and dock; then, reunited, the vessel could run for the void
and the escape of the immaterium.
Kell leaned forwards to stare out of the canopy. The only flaw in that otherwise
simple plan was the gathering of warships between the guncutter and the drive
module.
An armada barred his way. Starships the size of a metropolis crested with great
knife-shaped bows, blocks of hideously beweaponed metal like the heads of godhammers,
each one detailed in shining steel and gold. Each with the device of an
opened, baleful eye about them, glaring ready hate into the dark.
At the centre of the fleet, a behemoth. Kell recognised the lines of a uniquely
lethal vessel. A battle-barge of magnificent, gargantuan proportions haloed by clouds
of fighter escorts; the
“Pilot,” he said, his voice husky with the pain, “put us on an intercept heading
with the command ship. Put all available power to the aura cloak.”
The cyborg helmsman clicked and whirred. “Increased aura cloak use will result
in loss of void shield potentiality.”
He glared at the visible parts of the pilot’s near-human face, peering from the
command podium. “If they can’t see us, they can’t hit us.”
“They will hit us,” it replied flatly. “Intercept vector places
quadrant. Multiple enemy weapon arcs.”
242
“Just do as I say!” Kell shouted, and he winced at the jag of pain it caused him.
“And open a link to the Navigator.”
“Complying.” The Vindicare thought he heard a note of grievance in the reply as
the guncutter turned, putting its bow on the
showing the first curious returns from the picket ships in Horus’ fleet. They were
sweeping the area for a trace, uncertain if their scry-sensors had seen something; but
the
would be inside the fleet’s inner perimeter before anyone on the picket vessels could
properly interpret what they had seen.
Another rune on the console glowed; a vox channel was open between the
forward module and the drive section. Kell spoke quickly, fearful that the
transmission would undo all the work of the cloak if left active a second too long.
“This is Kell. Stand by to receive encoded burst transmission. Release only on Omnis
Octal authority.” He took a shaky breath. “New orders supersede all prior commands.
Protocol Perditus. Expedite immediate. Repeat, go to Protocol Perditus.”
It seemed like long, long seconds before the Navigator’s whispering, papery
voice returned through the speaker grille.
Navigator spoke again.
The rune went dark, and Kell’s hand dropped.
Beyond the canopy, laser fire probed the sky around the ship, and ahead the
battle-barge grew to blot out the darkness.
* * *
Close-range lascannons on the hull of the drive module blew apart the paper-thin
sheath of metals hiding the aft section of the ship, and the Ultio’s drive section
blasted free of the station wreck in a pulse of detonation. Fusion motors unleashed
the tiny suns at their cores and pushed the craft away, climbing the acceleration curve
in a glitter of void shields and displaced energy. In moments, the vessel was rising
towards one-quarter lightspeed.
Picket ships on the far side of the Warmaster’s fleet, ex-Imperial Navy frigates
and destroyers crewed only by human officers, saw it running and opened fire. Most
of the ships belonging to the Dagoneti had been obliterated over the past few hours,
and the stragglers had either been forced down to the surface or cut in two by their
beam lances.
Targeting solutions on the odd craft that had suddenly appeared on their
holoscopes behaved unexpectedly, however. Weapon locks drifted off it, unable to
find a true. Scans gave conflicting readings; the ship was monstrously over-powered
for something of its tonnage; it seemed unmanned, and then it seemed not. And