different way. Peering at the object, Yosef saw what it actually was. Discarded in the
melee, dropped from the pocket of…
worn with use and age.
33
THREE
Stripped to the waist, Valdor strode into the sparring hall with his guardian spear
raised high at the crook of his shoulder, the metal of the ornate halberd cool against
his bare flesh; but what awaited him in the chamber was not the six combat robots he
had programmed for his morning regimen, only a single figure in duty robes. He was
tall and broad, big enough to look down at the Chief Custodian, even out of battle
armour.
The figure turned, almost casually, from a rack holding weapons similar to the
one Valdor carried. He was tracing the edge of the blade that hung beneath the heavy
bolter mechanism at the tip of the metal staff, considering its merit in the way that a
shrewd merchant might evaluate a bolt of fine silk before a purchase.
For a moment, the Custodian was unsure what protocol he was to observe; by
rights, the sparring hall belonged to the Legio Custodes and so it could be considered
their territory. For someone, a non-Custodian, to appear there unannounced was…
impolitic. But the nature of the visitor—Valdor was loath to consider him an
the fighting quad and gave a shallow bow, erring on the side of respect. “My lord.”
“Interesting weapon,” came the reply. The voice was resonant and metered. “It
appears overly ornate, archaic even. One quick to judge might even think it
ineffective.”
“Every weapon can be effective, if it is in the right hands.”
“In the right hands.” The figure at last gave Valdor his full attention. In the cold,
sharp light tracing through the windows, the face of Rogal Dorn, Primarch of the
Imperial Fists, was like chiselled granite.
For a moment, Valdor was tempted to offer Dorn the chance to try the use of the
Custodes halberd-gun, but prudence warned him to hold his tongue. One did not
simply challenge the master of an entire Astartes Legion to a sparring match, no
matter how casually. Not unless one was prepared to take that challenge as far as it
would go.
“Why am I here?” said Dorn, asking Valdor’s question for him. “Why am I here
and not attendant to my duties out on the Palace walls?”
“You wish to speak to me?”
34
Dorn continued, as if he had not heard his answer. The primarch glanced up at the
ornate ceiling above them, which showed a frieze of jetbike-borne Custodians racing
across the skyline of the Petitioner’s City.
“I have blighted this place, Valdor. In the name of security, I have made this
palace into a fortress. Replaced art with cannonades, gardens with kill zones, beauty
with lethality. You understand why?”
Something in Dorn’s tone made the Custodian’s hand tighten on his weapon.
“Because of the war. To protect your father.”
“I take little pride in my defacement,” Dorn replied. “But it must be done. For
when Horus comes here, as he will, he must be met by our strength.” He advanced a
step. “Our honest strength, Valdor. Nothing less will suffice.”
Valdor remained silent, and Dorn gave him a level, demanding stare. In the quiet
moment, the two of them measured one another as each would have gauged the lay of
a battlefield before committing to combat.
The Imperial Fist broke the lengthening silence. “This palace and I… We know
each other very well now. And I am not ignorant of what goes on in its halls, both
those seen and those unseen.” His heavy brow furrowed, as if a choice had been
made in his thoughts. “We shall speak plainly, you and I.”
“As you wish,” said the Custodian.
Dorn eyed him. “I know the assassin clades and their shadow-killers are
mounting an operation of large scope. I know this,” he insisted. “I know you are
involved.”
“I am not a part of the Officio Assassinorum,” Valdor told him. “I have no insight
into their workings.” It was a half-truth at best, and Dorn knew it.
“I have always considered you a man of honour, Captain-General,” said the
Primarch. “But as I have learned to my cost, it sometimes becomes necessary to
revise one’s opinion of a man’s character.”
“If what you say was true, then you know it would be a matter of utmost
secrecy.”
Dorn’s eyes flashed. “Meaning, if I am not informed of such a thing, then I
should not know of it?” He advanced again and Valdor stood his ground. The stoic,
unchanging expression on the face of the Imperial Fist was, if anything, more
disquieting than any snarl of annoyance. “I question the purpose of anything so
clandestine. I am Adeptus Astartes, warrior by blood and by birth. I do not support
the tactics of cowardice.”
Valdor let the guardian spear’s tip drop to the floor. “What some consider
cowardly others might call expedient.”