‘Thank you for attending, brothers,’ he said. The words were inadequate, but there were none equal to the gratitude he felt. He had lost his Chapter, yet another, equally his, had come into being.
‘The step is necessary,’ Hemisphere said.
‘That won’t make it popular,’ said Koorland.
‘Ah,’ said Thane. ‘I see.’
‘Wait for me,’ Koorland said to the five Space Marines. Then he pulled open the bronze doors, and went inside to begin the impossible act.
The ork moon was in orbit over Tarentus, circling closer. Gravity storms shook the agri world. From the huge maw of the battle moon, greenskin landing ships poured in an unending cataract. They descended through Tarentus’ atmosphere, met from the ground with volleys of skyspear surface-to-air missiles launched by Hunter battle tanks. They were challenged in the air by flights of Xiphon interceptors. In the near orbit, the fleet hurled its fury at the moon. It was the largest gathering of Ultramarines vessels in the living memory of the brothers of the Chapter.
They were holding the ork invasion, but only just. Greenskins were making landfall, but they had not broken out into the wider regions yet. However, the gravitic effects of the moon were disrupting everything the Ultramarines threw at it. They had fought the orks to an eroding stalemate, and the orks had the numbers and resources on their side.
On the bridge of the battle-barge
And the parchment in his right fist announced it was about to happen once more.
‘Chapter Master, I have Captain Macrinus for you,’ said the Master of the Vox.
‘Private feed,’ Odaenathus said. He stepped back from the rail overlooking the bridge, moving deeper into the strategium. He kept his eyes on the oculus as he tapped the bead at his gorget. ‘Brother-captain,’ he said, ‘you have heard the call from Terra.’
‘I have, Chapter Master, but I’m not sure my astropaths have interpreted it correctly. Ullanor?’
‘The reading of my choir is the same. There is no mistake. Captain Macrinus, you are ordered to disengage immediately and make course in the
Macrinus hesitated. ‘Can the situation here afford the loss of a strike cruiser?’
In answer, a gravitic stormwave struck the
Odaenathus stood firm. He felt his ship’s pain, and he also felt its anger. ‘Shipmaster!’ he called.
‘Reversing course!’
‘Maintain fire,’ Odaenathus said. ‘Keep them busy taking down our ordnance. Some may yet get through.’ To Macrinus he said, ‘Your absence will be hard. But the Ultramarines were late coming to the aid of Terra once. It will never happen again.’
‘It will not,’ Macrinus agreed. ‘So ordered, Chapter Master. We leave for Terra. Courage and honour.’
‘Courage and honour, captain.’
The
‘Take us back, shipmaster,’ said Odaenathus. ‘Pull back but keep hitting.’
Ullanor, he thought. The name sounded in his thoughts like a cathedral bell. The echo of history was a dark one. He hoped he was not listening to a death knell.
The
The Ultramarines. The Dark Angels. The Space Wolves. The Blood Angels. Koorland had called them all.
No, he thought. You did more than call. You summoned.
He was walking with Drakan Vangorich. After Koorland had spoken to the High Lords again, he and the Grand Master had climbed the seating tiers until they reached the gallery beneath the dome. Some of its columns had fallen. The floor was uneven and fissured, but its path around the circumference of the Great Chamber was still complete. No falls of rubble forced them to turn around.
‘I assume this is about the call to the other Chapters,’ Vangorich said.
‘Yes. I know you’ve been working hard to make the Council respond with something like sense to the crisis.’
‘You’ve seen what success I’ve had. None.’
‘You have an understanding of the problems, though. Of why there is no unity.’