My first
scratch-written 40k story. The main inspiration
behind this, atmosphere-wise, was The
Name of the Rose.
His Purpose
How
did I gain this exalted position? The extraordinary roots of that, Unknown
Reader, are to be found in the abbey of my roots, the abbey of my dreams – the
abbey that, even now, I dare not name.
-oOo-
He
bent forwards, the dried-fish stink of his breath enveloping my face. The thick
bristles of his cheek scratched my beardless one.
‘I’ve watched you in the choir –
such a pretty voice, admirably suited to your face. Sing for me now.’
I tried to back away, but he used
the motion to force me against the cold outer wall of his chambers. His
saturnine face filled my sight; his strong hands clasped my arms to my sides.
‘Are you teasing? Of course you are – an inquisitor’s will must be obeyed. And you, my pretty nightingale, will obey it.’
I struggled, but his grasp was
unbreakable. ‘You cannot do this thing,’ I gasped, twisting my face from his,
‘It is forbidden to our order!’
He grinned widely – a rare
expression for him that added to my terror. The stink of fish was overwhelming.
‘Ah, your pious celibacy – foolish suppression of natural urges. How much
pent-up desire you must suffer! Come, as inquisitor I am here to help. No? But
I am the Emperor’s will. Would you deny Him?’
With a quick movement he spun me around, pressing me against the stone. ‘Submit
to the Emperor’s wishes, then.’
‘You blaspheme! The Emp–’
‘I cannot blaspheme!’ He pulled my body away from the wall, slammed it
back, knocking breath from my lungs. ‘Enough banter – tomorrow the orks could
breach the walls and all would be slaughter – and you, a novice, would deny me
this. Very well; if you will not give, then I shall take, and you will suffer
accor–’
A red flash, bright enough to
outshine the room’s glow-globes. Everything suddenly seemed to lift centimetres
into the air and drop instantly back. The mullioned windows exploded inwards –
a deadly shower of lead and glass. And then the roar of the explosion – and
nothing.
-oOo-
I
woke to early morning sunlight and the all-too familiar pounding of ork
ordnance. Or perhaps it was pounding in my head.
In a crumpled heap of black dressing gown and night
clothes, Inquisitor Ko lay unconscious or asleep beside me, a trickle of dried
blood at his temple. It is strange how pathetic and vulnerable even such
powerful men as he can appear when indisposed.
I pushed myself upright, stifling a groan, then
stood, wincing. Trying to avoid crunching the glass sprayed about the room, I
made my way to the door.
One particularly lengthy shard caught my eye. I
bent to carefully lift it, turned back towards Ko.
Who would know?
But I heard shouting from below – they were coming
to check on the inquisitor.
I dropped the sliver and departed his chambers.
Ork
raids were common here, though rarely on such scale. They had come three months
ago, sweeping aside our negligible orbital defences to make, the planetfall in
the centre of our cluster of newly-founded towns – and razed them in weeks.
We were an infant colony, only just
beginning to consider this world a home, and our contingent of Imperial Guard
was correspondingly small. Nevertheless, they made a magnificent stand against
overwhelming odds, buying the colonists time to flee. Even when the Guard could
contain the enemy no longer and the towns were taken, their disciplined retreat
kept the orks from harrying the defenceless civilians, allowing both to gain
the ancient fastness of the abbey.
Where, void shielding hurriedly
energised, the siege commenced.
All that said, however, I cannot
help but be eternally grateful to the green-skinned xenos savages. It was their
unwitting intervention that foiled Ko’s despicable lusts. One of their flying
bombs –fiendishly piloted by those sub-ork creatures, the grots– had navigated
a weakness in the abbey’s void shielding, only to be destroyed by a lucky
volley from the Imperial Guard’s patrolling sentinels. The resulting blast,
however, shook the abbey’s east side appallingly.
And Inquisitor Jorgiot Ko’s chambers occupied the
top floors of a minor eastern tower.
-oOo-
I
saw Inquisitor Ko again three days later. The choir had been summoned to what
was then considered the abbey’s deepest sub-level (two others have been found
since, even deeper, but I will not discuss them or their contents now). We had
followed the flickering torch of our aged choirmaster, Brother Took, down
low-ceilinged stone corridors, glimpsing in the many side chambers the
still-glowing screens of cogitators and control equipment of unknown purpose
and unguessable antiquity. After what seemed hours of walking, during which
Brother Took had us hum The Happy Emperor
to alleviate our uneasiness, we finally entered the Hall of Relics.
Here a few glow-globes had been
teased into life, but their wan light, coupled with the room’s immensity, only
served to accentuate the prevailing darkness. The Happy Emperor faltered into silence as we gazed in awe and some
fear at what we could discern of the hall’s shadowed contents (I will not list
those holy objects here – catalogues are available, and –for those holding the
necessary status– viewings can be arranged).
A murmuring became apparent, which
presently resolved itself into voices raised in argument. All of us recognised
Inquisitor Ko and our abbot, Beraph Franx.
‘… Desperate times, Abbot! How long
do you think the people can subsist on dried fish? The generators falter and
the abbey’s void shields will fall, what then?’
‘We store many varieties of dried
fish, Inquisitor, the people will come to appreciate their subtle differences.
Though not having directly suffered –as you have– the consequences of
shield-flicker, I am aware of it. I trust in our Emperor that we will be
rescued before the generators stop spinning.’
‘From where? The greenskins push
from one side of the Reach and the Word Bearers the other. Who can help that do
not need help themselves?’
‘As I said, I trust in our Emperor.
Still, I see no reason not to seek our own aid, hence…’
‘But your methods, Abbot, your
methods! It will take an age to discover its destination like this. We’ve lost
ten probes already. And now choirs!’
‘The portal doubtless possess a
machine spirit, Inquisitor, perhaps we can further arouse it with holy hymns.
Ah. They have arrived. Brother Took, I trust your boys are in good voice?’
Rounding a huge canister of ornate
wood, we had reached the masters of our abbey, both official and unofficial.
They stood in a large space cleared of the general clutter, before what
appeared to be a monstrous free-standing mirror. Its frame, fully four meters
square, was of a dull metal I did not recognise; and neither did I recognise
the intricately-embossed symbols covering it in what seemed utterly random
fashion. Thick cables had been stripped and jammed into recesses at the
mirror’s base suggestive of sockets (obviously the correct plugs were
unavailable), from where they snaked off into the shadows.
As we assembled before the mirror at Brother Took’s
muttered instructions, an ambient whining became apparent that set my teeth on
edge.
Inquisitor Ko, scowling, dressed in
heavy black trousers, shirt, and cloak (relieved only by his red inquisitor’s
rosette), stepped to one side and spoke quietly into a vox unit. A small
medical patch was affixed to his temple. I wondered if he knew I was present,
or, in his inherent arrogance, whether he was even concerned.
Abbot Franx, attired in the
ubiquitous beige habit our order demands, stepped forwards, smiling his fat,
reassuring smile. After briefly blessing us, he explained why we had been
summoned.
‘I will not mince words, boys. Times
are grim, and the outlook still grimmer. The Emperor has sent the orks to test
our faith, courage, and ingenuity – to see if we are worthy of His Imperium.
Our ingenuity we have proven, with the awakening of this,’ he indicated the
mirror. ‘What you see here is a xenos artefact, a portal, possibly lder,
possibly even older, we cannot tell. Whatever its origins, it is now made holy
and righteous having been bent to our will. What records we’ve found suggest it
is the last of a network of such things, decommissioned in the most ancient of
times for unknown reasons. It is a possible means of escape, boys. However,’
and he smiled again, somewhat impishly, inducing a nervous chuckle from my
fellows, ‘We do not know where it leads.’
Inquisitor Ko stepped forwards,
interrupting. ‘Your words border on rhetoric, Abbot, and we haven’t the time
–nor I the patience– for them.’ He turned to address the choir, and I was aware
of the others bridling at his open disrespect. ‘You are to sing to this
portal’s machine spirit in hope that it will somehow reveal its destination.
Why hymns would excite a xenos device
I do not know – the theory is not mine. However, I will indulge it, and, at its
sure failure, perhaps the good abbot will indulge me.’
His gloomy face broke into the
malevolent grin I had witnessed during his attack, chilling me more than the
cold draughts of that giant chamber.
‘So,’ he finished, raising his arms
in mockery of Brother Took’s usual actions, ‘Sing for me.’
He stepped to the side, once again
conversing with his vox unit – and, as he did, looked directly at me in a
manner that left no doubt he was all too aware of my presence.
We pointedly waited for Brother
Took’s command before launching into Adamantium
Ne Plus Ultra. In spite of our uneasiness, in spite of the prospect of
being torn limb from limb by millions of slavering orks, we were in good voice.
The words lifted to the unseen heights of the hall, billowing holy rapture
through the air like the sweetest incense. And I was lifted with them, closing
my eyes as I was overcome with pious wonder and delight. We had become
Metatron, voice of the God-Emperor. And what machine could not but heed His
voice?
I opened my eyes to look at the
portal – it was still the same. Perhaps this particular machine was deaf, or had
no appreciation for orthodox canticles.
Abbot Franx seemed pensive, wringing his hands
nervously, glancing between portal, inquisitor, and us. Ko continued to address
his unseen assistants through the vox unit, his expression again saturnine. As
I watched, his frown deepened. He shook his head in obvious aggravation and
bellowed, ‘Enough! It has no effect, Abbot! More direct action is required.’
Our abbot strode forwards, his
manner imploring. What was he so afraid of? ‘Inquisitor, that was only the first
of –’
‘No. It was first and last. My team
observed no response on any plane, with any instrument. If we want to know
where that portal leads, someone will have to enter it. And if that person
perishes… Well, perhaps sacrifice is what the machine requires.’
He marched up to the choir, face
set. There was a collective gasp from my fellows when they realised his
intention, but I knew they had
nothing to worry about. Twice he sadistically walked up and down the line of
trembling boys, before stopping and facing me. ‘I choose you. Make the Emperor
proud.’ Seizing me by the cowl, he yanked me to my feet and commenced to drag
me towards the portal.
I confess I began to scream and
kick. I heard my fellows shouting from the choir, the voices of Abbot Franx and
Brother Took rise in shock and anger. What they said I do not know, for I was
consumed with terror at the prospect of being thrown into that eldritch device.
Ko stood me before the portal, clamping
me in place with powerful hands on my upper arms. Beard once more scratching my
cheek, he said, “Hush, little nightingale. What is it the Tau say, “For the
greater good?” Think of it that way. I said hush!’
He cuffed the side of my head,
knocking me to the ground. I began to whimper, to plead for help.
Again, he dragged my to my feet,
facing the portal.
A change had come to it.
The silver sheen I had taken to be
mirrored glass had become agitated. Geometric patterns like interference on a
pict screen appeared, merging and interlacing with head-searing complexity. My
whimpering stopped as my eyes began to follow the ever-more complicated
designs, sucked along the convolutions. My mind screamed that I should look
away, but I could not. I was being thoroughly hypnotised.
For an instant –though perhaps I
imagined this– the patterns took on a recognisable form – an elongated humanoid
skull, stylised and bleak. Then the portal fell black and I was looking into
void. The transition was so rapid I felt myself to be teetering on the edge of
a precipice, and I jerked back in Ko’s now limp grip, knocking us both to the
floor and possibly saving our lives in the process.
A cannon roared. Something large
rocketed upwards over our heads, careened off the unseen ceiling and impacted
on the wall behind. Ancient stonework erupted, showering everyone in chunks of
black marble and dust. I awaited the explosion of fire and death that was
surely imminent. I thought an ork missile had impossibly hit the hall, even though
we were many meters below ground.
The explosion never happened.
Dust slowly settled. The inadequate lighting more
hinted at movement within the wafting clouds than illuminated it. A figure was
clambering upright – a very large figure indeed.
With a yelp of fear, I scuttled away
from Ko back to the rest of the choir.
A voice, vox-assisted, deep and
strong, boomed out, ‘I heard singing, and a plea. Did someone call for help?’
-oOo-
His
name was Ged, but everything else about him was a mystery.
He was of the Adeptus Astartes, so
much his huge size and distinctive armour revealed. However, the armour was so
battered and gouged no flake of colouring or even fragment of purity seal
remained to denote chapter. And the Space Marine himself was of little help as
–once they had overcome their initial amazement– the near-frenzied welcome of
Abbot Franx and abrupt questioning of Inquisitor Ko quickly exposed the
superhuman warrior as a hopeless amnesiac.
Coughing at the dust still labouring
the air, Abbot Franx said, ‘Honoured Brother, are you injured?’
The Marine slowly dusted himself
down and stepped free of the rubble of his explosive arrival. I found myself
awestruck at the power such simple movements as these somehow conveyed. His
immense strength was clearly evident even when it wasn’t being employed.
‘No, good abbot, I am not. My armour
has resisted stronger impacts than that… I believe. Apologies for the damage.’
Our abbot gestured this aside: it
was of no concern. He blessed the Space Marine and bade him welcome, introduced
himself and the inquisitor, gestured vaguely in our direction and labelled us
simply ‘Brother Took and the choir.’ For an electric moment, as Ged looked at
us, and in spite of the void black of his helmet’s lenses, I was sure his vision
met mine.
‘What is your name, Marine?’ asked Ko, rather pointedly interrupting Abbot
Franx’s enthusiasms.
‘Ged.’
Ko paused, obviously expecting more.
Ged remained silent, simply looking down at the inquisitor, whose head barely
reached his cuirass. I relished the tableau, as if the Marine were a monument
and Ko simply a tiny admirer. The inquisitor was once the most powerful man I
knew, but I realised then that there are orders of magnitude even amongst the
powerful – and that there are different types of power.
‘Succinct. Thank you.’ His tone was
sarcastic, but the Marine didn’t seem to notice. ‘Where have you come from?
Where does that portal lead?’
Ko bordered on insult by neglecting
proper forms of address, but Ged was unfazed. ‘Brother Inquisitor, it leads
nowhere.’
‘Nowhere? But you came from somewhere within it. How can this place
be nowhere? Elucidate us, please.’
The Marine’s massive hand went up
toy his helmet, as if to scratch in consternation a scalp it could not touch.
‘I recall nothing. Emptiness. Void. Limbo. How many ways, good inquisitor,
would you have me describe nowhere?’
Ko’s perpetual frown deepened, if it
were possible. He took a step back, as if Ged’s immense bulk bothered him. He
attempted a warning tone. ‘Do not mock me, Brother Marine. This abbey is in
dire straights. We seek egress or rescue. As you do not offer the former, what
of the latter? Where are your brothers? Are they a sizeable fo–’
Without warning, the Space Marine
suddenly slumped to the stone-slab floor, actually cracking the thick granite
in the process. Huge head bowed to his gorget, he rested his hemi-spherical
couters on similarly-designed poleyns. Abbot Franx moved forwards, concern on
his fat face. He hesitated before laying a reassuring hand on an enormous,
battered pauldron. ‘Are you ill? Shall I send for the –’
Ged’s voice was slow, laboured, as
if the Marine struggled to remember things much better forgotten. ‘My brothers?
They are with the Emp… No. They were taken… Slain… At least, I think… Pray they were slain… In that place the
Emperor would be denied them. Slain by… But by what adversary? More than that –
what were their names? This much I should remember, surely? By all that’s holy,
I should remember their names!’
The last was bellowed, and emphasised
by his right fist smashing into the floor, shattering another slab. Abbot Franx
jumped back in shock.
This was unprecedented behaviour for
a Space Marine. Even Ko seemed perturbed. To see the Emperor’s finest so
obviously overcome with grief and futility felt like witnessing blasphemy. We
were watching the ultimate the Imperium of Man had to offer on the point,
seemingly, of nervous breakdown.
Call it action without conscious
thought; call it the Will of the Emperor. I rose from my cowering position
amongst the choir and walked to the hulking Marine. His pauldrons above my own
shoulders even in his slouched position, I reached upwards to place my hand
where Abbot Franx recently placed his. The ceramite was cold, almost frozen,
but I did not break the contact, briefly wondering if sensors in the ancient
armour registered my touch. ‘Can I help, Lord?’ I said.
I heard an incredulous snort from
Ko, but ignored him. With a light scrape, the Marine’s helmet slowly turned to
me. This close, I noticed a bizarre lattice-work of thin scratches covering the
whole of the armour, reminiscent of the hypnotic patterns of the portal. My
eyes wondered along the intricate lines, until, after what seemed a full minute
of silent regard, Ged spoke.
‘A… Boy? Was it you I heard singing? You sing
beautifully.’
This honour was too much for Ko.
‘Insolent whelp! You dare – !’ Ko’s
hand moved to grab my wrist, but, impossibly quick for its huge size, Ged’s
power-glove wrapped around the inquisitor’s thick bicep… And squeezed.
‘An offer of assistance is hardly
the action of the insolent. Please step back, Inquisitor.’
Without waiting for his compliance,
Ged forced the other to obey. I heard servos whine – he was employing the
boosted might of his armour, exhibiting his strength. I glanced at Ko’s face.
He was sweating with the strain of keeping his expression set in spite of what
must have been considerable pain.
At last, Ged released him. Never during the
incident had the Marine’s regard left my face. Ko hissed, rubbing his bruised
bicep. ‘A rash act. It will not be forgotten.’
‘Really? How I envy you, I having
forgotten so much.’ With his next words, Ged dismissed the scowling inquisitor.
‘What is your name, boy?’
‘Seraph Gidion.’ I thought I might
stutter, but my voice remained steady.
‘I accept your offer, Seraph. Help
me to stand.’
Help him to stand! I knew he needed
no aid (and if he did, it would have to be in the form of a small crane),
nevertheless I pushed my shoulder into the pit of his right arm and he
pretended to be assisted upright.
He grunted. ‘Very good. You would
make a capable squire. Consider yourself employed. Now, Holy Abbot, what terror
is it that molests our – your abbey?’
-oOo-
Brother
Took lead the choir back to the dormitory. I found myself unable to stop
smiling as they filed past, looking on enviously at my new-found position as a
Space Marine’s squire.
Without further word, Inquisitor Ko
had faded into the hall’s many shadows and disappeared.
Once the chattering choir were out
of earshot, Abbot Franx spoke. ‘We are below Jorge’s Leap Spire here, the
abbey’s penultimate tower and an excellent observation point. Come, honoured
Marine – and squire, of course,’ he added, good-humouredly, ‘There is an
elevator.’
Ged’s power-glove resting feather-light
on my head as if I were a human walking-stick (thumb and little finger on my
shoulders amongst the folds of my cowl), we followed the abbot through the dark
relics.
Presently we arrived at a large
concertina door. With a grunt and somewhat blasphemous curse, Franx tugged it
open – its clatters and squeals shockingly loud in the hall’s encompassing
silence. We entered a green-lit elevator cubical that smelled of machine oil
and –for some Emperor-known reason– honey. Effortlessly, thanked with a smile from
the abbot, Ged slid the door closed again. At an ornate control panel, Franx
depressed the topmost of many brass buttons. With a teeth-shaking rattle the
elevator rose.
The abbot sighed and turned to face
the Marine. ‘Good Brother Ged, I must ask you not to, eh, antagonise the inquisitor.’
Stooping slightly to keep his head
from the cubicle’s greasy ceiling, Ged asked, ‘Really, good abbot? And why is
that?’
‘He is Inquisitor, brother Ged. One word from him and the Ecclesiarchy
would declare us heretics. Our cloisters would resound to the high heals of the
Adepta Sororitas!’
‘You do not love your Emperor, then?
You preach contrary to doctrine?’ I could hear amusement in Ged’s voice, but it
went unnoticed by Abbot Franx.
‘Brother Marine! Of course we love
our Emperor! We simply follow a less, um, oppressive
path to His Appreciation. We would try to teach
the Unsure and the Unbeliever the Error of Their Ways, rather than force Awareness.’ (Abbot Franx, was, of
course, a practiced orator. It was actually possible to hear the capitals in
his words).
‘Hm,’ said Ged, ‘Sometimes it is
hard not to view the Imperium of Man as ovines requiring stringent shepherding
to keep them within the fold. Softer methods seem inadequate. Still, I will not
argue theology with an abbot! Why is Inquisitor Ko here?’
As the elevator rattled upwards, the
Space Marine was told of the relatively recent rediscovery of this world after
its mysterious abandonment millennia ago, of the colonists beginning to make it
their own, and of our order’s occupation of this utterly ancient abbey and
responsibility for its priceless libraries and relics. ‘Inquisitorial interest
was inevitable. While we would protect the books, it is, purportedly, Ko’s duty
to protect us from the books – or at
least any he considers detrimental to our well-being.’
‘Is this not, in general terms, the
very definition of the inquisitor’s role?’ Ged asked.
Franx laughed in a rare show of
rancour. ‘Definition, perhaps; but in my experience it is rarely the motive for any inquisitorial
undertaking. Ko cares little for the well-being of monks. To date he has
sequestered seventeen books, twenty-two scrolls, and five artefacts, deemed,
ah, unsavoury. All reference to these
items in the catalogues now read, “Heretical/ Blasphemous – destroyed.” But he
has not destroyed them – he keeps them. For what purpose only the Emperor
knows.’
‘You suspect an abuse of power?’
‘It exists! As do other abuses of
his power – but those I will not dwell upon.’ He glanced sidelong at me. Was he
aware of what went on three nights past? Or was he referring to the general
awareness of Ko’s despicable lusts? ‘But what can I do? I am abbot of an
unorthodox order, one negative mutter from Ko and I am abbot of an heretical order!’
With a shudder and rather
frightening clunk!, the lift stopped.
Before Abbot Franx could struggle with the door again, Ged flicked it open.
Cold mountain air and bright
sunlight met us as we strode out on to topmost weapons embrasure of Jorge’s
Leap Spire – refreshing us after the musty depths of the Hall of Relics. At the
crenulated wall, in the shadow of the defunct and unguessably old cannon, ears
assaulted by the near-constant ork barrage, breath clouding before our faces
(except for Ged, as I recall, his
triangular helmet grill remained clear – doubtless a rebreather function), we
gazed out.
Our abbey sits at the end of a deep,
short gorge, splitting the foot of the western-most mountain of a range
girdling a full sixth of the planet’s northern hemisphere. Lacking regularity
and devoid of symmetry, the construct would hardly induce professional rapture
in the Imperium’s architects. It was little more than an amalgamation of towers
of different height, girth, and style, linked with similarly diverse sky
bridges. Canon embrasures sporting suitably eclectic, museum-worthy ordnance,
were dotted seemingly randomly – suggesting carbuncles. The wide bailey, where
beautiful rose gardens once bloomed, was crowded with the tents and fires of
the colonists. Close against the immense curtain wall (the composition of which
is still hotly debated amongst metallurgists), were the precisely arranged
barracks of the Imperial Guard, with their strutting sentinels and rumbling
salamander tanks.
And over the wall through flaring
void shields were the orks – idiot savants of war.
The gorge was once a pleasant place
consisting of narrow metal road (of the same mysterious composition as the
abbey’s wall), jumbled lichen-crusted rocks, mountain grasses and flowers.
Raptors and wild felines were often observed hunting there.
No longer – the ork war machine had
come to taint the land. The unnatural, vibrant green of their hides was the
gorge’s new carpet – an undulating, reeking mass of brute xenos power. Milling
about seemingly purposeless, they slavered and bit, bickered and bellowed,
guffawed and grunted. They were so many they overflowed from the gorge’s mouth,
spreading over the foothills where their motley collection of siege engines
maintained a continuous barrage of missiles, bombs, and detritus.
Before the abbey’s squat barbican a huge bonfire
had been lit, a pyre into which randomly-selected prisoners were thrust – their
terrible screams parodied by the malicious, abominable greenskins in what had
become a nightly ritual. Greasy black smoke from the fire now hung in a
permanent pall, unstirred by the still air at ground level.
With a creak and a thud, a trebuchet
arm swung upright, lobbing a spinning ball that quickly revealed itself as a
writhing knot of grots compressed tightly together with chains. The detestable
little creatures’ screams were curtailed by a wet slap as they impacted on the
void shields, inducing bellows of laughter from their masters.
The scene spoke for itself. We
awaited the giant’s comment.
However, he wasn’t looking at the
horde – he was enraptured by the abbey itself.
‘Brother Marine?’ said Franx.
At last Ged turned to face us.
‘Honoured abbot, why are they here?’
‘The orks? For their barbaric
entertainment, why else? They practice invasion and war purely because they like –’
‘No. I mean, why do you suffer them
on your doorstep?’
Franx became slightly irritated. ‘We
have no means of brushing them from it, honoured brother. The worthy Imperial
Guard are too few to repel them. We have only the shielding – and that
falters.’
Ged gestured expansively towards the
abbey’s towers. ‘But what of the defences?’
‘The batteries?’ Franx shook his
head sadly, “They are decrepit; aeons old.’
‘They where built with aeons in
mind. Abbot, you do not minister an abbey – you care-take a fortress.’
For a moment Franx was nonplussed,
and so was I. Something in Ged’s words implied his presence when such weapons
were new!
‘Well, erm, I admit some yet show
signs of life – the odd beep and twitch, a glowing tell-tale or two. However,
we can quicken them no further. They do not respond to our ministrations.’
‘They will respond to mine.’
Franx stared at the Marine, and I
watched his fat face slowly break into a wide, tentative smile of hope. ‘You
can awaken them?’
‘I can.’
‘I knew it! Emperor be praised! He
sent you, didn’t He? He rewards or faith in Him! It is your purpose to free
us!’
For some reason Ged looked at me as
he replied, ‘Yes. Surely it is my purpose.’
-oOo-
The
next few days were a whirl of inspections, meetings, and the awakening of guns.
During them I gained inkling as to just how old our saviour was, and to the
evident affinity he shared with this abbey.
In a dark control pit beneath one of
the elegant phased-light projectors, I watched in wonder as Ged’s giant
gauntlets –each digit equipped with magnetic ‘tip-reducers’ he had discovered
somewhere– flew daintily over the studs of a keyboard, teasing the ancient
weapon to battle readiness. Then I looked in greater wonder at the Space Marine
himself as he asked, ‘Squire, who, or what, are the Adepta Sororitas?’
‘Lord? Do you je–’ I caught myself,
but too late.
‘Jest? No. Consider it a symptom of
my amnesia.’
‘Erm, as you wish. The Adepta
Sororitas are the military might of the Ecclesiarchy, and by extension the Ordo
Heriticus of the Inquisition. Many simply call them the Sisters of Battle.’
‘An all-female order. Hm. One
wonders as to the sanity of that. When were they founded?’
‘At the end of the Age of Apostasy.’
‘Age of what?’
‘Lord!’
Much later that same day we climbed
seemingly endless spirals of steps to gain an emplacement unresponsive to
remote commands. I was bone weary, and lagged behind the Marine by some
distance.
Suddenly he stopped and turned to face me. ‘Why do
we climb these bloody steps, squire?’
I groaned inwardly, too tired for
the lesson in life I suspected I was about to receive. Nevertheless, I stopped
to pant, ‘To get to the top, lord,’ hoping the obvious answer would suffice.
‘But there is an elevator. Come.’
We ascended to the next landing.
There Ged stood before the slightly curved inner granite wall of the stairwell,
and began to stroke its surface with wide sweeps of his hands. Was he mad?
‘Lord, are you –’
‘Insane? Only south by southwest.
Ah!’ I heard a loud click! And felt a
low rumble. Dust sifted from the wall. The outline of an arch became apparent.
More rumbles, and stonework ground aside to reveal a shadowed iron cubicle. A
recessed lumen flickered into bright life. Ged stepped forwards. ‘Come on, boy
– get in and catch your breath.’
The air in the cubicle was musty,
but quite breathable even after the door trundled shut. We began to rise. I
watched stone scroll surprisingly smoothly from ceiling to floor.
‘My lord, how did you know of this?’
‘Doesn’t everyone? Those
interminable stairs spiralled around something, didn’t they?’
After that he would talk of nothing
but our work at the emplacement.
At a midday meal in the abbey’s
common refectory, Ged’s towering form at my side as I chewed mechanically on
dried fish, I suddenly realised that I had never witnessed the Marine eat, or
even remove his helmet. Now somewhat at ease in his company, I voiced both
observations between picking tiny bones from my teeth.
‘Perhaps I do not eat, Inquisitor Gidion,’ he said
with amusement. Then his tone changed. ‘Perhaps all that I am you already see –
a suit of power armour imbued with the essence of an eternity-dead Marine.
Perhaps I am fearful that if I removed my helm only my desiccated skull would
be revealed, lolling from side to side.’ He suddenly performed a grotesque
little jig, inducing amazed gasps from other diners already fascinated by the
Space Marine’s presence. ‘There,’ he said, amusement once more evident in his
voxed voice, ‘Did you hear it rattle?’
Direct questioning gained nothing
concerning Ged’s history – the wall of his amnesia was impenetrable. But there
were allusions, and in one of those secretive rooms I had noticed off the
interminable passages leading to Hall of Relics, one was made.
He was tapping indecipherable codes into a
cogitator that regularly emitted rude noises to his considerably ruder curses.
Of no immediate assistance, I began to rummage through the various items that
had been stored in the room over the unguessable years. I discovered a small
stack of paintings, one of which depicted with unsettling skill the
multifarious hordes of Chaos. I called Ged’s attention to the work.
For what must have been a minute he
gazed at the painting, and then said, ‘A skilful representation – the artist
conveys tentacle and claw, tooth and sucker, pestilential bubo and ossific
outgrowth, very well. But how could artwork ever hope to even hint at the
mental manifestations? Chaos whispers and giggles. It knows your darkest dreads
and desires better than you yourself. It taunts, threatens, cajoles you with them until they eclipse
all – even the honour and duty due brother and Emperor. How could art convey
that?’
‘I- I do not know, Lord,’ was my
stuttered reply.
‘No. I pray that I don’t, either.’
-oOo-
Ged’s
presence brought hope to the abbey, and, amazingly, something close to an
holiday atmosphere settled upon it. The Marine’s appearances in the colonists’
tent town, en route to meetings with the Guard’s officers, often induced
spontaneous cheers and applause. He acknowledged these only by a raised
gauntlet – I, however, grinned like a madman.
Not all was happiness and hope,
however. It soon became apparent many of the ancient batteries had indeed, and
in spite of Ged’s lauding, suffered time’s ravages. Furthermore, those yet
operable would be insufficient to clear the orks from our ‘doorstep.’ A
desperate sortie was planned – a do-or-die charge consisting of the entire
contingent of Imperial Guard and those colonists predisposed to battle.
Ko’s lusts continued to overcome
him.
During the resurrection of a
particularly stubborn focussed-sound weapon, Ged deemed an appeal to the
machine’s spirit in order. The choir was duly assembled and I could not resist
re-joining their ranks to lose myself in Soul
of Gear and Differential. After, when our song had achieved the desired
effect and the weapon began to vibrate with barely-contained acoustic power, I
dallied to catch up on recent gossip. Commenting upon the absence of one of our
best trebles, I knew the reason before I even heard the explanation – my
fellows’ sidelong glances, flushed cheeks, and angry frowns were answer enough.
‘He has sang to Ko.’
That damned euphemism.
The boy would be in his narrow bunk
in the dormitory, intimately bruised, mentally broken. Absolutely ashamed.
Perhaps one of the senior monks would visit him, perhaps even Abbot Franx
himself, to commiserate, to pity, to say that, for the good of the order, he
must keep the inquisitor’s vile actions secret. Maybe, within days or years, he
would suicide. Maybe he would leave the order. Or maybe he would continue as if
nothing had occurred, the episode only revealed and relived during twitching
nightmares.
What would I have done?
-oOo-
The
appointed day came. I climbed up Jorge’s Leap Spire once again, and from that
vantage watched all through the cold clear night as the floodlit Imperial Guard
prepared for the dawn sortie – overhauling their salamanders and sentinels,
stripping down their myriad hand weapons. I watched too as Abbot Franx and
other senior monks mingled with the soldiers, sprinkling holy waters and waving
sweet-scented thuribles, chanting the blessings of our beloved Emperor to
prepare the soldier’s spirits for battle. Ged was there also, helping with the
preparations, his mere presence an encouragement.
Why was I not at his side? For the same reason I
would not be riding to battle with him at the force’s fore. He had revealed my
appointment as his squire to be the sham most took it to be, and banished me to
this embrasure (its canon one of those we had been unable to resurrect). ‘I
cannot perform my duty as a warrior tormented with worry that you will be
spitted upon an ork pike. I will come back for you… Well, I or the orks and their
pikes, of course.’
I ignored his dark humour and tried
to argue, but, for the only time during my friendship with him, he would not
listen. Unsure if I was bitter and disappointed or abjectly relieved, I made my
way here.
For the umpteenth time, Ged looked
up at me, doubtless zooming in with the aid of his helm’s –his?– wonderful augmentations. Initially I thought he merely
assured himself of my location, but the frequency of his attention in spite of
the busy preparations he was involved in suggested otherwise. He remained
concerned though I was out of immediate harm’s way. Why? Something to do with
the battle? Did he dread its outcome? Suspect failure?
The prime bell tolled.
It was the first time I had heard it
since the siege began. The orks, aware of the Imperial Guard’s muster, had
finally ceased their barrage. Rank upon rank of vulgar xenos savages stood
almost still – the pall from their terrible bonfire physical manifestation of
their eager expectancy.
Orders were shouted over vox
amplifiers. Tank and walker engines roared, belching black exhaust fumes into
the cold air. The Guard began to form up before the barbican.
Shivering violently, teeth
chattering, stamping my feet and rubbing my midriff to counter the leeching
mountain air, I turned to look up Emperor’s Eyrie – the abbey’s tallest tower.
Where their viewpoints allowed, at other inoperative embrasures, windows,
balconies, bridges, and down in the colonists’ tent-town, more watchers did the
same.
Part of me desired the kiss of
sunlight on the tower’s peaked plasteel roof as the herald of heat it was.
However, as it was also the signal to commence battle, it was to be dreaded,
too. You will forgive me that I moaned aloud when it did occur.
Up on Emperor’s Eyrie, observers
voxed techs in the abbey’s depths. Keys were depressed to close some relays and
open others, energising/ de-energising contacts, re-directing unfathomable
powers.
With an audible fizz that
contemporaneously relieved a pressure I had been unaware of from my mind (as if
those eldritch energies affected me cerebrally), the void shields fell.
And the abbey’s ancient defences
awoke.
Light provided the first volley.
Rainbow lances –some of colours I could not name– spiked silently out from the
towers, incandescing ork warriors and turning their vehicles to slag without
appreciable dwell-time. Sound followed – concussive cacophonies whose mere
leakage shook abbey and gorge to their foundations; while their focus ruptured
internal organs and vibrated hardware into component parts. Then missiles
screeched into the fray, inferno exhausts scorching their embrasures black.
Some were simple line-of-site rockets, targets selected by cogitative equipment
of intelligences surely surpassing proscribed limits. Others actively sought
their own victims, coursing low over the battlefield – hounds hunting conies.
Visible ripples of shock passed
through the savages as they panicked at this totally unexpected form of attack
and stampeded in every direction, clawing at their fellows in madness and fear.
How had these weapons –surmised defunct simply because they hadn’t been
previously employed– been suddenly energised? Why now? What other nasty little
surprises had the abbey to offer?
One or two, yet.
Next came those weapons I had no name for, the
terrible creations of the ancients without comparison in our dark millennium.
Coruscating globes floated over the combat, spearing shafts of green energy
that instantly decomposed those they
struck, leaving only dust. Skimming discs of impenetrable black sucked up orks
in a dismembering maelstrom generated by pressure differentials between this
world and whatever dimension the discs were gateway to. Twinkling silver mists
engulfed their victims, pulsed once, passed on – leaving behind broken
creatures desperately clawing at their eyes, unable to bear whatever the mist
had revealed to them.
But the energies that supplied these
hellish mechanisms would soon flicker and die, and the ammunition for the more
conventional weapons was finite – the orks, due to sheer weight of numbers,
would regain the advantage. So, while confusion and terror possessed them, the
third –and final– stage of retaliation had to be initiated.
An argent flash from the bailey – my lord
flourishing an ignited power sword atop a rumbling salamander.
Rattling into their wall recesses,
the barbican’s gates flew open. Sentinels bounded onto the forecourt in a
bracketing stance, nimbly avoiding smoking craters and ork debris. Rocket pods
flaring, lasers scintillating in the dust-laden air, they ripped into the
compacted and now thrice-terrified orks. A trio of salamanders followed, heavy
bolters and autocannon blazing, Ged standing on the turret of the foremost and
now brandishing a huge black boltgun.
Let the barbaric bastards wonder at
the presence of a silver Space Marine in their midst!
Foot-soldiers interspersed with the
remaining sentinels flooded after. A wedge was rapidly formed –Ged’s salamander
its tip– that commenced a deep puncturing manoeuvre into the enemy’s heart.
The orks were in utter chaos at this
new onslaught. Xenos limbs and torsos, preternaturally-bright red blood
fountaining like a propellant, shot into the air before the wedge’s charge – a
grisly wave breaking before the prow of a battleship. The purple flash of a re-ignited
power sword flourished high, visible even through the roiling smoke and dust,
was the last I saw of Ged in battle.
But the greenskins’ numbers still
told. The wedge began to falter – the orks simply could not get out of its way
quick enough and were forced to stand and fight. The path cut through the horde
was closed off and flooded from sight. Thus surrounded, those ranged weapons
not accounted for by the abbey’s defences were at last brought to bear. Clouds
of smoke, balls of fire, explosions of dust, began to pepper the wedge itself.
I saw a sentinel decapitated, its volitionless legs continuing on to crumple
against the flank of a salamander. I saw another tank instantly destroyed by a
suicide-dive from a grot-piloted bomb, its blast radius engulfing scores of
foot-soldiers in an inferno of shrapnel and flame. I saw an Imperial Guard
incendiary-man’s head blown to pieces, his weapon spraying liquid fire over his
comrades as his body convulsed. I saw…
I saw so much death happen in so
many different ways I wondered at the reason for life.
A soft footstep behind.
‘Impressive, isn’t it, my starling?
Such powers our ancestors wielded. And the Guard! How brave.’
Inquisitor Jorgiot Ko.
He strode forwards to view the
havoc, not even panting though he must have climbed the stairs in order to come
upon me without the warning of the noisy lift.
His head bandage was gone, but other than that he
remained the same as I last saw him – proudly tall, severe, saturnine – the
very picture of inquisitorial authority. The red rose on his chest glittered in
the morning sunlight.
He looked down at me, and my heart
swelled in terror as that dreadful smile slowly stretched his thin lips. I knew
myself to be a mouse, toyed with by a feline prior to the kill.
‘Doesn’t look too promising, does it? If they win
through that it will worthy of a song, don’t you think? And who better than you
to sing it, eh? What? You expected me to be with them?’ He pointed at the smoke
and carnage. ‘Perhaps you think it my duty? But what does a pretty little
starling know of an inquisitor’s duties? Besides,’ and here I glimpsed his
white teeth as he actually grinned, ‘How else could we meet without that damned
Marine-chaperone of yours?’
His intentions were obvious. I
launched myself away from the wall – but he was quicker. His forearm was
suddenly crushingly tight against my throat, his other hand clamping mine
behind my back. With a grunt he half-marched and half-dragged me to a shadowy
alcove beside the lift.
The bristles of his beard again scratched my cheek
as he said, ‘It is a peculiar, even perverse, truth of human nature to want
what you cannot have. Still more perverse is the fact that those lucky enough
to achieve their desire often consequently lose all interest – the chase being
all. Will it be the same for me, do you think? Will you hate me if it is?’
He changed his grip on my neck;
squeezing my nape tightly, he bent me forwards. I tried to scream, but my
larynx was too crushed to enable anything more than a croak. ‘Calamity! The starling
has lost his voice! If you try to kick, I will break your legs.’
It was going to happen. He was going
to ruin me as he had so many other boys. He was going to –
I was released.
I whirled around. Behind Ko stood
Abbot Franx, a small pistol to the inquisitor’s temple. I had never seen such a
grim expression on his fat face before – that, coupled with the flush of
climbing the stairs, made him seem positively demonic.
‘I suspected this. I had you watched. This stops –’
But Ko interrupted, and my heart sank to see the
glee on his face. ‘My dear fat fool of an abbot. Stopping the inquisition in
its holy duty is best done with a bigger gun.’
He whirled, a swirl of black, surprising Franx and
cuffing the pistol from his grip before smashing a gauntleted fist into the
abbot’s face. Blood, mucus, and teeth erupted, and Franx fell to his knees with
an almost feminine squeal.
‘Now, as they say, where were we?’
Ko advanced upon me again. However, he had not seen
what I had – the elevator’s activation. Only when the doors shot back with such
force they buckled in their runners and he felt the near-simultaneous thud-crack! of almost a tonne of ancient
warrior leap to the flag stones behind him, did the inquisitor realise his doom
had come.
He made to turn, but was enveloped in an
unbreakable bear-hug. Ko became a black fly wrapped in the legs of a huge
silver spider by the name of Ged.
‘Gideon,’ boomed the Marine’s
amplified voice, ‘This can be ended here. The battle provides the means. The
choice is yours.’
No. There was no choice.
I nodded.
The servos in Ged’s arms began to whine and Ko’s
eyes began to bulge.
‘Stop,’ I said.
If Ged thought I had changed my mind, he soon
learned otherwise. I approached within centimetres of the pair. Lightly, almost
caressingly, I ran my hand along the inquisitor’s midriff to his hip. For a
moment I let it linger there –and actually witnessed hope flicker over his face
that I might yet comply with his atrocity– before gripping his beautifully-made
dagger.
At last realising my intention, and
in spite of the immense pressure of Ged’s arms, Ko managed to scream once
before gagging on a thick, gauntleted finger forced into his mouth.
The blade was as sharp as it was
beautiful.
-oOo-
Obviously,
the orks were routed (this account would not exist otherwise); and it was
indeed a victory worthy of song. Shaken by the onslaught of the abbey’s
defences, the orks never succeeded in properly rallying against the much
smaller force of Imperial Guard. The majority were slain within the gorge, the
remainder during a harried retreat.
Ko’s corpse, with Abbot Franx’s aid,
was secreted to the battlefield… to be eventually ‘found’ and listed amongst
the valiant dead. The majority of the inquisitor’s team decamped to make report
to sector headquarters, leaving Franx free to once more oversee abbey and
doctrine as he wished. A replacement for Ko was inevitable, but, given the
Administratum’s legendarily convoluted internal workings, would also be some
considerable time hence.
Ged decided to re-enter the alien
portal. ‘I am an anachronism here. But more importantly I have left brothers in
that void, victims of a fate I cannot –to my shame– recall. My duty is clear.’
At the appointed hour of his
departure, after many farewells, blessings, and effusive thanks, from Abbot
Franx, the abbey’s other dignitaries, and officers of the Imperial Guard, he
made to step through the hypnotic silver veil (somehow energised without the
aid of hymns, sacrifice, or the terrified pleas of choirboys).
I was dismayed to think he would say
nothing to me, but the worry was unfounded. He suddenly whirled and squatted
with that inconceivable show of speed of which he was capable.
Vox unit casting so only I could hear, he said,
‘They say I was sent by the Emperor to deliver this abbey. Perhaps. However, I
believe He had another purpose, and that His Will is not always concerned with
the multitude. Common sense dictated I send you to that embrasure – but
something other, a doubt, an instinct,
argued differently. Even as the battle raged, even though I should have been
satisfied as to your safety, my thoughts dwelt upon you. Though orkish matters
remained in the balance, I was nevertheless compelled back to your side. It was
contrary to the Emperor’s wishes that I left you alone.’
I did not know how to reply, and
only looked at my twin reflections in his helm’s wide, fathomless eyes.
He stood then, and rested a huge
hand lightly upon my shoulder. ‘Farewell, my boy. Honour the Emperor’s grace to
you – doubtless He has some purpose in bestowing it, hm?’
With that, he stepped through the
now limitless black portal. For the instant his hand remained upon my shoulder
it became intensely cold, searing my flesh even through the wool of my habit.
Then he was gone.
-oOo-
Research
in the abbey’s vast libraries has revealed the eldritch portals –left behind by
an unknown xenos race– to have once been a common method of interplanetary –if
not interstellar– transportation during ages past. Their use was curtailed,
then abandoned, when Chaotic influences and insurrections were detected within
the folded dimensions the portals employed.
The last to be decommissioned was the one now
encased in plasteel and adamantium in the Hall of Relics.
As its shutdown commenced, so the rotted records
patchily tell, Chaotic abominations spewed from it and overran the abbey (then
indeed considered a fortress, as Ged once defined it). At great cost they were
beaten back by Space Marines to their point of ingress. But the portal was now
a gateway into the immaterium, held gaping by infernal powers and
uncontrollable by its operators. The Marines had no option but to enter and
fight the demons from the threshold, thus enabling the aperture to be sealed
behind them.
In this they were successful – and
never heard of again.
Their chapter remains unknown – the
relevant sections of the records lost. Only a few names remain as part of an
honour roll – halfway down which is the entry, ‘Brother Gedditch Lot, Adeptus
Mechanicus aspirant.’
-oOo-
The
frostbite wounds I received from my last contact with Ged are now ridges and
puckers of white scar tissue. It has become my ritual to stroke them lightly
prior to sleep.
-oOo-