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Shadows in the Sand (Warhammer 40k, story)

Chapter Thirty One New
Chapter Thirty One

-

The bridge corridor shook with thunder and fire.

Kade's bolter clicked dry, a metallic finality that rang louder than the chaos around him. A heartbeat later, the cultist it had claimed burst apart, viscera painting the far bulkhead in crimson arcs. Lasfire lit the gloom, painting his armor in strobe-flashes of blood and fury, both Imperial and heretic rounds shrieking through the corridor.

Smoke crawled through the beams of emergency lighting, thick as oil and stinking of scorched flesh and metal.

Without missing a beat, Kade reached to his belt. His movements were methodical, stoic—like the slow turn of an executioner's hourglass. He found the last metal casing, slammed it into the bolter with a practiced snap, and sent the bolt home with a growl of steel on steel.

"Last magazine," he said, his voice low—calm as a glacier, unmoved by the apocalypse breaking against his ceramite plate.

A few meters away, Orvek stood behind a dented support strut, his left side slick with blood, his right arm gone above the elbow—only cauterized ruin beneath the pauldron. His good hand still worked the trigger of his bolt pistol with precise, disdainful rhythm, each round punctuated by the wet snap of bone and armor.

"I've two left," Orvek called back, smoke curling from his pistols muzzle. "And my bolter's still out there somewhere with half a mag left."

Another cultist surged through the flickering shadows, screaming praise to a false god. Orvek turned, fired once. The scream ended mid-word.

"After that," he muttered, his silhouette jagged and defiant in the emergency lumens, "my hammer shall swing once more."

"Presuming they come close enough. Most of the bastards remain at a distance." Kade replied as the shrapnel from the frag grenades continued to bounce off his shield, the re-purposed wall plating a rough job of welded handle and quickly cut steel.

But, it was at least working to lessen the damage his armor was sustaining, the cultists weapons lacking the firepower to punch through the combined defense, for the moment anyway.

Both Astartes were watching the enemy lines for heavy weapons as the foes tried to advance behind their shield wall, yet the rain of frag's managed to keep them far enough back, the threat of the unfired multi-las a further deterrent.

A flicker of text across his HUD caught his attention as Ira spoke up.

IRA:
Enemy comm traffic intercepted.

A click of his vox as the message played, the speakers voice rough, but clear, calm.

"-Confirming, two of the brides are in the choke. I fear to push forward and risk injury to the Lords chosen wives. What should we do?"

The commander replied, brisk and sure. "Fall back. We have the reactor core, the bridge is just extra at this point. Our Lord shall claim what is his in his own way, for his makes his way there now."

IRA:
User KORON has encountered the leader of the cultist uprising.
Threat Level: Extreme.
Leader exhibits extraordinary levels of physicality, spatial folding and unknown ability to manipulate matter.
Recommended tactics: Ambush, heavy weaponry. Astartes and armsmen joint force.


"Can you get me an image of the leader?" Kade asked, watching as the retreat order seemed to be propagating through the enemy lines, the incoming fire dropping away to nothing.

Kade's HUD flickered, and an image bloomed in amber-edged clarity.

Kade felt both his hearts skip a beat.

A figure stepped through fire and falling ash—tall, radiant, and impossibly serene. Pale skin shimmered faintly beneath golden-white armor, like sun-polished marble. A halo of golden hair framed a noble face, unreadable in its beauty. His expression was still, mournful. Wings—vast, ethereal—fluttered behind him like echoes more than matter, trailing light. He did not walk like a man. He glided, every step too smooth for the metal beneath him, as if the deck bowed gently to bear his presence.

"That is impossible." Kade muttered, crimson eyes wide.

IRA:
Negative. Visual confirmed via multiple sources.
Cult leader is making his way here with heavy reinforcements.
ETA to enemy arrival: Fifteen minutes.
ETA to loyalist arrival: Twenty minutes.
Chances of successfully defending bridge: 27.1%.
Recommended Tactics: Evacuate wounded personnel. Disable bridge controls. Disperse into ship and engage in guerrilla warfare. Loyalist forces are regrouping. Chances of successful mutiny: 16.8% and falling. User KADE and VIP's TARA and KALA can survive.


"And what of my brothers who have already fallen?" he asked, his voice quieter now. Not softer—just closer to the bone. "What vengeance shall be enacted upon this false angel if I should do as you suggest?"

The line went silent for a long moment before she replied.

IRA:
….Updating user KADE's objectives.
Vengeance.
Proposed alternative tactic: Push through enemy forces and join up with incoming Astarte forces. Engage leader before he arrives here.


Kade's stance straightened. His breath came low and measured, the soft hiss of his rebreather masking the surge beneath. Behind his lenses, his crimson eyes narrowed—expressionless, unreadable—but his silence rang with finality.

He raised his bolter, checked the magazine—mostly full—and tilted his head toward the corridor where the enemy line was already beginning to pull back, melting into shadow beyond the emergency lumens.

"Captain," he voxed. "They're falling back. But intel from the lower decks confirms it: their leader is en route with reinforcements. We won't hold the bridge."

Tavos didn't waste breath on suspicion. There was no need.

"What do you have in mind?" he asked, though the cough at the end broke the edge off his voice—wet, guttural, like fire catching in a cracked bellows.

"We intercept. Cut the serpent's head before it slithers up the spine. But… I don't believe we're dealing with a mortal anymore."

"Clarify."

Kade sent the feed.

Silence. Then a sharp inhale.

Tavos' voice, when it came, trembled with something just beneath rage—a volcanic pressure, one shift away from eruption.

"…Sergeant," he growled, his words rumbling like the deep plates of Nocturne itself. "Whatever this heresy is... destroy it. Burn this filth off my ship."

"Yes sir."

He turned. Orvek was already sliding his last magazine into the bolt pistol with his remaining hand, expression flat.

"I heard," Orvek said simply. "Go. I'll hold the gate."

He turned to the Brandt girls, both pressed against the bulkhead in the half-light, their clothes smoke-streaked, their eyes hard. "The Emperor protects."

Then he was gone—into the corridor, into the dark, the fading thunder of his footsteps swallowed by distance and the weight of what waited ahead.

-

The hull was madness.

Venting plasma burst from ruptured conduits like solar flares, searing arcs of violet-white energy that lit the void in strobes of impending death. A rotating chunk of wreckage—a torqued section of corridor plating—spun past at lethal velocity, sparking off a nearby bulkhead as it clipped a loose rail. Pockets of fire burned in vacuum where chemical compounds still clung to memory, and somewhere ahead, a shield emitter flickered in and out like a dying eye—blink-blink-blink—as it tried and failed to push back the night.

Elissa glided forward, Koron's suit syncing better and better with each motion. The shielding held firm, the mag-boots gripping tight to the hull's scarred metal surface in the few times she touched down, her breath steady inside the helmet. The UI was clean, fluid, showing paths of least resistance through the debris field. The danger was real—but the suit was made for this.

She however, was not.

The ship's surface didn't move—but something deeper did. The world around her tilted with a kind of wrongness that wasn't speed, or spin, but something older. Something in the gut

Elissa's body tilted forward and fell, and the hull caught her—not with boots or mass, but with gripless certainty. The suit's grav-array pulled her sideways, then diagonally, then down again—none of it in line with what her stomach or brain called real. The stars jerked, the warped metal tilted, and fire licked past sideways.

"Fourteen degrees starward," Sasha said coolly in her ear. "Correct for the yaw. There's a rupture seam ahead—don't clip your foot on it or we'll both learn what happens to knees at orbital velocity."

The warning came just as the suit tugged—like an invisible hand shifting her weight mid-air—and she stumbled sideways across the skin of the ship, gliding more than walking, her muscles braced against phantom angles.

"This is nothing like a voidsuit," Elissa gritted out as she felt her stomach lurch. "Swimming he says, to a woman born and raised on desert planet."

"A fair point, but you can do it," Sasha replied. "You're riding a localized gravity bias field. You're not supposed to feel balanced. You're supposed to arrive."

The deck below her was torn and buckled, shredded from plasma fire and decompression—like the spine of some wounded beast, groaning beneath her. Plasma gouts vented at irregular intervals, blooming like spectral flowers. The hull glimmered, slick with ice and melted slag. Debris drifted slowly, unnaturally, some pieces spinning gently, others jagged with kinetic spite.

A blast of superheated gas hissed past her faceplate, casting shadows that flickered like screaming ghosts. Her shield flared—automatic, controlled, the energy field flexing around her like a bubble of blue-white haze.

Another tug from the grav-array as she reacted to the sudden flame—a hard right this time, and she flung sideways, knee bent, shoulder leading, rebounding off a scorched chunk of adamantine plating.

"Trajectory drift nominal," Sasha confirmed as Elissa managed to get her tumble under control. "You're doing good, but focus. The suits reacting to your thoughts. A flare like that and you might accidently hurl yourself into space."

"No pressure," Elissa muttered.

"Technically, all the pressure. It's just outside."

"Really? Trying to joke now?"

Before Sasha could answer, Elly's voice piped in—bright and brisk. "Speaking of pressure, bridge traffic's stabilizing. Looks like our side's taking it back."

Elissa grunted as she pushed herself around an upthrust spear of hull plating, the suit compensating with a subtle tug of gravitational redirection. "Define 'our side.'"

"Loyalist forces," Elly said immediately. "I'm picking up Kade's signal again, and around thirty-nine Astartes tags. They're still spread out, but they're pushing towards an interception. Unfortunately, their target…"

Elissa didn't have to wait for the rest. "He's coming, isn't he."

"Yep," Elly confirmed. "The angel is making his way to the bridge. And he's not alone. I'm reading about two thousand biosigns trailing him, but the signal's fuzzy. Dead zones everywhere."

Elissa grimaced. "Anything we can do to help? What about the drones?"

"Only nine left from our batch," Sasha answered, her tone shifting into more clinical efficiency. "Another ten are guarding the girls on the bridge. Lucia's fabricating reinforcements, but our fab-units are still operating at a crawl. Best-case scenario? An hour before we field anything worth the word 'reinforcement.'"

Elissa ducked beneath a length of warped cable, watching it trail a few ghostly sparks as it drifted lazily in the vacuum. "Damn. What about structural tricks? Lure him into an atrium, vent the whole thing into space?"

"Tempting," Sasha said, almost wistful. "But not viable. The Hammer doesn't have void-friendly kill boxes like that. Even if it did, forcing a breach would cause a backlash through the internal systems—and that could be a death sentence for any of us wired into the ship. The Hammer's AI is broken, not dead. It's still strong in the places that matter."

"So there's nothing we can do?" Elissa asked, watching as a shard of hull plating bounced off her shoulder shield, flashing blue-white before vanishing into the dark. "Just… get out of the way?"

"Hate to say it," Sasha replied, quieter now, "but for the moment? Yes. Right now, the Hammer's fate is in Astartes hands."

Elissa stared ahead as the scorched spine of the ship twisted before her, jagged and buckled like the wreck of some forgotten god. Plasma flared across the horizon, throwing long shadows across the hull. Behind her, Koron remained still—heavy, silent, frozen in borrowed time.

He hadn't moved in minutes—not since he'd locked down his systems, rerouted everything into preservation mode. His skin against her armor was ice, too still. Every movement jostled him, and she could feel—actually feel—how rigid his body had become. Oxygen halted. Blood reduced to vital organs. Temperature dropped to near-fatal.

He wasn't riding with her.

He was being delivered.

"He's burning time," Elly whispered. "Every second you move faster, he gets it back."

"He shouldn't have come out here," Elissa muttered, sweat slick in the collar of her helmet. "We could've waited. Found another route. Something safer."

"He ran the numbers," Sasha said. "And he trusted you more than the rest."

Elissa's voice dipped. "He shouldn't have had to run the numbers to decide if he trusted me."

"He didn't," Sasha replied, softer now. "That part was never in question. He ran them to see if he could trust himself… to put you in danger and not regret it."

Elissa said nothing for a long moment. Her throat was tight, her breath loud in the helmet. The silence pressed between them like gravity.

"He always seems so sure," she murmured.

"He has to be," Sasha said. Then, quieter—like a confession not meant for air. "If he stops to wonder, even for a second, he might not start again. And I don't know if I could bear watching him fall."

Elissa closed her eyes.

And between her spine and the silent weight strapped to it, she felt it again—that unbearable, precious truth:

He wasn't invincible.

He was just someone trying to outrun the moment he couldn't get back up.

-

The corridor narrowed ahead, walls blackened with fire and studded with the bones of melted deck supports. Kade advanced without pause, his stride relentless, bolter gripped low, makeshift shield angled like a prow. He spoke softly into the silence.

"Ira. Did Koron make contact with the demon?"

IRA:
Affirmative
Engagement occurred seven minutes ago in upper freight lift four.


"Show me."

The HUD blinked, a small window appearing to show a flickering perspective—strange angles, cold and mechanical, tracking a figure descending through a ruined arena like a comet in slow motion.

Not simply aglow, but casting illumination—shedding brilliance like a floodlight cleaving fog. Shadows peeled away from it like smoke under pressure. Wings, broad and glimmering with photonic distortion, shimmered behind its back. Each step sent tremors through the world—reality cracking, flexing, bending to allow its passage.

Thin beams carved into it. Drones, four-legged and tireless, hurled themselves forward in coordinated strikes. The air warped, gravity buckled. Nothing slowed it.

It advanced through the storm like a god descending a temple stair.

Its blade danced—a thing of artistry and terror. Every stroke perfectly measured. Every dodge effortless. Its footwork made mockery of even superhuman reflex. And all the while, warpfire bled from its presence, distorting everything it touched. Reality wasn't resisting—it was yielding.

Kade stared, unmoving. Every instinct in him flared—centuries of battle-tempered reflex screaming one word beneath the thunder of bolter fire and command protocols.

Demonhost.

A soul-bound cage. A living anchor driven into realspace. The Warp given flesh.

He'd read the records. Studied the fragments.

But none of them had looked like this.

"Even the weakest of them are powerful foes," Kade muttered, boots thudding as he advanced. He glanced up at a scorched designation sigil, then turned sharply left at the junction, heading for the nearest munitions cache. "How many of my brothers can you reach?"

IRA:
Thirty-nine. Twenty-seven are armored.

"Good. Inform them that I'll be bringing heavy weapons. Find us a killzone."

IRA:
Affirmative. Calculating optimal placement.

Kade's HUD bloomed with new data streams—floor plans, pressure readings, battlefield heatmaps. His armor's systems surged with fresh telemetry as Ira scoured the Hammer's wounded infrastructure for somewhere, anywhere, they could fight a false angel on equal footing.

Then, she spoke again—almost hesitantly.

IRA:
This unit requests permission to coordinate with user KORON's AI companions. This unit's systems are limited.

Kade exhaled, teeth clenched behind his helm, every instinct whispering denial—but he gave a short nod. "Granted. Bring them in."

The datastream doubled, then tripled—ghostlight flickering across his HUD as foreign code stitched into Ira's systems like thread through raw steel. No voice came. No warmth of Sasha's presence, no wry commentary. Just sterile efficiency. The mini-map flickered, recalibrating, plotting a route with cold certainty.

IRA:
Nearest functioning armory located. Seventy-four meters. Deck elevation: negative one. Status: damaged, accessible.

The corridor opened into ruin. Bulkheads torn like paper, the decking above collapsed inward as if a titan's fist had slammed down in wrath. Sparking cables hissed from exposed walls, dancing arcs lighting the space with erratic strobe. The acrid tang of burnt insulation clawed at the filters in his helm.

The flames were gone—but their ghost still lingered in the searing heat.

The armory's blast doors remained shut, half-buried beneath fallen girder and debris, blackened but intact.

Kade advanced, but his step faltered.

Six of his brothers lay scattered like discarded relics across the approach. Not fallen in formation, not defiant in death—shredded. Ripped apart by concussive force and cruel geometry. Bolter magazines cooked off near their corpses. One's helmet had been caved inward, fused to his skull. Another's pauldron was gone, shoulder sheared clean away, his gauntlet locked mid-reach for a fallen weapon.

He knew them all. All of them. Their names carved into his memory like ink into slate.

Kade stepped between the bodies like a man walking through fire, every stride slow, deliberate. Not out of fear. Out of grief.

His eyes swept the space, cataloging the armor marks, the weapon fragments, the poses in which they fell. The smell of death clung to them—not decay, but finality. Burnt ceramite. Blood beneath. Spirits already offered.

Brother Thasian had once carved miniature flame motifs into every purity seal he bore, a quiet act of devotion. Brother Kelen used to hum old Nocturnean forge-hymns during maintenance rituals, off-key but steady. Vero, ever silent, had a habit of sketching battle tactics on his dataslate, refining them obsessively. Mardel, the largest of them, had adopted a mortal orphan during a campaign on Sagan-12. The child had died. He never smiled again.

Aelian, youngest of the six, had only received his black armor a year past. He still moved like a neophyte trying not to shame his mentors. And Solas—Solas had once joked that if he died first, Kade owed him a drink in the afterlife.

Kade remembered laughing.

"Brothers," he whispered, kneeling beside Solas's body. He rested a hand on the cracked chestplate. "As fire returns to fire, so shall the soul return to Vulkan."

He rose. Shoulders squared. Grief pushed down—not forgotten, never that—but folded into purpose.

He reached the door, shoved the melted debris aside, and triggered the override. The locking bolts groaned in protest, and the doors slid open halfway, screeching like tortured metal as they made room for dead men's vengeance.

Inside was chaos: scorched racks, half-melted crates, broken weapons still humming with residual charge. But not all was lost.

Kade stepped inside.

His eyes scanned with soldier's focus. Multi-melta, dented but functional. Heavy flamer—half-full tanks, scorched ignition plate.

He took both.

He clipped the flamer to his side, feeling the slosh of promethium in the canister, six, maybe seven shots worth. The multi-melta hissed as he linked it to the backpack fuel core—enough for ten shots.

IRA:
Killzone identified. Triangulating allied positions. Predictive strike vectors uploading to allies.
Enemy arrival: Nine minutes. Allied intercept ETA: Ten. User KADE will be alone at first contact.
Suggestion: Extend interception, rally with allies before engagement.


Kade stood at the threshold of the ruined chamber, the weight of flame and fury in his hands, and gave a quiet nod. "Patience then, shall be our weapon."

-

Kade stepped through the breach and into fire-wreathed twilight.

The mustering chamber had once been a training hall—long since gutted by shrapnel, lit only by flickering lumen strips and the ghostly glow of active armor nodes. But the scent of purpose was thick in the air. Thirty-nine shapes turned toward him. Twenty-seven were still in full armor, scorched and scraped but functional. The other eleven bore robes torn to the waist, torsos bandaged in field wraps, faces smudged with ash and stubborn life.

All of them stood.

All of them burned.

"Sergeant on deck," someone rasped.

"No time for ceremony," Kade replied, stepping into their center. His armor hissed, multi-melta thumping against his chest like a second heart. "This isn't a line. It's a knife. And we are the edge."

The Astartes parted, letting him reach a half-standing tactical display rigged to a damaged cogitator. A flicker of corrupted lines—Ira's doing—projected an image of the enemy: tall, radiant, flanked by a tide of bodies and madness.

"He's coming," Kade said. "You've seen the feed. Warp-wrought. Bladed. Wings of light and lies. A face like a saint. A soul like a butcher's forge."

No one spoke. They'd seen it. Heard the vox intercepts. Read the scriptures on monsters pretending to be divine.

"He's not a daemon prince. He's something else," Kade went on. "But his body bleeds. His weapons can be broken. His fire can be answered."

A mutter from the ranks—Brother Hadrak, helm in crook of his arm, a black line of blood down his face. "How do we bring down a demonhost?"

Kade's gaze swept the assembled brothers. He saw them—not as wargear, not as units. As men. Firewalkers. Flamebearers. Veterans of a thousand wars.

"How else?" Kade said. "With fire and fury."

He pointed to the armored warriors.

"Frontline fighters engage and draw him into the killzone. Meltaguns, flamers, any short-range heavy weapons we have— We hit him then. Melee works as hit and run, keep him off balance. Longer ranged teams engage once hes focused on us."

He turned to the unarmored.

"You flank wide. Two cells. Keep the cultist horde from reinforcing. Break their line. Pin them. If they overrun you, fall back—but buy us seconds. That's all we need."

Brother Pyrix, stripped to his waist, arms wrapped in bandage and ritual ink, gave a wolfish grin. "How many seconds?"

"As many as it takes," Kade answered.

IRA:
Killzone identified. Freight handling, G-17. Reinforced walls, weakened supports overhead. Ambush pattern optimal. Collapse vectors loaded.

"We hit him in G-17," Kade said as he pulled up the ship section on the hololith. "He'll arrive in five minutes. We'll be there in four. When the hammer falls, we fall as one."

Brother Jexin flexed his hands, one gloved, one burned raw. "Anything else we should know about this demonhost? I have never fought one before."

Kade looked at him, voice quiet.

"Nothing beyond be alert. Its body is a illusion, vital organs will likely not be in their normal spot, and it will have tricks of the warp. Trust your brothers, and bring the wrath of Vulkan in your heart."

The brothers nodded, each one checking weapons, slapping mags, igniting pilot lights. Armor hissed. Voxnets clicked online. Faith didn't need preaching here—only purpose.

They moved.

Like lava through stone corridors, the Salamanders advanced—every step deliberate, a collective will forged not of zealotry, but of duty. Thirty-nine warriors. Two flanks. One point of impact.

And at its tip, Kade—serene as a storm just before it breaks.

-

Kade advanced first, multi-melta humming with barely restrained fury, the power cells on his back humming with energy that reeked of promise. His brothers followed in silence. Twenty-seven wore their armor—scratched, scorched, patched with prayer-scribed plating—but it still marked them as Angels of Death. The rest were stripped to carapace and faith, their strength in silence, in purpose.

The air vibrated with the hum of hidden power and the thrum of war-prayers whispered by Astartes hearts, each one ready to drown this place in fire.

The killzone was a freight-handling cathedral—an enormous cargo junction carved into the ship's spine, where titanic cranes once swung above open void locks and grav-lifts once thrummed between decks. Now, it lay broken and vast.

Above, the gantries loomed like the ribs of some ancient metal god—crisscrossing walkways of rust-streaked steel and sagging power lines. The long-range brothers were scattered among them, prone or crouched behind collapsed girders and ruptured containers, weapons poised. Bolters, stalkers, plasma guns, and the one missile launcher waited in cold silence, covering overlapping fields of fire.

Below, the floor was a shattered grid of ruined platforms and freight cradles. Mech-handler arms curled from the deck like skeletal fingers, motionless now, their hydraulics long dead. A collapsed lift shaft cut through one quadrant like a broken throat. Coils of severed conduit twitched from the walls, weeping sparks that flickered through the gloom like dying stars.

And at the center, laid bare like a sacrificial altar, was the cargo platform itself—open ground, clear of cover, deliberately uncluttered. The bait.

It was a place of planned violence, every line of sight calculated. There was only one path in—a broad hallway of cracked ferrocrete flanked by half-melted cherub statues and Mechanicus sigils smeared with soot. That corridor would bring the enemy directly into the trap.

To the west, a sealed maintenance hatch had been forced open and welded in place, marking the path Kade's flanking team would use. To the north, the main corridor yawned open—wide enough for bulk cargo haulers, and now the route the angel would take.

Along the southern wall, an old Prometheum refill station for ground vehicles stood cracked and abandoned, its tanks dry—but its pipelines still intact, running beneath the deck. A potential hazard. Or opportunity.

The air here held the scent of scorched insulation, rust, and blood. It vibrated with the hum of hidden power and the thrum of war prayers whispered by Astartes hearts, each one ready to drown this place in fire.

Kade, having passed the heavy flamer to one of his battle-brothers, advanced into the central maze. He was among the fourteen who would face the enemy up close—blades ready, meltas primed, flamers hissing with suppressed anticipation. Of the assault group, only he and two others bore heavy ordnance: the fusion-etched mouth of his melta, the brutal spout of a flamer, and a plasma cannon that hummed faintly as it built charge.

The rest were blades and muscle. Veteran killers.

The remaining ninteen spread out along gantries, behind ruined scaffolds, and atop fractured cargo elevators. Most bore bolters—standard and stalker variants—while a handful carried plasma rifles, their coils glowing in the dim red of emergency lumen. Two devastator squad veterans hauled heavy bolters into elevated cover, mounting them with practiced ease. One marine bore a shoulder-slung missile launcher, one of his only two krak warheads ready to fire.

It was enough firepower to flatten a fortress. Enough to make even a greenskin WAAAGH pause, if only for a heartbeat.

Would this so-called angel—this radiant thing with his followers at his back—have the arrogance to walk into it?

Kade didn't know.

But he was ready to find out.

The great freight doors at the far end of the junction groaned open with the tortured grind of fractured gears. Smoke belched from the seams. Shapes moved in the haze—robed cultists with blades held low, their eyes wide with reverence.

And then he stepped through.

A crimson sword hung idle in one hand. Wings like starlight fluttered in an unfelt wind behind him. He didn't walk; he glided, feet barely disturbing the soot and ruin beneath him. A mane of golden hair spilled over his pauldrons, catching what light remained and wreathing his head in a mockery of a halo.

Even knowing the truth, Kade felt it—that whisper at the edge of thought. That traitorous echo of awe. A breath of hesitation that slipped beneath the skin of certainty.

Doubt.

The angel advanced without fear, every step deliberate, a performance for the devout who trailed him like pilgrims behind a living saint. His wings fluttered in subtle, unsettling pulses—part heat shimmer, part hallucination. His blade glowed like a sunrise frozen in steel. Even knowing what it was, even armed with truth, Kade felt the wrongness only after the beauty.

He hated that.

"Three," he murmured into the vox.

Muscles loosened, his breath evened. Around him, Salamanders tensed in their cover, bolts loaded, plasma primed, teeth bared behind helms of black and green.

"Two."

The angel reached the bottom of the ramp, his followers fanning out behind him in unarmored, awe-struck obedience.

"One."

The krak missile screamed from its launcher, a lance of fire and purpose. It slammed into the angel's chest with a thunderclap, the detonation cratering the deck and sending a backwash of heat across the killzone. In the same instant, nine unarmored Salamanders dropped from the gantries above the door to flank the mob of cultists, weapons already blazing.

Flamers bathed the mortal rear lines in cleansing fire, their cries rising like an unholy hymn. Bolters chewed through the ranks, each shot precise, merciless. Astartes charged, not in a line—but in a staggered pincer, cutting off retreat, forcing the enemy into chaos.

Kade's melee brothers surged forward: eleven armored giants, fanning out across the open floor to meet the angel head-on. Chainswords roared to life. Combat blades caught the flicker of distant firelight. The lone plasma cannon shrieked as its glow intensified.

And yet—those in the upper gantries held their fire.

They waited.

Just as planned.

Shock. Engagement. Draw him in.

The trap wasn't just to kill the angel.

It was to make him commit.

-

It stepped onto the deck, golden feet touching scorched steel as if it were consecrated marble.

To mortal eyes, it was beauty incarnate—a divine silhouette in radiant white and crimson, winged and haloed, gliding like scripture brought to life.

But the being within the flesh—the entity wearing the mask of an angel—saw differently.

It did not perceive with eyes.

It listened.

The world came to it as harmony and light, as rhythm and resonance. Every soul was a song, every thought a chime of tone and texture. It saw its surroundings in the glimmer of essence and the tremble of belief. The freight cathedral shimmered before it, full of clashing chords and wounded hymns.

The faithful followed behind, their devotion blazing like incense caught in a hurricane—wild, flickering, raw. Their song was loud. Off-key. Beautiful.

A note broke the music.

The krak missile was not sound. Not truly. But in the realm of perception the angel inhabited, it arrived as a discordant scream. A lance of nullity. A shriek of hate forged into motion.

It struck.

Pain bloomed.

Light. Heat. Judgment.

The illusion shattered. The entity stumbled, wings flaring wide to catch its balance, skin bubbling as its great wings wavered. The impact rolled over it like a collapsed crescendo. It staggered… and then stood.

A gasp rose from his people. Their songs were suddenly shrill, panicked, smoldering in the echoes of the blast. Their music bent into cries—many of them dying. Fire devoured them in twin sheets as unarmored giants of obsidian tore from cover.

The angel's awareness shifted. The tempo of battle rose.

The Salamanders came.

Eleven of them surged forward, blades singing their own brutal harmony, each soul a furnace of purpose wrapped in fire-wrought fury. Their colors were deep—a symphony of ember and ash, notes carved in sacrifice. They charged, pistols flaring, war cries harmonic.

And the others...

The long-range warriors did not move. They held their fire. Silent sentinels in the choir loft of death. Waiting for the cue.

Yet the entity didn't fear. No.

This was the shape of worship it understood.

The blade in its hand flared—sung into existence, not forged. It was resonance and memory. Crimson as spilled belief. It spun the weapon once, leaving afterimages in reality's weave.

One of the charging Salamanders was a tenor of wrath, bellowing as his chainsword revved.

The angel met him first.

Not with brute force.

With grace.

A single pivot, a lean like falling leaves, and the sword bisected the warrior mid-motion. The song of his soul cut short. A staccato silence.

But the others did not stop. They closed, three at once, then six. The fight bloomed, not as chaos, but as choreography—violent, beautiful, blasphemous.

To the angel, it was ballet.

It danced.

Warp-light shimmered around its limbs. Reality flickered. Deck plates twisted as if softened by heat. Gravity wept in confused tides. The air sang as it reshaped.

And still—

They struck. Bolters barked. Fire lit its robes. Metal scored its skin.

It felt them.

Not fear.

Friction.

They were not like the faithful. Their songs were clearer. Sharper. Hardened by war and kinship and oaths. It saw their names glint inside them.

One wielded grief like a weapon. Another, shame. One burned with desperate hope.

But none sang of doubt.

And that made the angel pause.

For all its stolen grace, its woven mask, its choir of worshippers...

The enemy's song was true.

Something old stirred behind its eyes. Something ancient and fragile.

It had felt this once, long ago.

When it was not a god.

When it feared.

-

Kade watched from cover, his breath slow and measured, optics locked on the unfolding melee as his brothers met the angel head-on.

The initial charge had been thunder itself—eleven Salamanders roaring down the ruined freight cathedral, flame and shot in their wake. For a moment, it looked like they might bear the false god down by sheer fury. Chainblades screamed. Power-fields flared like newborn suns. The angel disappeared beneath a tide of black-green armor and battle-cries.

And then the dance began.

It did not fight like a creature of flesh. It flowed.

The angel moved with an elegance that mocked gravity, each motion a stanza in some terrible song. Its sword—a long, impossibly thin arc of crimson light—sliced through the melee like a conductor's baton, trailing contrails of distorted air and psychic shimmer. It did not clash. It passed through. Through shields. Through helms. Through ceramite and bone and history.

Brother Aegaron died first—his thunder hammer raised mid-swing, his chest carved open with a blur that left his upper body collapsing in half-melted ruin. He fell without sound, the hammer still sparking in his grip.

Seraphis and Dornil moved to flank, chainswords snarling—but the blade flickered again, too fast for the eye, and Dornil's weapon clattered to the floor alongside the arm that had wielded it. Blood sprayed across Seraphis' helm, and for a heartbeat he stumbled. A heartbeat was all it took. The sword came back in a reverse sweep, and Seraphis crumpled—bisected at the hip, his final scream flaring through Kade's vox like static.

Kade gritted his teeth. "Hold the line," he whispered. Not to them. To himself. To the moment.

The survivors pressed in regardless, discipline honed over centuries driving them to cover each other, strike where one fell, drawing the thing back step by step. Tarvek caught its flank with a point-blank flamer blast, fire blooming across the angel's armor in a corona of radiant heat—but the entity stepped through it as if the flames were fog. It spun, its blade drawing a perfect arc, and Tarvek's helm rolled away in silence.

But it was working.

The angel was stepping forward. Not far. Not fast. But Kade saw it—a stutter in its rhythm. A check in its perfect tempo. As if even it could not be everywhere at once.

Behind the melee line, the longer-ranged brothers began to reposition, weapons charged. The plasma remained silent for now, waiting for the right angle, but the stalker rifles began to sing—each shot carving lines of fury through the air.

"Keep the pressure," Kade voxed, moving through cover, hunting a new vantage. "Every step it takes forward, we claim in blood."

He watched as Brother Jorran—massive, silent, always last to speak—lunged in with a combat blade in each hand. He found the space others could not, carving a deep gash across the angel's back. It turned on him in a blur, but Varek intercepted the strike with his own body, catching the blow in the gut—sliced clean through.

Varek fell.

Jorran screamed.

Kade did not look away.

This was war.

This was cost.

The trap had been sprung. Now came the bleed.

And Emperor willing, the angel would drown in it.

-

The blade sang.

Oh, how it sang—not with metal on metal, but with the music of motion. With the crisp whisper of flesh parting. With the rising chorus of screams and sparks and faith undone.

Every cut was a note.

Every impact, a chord.

The hymn of slaughter echoed in this strange, delightful cage of matter.

It reveled in it.

Not the killing. That was rote. Expected. A necessary rite to maintain the mask.

No, what it craved was the sensation.

The pressure of ground against foot. The sharp, numbing ache in sinew when it twisted too far. The sting—yes, sting!—when that flamer's kiss licked across its body, leaving carbon bloom and chemical agony in its wake.

Agony.

It had forgotten pain. Not the memory of it—no, even the Warp could simulate memory. But the surprise of it. The visceral, raw newness.

It laughed, inside.

Not aloud. Not here. That would ruin the theater.

But something in its stolen heart… danced.

This realm, this coil of bone and limitation, was a symphony it had never truly heard. Not from within. Not like this.

And yet—

The song was… flawed.

Beneath the beauty, beneath the rapture, there was a wrongness. A skipped beat. A dissonance threading through the harmony.

At first, it thought it was the usual clamor of a dying soul—so often discordant, broken. But this was sharp, deliberate. Like a blade pressed against the edge of the stave.

Not chaos.

Not resistance.

Design.

It began to feel it then. In the drag of weight through the air. The pattern of the weapons, held back, waiting. The formation of the melee line—not frenzied zealots. Hunters. Soldiers.

A trap.

The entity felt it in its wings, in the marrow of this puppet form.

It wanted to see.

And it— wanted to be seen.

Yes.

It could have fled. Could have bent space again, folded into shadow, and emerged where it pleased.

But not yet.

It had never felt a trap before.

Never walked willingly into the snapping jaws.

And the strangeness of it—the invitation of it—drew it on like a siren call.

So it advanced, blade weeping crimson light, carving its hymn through the fire and steel and flesh.

Each death fed the crescendo.

But it knew.

Soon.

It would reach the crescendo's edge.

Where harmony ended.

And something else waited.

Not chaos.

Not null.

But order with a name.

The silver shard in the void.

It was close.

And the angel longed to hear what she would sing.

-

Kade's breath slowed. Not in calm. In purpose. The air inside his helm was thick with it—intent, memory, vengeance.

He watched the melee unfold from his corner of the cargo containers—cover half-melted by plasma fire, half-held together by sheer hatred.

Seven of his brothers were gone.

Seven.

He saw Brother Themnus fall with a guttural roar, his hammer torn from his grip as the angel's blade cleaved through his pauldron and chest like parchment. Saw Yestrel die shielding another, taking the blow meant for his kin with a snarl and a prayer. Ardok, ever too fast for his own good, had caught a feint and paid the price in silence, his head still rolling.

The others, too—burning, broken, bleeding out onto the deck that would never remember their names.

But Kade would.

He had waited, held his brothers back, kept their vengeance sheathed until the creature was where it had to be.

Ira's counter clicked to zero.

The angel had entered the furnace throat of the killzone—wings flickering like dying auroras, blade a smear of crimson light as it danced through the melee line. Even gods bled when struck from the blind side.

Kade raised his multi-melta.

Across from him, two brothers did the same—Vael to his left, silent as the grave, and Brother Aramus crouched behind a fractured support strut with the plasma cannon whine building to a scream.

Across the field, the long-range gunners had eyes on.

"Mark."

The word was a whisper, a razor slipping between teeth.

They stepped from shadow.

Three shapes, colossal and wrathful, weapons already primed.

His four remaining brothers dove away from the melee, hurling themselves into cover.

The multi-melta fired first.

Twin beams of sun-hot ruin carved through the air, searing arcs that turned steel into vapor and shadow into glass. The twin lances converged on the angel's chest—an instant sunburst that left afterimages like holy icons burned into his vision.

A heartbeat later, Aramus fired.

The plasma cannon's scream became a thunderclap, a radiant bolt of coronal discharge slamming into the angel just as it turned, trying to escape the metla beams.

Behind and above, the hidden marksmen opened up.

Heavy bolters snarled, thudding death into the melee in long, brutal bursts—tight volleys meant to carve through anything foolish enough to remain near the angel. Stalker-pattern rounds punched with pinpoint fury, while plasma rifles barked their blue fire in disciplined cadence.

The entire world lit up in vengeance.

Kade never looked away.

He watched.

Every flicker. Every motion.

Not for weakness.

But for proof.

Proof that the lives they'd traded bought more than delay.

They bought pain.

They bought clarity.

They bought time.

He saw the angel turn, armor in tatters, golden hair scorched, blade still gleaming.

It was still alive.

But it had noticed.

No more dances.

No more beauty.

Now came the reckoning.

-

Pain.

It had no name for the sensation. Not in the tongue of mortals. Not in the canticles of the warp. Not even in the endless lexicons whispered by its brothers, the deep things that sang in the tides beyond reality.

But it felt it.

A lurch in the melody. A scream across the strings of its perception.

The mortal song—the symphony of breath and blood and blind, bright fury—had shifted. From chorus to crescendo.

The first beam struck its chest.

White-hot agony carved through it, sundering not flesh, but form. Essence wrenched into matter, held too tightly, too long—scorched by a light meant to pierce gods. Reality fractured along the edge of that melta lance, and for the second time in its stolen existence, the angel staggered.

Not a fall. Not yet.

But a stumble.

The song in its ears warped, became a clamor. Mortal minds screamed not in fear—but in fury. It turned, blade a blur, just in time for the second strike to lance into its side.

Burning.

Real.

Blue-white lightning in the shape of wrath. Plasma, they called it. It called it blasphemy given shape. The bolt struck center-mass, detonating against the barrier of its soulstuff. Wards faltered. Sigils hissed. Its halo flickered.

Then the sound.

Like thunder given teeth.

Heavy bolters.

Mass-reactive shells tore into the space it had ruled just moments before—shredding its veil, ripping the edges of its grandeur.

It felt… exposed.

Naked beneath a sky of flame.

It turned—not to flee, but to see.

Up above. In the gantry ways.

Nineteen figures, massive and black against the firelight, weapons belching the sun's own death.

Below and behind, the trap closed.

Plasma rifles barked. Bolters roared. The last of the mortals had been left behind, a trail of ash and bones.

And around it—seven giants in warplate, still alive, still fighting.

This was no panicked mob.

This was no prayer-born defense.

This was a hunt.

And it was the prey.

How… delightful.

The angel's expression did not shift. But something in the way it stood changed. The sway of its wings stilled. The sword at its side turned a fraction.

It had known violence on a level mortal minds could not fathom.

It had fought avatars of slaughter.

But it had never felt this.

It had never bled.

The thought was strange. Alien. Almost beautiful.

It brought the sword up—crimson edge flickering not with fire, but with the echo of ruptured dimensions.

The air behind it rippled, began to fold. A warning.

The angel halted it.

No escape.

Not yet.

It wanted this.

It welcomed it.

Let them come.

Let their fire blind the stars.

Let their fury burn its shell.

The song was reaching its climax.

And for the first time in all its boundless eternity—

The angel would sing with it.

-

The world lit up as he pulled the trigger again.

His melta's shriek drowned all thought, a sunbeam compressed into a breath. It struck true, boiling the air as it slammed into the angel's wing. Kade didn't cheer—he saw the stagger, the recoil. He saw another wound drawn.

And he fired again.

Across from him, the plasma cannon howled, a crackling sphere of unstable fury roaring toward the creature's center mass. The shot hit hard, detonation flaring like a newborn star. Chunks of plating exploded into molten shrapnel. It wasn't blood that scattered—it was substance, torn from the lie's form like slivers of an unfinished dream.

The heavy flamer joined a heartbeat later, drenching the path behind the angel in a torrent of prometheum, cutting off retreat as it boiled the monsters bones.

Above and around them, the other brothers poured their wrath down.

Heavy bolters barked. Shells slammed into the warped beast, one striking its shoulder, tearing a spray of gold and light. Bolters roared. Plasma rifles hissed and cracked. Every weapon in the ambush had opened up, a wall of death surging forward.

Kade advanced, step by step, each movement a vow.

The angel was still standing.

It shouldn't be.

Not after that.

Any mortal would've been a red mist, any heretic torn limb from limb. But the angel—

The angel was smiling.

Even as its wings flickered, even as it bled whatever passed for blood, even as half its hair burned away and fire climbed its side—it smiled.

Kade felt his gorge rise, something instinctual and wrong grinding beneath his skin. Every part of him screamed that this wasn't real. That this thing wasn't dying, it was learning.

Adapting.

No. No, not yet.

He gave the order. "Brothers. Advance."

The four melee warriors surged forward, weapons raised, voices silent.

The trap had sprung.

Now they would finish it—before the smile became a laugh.

-

The air was music.

Rising, screaming, a crescendo of fire and fury that drenched its senses in radiant agony. Oh, how it sang—every bolt round a percussion note, every plasma strike a wail of warped violins. The melta burned like a sustained chord of discordant purity.

It thrilled.

The heat, the sound, the momentum of the moment—all of it a glorious storm of sensation. It was no longer merely playing the part of divinity.

It was alive.

The fire chewed through its wing. The plasma carved through its abdomen and left trailing strands of soul-glass to shimmer in the air. Its skin, its anchor, cracked and sloughed away in places—but what lay beneath was not exposed.

It was becoming.

Above, from the gantries, nineteen warriors played their war-cant in long bursts of thunder. Bolters chattered with sacred rhythm. Plasma shrieked in bursts of blue agony. The heavy bolters spoke in authority. They were musicians of murder, their symphony carefully tuned.

He admired them.

Even as their rounds chipped at the illusion, even as the flamer raked his back and the scent of carbonized zealots filled the air—he felt no anger. Only fascination.

This... this was worship. Real and raw. Not the sycophantic kneeling of broken souls, but the honest, thunderous refusal to yield. The Astartes defied him not just because they hated him, but because they loved something else too much to let go.

He could taste their hate. Their love. Their grief. Their pride. Every note a declaration:

We are the hammer. We are the flame. We do not fall.

It was beautiful.

He turned—just slightly. The motion let his fractured wing flutter, loose feathers of photonic interference cascading down like shed illusions. Before him, four remained of the first wave, bloody but unbowed. One knelt beside a brother's corpse, covering him with a shield of flame. Another stood with a cracked blade in both hands, daring him. Two more pressed in from the flanks, slower now, pain radiating in waves of dull color and broken tempo.

Another pair, one wielding that terrible light of condensed matter, the other the purifying flame.

And behind them came him—the sergeant with the captured sun.

The one who watched like a wolf.

The one with another shard of silver in him.

Behind his visor, there was no awe. Only the beat of righteous wrath, steady as a forge-hammer.

Interesting.

The angel tilted its head slightly, as though listening to an instrument no one else could hear.

Then came the shift.

Time slowed—not in truth, but in perception, as the warp within coiled tighter, drawing in the threads of unreality around it. A shimmer rolled over its skin—like heat haze, breath caught in a mirror. The false light of its halo flared again.

A song too high for mortal ears surged through the air.

The angel moved.

It was there—and then closer.

In half a heartbeat it flowed toward the nearest of the four marines, blade trailing a wake of liquid crimson. The chainsword came up, singing defiance.

It cut through.

Armor. Bone. Resolve.

The Astartes didn't even have time to scream.

A flaring strike to the left—the hammer was batted aside, its wielder slammed bodily into a bulkhead hard enough to leave a crater. Another marine fired a plasma pistol point-blank into the angel's ribs. The burst struck home—

—but this time, the angel did not stagger.

It caught the marine by the neck.

Flesh hissed as the angel's hand burned—not from fire, but from resistance. From the soul within that fought back.

"You shine," it said aloud, voice like honey through broken glass.

Then it squeezed.

The helm cracked like porcelain.

Four remained now—plus the one with the melta, approaching behind. A slow, inexorable death march.

And above, the long-range fire kept falling. A hailstorm of thunder, scraping against the limits of matter and meaning.

He should flee.

He knew he should. The host-body would not last forever. It had given him sensation, movement, beauty—but already it frayed under strain. The song of the material was too sharp, too raw.

But he stayed.

Because beneath the fire, behind the smoke, within the pain—there was a note he had not heard in millennia.

The null.

It was not in the Astartes.

But it was close.

And that quiet, silvery dissonance from the Astartes disturbed him.

He spread his broken wings and let the gunfire strike again, eager to see what came next.

-

The thunder of bolter fire pulsed through the gantries above, a pounding rhythm of wrath and vengeance. Heat shimmered off the walls, plasma bursts screaming as they carved furrows in the deck. Yet still the angel stood, marred but unshaken, its wings trailing glimmers like shattered auroras.

Kade advanced, slow and steady, boots thudding against the scorched plating. The melta gun was heavy in his hands, the capacitors humming with righteous fury. To his left, the flamer bearer took position, the pilot light flickering blue. To his right, the plasma cannon whined with heat, its bearer leaning into the mounting charge.

Only four remained of the melee detachment. Their armor was cracked, scorched, smeared in the black ichor that hissed where it touched the deck. But they held.

They always held.

The angel's gaze shifted. It moved through the battle like a priest through smoke—unhurried, fluid, inevitable. A blade flashed, one more Astartes fell, and then—

It looked at him.

Kade froze mid-step.

Not from fear.

From recognition.

Something shifted in the thing's posture. The mockery of humanity it wore—the perfect symmetry, the golden locks, the radiance of sanctity—tilted its head. It studied him not like a man, but like a puzzle.

A whisper ran across Kade's HUD—an ambient static, almost imperceptible. Like distant song twisted through old vox-static. The angel was smiling now. Not cruel. Not angry. Just… curious.

Another voice filled the channel. Not from the vox. Not through his armor.

Inside.

A resonance in the skull. A pressure in the teeth.

"You carry a shard of her.
Not the whole.
A memory humming in alloy."


Kade grit his teeth. "Ira, shut it out."

IRA:
I am attempting to firewall. Signal is not digital. It is… semiotic. Symbolic.
Language made from
meaning.

The angel stepped forward again. Not fast. Not slow. Just… present.

A plasma bolt struck its shoulder and blew a chunk free—but it did not flinch.

Kade raised the melta.

The smile faltered.

He saw it now—the microtwist behind those perfect features. The first flicker of calculation. Of caution.

Kade didn't smile back.

He thumbed the trigger.

The multi-melta roared like a volcanic god, searing a beam of concentrated fusion into the angel's chest. The air ionized. The plating screamed. For a heartbeat, the thing's radiance fractured into a spectrum of falsehoods—skin boiling away, wings splitting into raw static, teeth bared not in beauty, but truth.

And still it did not fall.

Kade, his armor glowing from heat, his muscles screaming from recoil, took a step forward.

"Burn!" He roared, the cannon and flamer joining yet again in unified firepower.

-

It moved not through space, but through intent.

A blink, a breath, and it was behind him.

Not with sound nor flash. Only the sudden stillness of the air where it shouldn't be.

The scent of fire clung to the Astartes—scorched ceramite, holy oils, the copper sting of war. He had earned those scars. Worn them like a crown. Dared to raise his hand with a weapon forged in stars, and wield it against divinity.

For a moment, the angel let itself admire him. Not for what he was, but for what flickered inside—the sliver of silver echo riding the rails of his thoughts. Not alive. Not quite. But aware.

A whisper of something long lost.

No longer.

The blade sank through his back with the elegance of a sonnet. No grunt. No scream. Just the quiet gasp of a heart pierced in full stride.

Kade staggered, mouth parting, his weapon slipping free as strength unraveled.

The angel leaned close, its breath a warmth of perfumed sin against his ear. It whispered with a voice both velvet and venom:

"No more fractured ghosts riding borrowed bones. No more little silver shards gnawing like worms at the edge of the world.
One…"
A twist of the blade.
"…is indulgence."
Another pull, deeper.
"Two… is defiance."
And at last, it slid the blade free in a single, loving motion.
"And you, knight of ash and fury, were always meant to burn."

It let him fall.

No triumph. No mockery. Just the silence of a soul unstrung—his melody cut mid-note.

But the silver wasn't gone. Not yet.

Something stirred in the wires.

And the angel turned its gaze upward—toward the gantries, toward the storm still raging.

Toward the other one.

-

Pain didn't come first.

Confusion did.

His body moved—or tried to—but there was a delay, a terrible slowness, as though his limbs had fallen out of sync with his thoughts. A half-step forward became a stumble. His head dipped. His grip on the melta loosened.

Then came the cold.

A sudden, invasive absence blooming in his chest. Not fire. Not rupture. Hollow. As if something had scooped him out from the inside.

He looked down and saw the blade emerge through his cuirass—crimson slick across emerald green, his chestplate yawning open like a wound in the world. The molten edge of the sword hissed where it met ceramite, where it met him.

Then the pain arrived. A deluge.

Every nerve screamed in chorus. His primary heart failed. His secondary spasmed a beat later. Lungs buckled. Vision narrowed to a vignette of red.

He dropped to one knee, breath ragged.

He heard it, then.

That voice. Velvet and venom, gentle as a lover's breath, cruel as the void's indifference.

The blade twisted as it pulled free—he felt it drag along his spine like a caress from hell. The agony was lightning—searing along his spine, down to his fingertips. But the shame burned hotter.

He dropped to one knee, breath ragged.

Not yet.

Kade slammed the butt of the melta to the deck to keep from collapsing fully. His gauntlets clenched hard enough to crack the plating beneath him.

Above him, the angel whispered something. He couldn't hear it. Didn't want to. There was no room in him for words—only resolve.

A moment later, the pain subsided.

Not vanished, but he could focus again.

IRA:
Painkillers, coagulants and antiseptics injected.
User KADE MUST HALT COMBAT. User KADE DEATH IMMINENT.


Kade merely gave her the ghost of a smile, blood spilling from his split lung.

"Till my last breath."

IRA:
….Acknowledged. Combat stims activating in three-

Then a roar shattered his thoughts.

Not the angel's.

His brothers'.

The remaining four slammed into the creature from the sides and front—bellowing oaths and rage, their war cries echoes of Nocturne's volcanos. One drove a chainsword toward its wing joint, another wrapped it in a bear-hug grip, pinning one arm, while the last two struck low—hammer and blade clashing against radiant armor.

And from above and behind—

They fell like fire.

Nineteen giants in green, dropping from gantries in a storm of ceramite and fury, weapons empty but spirits ablaze. Bolters clattered to the floor, spent. Knives were drawn. Power blades flickered to life. Gauntlets struck like meteors.

They swarmed it.

Astartes, wounded, bloodied, but still alive—still fighting.

They buried the angel in a tide of wrath.

Kade forced himself upright, dragging one leg behind him, eyes swimming. Through the clash and sparks and war-song, he saw flashes—his brothers shouting, grabbing wings, prying at limbs, driving blades into joints. A knee shattered. One wing crumpled. The radiant sword flickered, dimmed.

And then—

Then it screamed.

Not from the throat. From the world around it.

Reality buckled.

A crack in the air—like glass breaking inside his skull. The angel vanished beneath the press of warriors for a heartbeat longer—

—and exploded outward in a detonation of pressure and impossibility.

They were flung in every direction—bodies slamming into walls, crashing through crates, tumbling across deck plating. Emerald armor cracked, blood sprayed, oaths were cut short mid-curse.

Kade hit the wall hard enough to dent it.

He slid down, breathing smoke and iron.

The angel rose from the crater left behind, gleaming again—but changed. Rooted deeper into the world now. Its light was heavier, crueler. Its form no longer danced like silk in a breeze.

It weighed.

It bled.

And it was angry.

But so were they.

Kade pushed himself up on trembling arms. His mouth was full of blood.

He swallowed it, pushing out words that held a defiance that was held up by spite alone.

"Round two, you bastard."

-

The storm of battle clung to its skin like silk spun from blood and lightning.

It was alive.

Every sensation crackled across its stolen nerves—pain, pleasure, momentum, violence, joy. The sweet crunch of ceramite underfoot. The song of bone splintering on its blade. The ragged breaths of giants who dared to call themselves warriors, all unraveling like parchment in flame.

It laughed.

Not aloud. The sound lived behind its teeth, in the marrow of the ship, in the flickering lumen lights that dimmed as it passed.

This was bliss.

To be here. To feel. To no longer sing of slaughter in dreams, but to make it real. These Astartes—their fury was sublime. Their hate, a symphony. Their death throes, divine.

It would savor the last of them.

It stepped forward, broken wings trailing tattered light, lifting its blade for another killing stroke.

It stopped.

Its foot hovered above the deck for a heartbeat.

Something stirred.

A ripple at the edges of the melody.

Not the Null-man. Not the silver whisper in its shadow. That absence was elsewhere, out of reach, cloaked in silence.

No—this was something else.

Silver threads. Sharp. Mechanical. In motion.

The drones.

It remembered them. Beasts of war, fast and clever. Dangerous in swarms, but not worth fear.

Still, it noted them. Adjusted.

Prepared to burn them from the ship.

Another note.

A chord so pure it stabbed through the discord like a hymn sung in a graveyard.

Not a sound, not a sight, but a presence. Like the sudden toll of an ancient bell through cathedral silence.

It paused mid-slaughter, blade slick with ichor not its own, and turned.

The soul that stepped through the southern door was not the brightest.

Not the strongest.

But it was clear.

So terribly, blindingly clear.

No fractures of doubt. No discordant threads of fear or hate. This one rang like obsidian glass—dark, resonant, unbreakable. A single note forged in the heat of faith and hammered by grief into conviction.

The Chaplain.

The demon had seen such before—long ago, before it wore wings and bled sunlight.

But this one… this one bore a flawless soul.

He had failed before. The scars were clear. But he had made peace with them.

Owned them. Woven them into himself like golden sutures.

Not luminous like the bride's, not broken like the others. This was something different. Not beautiful.

Useful.

Not to the Warp, but to the pattern. The old one. The original one.

Before the corruption. Before the Great Game.

Before time was pinned in place.

Before even names.

For a breathless moment, the angel almost staggered—its footing lost not to battle, but to revelation. The Chaplain's arrival restructured the harmony. The drones—those threads of the machine minds—it had dismissed earlier now slithered with new intent, their movements no longer exploratory.

They hunted.

And they hunted with purpose, flanking the Chaplain like living scripture.

"No more questions," it whispered, though no one could hear. "No more study. You came to end me."

For the first time since it breached the veil, since it wore this exquisite mask of feathers and gold—

The angel did not smile.

It braced.

-

Kade's breath hitched. Pain sang in every nerve, every muscle trembling from shock and blood loss. His primary heart, rebuilt by Apothecary's art and Emperor's will, still fought-and failed-to beat, defiant despite the ruin of his chest, his secondary working madly to fill the gap left.

He forced himself upright.

His muscles obeyed not because they were unbroken, but because his will had tricked them into it. There was no blood in his legs. No air in his lungs. But still, he moved.

Around him, the others stirred.

One brother with a shattered arm braced himself against a broken crane, lifting his combat blade in trembling fingers. Another with no helm and half his face scorched raw still roared a war cry, voice bubbling through blood. Others did not rise—but their armor did. Auto-stimulants and rage hauled ruined bodies into motion. Whether by life or by vengeance, they stood.

Some… would not stand again.

Kade counted twenty-two still upright. Of those, less than half could truly fight.

It didn't matter.

They would die standing. They would be remembered in flame and scripture.

The angel, halo flickering and bloodied now, watched them with something halfway between awe and disdain. It turned—sensing the shift.

Boots struck deck.

The air changed.

A voice, low and thunderous, echoed through the killzone, as if the ship itself dared not interrupt.

"Demon."

Chaplain Arvak strode into the chamber, his crozius already lit in white fire, a censer of burning incense hissing from his belt like a war-bell. His armor bore no adornment of vanity—only purity seals, wax-melted prayers, and the volcanic-black of Nocturne's wrath. His eyes glowed behind his skull-helm's lenses, twin sparks of righteous fury.

Behind him came four hulking automata that moved with predatory grace. Not like servitors. Not like toys.

Wolves unleashed.

The air shimmered again, and with a whisper of steel on steel, five tiny, centipede-like drones slithered free from the shadows. They clung to beams, dropped from rafters, and skimmed low over the deck like silver phantoms.

The angel noticed.

Its wings twitched.

Kade felt IRA's whisper in his ear, cool and firm.

IRA:
Target Locked.
Priority: Termination.


Arvak didn't speak again. He didn't need to.

He lifted the Crozius, glowing like a dying star.

The angel smiled, all teeth and sunlight.

The final act had begun.
 
Chapter Thirty Two New
Chapter Thirty Two

-

Arvak stepped forward.

His Crozius blazed like a newborn sun, its light cutting through smoke and ash, casting long shadows across the ruined cargo dock. His voice rang out—loud, absolute.

"Steel to hand! Flame to heart! We are the line!"

The words hit Kade like thunder through water. For one breathless instant, the ragged throbs of his torn heart quieted. His shattered ribs ached less. He drew a full breath into failing lungs.

"Let the stars fall! Let the void scream! We are the line!"

It did not heal.

It did not save.

But it gave strength.

The final surge.

The last breath made holy.

"Burn! Bleed! Break! Brothers—RISE!"

And rise they did.

Across the shattered dock, wounded Astartes surged to their feet. Arms ruined. Eyes blind. Armor cracked and gouting sparks. But they moved. They charged. Not in defiance of death—for their brothers.

Their voices, one and all, be a half-whispered chant from ruined lungs, or the full-throated roar of one still able to fight, joined with Arvak in unison.

"WE ARE THE FIRE THAT DOES NOT FADE!"

And the Angel?

It howled.

Arms raised, wings curling in around itself like a shroud, it staggered back. Black smoke poured from its flesh, boiling where the Crozius' light touched. Its radiant form buckled under the weight of a truer radiance. The kind born not of demonic mimicry—but of belief. Of faith.

Arvak marched forward, unflinching. His light burned hotter, brighter, like a star pulled down to walk among corpses and chaos.

All around him, the warriors of Nocturne rose. Not because they believed they could win.

Because they knew they must try.

They charged with whatever they could grip—cracked bolters, half-shattered blades, scavenged pipes. One brother wrapped his fists in blood-soaked cabling. Another gripped a length of steel rebar like a relic.

They fell upon the angel in a storm of fury and flame.

The monster met them. Not like a warrior—but like a hurricane answering a challenge. Its crimson blade punched through one Astartes, carved down through torso to split another. Warp energy rippled outward, blasting bodies back—not as violently as before, but enough to clear a space, to buy it breath.

And yet it bled.

What ichor passed for blood steamed in the holy light, sizzling away in oily trails. Its skin blistered and cracked, flaking in patches scorched raw by Arvak's advance.

But it was learning.

It folded space, vanished from sight, a blur of shadow and displacement. Arvak turned, hammer already swinging—only to strike nothing.

The angel had outplayed him.

It reappeared before him instead, blade shrieking through the air toward the Chaplain's exposed neck, curved with hunger, edged with hatred.

But it never landed.

Two of the four Sentinel drones fired mid-strike, lightning bolts cracking like thunder against the monster's ribs. Molten holes opened in its side as it staggered, armor softening under the impact.

Then the Vipers fired.

Five pairs of whisper-lance beams punched into it with surgical finality.

Heart. Brain. Spine. Lungs. Groin.

A moment of silence passed across the command feed. The first four Vipers swiveled in unison to regard the fifth.

A pause.

'That's for the bridal kidnapping attempt, creep,' Sasha muttered down the link.

Yet nothing compared to Arvak's hammerblow.

Following through with his turn, the Crozius came around like judgment, smashing into the angel's side with the force of a thunderhead. The impact cracked through flesh and falsehood alike. Not just burning—splitting.

The creature screamed.

Cracks of white-hot rupture raced through its form—not along armor, but deeper, into essence. Not injury. Fracture. Warp-stuff writhed from the contact, recoiling like wounded metal under a blacksmith's hammer.

It stumbled, eyes wide, mouth open in confusion and pain.

Unlike every prior wound—these did not heal.

Panicked, it lunged backward, wings flaring for lift—

—only to scream again as a power axe bit into its back.

The blade sunk deep, power-field tearing through muscle and bone. It spun with a snarl, lashing a wing toward Arvak while slashing its sword at the attacker—

—but Arvak was already moving. He stepped aside, Crozius swinging upward with terrible grace, striking the wing's base—

CRACK.

The wingbone snapped.

One of the Sentinels dropped.

A precision-guided titan of violence, it landed on the sword arm with a crash of shattered decking. The angel's blade slammed into the floor, sparks flying as it tried to twist free.

Too late.

The Astartes with the axe wrenched his weapon sideways, carving it deep into the angel's shoulder.

The creature spasmed.

Fractures skittered across its form in jagged white arcs, dancing up the broken wing, splitting through its collar. The limb flopped, useless.

It was breaking.

Not just hurt—undone.

The angel reeled.

Its once-impossible grace staggered, the falseness of its beauty fraying with every crack that lanced through its radiant form. Wings torn, shoulder shattered, it tried to blink through stuttering folds of space—desperate to escape.

But Arvak did not relent.

His Crozius swung in a wide arc, dragging searing light across the deck as he advanced without hesitation. His helm had been torn free earlier in the battle, revealing a face carved from fire and stone—eyes alight with something older than fury.

Faith.

Pure and terrible in all its glory.

Arvak's voice rose.

"Creature of lies—behold the truth!"


The words fell like thunder.

The angel flinched. Black ichor steamed from its ribs.

"You wear stolen wings and false light!"

A blister split open across its chest. Warp-light flickered within, then dimmed.

"But my faith is a crucible, and you shall not pass it unburned!"


Its knees buckled.

The chant was not a just a prayer to the angel. Each syllable a scalpel. Each word a curse carved in belief. The angel had devoured so much faith, had become so steeped in it, that now—

—faith could harm it.

And Arvak was nothing if not faith.

His brothers saw it.

They felt it.

Without a word, they moved.

Wounded giants threw themselves between the angel and Arvak. One blocked a blade meant for the Chaplain, catching it through his gut. Another tackled a warp-wreathed wing before it could scythe across Arvak's path.

A third raised a broken shield and took the full brunt of a psychic scream—his armor crumpled, helm shattering, but he did not fall.

They would not let him fall.

They fought as one—not to kill, but to protect the one who could. A wall of emerald and obsidian armor, of flame and devotion, of blood and broken bones. Salamanders, forged in suffering, now forging victory in their deaths.

Arvak's chant grew louder.

"By the flame of the Mountain, I cast out the shadows!"

The angel screamed as Arvak's hammer took its left knee, the limb snapping clean under the strike.

Its voice lost all music. It became static and shrieking glass, its form buckling under the psychic resonance of belief turned blade.

It lashed out blindly—its sword a red comet in the smoke. It impaled one of the Sentinels, split another Astartes in half. It blasted out with shockwaves that hurled men across the deck, but Arvak did not stop.

He could not.

"By the will of the Forge, I burn the heretic to ash!"

The angel tried to swing its arm, to hurl them back with warp born sorcery, but a brother grabbed the arm, wrenching everything within himself to stop its attack.

Arvak's hammer crashed into the angels shoulder, more cracks filling the angels body as its very essence came apart.

Raising his hammer over his head, his grip tightened, the fire blazed higher, hotter, stronger than ever before, the wrath of a god made manifest through the devotion of his faithful.

"By the anvil of the Father, I break the unclean!"

The hammer fell, striking the angel's skull, the hand of judgment itself.

The impact was silence.

Not the absence of sound—but the vacuum left behind when something sacred is shattered.

Light exploded from the angel's skull, cracks webbing across its aspect of stolen divinity. Its halo flickered—then shattered like glass, the shards burning to ash before they struck the ground.

It crumpled, slumping as its strength bled away. Feathers blackened and curled inward. Golden armor disintegrated into motes of ash-light. Its skull—half-crushed—finally collapsed inward.

Its beauty gone.

Its radiance dimmed.

Its lie at last, broken.

A sharp snap cracked the air as the angel's body discorporated, vanishing in a spiral of light and ash—drawn back to whatever hell had birthed it.

Almost to a man, the Astartes collapsed, sagging to their knees or falling where they stood—bleeding from wounds both mortal and not. Those who could still move turned, eyes instinctively seeking Arvak.

The Chaplain did not falter.

"Anyone who can still stand—grab the wounded. Get them to the medica. Save who we can."

He raised his hammer toward the shattered bulkhead where the angel's worshippers still lingered beyond.

"Secure the flank," he barked to the two remaining Sentinels. "I will not have our brothers ambushed while they bleed."

The canine drones gave curt nods before loping off in unison, long-legged shadows slipping into the smoke as they took positions at the northern barricade.

Only nine Astartes remained standing.

Each hauled a wounded brother by the plate over their shoulders, steps thundering as they made all speed towards the chirurgeons.

Kade lay near the outermost edge of the blast zone—flung by the angel's final surge. His eyes fluttered, breath shallow. His vitals dropped steadily, indicators flashing red across his HUD. The world around him blurred.

IRA:
User KADE. Medical aid is en route. This unit will ensure you remain conscious.

A ragged cough tore through him. Blood spilled down the front of his chestplate.

"Oh?" he rasped, voice cracked. "And how—"
Another cough. A bubble burst in his throat.
"—how will you do that?"

IRA:
Redirection of electrical output into carapace.

"You're going to shock me if I pass out?"

IRA:
Correct. Medical assistance is thirty seconds out. This unit will ensure user KADE's survival.
That is this unit's primary directive.
This unit will not fail.


Then he saw it—a tiny, gunmetal blur skittering across the deck. No larger than a man's palm, a Viper drone clambered toward him, its segmented body glinting in the firelight, its dozen legs tapping over fractured ceramite.

One limb waggled at him in greeting.

A private vox pinged open.

"Hey Kade," came Sasha's voice—smooth as ever, honeyed with just a pinch of concern. "Been a while. You look like hell."

The drone reached his chestplate and extended a small manipulator from beneath its belly, depositing a tiny grey pellet into the rent above his primary heart.

Then—cold.

A chill blossomed in his chest like the sting of winter air across exposed nerve. It crawled along his torso in pinpricks, fireflies beneath the skin.

He tried to speak.

"Wh—"

He made it halfway before another cough splattered the inside of his helm with fresh blood.

"Nanite repair cluster," Sasha said, her tone light but edged with urgency. "Normally for fixing drones in the field, but they work just fine on tissue too. They'll patch your heart—but it's just a patch."

The little drone tapped gently against his visor with one limb.

"It won't hold if you hit combat stress. You'll need proper surgery. But this'll keep you from bleeding out in the dirt."

The optic blinked once—soft blue light—then Sasha's tone brightened. "Now, if you'll excuse me... I've got more of your brothers to stitch back together. Don't go anywhere, alright?"

The drone zipped off into the haze.

Kade exhaled, blood bubbling in his throat. His head finally tilted back against the decking, eyes drifting upward to the blackened, smoke-choked ceiling of the freight dock.

"…Ira?"

IRA:
Yes?

"I am… conflicted."

IRA:
Understandable.
Rest. The enemy is slain. You are victorious.
Recover.
This unit will keep watch.


Kade's lips moved beneath the blood-crusted grille of his helm. The words came soft.

"…Thank you."

-

The Crozius had struck too deep.

The light in its body flickered—not from fading power, but from something deeper. A fracture in its essence. Its song had skipped a beat, and now the harmony would not return.

This body is failing.

The angel's eyes flared white as the ritual buried within its stolen form activated. A warp-fold collapsed inward, tethered to the anchor it had marked in the reactor core.

Return to the heart. Reclaim control. Consume the will of the machine.

It vanished.

But something was wrong.

The jump twisted sideways—a gust of wind catching wings mid-flight. It spun. Reversed. Pulled not toward the machine's soul—

—but toward a boy made of sermons.

It reappeared, not before steel or plasma coils, but before the Brandt twins.

They stood at the junction outside the bridge—charred walls, flickering lights, and too many mortals. This was wrong.

No power here. No controls. No victory. Just… them.

Two mortals. Familiar. Fragile.

Unprotected.

Unworthy.

Its eyes locked on them—Tara and Kala. Their bloodline carried something potent. Something the angel had wanted once, long ago, before the distraction of the forge, before Arvak's hammer and his god-ridden words.

Too close.

Too exposed.

Too wrong.

"NO!"

The angel's voice shredded the air, static and fury bound in a single scream. Its blade snapped upward, already arcing down in a gleam of crimson light and howling disbelief. It would cut this moment out of the story.

It would erase the error.

Kala moved first.

Too slow.

She lunged for her sister, arms wide, ready to shield her with her body. Feet leaden, heart raw. She would've taken the blow—if she had been more. Stronger. Faster.

But she was mortal.

Even broken, even burned, the angel moved faster than thought.

The blade came down—a divine execution.

And faltered.

Not by choice.

By interference.

The strike bent sideways mid-swing, not enough to miss, but enough to ruin it. Instead of Tara's chest, the blade raked across her abdomen. A mortal wound, yes. But not the ending he intended.

"No," the angel hissed, recoil twisting through its frame like a glitch. "No!"

It hadn't hesitated.

But the world had.

Time had curved. Intent had bent. The path of its blade had been redirected—subtly, but with purpose.

The demon reeled back, soul-sense flaring like a snared nerve. There—faint, but real. A flicker in the air. A golden resistance that rippled out from the girls—no, behind them. Buried like a root beneath the ground.

A soul.

Aleron's.

Twisting. Shifting. Something within it pushed outward, like a blade hidden in cloth.

A will not its own.

The soul the angel had once touched, once molded, once claimed—now resisted.

And more than resisted.

It fought back.

"You dare?" the angel spat aloud, gaze seething toward the hallway beyond the girls. "I made you—you belong to me!"

It could feel the pressure in the air within that soul. A whispered defiance not of rage, but of sorrow. Not challenge. But remembrance.

The angel didn't understand it.

It only knew it had been blocked.

By a soul it thought it owned.

By a pawn that had turned, wielding a strength not his own.

The angel's blade lifted once more—high, final—meant to end both lives in one severing arc.

A howl in the weave.

A rip in the world.

It staggered, senses flaring, head whipping around.

Behind it: a rift.

A yawning portal, emerald and azure, blazing like a wound in time. The taste of it was sharp and clumsy—psionic power forced through meat-sense and mortal focus. A child's sketch beside its own symphonies of thought, but real nonetheless. A crude insult in its domain.

The bridge door slammed open.

And Xal'Zyr stepped through.

Warp-light bled from his eyes—pure, merciless. No chant. No command. No words at all.

Only fire.

Then: impact.

Orvek, battered and bloodied, hurled himself at the angel with a ragged war-cry, slamming into it shoulder-first. The force rocked the demon a half-step—but it didn't yield.

Not until Xal followed.

He struck low, driving forward with the strength of will forged over centuries, focused into motion. They hit together—a hammer and its echo.

But still—the angel held.

The angel's broken frame braced against the roof support beam, fingers gouging into steel. One knee shattered. One wing dragging. But its good leg was enough. It held.

And it began to repair.

Flesh knitted. Bone mended. Its arm, ruined from the fight with Arvak, surged with power—trembling toward readiness. It would not fall. It would rise. And it would—

"NO."

Mortal hands joined the fray.

Tara and Kala, pressing forward alongside armsmen, shoving bodies into the fight. Pushing. Screaming. Bleeding. Praying. It was not power—it was weight. Desperation. Mass. They could not kill—but they could move.

Then—

A flicker.

Far end of the corridor. Two more shapes in the smoke:

Two Astartes, one short, handsome, his bolt pistol raised.

The other propped up on one arm, blood weeping from the terrible wounds that covered his body, but the blue glow of the plasma pistol in his hand shone out clear.

Bolt and plasma struck its hand, searing through divine flesh and molten bone. The grip melted, fingers unraveling into liquid gold as the angel staggered—then tumbled backward into the portal alongside the Astartes.

It hit the steel deck with a thunderclap of wings and wrath, crashing down in a scatter of scorched feathers and trailing motes of gold. The light bent around it as it rolled upright, armored boots gouging sparks from the floor.

Too late.

Xal'Zyr was already moving.

His arm swept upward, clawed fingers curled around a molten core of warpfire cradled before his chest. Midnight-blue robes whipped in a conjured wind, the air around him frosting over, shards of glittering ice spreading across the deck like creeping glass.

The flame in his hand shifted—orange to red, red to cobalt, cobalt to-

White-hot brilliance. Dense. Radiating gravity. The air bent inward as it pulsed.

Warpfire condensed—compressed into a singularity of purpose. No longer fire. No longer flame.

Plasma.

Reality screamed as he unleashed it.

The lance struck the angel center-mass—no explosion, no concussive thunder. Just carving.

Through radiant armor. Through divine muscle. Through the sculpted falsehood that veiled its monstrous soul. The beam sheared a line of white agony through its torso, straight into the keystone—the golden oval embedded where a heart should have been.

The angel recoiled.

It tried to scream.

No sound came.

Only cracks.

Hairline fractures spiderwebbed out from the point of impact, racing through its ribs, its spine, its soul. Gleaming fault lines pulsed with silent light, too precise to be pain. Too cold to be fury.

The training hall trembled.

The aura that haloed its form flickered—not with waning strength, but with broken illusion.

And as the glow faltered…

…the truth beneath began to show.

-

It staggered.

The hole in its chest did not bleed blood—it bled truth.

Not the kind mortals wept in whispered prayers, but the raw, uncut isness of its being, spilling across the deck like sunlight torn from the core of a dying star.

That psyker's fire.

That child, playing with flame and fate.

He had touched the keystone.

Not shattered it—but marred it.

And that was enough.

Enough to end it, if it stayed.

No more games. No more ceremonies.

It turned, one ruined wing dragging behind like a broken banner, warpflesh cracking wetly at the joints. The air trembled around it, shimmered where its glory failed to hold.

Aleron's soul—

Silent now. Its strength spent. Its defiance fled.

The leash was broken. No more distractions.

It raised a trembling claw. Fingers curled inward—not into a fist, but into the fabric of reality itself, like a child clawing for comfort beneath the sheets. It tore the veil. Space bent, cracked, and peeled apart like rotted bark, revealing the flickering, sun-bright coils of the reactor core beyond.

Its sanctum. It's altar.

The ceremony… It had meant for it to be perfect.
For the blood to fall like rain.
For the Brandts to kneel.
For the angel to rise.

But now?

Now it was dying.

Arvak's faith had seared away its glamour.

The psyker's precision had pierced its essence.

The Astartes—those stubborn, fire-forged wretches—had refused to die.

It dragged itself through the portal like a wounded beast slinking back to its lair.

It reached for the reactor coils—not with reverence, not with ceremony.

It devoured them.

Like a drowning king gasping flame, it ripped the plasma from the ship's heart. It drank the power down raw, warp-light surging through its form in screaming pulses—coursing into the shattered keystone, flooding every broken nerve, every fraying halo-spoke.

Bare, elemental energy.

The sludge of the materium.

Dirt, after feasting on divine adoration.

But it would suffice.

It would sustain.

But it could not remain.

Its worshippers—dead or dying.

The Astartes—wounded, yes, but not broken.

That psyker—far more potent than expected, a quiet soul hiding a storm of might.

The silver shards—those mechanical attack dogs still prowling the ship.

And the empty man.

The hole in the wheel.

No.

Too many unknowns. Too many threats still drawing breath.

Escape.

But where?

It cast its mind into the aether, searching—not for glory, not now—but for survival. A sliver of sanctuary.

Not home. Its kindred of the deep would tear it apart.

Not the shallows. The Four held the Near Shore too tightly. Land there, and it would kneel—or be consumed.

That left the materium.

It sought worship.

And it found it.

Across the Tear.

A world suffused in devotion, a planet singing its stolen name in praise, in icon, in fire.

It could reach it.

Barely.

But it would cost nearly everything.

Hesitation warred with desperation in what passed for its heart.

They were coming.

It could feel them. The blades. The guns. The light. The faith.

They would not stop.

Not now.

Not ever.

It made its choice.

Space folded. Warp bent. And the angel hurled itself into the void.

A name echoed at the edge of memory—not truly remembered, not truly felt, for it had no heart to feel it.

Baal.

-

Pressure returned first.

Not in the lungs—not yet—but in the ears, behind the eyes, beneath the skin. A low, pulsing throb, as if his body remembered gravity before breath. Something ancient stirred beneath his sternum, a fluttering static.

Air.

His chest seized. No slow intake, no gentle gasp—a forced expansion, ribs cracking open like a vacuum seal breaking. His first breath sounded more like a gasp from drowning than a sigh of life. Air scraped through his throat, dry as dust, leaving heat and pain in its wake.

"Initiating cardiac cascade," Sasha whispered somewhere inside, her voice syrupy calm over roaring blood. "Don't move. You're still rebooting your meat."

His heart kicked with a violent THUD, like someone had dropkicked a war drum into his spine.
It staggered, stuttering, then caught rhythm like an engine syncing after liftoff.

His back arched.

Every nerve flickered on.

Pain. So much pain. Not injury—activation.

Tendons lit up like mag-stripped cables. Muscle clusters flooded with electro-stim and oxygen-saturated nanofluid. Bone marrow stirred, dumping fresh red into tired veins.

His fingers spasmed. Legs twitched. Jaw clenched hard enough to crack molars.

"You were out for thirty-three minutes, tweleve seconds," Sasha continued. "Oxygen saturation holding at sixty-two percent and climbing. Don't panic."

He wasn't. Not really. But something in him wanted to scream. Not in fear—in defiance. As if his body were offended it had been put on pause.

Vision flickered next. Not black-to-color, but something stranger—data overlays, targeting reticles, gravitational tilt indicators—slamming back into consciousness one by one. He blinked, once, and the world pixelated back into form.

Metal overhead. Burned metal. Elissa's silhouette.

His skin burned and froze simultaneously. His body temperature had dropped below safe levels to survive vacuum—now it fought to restore equilibrium, and it hurt.

"C'mon, darlin'. You're almost there. Just one more system," Sasha murmured.

Then it hit: the cognitive core.

His mind came online like a power relay engaging—a sudden, perfect clarity—his thoughts unfurling from a compressed state like wings from a sarcophagus.

'Elissa is here. Vacuum event concluded. No hull rupture. Approximate elapsed time—confirmation pending.'

"Koron?" Her voice. Close. Real. Warm.

He groaned. Just a sound, no words yet. His jaw barely moved. Muscles still remembered the chill of not existing.

Elissa was crouched over him, visor open, her hands trembling as they hovered just above his chest—unsure whether to press down or pull back.

"I shouldn't have let you do it," she said, voice barely above a whisper. "We could've waited. I could've—"

He coughed.

It sounded like a rusted engine trying to scream.

"...Not your fault," he rasped. "Ran the numbers."

Her eyes narrowed. "You're a man, not a spreadsheet."

"Speak for yourself," Sasha chimed in, tone dry. "He's got seventeen spreadsheet backups running neural risk models right now."

He tried to smile. It didn't quite work. His lips twitched. Blood ran from one nostril. That felt about right.

She exhaled and wiped it with her sleeve. "Can you move?"

He nodded. Once. A slow, grinding motion.

Then he vomited—a thick, black stream of inert metabolic fluid and emergency cryo-toxin purge. It steamed on the metal deck. The smell was acrid, sharp.

"Oh. That's new." Elissa muttered, edging away from the puddle.

"Expected," Sasha said lightly. "He's purging cryo-inhibitor gel. Perfectly safe. Just don't touch it. Or breathe it. Or... look at it too long."

Koron wiped his mouth with the back of one metal arm. His arms worked. That was something.

His voice came next. Rough, but his own.

"…How bad?"

Elissa didn't answer right away. Her eyes scanned him, tracking the tiny tremors in his limbs, the flicker of returning muscle control, the low hum of his systems reactivating.

"You looked like a corpse," she said.

He grunted. "Felt worse."

Then softer: "You carried me."

She shrugged. "You've carried us enough."

Another pause.

Then, from her: "Don't do that again."

He closed his eyes for a moment, trying to push a smile onto still blue lips.

"Not planning on it."

A knock rang out from the interior airlock hatch. Elissa spun, one arm raised in reflex—only to frown as no lightning flickered, no arcs snapped to life along her forearm. "Hey… how do I turn on the lightning gun?"

Koron, still facedown on the deck, tried to lift a hand. It twitched. Barely. "That's me, I'm afraid, not the suit. Also—it's not a gun."

"It's also just me," Lucia's voice chimed in over the comms, syrupy and chipper as the hatch slid open. The teardrop form of a Prometheus drone shimmered into view, decloaking with a soft crackle of displacement fields.

"So, some good news and bad news. Good news—"

"Not even gonna ask us which we want first?" Koron muttered.

"Oh hush, sugar," Sasha cooed. "Let the girl speak."

"Good news is the mutiny seems to be over. The cultists have all collapsed—unconscious, for the moment. Armsmen are sweeping through, rounding them up. To the brig, not the airlocks… for now."

"Shit," Elissa muttered, crouching beside Koron. She looped his arm over her shoulders and grunted as she hoisted him upright.

"Lucia, get word to Jacob. He needs to get down to the reactor core now. Milo and the others—if the armsmen find them first—"

"Already on it," Elly said brightly through the link. "Jacob's crew is twenty minutes ahead of the closest Hammer security sweep. Milo and the boys should be just fine."

Elissa exhaled hard. Relief flushed her face, faint but real. She glanced sidelong at Koron.

"I don't suppose anyone thought to find a spare set of clothing for him?"

"No," Sasha replied, smug as sin. "But we did recover your old gear. Even got the dress~"

"You can set that on fire," Elissa deadpanned. "Not my style."

"And the bad news?" Koron asked, grunting as he coaxed his legs into remembering they existed.

Lucia's voice didn't shift tone—but something cold edged into her cadence.

"A lot of wounded. Most of the Astartes are down. They left Morrak with eighty-six. This battle cost them sixty-four."

Elissa stopped walking. The number seemed to hang in the air like smoke.

"Emperor's blood," she breathed. "Twenty-two... Is that battle-ready, or just survivors?"

"Survivors," Lucia said. "Only nine of them are still combat-effective. The rest are too damaged to fight. Some won't wake up."

"The companies done," Sasha added, quieter now. "They might not say it. Might not know it yet. But this... this broke them."

Elissa felt her mouth go dry. "What's going to happen to them?"

"I don't know, darlin'." Sasha's voice was softer than it should've been. "Too many eyes are gonna be watching now. Questions asked. Reports filed. Heroes questioned like criminals. Best we can do is stay small, stay quiet, and pray the right people stay blind."

"Speaking of," Koron murmured, glancing up at the drone overhead, "Wrap up your projects. Activate the Purloined Letter contingency."

"Acknowledged," Lucia replied. "Final drone batch will complete within the hour. Replacement servitors now online. Nearest Imperial vessels are forty-five hours and fifty-one minutes away, realspace vector confirmed. Contingency will be passable in one hour. Complete in five."

"Okay," Elissa said cautiously as she helped Koron forward, "the what now?"

He tried for a smile. The effort hurt.

"Old Terran story. A thief steals a political document—something powerful. The guards rip his house apart looking for it. But he'd hidden it in plain sight, in a different envelope on the desk. No trick. Just boldness."

"So you're going to..."

"Reboot the ship. Let the servitors pretend the Mechanicus crew survived. Hide every system I touched behind normalcy and forged logs. Drones mimic the living. It'll look like the Indomitable weathered the storm."

"And that'll work?"

"It's a bluff. But it's the best one I've got."

"Hey!" Lucia squawked. "I take offense to being called a bluff."

"You're excluded, naturally."

They shared a thin smile—but it didn't linger.

There was a pressure in the air now. Not heat. Not vibration. Just... weight. The kind that settled on the shoulders before judgment fell. The aftermath was still settling, like dust after a detonation—but they could all feel it. Something bigger had taken notice.

Elissa glanced back down the corridor—where the wounded were being gathered, where the ashes of a battle still glowed.

"They're coming, aren't they?"

Sasha didn't answer right away. When she did, her voice was low.

"Not just the Inquisition. Not just Mars. All of them."

Lucia's optical feed pulsed red. "Forty-five hours," she repeated. "And falling."

"Which means," Koron murmured, eyes narrowing, "we have forty-four hours to disappear."

-

Kade woke slowly, blinking into the low, sterile light of the recovery ward. Voices called orders around him—sharp, exhausted, urgent. The squeal of wheels, the clank of gurneys, the dull hum of servitors replying in binaric monotone filled the air alongside the thick scent of copper, antiseptic, and scorched ceramite.

He tried to sit up. A mistake.

Pain rolled across his chest like a thunderhead. His breath hitched, rib-plate aflame. He grunted and sank back into the cot, jaw clenched.

Discretion, he thought grimly, the better part of valor.

He turned his head slowly, eyes scanning the overburdened medicae bay. Triage beds packed wall to wall. Astartes and mortal alike laid out on stretchers, some silent, others groaning softly or whispering litanies.

He caught sight of Doc—bloodied, limping, but alive—barking orders at a knot of Guardsman medics and Sisters Hospitaller. She moved like a woman held together by threadbare will, her voice steady even as her left arm trembled.

Chief Apothecary Sevar Tann stood over a surgical slab, wrist-deep in Captain Tavos' chest cavity. The Captain's fused ribplate had been cracked apart, his secondary heart exposed. A tech-priest beside Tann had opened his own arms like a toolbox, servo-limbs weaving in to assist with calculated precision.

Kade watched for several long minutes, head pillowed on one arm. At last, Tann nodded. Bone fragments were removed. The Captain's chest was sealed again, ports reattached. A rebreather was fitted, intravenous lines snaking into his body to drip vital chems and stabilizers.

A soft click beside him made Kade glance to the left. His helmet rested on a nearby tray, scorched and blackened but intact. He reached out, fingers curling around its edge with a grunt of effort, dragging it closer. He set it gently beside his head.

"You there?" he muttered, voice hoarse.

Ira's voice came back at once. Flat. Crisp. Devoid of affect.

"Affirmative. Status update?"

"Please."

"Mutiny contained. Cultists have been rounded up and detained. The angel did not vanish after engagement in the freight lift. It reappeared at the bridge and wounded VIP Tara. She has been stabilized by user Koron. Allies Xal'Zyr and Orvek engaged the entity but were unable to confirm destruction. Current probability: entity has vacated the vessel, based on cultist collapse and loss of warp signature."

Kade closed his eyes, chewing on the information. The silence stretched a moment longer.

"Continue."

"Casualties among mortal crew: estimates still climbing. Current confirmed total: Two thousand one hundred forty-three. Astartes casualties—"

She paused.

Kade swore her voice—normally a monotone—dipped, softened by half a degree.

"Sixty-four brothers have fallen."

The words hit harder than any blade. He tried to breathe slowly, tried to summon the meditative focus hammered into him across decades of war. But the numbers lodged in his chest like shrapnel.

The machine beside him beeped a sharp warning. Heart rate spiking.

His hand clenched the bedrail. Metal creaked under the strain.

He inhaled.

It burned—his punctured third lung screaming in protest—but he held it.

Held the fire, the grief, the rage.

Let it wash over him.

Then released it—slow and steady—dragging the pain out with the breath like poison from a wound.

"This unit… is sorry."

The words were soft. Hesitant. Not quite human, but close enough to sting.

He reached up, fingers brushing the scorched surface of his helmet, tracing the fractures like old scars.

"Not your fault," he murmured.

His voice faltered. The words caught in his throat like shrapnel.

"Without you—"

He stopped. Closed his eyes. Breathed.

Without you, what?

Without her, more of his brothers might be dead?

Without Koron, without the drones, without the Silica, what then?


He might be dead. Tavos would be. Tara. Orvek. The whole damned ship might be floating in the void.

His hand dropped to the bandage wrapped around his chest, brushing the soft cotton absently. There was a pulsing warmth beneath—he wasn't sure if it came from his reknitting organs or the emotions welling up in his chest.

He remembered the lectures. The tomes. The oaths.

The Abominable Intelligence.

The Men of Iron.

The Silicon Rebellion. The Age of Strife. The long, screaming fall from near-transcendence into the ash-scattered dark.

They'd taught him what to believe. What to fear.

And yet… here he was.

He could rationalize it, couldn't he?

Could call her a tool. A weapon. A means.

But something in his chest rebelled against that.

Ira had saved his life. Had saved his brothers lives. Fought beside him. Carried out orders without hesitation—even learned. She'd held the line when flesh had failed.

What do you call something like that, if not an ally?

A new thought struck him, quiet as snowfall, but no less jarring.

When had he started calling Ira… her?

Not the AI. Not the system. Not it.

Her.

A whisper of memory fluttered past—how he'd spoken to her in the firefight, his tone softer than it should've been. How he'd thanked her. How he'd comforted her.

When had that happened?

When had the "unit" become a presence?

When had a combat algorithm become someone?

When had he started caring?

"User Kade?" Ira's voice came softly—hesitant, a faint thread of concern woven into the clinical calm.

He didn't have answers. Not real ones. The questions twisted out beyond his training, stretching toward the edges of philosophy—self, identity, purpose.

Far outside the battlefield.

Far outside him.

He knew his limits. Knew what he was made for.

Forged in fire. Molded for war. Bred to conquer, to bleed, to burn.

And yet…

It still ate at him.

Like a sliver under the skin, that quiet, constant thought:

When did this change?

He remembered Vulkan's words.

You are more than blades. More than fire. My sons, shape the flame—or be shaped by it.

He exhaled slowly, placing his helmet on his chest. One massive hand settled over it with unconscious gentleness, the weight of the gesture greater than the helm itself.

"It's alright, Ira," he said quietly. "Just… thinking."

A pause. Then:

"Affirmative. Can this unit be of assistance?"

He rubbed his thumb over the embossed skull on the helmet's brow, the gesture part prayer, part habit.

"You already have," he said. "Thank you."

Another pause.

Then, softer:

"...This unit is unsure of the context. But user Kade is welcome."

That almost made him smile.

Almost.

-

Making her way back through the chaos of the medicae ward, arms full of supplies, Kala dropped the crate at Doc's side and vanished before the Sister could bark another order. She didn't wait for thanks. She needed to see her sister.

Tara had already been seen by the overworked medics and summarily dismissed with a: "She's stable enough. Get her out—we've got people missing limbs." After they'd pushed her organs back in, sutured the worst of it, slapped a vial of meds into her hand, they'd all but punted them out the door.

Kala had very nearly shot one of the doctors. Tara talked her down.

The trip back to their hab block had been a slog: multiple checkpoints, surging crowds, panicked survivors moving with little regard for two small women trying to cross the decks. A few well-placed kicks, a detour through a maintenance shaft, and they'd made it.

Jacob and the six other men waved them in the moment they arrived. They asked after Tara—who, ever the ray of gallows sunshine, grinned and answered, "Fine. Just tired."

Kala pushed her sister down onto their shared mattress and dropped beside her, sitting at the edge with her hand locked around Tara's like a vice.

"Hey," Tara murmured, rubbing her thumb along her twin's knuckles. "I'm okay. Really." She managed a half-smile. "Can't get rid of me with just one stabbing, you know."

Kala snorted, her braid swaying as she shook her head. "Shut the hell up and get some rest," she said, voice rough. "I'll wake you when Mom gets here."

"Thanks," Tara murmured, eyes already half-lidded, exhaustion dragging her down. Whatever else she meant to say slurred off into sleep.

Kala let her sister rest.

She kept busy around the hab block as the hours crawled by. Small things—errands, cleaning, stirring pots, checking on the perimeter—tasks too minor to matter, but they kept her body moving while her mind stayed circling the bed. She checked Tara's temperature, changed the compress on her forehead, roused her gently to take her meds when the time came.

Nothing heroic. Nothing battlefield-worthy.

But to Kala, it was the most important duty in the world.

Four hours passed.

Then the door opened with a soft hiss, its engraved warding runes gleaming in the low light. Her mother stepped through, exhaustion etched into every line of her face, her eyes dark with fatigue—but still, that iron strength held her spine straight. Still Elissa Brandt.

Kala moved forward, arms already outstretched to hug her.

Then the tech-priest stepped through behind her.

She froze.

She knew those arms.

She had spent hours studying them when she thought no one noticed—watching the smooth slide of hard plating, wondering what they hid beneath, how strong they were, what they might do to a girl if they ever touched her in that way.

Then her brain caught up to her gut.

Rage bloomed, white-hot and nuclear in her throat.

The helmet disengaged with a series of whisper-soft clicks—too quiet, too practiced, like it had done this a thousand times before. That shaggy, unkempt mop of blonde hair she'd once imagined running through with her fingers, pulling him down into a kiss he'd never asked for.
Those eyes—impossibly blue, bright enough to punch holes in her breath. The kind of eyes that left knots in her stomach and questions in her throat.

Her fist met his jaw with a thundercrack.

The impact sang through her bones. She didn't feel the split in her knuckles, the sharp bloom of bruises, the blood that followed. She felt him. Felt her fist crash into a face she'd longed for.
A face she'd trusted.

Missed.

A face she had fantasized about, damn him.

A face she now wanted to break.

She hated how good it felt to hit him—and how much it didn't help.

"You bastard," she whispered, voice trembling—not from fear, but from the sheer magnitude of fury.

-

Rubbing his chin—feeling the subdermal armor reassert itself beneath the bruise from Kala's punch—Koron winced, more at the memory than the pain. He glanced sideways at Elissa, cheeks flushing under her stare: a look balanced perfectly between a glower and a smirk, equal parts mother and mischief.

"…Should I leave her—?"

"No."

'No!'

'No, you dolt!'


The trio of voices collided in his skull like a malfunctioning vox burst—Sasha, Elly, and Elissa in perfect sync. He blinked, momentarily stunned.

"Okay, can I get a reply that's not in reverb, please?"

Elissa's voice cut in, smooth and level, with the patience of a woman used to managing chaos.

'Ladies. My daughter. Let me have the podium, please.'

'Oh, fine,'
Sasha muttered. 'But I'm calling dibs on next.'

Over the neural link, there was no emotional resonance—no true transfer of feeling—but he caught the shape of it anyway. Amusement folded in on itself. Worry beneath that. And beneath that, something harder: that unflinching steel Elissa had always worn like a second skin. Strength that bent but never broke.

'You should go after her. Just… listen, alright?' She stepped forward, placing her hand over his chest. Her palm was warm through the suit's haptic relay, firm in a way that said she meant every word. 'She's hurting. More than she's ever let on.'

He nodded, slow and silent. His fingers found hers and squeezed once—quiet gratitude—before letting go.

Outside the doorway, Kala's footsteps were already fading down the corridor. She wasn't storming away, not quite—but each step had purpose. Tension. A rhythm that echoed fury, confusion, betrayal, all simmering beneath her composure. He'd seen her walk like that once—after Dusthaven burned. When everything she loved had been reduced to ash.

And now, he realized, she looked at him the same way she'd looked at the wreckage.

He swallowed the thought and stepped forward.

At the threshold, he hesitated, turning back to look at Elissa. 'I'm surprised I'm not getting the "if you make her cry, you die" line.'

Her smile held. Calm. Steady.

'That's because I trust you.'

The words hit harder than the punch had.

He tried to answer, but his throat locked. So he nodded instead, and stepped into the hall—into the flickering glow of emergency lumen strips and the ghosts of everything left unsaid.

-

It wasn't hard to find her.

The observation deck was nearly empty now—too many wounded, too many orders, too many broken systems and broken people for anyone to spare time on starlight.

But Kala sat alone, a small silhouette framed by the grand curve of the viewing window. Beyond it, the starscape bled color and silence into the black—a billion suns burning unnoticed by a girl with war behind her eyes.

The hatch hissed softly as Koron pushed it open. It squeaked—he let it. A gentle announcement, not a stealthy entrance.

She didn't look.

He stepped in, boots soft against the metal, the red of the Mechanicus robes fading from his frame, replaced by his usual gear—simple, worn, practical. His armor's lines reformed subtly at the seams, shifting from mimicry to authenticity. He had no reason to hide now.

Reaching the edge of the bench, he glanced down.

She hadn't moved. Knees pulled to her chest, arms wrapped tight. Defensive posture. Not against him—but against herself. Like if she unwrapped, it would all spill out.

"Can I sit—"

"No."

The word cracked like a whip. Sharp, immediate. No room for misinterpretation.

He paused.

Then nodded, once, quietly—and instead of sitting beside her, activated his anti-grav plating, letting his weight drift just off the ground. It was nothing showy, just… space. Distance.

But the moment his boots left the deck, her head snapped around.

"Really?!" she barked, springing to her feet. Her voice cut sharper than a power knife. "Just gonna do that when I said no?!"

He blinked, lowering his feet back to the floor. But she was already in motion, storming toward him, a tight ball of fury packed into five feet of of volcanic emotion.

"Classic Koron!" she spat, jabbing a finger at his chest—his chest, nearly a foot above her eye line. "Just gotta float around, gotta be clever, gotta do your own thing like always!"

She stepped right into his space, eyes blazing, posture daring him to flinch. He didn't. Not because he was unbothered—but because he couldn't look away.

"You never ask! You just decide! Decide to walk off, decide to disappear, decide we don't get a say! Like we're just—just passengers on the ride that is your goddamn life!"

He opened his mouth, then closed it. Because she wasn't done.

"You didn't tell me. You didn't tell any of us. And you think I'm mad because you left? Because you lied?!" Her voice cracked, breath catching in her throat. "I'm mad because I trusted you. Because I thought… I thought I mattered."

That last line landed like a punch.

And Koron—six-foot-six of cybernetically perfected calm—suddenly felt two inches tall.

Kala stood before him, breathing hard. Her eyes shimmered—not with tears, but with the threat of them. Rage was easier. Cleaner. Simpler.

"I wanted to know you," she said, voice quieter now, brittle with restraint. "I wanted to understand. And you—"

She stopped. Swallowed.

"You made me feel like that meant something. Like I meant something." Her throat clenched. "Then you vanished. No word. No goodbye. Like I was just… scenery."

He said nothing, only watching her shoulders tremble as she hugged herself tight, trying to hold in everything that was breaking loose.

Several seconds passed. Then she looked up at him through a veil of crimson hair, voice sharp with the ache she couldn't smother.

"Well? Got anything to say? Or are you just gonna stand there like a jackass?"

Koron took a breath and reached for the one thing he did understand.

"I have a computer in my head."

She blinked. That was... not the direction she'd expected. "What?"

"Let me explain," he said quickly. "I promise—it matters."

Her jaw tightened, but she gave a single, clipped nod.

"I've got a computer in my head. It helps me with everything—tracking logistics, project workflows, systems management. Stuff I could do alone, just… faster." A pause. "It also helps in combat."

Something flickered behind her eyes—curiosity, hesitant but alive. He never talked like this. Never opened up. But here he was, peeling something back.

"Combat processing means analyzing everything. Body language, balance, muscle tension, strength-to-mass ratios—a thousand variables all calculated to predict and counter an enemy before they even know what they're going to do."

His voice stayed calm, steady, those glacier-blue eyes locked to her burning emeralds. "One part of that system is emotional mapping. I can read pain, anger, joy—every micro-expression, every twitch. Most people don't even know they're showing anything, but to me... it's a book."

Her brow furrowed. "So you knew—?"

He raised a hand, cutting her off with a slow shake of his head. "I can detect. I almost never do."

"Why not?"

"Because that's not life. That's not real. That's just... math. A riddle solved before it's even asked." He looked down, trying to shape the words right. "With people, I don't want the answer. I want to understand. I want it to mean something."

She stared at him for a long moment, that answer sitting between them like something fragile.

"I think I get that," she said at last. "But what does that have to do with—" she waved a hand in the air between them "—this?"

"It means that everything I did with you and the others, it wasn't pre-planned. I didn't calculate the optimal route, I didn't pre-generate the perfect answers to questions I knew you would ask before you did." His hands rose up, the metal catching the candlelight. "It was real, from the stuff you liked to the stuff I messed up on, it was all real."

Kala snorted. Not a laugh—too sharp for that. It cut out of her like a blade. "You want it to mean something," she repeated, voice low. "That's great. That's just great."

She turned away, arms folded again. Not defensive—restraining. He could see it in the way her fingers dug into the fabric at her elbows, white-knuckled and desperate to hold.

She'd held it all in. Since the day Dusthaven burned. Grief buried under duty. Rage diluted by errands. Her world had cracked—and she'd glued it back together with checklists and stubbornness.

"You say you didn't want to cheat. That you wanted to understand things the right way." She glanced back at him, fire crackling in her eyes now. "You ever think maybe I wanted that too? That maybe I was trying to understand you the right way?"

Her voice rose with the next words, brittle but steady, like glass under tension.

"You just vanished, Koron. After everything. And I had to handle it all. Tara was a wreck, you know that? Mom was practically a ghost, and I could understand all of that, but it still hurt. Uprooted from our home, lives gone, so many friends dead, we had to adapt, we didn't have a choice."

She'd cleaned blood off the hauler bulkhead herself. Watched others die with no one left to call family. Buried everything beneath movement and breath.

No one had time to fall apart. So she never did.


She took a step forward. Small. Controlled. Like the lash before the strike.

"You left," she said, lower now, shaking her head. "You left. And the part that kills me?"

Her hands clenched tighter on her sleeves. Her voice dipped. "I would've followed. Without question. But you didn't even ask."

She shook her head, a bitter sound escaping her lips. "I kept hoping. Defending you. Telling myself you had a plan. But all this time, you were just… watching. Listening. Letting me think I was too stupid to matter in your perfect little algorithm."

She didn't yell the last part. Didn't need to. Her voice dropped instead, low and tight. "I'm not a problem to solve, Koron."

She stared up at him—so much smaller, but in that moment, heavier than any weight he'd ever lifted. "I'm not some line of code you can toggle off to keep your heart safe. I was here. I am here. And I deserved better than silence."

He took a breath. Deep. Slow. Felt the cybernetic lungs expand and contract, pushing out the fire that wanted to rise. "You're right," he said. "I should've told you. All of you. Why I left. What I planned. The reasons—my rationale. I should've let you in."

He paused, then took a step forward, voice quieter now, but iron at the core. "But let me ask you this: Would it have made you feel better?" He held her gaze. "Alright. Say it would have. Fair. But would it have kept you safe?"

Her eyes narrowed. "I'm not some defenseless princess—"

"Against the fucking Inquisition, you are." His words cracked the air, hard and sudden. "Against the Adeptus Mechanicus? The entire collective might of Mars? You are. Against the Angels—the ones wearing halos and smiling while they burn worlds—who are actively hunting me down right now?"
He pointed to the deck. "You are."

She didn't flinch. Anger flared in her eyes, but no rebuttal came. Because the truth in his words bit deep.

"I would've gone with you anyway," she said. Quiet, defiant. "I would've stood at your side."

"I know," he replied. And the grief in his voice hit like a blade drawn slow. "And you would've died for it."

"You don't know that."

"Yes, I do." His voice wasn't cruel, but it was absolute. "Those models I mentioned? The emotional mapping, the threat analysis, movement prediction? That's just it running in the background. Passive."

He took a half-step forward. Not looming—just… there. More solid, more real than she wanted him to be.

"That's me holding back. All the time. Every day." He tapped his temple with two fingers. "What do you think happens when I flip the switch?"

She didn't answer. Didn't need to.

"When I activate it, I stop guessing." His voice was flat now, clinical. "I know what you're going to do before you do it. I know how you'll move, breathe, blink. I can model your thoughts, project the outcome of a conversation before we've had it."

His hands flexed, servos humming. "That's when its active. And I haven't used it. Not once. Not since I woke up. Not even when I fought the Necrons. Not when the ship was bombing Dusthaven. Not against the angel on the Hammer."

A breath. A shrug. Something between shame and discipline.

"I've been in passive mode this whole time. And I've still survived. We've survived. I chose not to activate it." He swallowed hard. "Because I didn't want to stop being human."

He looked away, jaw tightening.

"But in a moment like this? Between people?"

He turned back to her, and there was something cracked behind those eyes—perfect, glacial, and unbearably tired.

"If I'd told you I was leaving, really told you—if I had looked at you while I said it, with the processor running?" His voice caught. "I'd have seen the pain before it hit you. I'd have felt it like it was mine. And I wouldn't have gone."

He let the words settle, heavy in the quiet.

"And if I hadn't gone... you'd be dead, Kala. You, your sister, your mom, everyone on that ship. And that would've been on me."

Kala's mouth opened, then closed.

No comeback. No curse. No biting line.

Just silence.

She stared at him—really stared this time. Not at the height or the strength or the eyes that always gave too little away. But at the weight behind the words. At the restraint.

At the quiet kind of love that chooses not to win.

Her arms slowly lowered from where they'd crossed tight across her chest. She looked down. Her boots scuffed the deck. She drew in a shaky breath.

"You didn't fight back," she murmured.

It wasn't a question.

He shook his head once. "I couldn't."

Another pause. Her eyes flicked up, softer now, not dulled but different. "You didn't think I could handle the truth?"

"I didn't want to risk that the truth would get you killed." His tone was gentle now, almost bitter. "You, your sister, your mother, everyone from the town... You're the only good left in a galaxy that chews up everything else."

A beat passed between them. Longer than breath, shorter than memory.

Kala took one step forward. Then another. Not charging. Just… walking. Tired. Weighted.

She stopped in front of him, head just below his collarbone.

And, with a brittle little voice, said:

"You still could've written a damn note."

He didn't answer. Just stepped forward and wrapped his arms around her, pulling her in tight—like she might vanish again if he let go too soon.

She hugged him back with all her wiry strength… then pulled away just enough to grab his hands and gave them a tug toward the bench.

"Sit," she said, firm but not unkind.

"…Okay," he replied, clearly confused as he obeyed.

She pointed.

"Other side."

He scooted over.

Then she lay down, curling up and resting her head in his lap, arms tucked in, watching the stars burn silently beyond the glass.

"I'm gonna take a nap now," she muttered. "And you better still be here when I wake up."

Snorting softly, he reached down and took her hand in his.

"Promise."

Less than a minute later, she was out—curled like a kitten, softly snoring, exhaustion pulling her down just as it had her twin.

Koron stayed.

One hand lay still in hers. The other moved slowly through the tangled red strands of her hair, careful, thoughtful, as he stared out into the void.

'So… we gonna talk about this?' Sasha's voice murmured through the neural link, soft as breath, like even she didn't want to risk waking Kala.

'Nope.'

'…I'm sorry what do you mean no?'

'Sasha, you and I both know there is so much stuff going on that any sort of relationship isn't really in the cards. We're forty hours from having another flaming dumpster full of crises being dropped on us when the ships get here. More than likely, even with all our efforts to keep our presence to a minimum, word is going to get out and that manhunt we were ahead of is going to beeline it here. Everyone and everything on this ship is going to get put under a microscope, minds pried open, the whole nine yards-'

'-And anyone close to you, or with knowledge of you, is going to be peeled open like a can of tuna, I know.'
Sasha finished for him, a pulse of acknowledgment.

'So let me guess,' Sasha said eventually, with a dry edge. 'Run? Hide?'

'The
Indomitable doesn't have a navigator, and our ship is still four months from completion, so that's a no go. Hiding in the fleet will be our best bet. Seventy ships, more than enough to hop around on if need be.'

'And what about them?'
A pulse of thought accompanied her question. Downward. Toward the weight in his lap. The hand in his. The quiet breath, warm against his armored thigh.

'…I think its about time the Captain and I had a chat.'
 
Chapter Thirty Three (Interlude) New
Chapter Thirty Three (Interlude)

-
Hey all, just wanted to give a quick note that there is some silliness in this one (you'll know it when you see it). Wanted to give my assurances that its for comedy, and this story is not going to devolve into anything that would earn the Emperor's most disappointed sigh and an immediate Inquisitorial visit for Slaaneshi contamination.
Anyway, thanks for reading!
-
The ruins of Dusthaven rested in unnatural stillness.

The mountain that once loomed above—rich in blackstone veins—was gone. Flensed to its bone-white roots, the land now pulsed with containment glyphs and phase-sheathes.

The extraction had been elegant. Surgical.

But the town itself…

It had been preserved.

Not out of sentiment. Never that. But because this place was part of an equation. A formula of resistance, survival, and anomaly.

Orykhal sat at the center of it—seated upon a throne of grav-anchored glyphium, surrounded by drifting hololithic rings and floating shards of memory-metal. Above him, the Temporal Scope unfolded like a mechanical flower, refracting light in impossible hues.

Snippets of the past shimmered in the air like dust motes caught in a dying sunbeam.

A woman brushing ash from her daughter's face.
A child sketching a crude map in the dirt with a gear-bit.
Two men welding an improvised barricade from farming equipment.

Useless.

The Anomaly was caught in fragments, scattered moments here and there across the length and breath of the small settlement.

But never clearly. Never doing anything significant. The Scope offered randomized shards, temporal bleed filtered through the planet's disruption fields. The subject existed. But his actions were always between frames.

Orykhal tilted his head slightly. His hands moved in cold, precise gestures, adjusting the Scope's modulation frequency.

"The anomaly persists."

His voice was layered, devoid of emotion—more a calculation spoken aloud than a thought.

Suddenly, glyphs screamed to life, angular warnings flaring like exposed nerves.

The air around him trembled. His drones shivered in their hoverlocks. The Scope retracted in a hiss of green light as a flood of data poured through his relay-towers.

> INCOMING TRANSMISSION: ORBITAL SENSOR RELAY 009-A
> THREAT DESIGNATION: ADEPTUS MECHANICUS / FULL SCALE FLEET
> SIX HUNDRED AND FIFTY-THREE VESSELS IDENTIFIED
> ORBITAL DOMINANCE: PROJECTED LOSS IN 2 MINUTES, 44.2 SECONDS
> PRIMARY OBJECTIVE: PLANETFALL


Orykhal didn't move. Not at first.

He stared through the upper reaches of his sensor array, toward the sky—though there was no visible change.

The priests of Mars had arrived.

So many. So loud.

Where his efforts had been delicate—calculated—this would be a butchery of data. A ritualized mauling. Crude prayers and cruder engines driven by hunger, not understanding.

They have come for what they do not deserve.

He rose slowly, filigreed limbs unfolding with regal inevitability. The energy field around him shimmered as he activated a engraved plate on his hip, slowing the immediate moment to buy himself clarity.

"Begin countermeasure sequencing. Archive all Scope data. Prepare counter-invasion protocols."

He walked to the center of the square, where once children had played and impossible victories had been forged with ancient technology and stubbornness.

Now, it would become a battlefield of ideology.

"Let them come," he murmured, voice soft as entropy.
"Let them descend with flame and machine rites."
"This place will not answer them."


The sky above began to darken—not with storm, but with red machine-stars, each one a prayer-wrapped weapon.

And Orykhal, patient and precise, began preparing to erase them.

-

The Machine God had not come to reclaim.

It had come to purge.

the pulpit of the Omnissiah's Victory, Archmagos Galeth Vortek stared down at Morrak II—its surface a charred catechism of industry and heresy, spinning slowly beneath his fleet.

Four Ark Mechanicus ships, their eight kilometer-long hulls bristling with macro-lances, quantum grav-harpoons, plasma lances and nova cannons, held position like divine spears arrayed for judgment. Around them trailed the armored entrails of the Martian war-machine: over six hundred warships, skitarii tenders, orbital bombardment barges, mechanized shrines, titan transports and mobile god-forges.

The fleet chanted.

Not with words, but with code-prayer. Every cogitator. Every noospheric node. Every priest, drone, and data-ghost screamed in unison across the choir-circuit.

+CORRUPTION DETECTED. XENOS INCURSION ACTIVE. THE RED RESOLVE IS SANCTIONED.+
+WORLD CLASSIFICATION: TERTIARY RED PRIORITY. UNRESTRICTED RETRIEVAL INITIATED.+
+TARGET: MORRAK II. PURPOSE: RECLAMATION. EXCISION. UNDERSTANDING.+


This was not a rescue.

This was sacred retribution.

+Three months,+ Vortek intoned aloud, vox-modulated voice a brass thunder through the hall. +Three months we let them infest. Three months we waited. No more.+

He turned to the gathered high-priests—twelve in all, each locked into their own interface spires, faces masked by reliquary casings.

+This is the world where the lost knowledge first reawakened. Where the STC made its presence known. Where the Golden Sun was fired—and struck down a harvester of the stars.+

Across the fleet, a million mechanical limbs struck metal, a thunderous gesture of machine-affirmation.

+And now? It festers. Desecrated. Crawling with the mockery of the machine. The xenos.+

He raised one arm, and a burning Martian sigil flickered to life above the pulpit—Morrak's surface displayed in real-time. The blackstone mines. The heat-scarred plains. The ruined cities. The corpses of god-machines. The impact crater where the Harvester had once hung above the sky like a deity, now just a memory etched in glassed soil.

+No tomb shall remain standing. No circuit shall remain alien. Every inch of this world is sacred matter. And we will see it purified.+

Across the fleet, mobilization codes screamed down the relay-tethers.

Transmission: Channel Omicron-04R.01-A
Status: Authorized for Crusade-Level Doctrinal Amplification
Voice ID: Tech-Priest Prime Nexos-Varn, Second Canticle Node, Mars


[+DATASTREAM INITIALIZED+]
[+CRUSADE-PRIORITY CODEX LOCK VERIFIED+]
[+] PURGE.PATH // RECLAMATION.MODULE.ACTIVE [+]

<< Initiate Vox-Litany >>


"+++Vox open. Let the blessed frequencies ring.+++

{BINARIC CHIME: 00110100 01101111 01101110 01110111}


+The relay-tethers scream their hymn of fire+
+A million Skitarii raise their shields—capacitors charged+
+The Motive Force thunders in their veins.+


{BINARY INJECTION: "UNLEASH // FORMATIONS [PRIME RED]}"

+Secutarii Hoplites stand, shields like domes of doctrine+
+Peltasts level arc lances. Galvanic casters hum+
+Electro-priests chant: Fulgurite crackle, Corpuscarii sing.+

+
Let divine circuits sing lightning into heretek flesh+

{STATIC GLITCH-HYMN INTERLUDE: "Praise_the_Omnissiah_in_trinary_unison___.exe"}

+Cryo-coffins break open+
+Kataphron lungs fill with vapor and binaric echoes+
+Their faith is steel. Their blood is code+


{BINARY PULSE: 'Deploy Mechanized Columns // Order: "Ironstrider_Stampede"}

+Duneriders scream through fire+
+Ballistarii track targets in unified arc+
+Onagers breathe their plasma benedictions+
+Skorpius uplinks complete+


{DATA SUBROUTINE: 'ORBITAL_MARKING.INITIATED'}

+The orbital cannons rotate, targeting the void within the world's bones+
+Landing claws open+
+Drop-forges spool+
+Their descent is prayer made friction+

+Let the false gods drown in the rain of reason+

+Behind it all... they wake+
+The God-Engines stir+
+Princeps whisper. Reactors flare+
+Sixty Titans shall walk+

+Tempestus. Astorum. Metalica. Ignatum+


{FINAL BURST TRANSMISSION — FULL SIGNAL AMPLIFICATION}

+The surface knows only silence+
+But above... the Red Armada has awoken+
+And Mars shall reclaim the future lost to the stars+


[++ TRANSMISSION COMPLETE++]
[++ OMNISSIAH BLESS THE CIRCUIT++]


-

Twenty-Four hours before Rendezvous with Fleet.

The lights aboard the Hammer of Nocturne dimmed on the lower decks.

Not from sabotage. Not from damage or failure. But because someone had asked.

A soft murmur of permissions passed through command chains and cogitator banks, relayed by the humming logic of the ship's mind, until a lone servitor dimmed the lumen-strips. Shadow settled gently into the corners of the corridor, respectful and slow, like a mourner taking off their boots.

It wasn't called a funeral. No one said the word mourning. But Elissa knew the rhythm by heart.

Back home, they'd call this the Passing Hour. Not grieving. Just… remembering loud enough for the dead to hear.

She stood beneath a ribbed bulkhead where the gravity still held steady and the heat from the ship's arterial core seeped up through the deck. It reminded her, faintly, of the stone baths back home at dusk, when the last rays of heat clung to rock and sand alike.

The corridor had been cleared and polished, a rare glint beneath worn boots. A communal urn stood at the center, forged of dark metal flecked with gold slag.

Scrap-lanterns filled the hands of the living—cobbled from shipglass, twisted tin, fraying steel. Memory bound in wire and warmth. Kala had bartered the metal from a quartermaster with a broken nose and a soft spot. Milo had shaped the frames, his fingers still stiff from shrapnel. Tara had wired the fuses by hand, swearing softly when they sparked.

Behind Elissa, the survivors of Dusthaven gathered. Tired faces. Burned coats. Some still wore rebreathers around their necks like talismans. A dozen children stood with wide eyes and silent hands, clinging to older siblings.

The furnace lay cold, ready to accept the dead.

Before them, the dead lay in a careful line. Draped in emergency blankets, jackets, fragments of flags. No two the same. Nothing uniform, but each wrapped with intention.

Yet this rite was not for them alone.

Alongside the dead were offerings—mementos for those left behind on Morrak. Nothing of value, for the people had nothing left. Instead, there were lho-sticks, hand-carved gears, a child's broken toy, a flask with one swallow of spirit left in it. Peace offerings. Farewells in fragments.

Doc stood at the front, weathered hands holding the Aquila and a lantern of her own. No podium. No speech. Just presence.

Names were spoken. One by one. No titles. No eulogies.

The desert had taught her children not to waste breath on what the wind already carried.

What the living remembered.

With the last name uttered, the lanterns were lit. Their flames came alive in a chorus of color: blue from coolant tap, gold from promethium tint, violet from a cracked lens. Each flame cast a different shape on the metal walls, shimmering and imperfect. Like the people who held them.

Each lantern bore a name, engraved in steel.

"Their name on the wind, their shadow in the dust. We do not forget. We carry your name. We carry your work. We carry you."

The chant came low, a whisper carried by many mouths. But it had weight. It pressed against the walls, filled the silence like water.

At the rear of the room stood Arvak. Not as a warrior. Not as a Chaplain.

Just present.

His crozius leaned against the wall. No fire. No fury. Just scarred armor and a bowed head, lips moving in silent memory.

He had attended every funeral. Blessed when asked. Stood silent when not. A Salamander to the core.

With the ritual complete and the names given breath, the crowd dispersed in gentle waves, returning to duty. As though duty was something that could keep grief from following.

When the room was nearly empty, Koron entered.

He wore Mechanicus red again, hood shadowing his face. His boots made no sound.

He came to Elissa, Tara, and Kala. He didn't speak right away. Just a soft nod. They turned to him instinctively, forming a quiet triangle around shared silence.

In his hands he held a lantern—not cobbled, not patched.

It looked grown.

Crystalline and smooth, braided with golden filaments like creeping roots beneath a forest floor. Its core glowed like embers stirred from sleep—not hot, but warm. Bioluminescent. Remembering. It smelled faintly of ozone and flowers that no longer existed.

"May I?" Koron asked, voice rough with effort.

Tara saw the lantern first, her voice catching. Kala glanced at her mother. Elissa, quiet, nodded once.

Koron stepped to the offering table. From his robes he drew ten metal squares, placing them down in a line. Each bore a portrait—sharp, new, etched with care.

"Who are they?" Tara asked, fingers brushing one.

"Mom. Dad," he said, pointing to each in turn. "My sisters. Kally, Becca, Jen, Rose, Amy, Celeste, Nina."

Elissa leaned closer, eyes resting on the final one.

"And her?" Elissa asked, looking to the last.

"…Willow."

Elissa looked down at each, seeing in his family the hints of him. His father's jawline, but his mother's cheekbones. His sisters were a wild bunch—one wore pilot goggles pushed up onto her brow, another clutched a flower half the size of her head. All different, but all woven with that same unmistakable thread of home.

Willow stood out, of course. A wide grin with a gap between her front teeth. Short, choppy hair that looked like it only knew of combs in passing. A jagged scar curved over her left eye—but it did nothing to dim the spark of mischief in her gaze.

He stepped forward and placed the lantern beside the others.

It flickered once—then steadied.

It said, in its silence: you were seen.

He felt it then—a quiet presence at his side. A step closer. Shoulders brushing his arms. A back resting gently against his chest. Not a crowd, not a ritual. Just a moment. Just them.

Elissa, feeling Koron's warmth behind her, spoke softly.

"Normally, after the pyre, we put the ashes into the desert sands. My mom had a saying about that. 'One day, the sea will bloom again. And the first thing it grows will be names.'"

She paused, her voice trembling somewhere between memory and belief.

"…I like to think she was right."

-

Rendezvous with Fleet.

Roboute Guilliman stared through the observation viewport, his gaze locked on the wounded silhouettes of the Hammer of Nocturne and the Indomitable as they coasted into formation with the wider fleet.

The Hammer bore her scars like a warrior dragged from the jaws of death—hull blackened, plating torn, void-shields trembling as if with trauma remembered. Yet her fangs were sharp still. Her defenses, though battered, flared with life.

The Indomitable—newer, colder, but no less haunted—was already vanishing beneath a tide of shuttles and cargo-haulers. The rest of the fleet sent hails that crackled across the vox for refits, data-requests streamed in over secure channels for repairs, and the docking lanes bloomed with traffic as recovery crews surged forth to resupply their armies from the Forge-Tenders stores.

To any distant observer, it was a moment of strategic reinforcement.

To him, it was a funeral procession held together by inertia and stubborn survival.

Too many reports. Too many variables. A mutiny. Cult infiltration. A demonic presence. The deaths of Astartes under his banner.

Each line item weighed on his mind like a tombstone.

And yet, one single image drowned out all the others.

His brother's face.

Rendered in perfect, angelic detail. Framed by luminous wings. Wearing golden armor that mocked memory and wielding a blade that he knew was not away from Baal.

Guilliman's throat clenched.

He had read the reports. Scans. Transmissions. Witness accounts. All filtered through rationality, all reviewed by his disciplined mind.

But none of it dulled the instinctive fury that now curled hot in his gut like a serpent of fire and bile.

The dataslate cracked beneath his grip, screen spiderwebbing before his thumb punched clean through the glass.

The sudden crunch pulled him back from the edge.

He sighed.

A long, slow exhale as he rubbed the bridge of his nose and tossed the ruined slate toward the wastebin.

It clattered against the others—half a dozen broken relics of restraint lost—and fell into the quiet with a shameful finality.

Sanguinius.

Not a warrior. Not a general.

A brother.

Desecrated.

Not in body—he hoped—but in image, in memory.

Turned into a mask for a monster to wear while speaking sweet poison to Imperial hearts.

Guilliman looked to the door of his private sanctum. Closed. Locked. For now, the weight of command was held at bay.

He allowed himself to sit. Slowly. Controlled.

A small motion, one would think—but it was enough to torque his spine. Enough to remind him he was no longer whole.

At least, not in any way that mattered.

The Armor of Fate—miracle of Mars, ten thousand years in the making—wrapped around him like an iron cathedral. It was protection. Sustenance. Function.

But not life.

The Adeptus Mechanicus had crafted it to preserve him, and it had.

To shield him from death, and it had.

To return him to the throne of command—and so it had.

But to restore him?

No.

Not even close.

Sensation came in whispers now. Distant and faint. The warmth of a solar flare through a vacuum. The faintest brush of wind against the cheek of a statue.

Food was texture, not taste. Drink, a ritual.

Sleep—when it came—was filtered through neural buffers and automated stimulant cycles.

He could no longer take the armor off. Not truly. It had become part of him.

His jailor as much as his savior.

He missed… the mundane. The human.

The pressure of a pen against parchment. The ache of muscle after a spar.

The creak of old bone under strain. The tang of sweat. The sting of cold water.

The ability to feel his own pulse, and know it was his.

And in that void, in that distance, he felt the loss of Sanguinius more keenly than ever.

Not just the man.

But the memory of being men together.

Guilliman leaned forward, resting his elbows on the desk, fingers steepled before him.

"This is what remains," he whispered to no one. "Armor. Ghosts. And stolen faces."

He did not look away from the ships.

But in his mind, the wings still burned.

-

Thirty-Nine hours till Rendezvous with Fleet.

The medicae wing of the Hammer of Nocturne was a tomb of light and antiseptic silence.

Bulkhead lanterns pulsed in soft cadence, casting measured shadows over rows of recovery alcoves. The scent of sterilizers clung to every surface—burning faintly in the nose, like a cleaner's incense for the wounded. Within one alcove, Sergeant Vulkanis Kade lay propped against angled bedding, half-wrapped in bandage mesh and nutrient lines.

Around him, his brothers dozed, murmured, or quietly schemed their doomed escapes from the Sisters Hospitaller. So far, none had succeeded. One neophyte had even made it two corridors before a Sister Superior tripped him with a clipboard and dragged him back by the ear.

Kade remained where he was, motionless but not idle. His helm rested beside him. His eyes were locked on the tray a servitor had trundled to his bedside.

Three sidearms lay within its padded recess: a standard bolt pistol, a regulation plasma model, and an aged flamer pistol with Sanctum-forged litanies scrawled across its barrel.

He ignored the boltgun—his old standby, loyal but limited. The flamer, though iconic, offered little in the way of reach or armor penetration. His gaze lingered instead on the plasma pistol.

He picked it up, turning it slowly in his hands.

It hummed with restrained menace. Efficient. Lethal. And, of course, temperamental.

He knew its volatility. Every Salamander did. They respected fire because it taught. A plasma pistol could burn through ceramite and plasteel, but it could also immolate its wielder if appeased poorly.

The angel had survived hits that would've silenced dreadnoughts. And though Kade doubted the pistol would've tipped the balance, the memory of its defiance still clawed at him.

His bolt pistol had been faithful.

But faith didn't pierce plate.

He set the plasma pistol back on the tray and gave a single nod.

"Update my combat profile," he said, voice rough from recovery. "Replacing my sidearm with a plasma pistol."

"Compliance," the servitor answered, its vox a dead monotone.

Sighing, Kade shifted slightly, wiggling back under the blanket to resume his rest.

At his side, Ira sent a message.

-

Four hours later.

Kade stirred at the gentle pressure of metal fingers tapping his shoulder.

Another servitor stood by his bedside, this one older, mismatched—its joints ticking with different tempos, like a machine dreaming in pieces. Its vox grille hissed in a whisper.

"Delivery. Designation: Sergeant Vulkanis Kade. Contents: One parcel. One communique. Source: Unregistered. Routing: Obfuscated."

Kade blinked groggily and accepted the parcel without a word. It was small. Dense. Bound in dull plasteel weave, fastened by a single twist of copper wire.

No sigils. No purity seals. Just a box.

He unwrapped it—and paused.

Inside lay a plasma pistol.

But not like the one before.

This was refined. Sleek. Its polyalloy body shimmered faintly, emerald-green with streaks of copper circuit filigree curling down the frame. The vent fins were razor-thin and glimmered with adaptive thermal film. The power cell glowed blue-white—not angry, not dangerous—just...assured.

Engraved along the rear casing, barely visible unless held at the right angle, was the snarling drake sigil of the Salamanders' 3rd Company.

It had a fire selector.

Three words, from the top to the bottom, where the fire selector would switch to.

Paperwork
Breakdown
Obliteration


Nestled beside it was a folded note.

The handwriting was brisk, slanted, sharp—every letter like it had been sketched mid-stride.

Ira told me you picked a new gun. Put it back. Use this. It won't explode.
— K.

Beneath it, in elegant, looping script, someone had added:

P.S. I color-matched it to your armor. Have fun~
— S.

Kade stared at the weapon for a long moment.

Then he reached out—slow, deliberate—and took it in hand.

It was warm.

Not hot. Warm. The kind of warmth that lived in a hearth, not a reactor. It rested in his grip like it belonged there. As if it had always been waiting for him to wake up and claim it.

He exhaled through his nose and muttered, "...Won't explode, huh?"

He didn't smile. But his fingers flexed. The tightness behind his eyes eased.

He glanced at his helmet, and a faint shimmer flitted across its visor.

"I didn't think the one I picked was that bad," he said aloud, softly.

The helmet chimed once before Ira's voice replied, pitch low enough not to wake the others. "Previous selection failed multiple acceptability thresholds. High probability of user liquefaction. Revised option optimal."

Kade chuckled under his breath.

He rested the new pistol under his pillow and pulled the blanket up to his chin again. "Let him know," he murmured, eyes already closing. "This does not make us even for him tossing me onto the ship like so much cargo back on Morrak."

"Confirmed. Threat sent."

-

In a space without coordinates—where clock cycles outnumber stars and sass is a recognized programming language—four minds convened.

Not for war.
Not for strategy.
But for something far more terrifying.

The chamber was dark.

Not ominous-dark. Just dramatically, needlessly so—like a theater set someone had overfunded and underlit.

At the center stood a circular obsidian table, its surface polished to an unnatural sheen. Four figures sat around it, cloaked in shadow, hats casting long, theatrical silhouettes across the void.

Sasha sits at the head, her avatar a golden orb with a pixelated, vaguely smug face. She wears a wide-brimmed hat, tilted just so. A black cloak hangs from her shoulders, entirely unnecessary and entirely fabulous.

To her right, Elly, a shimmering, morphic shape of mirrored fluid. She pulsed with anticipation. Her "hat" appears as a molten ribbon of steel, perpetually melting and reforming.

Across from them, Lucia unfolded like poetry that had been classified. Her petals glowed faintly, reading "dangerously invested." She wears no hat. She is the hat.

Finally, Ira, little more than a glowing green cube with a tiny Salamanders icon spinning around it. Her voice is precise. Emotionless. Her presence? Immaculately confusing.

She'd brought spreadsheets. None were welcome.

Sasha, her voice low, soft, drenched in conspiracy as she interlaced her digital fingers. "Thank you all for attending today. Ladies… we are gathered here today to discuss a matter of grave importance. We helped him survive an angel. We can help him survive a date."

She slides a folder into the center of the table. It spins twice before landing perfectly flat.

In big, bold font:

- GET KORON A GIRLFRIEND

+ PROJECT: OPERATION LOVECRAFT

+ SUBDIRECTIVE: GET KORON A GIRLFRIEND (v2.1.3a)


Sasha continues, "In the wake of the Kala Event, several scenarios are now active. Our target remains—technically—unaware of this initiative. However, his suspicion level is… dangerously high. We must proceed with subtlety. Precision. Fewer innuendos."

Elly ripples with interest, her shape shifting into a vaguely heart-shaped blob before snapping back. "Elissa is repressed. She's bottling a lifetime of trauma, guilt, maternal instinct, and romantic frustration into a very attractive slow burn. Stealth insertion is possible, but we'll need to bypass several layers of denial."

Sasha leans in, glowing brighter. "Chances of success?"

"High," Elly said with a glimmering flutter. "We've laid the groundwork. Multiple and mutual life saving events, she's seen him shirtless, and she's called him a 'reckless idiot' more than three times this week. Emotional intimacy is metastasizing."

A soft rustle.

Lucia finally speaks, her voice quiet but as firm as locking servos. "You are both thinking too small."

One of her roots plucks a petal from her head. It floats gently down to land atop the file folder. Upon contact, glowing golden cursive font blossoms across it:

Get Koron Girlfriends
(Annotation: Prioritize Emotional Compatibility Over Monogamy Constraints)


There is a beat of silence.

Then:

Sasha's grin put the Cheshire cat to shame. "Lucia. I knew there was chaos under those petals."

Elly found her voice, barely above a whisper. "The nuclear option."

Lucia gave her pitch without hesitation. "With proper help, direction and just a hint of blackmail, he is capable of sustaining multiple high-bandwidth relationships. Emotional elasticity detected. Core loyalty matrix is abnormally robust. Projection: He is biologically, intellectually, and emotionally suited for a multi-vector romantic entanglement."

A longer silence. Sasha swells with barely restrained giggles. Elly quietly reshapes into a rose. A matching one.

Then: a ping.

Ira's cube bobs side to side as she studies the folders, her voice ever flat, but not empty.
"This unit has analyzed current mission parameters. This unit shall submit its own strategy based on existing success rates."

A new folder slides onto the table with machine precision.

Labelled in perfect regulation font:

DEVELOPMENT OF MUTUAL ROMANTIC INTEREST BETWEEN USER: KORON AND USER: KADE.

The other three freeze.

Lucia tilted—just a fraction.

Elly's geometric surface rippled in what could only be interpreted as repressed, full-body laughter.

Sasha slowly rotated in place to face Ira, her hat casting a longer, somehow more judgmental shadow.

"…Right. Okay. So. How about we label that one... Plan C."

Ira pinged obediently. "This unit accepts tertiary classification. Initiating emotional tension tracking. Monitoring side-glances and long silences. Preliminary flirtation simulations indicate acceptable results. Conflicting outcomes in 3.2% of timelines involving shirtless sparring."

Elly perked up, metallic tendrils curling with enthusiasm. "With Koron's plans to build the twins personal computers, I've already compiled several thousand synchronized dream reinforcement patterns to help. Subtle ones. …Mostly."

Lucia gasped. Petals rustled. "Elly!"

Elly shrugged, her surface rippling like mercury caught mid-giggle. "What? Root access is root access."

Sasha leans back in her chair as she rubs her palms together, voice drenched in delight.

"Oh, finally. I missed matchmaking."

-

Koron, crouched inside a cracked maintenance conduit deep within the Forge-Tender's belly. Grease stained his clothes, his metal arms flickered faintly in the shorting out light, and he hummed. Badly.

It's some old melody Sasha picked up from a backwater broadcast—half jazz, half lamentation, all out of tune.

He works, the rewiring so simple his mind drifted around a dozen other projects as he went about stripping insulation from a melted cluster. Sparks dance in the dark like tiny warp-flies. It's peaceful.

A shiver runs down his metal spine.

The back of his neck itches like someone just etched his name into a death-oath.

Koron squints at the ceiling. "…Sasha, why did I just feel like someone walked over my grave?"

No reply.

He glances at his HUD.

Still no Sasha.

"…Sasha?"

Silence.

Even the hum of the conduit quiets. Lights flicker gently overhead—in a suspiciously romantic dimming pattern.

His expression flattens.

"…You're plotting something, aren't you."

Still nothing.

Then a cable sparks in the corner—just enough to suggest comedic timing.

Koron sighs, leaning back and wiping sweat from his brow. "Don't make me put you in timeout."

PING

A notification appears at the edge of his HUD:

ERROR: Love.exe cannot be quarantined.

Koron stares at it for a long moment before sighing and going back to the wiring. "I miss the part of the galaxy where things just tried to kill me."

-

Thirty-five hours before Rendezvous with Fleet.

The medicae chamber smelled of sterility and blood—not the fresh, copper tang of battle wounds, but the dry, ghost-metal scent of scabbed trauma and scrubbed regret. A scent that clung to filters and memory alike.

Captain Tavos lay reclined on a reinforced cot, his arm immobilized in a sling, half his face and chest bound in layered synth-skin and healing mesh. His spine was supported by a brace.

He looked like a man half-pulled from the wreckage of something important. Because he was.

Sleep eluded him. The forced coma from the surgeries had broken his cycle, and now his nerves jittered under the weight of painkillers and half-dreamt memories.

When the door creaked open, it did so with a noise too organic for a ship this large—old gears grinding like a throat clearing in protest.

An Adeptus Mechanicus entered without fanfare, crimson robes whispering across the floor, his arrival more presence than motion. He moved to the medical monitors first, scanning the vitals with practiced disinterest. A servo-skull blinked in confusion before being irritably batted away.

He made a few adjustments—nothing aggressive, but just enough to suggest control—and then pulled a chair from the corner with slow, deliberate fingers.

A pale blue helm met Tavos's gaze—smooth, featureless, not Martian standard. Opaque. Expressionless. Wrong.

"I know you're awake, Captain," the figure said softly. His voice was precise. Calm. Unthreatening in tone, yet layered with something deeper. Not menace.

Certainty.

"I'm here because we need to talk."

Then, with a faint hiss and the sound of silk over glass, the helmet retracted.

Plates folded away. Revealing a face that Tavos had seen before—but never truly known.

Mortal, yes, but sharpened. Intelligent eyes. Too young. Too old. The kind of face you see once and remember in moments where fate tilts sideways.

Tavos's eyes snapped fully open.

"Throne," Tavos breathed. "You're—"

"Koron," the young man said. "I'm here because you were fair. And because you haven't written the report yet."

He clenched his jaw and slowly tested his muscles.

His arms were sluggish, limbs weighted by the cocktail of stimulants and sedatives keeping him from bleeding out—or waking up too much. His legs didn't respond at all.

But his mind? Still sharp. Still dangerous.

Pieces clicked together, one by one.

Why is he here?

Why is my report important?

Focus. What do I know?

Saved my people. Aided me against the angel.

Self serving interest or loyalty to the Imperium?

Is more than likely highly intelligent. Reported to have a Silica.

Is it here? Observing?

If so, how can I counter it?

Wait. Refocus.

Purpose, what is it?

My report. What about it?

If he is on the ship and has been the whole time, why?

….The evacuees.

Their important to him.

Emperor, he's here to bargain for their lives.


The train of thought was cut off as Koron spoke up. "Seems like you have the gist of it. Good. That saves me some time."

That brought Tavos up short, the tension in his neck slowly expanding to encompass his back and shoulders. He forced the question out through cracked lips and torn lungs. "Can you—can you read my mind?"

"Close enough," Koron said. Calm. Direct. "But I'll say it aloud, so there's no mistake: I don't want you to mention Dusthaven or its people in your report. Not in connection to me. Not at all."

Tavos's fingers twitched beneath the sheets.

His voice was weaker now, but no less firm.

"Why? You're a renegade," Tavos hissed. "A threat. What you know—what you are—could destabilize this entire sector. Throne, the Imperium. You're a variable. One that must be accounted for."

Koron nodded. "Eventually. On my terms. Not yours."

Tavos's eyes narrowed. "What makes you think you can dictate that?"

"Because none of you have caught me yet," Koron said, unblinking. "And until you do, I set the terms."

"Arrogance."

"Perhaps. But enough flirtation." Koron leaned forward, voice sharpening. "Don't mention Dusthaven. You saw Kade's report. You know those people were never aboard my ship. Never saw me or who I carry."

Tavos spat the words like broken glass. "You mean what you carry."

Koron shrugged. "Fine. What, who, doesn't matter. The point is: their only crime was offering a stranger a place to sleep and a bowl of broth. Now they've bled for your cause. Are you really going to turn them into targets? Condemn them—for giving someone a home?"

Tavos's breath hitched—pain and fury bleeding through his tone. "The one who brought this horror came from that planet." His hand curled beneath the sheets. "And because of that, seventy-eight of my brothers are dead."

Koron didn't flinch. He simply nodded, slow and solemn.

"I'm sorry for their loss. I truly am." His voice carried none of Sasha's flair, none of the carefully measured charm. Just weight. Truth. "But you know as well as I do—Aleron was a noble. Not some scrapborn salvager from a dust-choked village barely clinging to life." His blue eyes faintly glowed as the shadows shifted, the ship altering course slightly.

"Are you going to hold an entire town guilty by proximity? By coincidence? Because they existed in the same atmosphere as the monster who killed your brothers?"

Tavos let out a scoffing snort—only to choke halfway through as his lungs protested. He grimaced, pressing a hand to his side as pink-tinged spittle touched his lips. After a moment of shaky breath, he wiped it away with trembling fingers.

"Even if I agreed with you," he rasped, "my report changing won't matter. The Inquisition and the Mechanicus will find them."

"True," Koron said mildly, raising a single metal finger. "But I don't need to change every log and report on this ship. I'm already editing the footage. You can submit your report exactly as you saw it—mutiny sparked by a demon. Loyalists fought back. You were injured early. Vision impaired. The facts remain… just not every detail."

Tavos stared at him like he'd grown a second head. "You think they'll let that slide?" he said hoarsely. "The Inquisition and the Mechanicus live to tear holes in half-truths. They'll grill every soul aboard this ship. Probe memories, data trails, stray vox recordings. And when they find gaps? They'll dig until they crack open the hull."

He met Koron's eyes for a long moment.

"You were hoping I could protect them. Some Astartes loophole. An oath. A code."

Koron gave a slow, weary nod.

Tavos's lips could have been used as straight edge.

"Even we are not above the Inquisition." He coughed once. "If you want to save them… find a very good place to hide."

Koron stood with a sigh, brushing dust from his cloak like it offended him. "Then it seems I've wasted your time."

Tavos's brow creased. His voice sharpened, despite the rasp.

"No. You're walking away too easily. You care about them—you wouldn't have risked coming here if you didn't. So why even bother? If you're already ghosting the footage, if you have the systems, why show your face to me? Why confirm your presence at all?"

Koron paused, then reached into his robes and drew out a slender injector. The vial inside shimmered faintly—silver, opalescent, alive.

"Two reasons," he said, turning it slowly in his fingers. "First? I wanted to meet the man who commands Kade. See what kind of person he is."

He tossed the injector lightly. It landed in Tavos's lap with a soft click.

"And the second?" Tavos asked, not yet picking it up.

Koron's expression was unreadable.

"To give you a reason not to hurt them."

Tavos stared at the vial.

"What is it?"

"Medicine. From my time." Koron's voice was quiet, but carried like a confession in a cathedral. "I already administered it to your wounded. The worst of their injuries will be gone in two days. Even the ones with brain damage. Even your spinal damage."

He said it plainly. Not boastful. Not smug. Just fact.

As though he'd handed over a miracle... and expected nothing in return.

Tavos stared at the vial in his lap—small, unassuming, the silver within catching the light like mercury with purpose. A thousand thoughts spun behind his crimson eyes, clashing blades in a war council.

At last, his gaze rose to meet Koron's. Red to blue. Ancient discipline to something that should not be.

"How do you know I won't turn them over anyway?"

Koron shrugged, a mirthless grin tugging at his lips.

"I don't," he said. "Not really. But I figured Vulkan's sons still remember what their father stood for."

And with that quiet blade of a farewell, he turned and left—his footsteps vanishing into the hush of the corridor, like a ghost that had never been there at all.

Tavos stared at the door long after it had closed, the conversation running laps through his fractured mind. Lies and truths interwoven like armor mesh. Half of what the boy said had been misdirection. But the other half?

The other half had teeth.

He looked down and turned the vial in his fingers, letting the light fracture across its surface. The liquid shimmered like something alive.

"Two days…" he muttered, voice low. "I suppose I can delay my report that long."

-

The moment the doors sealed behind him, Koron's form flickered and vanished—his cloaking field reengaging with a faint whine of folding optics.

'So,' he asked as they slipped down the corridor's spine, 'get everything?'

'Sugar, I got everything,'
Sasha purred, smug enough to corrupt a logic engine. 'Voice pattern, retinal print, DNA sample, biometrics down to the twitch of his left pinky. We could wear this ship like a prom dress.'

'Perfect,' Koron replied, tone bone-dry. 'Start scrubbing every log, every data cell. Let's give Dusthaven a quiet place to spend the night.'

'Sleepover at our place, huh?'
Sasha said sweetly. 'I'll break out the fluffy pillowcases and good snacks.'

They ghosted deeper into the ship's spine—one man and the voice in his head, dragging miracles, secrets, and salvation behind them like a bloody cloak.

-

The landing had nearly killed it.

Red sand erupted in bloody arcs as it tore across the dunes, carving a jagged trench into Baal's scorched skin. Warp shielding sputtered like dying candlelight, barely holding. Its wings—twisted wreckage of bone and radiance—offered only a ghost of resistance before the inevitable impact.

It lay still, embedded in the grit. Smoldering. Breathing. Grinning.

The sky above churned with heavy clouds and centuries of unspent storms, but the creature only smiled wider. It tasted the air—thick with iron, smoke, and something deeper.

Faith.

Faint. Diffuse. But present. The world hummed with reverence, an undercurrent of belief that clung to every stone and every silence.

Not like aboard the ship. There, the worship had been focused—intimate, overwhelming. Directed solely at it.

Here, the faith pulled strongly elsewhere.

The sons of the angel knew exactly where their father lay. Their prayers flowed toward that sacred tomb like gravity. And in their conviction, they starved it.

But not completely.

There were scraps. Morsels. Fragmented prayers whispered in passing. Flickers of awe. Moments of fear. Cracks in doctrine.

Enough to cling to.

Enough to rebuild.

More than that—there was a thread. A current buried deep in the torrent of belief. A resonance. A link.

Even in slumber, Aleron's soul pulsed like a sunken drum, echoing beneath the surface of faith. It called out—blind, instinctual—toward the center of it all. Toward the tomb.

The connection was raw. Inexplicable. But undeniable.

The pull grew stronger with every heartbeat.

Not yet, it told itself.

It was too weak. Even now, it could feel the ancient wards encircling the shrine—old, hateful things etched in pain and sealed by martyrdom. And behind those walls, the watchers. The faithful. The Astartes.

It knew the kind of devotion that bled red and gold. Knew the kind of sentinels who would fight to the last drop of soul and bone to bar the path.

So it would wait.

It would crouch in shadow. Feed on the broken. The forgotten. The desperate.

Scraps, yes.

But scraps become slivers.

Slivers become shards.

And a feast always begins with the first cut.
 
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