Hive Alda, Baraspine
Most people who had met Martin Crenshaw assumed that he was not a man who ever shed tears. That was broadly true. Many also assumed that he was compassionless. That was less accurate.
Jaded might have been a slightly more fitting description. But some things could pierce even a jaded psyche, and shock it into a true numbness that matched the cold, empty exterior. Today Martin Crenshaw was cold, inside and out.
The scene was tranquil. The monastery crypt held all the trappings that befitted such a passing - candles, incense, garlands of flowers, a cyber-cherub that clung to the vault above the bier, projecting soft hymnals from its vox caster. A golden idol of the Saviour Emperor watched over the casket, hands spread in solemn blessing. But there was a hole in the serenity, an ugly black emptiness where something should have been, and its size and shape was a match for Solvan Belannor.
Crenshaw looked at the bishop’s face, rendered in commendable detail on the stone of the coffin lid. The sculptors had wanted a stern, indomitable expression for his repose, but Sapphira had all but threatened them into reconsidering. Now the stone relief lay with hands calmly folded, its sleeping face graced by the understanding smile that the team had known so well. It was the smile he had often given Alia’s agents when they were together at prayer; or when he found one of them alone, wrestling with their personal daemons.
Or when you officiated mine and Kally’s wedding.
Solvan had earned Crenshaw’s trust and respect long before then, but that...yes, damn it, that had earned his friendship. As far as Martin Crenshaw could truly consider someone a friend, Solvan Belannor had been that.
Crenshaw raised his eyes from the gentle features lit from all sides by their halo of candles, towards the hard, golden face of the Emperor. Only gold now, he noted with dark cynicism - the ministorum had of course thoroughly rejected the greed of Goge Vandire and the opulence of his Temple Tendency.
“We call you the saviour Emperor.” he said bluntly, speaking in the long-obsolete High Gothic of the Tendency. “But anyone with a grain of intelligence knows that you are a vengeful god. I will not begrudge you that. But what kind of god takes vengeance on his most faithful servant?”
The statue glowered back at him; silent, stoic.
“This man lost his youth to xenos magic to protect your people. He threw himself on a grenade on Perinetus to protect
your people. He went to that convocation to
protect your people.”
Crenshaw’s flesh and blood hand thumped against the stone pedestal beneath the coffin.
“I could be on that bier, and that would be good and just. I have no soul to save. Alia’s team have borne the brunt of the retribution for my actions on the
Ampoliros and elsewhere, and I deserve my own share of judgement. But you punish me by letting
him die?”
His head dipped a fraction.
“He did more for Kally than I possibly ever will. She is going to hear about his death the hard way, and you will not even grant me the mercy of being able to be there for her when she does. Frak you. You are no god of mine.”
“Pre-reformation Gothic.” said Alia Machairi.
Crenshaw brought his prosthetic teeth together with a
clack. “A cursed language is good for cursing in.”
He turned towards the arched entrance way, and saw that Alia and Tomas had entered the crypt. He had hardly expected Machairi to announce her arrival in the Baraspine system, but he had also not expected her to be here so soon, even in secret. The fact that he hadn’t heard the two of them enter spoke to the extent of his compromised state.
The inquisitor and her bodyguard looked little better. Machairi was still confined to her wheelchair, though he noted new spinal implants in the back of her neck; the precursors to reconstructive surgery. It was not the wheelchair that made her look frail and brittle. Tomas, meanwhile, moved like a man unable to wake from a dream - his eyes a window into a soul that had been broken in half and put back together crooked.
“If you were me, you’d be telling yourself to be more careful.” Machairi said. “Some people aren’t too pious to eavesdrop, even in a church.”
Crenshaw turned away, both hands leaning heavily on the marble pedestal as he faced the coffin. “Are you going to tell me, then?”
“No.” Machairi’s voice was strained, a puff of white air that was almost immediately stolen by the circulation within the chapel. “I’m going to tell you that I loved him too. He was more a mentor to me than Sidonis ever was.”
“He managed to be a mentor to every single one of us.” Tomas nodded. His hand rested absently on his sword scabbard.
Machairi swallowed with an obvious effort. “Someone like Solvan...you’re lucky if you meet them even once. Someone like him can’t be replaced. You can’t make it right.”
Crenshaw exhaled. “If you were me, Alia, you would say you can live by his ideals. Keep the people he swore to protect safe.” His cheek twitched as he bit down. “You might also say the best way to do that is kill the ones responsible for this.”
“Maybe.” the inquisitor answered, closing her eyes. “But for now, all I want to do is grieve. I want to imagine him at the Emperor’s side before I think about sending anyone else to join him.” She looked up at Crenshaw, mirroring his own earlier response. “Are you going to tell me better?”
Crenshaw clasped his hands, looking up at the idol. “No.”
Prove that you are worthy of your name, saviour Emperor. Welcome him.
+ + + + + +
The sky had dawned bright and clear-blue, which seemed so wrong that Kelly Black had to polarise the windows and shut it out. The laboratory’s old air circulators wheezed and rumbled as they fought to keep the temperature of the room somewhere below suffocating.
Surrounded by evidence bags and immaculate stacks of verispex equipment, Kelly peeled off her plastek gloves and dropped her head into her hands. Every now and then it would randomly hit her and squeeze the air from her lungs, turning her next inhale into a sniffle, the exhale into a shudder. She had been tugging back and forth between the two states for hours - the stomach-churning grief that forced her to pull up short, and the masochistic need to carry on, to see all of it.
He’s really gone.
Solvan had been a rock for all of them, and for Kelly herself more than once. While everything else around them fell apart he was always there, and always seemed to know just what to say. And after the time-void on Hercynia and falling on a grenade for them all on Perinetus, she had naively believed that the Emperor simply wouldn’t allow such a good man to die.
Sifting through the old priest’s last hours, rendering it down in forensic detail, was only making the pain worse - and she already knew that it was essentially pointless.
Tarpeian’s men killed most of the attackers, and those who aren’t dead soon will be. Neither outcome brings him back. And yet she felt the compulsion to keep digging at the wound.
Was she just trying to bury herself in work - any kind of work? If so she was getting as bad as Marc. Kelly cuffed at her nose and looked down at the notes again. They were paperclipped to a pict, of cold grey skin striped with ugly black bruises.
Bruising suggests a single hand (left) wrapped around the victim's throat. Damage to trachea and vocal cords too extensive for typical human grip strength, even in the scenario of assailant pushing down on prone victim with full body weight. Angular abrasion pattern on victim’s skin also atypical. It is concluded that the victim was strangled with a bionic left hand.
Kelly turned the paper over, hiding the cold, clinical words and the painful photo-pict that accompanied them.
Bionic hands still collect DNA. The frateris’ debrief had noted several of the Adrantean assailants to have bionics, and the compulsion to find out which one of them had done the deed was still burning hollowly in her stomach.
“And then what?” she murmured, scolding herself aloud. If the killer was one of the men who had escaped the cardinal’s enforcers, then telling Marc and the others would just goad them into swearing futile, bloody vengeance. If the killer was already dead, then her trail of distractions was cold - and Solvan would still be gone.
She got up, wearily, and made her way over to the sterile white block of the genetic analyser.
The sample centrifuge was whirring, and the machine’s printer hummed as it juddered out sheets stamped with long bars of black and grey.
And then the screen uplinked to the team’s partitioned data library began to blink: MATCH.
+ + + + + +
“That’s not possible.” Gavin’s voice was glacial, but his fists were trembling, and the muscles in his neck were standing out taut. “I blew his shuttle out of the void.
I killed him.”
Marc stared down at his own PDA in silence. He wanted to think that Gavin was right and dismiss the DNA evidence as some kind of fault or rogue reading, but it made too much twisted sense.
We never found Vince’s arm. But how the Horus had Carson gotten off the orbital if he hadn’t been in that shuttle?
Impiger or
Tiercel would never have been an option.
Arthrashastra was hardly more likely - the one thing that they and Alley had agreed on was that Merle Carson needed to die. If he had gotten past the Nebulas then he might have been able to lose himself in the sprint trader’s mothballed decks, but Vince - Marc swallowed - Vince had still been alive and fighting him when the Nebulas made their hostage trade with Glabrio and closed the airlocks. The times didn’t match up.
But the only option left after that was for Merle to crawl away into Concordia’s under-decks to die of his wounds.
Concordia had a medicae suite.
It also had non-perishable stores for visiting diplomats, more than enough to keep one man alive between the mechanicus’ annual tributes.
He never left. And then - what, he bluffed his way onto some visiting trader vessel?
Marc clenched his fingers tighter around the compact data slate, as he realised that he was asking the wrong question.
Carson doesn’t have the means to orchestrate something like the attack on Reshia. And the Adranteans still professed the imperial faith - precious few of them would have agreed to stain their nascent republic’s image further, with a blatant attack on the Emperor’s church. Unless their target wasn’t the church, but the inquisition. Then, Carson became the perfect asset to target Solvan.
So who is Carson working with now?
The only thing that seemed certain for the moment was that Solvan had
not been a random victim amid the attack.
Marc’s head was pounding. Was it him the Emperor was punishing? It was a self-indulgent thought, but it was also the second time Merle Carson had been employed to murder one of his friends, right after Marc himself had shied away from their well-meant concern. Right after they had parted on bad terms.
Just like Vince. he thought as his vision blurred.
He felt acid burning the back of his throat, and turned to quit the room.
“Kelly’s already on her way.” Gavin barked sharply at him. “The least you could do is stay and be here for her!”
Marc halted, the technomancer a pace behind his right shoulder.
“Aye right.” he growled.
I’d just make her worse. The useful thing he could do right now was dig into all the shipping logs on and off Reshia: so that they could find out where the bastard might have gone, and kill him.
“Do we all have to die before you’ll talk to us?” Gavin asked him scathingly.
Marc whirled round, fist clenched to turn the spin into a punch aimed at Gavin’s face. The glass face of his wrist-chron broke with a sound like cracking ice, and the metal-link strap twisted and crushed tight around his wrist. Marc let out an involuntary bark of pain as the crushing force sprang his fingers open and caused them to rake harmlessly past Gavin’s jaw.
He hunched, cradling his wrist as ice crystals steamed off his arm. Looking into Gavin’s eyes, he saw that the psyker was as furious as he was: jaw clenched, muscles ticking in his scar-ravaged temples, sheens of ice glinting across his eyes.
It was Gavin who blinked first.
“I won’t claim to know your sister as well as you do.” the psyker said, more quietly. “But I do know that this rift between you is hurting her too.”
It was her decision, was Marc’s first thought.
You’re as stubborn as each other, was his second, coming to him in Solvan’s voice. “I know.” he said.
“She’s a forgiving soul.” Gavin said as the ice around his eyes melted and formed a wet sheen on his cheeks. “If you can un-frak yourself, she’ll come around.”
Marc held the smaller man’s gaze for a moment, cradling his crushed wrist. “I hope so.” he murmured, and turned away.
“You’re not running again.” Gavin warned him.
“No,” Marc agreed, “I’m not. I just...need to get my thoughts in order first.”
Marc retreated from the room, and this time Gavin let him walk. The hallways of the new ordo headquarters were full of armoured agents and shuffling, robed adepts, and they paid Marc no mind as he forged slowly through them, wincing as he peeled the crushed remnants of his wrist-chron off his arm and examined the welts where the links had dug into his skin. He flexed his injured hand open and closed, thinking.
Gavin’s right. How many times am I going to keep on making the same mistake.
He found an empty office, closed the door, and clicked on his PDA’s dictaphone recorder.
+ + + + + +
Inquisition void runner Crimson Eye
In orbit above Reshia
“You’re risking a lot just by making this vox call.” inquisitor Yannick growled. His bionic eye glowed like a dull ember, the rest of his face lit by the holo-projector that was casting its grainy, greyed-out image across the observation lounge. The ashen globe of Reshia spun lazily beyond the windows, with the void-runner’s extended vox mast jutting like a needle across the view.
“No-one will be spying on us.” Tarpeian’s bastard dismissed lazily. Gideon Tarpeian had his father’s long face but his mask was not as carefully constructed, the malice slipping out past his soft-spoken manners to hang like a permanent threat behind his blue eyes. “Even if I were stupid enough to be sending this signal unencrypted, you have every reason to be here investigating the attack, and I have every reason to be telling you the tragic story.”
“I would have preferred a less conspicuous go-between than the cardinal’s own spawn.”
“How so? The lord cardinal has a rock solid alibi. He was at the convocation when it was attacked, after all.”
At the seat beside Yannick, inquisitor DeShilo’s black dreadlocks cascaded over his shoulders as he leaned forward to rest his chin on his hands. “He wouldn’t have needed an alibi if he had gone for something less blunt than a full terror raid.”
“It was inelegant.” Mariyana Veiss agreed as she hovered down to bring herself closer to the holo-tank. “Effective, I’ll grant you, but
atrociously inelegant.”
“You wanted Machairi’s old preacher dead, yes?” Gideon countered.
“The domina is right.” DeShilo agreed. “Your lord father could have accomplished that without so much collateral death.”
“It is not in his nature to be restrained in the persecution of heretics.”
DeShilo closed his eyes for a moment, shaking his head. “Which is an issue in itself. This whole affair is far too close to lord Tarpeian’s signature methods for my liking, alibi or no. The church is a bad enemy, and even Vaegar’s lackeys aren’t totally expendable.”
“My lord father
is the church.” The hologram’s pict component had frozen, flickering jerkily between frames, but the two inquisitors could hear the smile in Gideon’s voice. “And most of those collateral deaths were his enemies. His goals were well served.”
“And our goals?” legus Telek challenged. His hood shadowed all but his mouth and jaw from the hololith’s light. “Your machinations have driven Machairi’s team into a defensive posture.”
“
Crenshaw,” the hatchet-faced man at Telek’s elbow added, his lips curling at the name. “Is working alongside them again, and Sonder is still active in the field.”
“You should study your quarry more closely.” Gideon replied.
“We are perfectly aware of their team dynamic.” DeShilo answered coolly. He had personally intercepted the late Josiah Wuziarch’s effects on their way back to the arbites, and had subsequently recovered and decoded the lawman’s private notes to add to Sidonis’ more outdated psych profiles.
“Then you’ll know that Belannor was a stabilising influence in their group. If they don’t do something reckless and walk straight into your hands on a heresy charge, then my father’s next blow will surely have them doing so.”
The video had begun to stutter again, freeze-framing between images. The moments they captured turned Gideon’s smile into something quietly feral.
“Make your preparations.” Yannick said curtly, and ended the transmission as the receiving station on the planet below drifted beyond the orbital horizon. He exhaled, slowly. “I suppose that means you’ll be needed once more, penitent Carson.”
He cast his eyes towards the door, where a familiar, ravaged figure leaned indifferently against the wheel lock. At the sound of his name Merle straightened, snapping to attention with an enthusiastic grin on his face.
"Fuckin’ A, I'm ready to go again." he drawled at Yannick.
The inquisitor regarded him. "I've read your file, Carson. And the first thing I resolved was not to trust anything you say."
Merle shrugged. "I...ain't ready to go again?"
“Regardless of the…” Telek shot Merle a sidelong glance. “
Asset used, our friend is right about one thing. The time is ripe to move onto our next target.”
“Crenshaw.” DeShilo guessed. The legus and his ill-tempered lackey were seldom fixated on anything else. “You got the evidence you needed, then?”
“Colonel Cummings sent Urquhart to engage him.” said Telek, and a smile ghosted across the face of his associate.
“A honey trap?” Veiss asked, tapping a finger against her jaw. “How delightfully traditional. Did she know?”
Cummings’ grin soured into a sneer. “Do you take me for a fool? I raised it through the blank breeding programme. A standard, scheduled coupling.”
“He went so far as to threaten to kill her.” Telek deadpanned. “He is most definitely...compromised.”
DeShilo steepled his fingers. “A good thing he didn’t, or we wouldn’t have gotten her report.”
“It would not have mattered if he had. In fact it might have been preferable, as we could then have arrested him immediately.”
Across from DeShilo, Yannick smiled, but there was frost on it. “Are all the AAT as detached as you, Telek?”
Yannick was looking at Telek’s half-shrouded face, but DeShilo knew that, thanks to certain facial motor surgeries, the legus seldom emoted anything. He looked instead at the legus’ robes, his dark eyes flickering to the wireframe eye stitched onto them. For ten thousand years, that eye symbol had given men like Telek the legal mandate to oversee the largest and longest running slave fleet in human history, with the most dangerous cargo imaginable. They were the iron shepherds of all the blessed, cursed souls who held the Imperium together by their telepathic whispers and by their sacrifice to the golden throne of Terra. It was not a task suited to men averse to spending lives, or to ending them.
Telek confirmed his assessment by answering Yannick’s question with a blank un-smile. “Yes.” the legus said simply.
“The intelligent response would have been to submit to your good lady’s charms.” Veiss mused. “But no, major Crenshaw wouldn’t do that. If he wouldn’t so much as cast a wandering eye in
my direction, he must be truly smitten with Kally. They’re married now, didn’t you know.”
“Married?” Yannick scoffed. “A pair of
soulless?”
Veiss batted her eyes innocently. “I know, I thought that such a rare occasion deserved marking. I made sure to treat them to a proper honeymoon after I reunited them.”
“You…” Cummings gaped, after which there was a long pause. DeShilo could see his jaw working, the tendons in his neck tensing as if poison were rising up inside his throat. “
What!?”
“And I’m pleased to say that it was surely the best honeymoon that that dreary little hive world has ever seen.” Veiss continued cheerfully.
Yannick’s fist hit the table like a thunderclap. “Is this a game to you,
domina?” the one-eyed inquisitor spat, the last word carrying all of his well-known antipathy towards the mechanicus.
“You are telling me.” Cummings finally ground out, “That you had the opportunity to eliminate both Sonder and Crenshaw, and you...did nothing?”
“Oh don’t be so boring, darling.” Veiss rebuked, with a dismissive flick of her metal fan. “Next you’ll tell me you staked everything on those saboteurs blowing him to bits at that ghastly auto-da-fe.” Her eyes switched towards the rest of the group. “You boys didn’t facilitate that little terror raid too, did you? Some might accuse you of actively sabotaging the Imperial war effort at this point.”
DeShilo shook his head. “One might argue that these repeated attacks on the ministorum serve to destroy the Adranteans’ credibility as wayward faithful, but no. The Legion’s treachery was abhorrent, and it had nothing to do with us. Although…” He turned a narrowed eye on the two AAT representatives. “When colonel Cummings assigned Crenshaw to attend, I’m sure he expected the frateris’ excesses to draw
some kind of violent reaction from the Baraspini.”
Veiss tutted. “Even worse than Tarpeian. At least he can claim to be inelegant but
effective. I have a better hypothetical for you. What if I were to smuggle Kally Sonder to Marioch alongside the expeditionary forces, supported on the ground by my own huntsmen, and supported operationally by my own son and heir - none could doubt my commitment if I were to involve dear Evgeni - with the intention of ambushing and killing the lamentable Alicia Tarran. Wouldn’t it be just
tragic if she were to die in the process of eliminating the Heroine of the Republic?”
“Hypothetically?” Yannick prompted, cautiously.
Veiss fanned herself as she cocked her head in the direction of colonel Cummings. “Colonel, your hatred suggests a certain familiarity. How would Martin Crenshaw react to the death of the woman he loves, especially given that I took pains to make their last meeting the best night of their soulless lives?”
The venom drained from Cummings’ face as he considered, the flicker of an oily smile returning. “We know that he disagreed with Machairi about Sonder’s field deployment. He holds her responsible for Sonder’s safety. Of the many people he would seek to kill, Machairi may well be the first.”
“And anyone between her and him, I shouldn’t wonder.” Veiss said. “The remainder of her team’s presence is a given, and I’m sure it could be arranged for that grey little man Lucullis to be there too.” She smiled sweetly. “All hypothetical, of course.”
Yannick frowned, no doubt wondering what other
hypotheticals the domina was considering. The psyk-warding pendant that Veiss wore brazenly woven into her mask whenever she graced them with her presence could not have done much to quell his fears.
“A neatly self-contained outcome.” DeShilo admitted. “Although one with quite a few possible points of failure.”
“You would go down in my estimation if you didn’t recognise that, darling.” Veiss purred. “As I said, hypothetical...so let us focus on the first act: Marioch.”
Yannick’s bionic eye whirred, the lens narrowing. “You are committing some of your best assets to this plan.”
“I daresay
the best.” Veiss replied. “My own son, as I said. Though I hope you will respect my wish to keep his hands clean in the final operation.”
Yannick twitched two fingers, the slightest gesture of assent. “Very well. Then I will match your contribution. Some of my own tier one assets. But they will not act until Sonder’s kill on Tarran has been confirmed. The heretic is the greater threat.”
“If you are talking about the
assets I think you are talking about…” Veiss elegantly closed the metal fan against the palm of her hand. “Are you sure you don’t have a flair for theatrics, inquisitor? I gave DeRei’s rifle to Kally to use against Tarran for a reason - and I do expect that marvellous specimen back, darling - but setting
them against her afterward is almost as fitting.”
“I can assure you I have no taste for theatrics.” Yannick stated bluntly. “I merely know of Sonder’s augments, and I wish to see her countered and destroyed in the most certain way possible.”
Veiss hovered a little higher into the air. “You have to admit, it is
delicious.” She fixed Yannick with a coy look. “I don’t suppose you’d permit me to make that destruction a little
more certain with some modifications of my own? I would love to compare them alongside my ongoing project with lord cardinal Tarpeian.”
Yannick regarded her steadily, and DeShilo had to agree that his reservation at letting Veiss tamper with his soldiers was prudent. “I think not.”
Veiss made an elaborate charade of sighing and shrugging her shoulders. “Oh very well. Speaking of the lord cardinal, what is his next move on Baraspine?”
As the tension in the room subsided, the hostility turned outward once more towards Machairi and her team, DeShilo found himself reassessing the domina.
Not fickle exactly, but she definitely plans to outwit and destroy everyone she meets. He had thought that the marriage and the priesthood had turned her feelings to ash, but now he wondered if that soul hadn’t always been infertile.
Nothing grows in that woman but greed.
+ + + + + +
Merle leaned his scarred head back against the wall, zoning out now that the inquisitors and their friends were seemingly done with him.
“I’m going to miss Belannor.” the Shard said wistfully, squatting with its chin in its hands beside him. “Isn’t it a lovely twist of fate that the old priest started all of...well, us?”
Merle flinched and turned away.
I fuckin’ begged him. He could still see the confessor’s face cursing him, telling him that he was irrevocably damned - only this time his face was turning black, with blood vessels bursting in his eyes.
“Don’t say I’m never good to you.” the Shard admonished. “I
did give you the honour of killing him.” It pushed its hands into its knees and rose, blue hair flicking behind its shoulders. “Now pay attention, this next bit concerns you.”
Merle looked up, in time to see Yannick speaking while a spidery tech-servitor powered down the holo-tank.
“Tarpeian will be bringing her to his sanctuary, once her purpose in the War of Faith has been served. We will need you to guard her.”
“Huh?” Merle said hurriedly, standing up straighter. “Who?”
Yannick looked at him with contempt. “The Sister, of course.”
Merle nodded and swallowed, but inside he felt cold. The clawing desire to pay the hospitaller bitch back, for everything she had done while he was in her captivity, warred against the knowledge that the daemon would reflect each and every sensation back on him.
“Think about it.” the Shard said, seemingly unconcerned. “If the old fool’s assassination is a knife to your former team’s heart, then taking the Sister too is twisting it...and because our friend Tarpeian is that much of a grandiose megalomaniac, I assume he wants to be the one to do it directly to their faces.”
She wrapped her arms around Merle almost tenderly, and the convict felt the warm brush of phantom skin against his own cold and clammy neck. The daemon’s face was against his, whispering in his ear.
“Their lady inquisitor is broken - in body and, worse, politically. She has nothing more than her team and a few marginal allies. The family Kol? Well, I’m sure you’ll remember the servo skulls from the last time they crossed the lord cardinal. The Silent Vigil? They have more direct concerns, and every casualty diminishes their influence in the crusade’s decision making. Lucullis made the mistake of trying to be a lone wolf in a world of packs - and he’s about to find that his one true ally, lady Veiss, is not such a loyal ally after all. I expect our dear lord cardinal is smelling blood.”
The daemon chuckled to itself as it pulled black, red eyes glinting with mischief, the tip of a pearly tooth protruding as it dragged one corner of its bottom lip into its mouth.
“Oh, just you wait.” it assured Merle. “This is going to be good.”
+ + + + + +
St Alric’s Cathedral, Baraspine
Located in the heights of spire secundus, the cathedral had weathered the invasion unscathed. Pontifex Albinius had called it the will of the Emperor protecting the place - though Glabrio suspected it had more to do with his commanders on the ground fearing the wrath of his bulldog Tarpeian, and ordering their air support to stay well clear of the holy landmark.
The cathedral stood at the end of a long, narrow spur jutting from the side of the hive spire, its three bell-towers facing defiantly out onto the basin of the Allocthon crater. Even under the shelter of the crater wall, the glass storms had done their work: softening and blurring the granite features of the saints who stood atop its towers. Instead of the delicate crystal glass that adorned the windows of other churches, the cathedral’s arched windows were thick translucent armourglass - grainily coloured and letting in only a fraction of the sunlight. To compensate, the stairway leading up to the main nave was flanked by dozens of tall candles, the gold-coloured wax running into thin grooves that captured the run-off in silver bowls at the foot of the ascent.
Glabrio felt weighted down as he climbed the stairs. The rosette pinned to the silk-fronted lapel of his frock coat was burning a hole through his chest, the metal pin he could feel through the material putting him in mind of a bullet aimed at his heart. Imperial generals with thousands at their command had shied away from this place, and he was here to aim an accusation straight at the leaders of the Emperor’s church.
He felt a light squeeze of his hand, and glanced aside. Sapphira must have sensed his disquiet, and she was giving him an encouraging look. It was enough to steel him for the task ahead, and to remind him why they were here.
Solvan. Glabrio had loved the priest like an older, slightly quarrelsome brother, and he wanted to see justice done as much as the rest of them. Lady Alia was demanding answers - about how the massacre had been allowed to happen, and how Solvan was seemingly able to be so directly targeted.
The thought of the Lady soothed his humours a little.
Most of the others don’t even know she’s on the planet. She trusts me to get this done for her. She still trusts me.
He squeezed Sapphira’s hand back, and offered her a smile before dropping his hand to his belt. To his right Marc and Gavin walked with grim purpose, and he saw the silver glint of Marc’s spy drone flitting close to the agent’s shoulder. On Sapphira’s left, Kelly looked tensely vigilant. Crenshaw was silent; detached, focused. The short, rotund Kol woman beside him was blandly impassive.
She has her own agenda, but the Lady trusts her too.
A row of sonorous vox-servitors waited at the top of the stairs, and they slid aside like metal beads to admit Glabrio and his team into the main nave of the cathedral. A trio of recorder-skulls circled lazily overhead. Before them, a double-vision flicker between the vast columns betrayed a refractor field, active across the entrance to the preacher’s apse. Standing in front of the screen were a dozen professional-looking frateris; at ease with feet apart and hands behind their backs, but with lasguns slung openly across their chests. Behind the flicker field were four crusaders in overlapping plate, shields grounded with the embossed aquilas facing the approaching agents. Behind
them were a knot of red-robed acolytes.
And lord cardinal Tarpeian.
Glabrio’s jaw tensed as he focused on the man. For a moment he fancied he saw the hatchet-faced cardinal smile, but then the refractor field rippled and swam like a veil of water, and by the time the image had reformed Tarpeian was the picture of quiet dignity.
Glabrio halted ten paces short of the cold-eyed frateris veterans, and for a moment there was silence.
“Lord cardinal.” Glabrio said at last. “
Imperator benedicat. I must say, it’s a surprise to see
you answering our summons.”
“Quite.” he heard Marc murmur under his breath. The investigator shared all of Glabrio’s own doubts about how the lord cardinal had managed to come out of the convocation bloodbath as a hero. Glabrio felt little threat from the Aurelian veterans and their show of force - the lord cardinal wouldn’t dare spill inquisition blood in such a public and sacred place - but still he had the uneasy feeling of standing in the jaws of a trap.
Cardinal Tarpeian slowly signed the aquila. “Your benedictions are welcome, agents, but I am not here upon your summons. I am here for sister Sapphira.”
The name was like the gunshot Glabrio had been half expecting. He glanced left at the sister and saw her looking back, a frown knitting her eyebrows. He looked back at the cardinal behind his shimmering force wall.
“Excuse me?” he stated politely.
“As a former guardian of Saint Nicolas of Delphi,” Tarpeian piously signed the aquila once again. “She is necessary for his presentation to the Delphic Triarii, ahead of the War of Faith on Coseflame.”
“Nicolas Lehner was never canonised.” Sapphira challenged him.
“Really?” Behind the field, Tarpeian carefully unfolded a document. “This record was obtained by the labour of my faithful servant Posca, may he rest in the Emperor’s eternal grace.”
The parchment he was holding meant nothing to Glabrio, but Sapphira turned as white as ash.
“What?” he whispered urgently, half turning his head. “What is it?”
Sapphira bit her lip. “Vince told me it was a stupid idea.” she murmured, almost too low for him to hear.
None the wiser, Glabrio could only watch with increasing unease. The cardinal had wrested control of the conversation from him, and it was not a position with which he was familiar - or fond of.
“Ink on a page is always subject to interpretation.” Tarpeian noted sagely. “Much like your previous statement, Sister...some might see that as the guilt-wracked confession of someone responsible for the destruction of a holy relic.”
Hercynia. Glabrio suddenly remembered, and felt his stomach sink.
She kept the pieces after that replicant blew her servo skull to bits, and Vince helped her with the funerary rites.
“A xenos construct on Venatora destroyed it.” he challenged Tarpeian. “We’ve got all the written and vid-reel evidence you like. The skull interposed itself to save Sapphira. If you see guilt in that rather than a miracle from the Emperor Himself, then I really don’t know what to tell you.”
He had hoped that the appeal to faith would throw the cardinal and his lackeys off their stride, but alas he was mistaken.
“What I see.” Tarpeian stated, calmly but with heavy intent, “Is a
sororita who is very publicly known to have brought shame to her Order, and disgrace to the Sisterhood, by her service alongside...” The cardinal gritted his teeth and signed the aquila once again, as if he were trying to choke up some hideous blasphemy. “
Saint Alia Machairi.”
“Blessings be upon her name.” Glabrio stated defiantly.
“You overstep.” Tarpeian warned, the first hint of a growl entering his voice. “We talk of confirming saints, but your inquisitor is someone who most certainly has
not been officially canonised.”
Sapphira’s fists were clenched tight, as were Kelly’s, Gavin’s and Marc’s. Glabrio began to reassess the probability of bloodshed as the Aurelian veterans unclasped their hands and rested them instead across the grips of their hanging lasguns. Their commander, a lank haired, blue eyed man whose long face bore a striking resemblance to Tarpeian’s, met Glabrio’s eyes and smiled, offering him an almost polite nod of acknowledgement.
The servo skulls. Glabrio thought, glancing up.
Marc’s drone. He must know this is all being watched and recorded.
“Think carefully, cardinal.” he cautioned. “Saph’s an agent of the Inquisition. Consider where your authority ends, and the consequences of overstepping it.”
“I overstep nothing.” the lord cardinal countered. “Sapphira is a Sister Errant.” His eyes narrowed through the rippling forcefield. “Very, very errant…and as a subject of the ministorum, her collaboration with your team is strictly by the Holy Church’s goodwill. By my right as lord cardinal, I am now revoking that goodwill.”
The frateris’ hands were around their lasgun grips now, fingers resting alongside the trigger guards. Glabrio’s mind raced for a way out, but he could see none. The same recorder-skulls playing witness to the exchange were binding his hands just as he had hoped they would bind Tarpeian’s. He looked at Sapphira again, but the sister’s shoulders had already slumped.
“I would suggest that you make use of this time to say your
final goodbyes.” Tarpeian rumbled softly.
Glabrio looked Sapphira in the eye. She looked overwhelmed, hollow, lost. He saw her beautiful lips move, forming three silent words.
I love you.
The rosette pin was cold against his heart. There it was. There was the bullet.
By the time he had regained enough wits to reply, a wiry Aurelian had already put her hand on Sapphira’s wrist, and was pulling her away from him across the endless gulf of the cathedral floor. Behind the oily refractor field, Tarpeian was smiling - openly now; a tight, wolfish smile of victory.
I love you too. Glabrio realised. And with that clarity, he went for his gun.
A cold metal hand clamped down hard on top of his, pinning it to the holster.
“
I know.” Crenshaw hissed in his ear, and the proximity of his blank aura made Glabrio want to retch. “We will retaliate, but not now.”
“
When!?” Glabrio snapped, not caring if the Aurelians heard.
“When we have the opportunity.”
And when will that be!?
For a moment, he thought he saw a spark of kindred resentment in the major’s eyes.
Kally. He knows what it’s like. And then he realised, with an unsettling twinge that had nothing to do with the major’s blank aura, that the major’s anger wasn’t directed entirely at Tarpeian.
Yes, he knows what it’s like to have Kally sent away...and he knows that it was the Lady and me who enabled it. He would find no alliance there.
“Marc?” Glabrio snapped, rounding on the other agent.
He understands rage. He knows what has to be done.
He bored his intent into Marc’s eyes, seeing his anger reflected back in one green eye and one milk-white bionic. But Marc just twitched his head; the subtlest of negative shakes.
“Remember what Machairi used to say, Ri.” he said, with an obvious effort. “Smarter, not harder.”
Glabrio saw a flicker of movement on his left as Kelly looked up, but before either of them could fully process Marc’s words, Tarpeian tapped his golden staff against the ground, tilting it to point towards Kelly.
“You. Go and collect the sister’s formal robes. She actually needs to look like a sister, for once.”
+ + + + + +
Kelly’s heart was thumping in her ears, her mind lashing around like a rat in a cage as she tried to think of a way out - threatening, running, fighting; they all circled back to the centre of the maze and the same inescapable outcome: Sapphira being ripped away from them. The only variable was whether the rest of them came out of the encounter alive or dead.
If I can get away from this one… She glanced aside at the Aurelian escorting her, weighed her own wiry build and limited MMA training against the muscular, sharp-eyed woman next to her, and didn’t like the odds of that course either. The ministorum might forbid its priests from keeping a standing force under their command, but Tarpeian’s bodyguards were clearly pushing the very limits of the decree - the woman looked like she had been through several warzones and collected part of her equipment from each. Her flak vest bore the golden sun of Aurelias Prime. Her marksman’s autogun was Margin pattern, her ammunition worn crossbelt-style in the manner of a Mordian fusilier. She wore a revolver on her hip, slung on a star-buckled belt like some Gunpoint outlander, and the knife strapped to her thigh…
...was Casterian. Kelly had seen the distinctive pattern-welding on Tomas Prinzel’s sword, and had heard him speak proudly on the Casterian tradition of welding their sword cores from bundles of twisted and untwisted steel. She would have recognised the striations and the starlike knots running down the centre of the knife anywhere.
For the first time, she looked at the frateris woman’s face. Her tan features were a professional mask, but there was tension in them. Her lips were pressed together just a little too tightly.
Maybe she doesn’t like what’s happening either? Kelly decided to take the gamble - it was all she had left.
She moistened her dry lips. “Soldier…”
The woman glanced sideways at her, wary. “I ain’t no soldier.” she refuted. “I’m with the frateris militia.”
Her accent was painfully familiar to Kelly; a guttural Gunpoint drawl. But there was a hint of something else mixed in with it - something even more familiar.
Kelly glossed over the semantics of titles. The militiawoman’s attention was all she had really been wanting.
“I want you to promise that you’ll look after Sapphira for us.” she said, quietly.
The other woman’s mouth twisted. “Well see, that’s a little outta my hands, agent.”
Kelly clocked her discomfort, and went all in.
“Swear it.” she urged. “On your Casterian honour.”
As she had hoped, the woman’s stride notably slowed, her eyes widening in surprise before she controlled her expression. “The fuck did you...?” she asked guardedly.
“Swear it.” Kelly pressed. Sometimes the shadowy mystique of an all-knowing inquisition had its uses, and she played it to the hilt now.
The frateris shifted from foot to foot, uncomfortably. “No promises,” she warned, “I mean, I’m not really a...but I’ll do what I can, a’ight?”
That was the best that Kelly could have hoped for.
+ + + + + +
Glabrio’s ears were ringing as he stared down the arched corridor where Sapphira had disappeared: down into the catacombs of the cathedral, and the twisting tunnels that would no doubt lead her to a waiting transport and then offworld beyond his reach - perhaps forever. He clenched his fists, trembling as his nails dug bloody grooves into his palms. He felt weightless, like his mind had escaped and was swimming free of his body.
A rhythmic sound off to his left started him out of his horrified trance. He turned his head, and saw the sari-clad figure of Avani Kol bringing her hands together in a slow, sarcastic clap. Her eyes were fixed through the shimmering refractor field towards Tarpeian.
“Well played, cardinal.” she said, her high gothic clipped and toneless. “I’m actually glad that you decided to come here personally. I’ve been meaning to ask you about my daughter.”
Tarpeian squinted down at the small woman, suspiciously. “And who are you?”
The hands that lady Kol had been clasping in front of her lowered slowly to her sides. “Avani Kol.” she answered. Glabrio saw Tarpeian’s posture shift, clenching his fists at the familiar surname.
“And my daughter is Lakshmi Kol.” the lady continued. “Her ship was attacked en route to Baraspine.”
Tarpeian composed himself. “My condolences on your loss, but I fail to see what that has to do with me.”
“Really?” Avani scoffed coldly. “You’ve hated my family ever since my brother outsmarted you on Sarus.”
Glabrio glanced around, and saw Marc already watching Avani as he caught on to what she was doing.
“You are mistaken.” Tarpeian growled thickly. “That preening little snake never
outsmarted me.”
The acolyte standing to Tarpeian’s right, a woman with elegant ropes of black hair and a dusting of freckles across her broad nose, had stopped smiling. Avani’s own smile was poisonous. “Nevertheless, your rivalry was hardly a secret. One might wonder how a Patriot cruiser was in the perfect place to intercept her ship, way out at the Apogee jump point, when the rest of the crusade fleet warped in right over Baraspine.”
“It sounds tragic, my lady.” the frateris commander broke in, his smirk matching Avani’s for venom. “If you wish, I can see to it personally that your children are recovered safely? It would allow you to focus on your own security.”
“You’re welcome to review my security any time you wish, sir.” Avani responded sweetly. “I trust you’ll be pleasantly surprised.”
The frateris commander sketched a slow bow. “Personal safety is never a permanent state of affairs, my lady.”
“Quiet, Gideon.” the woman beside Tarpeian warned.
“Don’t worry confessor, I understand your friend’s meaning.” Avani replied archly. “He means recovered in the same way the lord cardinal means it when
he launches a rescue mission.”
Tarpeian huffed and waved a hand, turning aside. “I have no idea what you are talking about, lady Kol.”
“I think you do.” Marc broke in. “Just like you know exactly what happened at the convocation.”
“The Emperor will forgive you in your grief,” Tarpeian snarled, biting down at the end of each word. “But I would have evidence before making such spurious accusations, agent.”
“I have plenty. So many of your personal enemies at one convocation must have been a tempting target. You’re not as careful as you think, heretic.”
“
You with your penitent’s brand dare call
me a heretic?” Tarpeian spat. “You will address me with
respect!”
“I’m addressing you with the respect you’re due, lord cardinal. I’m calling you a liar, and a traitor to the Imperium.”
“
I am the Ministorum in Adrantis!” Tarpeian thundered.
The woman beside him snatched at the lord cardinal’s sleeve. “
Dad!” Glabrio heard her hiss.
She knew as well as Glabrio did that Tarpeian had blundered. The interrogator saw his chance and took it.
“Really?” he smirked, and raised his gaze towards the circling recorder-skulls. He brought his eyes back down onto Tarpeian, crushing all of his grief and guilt down into a diamond-hard point. “I thought that office belonged to pontifex Albinius.”
Another one of the robed acolytes behind the field tugged at Tarpeian’s elbow. “Your radiance, we should go.”
“I’m sure you were hoping that
he would die at the convocation too.” Glabrio shouted after them as they began to hurry back into the apse. “Was that bad luck, or did your cat’s paw Carson screw up?”
Tarpeian threw off his acolytes and whirled, unwilling to let the challenge go unanswered. “And just who is Carson?” he spat.
“You don’t know that name? What about Yannick?”
The blur of the refractor field turned Tarpeian’s teeth-clenched snarl into something inhuman. “
Enough!” he roared. “All this amounts to is slanderous speculation! Speculation thrown by the
failures who allowed this rebellion to occur in the first place! No-one of worth...no faithful servant of the Emperor will give the slightest thought to your blasphemy!”
The cardinal turned and stormed away in a swirl of red, disappearing through the golden door at the north side of the apse.
Glabrio stared after him for a moment before snapping a hand at his team. “We’ve got work to do.”
I’m coming, Saph. I don’t know how yet, but I’ll get you back from that bastard.
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