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    Soul Drinkers 06 - Phalanx

    Page 9
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      a compulsion, a dark fascination as powerful as the pronouncements

      of the Chapter Master.

      This was a true disaster. Not the side effect of a war, or a revolt that

      had turned bloody. It was a catastrophe from outside, beyond the

      context of anything that had happened on Tethlan’s Holt. The scale of

      death was appalling. Millions lay decomposing in the streets. And yet

      a part of Varnica’s mind relished it. Here was not only a mystery, but a

      scale of horror that made it worth solving.

      The Thunderhawk approached its landing zone, a circular plaza in

      the Embalmers’ Quarter. Like every other possible landing site, it was

      strewn with bodies. Fat flies whipped around the Thunderhawk’s

      passenger compartment as it passed through a cloud of them,

      spattering against Varnica’s armour and the eyepieces of his power

      armour’s helmet. He took it off as the Thunderhawk came down to

      land.

      The grisly cracking sound Varnica heard was the cracking of bones

      beneath the Thunderhawk’s landing gear. More crunched below the

      lower lip of the embarkation ramp as it opened up all the way. Varnica

      walked off the gunship onto the ground of Berenika Altis, pushing

      aside the bodies with his feet so he did not have to stand on them.

      ‘Perimeter!’ shouted Sergeant Novas. His tactical squad jumped

      down after him and spread out around the plaza. Within moments the

      foul blackish flesh of the bodies was clinging to the armour of their feet

      and shins, shining wetly in the afternoon sun. The filters built into

      Varnica’s lungs took care of the toxins and diseases in the air, but

      anyone without those augmentations would have vomited or choked on

      the air.

      Techmarine Hamilca was last out, accompanied by the quartet of

      servitors that followed him everywhere like loyal pets.

      ‘What do you think, Techmarine?’ asked Varnica.

      Hamilca looked around him. The tombs of the Embalmers’ Quarter

      showed no sign of gunfire or destruction, and the sun was shining

      down from a blue sky. If one cast his gaze up far enough, there was

      nothing to see but a handsome city and fine weather. The bodies

      seemed incongruous, as if they did not belong here, even though they

      were undoubtedly the remains of this city’s population.

      ‘It is a beautiful day,’ said Hamilca, and turned to adjust the sensors

      of his servitors.

      ‘One day,’ said Novas, ‘they’ll put your brain back in, tin man.’

      Hamilca did not answer that. Varnica knelt to examine the bodies at

      his feet.

      What remained of their clothing ranged from the boiler suits of

      menials to the silks and furs of the city’s old money elite. The wounds

      were from fingers and teeth, or from whatever had been at hand. Tools

      and wrenches. Walking canes. A few kitchen knives, chunks of

      masonry, hatpins. One burly man’s throat had a woman’s silken scarf

      tied around it as a garrotte. Its previous owner might well have been

      the slender woman whose corpse lay, broken-necked, beside him.

      They had killed with anything at hand, which meant the time between

      normality and killing had been measured in minutes.

      ‘It was the Red Night,’ said Varnica.

      ‘Can you be sure?’ asked Hamilca.

      ‘I admire your desire to gather evidence,’ said Varnica, ‘but I need

      see no more than this. It is my soul that tells me. So many places like

      this we have seen, and I hear their echo off the walls of this city. The

      Red Night came here. I know it.’

      ‘Then why are we here?’ said Novas. His squad was by now in a

      loose perimeter formation, bolters trained down the avenues of tombs

      radiating out from the plaza. Novas’s Space Marines were well drilled,

      and Novas himself possessed a desire to be seen doing his duty

      combined with a blessed lack of imagination. These qualities made his

      squad Varnica’s escort of choice. They could be trusted to do their job

      and leave the thinking to the Librarian. ‘The last time we came to a

      place touched by the Red Night, there was nought to find though we

      turned that place inside out. Why will Berenika Altis be any different?’

      ‘Just smell,’ said Varnica.

      Novas snarled with a lack of amusement.

      ‘Do not scorn such advice, sergeant!’ Varnica breathed in deeply,

      theatrically. ‘Ah, what a bouquet! Ruptured entrails! Liquefying muscle!

      They are fresh! Compared to the last places we visited it, these bodies

      are ripe! We have got here earlier than before, Novas. These bodies

      still have flesh on them. We are not picking over a skeletonised heap

      but sloshing through the very swamp of their decay. Whatever brought

      the Red Night here, there is a good chance it still remains in Berenika

      Altis.’

      ‘We shall not find it here,’ said Hamilca. He was consulting readings

      from the screen built into the chest of one servitor. Another was taking

      pict-grabs using the lens that replaced both its eyes, roving across the

      corpse-choked streets. ‘Not in these streets.’

      Varnica held up the burly man’s corpse. It was sagging and foul, the

      joints giving way so the limbs hung unnaturally loose. The head lolled

      on its fractured neck. ‘He will not tell us anything more, that is for

      certain.’ He looked towards the skyline at the centre of Berenika Altis.

      The Sanctum Nova Pecuniae rose above the necropoli of the

      Embalmers’ Quarter, its spires scything towards the sky in golden

      arcs. ‘Let’s ask the people who count.’

      The Red Night.

      It was a wave of madness. Or, it was a disease that caused violent

      hallucinations. Or, it was a mental attack perpetrated by cunning

      xenos. Or, it was the natural consequence of Imperial society’s

      repression of human nature. Or, it was the influence of the warp

      seeping into real space.

      The Red Night caused everyone in the afflicted city to tear one

      another apart. The urge to do so came over them instantly. Most such

      disturbances led to an exodus of refugees fleeing the carnage, as the

      madness spread along some social vector. The Red Night, however,

      worked instantly. No word escaped the city, and so no one could

      intervene until the lack of communication forced an investigation and

      the first horrified reports came back of the scale of the death.

      It had happened five times that the Doom Eagles knew of. Four

      times Doom Eagles Space Marines reached the afflicted city to find

      nothing but a multitude of well-rotted bodies, their flesh turned to black

      slurry caking the gutters and bones already starting to bleach. The

      fourth time, Varnica perceived a spiralling route that connected the

      instances of the Red Night and, more through intuition than

      calculation, plotted a route for his taskforce that took it within two

      weeks’ travel of Tethlan’s Holt. When the whispers of the Red Night

      had been intercepted by the astropath on the Killing Shadow, the

      strike cruiser commanded by Varnica, the ship had dropped out of the

      warp long enough to point its prow towards Tethlan’s Holt.

      In time, the Red Night would evolve completely
    into legend. Every

      voidborn shiphand would know someone who knew someone who had

      lost a friend to it. Collected tales of the Red Night would fill half-throne

      chapbooks. Melodramas and tragedies would be written about it.

      Street-corner madmen would rave about the Red Night coming the

      next day, or the next week, or the next year, to take up all the sinners

      in its bloody embrace.

      Varnica would not let that happen. The truth about the Red Night

      would be uncovered before all hope of its discovery disappeared among

      the legends. Too often the Imperium caused the truth to atrophy,

      replaced by fear and madness. It was Varnica’s duty, among the many

      a Space Marine had to the Emperor, to scrape back as much of the

      truth as he could from the hungry maw of history. Each time the Red

      Night had struck, he had got a little closer to that truth, something he

      felt rather than understood, as if the screams of the dying got more

      intense in his imagination each time he saw those dreadful dead

      streets from the sky.

      The truth was in Berenika Altis. Varnica knew this as only a

      Librarian could. Only a psyker’s inner eye could perceive something so

      absolutely. Varnica would discover the truth behind the Red Night, or

      he would not leave this city. He had never been so certain of anything.

      The bodies suited the Sanctum Nova Pecuniae. It resembled a scene

      from a tragic play, painted by a master who placed it on a fanciful

      stage of soaring columns and marble, the dead contorted, their faces

      anguished, every clutching hand and sunken eye socket the telling of

      another story amid the drama.

      The ground floor of the palace was a single vast space, punctuated

      with columns and shrines. It was possible to walk, and indeed see,

      from one side of the palace to the other from outside through the vast

      archways, without encountering a wall. To a new visitor the place

      would at first seem hollow, as if forming some metaphor for

      transparency or absence of government. The complex architecture of

      the roof, however, formed of overlapping vaults and petals, hid the

      spaces where the government actually met and did business. This was

      a metaphor, too, thought Varnica as he cast his senses around him,

      half as a soldier and half as an appreciator of the palace’s art. The

      really important people in Berenika Altis existed on a higher plane, like

      a heaven sealed off among the friezes and inscriptions of the shadowy

      ceiling.

      The Doom Eagles had entered through an archway above which

      were carved words in High Gothic proclaiming that portion of the

      Sanctum Nova Pecuniae to have been built by the Guild of

      Steelwrights. Notable past masters of that guild were remembered in

      the statues that stood in alcoves, forming shrines to the exemplars of

      the guild’s values. They held formidable-looking tools, multiwrenches

      and pneumohammers, and had faces that looked like they had been

      beaten out of steel themselves.

      ‘These dead were not mere citizens,’ said Hamilca, whose medical

      servitor was playing its sensors over a knot of corpses at the base of

      the nearest pillar. ‘They wear the marks of nobility. Here, the badge of

      the Flagellants’ Guild. This one wears cloth-of-gold and ermine.’

      ‘The government must have been in session,’ said Varnica. ‘Perhaps

      the timing was deliberate?’

      Novas spat on the floor. He was a superstitious type, and the horror

      of this place was more spiritual than the mundanity of the bodies

      outside. Showing his contempt with a wad of phlegm scared away the

      dark things mustering on the other side of the Veil, so the

      superstitions went.

      A pillar a short distance away had a particularly dense heap of

      bodies around it. They were three deep, as if they had been

      clambering over one another to get at the pillar. Bloody smudges from

      fingers and hands painted the flutes of the pillar. Varnica walked over

      to them, picking his way past the master artisans and councillors who

      lay in his way. ‘Here,’ he said. ‘There is a way up.’ He hauled on one

      of the blade-like stone flutes and it swung open, to reveal a tight spiral

      staircase corkscrewing up through the pillar.

      A body fell out. Its face had been torn so much it was impossible to

      tell the back of the head from the front. Two severed arms tumbled

      behind it, neither of them belonging to the first body. Varnica looked up

      the staircase and saw bodies wedged into the pillar, clogging it up

      before the first twist.

      The leaders of Berenika Altis had thought the day-to-day business of

      government vulgar enough to hide it in the grand architecture of the

      Sanctum. Men and women had died trying to get at the concealed

      working of government, even as they were rending each other apart.

      Was it some bestial remnant of memory that caused them to flee to

      the only place a nobleman might feel safe? Or had there been

      something in the madness itself that compelled them to seek

      something above?

      Varnica said nothing. He simple forced his armoured form into the

      tight space of the staircase and began dragging down the bodies that

      stood in his way.

      Hamilca’s servitors aided the removal of corpses greatly. Thirty more of

      them lay beside the pillar, all horribly mauled as if chewed up and spat

      out, before Varnica reached the top. Novas’s battle-brothers followed

      him up, crouch-walking in the cramped space.

      Varnica emerged in a chamber of maps and portraits, a sort of

      antechamber before the government debating chambers and offices.

      The lower portraits, more stern steelwright masters along with wellheeled

      embalmers and jewelcutters in their leather aprons, were

      spattered with blood. Framed maps depicted early layouts of Berenika

      Altis and the changing political divisions of Tethlan’s Holt. Various

      landmasses were drawn in differing sizes from map to map, reflecting

      their relative importance. Varnica remembered that every planet in the

      Imperium had a history like this, shifting, waxing and waning for

      thousands of years, while the Imperium beyond did not care unless

      something happened to end that history entirely.

      The bodies here were clustered around one door. Hamilca moved to

      examine them while Novas’s squad covered all the entrances.

      Varnica took a better look at one portrait, mounted just high enough

      to have avoided the worst of the spraying blood. It was of a member of

      the Flagellants’ Guild. It was a large woman, well-fed rather than

      naturally bulky, whose ample bosom was encased ridiculously in an

      embroidered version of a penitent’s sackcloth robe. Spots of red

      makeup simulated self-inflicted wounds and her hair was piled up in a

      magnificent structure held in place by the kinds of serrated needles

      more properly used for extracting confessions. In one hand she held,

      like a royal sceptre, a scourge with three spiked chains, the

      implement of her guild’s craft.

      In the lower corner was a handprint in blood. It was made too surely

      and deliberately to have been accidental, from
    a flailing fist. Someone

      had used this wall to steady themselves. Someone wounded.

      Varnica followed the tracks through the gory mess of the floor. ‘They

      were following someone,’ he said as he paced carefully towards the

      body-choked door. ‘He was wounded and limping but he wasn’t

      scrabbling along like an animal, as the rest of the souls were. They

      were after him. The Red Night sent them after one man in particular.’

      The tracks led to the door where Hamilca’s servitors were making a

      survey of the various wounds. ‘They dashed themselves to death

      against the door,’ said Hamilca. ‘Few wounds from hands or teeth.

      They broke themselves here trying to get through.’

      The door had been panelled with wood to make it in keeping with the

      rest of the government officer, but that façade had splintered with the

      assault to reveal the solid metal beneath. It was a security door to

      keep out just the kind of frenzied assault that had broken against it.

      Varnica sighed. He did not like having to use the full range of his

      talents. He had always felt that a psyker should properly be something

      subtle, an intelligence weapon, reading or remaking minds, perhaps

      astrally projecting to make the perfect spy. His own talents had taken

      a form that he found ugly in the extreme. Still, duties were duties, and

      he had the best way of getting through the door that would not risk

      destroying evidence beyond.

      He clenched his right fist and thought of anger. The lines of the room

      seemed to warp around his fist, as if it was encased in a lens that

      distorted anything seen through it. Reality did not like it when he did

      this, and he had to fight it.

      Black and purple rippled around the gauntlet. Sparks crackled

      across the segments of armour around his fingers. The region of

      deviant gravity Varnica willed into being bowed and seethed as he drew

      back the fist that now disobeyed the laws of force and energy.

      Varnica punched the door clean off his mountings. The whole room

      seemed to shudder, its dimensions flickering slightly out of balance as

      Varnica’s psychic power discharged in a thrust of force. The metal

      door clanged into the room beyond.

      The Librarium of the Doom Eagles liked to classify its members’

      psychic powers according to categories and strength. Varnica’s was

      referred to as the Hammerhand, a crude but effective power that

     


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