Three days ago. The sky was still a furnace, but the wind was up, blowing yellow dust up and out of the desert to stain the sky a pale green. All else was the same, apart from the box.
Our wounds healed fast. There
was a fused mass of new bone over my cracked ribs that already felt strong.
Traeld’s face was blotchy with bruising, but it had already faded to a
yellowy-green that nearly matched the sky.
“Your second day of Xenos,”
Caidacus shouted down to us. “But first, an honour.”
A panel in the wall of the
arena slid open, and a servitor rolled out. This one was particularly macabre,
the rotting remains of a some long-forgotten criminal mounted on a heavy track.
A heavy brass plaque that told of its crime covered the bottom of its skeletal
face, the wording entirely obscured by years of corrosion. Six arms spidered
out from its torso, one holding a pleasantly smoking censer, the other five
each bearing a heavy sword, held blade downwards. I grimaced, and Quarvo
noticed.
“Squeamish, brother?” he
asked, smirking slyly.
“Criminals should be
destroyed, not paraded about like this,” I said. “The sins of that… thing are a
stain on the weapons it brings.”
“In this, you must yield to
the Emperor’s wisdom,” Laidon said.
“So I must,” I said.
It seemed we had earned
ourselves chainswords today.
Each of us took one of the
motorised blades from the mechanical corpse. Traeld hefted his thoughtfully,
gaining its measure. Laidon and Durando dropped to their knees and gave thanks
for their weapon. I watched the servitor leave, happy to see the arena wall
sliding down behind it, and worried. Yesterday, pistols and knives. Today, a
chainsword. This test would be even harder.
“Be faster than
yesterday,” Caidacus shouted from above, and the container banged open.
The tiled floor shifted as
before, but this time into an uneven, stepped arena. No corridors or corners,
but a treacherous floor full of curbs and edges ready to catch your feet.
The xenos inside was almost a
disappointment after the feral brutality of the Orks. Small, slight, a pale
waspish face with hair bound in a tight bun behind the head. A female, I
realised, clad in a tight-fitting singlet. She stood in the mouth of the
container watching us with tired contempt.
“Aeldari,” Quarvo said,
shifting to a defensive stance even as we spread out to surround her.
“The Emperor’s wrath comes for
you today, alien filth,” Traeld spat. “You face the Mantis Warriors!”
“You lie, savage,” she
answered him, curling her lip. “You are pupils. Children. No, that isn’t the
word. A mantis would have grubs, I think. That is what you are. Soft fat grubs,
easy to pop.”
We still had our pistols, and
Durando shot her then, impatient as ever. Or shot at her. She wasn’t armed or
armoured, but Caidacus clearly thought her dangerous enough to be a test, and I
could see why. Durando’s shots hit nothing, she stepped effortlessly out of the
way and closed the distance with him in a flash, long legs flicking out as she
kicked the gun out of his hand and hooked his arm down, stepping up and onto
his shoulder to jump over him and knock him flat in the same movement.
We looked like Orks in
comparison as we tried to pin her down. She was always one step ahead, spinning
behind us so we couldn’t get a clear shot, using our numbers against us so we
seemed to fight ourselves rather than her. And where we stumbled and tripped on
the treacherous courtyard floor, she skated across it like it was ice.
We taunted her because that
was what the Codex told us to do. Let her think we were unthinking primitives,
shout our mantras and hymns. The Aeldari expect it of us, it blinds them to our
tactical acumen. Let her feel superior, and strike when she dropped her guard,
so we were taught. What the Codex didn’t explain was how much better at
taunting they are.
None of us kept our tempers in
that fight. Were we playing as clumsy primitives? We were certainly committed
to our roles, sweating, furious and maddened with rage by the time we finally
managed to box her into a corner.Not a single shot we’d fired had connected,
and we’d spent more than ten minutes fighting her to a standstill. It was
Traeld who buried his chainsword in her chest, screaming with fury as he did
it. She’d somehow managed to damage mine, bending the trigger with a palm
strike. Quarvo suffered a shattered tibia, Traeld’s left hand had three broken
fingers and Durando wasn’t conscious at the end of the fight. Laidon was dead.
In one way, it was a relief. The xenos had disarmed him, killed him with his
own chainsword. His pride could never have outlived that fate, if Caidacus
could even have allowed it to.
What was she, that alone she
nearly outfought a combat squad of primaris initiates? We never learned.
Foremost in my mind, however, as we stood on the sand and savoured our bitter
victory, was Salixandrus’ question. Where was Caidacus getting these xenos
from? What else was in his collection?
“My mind was clouded by rage,”
Quarvo said. Caidacus still didn’t look up from his stool. “The aeldari used my
anger against me. Just it as turned Laidon’s blade on him.”
“It is not disloyal to feel
emotion,” Traeld said. “Or we would all be disloyal. Disloyal or servitors,
without working minds beyond what the priests give them.”
“And a weapon cannot be
disloyal, only the hand that holds it,” I added.
“Did your rage confound your
purpose?” Caidacus asked, still as ever. “Did it shake you from what you needed
to do?”
“No,” Quarvo admitted.
“It was not easy, but you did
not fail.”
“Is failure disloyalty, then?”
Traeld asked keenly.
Caidacus did look up at that,
and one hand even flinched towards his blade.
“Yes,” he said, with deadly calm. “When you or I fail, we fail the Emperor. His trust is in us, and to fail that is to fail the Golden Throne.” Traeld looked alarmed, more from the look on Caidacus’s face than what he said, although hearing our teacher admit that he himself might fail was bad enough. “Failure happens, like it or not. With luck, it will only happen once, and it will be no worse than your own death. Most of us survive our failures. You must be prepared for the shame when you do.
"But we are not talking of failure, or indeed disloyalty, Traeld. We are talking of treachery, which is worse, a deliberate failure. Traitors choose to fail." His gaze fell again, and whatever went through his mind then took its time to pass. When he continued, his voice was steady again.
“Quarvo, you fought the
Aeldari as best you could in the circumstances, and you defeated her
together.”
Quarvo let the breath he’d
been holding go. He had passed the test.
Two days before we sat in the
Zuchu Room, he unleashed Tyranids on us in the courtyard.
There was only one box, but no
time whatsoever for tactical thought. The door slammed open on a wall of
armoured limbs, shelled monsters with long, single claws in place of a forearm.
They were packed inside like rounds in a bolt magazine, wrapped round each
other so that no space was wasted. It didn’t slow them getting out at all, they
seemed to move as one fluid, connected mass.
“Castle!” we all shouted at
once. This was a drill we knew, keeping together in a circle and protecting
each other in the absence of other cover, but one we’d have to excel at as
never before.
Back-to-back we moved across the arena. Every time we made it to a raised area, we had to give ground as the floor shifted under us, our own bodies the only defensive bastion we had against a seething pack of shell-backed monstrosities. We were stronger than ever now, as though if Laidon had once been our unspoken leader, his death had somehow promoted us all. We fought as one, just as the Tyranids did, but unlike them we needed no leader to direct our efforts. We were the Codex manifest, a pure expression of tactical skill.
Unguided as they were, the battlement of our
flesh defeated them. Our pistols took down the front runners, our wazi blades
slaughtered the rest.
But it had been an extreme
test even by Caidacus’s standards.
All of us were exhausted,
slathered in healing unguents where bladed forearms had slashed us. Caidacus hadn’t joined
us for Zuchu that night. He’d left the parapet without a word, clearly
distracted.
Where or how he had seized
those swarming monstrosities was beyond me. It smacked of heresy, and I said as
much as we lay in our cots in the barracks that evening. My questions couldn’t
wait any more.
“It goes against the teachings
of the Codex,” I stated flatly.
“You say Koshi goes against
the Codex?” Traeld challenged me angrily. A deep, burned sear across his face
showed where he’d had to tear the jaws of one of the creatures from his cheek before it could bite too deeply, and he winced when he spoke.
“Tinq is right,” Quarvo said.
“It is… not wise to capture Tyranids. They call to their own kind across the
stars. Caidacus risks much having so many here.”
“No longer,” Traeld said. “We
destroyed them all.”
“Then what of introducing the
ork taint to the sands of Tranquility?” I asked. “A single spore from their
kind could breed hundreds more.”
“He had the servitors purge
the sands after the battle,” Traeld said. “I heard their flamers working
earlier. Nothing remains of their foulness.”
“As far as we know,” I said.
“For all we know, he may have more. Or more like that xenos assassin from
yesterday. What if something like that got out? What havoc could it wreak
across Tranquility?”
“He must have a reason,”
Durando said firmly. “We should have faith in him.”
“He is a veteran of the Badab
War,” I said.
There was a nervous silence.
“What are you saying?” Traeld
said.
“I’m saying nothing,” I said.
“Merely observing. He said himself, failures occur.”
“That was centuries ago! The
Mantis Warriors were tricked, we all know that. Their error was grievous, but
they’ve made their penance and been forgiven!” Traeld said hotly. “Koshi told
us this! The very fact that we’re becoming Primaris proves it!”
It was no secret to us, the
Chapter’s ancient disgrace. Hundreds of years ago, they had been one of several
chapters fooled into straying from the Imperial fold by a charismatic warlord who
later revealed himself as a traitor and heretic. Such things could never be
forgotten, especially here on Tranquility.
“This planet still bears the
scars of their original failures,” I pointed out. “It wasn’t a radioactive
desert before the Carcharodons bombed the Mantis Warriors out of their defensive
positions. Koshi was part of that. He might fail again, even with the best of
intentions.”
“Especially then,” Quarvo
said, nodding.
“We are the only aspirants at
this monastery. There isn’t anyone else from the Chapter here. Do they even
know what he’s doing?” I asked.
“Are you saying he’s gone
rogue?” Durando asked, horrified.
“I… I don’t know. Maybe he
thinks what he’s doing is justified,” I said. “Not that it could excuse such a
lapse of judgement. But I’m not certain…”
“Then be certain! Be certain
before a strike,” Quarvo said.
“You would strike at
Caidacus?” Durando said, even more horrified. “Our teacher and brother?”
"It may be he wants to be caught," Quarvo said. "To be punished, even. All traitors feel that, somewhere in their hearts. Perhaps our last test is to do confront him. If you're certain, Tinquando, then I will back you."
I held his eyes for a moment, then nodded.
Durando got out of his cot and
paced anxiously across the barracks floor. I could feel Traeld’s eyes burning
into me across the darkened room. But I had nothing else to say to them then,
no sure proof to give beyond what I held in my heart, so we left each other to
brood on our silent misgivings.
On that final day, before
Caidacus had gathered us in the Zuchu Room with such grave intensity, there was
one final box to face. Exhausted, still not entirely healed after the battle
the previous day, we’d stood before it in the deep shadows of morning, before
the sun could pour its heat into the well of the courtyard.
The box was as battered as we
all felt. The Chapter heraldry was worn away to the metal underneath in places,
and the design of the container was an old one, older than the ones on previous
days. The locking bolts were exposed for one thing, and the design of the
Aquilae felt archaic somehow, different edges to the wings of the eternal eagle
perhaps? I wondered where it had come from.
“What do you think it will
be?” Quarvo whispered to me.
I said nothing. I had my
suspicions, of course.
“Begin!” Caidacus shouted to
us, and the locking mechanism whirred and clattered as it disengaged.
The crate was empty.
Caidacus left the parapet
before Durando could ask him what was meant by this. We spent the rest of the
day nursing our wounds in the chapel barracks, silently fretting over what new
test was to come.
We had been sitting in the
Zuchu Room for several hours, now, silently for the most part other than the
short bursts of conversation I have already described. And none of us knew what
Caidacus was waiting for, just that he didn’t seem satisfied enough to let us
go yet.
Finally, Durando let out a
long, angry sigh. “Koshi, enough! Please, tell us what it is you suspect. I
have wracked my brain for any treachery in my own behaviour, or in my
brothers,” Traeld scowled at that, “but there is none that I can see. We are
not perfect in our execution of our training, but nor have we failed. Nor have
you in departing from the Codex.”
Traeld gasped. “Who are you to
judge our teacher?”
“I’m no judge, I merely share
my opinion, as Koshi asked. Which is that there is no treachery here.”
“You are certain?” Caidacus
asked.
“Yes,” Durando said.
“I see,” Caidacus said. His
sword flicked out, faster almost than thought, and my fellow initiate toppled
sideways. The strike was so fast it was nearly invisible, and the sword was
back on Caidacus’ lap as though it had never moved.
The silence was very long,
broken only by Durando’s choking gurgles as his body attempted to deal with the
gaping wound in his neck. None of us dared move.
“You killed him!” Traeld
said.
“No, he’ll live,” Caidacus
said. “I know my work.”
“Why?” Quarvo’s voice trembled
with rage.
Caidacus sat perfectly still.
“You know our Chapter’s history. You know how we once failed. It is taught in
every village school here on Tranquility. Every parent passes on what happened
to this planet when our betrayal was punished, how the Carcharodons devastated
every world under our protection to draw us away from the frontlines of the war.
“All of you know of our shame.
Yet you all chose to come forward and aspire to our ranks. You choose to join
us as we try to wipe clean the dishonour of our actions. It is not a stain that
can be removed. It will always cloud us. Even when the Inquisition allowed us
back to the Imperial fold, it was without the hard-earned support other
Chapters can rely on. No Greyshields for us to replenish our ranks.
“You are the first recruits
who will become Primaris. You are already stronger, faster, harder to kill than
even I, despite your initiate status, although I have served the Emperor for a
long age,” he tapped the studs on his forehead, “but you are still fallible.
Our Chapter cannot afford for you to fail. I must ensure you never do.”
His gaze was once more on his sword. His hand lay on the hilt and shivered slightly.
“Now, there are some amongst
the villages who would see our Chapter destroyed for our old sin. They teach
their children a different story to most. Where most praise our defence of this
world against so many other threats, they preach on our one terrible failure to
the exclusion of all else.
“You might wonder why we
tolerate such criticism from the very people we recruit from. Easily answered –
it is deserved. We did fail.” And he leaned forward very slightly, weight
shifting from his thighs to his crossed ankles. “But we will not fail again.
“I collect xenos to test our
initiates, against the practices of the Codex, this is true. It is not all I
collect.
“I also collect traitors.”
And at that moment, his eyes
flicked up, and I knew that he had my measure.
The others were frozen, still
lost in the full impact of what Caidacus had said. And Caidacus himself was ready to strike and armed with his power blade.
But I’d been waiting for this
moment my entire life, and, as he’d said, I was faster than him. I threw myself
across his lap before he could fully draw the blade, toppling him backwards and
using every ounce of my Primaris-enhanced strength to gain control of it.
As I rolled free, I brought
the sword up and round, right at his head. I’d have had him too, if it wasn’t
for Traeld.
Traeld threw himself in the
way of the blade, and it caught him mid-waist, cutting nearly half-way through
him. His weight tangled the sword, threw me off-balance, and my moment was
over. Before I could recover, Caidacus had his sword back and his foot on my
throat.
“Little viper,” he said,
almost fondly. “I knew what you were from the moment I recruited you. I just
wanted to see if the others would spot you for what you were too.”
“Murderer!” Quarvo said,
almost sobbing. He sprang at Caidacus, trying to aid me as he said he would.
But he was far too slow, and Caidacus cut him down without his eyes leaving
mine.
“Listen well, Durando, I know
your mind attends.” Caidacus said. “Tinquandus is from one of those villages I
just mentioned. A Son of the Sharks, isn’t that what you style yourselves?
After the ruthless Carcharodons. He’s sworn to attempt to kill any veteran of
the Badab War, avenge the deaths our mistakes caused here all those years ago. He’s been working on you over the last few nights, hasn’t he?
Telling you I’ve gone rogue, that you need to turn on me.”
“The old debt will never be
forgotten, betrayer!” I hissed at him. “Our teeth will find you, one day!
You’ll never escape us!”
“Nobody ever escapes their old
sins,” Caidacus said, and he looked tired. “But I doubt any of you
will find me until I come again, looking for more recruits in your villages.”
“We’ll never serve your kind,
betrayer! Never!”
“You’ve served me very well
already, Tinquanus. You’ve shown me Durando was never ready to be Mantis. Too
trusting, too blind to your treachery. A pity, he was a good warrior. But I
shall not waste him. Indeed, I have use for all of you except Quarvo. He chose
to aid you even after learning what you are, his death was earned.”
“What do you mean?” I
squealed. “What use?”
“Durando’s throat will
recover, although he will never speak again. He will serve amongst my serf
retinue here at the monastery, a silent servant among the others. Traeld alone,
of all of you, will join the ranks of my brothers as Primaris. He stayed your
hand, so he passes my test.
“Which leaves you. You
shall be the most loyal of all my new servants, Tinquando.”
“No! Never!” I shouted, trying
to get up, but Caidacus merely reached down, jabbed his fingers twice into
particular points at the nape of my neck and then, even though I was now
paralysed, pinned me to the floor with his blade through my stomach. Then he
turned to the door and gave a peculiar low whistle.
The servitor that rumbled
slowly into the room was the same one that had brought us our chainswords. As
its creaking pinions reached for me, I heard Caidacus say “When the Apothecary
renders you to servitude, he knows to leave your memories of this night
intact, traitor. As I live and serve with my failures, so shall you.”
Great ending to the story, I really love this. More please!
ReplyDeleteThis is absolutely fantastic! I agree with Pootle, more please!
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