The pressure upon her mind reached her before the visual change did.
The relentlessly-golden walls that had surrounded the group a heartbeat ago had disappeared, replaced by a rounded bubble of ever-swirling colors and shapes, changing far too fast to follow. Retreating and reforming, ever-pressing against the bubble like water currents beating against a submersible’s glass domes. Yet the ‘wall’ did not give, did not so much as flex.
Her caste-sisters stood where they had, backs turned to the chaotic sights behind them, completely unmoved.
Fireblade frowned.
Completely
unmoving. {Mallas Steelgrasp, can you receive me?}
The senior teidar did not respond. Did not give any sign of even receiving Fireblade’s sanzai.
Did not so much as breathe.
I don’t think they can hear you. The thought echoed from inside her own head. But its ‘signature’ was one she could recognize.
Alex? She turned, to find that Beryl and Tempo were nowhere to be seen; nor was the human.
Yes. Yet his thoughts floated inside her mind all the same. Devoid of the panic which she had felt in his thoughts a moment before the world went black.
It looks like we are sharing the same body once more.
But whose? She brought up her hands in front of her. Comforting, healthy blue skin flexed across her hands as they clenched and un-clenched. Good.
Which does not answer just what has happened. Alex sent. ‘Thought.’
Whatever.
Then the memory hit her — the Emperor! Something in her neck popped painfully as she jerked her head back to stare up, overhead. Towards where His soul-signature had been only moments before… and where it had disappeared an instant before their transportation to ‘here.’
I… sense nothing. We are entirely within this Warp bubble. Alex sent.
This is the warp?
Yes. Which means that He must still be with us, for us to be shielded this way.
Fireblade squinted, noting a pattern in the ‘bubble’ overhead. Where several ‘arches’ intersected and met near the crown, as if—
As if the single bubble they stood in was made of several overlapping spheres.
Twenty, to be exact.
I think perhaps it is us who are holding back the Warp. Fireblade sent.
That— yes, of course. Blanks. Alex acknowledged, before a wave of near-hysterical concern ran through their mind.
Then where is the Emperor? He is always visible from anywhere within the Warp; it is the only thing holding the Imperium together!
Fireblade dropped her head back down, now focusing on where the ‘center’ of their group had been. The two primarchs and single Eldar remained, but of the slashed-open wraithbone column or the horned, glowing warp-creature there was no sign.
And yet all three figures in the middle of the bubble suddenly took several rapid steps backwards. Guilliman turned back towards her, his mouth open and moving, yet no sound came out.
A spark.
A golden spark flared into view at their feet.
Growing by the solon.
Fireblade narrowed her eyes against the glare, as the light swelled until it was the size of a person. Then even larger.
Larger still.
It stopped only once it had surpassed the two brother primarchs by a wide margin.
And then faded.
Where only solon ago there had been empty space, now there stood a Giant. A
true Giant, one that towered over the lesser two in front of him.
A Golden Giant.
As if forged from liquid metal, the figure solidified further with each beat. Features emerged, hardening into fierce brows and a sharp jaw. Broad shoulders, a deep chest, arms and legs built to the same oversized scale. This was a figure which radiated
Might.
A figure that she
recognized, as its features finally came to completion.
She had seen the same likeness on the painted-glass windows of that Imperial cathedral, during her first ‘visit’ to Terra.
It was humanity’s Emperor… as he had been in his youth.
Yet… it was also
not.
The painted-glass image had still been a
human; this statue was of utterly monolithic gold. Its ‘features’ were only discernable as sharpened ridges in its metallic mass, devoid of any color other than its iridescent monotony. A remarkably lifelike sculpture, but still life
less.
The sculpture opened his —
its — eyes.
Each one a bright, glaring mirror of the earlier overpowering glow as they stared all around.
Which did nothing to make the sculpture less impersonal. Those eyes were bright lights, but they were nothing more: there was nothing of the spark, the
soul, that animated a living being. More akin to a machine’s pict-sensors than actual ‘eyes.’
Your thoughts are even more strange when I receive them from within my own mind. Fireblade sent.
Alex did not answer.
The living sculpture continued to cast its gaze around the room. It moved, yes, but there was nothing alive about its robotic motions or flat, staring eyes. Nothing
human.
None of those who returned its baleful stare dared to move, or even to breathe. A…
Presence had settled upon them, rooting their bodies in place as if
they had been the ones cast from solid metal.
Then the sculpture’s stare came to rest on Fireblade. Its mouth opened — revealing only more cold golden light within — as if to speak aloud, but no sound emerged. It took a step forward, towards her.
Faltered.
Doubled over, so that its head now came to the same height as that of Guilliman who moved to stand before it. Golden-glowing eyes burned furiously into the smaller giant’s own unflinching gaze.
One flowing-gold hand rose to point accusingly at the blue-armored primarch.
The finger fell off.
Melted, dripping away from its arm like hot wax.
The sculpture toppled over fully, hitting a ‘ground’ at its foot-level that was invisible to Fireblade.
And splattered.
Molten gold surged forth knee-high, splashing outwards in a wave.
Both Primarchs leaned into the onrushing mass of metal, keeping their feet amidst its onslaught but being driven back. Yvraine leapt onto Guilliman’s back, her feet resting on his armored hips just above the molten-hot flow while one arm grasped the ornate decoration protruding up from his back to keep her balance.
And twenty teidar
reacted as one to the unusual threat, finally able to move as the Presence from earlier vanished. To either side, caste-sisters trained to the exacting precision required of the Imperial Guard flash-cooled the molten metal’s leading crest, forging barriers that diverted the lethal flow around them.
Rapid sanzai cries of surprise and requests for information buffeted Fireblade's mind, but she had a more immediate problem as the wave of surely deadly-hot metal surged towards her.
Lacking the finesse of her fellows, Fireblade instead gathered her powers to forcibly divert the onrushing doom by sheer strength of telekinesis. That much dense metal would weigh more than most dropships, but hopefully she could direct enough of it aside to avoid instant immolation or crushing.
In the half-solon she had before the wave was upon her, she marshaled her strength as best she could. Felt the building… ‘humming’ in the core of her mind, that was never quite possible to explain to one who lacked telekinesis of their own.
Humming that kept building, accelerating past any exertion of her powers that she had tried before. Strengthened and concentrated, until she finally unleashed it.
Instead of a minor redirection of what must be many hundreds of millions of pilo worth of flowing metal, the shimmering golden flow split apart and upwards as if hitting an invisible angled wall. Cooling as it went, it began to solidify even mid-air.
And so a few short solon later, Fireblade stood exactly where she had before… now surrounded on each side by two curling arcs of metal frozen in place as if sculpted by an artist’s hand. A crashing wave, captured mid-motion.
Muted sanzai buzzed around her, as the other teidar muttered amongst themselves at the feat.
Teidar do not ‘mutter.’ she sent internally.
These ones do. Alex responded, all the more infuriating now that she could not shoot him a glare to express her distaste at his slighting of her caste-sisters. After all, with their minds now so intertwined it was truly impossible for her to shield from even his inexpert grasp of sanzai just how amazed she was
herself with the feat of telekinesis that she had just accomplished.
And her satisfaction knowing how impressed those arrogant Imperial Guard warriors must be at the sight. A surge of self-congratulatory pride most unbecoming of a duty-focused teidar.
I’d say you earned it. Alex’s sanzai came only a moment before a loud, wet cough from the center of the room.
As the last of the soulless sculpture melted away, another figure emerged, appearing from the thinning pool of gold.
Less tall, although of the same oversized proportions… but this one seemed actually
human.
El’Jonson stepped forwards without hesitation, and a moment later his brother followed him. Both primarchs knelt, looping their massive arms under this latest figure’s shoulders and heaving it upright.
Heaving
him upright.
Long black hair parted, revealing two eyes which glowed yellow in a pale imitation of the harsh glare of the now-dead statue. But where that golden monster’s gaze had been flat and uncaring, this one’s was softer, ‘warmer.’
She blinked, frowning. How could one even think to read intent such as that from glowing eyes?
A bolt of electricity singed its way through her heart.
Because He is the God-Emperor! Alex slammed his thoughts into her mind.
Her — ‘their’ — knees weakened, and it was only by experience at standing rigidly in place for long cycles on guard duty that Fireblade forced herself to remain upright. After all, Guilliman had warned that the teidar should not leave their positions until advised otherwise, and that time had not yet come.
{Maintain your positions.} She sent to her fellow teidar, for all that veteran warriors of the Guard were unlikely to have forgotten Guilliman's warning.
No response.
A ping via sanzai and a momentary glance confirmed that her caste-sisters had frozen once more. Each warrior stood in her own pose, unmoving, as if paused in time. Leaving her as the only 'active' teidar in this bubble-room. Something
most strange was going on; best to remain alert in case the forewarned-of danger may yet remain ahead of them.
What danger could possibly threaten when the God-Emperor lives again!? Alex’s shocked doubts rose — predictably — to the fore.
The two Primarchs finally levered their reborn father upright, stepping back to let him stand on his own two feet. Rivulets of still-molten gold poured down his body, somehow leaving no mark of the horrific burns that such contact should have caused. Although now that Fireblade had a moment to think about it, the liquid metal all around them
should have killed all of those present by convection alone; yet the heat which she felt from the cooling mass around her was only barely unpleasant.
We are in the Warp. Alex sent.
All which happens here is guided by Will, not by material reality.
That promised to be a
most confusing concept if she tried to think about it too much.
The human Emperor raised his hands before him, clenching and un-clenching his hands as he stared at them. Perhaps unsurprising, for someone who had apparently spent many years as a living corpse immobile on his throne.
With a nod, the towering figure turned to look at Guilliman. In a low, rumbling voice he intoned “
The next step.”
Yvraine stepped out from behind Guilliman, and opened her mouth to speak.
Yet the voice which filled the small ‘bubble’ within the Warp was not the voice of the thin Eldar that Fireblade had heard before. Instead, a dry and thin voice rustled like sand blowing in the desert wind, only audible because of the silence of everyone else around “
Summon… your Prophet.”
The two Primarchs flinched back, heads turning back-and-forth while they reached for the weapons slung at their waists. Yet the Emperor himself only rose one broad hand, and they froze immediately. Turning to regard the much-shorter Eldar in front of him, the human leader spoke forcefully “
I have never possessed nor sought such a follower.”
A new voice came then from all around them, cackling loudly from some place outside of their bubble “You didn’t
have to! Just think: Who was your first, foremost worshiper?”
Guilliman took a half-step forward, opening his mouth to speak.
The disembodied voice added sharply “Quiet, you! I have waited a long time to see the look on his face when he realizes it for
himself. It will only take a thought to pull his Prophet to his presence.”
The Emperor’s face hardened, lines deepening on his brow as he stared off to one side. Then his eyes flared wide, just in time for a new figure to pop through the swirling vortex of colors and patterns which surrounded the bubble.
Another primarch, by his height, but this one seemed…
wrong.
A head crowned by four arcing horns glanced around the scene, eventually coming to rest on the Emperor. A sharp smile spread across his darkened features, and as he stepped closer Fireblade could just begin to make out an uncountable number of symbols apparently inked — or
carved? — into what little flesh was visible through his heavy spiked armor.
Symbols which brought a mild headache as soon as she set eyes on them.
A melodious, sepulchral voice issued from this new arrival — a 'Daemon Prince,' as Alex supplied. “Hello,
Father.”
What, that is a human? Fireblade asked the other half of her apparently-shared mind.
It was a human. Alex replied grimly, as arcs of anxious energy flared along Fireblade’s nerves. An utterly inexpert mind pulled blindly at the levers of her telekinesis, until she brushed Alex's scrabbling attempts aside. Whatever this newest arrival is or was, Fireblade would not be the one to begin a fight.
“
Lorgar.” Guilliman ground out, his eyes locked on the horned newcomer.
The prince ignored him, striding confidently up to the imposing bulk of the Emperor. “I see that you have finally realized what I knew so very long ago.”
“
Fanatic.” El’Jonson spat, stepping towards his seeming brother and drawing a thin, glowing sword in the same movement.
Lorgar only turned to glance dismissively towards the approaching armed giant, then flicked his gaze back to the Emperor, clearly expectant.
Muscles bunched taut in the black-haired elder human’s jaw… and he raised one hand. “
Hold, Lion of Caliban.”
El’Jonson’s face-hairs twitched, but he indeed froze in his step. “...Father?” His voice was gravelly as ever, but the note of…
doubt in it was undeniable.
Lorgar added with a voice of liquid mercury “
Do tell him, Father. What I am… what we
all have been, all this time.”
The Emperor was silent.
“Leaving it up to me, again? Age
has brought you wisdom, Father.” Still smirking, Lorgar turned to fully face his two glowering brothers. Despite the clearly-murderous intent burning from their eyes, he did not even reach for the massive mace that hung at his waist. “It was ever-obvious to those with Vision that Father is and has always been a God, despite his short-sighted denials.” He canted his head towards Guilliman, and his smile grew even more mocking. “And despite the attempts of a great many ‘heretics,’ my sons and I saw the Truth. Preached the Truth.”
He turned a sneering glare onto El’Jonson. “Your people often say that I ‘became’ a Daemon Prince after Horus’s failure and Father’s weakness. But how could I ‘become’ something which I had been ever since the moment of my creation?”
“You speak madness.” El’Jonson found his voice.
“
I speak the Truth!” Lorgar crowed, eyes wide. “Or do you truly think that Father
crafted twenty Sons, used ‘Dark-Age technology’ to make for us
mortal brothers who grew to majestic titans by their tenth year, who survived alone on death worlds, who controlled minds, who could
revive after death?” He spun on one heel, improbably agile despite the bulky-seeming horned armor he wore. Now facing his father, arms wide, he finished with “But by all means, do tell us how such feats could be accomplished
without the Immaterium.”
Guilliman spoke before his father could. “You know full well that there exists archaeotech devices and patterns capable of these accomplishments.”
Lorgar rolled his eyes. “
Xenos archaeotech.” His head lolled aside, eyes sliding with disturbing fluidity to first Yvraine and then Fireblade. “Although I see that you have turned to the use of these two xenos mercenaries already. And you say that
I have turned my back on Humanity!” Sneering, he revealed pointed teeth.
Alex’s white-hot fury surged within her mind, and Fireblade fought him down with a pulse of discipline. Unfamiliar as she was with humanity’s history — and especially that of the four humans before her now — this did not seem like a time for her to interrupt. No matter how insulting the term 'mercenary' was when applied to a warrior of the Union.
And besides which, this Lorgar had said
two ‘xenos mercenaries.’ Did he simply not count the nineteen other teidar spaced evenly around the area… or did he not see them, somehow? He evidently did not seem aware that loroi were not ‘xenos’ to humanity, not fully.
“
There is much that you do not know.” the Emperor rumbled, eyes narrowing to slits… before dipping, slightly. “
Yet you are correct in how your brothers were constructed.”
“Say it, Father. Admit what you are.” Lorgar taunted. “Certainly Guilliman’s pet Witch will have told you how embracing your nature is the only way forward from here?”
For several solon, there was silence.
Then “
You are, each of you, Warp Entities… forged from a part of my Divine Essence. ‘Daemons,’ to the backwards and superstitious.”
Guilliman and El'Jonson both flinched at his words, bulky armor sagging as shock echoed across their disbelieving faces. Guilliman opened one mouth as if to speak, but no sound emerged.
Lorgar only scoffed. “To those who admit the
Truth about reality.”
As if his son had not spoken, the Emperor continued “
But each of you was alloyed with a mortal human soul of my own crafting, to make you more than a mere Warp construct.”
“And only a few of us grew
past that shell you saddled us with.” Lorgar jabbed one finger up at his father. “
Embraced our latent powers, and left the weak and pathetic human body behind. If only more of my blind brothers had—”
“Enough.” Guilliman finally spoke, both hands raising in front of him… and now gripping the colossal sword that he had brought with him. A beat later, and it burst into red-orange flames that licked hungrily along its length. In a grim but resolute voice, he intoned “You say that you — that we all — are daemons? Then no matter — I have slain daemons before.”
With that, he lunged forwards, bringing the sword in blindingly-fast overhand arc down towards his brother’s unarmored head.
Smokeless flames trailed behind him, rippling and crackling in the massive blade’s wake.
Lorgar turned, eyes instinctively widening just in time for the weapon to slash down upon his skull, directly between two of the horns which jutted from his head.
The blade extinguished.
The flames died.
And Lorgar only grinned madly, the blade which must have weighed many thousands of pilo having left no mark whatsoever upon his gray-brown skin. “
You are but a Daemon.
I am far more.”
Cackling, he took a step back. His laughter only redoubled as Guilliman lurched after him, as if utterly unable to pull the extinguished sword from its narrow and ineffectual contact against his brother’s head.
Lorgar reached up with one hand, casually grasping the blade which should have sliced his skull open and pulling it easily from his brother’s grasp. “I have spent ten-thousand
YEARS preparing for this, brother! Spread the Faith, brought the entire Galaxy under the dominion of Father’s Cult! And all of it… from
my Book!
My Words,
my Tenets,
my Religion!” His grin spread unnaturally wide, cheeks splitting to reveal more teeth than should be found within any being's mouth. “There is no God worthy of true worship but Father, and
I am His Prophet!”
He shifted the sword around, until it now sprouted forth from his grip. “And while a God’s power has few limits… the survival of his Prophet is one of them. No God can — whether they wish it or not — allow their Prophet’s existence to end. We may be recalled to the Warp, pulled from the Materium… but never
killed.” He turned around, and executed a deep, mocking bow towards the tight-jawed Emperor. “
Thank you, Father, for shielding me from dear brother’s strike.”
El’Jonson then spoke “’
Your religion’? You have spent all these millennia attacking the Imperium, sending wave after wave of Chaos’s corrupted slaves to ravage the ranks of those foolish enough to believe in your twisted cult.”
This time, Alex’s livid indignation was enough to force Fireblade to take a step forwards. Whether towards Lorgar or towards
El’Jonson, she did not know.
But then the Emperor’s gaze rose to meet hers over Lorgar’s head… pinning Fireblade in place.
Sanzai with the weight and strength of millennia behind it speared into her mind. {
Hold, child of Seren and of Tallarn. Your moment is not yet at hand.}
Lorgar continued speaking, apparently not having received the sanzai. A private sending, then? “Every religion requires
sacrifices, brother. Sometimes individuals, sometimes worlds…” he turned to levy an icy glare at Guilliman, “...and sometimes
cities. You recall that first expansion out from Terra, when Father’s hand guided Legions of our sons to spread His ‘Truth’ far and wide to the scattered worlds of Humanity?
That was Civilization taming the wilderness. Father
is Civilization… and Civilization does not exist in a vacuum. It requires — it is
strengthened by — barbarians beyond its borders.”
He chuckled darkly. “Every Imperial faithful who huddled, teary-eyed, in their cathedrals as they burned… was a sacrifice to Father. Every Warp-twisted madman, bellowing praise to the myopic and squabbling Four until he fell in combat… was a sacrifice to Father.”
“And all of it” he gave the sword in his hands a twirl, before jabbing its length upright, “channeled through
me. Father’s Prophet… and the conduit for the Warp-strengthening power of prayer destined for him. More and more of it, every year. Strengthening Father's true aspect here in the Warp, pulling him from his false-body in the merely-material world.” The sword burst alight once more… but the flames now flickered gold-and-black rather than red-orange. “Unless you thought that that fading corpse on the Throne was simply ‘decaying’ ever-faster, these last few decades?” The flickering light cast dancing shadows across his leering visage.
El’Jonson stepped forwards with a snarl, raising his armored fists.
And stumbled, as Guilliman’s extended arm held out across his chest. “Hold, brother.” Where the Lord Regent’s voice had until now been level and calm, now it came taut…
strained. His eyes snapped up to stare at the Emperor for a solon, before dropping again to glare hatefully at Lorgar. “He is right, the damned Traitor. Or do you think that father would have let him prattle on so without interruption, if he truly spoke only nonsense?”
The green-armored primarch lurched to a halt, while Lorgar tilted his head back and laughed. “You see the Truth at last, brother! Father
cannot allow me to come to harm, no more than he could collapse this null-Warp bubble that he has so kindly maintained for our private discussion. It is simply part of his true nature, deeper even than instinct in a mortal creature. And now that your Witch’s scheming has brought his mortal coil to an end, he
has to return to the Materium lest his entire Imperium collapse without him. This entertaining conversation will draw to a close soon: even Father’s power cannot keep this bubble shielded forever against the other natives of the Warp… and the Four are ever-hungry.”
Lorgar took a step forwards, eyes flicking past his brother. “No, he must reincarnate… and that requires the sacrifice of a deep and ancient soul. How
thoughtful of you, dear brother, to bring one!" His gaze rested on Yvraine, who stood behind and to one side of Guilliman. Shoulders back, head high, defiant… but unarmed.
Guilliman's eyes widened, his jaw shutting with a click as he stepped to interpose himself, unarmed, before his slowly-advancing brother.
Who paused, leering at him. "Did Father not
tell you why he bid you 'invite' her here?”
Fireblade's eyes flicked between the stony-faced Emperor, the unarmed Guilliman, and El'Jonson whose own gaze bounced between his father and Lorgar. One green-armored fist wrapped around his sword, half-drawn but waiting.
A sword much smaller than that which had utterly failed to harm the daemon prince. It seemed that none of the humans here could do anything against the advancing Lorgar.
But we can! Alex shouted inside Fireblade’s mind, and her powers flared without her command. Tore outwards across the bubble-shaped calm area in the Warp, with a painful intensity that blanked out her vision for a solon.
Nothing happened.
It was as if her powers simply refused to harm the vile human, dissipating entirely.
Lorgar did not so much as flinch, did not even glance aside at Fireblade as he strode slowly towards the doomed Eldar.
“
Hold, Lorgar.” the Emperor’s voice commanded… and the vile Prophet did halt in his step. Visibly straining to keep moving forwards, but with no more success than Alex/Fireblade’s attack against him a split-solon earlier. “
Return to my side, my Prophet.”
The daemon's hungry leer shattered, sinking into a fierce scowl. Too-sharp teeth ground against each other and neck muscles bunched angrily, yet Lorgar did indeed turn on one heel and retrace his steps. But with halting and irregular movements, as if he were fighting his body the whole time.
His father stared down at him, no emotion whatsoever visible in his eyes or on his face. And, of course, like all the humans that Fireblade had yet met — besides one, eventually — his mind was utterly invisible to her, completely unreadable.
The Emperor continued “
You assume that I hid from my nature. That I denied it out of cowardice, or lack of ambition.” He leaned forwards slightly. “
That is not so. You think that a God is a mighty being; they are not. A creature of the pure Warp, always and eternally restricted by the emotions which gave it life. Worshipped by the foolish, yet with no more actual agency than the rocks and trees and rivers likewise worshipped with no less devotion by our primitive ancestors. What is a God, after all, but a miserable pile of holy secrets? There is no power in a God but that which is unwisely granted to it by short-sighted worshippers... such as you. I am Civilization, yes, but you were raised in my civilization, and cannot deny my commands.”
“Yet you know that you cannot avoid what must be done.” Lorgar spat back. “You
must return… which means that I
must act.”
“
I cannot delay you forever, no. And a sacrifice must indeed be made.” the Emperor admitted. “
But I have one Act to perform, first.”
Fireblade narrowed her eyes, flexing her arms and shuffling her feet slightly to ensure that the muscles were warmed up. If the Emperor apparently sought to save Yvraine’s life yet still admitted that
someone in their small group must die… that left only one remaining option.
She would not go quietly.
But… if it is the Emperor who commands it? Alex asked, although she could feel him fighting hard against the thought.
No warrior can escape death forever. But she can ensure that she meets it on her own terms. Fireblade responded. And besides, the human emperor who had presumably also waited ten thousand years for this moment seemed unlikely to give in to his obviously-hated son so easily. Even if she couldn’t imagine what other option remained.
Of all people, you expect a miracle? Alex asked.
Of all people, you do not? She retorted.
The human leader in question reached out and rested one hand atop Lorgar’s head, the light-bronze skin of each larger-than-life finger a sharp contrast to the unnaturally-gray hide of the traitor primarch. “
You say that you have cast aside your human coil, yet its traces remain within you. Screaming to get out, they are the last anchor tying your compound soul to the Materium… and would suffice as the sacrifice to allow my reincarnation. Choose, then: inflict a minor revenge upon your brother, or complete your Ascension; but know that your soul may only be so split here and now, before my own Divine Soul is reborn into the Materium.”
For several solon, Lorgar was silent. The murderous primarch visibly shook with the wracking agony of his own internal argument, but after some time he raised his head once more and spoke. “I will Ascend. My humanity is behind me and beneath me; let it be so
entirely.”
The Emperor nodded, and then dug his fingers into his son’s scalp. “
Then I hereby strip you of your Humanity. Kneel.” Lorgar did so, and suddenly the still-blazing sword leapt from his hands into the Emperor’s own remaining fist. The blade that had seemed comically large in even the massive grasp of a Primarch appeared merely normal in proportion to the Emperor’s clenched hand.
Orange-red flames sprouted once more, burning away the cold golden light. The Emperor slowly lowered the flat of the blade, tapping it against Lorgar’s shoulder. “
You are now the Arch-Daemon Lorgar, Foremost of My Faith.” He then tapped the other shoulder, before lifting the blade out of the way. “
Rise… and accept your destiny.”
Lorgar stood up… and up, and up.
When he finally straightened his back entirely, he now stood almost eye-to-eye with his towering father. Looming far taller than his brothers, who only moments before had been his equals in size.
Despite the ominous gravity of the moment, Fireblade couldn’t help rolling her eyes. Of
course humans would express this maddeningly-strange magic promotion as becoming
larger.
Lorgar turned around, beaming, and the soulless light of ambition shone out of his cold eyes as he sneered down at his brothers.
The Emperor’s hand clasped him by the shoulder. “
One more thing. Now that you are no longer Human in any sense, it is time that you meet a weapon far more ancient than even I… one that was purpose-forged to fight creatures such as those whose ranks you have so eagerly joined.”
Warm golden eyes rose to meet Fireblade’s. {
Pallan Fireblade, I believe that you should be able to ‘see’ my foolish son now.}
“What?” Lorgar managed, a moment before Fireblade reached out with her senses.
Where before there had been nothing as seemed normal for a human, now Lorgar’s mind-signature… ‘
glowed.’ Sickly streamers of unthinkable thoughts radiated outwards from him, a miasma of cruelty and hunger.
It was not a pleasant sight, and she averted her senses as quickly as she could.
Which was not fast enough.
Overwhelming
revulsion surged upwards from her very core, and this time her powers stormed out without her or Alex’s command. Their souls could no more halt the instinctive strike than could the body of a person who had swallowed the most vile filth somehow halt the convulsive regurgitation that instinct demanded.
Lorgar opened his mouth to say more, but that was as far as he got before Fireblade’s powers slammed into him.
He jerked back, knocked from his feet. Floated now a pace above the invisible ‘floor’ that they all stood upon, spread-eagled. Muscles bunched in the daemon’s neck as he fought to move, but with no success. Rage-bright eyes rolled in their sockets, glaring balefully between his brothers, then Yvraine… and finally coming to rest on Fireblade.
They narrowed, burning with hate and confusion. “The
xenos, Father? You would turn a xenos monstrosity against your own Prophet?”
“
She is no more xenos than you are. Indeed, by your own request, she remains more human than you have now become.” the Emperor finally moved, stepping forwards to pace around his floating, pinned-in-place son. He held out one hand, cupping a swirling golden-gray flame which flickered weakly within his grasp. “
Your human soul was all that protected you against ancient Eldar warp-smithed weaponry. Those who made her species — and made ours — could hardly have the two halves of their project annihilate each other.”
“
The Human form is Sacrosanct!” Lorgar hissed, head jerking around to follow his prowling father. Amusingly, the sheer Faith in his voice was… ‘familiar’ to Fireblade.
I never sounded like that! Alex protested furiously.
Like that Traitor!
You got better. She replied.
The Emperor rolled one thumb over the glowing ball of light in his palm — the visible ‘soul,’ as ludicrous an idea yet undeniable a reality as that was — and now it was his turn to smirk. “
Even your fall to your Warp-sourced side failed to damage this human soul which I had granted you. It was made by great effort and imbued with a Father’s hope for his children…” the smile, thin as it was, disappeared utterly. “
but I have snuffed out its like before. Although I am pleased to see that my craftsmanship has held up so well: even a mere half of it will suffice for the necessary sacrifice.”
He halted his pacing, standing directly in front of Lorgar’s immobile form and leaned forwards. “
You are indeed correct that as my Prophet I cannot harm you myself or allow you to be destroyed… but as you are no doubt aware from your long dalliance with the Four, there are many ways indeed to make someone wish for death’s embrace.” He straightened up and stepped back, his long black hair flowing forwards to frame his face as it stonily glared down at his despised son. “
You have seen what a single one of our cousins can inflict upon a Warp Construct; shall we meet her sisters? They have been so kind as to hold this null-Warp bubble open for us, but I think that my own strength shall suffice to grant them a break.”
With a wave of one hand, the bubble around them expanded. The ‘arches’ in the ceiling overhead that met in the middle disappeared, and it was only then that Fireblade glimpsed that they were the result of twenty overlapping bubbles… each one centered on a teidar, herself included.
As they vanished, her frozen caste-sisters now moved once more. Heads turned rapidly side-to-side as they took in the changed situation, Mallas Steelgrasp sending immediately {Pallan Fireblade. Who are these new figures?}
They truly had been frozen all this time, then. {It is complex; I will explain later.} Fireblade responded. {For now, know only that the horned human held in place amidst us is a most-senior leader of those allied with the Hierarchy, perhaps commanding it.} That was… perhaps among the
least of his crimes, from what Fireblade understood of the ancient human history which had reached its climax here just now. {Destroy him.}
But it was enough for thirty-eight glaring teidar eyes to turn upon Lorgar in a moment.
The echoes of their powers ebbed against Fireblade, nineteen caste-sisters unleashing their fury upon the suspended Primarch, adding to Fireblade’s own strength.
Lorgar bellowed his confused agony as his limbs snapped taut: twitching, stretching… and in a spray of black blood,
tearing from his body.
The flow of clotted ichor stilled within moments, yet his howls continued.
Redoubled, as his red-and-black chestplate with its red skull emblazoned within an eight-pointed star crumpled inwards, doubtlessly crushing organs. But evidently not his lungs or diaphragm.
All this time, the Emperor stood by and watched his son be ripped limb-from-limb, his face stony and impassive. Only now did he bring his cupped hands together, splitting the glowing orb into two equal but lesser lights. One he held back… and the other he reached out and pressed into his son’s misery-wracked forehead. “Enough.”
The moment that the bright mote touched Lorgar’s skin it was absorbed, disappearing into him. The repulsive ‘glow’ of the daemon’s mind vanished from Fireblade’s senses. And like a child’s marionette with its strings cut, Lorgar crashed to the invisible ‘ground’, his stump-legs squelching loudly as they impacted. He was only saved from toppling over face-first by his father’s hand… which batted him aside so that Lorgar instead crumpled down to rest with his face staring upwards.
“
You are now shielded enough once more, by a faint trace of humanity that I can and will remove if necessary. It was by an impressive manipulation of Warp knowledge — doubtlessly not given to you by the Four, given your goals — that you forced my hand and caused my Deification… but there remains far, far more about this universe of which you do not know even the most faint beginnings." His voice somehow turned even colder, frigid hate — and was that a hint of
fear? — in his tone as he added "
And it was by your short-sighted scrabbling for power that a true God of Civilization in line with your teachings was crafted: soulless, terrible, ever-hungry for naught but conquest, bloodshed, and mindless Order above all else.”
The Emperor knelt at his fallen son’s side, gazing pitilessly down at him. “
A God which would have bathed this galaxy in a golden tidal-wave of warfare, different only in the most minute of details from the green tide of the Ork or the crimson bloodshed sought by Khorne. You would have reduced me to their level, bound me within unbreakable rules of Holy Tradition from which I could never have escaped… and you would have been among its first victims. ‘Civilization’ does not share power for long, not even with Prophets. I was there for all of Humanity’s history: the era of the Prophet-King ended inevitably in streets that ran with the blood of priests and Prophets alike.”
Lorgar gurgled a wet laugh, blood running in lumpy rivulets from one corner of his lip. “I see that I am already one of your ‘first victims.’”
The Emperor snorted. “
That God was brought into being by your foolishness… and it now lies dead, its monochromatic lifeblood pooling around us all. It lacked even the faint trace of humanity which had yet survived within you… and so the loroi’s presence slew it. You lie here crippled by their hands, not mine; laid low by your own hubris.”
Ah, so that was what that golden-statue had been.
We… killed an incarnation of the God-Emperor? Alex asked, horror and confusion fighting for prominence in his thoughts.
A version which this God-Emperor seems to hate with great fervor. Fireblade pointed out. And that golden statue with its baleful eyes had indeed felt…
wrong.
Revolting.
Abnormal.
Even knowing that apparently her instinctual reaction to its presence had been engineered into her ancestors by the Eldar, she could not shake the feeling of
satisfaction that she and her caste-sisters had slain it.
For one thing, even the haughtiest Torrai could not claim that her caste had ever killed a ‘God.’
Lorgar spat more words “Yet you still cannot allow me to die. I
know that you cannot. I will forever remain your Prophet; that can no longer be changed.”
“
That is true indeed. But nowhere in the ties binding a God to their Prophet is there any requirement that you take an active role in my Reborn Imperium.” His faintly-glowing golden eyes rose slightly, seeming to stare through Lorgar off into the distance. A thin smile utterly devoid of any warmth curled at one corner of his disapproving mouth. “
As I have heard said to one I knew long, long ago: ‘You will see the Imperium only from a distance; you will not enter the new world I will bring to Humanity.’”
Straightening up, the Emperor canted his head towards Guilliman. “
My Captain-General has surely informed you of the availability of the Shadow Cells beneath the Palace?”
Guilliman’s eyes only flickered to his prone brother’s shattered body for a moment before returning to meet the Emperor’s. “Yes, father.” his mouth pulled taut, and he answered “Many of those Cells were… ‘emptied’ without warning, more than a century ago and before my revival. Are you certain that they are secure enough for—?” one arm twitched towards Lorgar.
“Yes, I felt the Warp reach in that day and pluck my prisoners from their vaults. We must prepare well for when those dread abominations are inevitably encountered by Humanity once more.” The Emperor slowly rotated his head back and forth, nodding to himself. “But there are now more…
methods available to make their containment secure once more than had been available to the dwindling Imperium.”
Fireblade was most certain that he had been glancing between her caste-sisters, even as she translated and relayed the Emperor’s words for her fellow loroi. And while ‘prison guard’ seemed a waste of a teidar’s talents, if those escaped prisoners — or ‘abominations’ — were fierce enough that even this living God felt some apprehension at their new-found freedom, then perhaps something could be arranged.
And Fireblade had known Tempo for long enough to say with certainty that the plot-happy mizol would be especially intrigued to learn of this new facet which could be brought into future negotiations between the Union and the Imperium. An opportunity for the Union to offer the aid of its telekinetic daughters, and extract some useful concession in turn.
Not to mention that the humans’ Emperor clearly seemed to owe his very life and freedom now to Fireblade and her caste-sisters. One hardly needed to be a sneaky mizol to see how
that debt could protect the loroi from their human cousins.
{
I do not believe that your people will require ‘protection’ from my Imperium.} the hammer-blow sanzai crashed into her mind once more, a beat before the Emperor’s golden eyes slid aside to meet hers. {
I have waited a long time to meet the distant cousins whom I first glimpsed in age-worn records found beneath Terra’s oldest places; I shall hardly allow my people to bring yours to harm.}
Fireblade flinched as the human-occupied half her mind went white with shock at being spoken to so directly by the God-Emperor; the only thing which kept Alex’s portion of their shared self from falling entirely into unconsciousness was Fireblade’s steely discipline clamping down hard on his antics. But she couldn't keep that up forever.
So, how to distract Alex?
Fireblade’s eyes flicked to Lorgar’s blood-caked form at the Emperor’s feet, before climbing all the way back up to meet the two golden eyes. {Did you ‘allow’ several of your sons to turn against you however-long ago?}
An unstoppable bubble of
panic flowed over from Alex’s mind to hers, and her right hand twitched upwards towards her neck. With her left hand, she reached over and grasped her right forearm, arresting the motion.
Which did nothing to quiet Alex’s voice in her mind
Are you MAD!? Do not speak so flippantly to the God-Emperor!
Grasping my neck would hardly have interrupted my sanzai. If Alex insisted on exposing himself to further combat situations in the future, it was clear that he would require training in the basics of a warrior’s craft.
Then how do I silence you before you get us all killed!?
A pair of glowing eyes narrowed briefly at her, and for a heartbeat there was a faint echo within them of the baleful glare of that earlier golden statue-God.
But then the light-brown skin of his creased brow slackened. {
It has been some time since I was spoken to with such lightness.}
See? Alex hissed, no small amount of terror wafting off from his thoughts.
I told you!
The Emperor nodded thoughtfully, even as El’Jonson followed his father’s gaze to Fireblade with a frown. {
It will be very useful indeed to have others like you in attendance.} Was that a thin smile curling at his lip? {
I will almost miss the presence of you both once you return to your duties.}
This time, even Fireblade’s best efforts could not keep Alex from fainting dead away, his presence in her mind dwindling to nothing in a most strange sensation.
///////
For an excellently-written illustration of just what sort of God of Pure Order Lorgar almost made, see
this interlude-chapter of another 40k AU story which I quite like.
Guilliman: “Hey Lorgar, now you’re even worse-off than Abaddon! You don’t have any arms or legs!”
Also, Fireblade, please don’t sass-back the God-Emperor. You’re going to give Alex a heart attack.