The primarch of the Word Bearers had fallen. His armour, once red and engraved with scripture, was an ashen husk of charred plate. Cracked and weeping skin showed around the patchwork spread of bleeding burns. Not a patch of skin was left untouched. He didnβt rise from his knees. He didnβt lift his head. He did nothing at all.
βHeβs dead.β Ellas spoke softly.
βFire again.β Delantyr breathed the words. βFire again.β
βYou bled the core,β Kei replied. βWeβre plasma-starved.β
βFire the suppressing tracers. Three bursts.β
Ardentorβs anti-infantry bolters spat their tracer fire at the prone primarch. The first burst chewed glass, spraying fragments everywhere. The second two punched home in the scorched armour, blasting the fallen Emperorβs son onto his back β a vessel of cooked, punctured meat.
βWe just killed a primarch.β Kei swallowed. βWe just killed a primarch.β
Delantyrβs grin showed almost every tooth he had. βCrush him. Leave them nothing to bury.β
Ardentor walked. Its backwards-jointed legs hammered down on the steaming, downsloping glass, breaking it underfoot as it staggered down into the crater. When it reached the primarchβs body, Ellas raised the right claw-foot, and steered both control levers to slam the limb back down.
The Warhound shook, unbalanced with one leg in the air. Great gears in the war machineβs knee and hip protested with rough, mechanical coughs.
βGet the leg down,β Delantyr ordered. βFinish it.β
Ellas gave the control levers another wrenching shove. βSomethingβs obstructing us.β
Kei lifted his targeting visor again, looking out of the Warhoundβs left eye-windshield. He took a slow breath, and glanced back at his princeps.
βMy princeps? The World Eaters in the ruinsβ¦ Theyβre cheering.β
The bleeding demigod had torn his way through the ground, giving voice to his resurrection with a bellow nothing short of ursine. Gore sheeted him, painting him in dark, rich red wetness. He threw his axes away, ruined and never to be wielded again, and breathed freedom into his lungs. It smelled of melted glass and felt like sunburn.
βLorgar.β He spat blood as he said the name, rising to his feet at last.
The Word Bearer lifted a scalded hand, not for aid, but in warning. Angron had no time to lift his mutilated brother, sprawled at his feet. The sun went dark, as dark as night falling in an instant.
He turned, raising his arms, and took a god-machineβs weight on his shoulders.
Every muscle in his body locked tighter than the iron trying to crush him. Drool stringed through his metal teeth, skinned knuckles white as he defied the will of a Titan. He gave a bearβs roar as the foot lowered another half-metre. Sinews crackled in his shoulders. His broken boots skidded back on the patch of unglassed rock; something cracked in his spine, something else cracked in his left knee. The compression of his bones sounded like twigs breaking underfoot, which was a vivid burst of imagination he didnβt appreciate.
But he could hear his men cheering. He could hear them howling as they killed, and crying his name.
He blinked to clear away his sweatβs greasy sting, and dug his boots into the ground. With a smile slitting across his broken-angel face, he shifted his slipping, blood-slick grip on the Titanβs clawed foot, and started pushing back.
βLorgar.β Angron spoke in something that wasnβt quite a growl and wasnβt quite a laugh. βGet up. I canβt hold this forever.'
~Betrayer, by Aaron Dembski-Bowden