He felt something slither within him. Something stirring, wrapping around the bones of his arms and legs, coiling in a tight spiral around his spine.
‘Summon every warrior to the bridge,’ he ordered, hearing his own voice echoing in his mind, a silent chorus twinned with his words.
‘And Dagotal,’ said Argel Tal, ‘get us out of here.’
The ship that limped its way from the warp storm was a far cry from the noble Imperial vessel that had cut its way in. It trailed psychic fog around its membrane-thin Geller Field, turning in a slow roll that spoke of flawed guidance systems and damaged stabilisers.
Pulsing from its mangled communications towers was a repeated message, the Colchisian words rendered into fuzz by detuned vox.
‘This is the
‘Contact re-established with
The command deck of
‘Already?’ he said, glancing to the officers at the vox-console.
‘Sire,’ the Master of Auspex called from his bank of flickering monitors, ‘the ship is... horrifically damaged.’
The bustle of the bridge began to quieten, as more and more crew members watched the occulus, seeing the
‘How can this be?’ Lorgar leaned on the handrail ringing the raised podium, his golden fingers gripping the steel. ‘That’s not possible.’
‘Receiving a distress pulse,’ said one of the vox-officers. ‘Sire... My primarch... The
Lorgar covered his parted lips with a hand, unable to conceal his unrest where another primarch might have stood stoic. Worry was etched onto his handsome features, replacing the confusion that had taken hold moments before.
‘Play the message, please,’ he asked in a soft voice.
It came through in a crackle of vox, grating across the bridge speakers.
‘...the
‘How can this be?’ he asked again. ‘Master of Vox, get me a signal to that ship.’
‘By your word, sire.’
‘Argel Tal,’ Lorgar breathed his son’s name. ‘I know his voice. That was Argel Tal.’
At his side, Fleetmaster Baloc Torvus nodded, his stern features emotionless where his primarch’s were tormented. ‘Aye, sire. It was.’
Contact took three and a half minutes to restore, during which the rest of the 1,301st Fleet had raised its shields and armed all weapons. Tug-ships sailed from the flagship’s docking bays, ready to drag the limping
At last, a picture resolved on the occulus, showing the other vessel’s bridge. Audio contact filtered back a few seconds afterwards, heralded by a burst of static.
‘Blood of the Emperor,’ Lorgar whispered as he watched.
Argel Tal wore no helm. His face was gaunt, a pathetic wraith of his former vitality, with his eyes ringed by the dark smears of countless restless nights. Speckles of old blood decorated the left side of his face, and his armour – what was left of it – was pitted and cracked, devoid of any holy parchment.
He rose from his command throne on unsteady legs and saluted. There was the softest bang as his fist hit his breastplate.
‘You’re... still here,’ he rasped. All strength was gone from his voice.
Lorgar was the one to break the silence. ‘My son. What has befallen you? What madness is this?’
Behind Argel Tal, other figures were moving into view. Word Bearers, all. They were just as weak, just as ruined, as their commander. One fell to his knees as Lorgar watched, praying in a senseless stream of conflicting words. It took several moments for the primarch to realise it was Xaphen, recognisable only because of the broken black armour.
Argel Tal closed his eyes, letting out a breath. ‘Sire, we have returned, as ordered.’
Lorgar glanced at Torvus, before turning back to Argel Tal. ‘Captain, you’ve been gone no more than sixty seconds. We just witnessed the
Argel Tal scratched his ravaged face, shaking his head. ‘No. No, that cannot be.’
‘It can be,’ Lorgar stared hard at him, ‘and it is. My son, what happened to you?’