Galaxy in Flames

Galaxy in Flames by Ben Counter

Book: Galaxy in Flames by Ben Counter Read Free Book Online
Authors: Ben Counter
Tags: Science-Fiction
Ads: Link
his oaths of loyalty to the Imperium.
    Tarvitz was spared thinking of an answer by the dull thump of the interior doors blowing open. He put the dead man from his mind and set off after Eidolon as he held his hammer high and charged into the central dome. He ran alongside his fellow warriors, knowing that whatever the Isstvanians could throw at him, he was an Astartes and no weapon they had could match the will of the Emperor’s Children.
    Tarvitz and his men moved through the dust and smoke of the door’s explosion, the autosenses of his armour momentarily useless.
    Then they were through and into the heart of the Isstvan Extremis facility.
    He pulled up short as he suddenly realized that the intelligence they had been given on this facility was utterly wrong.
    This was not a comms station, it was a temple.
    T ORGADDON ’ S FACE WAS ashen and leathery, puckered and scarred around a burning yellow eye. Sharpened metallic teeth glinted in a lipless mouth and twin gashes were torn in the centre of his face.
    A star with eight points was gouged in his temple, mirroring its golden twin etched upon his ornate, black armour.
    ‘No,’ said Loken, backing away from this terrible apparition.
    ‘You have trespassed, Loken,’ hissed Torgaddon. ‘You have betrayed.’
    A dry, deathly wind carried Torgaddon’s words, gusting over him with the smell of burning bodies. As he breathed the noxious wind, a vision of broken steppes spread out before Loken, expanses of desolation and plains of rusted machinery like skeletons of extinct monsters. A hive city on the distant horizon split open like a flower, and from its broken, burning petals rose a mighty tower of brass that punctured the pollution-heavy clouds.
    The sky above was burning and the laughter of Dark Gods boomed from the heavens. Loken wanted to scream, this vision of devastation worse than anything he had seen before.
    This wasn’t real. It couldn’t be. He did not believe in ghosts and illusions.
    The thought gave him strength. He wrenched his mind away from the dying world, and suddenly he was soaring through the galaxy, tumbling between the stars. He saw them destroyed, bleeding glowing plumes of stellar matter into the void. A baleful mass of red stars glowered above him, staring like a great and terrible eye of flame. An endless tide of titanic monsters and vast space fleets vomited from that eye, drowning the universe in a tide of blood.
    A sea of burning flames spat and leapt from the blood, consuming all in its path, leaving black, barren wasteland in its wake.
    Was this a vision of some lunatic’s hell, a dimension of destruction and chaos where sinners went when they died? Loken forced himself to remember the lurid descriptions from the Chronicles of Ursh , the outlandish scenes described by inventions of dark faith. No, said the voice of Torgaddon, this is no madman’s delusion. It is the future.
    ‘ You’re not Torgaddon!’ shouted Loken, shaking the whispering voice from his head. You are seeing the galaxy die. Loken saw the Sons of Horus in the tide of fiery madness that poured from the red eye, armoured in black and surrounded by leaping, deformed creatures. Abaddon was there, and Horus himself, an immense obsidian giant who crushed worlds in his gauntlets.
    This could not be the future. This was a diseased distorted vision of the future.
    A galaxy in which mankind was led by the Emperor could never become such a terrible maelstrom of chaos and death. You are wrong.
    The galaxy in flames receded and Loken scrabbled for some solidity, something to reassure him that this terrifying vision could never come to pass. He was tumbling again, his vision blurring until he opened his eyes and found himself in Archive Chamber Three, a place he had felt safe, surrounded by books that rendered the universe down to pure logic and kept the madness locked up in crude pagan epics where it belonged.
    But something was wrong, the books were burning around him, this purest

Similar Books

Craft

Lynnie Purcell

Play Dead

Peter Dickinson

Fionn

Marteeka Karland

Rage

Jonathan Kellerman

Dangerous Kiss

Jackie Collins

Therapy

Sebastian Fitzek

Blood

K. J. Wignall

How to Live

Sarah Bakewell