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    Ruinstorm


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      Backlist

      Book 1 – HORUS RISING

      Book 2 – FALSE GODS

      Book 3 – GALAXY IN FLAMES

      Book 4 – THE FLIGHT OF THE EISENSTEIN

      Book 5 – FULGRIM

      Book 6 – DESCENT OF ANGELS

      Book 7 – LEGION

      Book 8 – BATTLE FOR THE ABYSS

      Book 9 – MECHANICUM

      Book 10 – TALES OF HERESY

      Book 11 – FALLEN ANGELS

      Book 12 – A THOUSAND SONS

      Book 13 – NEMESIS

      Book 14 – THE FIRST HERETIC

      Book 15 – PROSPERO BURNS

      Book 16 – AGE OF DARKNESS

      Book 17 – THE OUTCAST DEAD

      Book 18 – DELIVERANCE LOST

      Book 19 – KNOW NO FEAR

      Book 20 – THE PRIMARCHS

      Book 21 – FEAR TO TREAD

      Book 22 – SHADOWS OF TREACHERY

      Book 23 – ANGEL EXTERMINATUS

      Book 24 – BETRAYER

      Book 25 – MARK OF CALTH

      Book 26 – VULKAN LIVES

      Book 27 – THE UNREMEMBERED EMPIRE

      Book 28 – SCARS

      Book 29 – VENGEFUL SPIRIT

      Book 30 – THE DAMNATION OF PYTHOS

      Book 31 – LEGACIES OF BETRAYAL

      Book 32 – DEATHFIRE

      Book 33 – WAR WITHOUT END

      Book 34 – PHAROS

      Book 35 – EYE OF TERRA

      Book 36 – THE PATH OF HEAVEN

      Book 37 – THE SILENT WAR

      Book 38 – ANGELS OF CALIBAN

      Book 39 – PRAETORIAN OF DORN

      Book 40 – CORAX

      Book 41 – THE MASTER OF MANKIND

      Book 42 – GARRO

      Book 43 – SHATTERED LEGIONS

      Book 44 – THE CRIMSON KING

      Book 45 – TALLARN

      More tales from the Horus Heresy...

      CYBERNETICA

      SONS OF THE FORGE

      WOLF KING

      PROMETHEAN SUN

      AURELIAN

      BROTHERHOOD OF THE STORM

      THE CRIMSON FIST

      PRINCE OF CROWS

      DEATH AND DEFIANCE

      TALLARN: EXECUTIONER

      SCORCHED EARTH

      BLADES OF THE TRAITOR

      THE PURGE

      THE HONOURED

      THE UNBURDENED

      RAVENLORD

      Many of these titles are also available as abridged and unabridged audiobooks. Order the full range of Horus Heresy novels and audiobooks from blacklibrary.com

      Audio Dramas

      THE DARK KING & THE LIGHTNING TOWER

      RAVEN’S FLIGHT

      GARRO: OATH OF MOMENT

      GARRO: LEGION OF ONE

      BUTCHER’S NAILS

      GREY ANGEL

      GARRO: BURDEN OF DUTY

      GARRO: SWORD OF TRUTH

      THE SIGILLITE

      HONOUR TO THE DEAD

      WOLF HUNT

      HUNTER’S MOON

      THIEF OF REVELATIONS

      TEMPLAR

      ECHOES OF RUIN

      MASTER OF THE FIRST

      THE LONG NIGHT

      IRON CORPSES

      RAPTOR

      Download the full range of Horus Heresy audio dramas from blacklibrary.com

      Also available

      MACRAGGE’S HONOUR

      A Horus Heresy graphic novel

      Contents

      Cover

      Backlist

      Title Page

      The Horus Heresy

      Dramatis Personae

      Prologue

      Part I

      One

      Two

      Three

      Four

      Five

      Six

      Seven

      Part II

      Eight

      Nine

      Ten

      Eleven

      Part III

      Twelve

      Thirteen

      Fourteen

      Fifteen

      Sixteen

      Seventeen

      Eighteen

      Epilogue

      Afterword

      About the Author

      An Extract from ‘Tallarn’

      A Black Library Publication

      eBook license

      The Horus Heresy

      It is a time of legend.

      The galaxy is in flames. The Emperor’s glorious vision for humanity is in ruins. His favoured son, Horus, has turned from his father’s light and embraced Chaos.

      His armies, the mighty and redoubtable Space Marines, are locked in a brutal civil war. Once, these ultimate warriors fought side by side as brothers, protecting the galaxy and bringing mankind back into the Emperor’s light. Now they are divided.

      Some remain loyal to the Emperor, whilst others have sided with the Warmaster. Pre-eminent amongst them, the leaders of their thousands-strong Legions are the primarchs. Magnificent, superhuman beings, they are the crowning achievement of the Emperor’s genetic science. Thrust into battle against one another, victory is uncertain for either side.

      Worlds are burning. At Isstvan V, Horus dealt a vicious blow and three loyal Legions were all but destroyed. War was begun, a conflict that will engulf all mankind in fire. Treachery and betrayal have usurped honour and nobility. Assassins lurk in every shadow. Armies are gathering. All must choose a side or die.

      Horus musters his armada, Terra itself the object of his wrath. Seated upon the Golden Throne, the Emperor waits for his wayward son to return. But his true enemy is Chaos, a primordial force that seeks to enslave mankind to its capricious whims.

      The screams of the innocent, the pleas of the righteous resound to the cruel laughter of Dark Gods. Suffering and damnation await all should the Emperor fail and the war be lost.

      The age of knowledge and enlightenment has ended.

      The Age of Darkness has begun.

      ~ Dramatis Personae ~

      Ultramarines

      Roboute Guilliman, Primarch

      Verus Caspean, Chapter Master of the First

      Titus Prayto, Librarian

      Turetia Altuzer, Shipmaster, Samothrace

      Drakus Gorod, Commander, Suzerain Invictus Bodyguard

      Iasus, Chapter Master of the 22nd, Destroyers

      Junixa Terrens, Vox-officer, Samothrace

      Nestor Lautenix, Lieutenant, Samothrace

      Hierax, Captain, Destroyers

      Lucretius CorvoCaptain, Glorious Nova

      Mnason, Destroyers legionary

      Teosos, Destroyers legionary

      Byzanus, Tech-priest

      Kletos, Destroyers legionary

      Aphovos, Sergeant, second squad, Destroyers

      Gorthia, Sergeant, third squad, Destroyers

      Antalcidas, Dreadnought, Destroyers

      Empion, Chapter Master of the Ninth

      Blood Angels

      Sanguinius, Primarch

      Carminus, Captain, temporary Fleet Master

      Raldoron, First Captain, Equerry to Sanguinius

      Mkani Kano, Librarian

      Meros, The Red Angel, Herald

      Varra Neverrus, Vox-officer, Red Tear

      Azkaellon, Captain, Sanguinary Guard

      Amit, Flesh Tearer, Fifth Company

      Jeran Mautus, Lieutenant, auspex officer, Red Tear

      Orexis, Sergeant

      Vahiel, Sergeant

      Da
    rk Angels

      Lion El’Jonson, Primarch

      Stenius, Captain, Invincible Reason

      Holguin, Voted Lieutenant, Deathwing

      Lady Theralyn Fiana, Chief Navigator, Invincible Reason

      Tuchulcha

      Farith Redloss, Voted Lieutenant, Dreadwing

      Vazheth Licinia, Mistress of the astropathic choir, Invincible Reason

      Iron Hands

      Khalybus, Captain, Sthenelus

      Raud, Sergeant

      Cruax, Iron Father

      Seterikus, Legionary

      Demir, Legionary

      Kiriktas, Helmsman, Sthenelus

      Raven Guard

      Levannas

      Word Bearers

      Toc Derenoth, Unburdened

      Grel Kathnar

      Phael Rabor, Captain

      Quor Vondor, Chaplain

      Yathinius, Navigator, Annunciation

      Nekras, Navigator, Annunciation

      Others

      Konrad Curze, Night Haunter

      Eleska Revus, Colonel, Imperial Army commander, Episimos III

      Madail the Undivided, Daemon

      Prologue

      I sing the carnage of faith rewarded.

      By verse of eight and chorus of four, with choir of bone and chords of pain, I am the celebrant of ruin.

      By path of eight and praise of four, I bow to excess and to blood, to change and to plague.

      With sight of eight, by command of four, I am weaver and reaper, the shaper of souls and their devourer.

      I lead the congregation of slaughter. I bring the revelation of skulls. My path is deluge, my wake is holocaust, and my march is fealty. I am the servant. I am the priest.

      I am the undivided.

      The web of storms shakes and moans. Its strands convulse. Down their lengths, the prisoners struggle in bonds they do not truly perceive. Fate shackles them. By power of eight and will of four, they are caught in the design. It pulls them towards me. I take up the web. I gather it in. The prey rushes forwards, blind in the arrogance of false hope.

      They are three, coming to be ground and torn by jaws of eight and edict of four. They believe in the illusion of choice, in the ragged dream of their struggle. The disciple of reason, the holder of secrets, and the winged nobility, they are infused with fire. It will burn them.

      I will burn them.

      They are no more than ash.

      But by knives of eight, for the glory of four, of the three there is the one whose pyre must be the galaxy. I pull the web, and shape his fate. The riven must stand before the undivided.

      He will embrace the majesty of ruin.

      Part I

      The Tempest

      One

      The Redemption Leap

      My sin is the greatest, the Angel thought. And so my need is the greatest. Father, hear my cry. Bring me to you.

      His great wings folded, one hand resting on the pommel of the Blade Encarmine, the Angel stood as a towering, meditative statue on the central command dais of the Red Tear’s bridge. By his word, a fleet went to war. The power of a Legion flowed from him, and his decisions, his acts, had brought the sin to all his sons. His must be the power now to wash away that sin.

      From the dais’ forwards, elevated position, Sanguinius had a pano­ramic view through the battleship’s windows. He watched the warp-torn agony of the void for a few final seconds as the shutters began to close. The view of the Ruinstorm narrowed, and the tension of the crew increased. The humans had survived the madness that had fallen upon the fleet on the jump to Signus Prime, though they bore the psychic scars, memories like shards of glass digging at their courage. But they looked at him and drew strength, and performed their duties. A navigation officer began counting down. Her voice was steady, committed. One after another, officers called from their stations, announcing the readiness of the vessel.

      A tremor ran through the decking as if the machine-spirit of the battleship were bracing itself. The Red Tear had fallen on Signus Prime. Like so many of us, the Angel thought. It had risen again. The years at Macragge had been time enough to repair the venerable ship. It was battle-worthy once more, but its scars ran as deep as those of the crew, as profound as the spiritual wounds inflicted on the Legion. Much had been lost. The lines of the battleship ran true. Its halls and bays were intact. Its weapons systems were fully operational. But the statues, the art and the manuscripts that had been burned were gone forever. The Red Tear had been the proud embodiment of the culture of Baal. Each destroyed artefact was a vanished piece of Blood Angels history. Sculptures, tapestries and tableaux still lined the corridors. Those that could be restored had been. Sanguinius had given orders that the others stay in their places. They were memorials now. And they were reminders that the IX Legion fought on, no matter its wounds, no matter the flaws that threatened to shatter its fundamental nobility.

      The shutters closed. The Ruinstorm vanished from Sanguinius’ view. It remained before his mind’s eye. The rage of madness tore at the materium. It hid the stars. It was a howling promise of destruction, an endlessly twisting slashing at reality. Yet this bloody pyre of existence was just a foretaste of what waited in the warp itself. The warp that Sanguinius knew held worse than just the breakdown of sanity. There were deeper forces there, powers with sentience and will.

      He had fought them. He and his Legion had fought them, and they had triumphed. If it was time to fight them again, then he and his sons were ready.

      Yet he felt the wounds. He felt them in his crew, in his ship, in his Legion, in his soul.

      Seated on the Red Tear’s command throne, Carminus called out. ‘My lord,’ he said, ‘the jumps of the First and Thirteenth Legions are confirmed.’

      ‘Thank you,’ Sanguinius said to the captain of the Third Company. He had made Carminus temporary fleet master during the exodus from the Signus System. There had been time to find a mortal officer suitable for the command, but the Angel had decided Carminus should lead the fleet again. Even if all went well, the journey through the warp was going to be a long one. After what had happened at Signus Prime, Sanguinius needed a genhanced human at the post, someone with a stronger resistance to the attacks of madness.

      At the Angel’s side, Raldoron said, ‘May we meet our brothers again at journey’s end.’

      ‘We will,’ Sanguinius told him. The First Captain had been in favour of the combined forces of the three fleets striking out together. Even if the primarchs had been of the same mind, their approaches to the journey were too different. We each have our hopes, our convictions, and our sins, he thought. Guilliman’s fleet was attacking the warp in a systematic manner, seeking to batter the storm into submission with the brute force of reason. As for the Lion…

      Sanguinius did not know his strategy. He did not know how the Lion would travel through the warp. But in their last meeting together in the Fortress of Hera, where Roboute had looked determined, the Lion had appeared confident. He fully expected to reach Terra.

      Sanguinius envied his brother’s confidence at the same time that he distrusted it. Certainty had brought catastrophe to the Imperium. Sanguinius had been certain of Horus. And what was Curze, if not certain of the truth in whose name he had slaughtered?

      The Blood Angels had been lost in the Ruinstorm when they tried to reach Terra after Signus. There was no reason to believe the passage would be any easier now. Sanguinius knew to hold fast to the certainty of uncertainty. All there was to take the Legion through the storm was urgency.

      Urgency, and the need for redemption.

      There had been no ceremony to mark the departure of the fleets from Macragge. There had been no formal taking of leave by the Triumvirate. The Emperor, the Lord Warden and the Lord Protector had left, each taking two-thirds of their fleets. Those who remained would guard Ultramar under the regency of Valentus Dolor. Imperium Secundus no longer e
    xisted, except as a fiction Sanguinius despised as much as he understood its necessity. Some form of continuity had to be maintained to preserve what order had been restored to the Five Hundred Worlds. Until Terra was found again, until the Emperor was proven to be alive, the Angel’s official status could not change. For the billions of Ultramar, he was the Emperor Sanguinius. His sin could not be erased by edict. It could only be forgiven by his father.

      My sin is the greatest.

      The Angel was the usurper. He had sat upon a false throne and been called Emperor. Not even Horus had managed to go so far.

      Father, hear my cry.

      Urgency drove all three fleets. Urgency to reach Terra and confound Horus. The traitors had done their work well, convincing three Legions that there was no Terra to aid. The Ruinstorm was not just a barrier, it was a veil concealing the truth and had led to the lie of the Imperium Secundus. The lie was over now, but the barrier remained. To purge the sin of usurpation and save Terra, the task was clear.

      Break through the Ruinstorm.

      ‘The fleet is ready, lord,’ Carminus said. ‘We jump at your command.’

      Father, bring me to you.

      Sanguinius sent his need towards hidden Terra. He could not call it hope, the thing that would travel with his fleet through the warp, this convulsion in his soul that the galaxy felt too small to contain. He could not expect it would guide them to his father. But he reached out as if it would. In the exodus from Signus, anger and military priorities had been the driving needs. They were still present, but the desperate reach for redemption was even more powerful. If Sanguinius stretched out his arm, surely he should be able to grasp the path to Terra.

      The need was that strong.

      But there was no certainty, and he would not fall to the illusion.

      He turned to Mkani Kano. The Librarian stood at Raldoron’s right hand. ‘Your men are at their posts?’ he asked. Sanguinius had ordered a Librarian be stationed in the Navigation chambers of every vessel in the fleet. They were to do what they could to protect the fragile humans from the forces that would come for them in the immaterium. There was no more certainty they would succeed than there was of reaching Terra.

      ‘They stand ready,’ said Kano.

      Sanguinius turned his back on the shutters. He faced his sons and the human crew. Below the dais was a squad of Raldoron’s Sanguinary Guard. With them was the Angel’s herald. This was his sacrificial son, the legionary whose identity Sanguinius had necessarily hidden from himself, who had become the Angel’s voice in the Imperium Secundus. It was he who had been the figure most of the supplicants to the throne had seen, and not Sanguinius. The Angel now saw this son’s sacrifice as all the greater for having been part of an immoral folly. His presence on the bridge, close to Sanguinius, was in recognition of his service, and as a visible reminder of the need for atonement. The sacrifices his sons had made weighed heavily on his mind. On Signus Prime, Meros had taken his place to become the Red Angel, giving up all nobility and humanity to become the worst of the Blood Angels’ savagery. The herald lived, and remained human, but the price he paid was a high one. His helm kept his face hidden, and would until the legionary’s death. Sanguinius was no longer Emperor. There was no need for the role of herald any longer. Yet the legionary’s identity remained subsumed by his duty.

     

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