Let’s Read the Horus Heresy! Part 9: Battle for the Abyss

Over the last few books, the Horus Heresy series has stepped away from the “present day” of the Heresy to cover some important prequel events. The two books created a “bookend” of sorts; we looked at the I Legion under Lion el’Jonson, and the XX Legion, the last to be established, under Alpharius. The I Legion, the Dark Angels, will be loyalists during the heresy (though ultimately with an entirely separate betrayal within their own ranks–but that’s a story for another day), while the XX Legion, the Alpha Legion, will join the traitors–but with a twist (that I won’t spoil again here!).

Now, though, it’s time to step back into the action. We’ve seen the two great ambushes that Horus orchestrated to purge as many loyalists as possible from his ranks–the ambush at Isstvan III, and the Dropsite Massacre at Isstvan V. But there are plenty of loyalist legions left, and they won’t stand idly by while Horus comes for the Emperor. They, too, must be taken down if Horus is to win this war. There is perhaps no more loyal legion than the XIII Legion, the Ultramarines, under their primarch Roboute Guilliman–and so they become the target for the traitor XVII Legion, the Word Bearers under Lorgar. Lorgar, you will recall, is the first Primarch to fall to Chaos, long before Horus; it was his machinations that led to the fall of Horus at Davin. This is a Legion totally given to Chaos; and they have plans to destroy the Ultramarines before the alarm can even be raised. And thus we come to Battle for the Abyss, by Ben Counter.

Spoilers ahead! If you want a more spoiler-free review, with just my thoughts on the book, skip ahead to the last dividing line in the post.


The Furious Abyss

Hidden in the depths of the solar system is the moon of Jupiter known as Thule. This minor celestial body has been hollowed out by the Mechanicum of Mars, then converted into a massive, single-use shipyard; and hidden inside that shipyard grows a monster. The Furious Abyss is a new creation, an Abyss-class battleship, the largest ever constructed by the Mechanicum. Its engines are enormous, its armament unmatched–and it is entirely under the command of the Word Bearers legion. It is early days in the Heresy, and most of the galaxy is unaware of the treachery of the Warmaster and his aligned Legions, which include the Word Bearers. But they will know soon enough; for the Heresy is about to announce itself. The Furious Abyss takes flight for Macragge, the homeworld of the Ultramarines, to set an ambush that will open the way for an invasion of the entire system, and the destruction of the XIII Legion.

I need to stop here and talk about the Mechanicum for a moment. Since the colonization of Mars many thousands of years ago, the planet has been its own entity, sometimes even rivaling Terra. It is wholly given over to the pursuit of technology, hence the name of its ruling organization: the Cult Mechanicus, or the Mechanicum. They are a religious body as well as a political one, seeking oneness with their proclaimed god, the Omnissiah. Much has been written over the years as to whether the Emperor is also the Omnissiah, and I won’t get into that here–but it’s the pretext of that claim that allowed the Emperor to ally the Imperium with the Mechanicum rather than try to conquer them. This alliance is the reason the Emperor’s symbol is the aquila–the double-headed eagle, with one head representing the Imperium, and the other representing the Mechanicum. Since that day, the two have functioned as one, with the Mechanicum cranking out the ships, armor, and weapons that the Great Crusade requires. Mars’s influence also covers other bodies in the solar system, such as the shipyards around Jupiter, which explains Thule’s selection for the construction of the Furious Abyss. At this time, it appears that elements in the Mechanicum–all the way up to their leader, the Fabricator-General–have decided to throw in their lot with the traitors.

I could not find art of the Furious Abyss.
All art is of the related Gothic battleship,
from which the Abyss-class design was drawn.

The Furious Abyss–or just Abyss, for convenience–is captained by a Word Bearers admiral named Zadkiel, who is a true zealot indeed, and also quite paranoid. They aren’t called the Word Bearers for nothing; their form of Chaos worship is a dedication to the Word of Lorgar. They literally have scriptures that guide them in the pursuit of Chaos. As a symbol of this, the Abyss carries an experimental weapon, a plasma lance, in its prow–which is shaped like a massive book of scriptures.


The Fist of Macragge

Somewhere between Terra and Macragge, an Ultramarines cruiser called the Fist of Macragge sails the void, captained by Brother-Captain Hektor. The ship has been recalled to Macragge (or Ultramar, as the system is called–it also includes the planet Calth, among others, all under the jurisdiction of the Ultramarines) to muster for a campaign to liberate the planet Veridan from the Orks. On the way, it is supposed to stop at Vangelis Spaceport, a popular transfer point, to pick up a contingent of Ultramarines who wait to join the campaign.

The ship never makes it to Vangelis. Instead, its proximity alarms sound as it suddenly encounters the largest ship any of the crew have ever seen. The Furious Abyss wastes no time; it immediately fires upon the hapless cruiser, testing its weapons. Hektor never gets a chance to learn the name of the ship that kills him–but he does manage to get the astropaths to send a warning.


Vangelis Spaceport

Let’s meet our protagonists! This story features a motley collection of Space Marines from various Legions, as well as Imperial Navy officers from the Saturnine Fleet, an older and storied fleet that is about to be retired. We have the Ultramarines who were waiting for the Fist of Macragge: Brother-Captain Cestus; his honor guard, consisting of Battle-Brothers Antiges, Saphrax, and Laeradis; and several unnamed squad members. There’s the VI Legion Space Wolves; it’s a small squad, led by Wolf Guard Captain Brynngar and his Battle-Brother Rujveld, and comprising several lower-ranked Blood Claws. There is a squad of the XII Legion World Eaters, Angron’s Legion (unaware that their Primarch and much of the Legion have turned traitor), led by Brother-Captain Skraal. And then there is a single representative of Magnus’s Legion, the Thousand Sons: the psyker Brother-Sergeant Mhotep, who serves as fleet captain of the ship Waning Moon. From the Saturnine Fleet, we have Rear Admiral Kaminska, captaining the Wrathful; her helmsmistress, Venkmeyer; and her Principal Navigator, Orcadus. The Wrathful will be accompanied by four escort attack ships; also, a Captain Vorlov, of the mothballed ship Boundless, will bring his ship and crew to join them..

All of the above are stationed at Vangelis Spaceport, awaiting various assignments. Cestus, Antiges, and Brynngar are old friends, having fought many battles together. The World Eaters, on the other hand, are looked upon cautiously by all others involved; their inheritance of their gene-father Angron’s renowned fury and battle-rage, makes them a bit suspect in everyone’s eyes. Mhotep keeps to himself until things kick off; and the Saturnine fleet staff–well, they’re just in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Interstellar communication is a tricky thing. It can only be done via psyker, aka astropath; and astropaths are not known for transmitting text very well. They communicate instead in images and feelings, which must be parsed and interpreted. That would make things difficult enough; but when the message–no, the psychic death scream–from the Fist of Macragge comes in, it’s so overwhelming that a burst of power escapes from the receiving astropaths, damaging the station. Cestus, Antiges, and Brynngar leap into action to shut down the damaged main reactor; but in the process, Cestus gets caught in the psychic blast, and gets a vision of the projected course of the as-yet-unknown Abyss: Macragge. He knows, with a cold certainty, that the ship is going to attack Macragge. Worse, it is accompanied by a disturbance in the Warp that prevents communication; there is no way to warn either Macragge or Terra in time. Cestus will be forced to act.


A Desperate Alliance

Cestus calls a conference of all the available Astartes. Over their objections, he lays out what he knows: that the unknown ship has destroyed the Fist of Macragge; caused the inadvertent damage to Vangelis; and is en route to Macragge for some form of ambush. Then, he demands an alliance to stop the Abyss.

It’s a difficult thing to ask. One would be hard pressed to find a more disparate group of Astartes than the Ultramarines, Space Wolves, and World Eaters. It is made worse when, for reasons of his own, Mhotep arrives and volunteers himself and his ship and crew. Mhotep is a psyker, as is his entire Legion, and this does not sit well with Brynngar; the tension between the two will be an ongoing problem. (At this point the Council of Nikaea has already passed, and Magnus’s legion was censured for their sorcery; most legions still have their psyker Librarians, but the actions of the Thousand Sons are a step too far for many. It doesn’t help that Mhotep is here for reasons he determined through psychic divination.) But somehow, through sheer force of will, Cestus obtains the commitment of the others. At the same time, his honor guard is busy commandeering ships; and the flotilla they acquire happens to be that of Admiral Kaminska, who–in addition to the prospective mothballing of her fleet–is near retirement herself. She, too, will be a source of contention, as she simmers under Cestus’s command of her fleet; but the knowledge of the end of her career will drive her to give everything to this cause.

It’s a small fleet of seven ships that departs Vangelis: The Wrathful; its four escorts, Fearless, Ferox, Ferocious, and Fireblade; the Boundless; and Mhotep’s Waning Moon. The ships set off in pursuit of the Fearless Abyss, hoping to catch it before it can reach the Tertiary Coreward Transit, a major route through the Warp.

Meanwhile, Zadkiel sharpens his weapons, in the figurative sense. He deals with a young and ambitious Word Bearer named Ultis, whom he begins to shape into a weapon to hurl at his enemies–both to defeat his opponents, and to remove a potential rival. He is interrupted when the Abyss’s sensors detect the approaching fleet.


First Engagement

Perhaps things might have gone very differently in this book if Cestus and his people had known about the Heresy. As it is, they will hold back at first, unable to believe that other Astartes could have turned on the Ultramarines. But the message had made it clear: These were Word Bearers, brother Astartes. It seems impossible to believe. Nevertheless, Cestus sends in one of the escorts to make first contact, with Mhotep’s ship following along.

Zadkiel refuses to answer any hails; but he chooses instead to make contact with Mhotep, hoping to bring the psyker over to his side. The attempt fails; and the Abyss opens fire. The Fearless is destroyed in the first salvo, and the Waning Moon is struck and damaged. Cestus gives the order to engage and destroy–to break the Abyss in two.

As the battle heats up, Zadkiel releases the first of many unexpected weapons. Torpedoes strike the Waning Moon, but they seem to do no damage–until they begin chewing through the hull. Once penetrated, they explode inside the ship’s armor. A chain reaction begins that will ultimately scuttle the ship–but for now, it holds on and continues firing.

The Abyss weathers the attack, returning fire, but taking no decisive action; and so the Boundless launches fighters and attack craft. It looks promising–until the attack ships’ crews begin to turn on their pilots, killing them and causing the ships to crash against the Abyss’s hull. It suddenly becomes clear that this battle isn’t just conventional; it includes a psychic attack from the Word Bearers, driving crew members to turn on their own.

The escort ships move in to attack, and it seems the Abyss is just going to allow it–until the giant book that comprises the ship’s figurehead begins to open. It reveals a massive gun barrel–an experimental plasma lance. The weapon fires, shearing off the rear third of the Waning Moon, and setting the ship into its death spiral.

No one has ever seen such a weapon in action, but Cestus has heard of it, though that is little help now. Mhotep, having survived the blast, is unable to contact the Wrathful; but he manages to escape his dying ship in a life pod. The Abyss turns its attentions to the Boundless, which is already suffering damage; at Kaminska’s direction, Vorlov breaks for an escape via Warp. That leaves only the Wrathful, Ferox, Ferocious, and Fireblade in action. The Abyss launches fighters–something that typical doctrine says that no ship can do, when also bearing such monstrous onboard weaponry–and begins overwhelming the escorts. At last the squadron must disengage; but the Ferox is unable to escape, and is destroyed. Many of its crew escape in life pods. The Ferocious dies next, its bridge destroyed and its command crew dead. The Abyss pulls away, heading for Warp, but it takes time to intercept and destroy the Boundless on the way; it softens the ship up with more hull-breaching torpedoes and magnetic pulse torpedoes, then finishes it with the plasma lance.

The Wrathful fakes an escape, to hide their pursuit of the Abyss. As the crews of the Wrathful and the Fireblade regroup, they take a moment to gather strength and make repairs. They collect lifepods, including Mhotep’s. Further, they try again to contact Terra and Macragge, only to find something horrible: Not only is contact impossible, but the Astronomican–the Emperor’s psychic beacon that enables Warp navigation–has vanished! It appears obscured by Warp storms, which seem to have arisen at the worst possible time. Nevertheless, they follow the Word Bearers into the Warp.

Cestus takes this opportunity to reinforce his coalition and his authority. The various dispositions of the Astartes, as well as Kaminska, are beginning to wear at the bonds between them. Nevertheless, he manages to hold things together–for now.

Aboard the Abyss, we get a glimpse of how the psychic attack was carried out. The Word Bearers employ supplicants: mutated psykers whose powers are reinforced through suffering and the Warp. With the supplicants, they can bend the Warp to their needs, and set any number of tactics in motion. However, doing so is strenuous, and in each effort, some supplicants die. Three have been lost already. Zadkiel doesn’t care; it’s a worthy cause, in his eyes. And he now employs them a second time: He launches some into the void, where their psychic death scream has an unprecedented effect: It collapses the Tertiary Coreward Transit entirely–with the pursuing ships inside.


Through the Warp

The Warp is always dangerous. There is always a risk of psychosis, mutation, and even death when passing through it. Worse, if the ship’s Gellar fields collapse, things out in the Warp can get inside. With the collapse of the Transit, the first risk became reality, and crewmembers began to suffer and die. As well, contact with the Fireblade was instantly lost. As the crew struggled to restore order, Cestus and his men debated how to deal with the Abyss–if they can even catch it. At the same time, he is forced to negotiate rising hostilities between Brynngar and Mhotep.

Kaminska’s navigator, Orcadus, explains the situation with the Transit. The Warp is like a wilderness, crossed by (mostly) stable and safe roads; but now the road they were on has vanished, and there is only wilderness. The only option is to follow the Abyss as closely as possible–but it will be neither safe nor easy, and dangerous things live in the Warp.

Things come to a head with Kaminska, as she finally rebels, verbally at least, against Cestus’s seizure of her authority. However, to her great surprise, Cestus admits his error, and apologizes. Thereafter, the Admiral recommits herself to the cause. However, before they can proceed any further, the Gellar field blinks–and something finds its way in.

Aboard the Fireblade, the crew falls victim to Warp psychosis–and something worse. We don’t get to see the full damage here, but we next see the ship coming in to dock with the Wrathful. Kaminska allows it, against her better judgment–something is off, here. Before the Wrathful’s crew can respond, they find themselves swarmed with daemonic presences, manifesting inside the ship. The crew mounts a defense, but it falls on the Astartes to do the dirty work; and they do, taking the battle down to the docking level. However, this is a battle against the Warp, and arms alone won’t prevail; and so Mhotep forces the other Astartes out of the dock, stating he will seal it from inside and activate its auto-destruct sequence. Mhotep strips the illusion off the entities, and finds them to be all extensions of one creature, which has completely possessed the Fireblade. He brings his full power to bear, and banishes it back to the Warp. Mhotep survives, though unconscious, but it is revealed to Brynngar that he only did so via “sorcery”. To keep the peace, Cestus is forced to confine Mhotep to a cell.


Second Engagement

While the damage to the Abyss was not substantial, it *was* substantial enough to require some work before pushing on to Macragge. Only one suitable shipyard lies within range–the shipyard at Bakka Triumveron. It’s here that the ship would be at its most vulnerable, a fact known to both Cestus and Zadkiel–but, Zadkiel thinks they’ve lost their pursuers. Cestus presses the advantage and sets an ambush.

The shipyards are a ring of orbital platforms around the planet, each with its bubble of atmosphere. The loyalist marines come at the Abyss from its blind side, which means crossing a section of the ring on foot. They deploy in squads that quickly get separated; their goal is to fight their way to the ship and board it before it can take off again. Along the way, the World Eaters, in an attempt to stoke the fires of their combat rage, kill a number of civilians.

Let’s talk Space Marines for a second. Although all Astartes have the same basic design, the legions vary in the specifics of how their genetics play out; each Legion’s genetics are based on their own Primarch, who differs subtly (and sometimes not so subtly) from the other Primarchs. This means that sometimes a Legion’s geneseed–the organs that alter their genetics and make them into Astartes–will have a flaw that affects their capabilities, behavior, or both. Add to this the fact that the Primarchs are a varied bunch of people, with vastly different leadership styles, and one Legion suddenly doesn’t look much like the others. With the World Eaters, Angron’s Legion, the consensus seems to be that their geneseed wasn’t truly flawed; but it did tend to push the World Eaters to be angry, brutal, and relentless, much like their Primarch. Then, as well, Angron was raised as a slave in the gladiator pits of Nuceria, and was implanted with a terrible piece of old technology called the Butcher’s Nails. This brain implant made him even more brutal, subject to terrible rages that made him almost unstoppable in battle. Upon becoming Primarch of the World Eaters, he reverse-engineered the device and had nearly all his Astartes implanted with it–making them also prone to such fury and rage. That rage is powerful, but also feeds on violence; and so, when the World Eaters kill the civilians here, they consider it to be an acceptable action in order to be ready before they reach the Word Bearers–but it’s going to come back on them later.

In the end, the battle outside the Abyss is short but brutal. One important Word Bearer–Baelanos, Zadkiel’s second in command–gets crushed; he lives, and is recovered by his fellows, but is badly injured. We’ll come back to him later. Of the loyalists, only one–the World Eater captain, Skraal–makes it aboard the ship and survives. He is forced into hiding inside the guts of the ship, hunted by the Word Bearer Reskiel, Zadkiel’s third in command. The other World Eaters are killed; most, but not all, of the other loyalists make it back to the Wrathful as the Abyss launches again. Notably, Cestus’s friend and second, Antiges, is killed–but Brynngar manages to take a prisoner: the young Word Bearer, Ultis.

While all this is happening, the Word Bearers are preparing their next strategem: They are rousing someone named Wsoric.


Toward Macragge

Brynngar’s men attempt to torture and interrogate Ultis, but with no success. With no choice left, Cestus is forced to release Mhotep to psychically interrogate the Word Bearer; this decision is nearly a breaking point between Cestus and Brynngar. Mhotep also warns Cestus about the sentient beings of the Warp, before going to deal with Ultis.

While this is going on, the Wrathful comes under attack by Warp entities again; and one of them finds a way inside, possessing a man on the ship’s lance (i.e. energy cannon) decks. The resulting creature begins killing everyone on the deck. Cestus and his remaining honor guard attack the creature; quickly afterward, Brynngar and his men join them. After a few more deaths, they are rescued by Mhotep, who–having broken Ultis–now comes and uses his powers against the beast. He no longer has reason to hide his power from the others, and so he uses it freely here. As soon as it is vanquished, he passes out.

Aboard the Abyss, Skraal has an encounter with Zadkiel, who tries to tempt him to change sides, castigating him for his slaughter of the innocent civilians; but Skraal resists the temptation, and flees deeper into the ship. Over the rest of the Warp transit, he will lose his sense of time, and very nearly his sanity, as he tries to stay alive. Eventually he discovers Antiges’s remains, and learns they have been used for the sacrifice that will summon the Warp entity, Wsoric. He watches as the apothecaries use the remains for divination, determining that the mission is still unknown to Macragge.

Brynngar has finally had enough of Cestus’s sanction of Mhotep. He challenges Cestus to a duel for control of the expedition. It’s a tight battle, and Brynngar clearly has the advantage; but in a clever trick, Cestus manages to win, much to the relief of everyone watching. Later, Brynngar agrees to submit to Cestus, but warns him to keep Mhotep away. It seems Cestus has won the battle, but lost a friend. Shortly thereafter, Brynngar has a vision of his youthful trials on his homeworld; and Mhotep wakes up.

Mhotep uses his powers to push the information he gained into Cestus’s mind. Cestus considers it a violation, but, ever the pragmatist, he will use the information anyway. He learns that the Word Bearers plan to destroy Macragge’s second moon, Formaska, sending fragments to rain down on the surface. This will keep the planet and its fleets busy, while the main force of the Word Bearer fleet destroys the muster point at Calth, thus eliminating most of the Ultramarines before turning back on Macragge itself. At Macragge they will use virus bombs to kill anything still living. Mhotep reveals that he came here because he had traced his destiny to this point, and knew he had to be here to resist the traitors.

As the Abyss presses toward Macragge, a warp storm strikes the Wrathful, the first sign of Wsoric’s presence.


Formaska

As the Wrathful fights through the storm, Cestus calls a final conference and reveals the Word Bearers’ plan. He and Kaminska make a plan–but it will be the final plan. It is unlikely anyone will walk away from this fight.

The Abyss leaves the Warp near Formaska. The Wrathful follows shortly thereafter as the Abyss prepares to bombard the planet. The two ships join battle, and the Wrathful is quickly crippled; but it launches shuttles toward the Abyss. The plan is to get in through the Abyss’s open torpedo tubes before they can be closed–and this close, it has a chance of succeeding.

Most of the Astartes, and a few of Kaminska’s guardsmen, make it aboard. (Mhotep is not among them–we’ll get back to him.) The Astartes begin fanning out through the gun decks, destroying what they can–but they know it won’t be sufficient. With the final battle at hand, Zadkiel pulls out all the stops; he sends Reskiel and a number of the Word Bearers to intercept the loyalists, and then releases the remaining supplicants to lead a psychic attack. Cestus still intends for now to destroy the cyclonic torpedoes that would shatter Formaska. One of his battle-brothers, badly wounded, sacrifices himself to set off the detonator that will destroy the cyclonics.

At that moment, the supplicants strike. Cestus finds himself in the midst of a long, repetitive vision of hell, in which he fails, over and over again. Brynngar also suffers a vision, in which he is fully a wolf–and unknowingly, he kills his own “pack”, his Blood Claws. Meanwhile, back on the crippled Wrathful, Kaminska orders her crew to evacuate, but the bridge crew requests to go down with her and the ship. Kaminska accepts, and honors them, but it is cut short when the Helmsmistress, Venkmeyer, falls ill. Kaminska realizes that a daemon has possessed her, and tries to kill her, but it is too late.

By the time Mhotep frees himself from his cell, the ship is weirdly vacant. He arrives at the bridge just in time to see Kaminska die at the hands of the daemon in Venkmeyer’s body. The creature erupts from Venkmeyer’s form, and becomes a massive, scorpionlike creature–this is Wsoric, fully manifested at the behest of the Word Bearers. It has gorged itself on the crew, and has grown powerful–but Mhotep is ready for it.

Brynngar shakes off his vision and is horrified by what he has done; but he stays focused. He finds himself in the weapons lockers, where he encounters Baelanos–who is midway through the transformation into a dreadnought. Dreadnoughts in 40K are oversized suits of armor, in which an otherwise mortally wounded Astartes is permanently sealed (or “entombed”, as they phrase it), in order to keep fighting. They are long-lived and powerful–but Baelanos is only halfway there, and his armor isn’t sealed or complete. Brynngar engages him.

Cestus survives and escapes his own vision, defeating his own doubts and fears. He fights his way through another squad of Word Bearers, and manages to reach the armories. But before he arrives, Baelanos is about to kill Brynngar–until Skraal, somehow still alive, manages to finish off the would-be dreadnought.

As Mhotep’s battle with Wsoric carries him throughout the failing Wrathful, Cestus, Brynngar, and Skraal restock their weapons and head for the Abyss’s reactor decks. One round of cyclonics has been destroyed–but there are still options left to the Word Bearers, and the only chance is to destroy the ship. And the only way to do that is to blow up the main plasma reactor–much as nearly happened to Vangelis station.


Final Engagements

On the bridge, Zadkiel’s high priest, Ikthalon, attempts a coup, but is killed for his trouble. At the same time, the loyalists reach the reactor deck and engage the Word Bearers there, preventing the ship from activating its engines. Zadkiel sends Reskiel to intervene. Skraal turns the tables on Reskiel’s men, hunting them one by one and ripping them apart. He kills Reskiel, and rejoins Cestus and Brynngar to head to the main reactor. The losses prompt Zadkiel to take the matter into his own hands, and he heads down to lead the defense.

Mhotep is dying of his wounds. Wsoric exults in his supremacy, insisting that there was no chance of Mhotep killing him–but, that was never the plan. Mhotep reveals that he only intended to wound Wsoric badly enough to stop him from sustaining his presence in realspace, sending him back to the Warp. He sets off his remaining grenades, inflicting the final damage that sends Wsoric back; he is caught in the explosion, but lives long enough to watch Formaska approach as the dead Wrathful crashes.

At the enormous main reactor, Zadkiel arrives just before the loyalists can head inside. Skraal buys time by attacking the Word Bearers, though it will be suicide. Just outside the radiation shield, Cestus asks Brynngar for his remaining grenades; but, knowing it will be a one way trip, Brynngar hits Cestus and stuns him. He asks his old friend to avenge him; then he takes the grenades and goes inside.

Above, Zadkiel kills Skraal–but not before Skraal cuts off half of Zadkiel’s gun hand. Zadkiel goes to take the others, though it is too late…inside the reactor, Brynngar primes his bombs, and then leaps into the reactor core.

The explosion begins a chain reaction through the entire reactor network. Zadkiel, knowing his ship is going to die, runs for the shuttle bay to escape. There he meets Cestus, and the two fight their final duel. Even now, throughout it all, Zadkiel–zealot to the end–tries to convince Cestus of the rightness of the traitor cause; but he fails. With a final blow, Cestus cuts off his head. Then, at last, he awaits the destruction of the Furious Abyss, and his own death, knowing he has done his duty and completed his mission.


That was a long summary!

Battle for the Abyss is no longer than the other books we’ve seen (or at least not much longer); but it crams an amazing amount of action into its pages. There’s no careful setup here, no backstory; it barely delves into the progress of the Heresy at all. Instead it leaps into the fray, guns drawn and chainsword whirring, and never stops, right up to the final lines.

The obvious downside is that one cannot start here. You’ll be utterly lost if you do. Who are the Word Bearers? Why are they traitors? Why does no one know what’s happening? How did we get here? You’d have no idea! But, we didn’t start here, and so we can appreciate this story for what it is.

The other important point is that this is only half a story. The overarching story is the battle for Macragge and Ultramar, the planet and system of the Ultramarines legion. But, that battle happens in at least two parts: The attack of the Furious Abyss on Macragge itself, and the attack by the rest of the Word Bearers fleet on the Ultramarines muster point at the planet Calth. We only get the barest glimpses of the attack on Calth–actually, all we get is some of the lead-up to that battle. We’ll have to wait for another time to find out what happens there. This is emphasized by the book’s ending; when Cestus dies, the story ends, because it’s strictly told from the point of view of internal characters (who, spoiler, are all dead by then).

Cestus is a true soldier of Ultramar, through and through. Space Marines are known glory-hounds, regardless of their Legion; it’s a major motivation for them. Cestus carries out his mission, knowing it will be fatal to everyone involved, knowing full well that no one will ever know their story, that no glory will accrue to their names, because there’s no one left to carry the word of their exploits. He does it anyway, and never flinches. In so doing, he pulls together some very disparate warriors, and somehow makes a unit out of them. He dies knowing his only consolation is seeing his homeworld safe–not a small thing, no, but very lonely as consolation goes.

I wouldn’t want every book to be like this. I don’t think that dropping us in with no context, nothing to link to the larger narrative, is always the best tactic. It works here, though, and that is enough for me this time.

If we’re looking for a comparison from outside the 40K fandom, I’d go with Rogue One: A Star Wars Story. You have the same tale of a ragtag group of warriors, full of conflicting motivations and secrets, taking on themselves a one-way mission to save millions of lives from a massive, spacefaring, technological threat. You can carry the comparison all the way down to the one character who is visibly supernatural in nature, and the final battle against the enemy’s leader. None of the protagonists survive–they’ll never even know for sure if they were successful, because elsewhere, the battle still rages. But they know, before they die, that what they’ve done will give their people a fighting chance. It’s a thing of beauty, if horrifically tragic!

One thing I love is the way the various Astartes here are portrayed. The Ultramarines and the Space Wolves will remain loyalist, so we’re glimpsing them in their prime, via their representatives here. We get their differences highlighted while still seeing the camaraderie and companionship they feel. Then there’s the Thousand Sons, represented by Mhotep, and the World Eaters. Those legions will ultimately be traitors–in fact, the World Eaters already are; it’s just that this squad is isolated and doesn’t know it. So, we get an exceedingly rare glimpse of them as loyalists, before their fall. I especially loved seeing Skraal, the World Eater captain, having his internal struggle against both the temptation to heresy, and his own impulses. We don’t often get to see World Eaters be true heroes (or so it appears, anyway), but Skraal is every bit a hero, no matter how much he scares the hell out of Cestus and the others. As for Mhotep…well, the topic of psykers in 40K is always going to be complicated, and this is no exception. But he’s an honorable man, and determined to stand against corruption, and soon enough that quality will also be in short supply among his legion. We’ll take it while we can get it.

If I were rating these novels–and again, I’m not–I wouldn’t put this one near the top; but not because it’s bad. It’s just that this book is not a very general sort of book–it’s very targeted, very precise. I certainly enjoyed it, but again, you wouldn’t start here, and you need the background of at least the opening trilogy in order to understand it. I have to take a few points off for that. That doesn’t mean it’s a bad book, and I definitely enjoyed it; so, if you’ve read everything up to this point, absolutely make sure you don’t miss this one. Besides, we still have the second half of the story to tell!

Next time: We’re going to divert a bit and start looking at the supplementary series, the Primarchs of the Horus Heresy series. These short novels, one to each Primarch (or almost all of them, anyway) are intended to shed more light on the Primarchs and how they became who they are. I’m not going to tackle them in order–they aren’t in chronological order anyway–but rather, as a Primarch rises to prominence in the Heresy series, we’ll pick up his Primarch novel. We’ll begin with Fulgrim: The Palatine Phoenix, by Josh Reynolds. And when we get back to the main series, we’ll pick up with book nine, Mechanicum, by Graham McNeill! See you there.

The Horus Heresy series, and other Warhammer 40,000 novels, may be purchased from the Black Library, or from many booksellers.

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Let’s Read the Horus Heresy! Part 6

Now that we’re into individual novels, I really should start putting the titles into my post titles instead of just “Part <number>”. But…not today.

Last time, we covered book four of the Warhammer 40,000 Horus Heresy series, The Flight of the Eisenstein. Today we’re looking at book five: Fulgrim, by Graham McNeill. It’s an interesting choice for this early in the series: Other than Horus himself, it’s our first look into the psyche of a Primarch, and how they handled the temptation to Chaos (or the threat thereof–some of them will never be tempted). We’ll have more soon enough.

I never really made this statement in the previous entries, though I should have: There are spoilers ahead! If you continue, you will have the general plot of the story spoiled, including its ending. All the posts in this series will have that level of spoilers. I’m writing chiefly for those who don’t mind, or who are familiar with the setting; if you’re not there yet, and don’t want it spoiled, feel free to come back after you’re caught up. I feel justified in doing things this way, because Warhammer 40,000 is in a unique place where there’s so much material, that people tend to obtain spoilers through discussion and forums long before reading the books; for example, the general events of the Heresy are very widely known, if not as widely read. If you would like my thoughts on the book without the plot details, skip down to the last section, after the last divider line.

With that said, let’s dive in!


The Primarch and the Eldar

So far, we’ve hardly mentioned the Eldar. The Heresy is a story of the Imperium; it usually only concerns xenos (alien) races when the Imperium is steamrolling over them, or when Chaos is stealing their relics for nefarious purposes. But this ancient race makes its first substantial appearance here, and they deserve a little discussion.

In tabletop gaming, the Eldar are the 40K equivalent of fantasy elves–even the word, Eldar, is a nod to Tolkien, who referred to his elves as the Eldar, the elder children of Eru Illuvatar. So, you can expect that they will be an ancient race (though still young by 40K standards–in a world with C’Tan and Necrons, the Eldar are adolescents); that they will have high involvement with magic or its equivalent; that their technology will appear more organic; that they will look like elves to one degree or another; and that they will generally look down on humans. In the game, they’re a playable faction, and thus have everything they need to be the equivalent of all the other playable factions; but in the novels, they’re…not quite that mighty.

Or at least not anymore. The Eldar, or Aeldari, once dominated the galaxy. For millions of years they were the dominant force, controlling not only realspace, but also the Webway, the tunnels that connect realspace and the Warp. They were both mighty and noble, and considered themselves superior to other races (okay, not too noble). This empire lasted all the way into the human Age of Technology, five or six thousand years before the Great Crusade.

It all came crumbling down–or, more accurately, it was blown away with the force of a million supernovae. Over time the Eldar became corrupt and hedonistic, seeking pleasure and possession more than anything else. But, all Eldar are psykers to one degree or another, and no one realized the effect this would have on their impression in the Warp. All of that greed and pleasure-seeking and lust eventually congealed in the Warp, and suddenly–too suddenly–a new, fourth Chaos God was born: Slaanesh, the god of pleasure.

Slaanesh’s birth destroyed the Eldar empire in a single stroke. Its birth tore the fabric of space open in a massive Warp incursion that consumed the Eldar homeworlds, as well as worlds held by other races (including humans). That tear would persist, and become known as the Eye of Terror, an ongoing stronghold of Chaos. Billions of Eldar died at once. Further, the Eldar had previously not feared death; upon death, their souls were peacefully absorbed into the Warp, to be reborn later. But now, their lusts had given life to Slaanesh’s own lust–and the thing she lusts for are the souls of the Eldar. Upon death, the Eldar find no solace; they are consumed by Slaanesh to suffer for eternity. (They’ll find workarounds later, but that’s a topic for another time.)

Now, the surviving Eldar wander the stars in massive ships called Craftworlds (mostly anyway; there are a few other factions with different strategies–but again, we’ll cover that another time). And that is where we find them in this novel.

Fulgrim is the name of the Primarch of the III Legion, the Emperor’s Children. After his rediscovery by the Emperor…well, it’s safe to say that he and his legion started out with a chip on their shoulders. Recall that the Astartes, the Space Marine legions, are genetically modeled after their respective Primarchs–that is, their geneseed, the extra organs that make them Astartes, are derived from the Primarch’s DNA. In the case of the III Legion, there had been an accident. Much of the available geneseed was lost, and without Fulgrim around to help with replenishment, the legion had grown very slowly. When Fulgrim arrived, only two hundred marines had been created. But, he rallied them to his cause with a speech so impassioned that it led to the Emperor granting them his own title for their legion name, and allowing them, alone of all the legions, to wear the Imperial Aquila, the Emperor’s symbol, on their armor. This lack of numbers caused Fulgrim to have a strong drive toward perfectionism, which he then trained into all his Astartes.

Needless to say, he’s a bit proud.

Which brings me to the point: You could not have created a more ill-fated confrontation than when the Eldar came to confront Fulgrim. Now, in their defense, they meant well; and their mission was urgent. They came to warn Fulgrim that his brother, Horus, was about to fall to Chaos (as foreseen by their prophets, or “Farseers”). This did not go over well. Fulgrim rejected this warning out of hand, and turned his forces against the Eldar delegation, killing most of them.

But don’t be too hard on Fulgrim yet. Remember that the Emperor had concealed the existence of Chaos from, well, everyone; and his sons were no exception. It’s been an argument in 40K for a long time as to whether the Primarchs would have fallen if only the Emperor had told them the whole truth–but, he didn’t, and here we are. Until now, Fulgrim is just working with what he knows.


Laeran

From here, the book is told from the perspective of lesser individuals within the Legion–mostly, First Captain Julius Kaesoron and Captain Solomon Demeter. You may have noticed that this is the general pattern of the Heresy series: stories are told through the eyes of underlings, often simple soldiers, rather than the Primarchs themselves. We find our protagonists attacking the world of Laeran, the home of the serpentine Laer. It’s a long and difficult battle, and once again we get a view of the importance of sound to Chaos; the cities of the Laer howl in the wind, and the sound channels the power of Chaos. Laeran, as it turns out, is a planet completely given over to the power of Slaanesh, the same Chaos God that devours the Eldar.

It didn’t have to be this way. Every cost estimate showed that bringing Laer to compliance would be too long and too costly. There was even talk of making the world a protectorate–essentially leaving it alone and cordoning it off. But Fulgrim, ever the perfectionist with something to prove, boasted that he would complete the extermination of the Laer, and quickly, too.

The important thing, though, is what happens at the end of the campaign. Fulgrim leads the charge to take the last stronghold of the Laer–and inside, he finds a sword. It’s not particularly magnificent–it pales beside the sword he carries already, which will come up again shortly–but he finds himself pulled to it, and takes it anyway. From that moment, he begins to hear a voice in his head.


Fulgrim and Ferrus

The Primarchs are very much a blended family, and they suffer the same disputes, alliances, and petty jealousies of any such family. Fulgrim, as it turns out, is closer to one brother than any of the rest: Ferrus Manus, Primarch of the Iron Hands legion. Ferrus is an interesting character, and maybe we’ll talk more about him later; but for now, suffice to say these two were tight. Upon first meeting, they had felt an instant rivalry–and then it was revealed that each considered himself a master blacksmith. They had set up a competition to see who could create the greatest weapon. Fulgrim created a massive, exquisite warhammer (get it?), which he called “Forgebreaker”. Ferrus created a one-of-a-kind sword that forever glowed with the heat of the forge, called “Fireblade”. Upon seeing the weapons, each was overwhelmed with the beauty of the other’s creation, and gained a new insight into each other. They traded weapons, and were instant and devoted friends ever after.

Ferrus Manus

We’ll leave Fulgrim for a minute, but I will say that the voice in his head continued. Unfortunately, as it turns out, the voice belongs to a Greater Daemon of Slaanesh, manifesting through the sword; and, playing on his vanity and drive to perfection, the Daemon will eventually bring about the fall of Fulgrim to Chaos, taking most of his legion and most of the non-Astartes population of his fleet with him. I wish it was more dramatic than that, but it isn’t–the Daemon just simply wears him down; however, it all culminates in a meeting with Horus, who provides the final push to persuade Fulgrim to give in. Horus would go on to give Fulgrim the anathame, the Chaos blade which had given Horus the deadly wound that led to his own fall (although it did not replace the Laer blade). All because his drive for perfection led him to exterminate the Laer.


The Diasporex

Sometime after Laeran, the Iron Hands would encounter a roving civilization called the Diasporex. This civilization was composed of a mix of humans and xenos living in harmony; so of course it was anathema to the Imperium. Ferrus’s legion worked for some time to wipe them out, but was unsuccessful. At last he was reinforced by Fulgrim and the Emperor’s Children, who helped him formulate a decisive battle plan. During the battle, Fulgrim’s personal ship came under attack, and was rescued by Ferrus…which, again, offended his sense of perfection. He retaliated by leading a shipboard action on the Diasporex flagship–but again felt cheated, when Solomon Demeter took the ship’s bridge before Fulgrim could arrive. These events only fed the malignancy growing in his mind, and further turned him against both Ferrus and Demeter.


Callinedes

At Horus’s direction, Fulgrim sent most of his legion to Isstvan to prepare for the purging of the loyalists. But Horus had given Fulgrim a different mission: the corruption of Ferrus Manus. Fulgrim took a smaller group to assist Ferrus with the subjugation of the Orks at a planet called Callinedes.

The confrontation did not go well for Fulgrim. Ferrus refused to be swayed, voicing his loyalty to the Emperor, and his intention to bring Fulgrim and Horus to justice. The two fought in Ferrus’s quarters, and Ferrus broke Fulgrim’s Fireblade, hurting them both. The daemon in Fulgrim’s head urged him to kill Ferrus, but Fulgrim resisted; instead, he used Ferrus’s own Forgebreaker to knock Ferrus out. Stealing the warhammer, he fled the ship, killing a number of Ferrus’s marines in the process. His ship opened fire on Ferrus’s, crippling it long enough to escape back to Isstvan, where Fulgrim faced Horus’s wrath for his failure.


Isstvan

We’ve already covered the atrocity at Isstvan III, in which the bulk of the loyalists in Horus’s four traitor legions (the Luna Wolves/Sons of Horus, the Emperor’s Children, Death Guard, and World Eaters) were purged by the Life Eater virus and by personal combat. It gets a brief account here, but our focus is elsewhere. Horus, angry at Fulgrim for his failure, sends him away to Isstvan V to set up the next phase of the purge.

Meanwhile, aboard Fulgrim’s flagship, Chaos has infected nearly everyone. It comes to a head when a Remembrancer, composer Bequa Kynska, stages her final performance: an opera called the Maraviglia, ostensibly to the glory of Fulgrim. The composition, and the newly created instruments that perform it, are completely corrupted by Chaos; it drives mad anyone who hears it, causing them to mutate and kill each other. Ultimately, the civilians are all purged by the Astartes in the room, who merge with the instruments to become the first Noise Marines, using sound as a weapon of Chaos. This moment marks the dedication of the Emperor’s Children to Slaanesh.


The Dropsite Massacre

Ferrus Manus had not been idle since his failed battle with Fulgrim. He had quickly gathered the nearest loyal legions he could find: His own Iron Hands, the Salamanders under Vulkan, and the Raven Guard under Corax. Those forces now gathered at Isstvan V to confront Horus, Angron, Fulgrim, and Mortarion.

It should have been a normal battle, if any battle among Astartes can be called normal. Four legions against three is perhaps not fair, but it’s close enough. But, we call it the Dropsite Massacre for a reason; and here, betrayal is in the air. More arrived mid-battle to reinforce the loyalists: the Night Lords under Konrad Curze, the Iron Warriors under Perturabo, the Word Bearers under Lorgar, and the Alpha Legion under Alpharius. But, if you’ve been following along, you should already know something is up, given the presence of Lorgar…

As soon as they landed, the arriving legions turned on the loyalists. Horus, it seems, has been busy, and a full seven Primarchs–Angron, Fulgrim, Mortarion, Curze, Perturabo, Lorgar, and Alpharius–had sworn to him and the forces of Chaos. That’s nearly half the existing legions; remember, two legions are long gone and expunged from the records, so there are a total of eighteen. We’re treated to some classic 40K here: a long and glorious, if tragic and bloody, commentary of the battle–but, calling it a battle is hardly fair: It’s a rout, then a massacre. The only thing that saves the loyalists is the fact that their entire legions aren’t present, just what forces could be gathered quickly. Even so, some legions were reduced to a fraction of their former strength.


Fulgrim and Ferrus, Part 2

Fulgrim fights his way to a final confrontation with Ferrus Manus. Their brotherhood, their true friendship, has reached its end. It’s an epic battle, with Ferrus wielding a repaired Fireblade and Fulgrim using the stolen Forgebreaker; but in the end, Ferrus is just outmatched. Ferrus is as yet unaware of the treachery of the newly-arrived legions; Fulgrim points it out to him, to break his spirit. Their battle then resumes. Ultimately Fulgrim swaps Forgebreaker for his Laer blade, and wounds Ferrus. He prepares to strike the killing blow…and has a moment of clarity, seeing how far he has fallen. He is horrified, and tries to pull the blow, but he is too far under the control of the daemon of the blade; and he decapitates Ferrus with a single blow. The first of the Primarchs has fallen.

But the worst is yet to come. Fulgrim is horrified at his own actions, and can’t stand the thought of living with himself for what he’s done. In this moment of supreme weakness, the daemon whispers that Fulgrim can find peace in oblivion; and Fulgrim agrees. With this invitation, the daemon escapes the blade and possesses Fulgrim, taking over his body and locking his mind away deep inside, where he will scream for a long time indeed.

After the massacre, daemon-Fulgrim met with Horus, and revealed himself. Horus, though given to Chaos himself, is horrified at what has become of Fulgrim; nevertheless he accepts the daemon as an ally, agreeing to keep its identity secret. Secretly, he plans to one day destroy it and free his brother–though he has no idea how to begin.

Afterward, Horus dispatches his legions to various battles, and sets his sights on Terra. But before he begins, he is contacted by one final Primarch: Magnus the Red, the powerful psyker and Primarch of the Thousand Sons legion. Magnus had previously tried to warn the Emperor of Horus’s betrayal, using psychic power to do so, but disrupting the Webway project in the process. In a rage, the Emperor had sent the Space Wolves legion to bring him to Terra to answer for his crime; but things had gone terribly wrong, and his world of Prospero had been devastated, turning Magnus to the side of the Traitors. (But that’s a story for another book.)


I won’t lie: I struggled a bit to get through this one. It’s certainly an engaging story–I’m not suggesting that it was dull or uninteresting. Rather, it felt haphazard and unfocused. There’s a lot of ground to be covered between the covers of this book, and sometimes it feels thrown together. After all, we’re covering a story as grand in scope as Horus’s fall–one could argue that it mirrors Horus’s fall, with a cursed blade, a xeno-accomodating civilization, and a massacre at Isstvan. But, Horus’s fall gets three books to tell its story, while Fulgrim’s fall is crammed into one. It’s unfortunate, because the Dropsite Massacre is arguably more important than the Isstvan III atrocity–and yet it gets less coverage.

But, there’s a bigger and better comparison to be made, and though we’re not there yet, I want to plant the idea in your head. When we reach book seven, Legion, we’ll see powerful parallels with this book, and yet with a very different–and, in my opinion, much more interesting–outcome.

Far be it from me to suggest, though, that Graham McNeill did a bad job with this book. I simply think he had more to cover than he could do justice. His characterization of the principal characters is as good as any that went before it; I was especially fond of his portrayal of Ferrus Manus, whom we unfortunately won’t see much more, if at all.

And that’s really it! There’s not much more for me to add about this book; it wasn’t bad, but wasn’t my favorite by any means. We’ll have more commentary on upcoming entries. With Fulgrim, we’ve wrapped up the major opening strokes of the Heresy. From here, we’ll begin to look first into the early days of certain players, and then into the next phase of battle.

Next time: We’ll visit with the Primarch Lion el’Jonson and his legion, the Dark Angels, in the early days of their career, in Descent of Angels! See you there.

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Let’s Read the Horus Heresy! Part 5

It should be obvious by now that this series is full of spoilers. If you want spoiler free reviews, you’ll find quite a few on YouTube and in other places–but here, you must read at your own risk! If that doesn’t bother you, then welcome aboard, and let’s have some fun!

We’ve packed a lot of action into three short books! The opening salvos of the Heresy series give us the rise of the Warmaster, Horus; the last days of the Great Crusade; Horus’s fall to Chaos; and the massacre at Isstvan III that purged nearly all the Loyalists from his ranks. Now, with three other Primarchs at his side, and more to come, Horus is set to begin his campaign against the Imperium and the Emperor.

But, wait! Near the end of Galaxy in Flames, we saw survivors escape! It will be some time before we get back to the few survivors on the surface of Isstvan III; but in the meantime, we have today’s novel, James Swallow’s The Flight of the Eisenstein. Let’s get started!


Nathaniel Garro

Most of the legions at Isstvan III had a large contingent of loyalists, something approaching a third of their forces. It’s probably that this is why Horus chose to use the Life-Eater virus to dispose of them rather than simply have his own traitor forces fight them–the cost would have been too high. Instead he sent his forces in to mop up after the virus did its work, knowing there would be some survivors. The plan was wildly successful; the survivors on the surface ultimately numbered only a few, possibly even in single digits (I haven’t seen a number, but I know a bit of what’s coming for Garviel Loken, and that would seem to indicate that not many at all survived).

Nathaniel Garro

But then there’s the Death Guard, the legion of the Primarch Mortarion–and one of their battle-captains, a man named Nathaniel Garro. I’ll go ahead and spoil a bit here, and say that a full *seventy* loyalist Death Guard will survive, thanks to the actions of Captain Garro. Of course, it helps that they weren’t on the surface to begin with–but that didn’t stop the traitors from trying to kill them!

Garro is, not coincidentally, one of my favorite characters so far. I suppose that’s by design–he’s the hero of the story, we’re supposed to like him. He’s a ruthless bastard, but it’s hard not to like him anyway. Garro is an old-school marine; remember that the Crusade has been going on for two centuries now, and the legions–some of them anyway–date back to the last days of the Unification of Terra. Nathaniel has been an Astartes since the early days, long before his Primarch was rediscovered, back when the legion still called themselves the Dusk Raiders, and served the Emperor directly.

Moreover, he’s a traditionalist. He holds strongly to the old philosophies of the legion, and that makes him singularly resistant to the traitor cause. But old-timers like him are dwindling, and most of the Death Guard these days have come up since Mortarion’s ascension, and will follow their Primarch into the grip of Chaos. The thought of the end of the old ways is much on his mind in this book, and perhaps reinforces his decision to break with his legion and stay loyal to the Emperor. Also aiding his decision is the bond between himself and two other loyalist Astartes we’ve seen: Garviel Loken of the Luna Wolves, a.k.a. the Sons of Horus; and Saul Tarvitz, of the Emperor’s Children. Garro has fought and bled with both men before, and their friendships are strong.

But then, it all comes down to chance.


Isstvan Extremis

The Isstvan campaign started like any other. Garro took his Seventh Company of the Death Guard to join the Emperor’s Children in an assault on the outermost planet, Isstvan Extremis. There he had his first brush with Chaos, in the form of a psyker in service to Slaanesh, called a Warsinger. Nathaniel was badly wounded, with his right leg amputated at the thigh. (He was saved by an Emperor’s Children apothecary, Fabius, who will eventually become a person of great significance himself–but that’s neither here nor there.) The leg would be replaced with a prosthetic, but in the meantime, Nathaniel was unfit for combat, which frustrated him to no end.

Ignatius Grulgor

But, it was this unexpected injury that would not only save his life, but set his path. Unable to fight, he could not be sent down to Isstvan III; and without their leader, his company wouldn’t go either. To do otherwise would have alerted the other loyalists to the plan. This left Horus and Mortarion in a quandary–what to do with the wounded battle-captain? His men could certainly still cause problems; they were still likely to be loyalists when the plan began.

So, Horus and Mortarion shuffled Garro out of the way. They stationed him and his men aboard an older Death Guard frigate, the Eisenstein. Nominally Garro had command of the ship, superseding its non-Astartes captain; but to ensure that Garro could cause no trouble, he was accompanied by another captain, a traitor, Commander Ignatius Grulgor, who already had a rivalry with Garro. Grulgor wasn’t fully informed of the plan; but he accurately assessed it from the assignments for the ground assault, and decided that if Nathaniel couldn’t be won over, he would be eliminated.


Over Isstvan III

Grulgor wasn’t the only competent tactical analyst on the Eisenstein. Garro himself figured out that something was up, when he realized that their orders for the battle didn’t match up to the ship’s usual capabilities. After all, this frigate was no troop carrier, so why would they be ordered into drop position? He also began to suspect that something wasn’t right with Grulgor. His suspicions were confirmed when his personal servant took it on himself to spy on Grulgor, and saw the loading of the virus bombs containing the Life-Eater virus.

Things began to come to a head when Garro was contacted with instructions. A Thunderhawk attack craft had broken from an Emperor’s Children command ship, the Andronicus. A cluster of interceptors were chasing the ship; then, the Andronicus issued orders for the nearby Eisenstein to fire on the Thunderhawk. But Garro was interrupted by the pilot of the Thunderhawk: Saul Tarvitz. Tarvitz told Garro that the Warmaster was betraying the Emperor, starting with this assault on those who might resist; he was making his way to the surface to warn Loken and the others. He also confirmed that the rest of the fleet were also preparing to launch virus bombs.

Making a last-minute decision to trust his friend, Garro ordered the ship destroyed–but in actuality, he destroyed the lead interceptor. He used the garbled readings from the destruction to report the Thunderhawk eliminated, while actually allowing Tarvitz to escape.

The combination of events was enough to convince Garro’s men that they had been betrayed, by Horus, but also by their own beloved Primarch, Mortarion. But there was little time to dwell on their decision, for Grulgor’s crew was about to launch the bombs. A drawn-out running battle aboard the ship ensued, in which Grulgor killed Garro’s servant–but in the last moment, the servant released the virus into the compartment where Grulgor and his men were massed, and sealed the compartment.


The Flight of the Eisenstein

With the help of the ship’s captain, Garro quickly consolidated his forces and explained the situation. Though horrified, the survivors all swore themselves to Garro’s decision, and took an oath to carry warning of the betrayal to the Emperor. He knew that any loyalists were on their own; any attempt to unify their efforts would just paint a target on his back, and no one else was in a position to carry the warning. He prepared the ship to break orbit and leave the battlefield.

But before he could do so, the ship detected another incoming Thunderhawk, this time from Horus’s flagship, the Vengeful Spirit. Flown by Luna Wolves captain Iacton Qruze, the ship carried three refugees from the civilian slaughter aboard the flagship: Mersadie Oliton, Loken’s personal documentarist; Kyril Sindermann, the iterator; and Euphrati Keeler, the imagist-turned-prophet that the Emperor’s faithful had begun to call the Saint. Their testimony agreed with the betrayal of which Tarvitz had warned; and so Garro let them board.

Garro had his crew report an engine malfunction, for which protocol decreed that they leave the main formation. But the Death Guard’s First Captain, Typhon, grew suspicious when he could not reach Grulgor to confirm; and so he moved to intercept the Eisenstein in his battleship, the Terminus Est. He managed to inflict severe damage on the frigate as it fled–but the ship managed to limp away.

Unfortunately, all of the ship’s Astropaths–the psykers who would handle communication through the Warp–had died in the fight; and the lone Navigator, the psyker who would guide the ship’s Warp travel, was mortally wounded. With no options, Garro ordered a blind Warp-jump to escape pursuit.


In the Warp

We’ve often mentioned the hazards of Warp travel, but we’ve never seen them–until now. The Eisenstein‘s damages included a weakening of its Gellar field, the shield that keeps the unreality and disorder of the Warp at bay. Thus it caught the attention of Nurgle, the Chaos God of decay and disease. Nurgle couldn’t manifest fully, but could touch the ship. He resurrected Grulgor and his underlings, now as plague-ridden monsters, and the battle for control of the ship resumed; in the battle, the surviving Navigator was killed. Grulgor was defeated, but not before he managed to infect a loyalist marine named Solun Decius with a Chaos plague, Nurgle’s Rot. He also attacked Garro; but Garro ordered an emergency transition back to realspace. Immediately, with the direct power of the Warp cut off, Grulgor and his warriors fell dead again.

But, now the ship was stranded, with no Navigator, in a barren stretch of space. With few options left, Garro had the ship’s Warp-drive engine set to explode, then jettisoned, reasoning that the shockwave would be detected by any passing Imperial ships in the Warp. He got more than he bargained for, when someone did detect it and respond: the Primarch Rogal Dorn and his legion, the Imperial Fists. Dorn was en route to Terra at the Emperor’s order, to strengthen the planet’s defenses and serve as its Praetorian; but, perhaps very coincidentally, his fleet had been becalmed by Warp storms, which had only just begun to abate when the explosion was detected. Dorn took the survivors in and, though reluctant to believe their story, finally accepted the truth when he had heard all the evidence. He agreed to carry their message to the Emperor.


Not Finished Yet

Dorn remanded the survivors to the care of the Sisters of Silence, an order of psychic Nulls–soulless individuals, also called Blanks or Pariahs, on whom direct psychic powers don’t work–whose usual duties are to hunt down rogue psykers. The survivors rested in the Sisters’ fortress on the moon (Luna), called the Somnus Citadel; but even here they resented the forced inactivity, considering it an imprisonment. Here, the wounded and plague-stricken young marine, Solun Decius, finally fell to Nurgle’s control. He was then possessed by a Greater Daemon of Nurgle, the Lord of Flies; he rapidly mutated into a horrific monster. Tearing out of containment, he went on a killing spree in the fortress.

Garro himself took on the Daemon, driving it out onto the lunar surface before ending Decius’s tainted life and forcing the Daemon back into the Warp.


A New Mission

Afterward, Garro at last was permitted to see the beginning of the Emperor’s response to the Heresy. He, along with Iacton Qruze and one of the Sisters, Amendera Kendel, was summoned to a meeting with Malcador the Sigillite, the powerful psyker/Perpetual who served as the Regent of Terra, second to the Emperor. At the Emperor’s order, Malcador informed them that they had been selected to form the foundation of a new body, composed of “men and women of inquisitive nature”, to seek out traitors, witches, mutants, and xenos. This, he said, would be part of the Emperor’s plan to salvage victory from the destruction of the heresy, as even the Astartes were not immune to corruption. As a first task, he assigned them to find seven other Astartes from both traitor and loyal legions, men who would be utterly loyal to the Emperor, to become Knights-Errant with them. We then end with a hint that these men and women would go on to form the beginnings of several other important organizations in the Imperium’s future.


It would be hard to overstate the importance of The Flight of the Eisenstein to the overall course of the Heresy series. Up til now, we’ve been covering the broad strokes of the Heresy: Horus’s fall, the massacre at Isstvan III. (Soon we’ll also cover the Dropsite Massacre at Isstvan V, the last remaining major set piece for the Heresy’s beginning.) Here, though, we make a transition to smaller stories, stories that are more focused on individuals or particular pieces of the puzzle. Most of the series will be stories like this, on a smaller scale. And that’s a good decision, I believe; a long tale like the Heresy is composed of a multitude of moving parts, and deserves to have those parts explained. We might not have the same version we received if not for this story’s example.

But more than that, this is a damn good story. In a world where war is the order of the day–it’s right in the setting title!–you expect action. But I will tell you honestly that we haven’t seen action like this before. Garro’s desperate flight to Terra is a nonstop roller coaster of battle, snap decisions, and last-ditch efforts, all just to survive–no: All just to let the Imperium survive.

Although the Heresy series was designed to begin with the initial trilogy, with most other books being optional (at your reading preference), I can’t imagine not including Eisenstein with the initial trilogy. Sure, the initial trilogy wraps up the immediate story of Garviel Loken, who has been the primary viewpoint character thus far (“protagonist” is really the wrong word; there are too many people who can fit the bill). But we’ve come to know and love too many other characters to stop there! Without Eisenstein, you’ll be left wondering what happened to Kyril Sindermann, Mersadie Oliton, Iacton Qruze, Euphrati Keeler–and of course Garro himself, who made his first appearance in the trilogy.

This book is a good place to bring up a recurring theme that we’ll see several times: The power of sound in regard to Chaos. Several times in the early Heresy, sound, and especially music, is portrayed as a potent tool of the Ruinous Powers. We see it on Davin, where Horus fell to Chaos; we see it here, when Garro battles the Warsinger on Isstvan Extremis; we’ll see it in the next book, on the planet Laeran; and we’ll see it again in book seven, in the screaming of the city Mon Lo on the planet Nurth. None of this is a coincidence; somewhere further down the line, we’ll see that sound is connected to Slaanesh, the Chaos God of sensation, who will one day have entire groups of traitor Space Marines dedicated to it (the Noise Marines–but that’s a long way from here!). Music and sound serve as powerful vectors for the twisted power of Chaos, leading to distortion and death.

This is now the end, for awhile, to the chronological tale of the Heresy. From here, we’ll begin jumping around, setting up the background of various forces and individuals, explaining how they began the path that leads them either to greater loyalty, or great betrayal.

So: Check it out! But it’s probably not best to start here. Garro’s story is strong on its own, but it depends heavily on what has gone before. This won’t always be the case; for example, one could read book six or seven without having read anything that comes before. But here, you’ll want to have had the entire trilogy behind you before you read Eisenstein. It’s worth it, though! If you’re interested, give it a try.

Next time: We’ll prepare for the Dropsite Massacre, and look at the heresy through another traitor Primarch’s eyes, in Fulgrim by Graham McNeill. See you there!

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Let’s Read the Horus Heresy! Part 4

When I first began to read the novels of the Horus Heresy series, I had no real idea of what I was getting into. I had only read one Warhammer novel (Guy Haley’s The Death of Integrity, which was a great introduction to the setting, and you should absolutely read it). That novel is set in M41, the “present day” of the 40K universe, and I knew up front that the Heresy series would be very different. It’s the Heresy that gave us the modern version of 40K; the galaxy in M31 was a much different place. Also, the authors would be telling stories that were as close to set in stone as anything ever is in this setting, stories that had had the power of myth and legend for real-world decades. And then, on top of all that, I knew that the series was long–fifty-four numbered novels, eighteen non-numbered Primarch novels, eight planned Siege of Terra novels (I believe four had been published at that time), and a whole host of short stories and spinoff materials.

All that to say, I was a bit intimidated. I’m still intimidated–I know I may never finish them all. I’ve come to terms with that–I even wrote an entire post about it–but still, even if I skip around, there’s a lot of ground to cover. And so I wasn’t sure if I was even going to make the attempt. That’s why I didn’t try to review the early novels as I finished them; what’s the point of starting if there’s no chance of finishing?

Well, here we are, seven books in, and it’s time to take the plunge! Fortunately I’ve been able to focus a bit more, and move a little faster through the series. Unfortunately, that means I need to back up and talk about the six books I’ve already finished! And I am notoriously bad at holding onto all the details of a book once I’ve moved on from it. Therefore, the next few posts won’t be incredibly detailed; they’ll be an overview of several books at once. But that’s okay; the opening entries in the Heresy series were intended to be more tightly woven than the later books. We’ll make it work.

So then, let’s get started! Today we’ll cover the opening trilogy of the series, the highly interconnected Horus Rising by Dan Abnett; False Gods by Graham McNeill; and Galaxy in Flames by Ben Counter.


Horus Rising

You’re going to find that many books in the Heresy series start in media res, with important foundational events told after the fact. We dive right into that pattern here at the beginning, with the most powerful first line I have yet to encounter in 40K:

“‘I WAS THERE,’ he would say afterwards, until afterwards became a time quite devoid of laughter. ‘I was there, the day Horus slew the Emperor.’

Well, there it is! Mission complete! Roll credits! It was a good Heresy, boys, now let’s go home.

Except, wait. The legend as it’s always been told has the Emperor killing Horus, not the other way around. So what’s going on here?

We open with the conquest of a most unusual star system. The system bears an uncanny resemblance to the solar system of Earth, aka Terra–nine planets in the same configuration, led by the third planet, all orbiting a yellow sun. But more than that, the people of the third planet believe their world is Terra, the homeworld of humanity. Naturally, when the Imperium shows up, claiming to be from the true Terra…they take that personally. So then, the Emperor mentioned above isn’t our Emperor, and it’s entirely believable that Horus would kill him personally.

The tale-teller here is Garviel Loken, a Space Marine of Horus’s XVI legion, the Luna Wolves. Loken is the captain of the legion’s Tenth Company, and after his adventures on this imposter Terra, he will be raised to the Mournival. This small group is his Primarch’s personal advisory council, an egalitarian body that accompanies and advises Horus without fear of reprisal. Loken is one of my favorite characters thus far, and has an interesting future ahead of him, but he’s going to have some suffering first.

Soon we’ll back up and get some perspective. The Great Crusade is in its two hundred and third year. Not too long ago, the Ullanor campaign ended, and Horus was elevated to the post of Warmaster. But that decision, and the Emperor’s unexpected retreat to a secret project on Terra (the Webway project–see the last post) have left Horus and his brother Primarchs with doubts.

Several major developments happen in this novel. The Crusade is joined by a huge host of Remembrancers, for one. Remembrancers are artists, authors, imagists (i.e. photographers), dramatists, musicians, orators, philosophers, and other practitioners of the fine arts. At the Emperor’s directive, they are sent to record and memorialize the triumphs of the Crusade, filling the fleets with arts and culture, thus humanizing the Astartes and the military and connecting them with the populations of the Imperium. It’s a grand dream, and shows the thoroughness of the Emperor’s vision for humanity. Several Remembrancers figure into the story here: Mersadie Oliton, a journalist who serves as Loken’s personal Remembrancer; Petronella Vivar, also a journalist, Horus’s personal Remembrancer; Ignace Karkasy, a poet whose works would ultimately drive a wedge between the Mournival and the non-Astartes population of Horus’s fleet; and Euphrati Keeler, an imagist who ultimately becomes a sort of prophet of the Emperor, leading the transition from the atheist Imperial Truth to the cult of the Emperor.

For another, the 63rd Expedition–Horus’s fleet, consisting mostly of the majority of the Luna Wolves and their support apparatus–encounters the Interex, a civilization in which humans have learned to live in peace with xenos, and especially with a race called the Kinebrach. Horus, to the surprise of his subordinates, at first looks into the possibility of peace with the Interex; but the negotiations are short-lived. A bladed weapon called an anathame, known to have ties to Chaos, is stolen from an Interex museum; the Interex erroneously accuses the Luna Wolves of taking it, and the talks devolve into violence, after which the Luna Wolves exterminate the Interex. As it turns, out, though, the blade wasn’t stolen by the Luna Wolves…

…It was stolen by Erebus, a visiting chaplain from Lorgar’s Word Bearers legion. The Word Bearers had long since given themselves over to Chaos, though this information remained a secret. The Ruinous Powers had led Lorgar to the knowledge that the anathame would be needed to bring Horus over to Chaos. Exactly how, will be revealed in the next book. However, after the battle with the Interex, Horus decides that the Luna Wolves have lived up to his example, and thus he renames them: The Sons of Horus.

My verdict: Obviously I must have liked the book, because I’ve kept on with the series–but I will admit that this opening novel wasn’t quite as I expected. I didn’t know just how complex the story of Horus’s fall would be, or how much backstory it would require. The story is excellent, but there is definitely a feeling of incompleteness, and I felt the need to hurry on to the next entry. I was very pleased with the characterization, though, and was ultimately disappointed to find out that Loken won’t get a lot of screen time after this first trilogy. But we’ll enjoy it while we have it!


False Gods

We pick up some weeks after the battle against the Interex. Erebus is the star of the show here, if not the viewpoint character; it’s Erebus who weaves the web that ensnares Horus and brings about his fall to Chaos. He has already stolen the Chaos-empowered anathame from the Interex, and arranged its delivery; now he must get Horus into position. To that effect, he tells the Warmaster about the Davin system.

Davin is an already-compliant Imperial world; but now its Imperial Governor, Eugen Temba, has rebelled. Unknown to any of the Warmaster’s forces, the planet has actually given itself over to Chaos, which is a concept that the Emperor has continued to keep back from his sons and the population. They don’t know what they’re walking into; but Erebus has prepared surprises for them.

On Davin’s moon, Davin 3, the Sons of Horus encounter their first real Chaos opposition, in the form of plague zombies: diseased zombies in the service of Nurgle, the god of decay and sickness. While the marines battle it out, Horus infiltrates the wrecked battlecruiser that serves as Temba’s fortress, and fights Temba himself. But Temba is wielding the stolen anathame; and he mortally wounds Horus with it. The Mournival rush Horus back to his flagship, the Vengeful Spirit; in their haste, they trample and kill a number of Remembrancers and other mortals aboard the ship. This act will ultimately be recorded by Ignace Karkasy in an inflammatory poem that will drive a wedge between the humans and the Astartes.

With the legion’s medicae and apothecaries unable to heal Horus, Erebus convinces the Mournival that hope can be found in a Davinite healing ritual. Reluctantly they agree, and transport him to a temple on the surface of Davin (the planet, not Davin 3, the moon). And the ritual works! Except…

During the ritual, Horus’s spirit is thrust into the Warp, where Erebus meets him. Erebus shows him visions of what the future holds: a galaxy in which the Emperor has betrayed all the ideals he has formerly espoused, leading the galaxy into pain and misery. It’s a true vision, but the catch is that it is Horus himself who will bring it to pass if he serves Chaos; but of course he doesn’t get that part. Erebus is countered by the unexpected psychic presence of the Primarch Magnus, a powerful psyker himself; Magnus attempts to warn Horus against this path, and exposes Erebus’s plan. However, it’s too late; Horus has chosen to accept the offer of power from the Chaos Gods, and has given himself over to them. The stage is now set for him to rebel against the Emperor in what will become known as the Horus Heresy.

Horus, now miraculously healed, leads the Legion against another human civilization, the Auretian Technocracy, while he prepares his plans. Meanwhile, behind the scenes, Loken and his fellow captain Tarik Torgaddon start down a path that will set them against the rest of the Mournival, and against the Warmaster himself. Ignace Karkasy is killed; and then, Horus directs the expedition to a planet called Isstvan III.

My verdict: I knew enough about the beginning of the Heresy to know that things are starting to come together now! Isstvan III is the site of one of the two major battles that will inaugurate the Heresy–but we’ll get to that in a moment. This book was more satisfying than the first, but only because it feels like the key in the lock of the first book; and soon, we’ll see the tumblers of that lock start turning.


Galaxy in Flames

Galaxy in Flames picks up shortly after the end of False Gods, with the 63rd Expedition taking the Isstvan system. Here, under Horus’s now-traitorous machinations, other Primarchs begin to gather with their legions–specifically, those Horus deems susceptible to his new cause. Those gathered are Horus with his Sons of Horus XVI legion; Fulgrim, with the III legion, the Emperor’s Children; Angron, with the World Eaters III legion; and Mortarion, with the XIV legion, the Death Guard. Others will join the traitors in the future, but for now, these comprise the core of the rebellion. All three Primarchs come to Horus’s side easily.

But, not all is according to Horus’s plan. A shockingly high number of Astartes are easily swayed to the traitor cause–but not all of them. About a third of each legion will not bend, remaining loyal to the Emperor. Horus cannot tolerate this, and so he devises a strategy to rid himself of the loyalist elements.

It’s important to note that his plan depends on secrecy. The loyalists have to be eliminated before they realize there is a schism in the ranks; if they knew, they would break ranks and warn the Emperor. But fortunately for Horus, Lorgar and Erebus have prepared for this! Years earlier, Lorgar created the Lectitio Divinitatus and released it to the Astartes in secret. This religious text declares the Emperor to be a god, contrary to the atheistic Imperial Truth, which states that there are no gods. It may seem counterintuitive to declare your enemy a god and send worship his way; but faith in 40K serves whichever Warp entity it is directed toward. Lorgar’s goal is to create this faith, and then turn it to Chaos. Now, the faith has spread in secret throughout most of the fleets, in the form of secretive “lodges” where anyone can meet as equals. Many of the loyalists are those who refused to join the lodges, or walked away from them as the situation grew darker. This breach allows Horus to single out the loyalists while diverting attention from the truth of his cause.

Thus, he saves the hardest battle for last. He causes the loyalist elements of the four legions to be dispatched onto the surface of Isstvan III for a final offensive. Then, he moves the fleet into a bombardment position…and launches one of the Imperium’s deadliest weapons: virus bombs.

These bombs contain an engineered virus called the Life-Eater, which is the perfect mass-murder weapon. The virus destroys all forms of organic life in seconds, with no chance of survival. It propagates through air and water, sweeping a planet’s surface in minutes; and then it dies out shortly thereafter, leaving the planet scoured clean and ready for the taking. But Horus isn’t interested in taking the planet; and so he follows up with a firebombing that ignites the atmosphere, burning off most of the breathable air. Most of the loyalists are killed.

And he would have got away with it too, if not for that meddling…Tarvitz? Saul Tarvitz, a loyalist captain of the Emperor’s Children, and friend of Garviel Loken, caught wind of the betrayal just before it happened. Risking his life, he stole a Thunderhawk gunship and raced to the planetary surface, where he would be in range to broadcast a warning to Loken and others. Thus Loken was able to lead some fragment of the loyalists to safety in sealed bunkers before the bombs fell.

At the same time, Horus had his traitors turn on the Remembrancers, who had little stake in his cause, and could serve as dangerous witnesses. Aboard his ships, nearly all Remembrancers were massacred. But some escaped deep into the ships, where they engaged in sabotage before they were hunted down; and one small group managed to escape.

The Remembrancer Euphrati Keeler had been scarred by a brush with Chaos during a recent campaign. That encounter, couple with her strong faith in the Emperor, changed something inside her. When an archivist, at the behest of Loken, conducted research that unintentionally released a daemon into the real world aboard the Vengeful Spirit, it was Keeler’s faith that led to the miraculous defeat of the creature. Now called “the saint” by her amazed congregations, her words and deeds led to a rapid increase in faith in the Emperor among the people of the fleet. When the massacre began, she and Mersadie Oliton, along with Iterator Kyril Sindermann, were rescued by loyalist Luna Wolfe Iacton Qruze. They made their way to a Death Guard frigate, the Eisenstein, where loyalist captain Nathaniel Garro had been stationed after being wounded in action. Garro’s marines took the ship from the traitors, and blasted their way out of Isstvan in a desperate bid to reach Terra and warn the Emperor of Horus’s betrayal.

And on Isstvan III, the fate of the survivors remains to be seen…

My verdict: A most satisfying, and frustrating, book! Satisfying in that this novel gives us the payoff of everything we’ve been building toward. It’s well-written, a real page-turner. Frustrating, in that there are now new plot threads that we need to play out–and I can’t wait!

So: If you’ve kept up with me this far, and you’d like to get into this series, go on and jump in. Try to finish the trilogy, at least. Don’t stop with Horus Rising, even if it doesn’t convince you; it’s a great book, but it poses many more questions than it answers. If you get to the end of Galaxy in Flames, you’ll have everything you need to know in order to decide if you want to continue the series.

Next time: We’ve covered one of the two major battles that begin the Heresy. The other is the Dropsite Massacre of Isstvan V; but before we get there, we need to see what happened to Garro and his refugees aboard the Eisenstein! And we’ll get that in book four, Flight of the Eisenstein, by James Swallow. See you there!

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Let’s Read the Horus Heresy! Part 3

Last time, we finished up with a description of the setting of Warhammer 40,000, up to M30 (the thirtieth millennium), just after the conclusion of the Unification Wars that established the Imperium of Mankind. If you’re just joining us now, and especially if you’re brand new to 40K, click here to go back and read that post, and you’ll be caught up and ready for today!

We left things in pretty good order, all things considered. Despite the chaos of the five thousand year Age of Strife (or “Old Night”, as it is sometimes called–if you haven’t noticed, *everything* in 40K has multiple names), things in the galaxy have largely reached a quiet moment, at least in the materium, the physical universe. The Eldar have fallen, but that largely doesn’t concern anyone but them at this point. Slaanesh, the fourth Chaos God, has arisen, but as yet that has not begun to tip the balance of power. In most of the galaxy, the Warp is pretty well separated from the materium (though not everywhere!). Chaos is potent, but hasn’t really done much that would affect the Imperium or other civilizations aside from the Eldar, except in isolated pockets. The Warp storms that prevented most travel have abated. Terra and its neighbors are united under the banner of the Emperor. The Tyranids have not arrived, the Necrons have not awakened, the T’au are still primitive. The Primarchs remain lost, but that hasn’t stopped the Emperor from creating the Space Marines, the Adeptus Astartes.

Thus begins the Great Crusade!


The Emperor’s Plan

It certainly took him long enough–thirty-eight millennia, more or less–but the Emperor has a plan. It’s a far-reaching plan; but here at the outset, the goal is simple: Reunite the scattered worlds of humanity under one banner, that of the Imperium. After the Age of Strife, humanity is distributed throughout the galaxy on potentially millions of planets (there’s never a definite count; like so many things in 40K, this is kept intentionally vague for the sake of the tabletop game, to allow players freedom to design their own campaigns). There’s little communication, and often little awareness that other worlds even exist; it’s not uncommon for planetary civilizations to have regressed to a point where they have forgotten that they came from the stars in the first place.

The Emperor’s views would be barbaric by the standards of the twenty-first century. He holds several tenets: The superiority of humanity; the inferiority of alien races, or “xenos”; the right of humanity to both live and rule. Not very tolerant, eh? And indeed, there will be those even in the Imperium who don’t agree–but mostly, humanity will come to embrace those views. It’s best to just consider them the prevailing attitude of the Imperium, and not be concerned about whether they would be acceptable here in the real world–40K isn’t the real world, and its situation is so far removed from our reality as to not be comparable.

But, the Emperor has a longer plan, too. He is well aware of the threat of Chaos, and the risk it presents to humanity; also, he is aware of the increase in danger posed by the mass rise of psykers among humanity. His goal, ultimately–though it will be a long time before he says it–is to sever humanity from the Warp, ending the risk of Chaos forever.

But first, he has to unite all humanity.


The Great Crusade

The Emperor deployed his twenty legions of Astartes, along with the Imperial Army and Navy, into the galaxy to locate and retake human-settled worlds. Some would join the Imperium willingly; most would resist, and be militarily pacified and occupied. The goal in each instance is to bring the world to “compliance”–that is, full adoption of, and absorption into, the Imperial system (including, of course, taxation and military conscription). Compliance required more than just military subjugation, though; and so, with the fleets went many Imperial Iterators: teachers, philosophers, and other functionaries who functioned as the engine of Imperial propaganda, convincing the locals of the rightness of the Imperial way.

It all sounds a bit fascist–but that’s the unfortunate truth of the Imperium. The Imperium is not a democracy in any sense; it is a monarchy or dictatorship. And that brings me to a central principle of the 40K setting: The good guys aren’t always the good guys. It’s all highly dependent on the situation and the individuals; there are few points of moral high ground when the future is all war. This, again, goes back to the tabletop game; players can play any faction they like, and aren’t bound to behave in an “evil” way just because they play a faction that sometimes behaves that way. The Imperium are, for the most part, the protagonist faction in the setting, but they can be both good and evil depending on the context.

I have to mention that the Crusade didn’t focus only on worlds already occupied by humanity. The Emperor considered xenos to be inferior to humans, and the standing policy of the Imperium is that xenos be wiped out wherever they are found. That will come to the fore shortly.

The Emperor himself led the Crusade at first. This was a heady time, as many systems flowed into the Imperium, and the pace of the reconquest increased. Moreover, one by one, the Emperor rediscovered the twenty lost Primarchs, all now grown to manhood on scattered worlds. Beginning with Horus, he brought them into the fold and set them in charge of their respective Legions, dispatching them to fight the battles of the Crusade.


Ullanor

Around the beginning of M30 (the 31st millennium–remember, the first millennium was 1 AD through 1000 AD, so M30 is the 31st millennium), the Crusade came to the Ullanor sector of the galaxy. This sector was ruled by the Orks under an Overlord called Urrlak Urruk. Under the Imperium’s tenets, this situation couldn’t be allowed to stand.

Thus, the Emperor deployed what was likely the largest concentration of force in the entire Crusade. One hundred thousand Astartes were accompanied by eight million Imperial Army troops and six hundred starships, and deployed into the Ullanor sector. Not all the Primarchs were present–many were too far away to be called to the battle–but Horus and his Luna Wolves legion led the fight, second only to the Emperor himself. It was Horus’s strategic planning that took the capital world of Ullanor Prime, defeating a force that outnumbered them five to one. Within a year of the taking of Ullanor Prime, the rest of the sector fell under Imperial control, and the vast majority of the Orks in the sector were wiped out.


Warmaster

The Emperor chose the victory at Ullanor as the opportunity to enact the next phase of his plan. At Ullanor he initiated a great celebration of the Imperium’s victory. Fourteen legions (of eighteen–the two lost Primarchs I mentioned yesterday had already been removed, with their legions) were able to attend, accompanied by nine of the Primarchs, great hosts of regular military, ships, and Titans–the massive, walking war machines that had been instrumental in the battle.

And then, the Emperor stepped down from the Crusade.

The Emperor honored Horus, the first-regained and favorite of his sons, by naming him the Warmaster of the Crusade. He placed Horus in charge of the Crusade, to prosecute and complete as he wished. Then, the great celebration completed, the Emperor returned to Terra, keeping his reasons and his plans to himself.

This would prove to be a great miscalculation, and a great misunderstanding of the Primarchs. They were, after all, still human, if not exactly normal humans; and they had their fears and their petty jealousies. Ultimately the forces of Chaos would use those flaws to turn some of them against each other and the Imperium.


The Horus Heresy

The events known as the Horus Heresy began not long after the appointment of Horus as Warmaster; but their origins go back further, and are in some way still murky. It is clear that some characters had already begun to be corrupted by Chaos at this point–most notably, the primarch Lorgar and his legion, the Word Bearers. But none of this was known at the time; and the actual beginning of the Heresy can be dated to the corruption of Horus, in approximately 005.M31 (that is, the year 30,005).

I will not try here to cover all of the events of the Heresy, because my goal is to cover it as I read through the novels. But, an overview is in order.

Much tragedy could possibly have been prevented if the Emperor had simply chosen to let Horus in on his plan. It was Horus’s doubts about the Emperor’s commitment to him, the other Primarchs and Legions, and the Crusade itself that opened him up to the influence of Chaos. Likewise, notifying the other Primarchs might have prevented them from seeing Horus’s appointment as Warmaster as a sign of favoritism from the Emperor, and may have prevented some of the rifts between the Primarchs. Moreover, the Emperor created an administrative bureaucracy to handle the running of the Imperium while he pursued his secret plans; of necessity, this meant that the Primarchs now had to bow to the will of civilians. Naturally, this didn’t sit well with them.

Lorgar, having already given himself to Chaos in secret, made sure to place himself close to Horus where he could whisper dissent into his ear. He also created the Lectitio Divinitatus, a religious text that proclaimed that the Emperor should be worshipped as a god. This was contrary to the Emperor’s atheist edicts, the “Imperial Truth”, which sought to eliminate the practice of religion (and thus deny Chaos a source of power, though he did not publicize that aspect of it). He ensured that secretive “lodges” were established among the military and Astartes, to spread this heretical view.

Lorgar then engineered the mortal wounding of Horus on a Chaos-touched moon of the planet Davin. His lieutenant Erebus then arranged for the use of local mystical practices to heal Horus. During the resulting rituals, Horus’s spirit entered the Warp and saw a vision of the future in which the Imperium would become a violent, stagnant, suffering-filled theocracy–a vision provided by the Chaos Gods. It would prove to be true–but, only because of Horus’s actions, a fact hidden from him. Horrified, and already suspicious of the Emperor, Horus gave in to the Chaos Gods and rebelled against the Imperium.

Most of Horus’s Legion, the Luna Wolves–now renamed the Sons of Horus–would accompany him, as well as the World Eaters under the Primarch Angron, the Emperor’s Children under Fulgrim, and the Death Guard under Mortarion. However, some elements of those Legions, as well as the Iron Hands under Ferrus Manus, would not; and so Horus engineered the destruction of these loyalist elements. In two great massacres in the Isstvan system, he set ambushes to wipe out the loyalists in the first great battle of Astartes against Astartes. However, some few survivors escaped. Horus then declared war on the Emperor, and set about trying to bring other legions and Primarchs to his side.


The Webway Project

However, despite Horus’s beliefs, the Emperor had not abandoned the Imperium. He had, instead, begun the next phase of his ultimate plan to sever humanity from the Warp. Travel in the Imperium depended upon the Warp, not only as the medium of travel, but also by way of the psykers required to navigate and to generate the Gellar fields that protect ships. The Emperor planned to eliminate this need by taking control of a much more ancient form of travel: the Webway.

The Webway consists of tunnels outside normal reality, connecting farflung points in space. Technically it passes through the Warp, but is separated from it, and protected from it. The Emperor planned to add new tunnels, centering around a great Webway portal beneath the Imperial Palace on Terra. It was to this project that he had secretly dedicated himself.

It was not meant to be. One of his sons, the Primarch Magnus the Red, was a powerful psyker, perhaps nearly as powerful as the Emperor himself. He and his legion, the Thousand Sons, were dedicated to the pursuit of psychic ability, to the disapproval of the Emperor; such pursuits had already been forbidden to the Astartes at the Council of Nikaea. Magnus, through use of his powers, foresaw Horus’s betrayal. He attempted to warn the Emperor; needing to do so quickly, he chose to do it via a powerful psychic message, reasoning that the Emperor would be willing to forgive him under the circumstances. However, he did not know about the Webway project; and his overpowered message destroyed the psychic wards around the palace, and damaged the project. Thus, daemonic forces of Chaos were able to penetrate the Webway and attempt to breach the gate into Terra itself. A long and desperate battle resulted. In the end, the Emperor was forced to reinforce the barriers himself with his unparalleled psychic powers, sitting on a device called the Golden Throne that served as a psychic amplifier. Only once would he rise from the throne, years later. The Emperor’s plans now lay in ruins.


The Siege of Terra

The Heresy would go on for nine long years. Many battles would be fought, which I will cover in later books. In the end, the Traitor Primarchs and their legions would lay siege to Terra itself. Terra was defended by Rogal Dorn and his legion, with some reinforcements from other Loyalist forces.

At last, Horus himself came to Terra to complete his conquest. He lowered the shields of his flagship, the Vengeful Spirit, and challenged the Emperor to personal combat. The Emperor accepted the challenge. He rose from the Golden Throne, placing his regent, Malcador the Sigillite, on it in his place–Malcador being the only remaining psyker with enough strength to even temporarily take the Emperor’s place there. He then teleported to the Vengeful Spirit, accompanied by the Primarchs Dorn and Sanguinius, several companies of their Astartes, and his own personal guard, the powerful Custodes. The Emperor and Sanguinius confronted Horus, who first struck down Sanguinius before taking on the Emperor himself.

The Emperor won the battle–but not before being mortally wounded by Horus. He then gathered all his psychic power and erased Horus from existence, body, soul, and spirit. He then returned to the palace.

The tech-priests of the Mechanicum quickly swapped out the Emperor for the now-dying Malcador, who sacrificed the last of his own power in a burst to sustain the Emperor’s life. At the same time, they made hasty modifications to the Throne, giving it life-support capabilities. The Emperor, knowing he would never be able to leave the Throne again, gave orders to the survivors on how to cleanse the last of the traitors from the galaxy. He then fell silent, pouring his power into two tasks. First, he devotes the greater share of his power to protecting the webway portal from Chaos; and second, he maintains the Astronomican, the great psychic beacon that serves as a lighthouse to guide ships through the Warp. He would remain on the Throne for the next ten millennia, his body slowly growing weaker and decaying while still alive, dependent on the failing machinery to survive. His spirit remains strong, but he rarely speaks, leaving the Imperium to his underlings.


Aftermath

Nearly all the remaining Primarchs are lost to the Imperium today. Many are dead; of those that survive, some are devoted to Chaos and continue to prosecute its wars. Only two Loyalist Primarchs are confirmed to survive: Lion el’Jonson, of the Dark Angels, secretly survives in stasis in the heart of their fortress-monastery, awaiting his return; and Roboute Guilliman, of the Ultramarines, has returned to the Imperium, and now serves as the Imperial Regent, leading the Imperium in his father’s stead in late M41.

The legions themselves were mostly disbanded and reorganized after the Heresy, in what has become known as the Second Founding. To ensure that no great force of Astartes could ever be corrupted at once again, they were redistributed into small chapters of no more than a thousand Marines each. Each chapter now functions as a smaller legion, waging its own wars and carrying on the legacy of its parent legion as it deems fit. Few, if any, maintain the pure geneseed legacy of their parent legions, with most having some sort of flaw or defect endemic to their chapter. The Imperium is ruled by the Lords of Terra, and policed by the Inquisition. The Imperium has become a dark and grim place, populated by trillions living in suffering. The Necrons are slowly awakening; the T’au have risen; the Eldar remain a potent force despite their fall; the Orks continue to spread; and the Tyranids have come to the galaxy–and over it all is the shadow of Chaos. The people worship the Emperor as their god; the Imperial Truth is all but forgotten. The Adeptus Mechanicus maintains the Golden Throne, while the Adeptus Custodes watch over the decaying Emperor and attempt to carry out his will. And the Throne is failing. Soon the Emperor will die; and whether the Imperium can survive, no one knows.

Perhaps you can see why this setting gave us the term “grimdark”.


But in the meantime, we have stories to tell. We’ll begin with the stories of the Heresy. Next time, we’ll look at the opening trilogy of the Horus Heresy series: Horus Rising, False Gods, and Galaxy in Flames. See you there!

Want to read along? Most books in the Horus Heresy series remain in print; many are available also as ebooks and audiobooks. Check your local retailer, or order at Amazon, Barnes and Noble, or your preferred online retailer.

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