by Dan Abnett
‘No, it’s just… could you not call me “Carly”?’
Frauka frowned. ‘Okay. What about “Thony” then?’
‘No!’
Frauka held up his hands. ‘All right. Throne! I was just being pally. The boss said I was too aloof. Too aloof, can you believe it? He suggested I should try being more friendly. He said it would help with team building, and–’
‘Frigging hell, Frauka!’
‘What? Emperor’s tits, you guys are so uptight! I’ll go look! I’ll go look! I got your back, remember?’
Frauka turned. DaRolle’s laspistol was aimed directly at his face. The ginger-haired killer grinned.
‘On a side note,’ Frauka said, ‘it would have been nice if you’d got my back too, Carly.’
XX
‘Out!’ said the hunter in grey-scale armour. He gestured with his double-bladed harn knife. Patience got up, and slowly came out of the pumping station cavity. The hunter’s drone circled her, purring softly.
‘Gonna fight?’ he asked.
She shook her head.
‘Good girl. Step out here.’
She came out.
The hunter keyed his vox-link. ‘This is Greyde. I’ve got her. Game’s done. Tell Loketter that my master Vevian will want his winnings in small bills, so he can pay me off nice and handsome.’
The hunter looked at Patience. ‘Why are you smiling?’
‘No reason.’
He settled his grip on the alien blade. ‘Sure you’re not thinking of trying something dumb? I’d hate that. It’d make me take a lot longer with you.’
‘I won’t fight,’ Patience said.
‘Good.’
‘Because Kara told me I didn’t have to any more.’
‘Who? Who’s Kara?’
‘The girl who told me her friend was coming. She told me to have patience, because patience is a virtue.’
The hunter, Greyde, looked around edgily. ‘No one here but us, girl. No sign of any friend of yours.’
Patience shrugged. ‘He’s coming.’
A wind picked up, stirring the dust and the grit around them, billowing the filth up in swirling clouds. Like an exhalation from the sumps of the towering city.
Except it wasn’t.
Larger pieces of trash lifted and fluttered through the air. Pebbles rolled on the ground. It was like a hurricane was gathering over the slums.
No hurricane.
Alarmed, Greyde grabbed the girl, viced her neck with one powerful arm, and raised the harn blade to deliver the kill-stab.
+Kuming Greyde. I know you. I know everything about you. I know the nine counts of murder that you are wanted for, and the fifty-seven other killings you have on your clammy soul. I know you killed your own father. I know you understand only hard cash and killing.+
‘What? What?’ the hunter wailed in terror as the tempest of wind engulfed him and his prey.
+I don’t carry cash. No pockets. I guess it’s going to be killing then.+
I turned on my chairs stablights, so I became visible as I ploughed in through the tumult of dirt and dust. The hunter screamed, but the dust choked him. Gagging, he threw Patience aside, and drew his Etva c.II plasma cannon, a pistol-sized weapon more than capable of burning clean through my armoured chair.
Staggering, half-blinded, he aimed it at me.
With a simple tap of my mind, I fired my chair’s psi-cannon. The hunter’s corpse slammed back through the wall of the pumping station. Even before it had hit the wall, every bone in that body had been pulped by concussive force, every organ exploded.
The wind dropped. Grit pattered off the sealed body of my chair.
+Patience?+
She got up. I wasn’t using Kara Swole’s voice any more.
+Are you all right?+
She nodded. She was singularly beautiful, despite the dirt caking her and the tears in her clothing. Tall, slender, black-haired, her eyes a piercing green.
‘Are you Kara’s friend?’ she asked.
+Yes.+
‘Are you Gideon?’
+Yes.+
She stepped forward, and placed her right hand flat on the warm canopy of my support chair. ‘Good. You don’t look anything like I imagined.’
XXI
‘So, we’re dead? Yeah, of course we are,’ Frauka said softly.
‘You’d be dead already,’ replied DaRolle. ‘I just wanted to find out which bastard was running you. Who is it? Finxster? Rotash? That’d be right. Rotash always wants a slice of the boss’s game-play.’
‘Neither, actually,’ Frauka smiled.
‘Frauka…’ Carl began, terrified. He’d backed away as far as the gig’s scan-console would allow, and even then knew there was no hope. This killer had them both cold. Carl wondered where he’d left his weapon. The answer – ‘in the cabin lockers’ – did not cheer him up.
‘Who, then?’
‘You won’t know him. His name’s Ravenor.’
DaRolle sniffed. ‘Never heard of the frig.’
‘Untouchable?’ Frauka asked, casually indicating the limiter around DaRolle’s throat.
‘Uh huh. You too?’
Frauka smiled. ‘Made that way, so help me. Still, the pay’s decent. Always someone who needs a good blunter, right?’
‘I hear that,’ DaRolle grinned.
‘Oh well,’ Frauka sighed. ‘Do me a favour, okay? Make it clean and quick. Back of the head, no warning.’
‘Sure.’
‘I mean, one blunter doing a favour for another? We gotta stick together, right, even if we are working for rival crews?’
‘No problem,’ said DaRolle.
‘Okay,’ Frauka said, and turned his back. ‘Any time you like.’
DaRolle aimed his pistol again.
‘I don’t suppose…’ Frauka began. Then he shook his head. ‘No, I’m taking the piss now.’
‘What?’ asked DaRolle.
‘Yeah, what?’ Carl squeaked in frozen terror.
‘One last stick? For a condemned man?’
DaRolle shrugged. ‘Go on.’
Frauka took out his lack, set a lho-stick to his lips and lit it with his igniter. He breathed in the smoke and smiled. ‘Oh, tastes good. Real mellow. Want one?’
‘No,’ said DaRolle.
‘Real smooth,’ said Frauka, inhaling a long drag. ‘These things’ll kill you, you know.’
‘I wouldn’t worry about that,’ DaRolle smiled.
‘I don’t frigging believe this!’ Carl whined.
‘Hey,’ said Frauka, glancing over his shoulder. ‘Why don’t you do him now while I’m smoking this baby? Save time. I never did like him.’
‘Oh Throne!’ Carl cried out and fell into a foetal position under the console.
‘Frig, what a baby!’ DaRolle laughed.
‘Tell me about it,’ Frauka said. He stubbed out his smoke. ‘Okay, ready.’ He held up the squashed butt. ‘Know what that was, my friend?’
‘Don’t tell me,’ smirked DaRolle. ‘Best smoke of your life?’
‘No,’ said Frauka quietly. ‘It was delaying tactics.’
DaRolle swung round. The hulking shape of Harlon Nayl filled the hatch behind him. Nayl’s Hecuter 10 boomed once.
‘Everyone alive?’ Nayl asked, stepping in over the twisted body of the ginger-haired man.
‘Saw you approaching on the scanners,’ Frauka said. ‘Thought I’d keep him talking.’
Carl Thonius got to his feet, shivering with anger and fright. ‘You’re unbelievable, Frauka,’ he hissed.
‘Thank you, Carl,’ Frauka smiled, and sat down with his book again. ‘See? Now you’re team building too.’
XXII
I led the girl back to the gig, where the others were waiting.
‘Hello, Patience, I’m Kara,’ Kara said.
‘Good to know you,’ Patience replied.
By the time we raided Loketter’s manse, backed up by a full squad of magistratum troopers, the narcobaron and his croni
es had cleared out. There are warrants out for all of them. I understand Loketter is still on the run.
We returned to the Kindred Youth Scholam, and resumed the interrogations. It took several weeks, but by the end of it, I’d wrung some precious facts out of Cyrus and his staff.
There wasn’t much. No, that’s a lie. There was enough to ensure that Cyrus would face further interrogation at the Inquisition facility on Thracian Primaris, and enough to make sure the scholam’s tutors and rigorists would remain incarcerated in the penitentiaries of Urbitane for the rest of their natural lives.
And a lead. Not much, but a start. From Cyrus, just before his mind finally snapped, I learned that Molotch was heading for the outworlds. Sleef, perhaps. Maybe even deeper than that. I instructed Nayl and Kara to provision for what could be a long, dangerous pursuit.
The day before we were due to leave Sameter, I met with Carl in one of the scholam’s old, faded classrooms. Most of the staff had been shipped out by then, in magistratum custody.
‘Did you trace what I wanted?’ I asked.
He nodded. ‘It’s very little. With the records wiped–’
‘What have you got?’
‘Pupils Prudence and Providence were sold to a free trader who called himself Vinquies. The name was false, of course. No other records remain, and the name doesn’t match any excise log I can get from Sameter Out Traffic.’
‘The man himself?’
‘There was a picture in Cyrus’s mind, and in the minds of several of the other tutors present at the supper, but they’re not reliable. I’ve fed them through both the local magistratum files and the officio itself. Nothing.’
‘So… so, they’re lost?’
Carl nodded sadly. ‘I suppose, if we dedicated the rest of our careers to trying to find them, we might turn up some clue. But in all reality, they’re long gone.’
‘I’ll tell her,’ I said, and slid out of the room.
Patience was in the oubliette. By choice. The hatch was open. She sat inside, in the semi-dark, sliding her hands over the stones. She was still wearing her torn and filthy uniform. She’d refused to take it off.
‘Patience?’
She stared out at me. ‘You can’t find them, can you?’
I thought for a moment, and decided it was better to lie. Better a lie now than a lifetime of hopeless yearning.
‘Yes, Patience, I found them.’
‘They’re dead, aren’t they?’
‘Yes.’
She coiled up, and I felt her hold onto that small black nugget in her mind again.
+Patience.+
‘Yes, Gideon?’
+I’m sorry. I truly am. We have to leave soon. I’d like you to come with us.+
‘With you? Why?’
+I’ll be honest. I can’t leave you here. You know about your gift? What it means?+
‘Yes.’
+You’re a psyker. A telekine. You can’t be allowed to remain in public. But I can look after you. I can train you. You could come to serve the God-Emperor of Mankind at my side. Would you like that?+
‘Better than an apprenticeship to a mill,’ she said. ‘Will Kara be there?’
+Yes, Patience.+
‘All right then,’ she said, and stepped out of the oubliette to join me.
+If you follow me, it will be hard at times. I will demand a lot of you. I will need to know everything about you. What do you think to that?+
‘That’s fine, Gideon.’
+I’ll be asking you questions, probing you, training your gift, unwrapping who you are.+
‘I understand.’
+Do you? Here’s a test question, the sort of thing I’ll be asking you. What was it that you held on to? When the hunters were closing. I felt it as a dark secret part of you, something you wouldn’t let go.+
‘It was my name, Gideon,’ she said. ‘My true name, my real name. It was always the single thing my mother gave me that I didn’t ever give away to the bastards in this place.’
+I see. That makes sense. Good, thank you for being so honest.+
+Gideon, do you want me to tell you my real name? I will, if you want.+
‘No,’ I said. ‘No, not now, not ever. I want you to hold onto it. It’s your secret. Keep it safe and it will keep you sane. It’ll remind you what you’ve come through. Promise me you’ll keep it safe.’
+I will.+
‘Patience is a fine name. I’ll call you that.’
‘All right,’ she replied, and started to walk down the hallway at my side.
‘I’ll need a surname, though,’ she said at length.
‘Choose one,’ I replied.
She looked down at the monogram embroidered on her ragged scholam-issue clothes.
‘Kys?’ she suggested. ‘I’ll be Patience Kys.’.’
.
About The Author
Dan Abnett is a novelist and award-winning comic book writer. He has written over thirty-five novels, including the acclaimed Gaunt’s Ghosts series, the Eisenhorn and Ravenor trilogies and, with Mike Lee, the Darkblade cycle. His novels Horus Rising and Legion (both for the Black Library) and his Torchwood novel Border Princes (for the BBC) were all bestsellers. His novel Triumff, for Angry Robot, was published in 2009 and nominated for the British Fantasy Society Award for Best Novel. He lives and works in Maidstone, Kent. Dan’s blog and website can be found at www.danabnett.com
Follow him on Twitter@VincentAbnett
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First published in 2006 by Black Library, Games Workshop Ltd., Willow Road, Nottingham, NG7 2WS, UK
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