
and the bluecoats, were maimed. Men and women both had mangled limbs or scorched faces. Some hobbled on
wooden crutches, swinging the stumps of legs before them. Others were blind and were led about by children. A dwarf
with no legs waddled past, using his arms for motion, walking on the palms of his hands. They all seemed to be the
accidental victims of some huge, industrial process.
In the darkness. by the light dancing from the hellish chimneys, they moved like shadows, scrabbling about crying for
alms, for succour, for deliverance. They called on the Heavenly Father, the four-armed Emperor, to save than. They
cursed and raved and pleaded under a polluted sky. Two Heads Talking watched the poor steal from the poor and
wondered how his people had come to be laid so low.
He remembered the tall, strong warriors who had dwelled in the lodgetowns and asked nothing of any man. What
malign magic could have transformed the People of the Plains into these pathetic creatures?
He felt e shock as a child tugged at his arm. "Tokens, Elder. Tokens for food."
Two Heads Talking sighed with relief. His spell still held. The child saw only a safe. unobtrusive figure. He could feel
the strain of binding the spirits gnawing away at him subconsciously, but they had not yet slipped his grasp.
"I have nothing for you. boy," he said. The urchin ran off mouthing obscenities.
*****************
Depressed and angry, the Marines left the cave village. Cloud Runner noticed that Lame Bear's face was white. He
gestured for the big man and Weasel-Fierce to follow him. The two squad leaders fell in beside him. They marched up
to a great spur of rock and looked down into a long valley.
"Stealers," he said. 'We must inform the Imperium."
Weasel-fierce spat over the edge of the cliff.
"'The dark city is theirs." said Lame Bear. There was a depth of hatred in his quiet voice that Cloud Runner
understood. "They must have conquered the People and herded than within."
"Some clans resisted." Cloud Runner said. He was proud of that. The fact that his clan had chosen to continue a
hopeless struggle rather than surrender gave him some comfort.
"Our world is ended; our time is done," said Weasel-Fierce. His words tolled like great, sad bells within Cloud Runner's
skull. Weasel-Fierce was right. Their entire culture had been exterminated.
The only ones who could remember the world of the Plains People were the Marines of the Dark Angels. When they
died the clans would live only in the Chapter Fleet's records. Unless the Dark Angels broke with tradition and recruited
from other worlds, the Chapter would end with the death of the present generation of Marines.
Cloud Runner felt hollow. He had returned home with such high hopes. He was going to walk once more among his
people, see again his village before old age took him. Now he found his world was dead, had been for a long time.
"And we never knew," he said softly. "Our clans have been dead for years, and we never knew. It was a cursed day
when we rode the Deathwing back to our homeworld."
The squad leaders stood silent. The moon broke through the clouds. Below them. in the valley. they saw the faded
outline of a giant winged skull cut into the earth.
"What is that?" asked Weasel-Fierce. "It was not here when last I stalked in the valley."
Lame Bear gave him an odd look. Cloud Runner knew that his old friend had never pictured the brave of an enemy clan
walking in his people's sacred valley. Even after a century, the taciturn, skeletal man could still surprise them.
"It was where our spirit talkers made magic." answered Lame Bear.
"They must have tried to summon Deathwing, the bearer of the Warriors from the Sky. They must have been desperate
to attempt such a summons. 'They trusted us to protect them. We never came."
Cloud Runner heard Weasel-Fierce growl. "We will avenge them." he said.