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Chapter 236 - Chapter 234 — The Voice Beneath the Light

Chapter 234 — The Voice Beneath the Light

The Thunderhawk launch bay was already prepared.

Servitors moved in ordered lines across the platform while serfs completed final checks on fuel lines, weapon systems, and atmospheric seals. Red warning lights pulsed steadily along the walls, their glow reflecting off the dark metal floor of the Oath of Rectitude.

Despite the activity, the bay remained controlled. Quiet. Routine.

At least on the surface.

Gaius walked forward without slowing.

Behind him followed a full Ultramarine squad in heavy armor. Their bolters were secured across their chests, their movements disciplined and steady as they formed up behind him.

No one spoke.

There was no need for questions. The nature of the deployment had already been understood.

This was not a rapid assault. No drop pod insertion. No orbital shock landing.

The world below was already compromised.

Its defenses weakened. Its command structure fractured.

What remained was not conquest.

It was precision.

At the front of the Thunderhawk, Marcus waited near the lowered ramp. The young serf pilot straightened immediately as Gaius approached.

"Praetor," he said quickly.

Gaius gave a small nod and stepped aboard without breaking stride.

The Ultramarines followed.

Marcus moved toward the cockpit, doing his best to maintain composure, though tension still showed in his posture. This was not a routine flight. Not anymore.

The ramp sealed behind them with a heavy thud.

A low vibration ran through the hull as the engines came fully online.

Then the Thunderhawk lifted.

The descent toward Varrak Prime was initially uneventful.

The craft broke through the upper atmosphere smoothly, passing scattered wreckage of orbital defenses. Broken stations drifted in silence above the planet, some still glowing faintly from recent destruction.

Below them, Varrak Prime stretched across the horizon.

Hive cities rose like layered mountains of steel and stone, stacked endlessly upward into cloud cover. Smoke drifted into the atmosphere from earlier orbital strikes, forming dark trails across the sky.

From above, it should have looked like a world in collapse.

But something felt off.

Not immediately. Not visually.

Subtle.

Inside the cockpit, Marcus frowned as he checked the readings.

"Auspex fluctuation," he muttered.

One of the Ultramarines leaned slightly forward, watching the instruments.

Marcus adjusted the controls, then paused.

"…distance markers are unstable."

The display flickered.

For a brief moment, the Palace Spire appeared closer than expected.

Then farther.

As if the world itself could not decide where it was.

A faint crackle passed through the vox system. Not full interference, something uneven, inconsistent.

Marcus tightened his grip on the controls.

"Brief visual distortion detected," he reported.

Gaius remained still.

His gaze was fixed forward.

Not alarmed yet.

But attentive.

Something was affecting perception. Subtly. Carefully.

The Thunderhawk continued its descent.

As they entered lower atmospheric layers, the hive city came into full view.

Massive transit roads connected towering structures. Endless windows lit the darkness. Industrial smoke rose between spires, drifting upward into the sky.

Even after orbital bombardment, the city was still active.

That was the first clear inconsistency.

Traffic moved.

Lights remained on.

Entire districts continued operating.

There should have been panic. System collapse. Mass evacuation.

But there was none.

Gaius observed quietly as they passed over civilian sectors.

People still walked the streets.

Not fleeing.

Not rioting.

Moving with an unnatural calm.

Behind him, the Multiversal Chat began to take notice.

Diana spoke first, narrowing her eyes.

"…why aren't they panicking?"

She already knew the people of Gaius' universe were different from theirs, but even she hadn't expected the gap to be this wide.

Tony leaned forward slightly, analyzing the feed.

"That's not normal behavior after orbital strikes," he said quietly.

The display showed civilians gathering near damaged streets. Some looked at collapsed structures. Others at burning sections of the hive.

But none ran.

None screamed.

They simply… watched.

Naruto frowned.

"They just got bombed…"

Yet the population did not behave like survivors of a catastrophe.

There were no riots. No panic surges. No collapse into chaos.

Something was holding them together.

Not physically.

Psychologically.

A stabilizing force.

And beneath that calm, something else lingered.

The Thunderhawk continued deeper.

That was when the first resistance appeared.

PDF gunships emerged from between upper hive structures, moving directly toward the descending craft.

"Enemy aircraft approaching," Marcus warned.

Inside the Thunderhawk, the Ultramarines prepared immediately.

But something about the engagement was wrong from the beginning.

The enemy did not hesitate.

They did not maneuver defensively.

They flew directly into engagement range without caution.

Bolter fire erupted from the Thunderhawk.

One gunship exploded instantly. Another lost its wing but continued forward regardless, its trajectory unchanged.

"Contact has not disengaged," Marcus said, confused.

The Ultramarines opened fire through side hatches as the Thunderhawk advanced. Controlled bursts tore through enemy formations along elevated platforms.

PDF soldiers fell. Structures collapsed.

Yet even as they were struck, many did not retreat.

Some continued advancing after sustaining fatal injuries.

Others crawled forward, dragging broken limbs behind them.

One soldier collapsed under fire but still tried to lift his weapon.

Through blood and shattered armor, he shouted:

"For the Emperor!"

Others echoed him across the battlefield.

"For humanity!"

Naruto's expression tightened.

Not because of the violence, but because of their certainty.

They were not forced.

Not controlled in the traditional sense.

They believed it completely.

That made it worse.

Then the voice appeared.

It did not arrive suddenly.

It spread through vox channels like soft static. Calm. Warm. Controlled.

"Stand firm."

"You are not abandoned."

"I protect you."

The effect was immediate.

Panic dropped further across the hive.

PDF coordination stabilized. Wounded soldiers regained composure and continued fighting despite injuries that should have incapacitated them.

Civilians who had been distressed moments earlier visibly calmed.

The voice was consistent. Gentle.

Reassuring.

Behind Gaius, silence formed.

Then tension.

Because while others felt comfort, Gaius noticed something else.

Under the human tone, familiar, steady, there was a second layer.

Subtle.

Misaligned.

As if multiple voices were speaking through the same message, perfectly synchronized but not identical.

Too smooth.

Too precise.

Wrong in a way that was difficult to explain.

Gaius narrowed his eyes slightly.

Now he understood.

Not fully.

But enough.

As the Thunderhawk passed lower into the hive, massive projection screens came into view across buildings.

Golden light filled them.

A figure appeared.

A man standing in radiance.

Calm. Noble. Perfectly composed.

To the civilians below, he looked holy.

Divine, even.

People in the streets looked up with relief.

Some wept.

Others knelt.

The PDF fought harder upon seeing him.

Behind Gaius, the Multiversal Chat watched closely.

At first glance, the figure resembled the Emperor. Not perfectly, but enough that most would not question it.

Then Gaius noticed the inconsistencies.

The eyes reflected light incorrectly. Shadows moved slightly out of sync with his body. Facial proportions shifted subtly between frames. Even his motion was too smooth, lacking natural imperfection.

Ordinary humans would never notice.

But Gaius did.

The image was not physical.

It was psychic.

A constructed projection layered directly into perception.

And once recognized, the illusion became easier to see through.

The Thunderhawk landed briefly near a secured transit platform in the upper hive sector.

The squad disembarked.

The surrounding area was strangely orderly.

Civilians moved between supply stations. Food distribution lines remained active. Armed PDF forces maintained perimeter control.

But what stood out most,

Was cooperation.

Not forced.

Voluntary.

An elderly woman handed supplies to soldiers and thanked them.

Children waved toward the golden projection screens.

There was no fear.

Only trust.

That was the dangerous part.

Because the system had not begun with control.

It had begun with improvement.

Before this, there had been starvation. Crime. Collapse.

Now there was order. Distribution. Stability.

People had something they had not had before.

Hope.

And that made the foundation stronger than fear ever could.

They later encountered Loyalist Imperial survivors inside a ruined transit station.

Exhausted guardsmen immediately saluted upon seeing the Ultramarines.

One of them spoke quickly.

"At first, people resisted him. The Ecclesiarchy called him a fraud."

He hesitated.

"Then people started hearing him."

Another survivor added quietly:

"Violence stopped. Riots ended."

A pause.

"People listened."

Then the final line came, heavier than the rest.

"After hearing him speak… people stopped fearing death."

Silence followed.

Because that explained everything.

Gaius turned away from the survivors.

"Return to defensive positions," he ordered.

The guardsmen saluted immediately.

Minutes later, the Thunderhawk descended once more through the smoke-choked upper hive, its engines shaking loose ash from the ruined transit structures.

The Ultramarines boarded in silence, while civilians watched from a distance.

As the ramp sealed shut, the gunship lifted again and continued toward the Palace Spire.

The deeper they flew into the central hive sectors, the stranger reality itself began to feel.

The lower sectors were worse.

People sat in prayer circles for hours without moving. Others spoke to empty corners. Some stared upward, smiling at things no one else could see.

At the edges of vision, walls seemed to shift slightly. Not fully. Not yet.

But inconsistently.

Belief was beginning to affect perception.

The Warp was leaking in.

Slowly.

Quietly.

As they neared the Palace Spire, the voice returned.

This time, it reached Gaius directly.

"You came to save them."

The others heard reassurance.

Gaius sensed something underneath it.

Another presence.

Warp-touched.

Hungry.

"So did I."

That was when Gaius fully understood.

Not everything.

But enough.

This was not just rebellion.

Not just psychic influence.

Something else was layered beneath it.

The upper hive became calmer as they approached the Spire.

Fires and destruction felt distant here.

People knelt willingly in the streets. Some prayed. Others cried with relief at the golden image above them.

But now, Gaius saw through it more clearly.

Illusions weakened as his senses got closer.

Statues briefly revealed warped textures beneath golden stone. Screens flickered with distortions beneath the holy figure. Shadows moved in ways that did not match their sources.

Something was inside the light.

Watching.

Waiting.

The voice spoke again.

"You came to save them."

A pause.

"So did I."

There was no mockery.

Only belief.

It truly thought it was salvation.

And that, more than anything else,

Was the problem.

At the edge of the Palace Spire, the psychic pressure intensified.

The Multiversal Chat group stood in silence, observing the chaos unfold and taking in every detail without interruption.

Finally, Gaius stopped.

Ahead stood the Palace Spire.

Golden light wrapped around it.

To everyone else,

It looked holy.

But Gaius saw what lay beneath.

Warped movement beneath the surface of light itself.

Something vast shifting inside the illusion.

And within it,

Something waiting.

~~~

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