The Apostolic Palace was aflame with shock and commotion, its halls filled with panicking stewards and officials, a sea of powdered wigs and blathering voices. High statues of saints glowered upon the senators as if judging their incompetence. Even the gargoyles seemed to laugh and jeer at the situation, grins wide with amusement, fists propped under their bearded chins. Locked away in her private chapel, Empress Johanna was unavailable for comments. For the first time in her life, she knelt in prayer.
“Forgive me, Father,” she whispered into a rosary, “for I have sinned.”
Before the altar, she was engulfed in the glow of stained glass windows—garnet trim with sage and honey hued segments, blending together in the eerie dimness. She was surrounded by images of the Far Messiah and the origins of the Imperium, dramatizing the lore of generations untainted by censorship and historical revision. The same could not be said for what she fed her people. Addled by the gout of baroque art and alternative facts, the populace remained ignorant of the monstrous truth—the End Times were upon them. Garish statues and gaudy paintings, funded with indulgences and alms, served to gild the narrative of God. Here in Holy Gothica, there was little difference between iconography and propaganda. Between the book burnings and inquisitions, so much had been forgotten, never to be relearned.
Amadeus…. What have we done?
Johanna had seen flammagenitus clouds from the balcony swelling across the Gridiron in an eruption of daemonic energy and mass destruction. It was her decrees that led to this. Her own hubris. And the result was awesome and horrific—Chimay had been annihilated. Meanwhile, the stone walls and vaulted ceilings seemed to sag with self-loathing, for the Ecclesiarchy had become an instrument of evil. She understood that now, and yet, she’d already come so far down this path paved with the myriad corpses of her enemies. It was too late for her.
“Dammit!” she cried, slamming her fists against the tiles.
A pressure plate clicked. To her astonishment, the golden altar slid aside, revealing a series of descending steps. Slowly, she stood. Johanna had grown up in these halls and swore she was familiar with every nook and cranny. Apparently, she was mistaken.
A moment’s silence passed.
Johanna lifted her gown and listened to the clack of her heels against the stone stairwell. With every step, an iron sconce flickered to life, illuminating a long passage to a forgotten undercroft. Alone in the dimness, she wiped thick cobwebs aside and beheld an antechamber of ossuaries and slender colonettes, wafting with dust and the reek of neglect. Eventually, she beheld sarcophagi topped with effigies of centurions—nameless and forgotten.
Soldiers of God….
At the tomb’s end, Johanna came before a bethroned corpse clad in the bronze scale armor of centuries past. When chivalry and honor triumphed on the battlefield, and centurions engaged in single combat. It barely seemed a fairytale. With a red crested galea and a signature gladius, even in death, Johanna recognized her legendary forebear.
Emperor Maximillian….
One of the great leaders of the Old Imperium, it was he who united the fragmented kingdoms of Gotland, first of his name, and he who spread the faith across the hinterlands, converting the barbarous and purging the unclean. Johanna felt a twinge of veneration. To think she stumbled upon his crypt, ignorant of its existence.
“Surrendering already?” echoed a distant voice.
Johanna glanced over his shoulder, expecting an impudent guard or the like, only to find herself alone with the emperor’s corpse. An unnatural chill wafted through the undercroft; she could’ve sworn Maximillian’s eye sockets pulsed with deep crimson light.
“My child,” he said, “it is far too early to consider.”
“Is this a dream?” Johanna asked.
The emperor gave a deep throbbing chuckle. “I remember the Battle of the Mournweald when my men and I were surrounded by the pagan hordes, frothing and bleating. They chased us through the wealds and wolds, blood-smeared berserkers armed with stolen blades, crowned with the heads of beasts and honored with the skulls of our women and children.”
“Yes,” Johanna paused, “I’ve read the annals.”
“They pursued us to the edge of the woods,” Maximilian said. “Our backs were to the river. Our palisades and abatises were nothing against the deluge of flesh and steel. Empowered by henbane and twisted druids, they fought to slaughter us all. You face the same manner of evil. A war of extinction. One where mercy is a weakness and quarter cannot be given. Do you remember how I won that battle and later the war?”
“You burned the forest down.”
“Indeed,” Maximilian said. “You are my heir. My blood is your blood. And, if your wisdom and tactics be true, you will triumph against the enemy. That much I know.”
“Your holiness,” called a guard, “there’s—”
“I thought I told you,” Johanna spat, spinning around. “I’m not to be disturbed.” She turned back to Maximilian, only to find his corpse to be just that—a corpse.
“There’s,” the guard managed, “someone here to see you.”
When Johanna remerged to the chapel, she was greeted by the familiar silhouette of Doctor Somme. He stepped into the light, hair greasy as ever, specetals caked in dander, his lab coat loose over his zoot suit and tie. “How fares the brooding?” he rolled his eyes.
“I think I’ve collected myself,” Johanna said. “Any news on Amadeus?”
“Only the obvious.”
“I see. We must send forth all reserves.”
“What?”
Johanna straightened, attempting to put on the queenly mask. “I fear we have a far greater enemy than the Entente at this point, doctor. One we’re responsible for unleashing. I do not act on the pretense of ‘making things right,’ rather, to prevent as much damage as I can.” She looked away. “However, I’ve yet to see any choice except for fighting fire with fire, as it were.”
Somme scratched his head. “Meaning?”
“Amadeus must be stopped,” Johanna stated, “and I plan on using every asset at our disposal to do so.” She turned to the bystanding guardsman. “Clear out the rabble and escort me to the communications tower. I have a few calls to make.”
As she strode down the halls, Johanna cursed the horrors she’d unleashed upon the world. Her mind raced with what options remained. She would not abdicate her throne. Nor would she surrender to the Mannequin Legion. The Entente was weak and ready to fall without Chimay. For the first time in centuries, they had a common enemy. Of course, such alliances were temporary at best, and, failing cooperation, she had an alternative.
Burn the forest down….
#
The communications tower loomed among the ornate pinnacles, braced by flying buttresses and lined with grotesqueries. Above and adjacent to the war room, its great steel dish was a stark anomaly among the flamboyance of the Apostolic Palace.
Consoles of cogitators and analog computers lined the walls, riddled with dials and meters, shells painted a gross khaki green. Pneumatic tubes flanked the switchboards, used for sending telegrams to and from the Central Servitorium. Johanna didn’t expect the rococo, but the odor of diesel fumes and burnt rubber was hardly imperial. With her guards stationed by the door, she climbed up the latticed stairwell and took a seat before the blank screen. Rail-thin labori rolled on treaded tracks to assist her with plug-ins, their spidery digits plucking chords, bodies helmed with wetware processors—brains in tanks of formaldehyde.
“Not exactly state of the art.” Doctor Somme lingered by the central console, eying the primitive equipment. “It’s a miracle we can get anything done with relics like these.”
Johanna raised a hand to silence the minister. Inch by inch, the cameras and telescreen flickered on. With the twist of a dial, she tried to weave past the static to reach the desired station. Slowly, a voice turned audible. With a bit of code uncovered from the Seaside Parliament, she slid through the cracks of royal security.
“On screen,” she commanded.
With the shift of a few stations, Johanna was greeted with the jowled face of Jean Luc Debussy. Seated at his oval desk, the venerable politician tapped a pen over a series of documents, eying a stack of paper decrees—oblivious to the call. Judging by the drone of engines, he was aboard his private airship, departing to Lumiere with haste.
Johanna wanted him to notice.
“Prime Minister Debussy,” she called, “it’s been quite some time since our last correspondence. I take it you’re aware of what happened with Chimay.”
“What the?” His baggy eyes widened in shock. “Johanna? How’d you—?”
“Don’t underestimate the Inquisition,” Johanna waved, “at any rate, how does Lumiere fare?” Such pleasantries were spoken through gritted teeth. “Hard at work, I see.”
Debussy poured himself a handsome shot of cognac. “Liberty has its benefits.”
“Congratulations.” She leaned forward. “Now then. Chimay. A most unfortunate turn of events. And a crisis for the world, I’m afraid.”
“Oh, I’m well aware.” Debussy killed his shot. “I was there.”
Johanna picked at her nails. “Ah.”
“Don’t worry,” the minister said, “I’m safe. I can’t say the same for the hundreds of thousands of civilians, though.” He poured himself another shot. “Have you ever smelled hellfire burning the flesh off a living man? Have you ever heard the screams?”
“I didn’t give the order,” Johanna said. “Amadeus went…absent without leave.”
Debussy sighed, deeply. He lit a bulbous cigar and puffed like a toddler sucking his thumb. His eyes narrowed, lids drooping with suspicion. “Why am I even talking to you?”
“Because, like me, you’re terrified of these implications.”
“Implications? An entire city was destroyed, Johanna. Wiped off the face of the earth. In seconds. Whether you gave the order or not, it was your ‘men’ who did this. You are just as much to blame. You’re a war criminal.”
“That,” she winced, “I do not deny. It does not change the fact that a third party rages across the continent. Amadeus will scour all nations unless stopped.”
A bitter silence passed. “If I didn’t know any better.” The minister paused, choosing his words carefully. “I’d say you’re proposing…something.”
“Nothing more than the discussion of terms,” Johanna said. “Given the circumstances, I believe that we can reach a mutually beneficial agreement. We face the same crisis.”
Debussy nervously tapped his pen on the desk. “I,” he managed, “invite you for talks. At the Seaside Parliament. Be there as soon as you can.”
With that, the screen shut off. A whistle filled the room. A hint of cordite stung the air. The next thing Johanna knew, she was knocked flat on her back, winded, ears ringing, and vision blurred. The rattle of gunfire was scarcely audible as she clawed her way behind an analog computer. Doctor Somme pressed a hand against her chest as a firefight erupted between her assailants and the Praetorian Guard. Flaming debris lay before a blasted hole in the window as crimson-cowled guerillas took cover behind the consoles, emerging to take potshots at the violet robed elite. Electro-spears crackled to life as the silvered labori spun their arms in feats of martial arts, stabbing and swinging at the infiltrators. It was a short-lived skirmish. When Johanna regained her senses, she spotted her guards stabbing the necks of the prone, one by one.
“Spare the last,” she said. “We need him for questioning.”
Johanna towered over the remaining partisan, eying him with care. He was dressed in little more than a ragged loincloth, chest raked with scars and lash marks as if he’d been flogged for days on end. Clutching a barbed-wire whip, he was a flagellant—one devoted to suffering and self-mortification of the flesh. His eyes were wild and teeth rotten, not dissimilar to the meth whores and madmen of the Serfdoms. Johanna knelt at the flagellant’s side.
“Well,” she said, “you have my undivided attention.”
The flagellant cracked a mad sneer. “Go ahead. Kill me,” he wheezed, bleeding from the mouth. “It won’t stop what’s coming. What you’ve unleashed.” There was a certain glimmer in his eyes—a bloodshot glow, a degree beyond insanity. “Blood begets blood, and so it flows. Oh, how it flows.” He cackled. “The Beast has awoken to the corpse of a nation. And its malice will pool and spread until the world runs red.”
“Shall I finish him, your holiness?” droned a guard.
“No,” Johanna raised a hand, “his words intrigue me. Take him to the Palace of Justice. I am curious to hear what else he has to say.”
#
Johanna did not frequent the Palace of Justice. Between the screams, mechanical clatter, and the reek of misery, it was far from appropriate for a woman of her position. As the Holy Pontiff and Empress of the Third Gothic Imperium, she had better things to do than to mingle with bailiffs and heretics scheduled for forced conversion. She strode down the cell block and tried to ignore the whirling saws and gibbering of the lobotomized.
A pair of gas-masked wardens bowed low and stepped aside. Johanna and her entourage were greeted with a grisly sight. The flagellant was strung up by his thumbs, dangling a few feet from the bloodstained floor. He gasped and wheezed, for whatever his tolerance may have been, he’d been injected with truth serums and stimulants. Every barb had its sting, and the torture-drones were programmed to pause between lashes. She took a seat behind the glass barrier, watching the prisoner twitch and whimper.
“Comfortable?” she cooed.
The flagellant did not reply, managing a few ragged breaths.
“I’m impressed, honestly,” she said. “You were closer to killing me than I’d care to admit.” She stepped forward. “Who sent you?”
With a trembling wheeze, the flagellant coughed up a lungful of crimson ichor.
Johanna smirked. “You were so talkative earlier. What happened?”
“I,” he managed, “I’ll not be intimidated by you. The,” he paused, “the F-far Messiah is with me. By the blood I’ve shed, in the world’s name, he will usher the final kingdom….”
That piqued her interest. “Please, continue.”
“He has summoned the Beast,” the flagellant laughed, “the Orphan of War. You’ve seen the omens. A hundred years to incubate God in her gestating form. The third seal has been broken. Pestilence and Famine pale in comparison to what’s coming.”
“And what may that be? What terrible apocalypse will your master unleash?”
“Terrible? No. A deluge to cleanse and quell the sinful earth.” His voice rose to a mad cackle. “Imagine a world where lashes are no longer needed. A world free of sin. When the Cloud of Darkness rose from the soiled city on the hill, we all knew that our reckoning was at hand. Even if you kill me, my soul will be untarnished.”
“Are you referring to the destruction of Chimay?”
“Yes,” the flagellant shouted, “the city burns as we speak!”
Johanna smirked to herself. Those who would topple images were no better than those who erected false ones. She ran her fingers through her long, platinum hair. “Why then?” she asked. “Why attempt to assassinate your Holy Pontiff and Empress?”
“You are a false idol,” he sneered, “God has already determined who is to be damned and who is to be saved. You are but a false prophet. You pervert His will.”
Johanna clenched her fists. “You must understand, the immaterial is, well, immaterial—”
The flagellant burst into mad laughter. “You fool, the immaterial will succeed the world. Have you not seen it? The leprosy epidemic? The famine which gripped the Holy Land? And now, those slaughtered by the Hundred Years’ War. It is only a matter of time before it dominates the entirety of existence. A world of thought. A world of ideas.” He sneered. “People like you will be the first to face the End of All Things. History will forget you.”
“Really now?” Johanna heaved with rage and yet maintained composure, however fleeting. “Will history forget the Hundred Years’ War? Will history forget my forebears?” Her fists tightened. “Whatever sacrifice need be, it matters not. Will history remember me as a tyrant? Perhaps so, but I’ll be remembered nevertheless.”
With a simple wave, the blast door clattered open, and in rolled a labori of her own design, veiled in shadow. Long had the iron maiden been the topic of pseudohistorical legend, a half-imagined device of torture, death with dozens of spikes. Such was the imagery that she simply had to make it a reality. Even her wardens exchanged nervous glances.
“You’re accustomed to pain, right?” she asked. “This is your moment of martyrdom.”
The prisoner’s manacles came undone. He flopped to the floor, dazed and reeling. Inch by inch, metallic clangs echoed from the darkness, pounding against the concrete floor until a monstrous construct on wheels emerged—the maiden bore the mask of a weeping madonna, heaving tons of steel on long chains, each dangling from a shoulder blade, chest a cabinet of jagged blades. By some mechanism, the chains lashed out towards their victims, spiraling around his chest and ensnaring him from waist to mouth, muffling his screams. Dragged into the construct’s bowls, he screamed and wordlessly pleaded, only for the doors to slam shut with a sickening crunch. The maiden stood still and motionless, soaking in the carnage. Johanna watched on with sadistic satisfaction. Within every blade was a syringe meant to drain vitae from the executed. Every drop was a bit of fuel, be it for the Mannequin Legion or other abominable instruments of war. Every corpse was a resource, every cadaver an automaton yet to be animated. This was total war. Nothing would stand in her way.
“Rest assured, history will remember me as a conqueror.”