Stukov grunted as he sat up, the sound distorting oddly in his throat as he picked himself off the bed, sitting upright and scattering frost and ice that had accumulated, turning himself to face Smiles as she dangled the alcohol in front of him, also holding food of some sort or another as well. She commented on his bionic throat, mentioning hoping that it wouldn't interfere with him consuming food or drink. Well, that would be rather inconveniant if it had since, well, he was still mostly organic and still required sustinance to function. And eating out of a tube hooked up to some induction port for the rest of his days would have been even more miserable. But, as he was about to explain to the psyker, as far as he had been told, that would not be the case. "Food and drink do not interact with the bionics, but anything toxic, or perceived as toxic, gets filtered. Which means any alcohol would be little better than filtered, foul tasting water. And no upside to it either. Damn cogboys."
Turning his attention to what she had said prior, the armsman shrugged, leaning back against the wall, extending his bandaged hand to take a drink. Some sort of intake was probably necessary at this point, and even if it would be little better than some foul tasting swill, it would be better than nothing at all. She would probably question the hand, but he would burn that bridge when he got to it. Either way, once he got his hand on the drink he would crack it open and slam back the contents, ignoring the taste and absolute lack of effect it had on his system, setting the empty can down on the deck before bringing his augmatic foot down on it, crunching it flat with a resounding noise. "Fair point, but most men don't spend more of their life exposed to the warp than in the safety of real space. Even fewer psykers do. And even fewer tend to have the damn powers crop up in the nest of cultist evil that is barely one slip up away from forming into a daemon gate."
Groaning he half closed his eyes, the cold making the connection between flesh and metal on his body even more uncomfortable than it felt right now. Not even completely human anymore, and now the warp decided to start really screwing with him. He was still maintaining that brute force wall of willpower around his mind, and it was taxing enough to begin with without considering the implications of all that had happened recently. His voice was quieter now, eyes half closed as he left his arms crossed over his stomach, but the mechanical grating seemed unadjusted to a quieter voice and lost more of the humanity that was left in his voice. "Never had a problem with psykers, wasn't their choice to risk detonating, going mad, or getting possessed on a daily basis. Doubly so for those sorry bastards that get called Navigators. I don't, however, need the damn warp interfering with my life, been dealing with enough of it for multiple life times of most men. Spend long enough staring its minions in the eye, the warp tends to stare back and wonder why your being so repulsive to its being, and it tries to get clever."
Stukov was convinced the warp had a mind of its own, on a basic level at least, and everything that came out of it, from the smallest psyker power to the most hideous chaos spawned Daemon, would come from that vastness. It was colder than the void between stars, and cared not for any of those that drew from it. It cared only to bleed over into the real space, and take over. Like an Emperor damned parasite. Opening his eyes fully, he locked his stare with Smiles own eyes, only showing the hardened stare of a veteran servant against Chaos, the very fabric of which was now interfering with his life. "I won't undersell whatever hell the Black Ships put you through, Smiles, and I have heard stories. Not something I could ever fathom though. But you take a man who has spent his entire life, fighting against everything the Warp vomits into real space and expect him to turn around and suddenly be a conduit for powers that come from such a place? I don't see any sane person ever wishing that kind of power onto someone. Especially since rejecting it isn't an option, is it? Not if this damn cold has anything to indicate."
Stukov slung himself back to a laying position, staring at the ceiling as he weighed the situation, but didn't give Smiles a chance to get a word in edgeword yet. "What would you have me do, Smiles? A damaged vessel for a power that he loathes. Guess I was in denial until recently about it, after that hell in the Factory. And now this damn cold won't go away either, like the void itself is chasing me now. Better then the blasted heat though, small miracles there." Might as well see what she had to say on how to proceed, Stukov considered, since she had been there and done that her whole life. Beyond that, he waited for a response, crushed can not frosting over like the other items that had either already frozen or had not.
Turning his attention to what she had said prior, the armsman shrugged, leaning back against the wall, extending his bandaged hand to take a drink. Some sort of intake was probably necessary at this point, and even if it would be little better than some foul tasting swill, it would be better than nothing at all. She would probably question the hand, but he would burn that bridge when he got to it. Either way, once he got his hand on the drink he would crack it open and slam back the contents, ignoring the taste and absolute lack of effect it had on his system, setting the empty can down on the deck before bringing his augmatic foot down on it, crunching it flat with a resounding noise. "Fair point, but most men don't spend more of their life exposed to the warp than in the safety of real space. Even fewer psykers do. And even fewer tend to have the damn powers crop up in the nest of cultist evil that is barely one slip up away from forming into a daemon gate."
Groaning he half closed his eyes, the cold making the connection between flesh and metal on his body even more uncomfortable than it felt right now. Not even completely human anymore, and now the warp decided to start really screwing with him. He was still maintaining that brute force wall of willpower around his mind, and it was taxing enough to begin with without considering the implications of all that had happened recently. His voice was quieter now, eyes half closed as he left his arms crossed over his stomach, but the mechanical grating seemed unadjusted to a quieter voice and lost more of the humanity that was left in his voice. "Never had a problem with psykers, wasn't their choice to risk detonating, going mad, or getting possessed on a daily basis. Doubly so for those sorry bastards that get called Navigators. I don't, however, need the damn warp interfering with my life, been dealing with enough of it for multiple life times of most men. Spend long enough staring its minions in the eye, the warp tends to stare back and wonder why your being so repulsive to its being, and it tries to get clever."
Stukov was convinced the warp had a mind of its own, on a basic level at least, and everything that came out of it, from the smallest psyker power to the most hideous chaos spawned Daemon, would come from that vastness. It was colder than the void between stars, and cared not for any of those that drew from it. It cared only to bleed over into the real space, and take over. Like an Emperor damned parasite. Opening his eyes fully, he locked his stare with Smiles own eyes, only showing the hardened stare of a veteran servant against Chaos, the very fabric of which was now interfering with his life. "I won't undersell whatever hell the Black Ships put you through, Smiles, and I have heard stories. Not something I could ever fathom though. But you take a man who has spent his entire life, fighting against everything the Warp vomits into real space and expect him to turn around and suddenly be a conduit for powers that come from such a place? I don't see any sane person ever wishing that kind of power onto someone. Especially since rejecting it isn't an option, is it? Not if this damn cold has anything to indicate."
Stukov slung himself back to a laying position, staring at the ceiling as he weighed the situation, but didn't give Smiles a chance to get a word in edgeword yet. "What would you have me do, Smiles? A damaged vessel for a power that he loathes. Guess I was in denial until recently about it, after that hell in the Factory. And now this damn cold won't go away either, like the void itself is chasing me now. Better then the blasted heat though, small miracles there." Might as well see what she had to say on how to proceed, Stukov considered, since she had been there and done that her whole life. Beyond that, he waited for a response, crushed can not frosting over like the other items that had either already frozen or had not.