Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Jb
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Jb Because we're here lad

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Liaison-officer Gratius McNespey of Outpost 3-12/19 rushed through the corridors of the Imperial station with all haste, faster in fact than he had ever moved in his entire life, for he was overweight and his body strained to break free from his cream-coloured uniform even as he barged past a more slender worker to reach his goal; red-faced and sweating, stains visible in his armpits and crotch areas, he got to the personal chambers of Station-Commodore Perry Harker and rapped against the metal of the door with one of his hammy fists.

“My Lord, please, there is an urgent matter I must appraise you of!”

Perry Harker was not one to be roused lightly, not only because he was a notorious drunk and severely hard to bestir anyway, but mostly because he was a short-sighted man in his eighties – he had once commanded Battlegroups from one side of the Imperium to the other, now he was a dusty old relic, a fossil in the Naval hierarchy, who had been given command of this outpost in the Segmentum Ultima for the very reason that he wouldn't get up to any mischief there. Now some fool was knocking on his door, and he knew it was that fat oaf McNespey.

“Coming,” he groaned from his pillow, already dressed in his full dress uniform – including a row of clinking medals and his red striped trousers - “give me a moment, Throne take your eyes!”

With deliberate slowness he made his way to the door, pushing on the entry pad and letting out a heavy breath into the face of the Liaison-officer full of alcoholic fumes.

“What do you want, fatty? Can't you see I'm busy.”

Oh how he wanted to smack that old fart right in his stupid wrinkly face, just one blow would probably snap his neck in two...he could make it look like an accident.

“Of course, my Lord,” replied Gratius in his most slippery tone, “I am sincerely sorry to disturb you, but a ship has entered our region of space and I thought you ought to know about it before any actions were taken.”

“A ship?” Answered the Commodore in mock surprise, “a ship! In this area of space? My God-Emperor, whatever shall we do?!”

Just one strike, one hammering blow that would end his life...

“Yes, Lord, it is a ship of some antiquity. A Hulk in fact.”

This did rouse the interest of Perry Harker – Space Hulks were rare, as was what they may contain, but often times they also bought with them the most unwanted things; Genestealers...Orks...and Chaotic forces. - now he sobered up surprisingly quickly and eyed the piggy with more seriousness than before.

“Well don't just stand there, McNespey, tell me what we know.”

“Sir, it transmitted into realspace not several hours ago, and as far as our limited scans can tell it is composed of parts of over a dozen ships of varying classes and manufactures. The largest sections are without a doubt composed of two Astartes vessels from before the Great Heresy, one showing the markings of the Word Bearers and the other of the Emperor's Children.”

“Astartes...interesting.”

“Not only that, sir, but our Astropaths tell us that it is emitting some form of message through surrounding warp space. Ripples in the Immaterium, so they say.”

Now the Station-Commodore was on 'high alert', his mind – which remained as sharp as it had always been, in spite of his outward appearance – racing with possibilities.

“Get on the vox with the Ultima Strategic Reserve and request they send ships and men to aid us, as we are going to take a look at that wreck ourselves.” He announced proudly, “what is the closest Astartes world to our position?”

“Preyspire, sir. Homeworld of the Hawk Lords Chapter, although much of their strength has gone into the defeat of the most recent Black Crusade.”

The Commodore gave a slight nod of his head, “send a message anyway, tell them we would request aid but do not demand it. Make sure it sounds as if we are grovelling, the Astartes like that sort of thing.”

“Yes, Lord.”

“Stop standing there then and get on with it!”

Events were in motion, but would they ultimately help or hinder the eventual fate of the Hulk and the Outpost both?




Merciless Aquila had served within the fleets of the Third Legion for centuries on end, a battle-barge carrying multiple companies and bringing death to the Emperor's foes everywhere it went...now nothing more than a twisted wreckage, it's innards entwined with vessels of Ork, Eldar and Imperial origin. Yet there was another vessel, one of even older age and vintage, from which a signal...something...now emitted a call to others; it was The Dawn of Truth, a Desolater-class Battleship used by the Word Bearer Legion since their re-naming from the Imperial Heralds, now no more than scrap metal and the secrets it held within itself.

As far away as the next Segmentum over the signal could be heard, or felt, by those that knew how; something...or someone...was aboard the Dawn and was seeking to draw others to it, but who or what would answer could not be know. What would the prize be if they did? Would there be anything to salvage?

That was for Fate and the Gods to decide.
Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Bright_Ops
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Bright_Ops The Insane Scholar

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Fio'Ui Fi'Rios Gal'leath's 'day' on board the Rigged Fortune began in a manner that he had sadly grown rather accustomed to since his 'invitation' to join the crew of his Rogue Trader master... The demented rambling and screaming of one of his peers in the research team moments before several gunshots rang out to silence them. Another mind twisted and lost to the affliction of madness. From the sounds of it, Lucius had finally broken; Fio'Ui stared at the ceiling above his bed as he let out a tired little sigh as he privately lamented the loss of a Gue'la who didn't deserve the end that he had gotten... But at least he would be at peace now.

The private moment of moaning the senseless loss of sanity and life was short lived as he get to his feet and prepared himself as best he could for the long 'day' ahead before any of the guards decided to kick him to hurry him up. At this point it was simply a matter of going through the motions of getting dressed, being escorted through the hallways of the ship while keeping clear of the ventilation shafts (While the infestation of tiny Be'gel that had been plaguing the vents had been declared eradicated several days ago, no one knew what had wiped them out yet and rumor had it that several members of the cleaning staff had gone missing so far) and enjoying an incredibly bland tasting sludge that was none the less filling enough to drive away the hunger pains for at least a few hours.

There was however a new rumor that was spreading around the mess hall this 'morning' that all he had to do to hear was listen to the general chatter of the Gue'la crew. The details weren't exactly known and it was clear that there were at least three primary stories of events so far, but at it's core some sort of message had been received by the bridge some time during the 'night' and the Rigged Fortune had been on the move towards a location currently debated by the various crew members but was officially currently a mystery, as was the nature of the message and what was expected to be at the end of the journey this time around.

Fio'Ui ate his meal quietly, enjoying the sound of... well, sane people talking. It was a small comfort to him before he went to continue the research into the strange relics that he had been put in charge of unlocking the secrets of. As much as he would have liked to hope, he doubted that Lucius would be the last lost in the pursuit of knowledge before he was allowed to have dinner and get some rest.

The meal was quickly over and Fio'Ui sighed a little to himself as he steeled his mind and body for what would no doubt be number of horrors that these strange relics would unleash upon him and the rest of the group that had been assigned to them. More as a mantra to help him, he softly muttered "For the Tau'va" before he went to start the 'day's work.

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Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Necroes
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Necroes Dice Lord

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The warp is a strange place. In it, reality is literally a matter of perception. Through it, those from the material world can use its unique properties to travel distances of millions of light years, in a matter of moments. It is with that technology that the Imperium of Man is able to maintain what little grasp it still has on the galaxy it calls home. Warp engines, the incredible machines that make such travel possible, are notoriously rare for those outside of the military. They are available, of course. The vast network of merchants and rogue traders that use them to sell their good across the galaxy could not exist without those machines. As a general rule, though, the drives themselves are massive, and are generally only available on the largest crafts.

That being said, 'Ow'd dese 'ummie gits find a fing like dis?!' Urgrugg asked himself, as he looked at the small vessel. At most, maybe ten crew members could travel in it. There would not be enough room for rations, equipment, and general supplies for more than that. Yet, somehow, it was not only capable of warp travel, but even had its own gellar field system. How a group of seven random fools had managed to not only get their hands on such a prize, but keep it, was simply astonishing. It was also extremely fortunate for Urgrugg.

His time among humans had been educational, to say the least. While he had no idea how any of the systems worked, he understood the general concept and purpose of most of the parts of a standard spacecraft. As he was an ork, people constantly found his intelligence amazing. It was always obvious when a potential client-their word, not his-sought him out, and had never before met an ork. His size, looks, clothing, voice; it all seemed to confirm their beliefs about his race. One he began actually speaking to them, though, very few let that first impression poison their view of him for long. While it had taken time, he had learned much among the humans, and had taken quite well to using that knowledge.

This particular group, however, was an oddity. Usually, when people sought him out, it was because they were desperate. As an ork, he was a powerful combatant, and no small amount of his work came from acting as a bodyguard or mercenary. As a psyker, though, he was much more. People came from constellations away to find him. A for-profit, unregulated psyker was an extreme rarity in the Imperium, and it made him a very valuable employee. However, it also made him dangerous. Much like himself, others tended to rely on the powers of the warp only when necessary. When they came to him, it was important. He had helped with everything from removing curses, to enchanting equipment, and had even been hired as a navigator for a warp-capable ship.

These people, though, were different. For one, they were not desperate. They had their own psyker already, one who acted as their navigator on his own. Second, their goal was purely one for profit; they were willing to risk an attack by daemons all for a chance to make money. Finally, and most disturbingly, they were not merchants. Much like himself, these people were mercenaries, and had come to him with the soul intent of using him as a weapon.

None of that mattered, of course. Urgrugg saw these people as a convenience, after all. While they were completely unaware, he knew why they were so driven to reach their goal. He had felt it, himself, and new what it meant. Someone, or something, had created a signal in the warp. To most, it was nothing. A certain few, like these seven, felt it a bit stronger, though. For them, it was a tug, a pull towards something, and they just happened to be both unlucky enough to know what that something was, and possess the means to get to it. Like them, Urgrugg felt that same tug. Unlike them, he knew he was being manipulated, and had no intention of stumbling head-first into a trap. Of course, that didn't mean he was simply going to avoid a chance at a good fight. What sort of ork would he be if he did a crazy thing like that?
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Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Hank
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Hank Dionysian Mystery

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Not for the first time, Naamah thought the Rogue Trader that commandeered the Rigged Fortune was a particularly hilarious mon-keigh. His name was Sobryn Nykerion, one of the scions of a wealthy aristocratic house from Gudrun, and considered himself one of the cleverest bastards to sail the galaxy. Rogue Traders weren't often in the habit of taking slaves and studying artifacts whose essence resonated with the Sha'eil and Nykerion's recent application of such methods had elevated him -- at least in his mind -- to decidedly dastardly status. Naamah knew, of course, that Nykerion paled in comparison to the Eladrith Ynneas of Commorragh, something that showed itself in the small smile that played around her blood-red lips. Not that Nykerion noticed; he was far too preoccupied with the signal.

They were aboard the Rigged Fortune's bridge. The Rogue Trader was animatedly talking with his Navigator and most of the upper echelon of the crew about their new destination, crowded around a console and holo-caster, and Naamah watched from an appropriate distance, her tall, otherworldly form shrouded mostly in shadow as she leaned against one of the bridge's solid adamantium walls. That didn't stop the glances of course -- both senior and junior crew members couldn't help themselves, occasionally risking a peek at the scantily-clad she-devil that served as the ship's Mistress of Arms. Most of them probably hadn't been intimate with a woman in months, and certainly not one that both terrified and excited them at the same time. Too bad for them, then, that Naamah only slept with Sobryn Nykerion. Her appointment to Mistress of Arms had been challenged by some of the more senior mon-keigh armsmen aboard the vessel. Using xenos as slaves was one thing, but putting them in a position of power? Especially one as vile as a Dark Eldar? Highly questionable, at least... but Nykerion was powerless to resist against once Naamah had lured him into bed and shown him pain and pleasures he had only dreamed of before. It had been altogether too easy; Naamah didn't even have to kill anyone to attain this position within the mon-keigh kabal. She smiled again at the thought.

Her pointed ears could easily make out of the conversation, of course, and despite the respectful distance she kept from the hushed conversation between the Rogue Trader and his navigational crew and closest advisers, she knew exactly what was going on. A Space Hulk had emerged from the Warp and started emitting a signal, and now these children wanted to explore. The thought didn't give Naamah much joy, to be honest, as she held a deep disdain for anything related to the Warp and its hellish denizens. Psykers, especially. And who knows what other types of attention that kind of signal would attract? It seemed so risky. Then again, Naamah remembered, mon-keigh were apt to dive into far more danger than reasonable whenever the opportunity presented itself. They were not like the Eldar, cool, calculating, always three steps ahead. Hot-headed, passionate, brash, that was the human way. And truth be told, that was exactly what made them so entertaining.

Naamah watched as the congregation was dismissed and Nykerion turned his gaze towards her, beckoning. She approached, her face inscrutable and her body swaying gently this way and that in rhythm with the cadence of her long legs. "Yes, master?" she asked in heavily accented Low Gothic as she sat down on the console next to Nykerion.

She could see the lust in his eyes, ever-present, but the Rogue Trader steeled himself. "Ready the men at arms. We've detected a Space Hulk that recently arrived in the sector -- it's sending out a signal that our astropaths picked up. We don't know why... but I want to investigate. Perhaps it holds the answers to these cursed relics. All this death and madness aboard my ship can't be for nothing," Sobryn Nykerion said, looking up at the inhumanly elegant face of his consort; even when seated, Naamah was taller than him.

What do you hope to find? Naamah thought, but her mouth merely acquiesced in a smile. She left the bridge and stalked down to the lower levels, calling over the comms for the ship's militia to gather in the hangar. She knew the men didn't trust her. Many of them were ex-Imperial Guard, and not even turning away from the Emperor's light is enough to undo decades of conditioning against xenos -- but they knew the price of refusing her command. Naamah felt goosebumps on her skin at the memory of dismembering the last man to speak out against her. While walking she paused every so often to peek into the ventilation shafts, hoping to catch a glimpse of whatever it was that remained within the dark corners of the ship that was abducting members of the crew, but she saw nothing. It was technically her job to guarantee the safety of all the crew on board, but the matter of the Gretchin infestation had only irritated her greatly.

In passing, she saw the Tau being escorted to the chamber where the relics were kept. Remarkable creature. Naamah made sure to keep her distance from that part of the ship, wanting no part of the madness that was afflicting the slaves Nykerion 'employed' for research. She already suspected the cause -- but what was the fun in telling the Rogue Trader herself?

She reached the hangar before most of the men at arms, who had to flock to her call from all over the ship's rooms and corridors on legs that were decidedly shorter than hers. Naamah made herself comfortable on top of a toolbox, sending the nearby engineers shuffling away in fear, and waited with her arms crossed. In groups, pairs, or one by one, the men at arms of the Rigged Fortune appeared and assembled before her in a miserable excuse for a formation. Her dark eyes fell on one particular, the filthy one whose uniform looked like it was looted together from a hundred different corpses, and frowned. She could not imagine being content while looking like that. Where was the mon-keigh's pride? On top of that, she didn't like the glassed-out look on his face. In Commorragh, drugs were supposed to elevate one's senses and awareness, not dull them. And this armsman looked decidedly dulled.

Once they were all assembled, Naamah rose to her feet, staring down on the expectant faces -- many of whom turned away from her gaze -- of the soldiers, wasters and mercenaries (including one solitary Kroot) that stood before her and cleared her throat. "A ship has been detected. Rogue Trader Nykerio wishes to investigate it. You know what to do," Naamah said, her voice high and cold. No words of encouragement could be expected from her. She considered divulging the rest of the information -- that it was a Space Hulk, that a Warp-signal had been detected, that she absolutely did not know what to expect -- but decided against it. Would it not be more fun for them to discover that for themselves? Naamah could already imagine the fear and the confusion, and her eldritch soul salivated at the thought.

Upon realizing that this was the extent of the briefing they were to receive, the men at arms set about preparing themselves and the shuttles.

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Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by DepressedSoviet
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DepressedSoviet A Sad Communist

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Joran had been aboard ships before, both small cargo vessels barely able to warp from planet to planet, and massive hulking transport craft designed to carry a world's worth of Guardsmen to the next battlefield. But none put him as much on edge as this one. The Rigged Fortune had an ominous air about it, one that was not helped by the constant screaming of dying slaves as that Tau carried out experiments for Nykerion. Joran had agreed to join up with this crew because of the Trader's willingness to hire...less-reputable members of society, from criminals to psykers, to even Xenos, the crew of the Rigged Fortune was a menagerie of the dregs, outcasts, and criminals of the galaxy, and Joran was no exception.

Having escaped a life of fighting, and inevitably dying, for the so-called Emperor(Joran doubted he had even existed, it was said to have happened so long ago.), Joran found himself doing mercenary work in exchange for getting as far away as possible from Savlar. Now he found himself as one of the men-at-arms for the Rigged Fortune, and was currently in the midst of some impromptu, unapproved R&R. Rolling up his shirt sleeve, Joran found his usual chem injection site, and carefully slid the needletip into his arm. Slowly, he pressed down on the syringe plunger, and with a deep exhale felt the initial effects of the Stimm as it entered the bloodstream. Removing the needle from his vein, and then removing the needle from the plunger, which he'd save for later. Rolling his fatigue sleeve back down, Joran pulled a box of Lho-sticks from a pocket, slipped one out, and lit it with the pilot light of the flamer pistol attached to his lasgun.

Taking a few puffs of the Lho-stick, Joran groaned slightly when he was called down to the hanger by the so-called "Mistress of Arms", a Dark Eldar by the name of Naamah. Before joining up with the crew, Joran hadn't even known there was such a thing as a 'Dark' Eldar, having only barely known about the knife-eared Xenos from the (now proven inaccurate) Imperial Infantryman's Uplifting Primer, the wholly pathetic handbook that Joran had, on more than one occasion, used as waste tissue after a bad night of experimentation with rations. Walking down the ship's halls towards the hanger, Joran tried to get as many puffs out of his lho-stick before tossing it on the metal floor and snuffing it out with his foot as he approached the hanger door.

Entering the hanger, Joran took a place in the ragtag excuse for a formation that then other men-at-arms were making. As he stood, waiting for the others to enter the hanger, he rubbed his eyes to try and keep them from glazing over due to the inactivity reacting poorly with the Stimm. Eventually, the last stragglers came in, and Naamah began the briefing.

"A ship has been detected. Rogue Trader Nykerio wishes to investigate it. You know what to do"

With that Joran rushed to prep his gear, making sure he had everything he needed with him before the boarding.
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Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by BCTheEntity
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BCTheEntity m⊕r✞IS

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Tiphrates III was surprisingly green for a Hive World. That is to say, the near-lethal atmosphere hadn't choked out all of its flora beyond the limits of the Hives themselves, but rather had encouraged some of the plants to develop ever more efficient ways of filtering carbon dioxide and other pollutants from the planet, in turn compensating for the relatively low light the planet received through the atmospheric smog. It helped that occasionally, a few people would abandon the Hives to live in these green areas, tending parts of them like their own personal gardens and ensuring they continued to thrive after the tender's inevitable death.

Lucius' memory of the green patch he'd spent time in was still quite clear. He recalled it being rather beautiful, actually. Sadly, the galaxy hates beautiful things, so to correct the error, the city and everything in its vicinity was going to be utterly destroyed in mere minutes.




The tale of how he'd come to learn that was short in substance, but quite rich in detail. As it happened, he'd been chasing up hints of a supposed cult in the Hive city of Calam for a little while, and had focused his efforts on a rich company owner called Jeremiah Albrecht, who he'd discovered had a tendency to wander down to the lower levels of the Hive despite lacking any obvious reason to do so. Hiring the services of one of his younger contacts, a pickpocket who was surprisingly good at his job, he'd consequently managed to acquire some important details: a card denoting VIP membership to "The Gentlemen's Boutique of Intriguing Antiques", and a small, opalescent stone, glistening as though it were covered in oil, that when moved near the card briefly revealed an eight-pointed star surrounding a wheel. An unfamiliar symbol, funnily enough, but there was no mistaking its association.

That said, Lucius had his address. After just the slightest bit of additional investigation, it transpired that the name covered a number of shops throughout the city, rather than just a single location, including one that was surprisingly deep in the Hive's lower regions. An enterprising location to rob, one would have thought, until one entered and realised that it essentially stocked overpriced trinkets. Perhaps the more luxurious shops further up held correspondingly more valuable goods. Either way, it hardly mattered, as the moment Lucius made his way in, he espied the seemingly armour-plated door covered in alternating strings of green, blue, purple, and red beads, watched over by a very muscular bouncer with folded arms and an autogun in one hand. For propriety's sake, he browsed some of the goods as though he were planning to buy, steadily making his way to the guard and the doorway, glancing a few times before the guard's interjection about it being "VIPs only".

Suffice to say, despite the obviously-stolen identification, the guard allowed Lucius into the corridor beyond, taking him through a few twists and turns, and two additional locked doors, until they reached a final doorway, beyond which came a riot of sound. The source, it turned out, was an abnormally large room not unlike some form of club, if said club was a self-contained orgy of depravity sitting opposite a small bar, as well as what appeared to be a number of fighting pits. As he moved out of this section, and taking a look around, it seemed to Lucius that the entire place was organised into a few sections: two sections reserved for extreme orgies, two fighting pits (complete with doors dropping people straight into them), two areas riddled with filth (he reminded himself to avoid these areas at all costs), and two sections apparently designed for the use of various psychic abilities. And at the bar itself, various objects far more intriguing than any of the antiques in the shopfront he'd entered from, alongside substances of all sorts: alcohol, virulent toxins, drugs to inflict pleasure and pain, or to improve combat abilities or psychic prowess, and he was sure many of them mixed and matched freely. All in all, an extraordinarily heretical place, the likes of which he'd never laid eyes upon before, so far as his memory was concerned.

It hardly phased him as he sat at the bar, telling the many-armed bartender to serve him a normal, but extremely alcoholic drink. He was promptly handed a bottle of something or other worth a couple of hundred Thrones, yet hardly had the time to open it before an exceptionally attractive woman dressed in little more than strips of purple and pink silk took a seat next to him, wrapped her arms around him, and kissed him on the cheek. His body processed whatever substance had been on her lips, registering it faintly before wiping it from his system as some form of potent aphrodisiac, enough to incapacitate a normal man with arousal.

'It's generally polite to introduce yourself before making physical contact,' he'd said with a glare, subtly stretching his arms to force the person off of him. She'd pouted, then introduced herself, in a tone somewhere between whore and madame, as the owner of the Gentleman's Boutique brand, one Suzerain Marcelle, who had been quite interested in the man's size, his origins as it were... and the fact that he'd been snooping where he shouldn't, oh what a naughty boy he was. He hadn't appreciated the jab, but the bigger issue lay with how much she knew about him and his actions. When asked, she simply tapped her nose. Apparently, she was fearless and stupid in equal measure. How dare she mock an Astartes, he'd thought to himself. She ought to be bowing to him. At this point, he reminded himself that his pride, growing as it had been over time, was utterly meaningless in the grand scheme of things, slave as he was to the Gods of Chaos, as all of Chaos' minions were willing or not.

With the mental turmoil out of the way, he'd taken a leap of faith and assumed she was a follower of Slaanesh out loud. She'd confirmed the guess, then begun leading him around the place by the arm, as though he couldn't tear hers off with a well-timed jerk. The bias was obvious, as she barely touched upon the area dedicated to Khorne, dismissing it as "a place of brutal violence not suited for a man of your obvious good taste", whilst spending an extensive amount of time going over all of the possible pleasures that the locations dedicated to Slaanesh might offer him, ranging from razored sex toys to drugs that, she guaranteed, would have him orgasming for a week at a time. He deliberately had them avoid Nurgle's section of the Boutique - he would pick a God to follow when he was good and ready, and not because some shit-covered bastard gave him Nurgle's Rot and forced him to accept his Ever-So-Gracious Father against the Space Marine's will - which left just an examination of what Tzeentch's parts of the club might offer him.

Here, he learned, there were actually stairs leading to higher and lower levels of the club. How many, he'd asked? Enough, she'd replied, before promptly gagging just enough for Lucius to step out of the way before she threw up several liters of blood and vomit without pause, as well as expelling the same mixture from various other orifices of hers. At an estimate, when the event was over and she'd collapsed in the puddle afterwards, there were probably twelve pints of fluid on the ground, most of it red, and fortunately none of it on his shoes. Those were difficult to clean off.

Somewhat more surprising - though in hindsight, it ought not to have been - was her promptly standing up as though nothing happened, and in fact grinning like a maniac despite most of her body being covered in her own insides. Though she was apparently sound of body, she was surely a lunatic, as evidenced by her promptly doing her best to grip Lucius around the shoulders, still covered in vomit and blood, and marching him to the bar. Or rather, he let her seem like she was moving him, and she had him jump over the top of the bar before following herself, the spider-like bartender stepping aside at their approach to reveal an inconspicuous set of elevator buttons against the wall.

Frankly speaking, Suzerain was giving Lucius few reasons to like her at this point. She had approached him from out of nowhere, invaded his personal space repeatedly, covered him in blood and vomit, and generally made him want to twist her head off her neck like the cap on a bottle of wine. He relented only because she owned the establishment (her death would probably mean a lot of work killing everybody angry about her demise as well), and because he was curious to see where she was taking him. As it happened, the answer to that question was "to the top". And it was a very long was up. Five minutes passed before she and Lucius reached that point, looking for all the world like a perfectly normal CEO's office at this height, and the deep windows that had by then revealed themselves showed the planet below in its full curvature, smoke-darkened as the view was. Here, she finally let go of him, and as he examined his clothing to see what would need washing later on, strolled over to a screen and pressed a button that, it seemed, activated a camera of some sort.

And there, she began her speech. A speech proclaiming that, as of Lucius' arrival, the next twist of the knife would be planted in the stomachs of the corpse-worshippers of this planet. That this man, this man who was more than a man, this Scion of Chaos, had coincided with the signal that she and her closest allies had had portents of for thirty years and more, bringing them together to build an almighty weapon, a device that would PLUNGE Calam into the Warp itself, sacrificing all and sundry within it to the Chaos Gods and their Holy Daemons, sending Tiphrates III into chaos and Chaos alike, and assuring that the TRULY loyal would pass into Eternity as true worshippers one and all, made immortal by the Gods for completing their Great Project at long last! And so on and so forth.

It occurred to Lucius, as he was ushered forward to give a word of encouragement, as he raised a fist and uttered 'May the Warp take them,' in a way that only the perceptive would realise was rather half-hearted of him, that this was perhaps the Chaos Gods' way of ensuring he continued to work what minimal affinity he had with them to their appropriate ends. He felt it'd have been rather preferable that they simply leave him down on the planet to die with everyone else.




And so, the moment was upon them. Suzerain had positioned them both at the window of what it turned out was in fact a starship, had at some point slipped her hand into his heedless of his own desire to crush that hand into pulp, was squealing with delight at the proposition of murdering countless innocent souls, and how they'd apparently feed her apotheosis, and that of others in the ship who really deserved it, into a being worthy of the respect she warranted all along, but those who didn't deserve that would instead be left alone, unless they REALLY annoyed the Gods, at which point they'd turn into murderous mutated things that'd attack the unaffected on the ship. And she was still covered in her own blood and vomit, Warp damn it.

The idea, at the end of the day, was simple enough: activate a Gellar field around the ship proper, by now automatically welded shut on all doors, then trigger its entry into the Warp, taking energy from the planet's own core to vastly amplify the entry point to cover the entire city and the surrounding area, creating a rift in reality like a miniature Eye of Terror to drop that section of the Hive World into the Warp like a hammer, and in turn smashing down the walls between reality and unreality in a way that would ensure the rest of the planet would suffer for years, if not decades to come. If that was successful, the idea could be upscaled to induce the effect upon entire planets, thus giving very reasonable ways to kill entire worlds in an instant in the name of the Gods. Incidentally, his very presence here apparently warranted the flash of recalled information about the Eye of Terror's existence and nature being dripped into his brain, perhaps to tease him about what came next.

Finally, the entire ship jolted as the Gellar field generator came online. Then, a second later, reality crumpled. The window showed a rush of something in every colour of the rainbow, and many that didn't exist, couldn't, or else had yet to come into being, charging upward like a wave of madness, before it finally reached them both and-

...the effect was less pronounced than Lucius had been led to believe it would be. A slight shudder, and little else. Admittedly, that at least meant the Gellar field was doing its job. Outside the window, the sky, space itself, had turned into a mess of impossible colours and shapes that hurt to look at. The city below, though still smog shrouded, was surely already being eaten alive by the daemons waiting for this moment to come, any psykers on the planet boiling inside their skins or twisting inside out or any number of deadly options, whilst their non-psychic brethren were to be subjected to far worse fates than that. All those green spaces, gone. At least the ones closest to Calam, but given how dramatic the effects of Chaos were, he doubted the rest would last that much longer.

And next to him, Suzerain had yet to start mutating. Despite an additional rumble that signified the ship breaking away from the planet’s surface and the city surrounding it, despite the supposed passage of time, she seemed to just be... standing still. Eyes wide, staring out into the void of the Etherium and at her hands, until she finally spoke: 'It's so beautiful... just like me...'

And then she started mutating. Taking the tactful option, Lucius let go of her hand and stepped back to allow the mutation to run its course. If she turned into a Chaos Spaw- oh, THAT was what she was referring to by "murderous mutated things"... he had two perfectly good weapons to kill it with. If not... well, he'd cross that bridge when he came to it. Speaking of which, Suzerain was apparently having the time of her life, despite her flesh bubbling like a vat of oil. And multiple arms sprouting out of her back, horns jutting from her skull, two of the arms turning into wings and various pronounced bulges emanating from under her clothing... more arms in less regular places, tentacles and tendrils, a malformed leg akin to a fish’s fin… it seemed she was going to turn into a Chaos Spawn after all, then. So much for the respect she warranted, then, and oh look at that, now Lucius had an excuse to kill her. He drew both his weapons as the entity before him continued to mutate, becoming less and less human with every second, and began to hack it to pieces before it could lash out at him.

Eventually, the mass of flesh disintegrated into nothing, save another puddle of blood and vomit where it had once existed, and Lucius cleaned his blades off on the desk that the woman had once stood at before sheathing them. Shame he couldn’t do the same with his ruined clothing… that’d need repatching as soon as possible. For now, though, he was left to his own devices. More specifically, figuring out how to get down from this location, as it looked like there weren’t really stairs down, and the elevator buttons were now nowhere to be found. That might be an interesting problem to resolve. Still, it wasn’t like he didn’t have time to do so. After all, who knew how long this ship would be in transit?
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Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Necroes
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The journey through the warp turned out to be far less boring than he had assumed. The gellar field should have acted as a shield against the various warp entities whose home they were passing through. Instead, it acted as a cage. As he traveled aboard this originally unimaginable vessel, he saw more and more how such a thing was able to exist in the hands of random mercenaries. The simple truth was, it was far from the prize it would have seemed on paper. For Urgrugg, though, that ultimately meant inflight entertainment.

Not long after they had taken off, the crew had set to work making ready for warp entry. Most of the process was standard, if somewhat modified. The ship was given time to build energy for the initial entry, the small engine needing more time than usual to fill the capacitors. It would be necessary, though, as the ship would need the extra energy to tear open the hole into the warp, but still have power left for the gellar field. While that was going on, the rest of the crew saw to the dull, ordinary tasks associated with entering a rough patch of travel. Cargo was tied down, various equipment and personal belongings were put away and fastened securely. At the time, Urgrugg simply stayed out of everyone's way. He had very little in the way of personal belongings. Beyond that, no one seemed eager to entrust any potentially vital tasks to an ork, and he was happy to let others do the work. It took very little time for the ship to get ready, in terms of his previous experience with warp travel.

Just before entry was when things started to get strange. First, the entire crew, Urgrugg included, were ushered onto the bridge. Second, instead of the sudden jerk that generally meant entry into the warp, he was almost thrown from his feet when the ship started hurtling towards the solar system's sun at maximum velocity. When he managed to reorient himself, he realised that the ship had, at some point, entered the warp. More significant, though, was that the engines were quiet. When the green skin turned to leave the bridge, the ship's captain told him to stay. It quickly became obvious that there was something they had not told him before, when he still could have conceivably left the crew.

Truth be told, he understood why when they explained it to him. The ship's engine required every ounce of power it could generate to project gellar fields around the most key areas of the ship. Considering the only places on the ship that were shielded were the power core, the atmosphere generator, and the bridge, it made the term 'key' seem almost an understatement. Even the ship's engine was left out of the protection of the field. Apparently, the reason they had built up so much speed before entering the warp was so the ship's momentum could carry them forward without the engine actively providing thrust. He had known that a gellar field was extremely difficult to produce, but just how little protection their advance generator was able to provide but clearly into perspective how amazing it was. This was was very clearly an act of desperation for whoever had designed it.

The odd design did not end there, though. In addition to the restricted quarters while they were in the warp, the ship was also forced to leave the warp on a regular basis. At a minimum, it had to exit at least twice every standard day, in order for the crew to determine their location, replot their course, and make corrections to allow for any needed changes in their trajectory. Since the engines were unable to provide thrust during warp travel, turning was impossible. Beyond that, the warp was not entirely like space. While there wasn't exactly an 'atmosphere,' the warp was not a void. There were things in it, and each thing that collided with the ship stole some of its momentum. That required even more stops to be made, so that momentum could be replaced. Finally, there was the issue of technical difficulties. Being an imperial ship, and an extremely advanced one, meant that it was old. As tends to be the case with old technology, it had a habit of breaking down and needing maintenance. However, the gellar field wouldn't allow for such work, so even more stops had to be made when an issue came up. Before long, it became quite clear that the ship was not the ideal vessel he had thought it was when they first told him about it. Instead, it was more likely one of the earliest successful attempts at a warp engine, with 'successful' being a misnomer. Ships like this one weren't meant to be secret weapons, but instead existed to prove that warp travel is practical only on a large scale.

None of that really mattered, though. Urgrugg was less than happy with being forced to spend countless hours cooped up with spineless humans with nothing to do but complain about their boredom. However, as travel in the warp tends to have, there were more than a few complications. When systems broke down, for example, it was normally a simple matter of leaving the warp, fixing the problem, and then continuing. A few times, though, the systems that broke down were some part of that process. Once it was the gellar field itself, once it was the warp drive, and twice it was some part of the navigation system which had to be fixed to determine where the ship would emerge if it left the warp. Each time, Urgrugg relished the opportunity to have something to do. Without fail, when the crew was sent to try to repair the ship to the point that an exit could be made, they fell under attack. Urgrugg was always the one sent to their rescue. The daemons did not know what to make of this strange, warp-channeling ork, and in their confusion, he was able to strike them down.

By the journey's end, the crew had been changed. Instead of the original seven humans and one ork, they arrived with only four men and the one xeno. The crew consisted of the ship's captain, their medic, the astropath, and a priest who had spent most of the trip with a pistol aimed at Urgrugg. The green skin himself had been cut, stabbed, bludgeoned, and at one point even lost an arm. In true ork fashion, though, he made a full recovery each time within a matter of days. Even his arm ended up being reattached, though it did leave that hand with notably less feeling. As always, his battles left him with just more scars to be added on top of the hundreds he already had. Compared to the rest of the crew, he may as well have walked there along a trail of flowers.

When he finally got a look at their destination, though, he was fairly certain the worst was yet to come. The massive hulk of various wrecked ships, and the staggering number of other vessels that their long-range scans were showing surrounding it, all pointed towards a coming battle. Luckily, as small as their craft was, it was unlikely in the extreme that they would be noticed by the other ships. There were any number of places that a vessel of their size would be able to land, and a good number of them looked to be connected to the main bulk of the behemoth. If nothing changed, they would be able to land unnoticed near the loading dock for the primary munitions. From there, it would be a straight shot to anything left of the offensive systems. So long as nothing complicated matters, there would be little cause for concern. A perfect example would be the captain speaking through a com-link with an 'Inquisitor Marcus,' as the priest reaches for a chain sword. They really should have held off on the automated landing sequence until after they had ambushed him.
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Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by Wraithblade6
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It was an old Thunderhawk gunship, obviously with some wonder of a story behind it for it to end up as a fancy yardpiece for some wealthy warlord on a forgotten world at the edge of the galaxy. Xepherial, having been adopted by the ganglike warband, had encouraged its purchase, offering to repair it himself. The gang knew Xeph for his esoteric enginesight, and kept him around for it, and the prospect of having their own functional air transport, or even space transport, excited them. Oh how they would have such an advantage over their enemies... The purchase was made, and the ship was towed back to their territory.

The rough animals who deigned to call themselves human knew next to nothing about machines or space travel. The fact they even touched the wreck was sin, but Xepherial held back his wrath. Any who got too nosy while he was working would likely be repelled with a spray of sparks. The gang brought him supplies as directed, but none could verify his work. It was practically magic to them.

The gunship's machine spirit was initially comatose. It couldn't start and certainly wouldn't be flying anytime soon. The external markings were badly rubbed out, now covered with heretical icons. The original paint had been black and grey, and one of the wings still bore the image of an iron hand. Weeks turned to months, and eventually Xepherial lost his ignorant audience with his repeated vague updates. With prayer and skill, he breathed into the ship new life, eventually reviving and speaking with the onboard computer, learning its name as -chip. Chip had lost a lot of memory, including its original name, but basic functions were intact. A breach in the hull had to be repaired in order to withstand the vacuum of space, and numerous other checks and duties had to be performed. Finally, after 6 months of sole devotion, Chip rose from the surface for the first time, and Xepherial stole it that night.

"Liberated" might have been the more apt word, if you asked Xepherial. Clearly, the machine spirit of -chip was pleased to escape, as the takeoff into orbit went surprisingly smoothly. The machine had been given a second life, and although it would take much more incense and litany to undo the abuse it had endured, it was grateful. Praise be to the Omnissiah.

As the sole crew, Xepherial wouldn't have a gunner. The gunship was fortunately capable of navigation once programmed, so Xepherial could simply set it and wait. The Thunderhawk would get him offworld, but it was slow when it came to any significant distance in space. Fortunately, he was already close.

Days passed, and finally Xepherial approached an anomaly. Damned if his gunship didn't still look like a flying chaos worshippers' gangsign. The idea that he might be fired upon by "one of his own," as the psyker had said, was seriously concerning.

Text softly began to flare on the command screen as the machine spirit of -chip located nearby objects of interest. Xepherial leaned in, reading and watching the screen silently. It was a spacehulk. The techmarine blinked, and momentarily questioned his faith. Was he intended to explore it alone!? Then Chip's machine spirit reported more. Another, smaller ship was in range of the hulk. Neither he nor Chip could identify it. Xepherial turned on the communications relay to listen in on any transmissions, debating the wisdom of sending any kind of signal.

On the one hand, he wasn't going to be getting much further in a Thunderhawk. The things were supposed to be planetary dropships and didn't have perpetual propulsion. Thus, making 'friends' was a good idea if for no reason other than to hitch a ride out of here once this mission of faith of his was completed. The chance of his being able to recover a ship out of the hulk was also fairly slim, given the damage those ships had endured and the dangerous creatures that could be living within them.

Xepherial decided to wait and see if he had been detected or not, or if the frigate was going to take any action. "Landing" Chip on the outer hull of one of those decrepit vessels of the hulk without first being assured of his safety would leave him vulnerable to being fired upon. Getting stranded there, possibly wounded, was not an option.

Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by Jb
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Flies love corpses, any worshipper of Nurgle could tell you that...and the drifting, thruster-absent construct of twisted metal that was designated as Ill Fated by Imperial observers was as much of a bloated corpse as one could expect to find in the middle of windless space.

From the observation deck of Outpost 3-12/19 Commodore Harker peered into the vast distance between his own command and the Hulk, the extensively high-powered observation scope allowing even his eyes – weakened by age as they were – to make out both the corpses and the flies that buzzed around it with immaculate clarity.

“So, what do we have so far?” He muttered to the nearest Deck Officer, a gangly creature of a man wearing the rank insignia of a Chief Petty Officer, “what can you tell me about our first guests?” A sibilant hiss of air accompanied his final word, pressed with some force from between his thin lips, his eyes never moving from the eyepiece of the observation scope.

“Well...there is a licensed Trader vessel – the Rigged Fortune under a certain 'Nykerio' – as well as what appears to be a former Astartes Thunderhawk, Iron Hands Chapter.” The man paused and took another long stare at his screen, clarifying what he was seeing, “there is also a pair of unregistered and unidentifiable vessels, including what looks to be a ten-man warp-capable ship and...” yes, he was looking at something, but what was it, “another vessel that seems to have simply flung itself from a warp rift not too far from the hulks prow.”

“Any responses to our call for assistance?” Asked the older man through gritted teeth, annoyance clear in his voice, for he wished to be out there and investigating in person and not stuck here merely observing!

“Some responses sir, yes. Any aid will take some time to reach us though, I'm afraid.”

“Blast.”




Half an hour later and most, if not all, of the vessels that had been moving about the outwardly lifeless melange of ships had found some way to either dock – or more likely hammer into the side of – the Fated, perhaps delivering cargoes of warriors or maybe just impacting into a crumbled heap on the wrecks outer skin...

Not too far away, but far enough that even the Outpost could not see them, a small crevice – a fissure in the material of real space – opened to allow the disgorging of a number of space-faring vessels. From this distance it was hard to tell from where or whom they hailed, but it was obvious to anyone that they were on an intercept course with the hulk and those ships gaining entry to it.

They were moving fast, and with purpose.




Somewhere in the rancid bowels of the hulk a figure moved, eyes flickering beneath closed lids, the comatose form certainly of Astartes proportions and the armour it was clad in – although coated in a thick layer of dust and refuse – could only be the protective ceramite shell of one of the Imperiums protectors.

It was in a sudden burst of energy that the slumped transhuman lurched forward with a digitalised cry, keeling over with a fall that shook the metallic deck beneath its feet, the eye slits on the helmet slowly but surely beginning to glow a hellish red.
Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Klomster
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The ripple of energy had halted his raving thoughts, the battle of a pathetic mech-wright and the exalted mind of a dread-magi.
Such an energy wave, it affected him like a caress of a lovers hand mixed with torture. Shudders moved across his mind as Zuriel awoke from his lost state.

Was it a warp disruption? A material energy wake?
He had not been paying attention, he knew not what it was or where it hailed from.... apart from it being deeper upon the hulk.
With a loud creak the magi straightened his neck and back, in the darkness nearby vile creatures wailed and fled in terror. The dark one had awoken, the mortal steel man was moving.
Some small black winged creature fluttered away, followed by some other deformed creature in the dark.

They feared him.
Zuriel began to fiddle with his fingers, twisting the glove on his right index finger. He began to move through the dead corridors of the once proud ship Justifiable. How they had suffered during the journey, how he had worked so hard to keep them from buckling. To no avail, his effort was pointless. A fruitless task with little purpose, how blind he was back then.

He walked through the vessel a short while, his clanging footsteps the only thing that made noise in the ghost vessel parts of the hulk. For none other dared, not even the dead.
The target had been acquired, a data-screen. Zuriel flicked the switch but it was black, expected.
With a steady trained hand he grabbed his dataport and extracted a cable that was fitted to his potentia coil. Sure he didn't have a lumen capacitor, but the screen might just work from the coil itself.
The screen flickered and spat, not designed for such torture and malice. Zuriel cared not as he forced it into life and began to reroute the access grants. The puny defensive systems of the mechanicum was now beneath him, he quickly got past them and accessed what was left of the sensors.
Inactive... of course. The power had never been reactivated.

He began to move further into the hulk, a door in his way was made short work of as he slammed his mechadendrite into it and simply ripped the damaged thing open enough so that he could pass with it and bracing himself upon his mechanical leg, the pure bionic parts having far more strength than something of his frame should possibly be able to have.

The heretical red priest disappeared into the darkness beyond, the only audible sound was the soft clanking of his footsteps.
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Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Necroes
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To say the fight was unfair would have been a dramatic understatement. Four humans, armed and combat-trained, fighting a single xeno aboard their own ship. The poor fools had never stood even the slightest chance. As soon as the priest's hand had wrapped around the hilt of that chain sword, Urgrugg called upon his power. Immediately, he felt it, the energies of the warp coursing through him, surging forth to bend to his will.

His entire body became enveloped in flames, which danced and played over his flesh and clothing, but did not burn him. That was not all he did with his power, though. As soon as the first spells was complete, he summoned forth the power necessary to unleash a burning nova. It blast out from him, turning the entire cockpit into a hellish tsunami of daemonic flame. Before the rest of the crew even had time to draw their guns, he had turned all four of them to ash. Burning as it was, the ship's emergency systems kicked in, and the cockpit was stripped of its atmosphere. Quickly releasing his first spell, he and the rest of the flames were extinguished almost instantly, when the cabin became livable again a few moments later. Though it enhanced the power of his pyromancy, Urgrugg realised upon reflection that the first spell had likely been entirely unnecessary. He had cast it as a defensive measure, but the humans were so unlikely to survive the nova the effort was unnecessary.

As he contemplated his performance in combat, he heard a loud, crackling noise coming from one of the coms. Walking over to it, he realized that the transmission between the captain and the man he had been speaking with had not ended. Pressing the appropriate button, he spoke, "Your little dogs dead, human. Should not challenge better." His low gothic what it was, his voice alone would have given away that he was not human. As he waited for a response, the thought occurred to him that if the captain hadn't gone to the trouble of ending his call, he must have assumed that the other three would be enough to make the kill. Insulted, Urgrugg snorted, and spat upon the late captain's ashes, leaving a great green glob of ork mucus as his gravestone.

'So it's confirmed. Just the kind of crass nature I'd expect from xeno scum.'The response was surprising, to say the least. For one thing, from the sounds of the voice, it was a human female who had ordered his death. Stranger still, by her tone, she did not seem upset. If anything, she sounded annoyed. 'My name is Elizabeth Septum Marcus, high inquisitor of the Ordo Hereticus of the Emperor's Holy Inquisition. Normally, a filthy xeno beast such as yourself would be dealt with by a separate ordo. However, when the reports stated that you were a free-practicing psyker, it was assumed that the information stating you were an ork was in error, and you were designated as a witch. Now that it's proven true, though, it's quite fortunate that things turned out as they did.

'Don't resist capture, and your death will be quick and painless. As a specimen for study, you're quite rare, and it would be best to damage you as little as possible for the dissection. Before you respond, you should know; I have just entered the system, and I have an entire Adeptus Sororitas Preceptory with me. We came because information we obtained from our diviners led us to believe a space hulk of some importance would be appearing here, and I was sent as the fastest to be able to come with a sizeable force. However, I have the authority to turn the whole of their might against you, should you choose to evade capture. What do you say to that, you great, green beast?'

There was no response. By the time she had mentioned an army headed his way, he had all the reason he needed to make his way onto the massive hulk. The thought of an ensuing battle of such size made him shiver, deep in his orkish bones. He had not taken part in a proper war in decades, maybe longer. As he walked, he headed for the deepest sections of the ship, letting the flow of latent warp energy in the ship guide him to his intended destination. If his foe was bringing an army, he would need to prepare one to meet them with. For that, he'd need time, which would be in short supply. Even the feeling of his potential impending doom made him giddy with joy.
Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by BCTheEntity
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It ultimately took Lucius three days to figure out how to re-enable the elevator buttons and get out of that room - it turned out there was a button hidden on the back side of a desk in the room, clearly meant to remain hidden so that potential victims couldn't escape - but after spending a few hours back down with the rabble, who each adored him for their own reasons after the late Suzerain's announcement about his presence signifying the end and the beginning, he found himself spending most of the next week or so up there anyway. "Up", of course, being relative, considering the direction of gravity. And it was surprisingly nice, considering it was the equivalent of a proper ship's command bridge, though he suspected that was more due to Slaanesh's influence than anything else. There were four separate desks, each apparently dealing with a different set of documents that just the one could have handled well enough, and the room's floor was reasonably plush, if slightly sticky in some places. Well, very sticky, in a lot of places, largely with what it turned out was some form of hyper-concentrated lho compound that air exposure had degenerated. The needles for that and other such substances were stored in the shelf next to one of the desks, which in turn sat next to what seemed like some form of control console, albeit one with very limited functionality. He couldn't claim to know how to pilot a starship, but he imagined it required more than five buttons to do well. And of course, a small but very heavily gilded en suite bathroom, whose pipes he suspected led to one of the Nurglite sections of the ship.

Regardless, time passed, the ship's Gellar Field remained intact despite the Warp's ravages, and eventually the contraption abruptly emerged into Realspace, in the vicinity of what appeared to be not only a few other ships, but the apparent target of their travel through the fabric of unreality: a Space Hulk that, as minutes passed, loomed ever closer to the ship that had obliterated a city and probably doomed a planet.

...it occurred to Lucius that perhaps the front of the ship was not the best place to be when it showed no signs of slowing down. With that, he re-entered the elevator and began heading downward as far as possible, just as some automated announcement system declared that everybody should strap themselves down, because they were about to activate the melta drill. He spent half a second processing the fact that a disorganised cult had somehow managed to acquire a melta drill in secret, before bracing himself on the side walls of the elevator as it descended. Admittedly, he was perhaps a little early to begin doing so, but it saved him from having his head caved in when, minutes later, the entire ship jolted several meters as it burst through the outer layer of the Hulk, only to keep going and going, slowing down gradually in fits and starts, until it eventually came to a complete halt, along with the elevator itself. He could only imagine how many layers of the Hulk had just been pierced, how many bodies in the path of the ship had just been pulped, but took a wild guess and decided "not enough to escape the sudden vacuum should the ship open itself up".

That, naturally, was resolved by a sudden double-burst of heat that he could feel even from that far below. Either the top of the ship had violently exploded, or another system had just activated to seal the gap between ship and Hulk permanently. Judging by the noise, it was the latter, followed swiftly by the former. And not long after that, the gravity of the ship readjusted sideways quite abruptly, dropping Lucius into the elevator wall like a fool. But, at least the same applied for the actual fools, too, if they'd not remained strapped in. Whatever that meant.

Now all that was left was the problem of getting out of the ship from the elevator. That said, its roof was surprisingly flimsy, giving way after just a few hard kicks, and after that it was just a matter of walking up the shaft. And... well, it ended up being a fairly long walk. Half an hour at least, and by the time the top-now-end of the ship was in sight, he could hear the frenzied calls of the Chaotic horde coming from somewhere behind him. Right, of course... that influx of new meat into the Hulk was going to be interesting to observe. He wondered idly, as he stepped over the ruins of the top deck, if they'd be accepted or fought by whoever lay within the Space Hulk's walls of plasteel and adamantium. More importantly, though, he wondered what in the Warp his reason for being here was. Did they have some great plan for him, or was he simply drifting on the tides of fate, so to speak? Perhaps he'd figure that out along the way. Or perhaps not. The first step of that, of course, was be moving into the Hulk from where he was located and figuring out whether there was anything interesting in it... knowing Space Hulks, there usually was.
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Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by Wraithblade6
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The Price of Hesitation


Xepherial loomed over the faint glow of the console as -chip displayed everything it immediately knew about The Rigged Fortune, which wasn't nearly enough information, and only only managed to amplify Xepherial's uncertainty by an order of magnitude. The strange ship seemed almost dead as it floated in place, transmitting no signals and taking no action. An uninteresting waiting game, this was, and Xepherial debated the value of wasting any more time on it.

Just as his hand moved to give -chip the order to start communicating, another blip appeared on the screen. Xeph's hand paused. It was a second ship, a very small one that would probably have been missed completely by the Thunderhawk's limited senors if it weren't for a sudden infrared burst that had flared from it. It was landing on the other side of the hulk, disappearing from view behind some jutting wreckage.

Xepherial wasn't known for speaking to himself, and so he didn't verbalize his intense curiosity. Something had just happened to that little craft. It must have been an explosion, or perhaps there was fighting aboard. A sense of urgency grew as he immediately began...

**PROXIMITY ALERT**

An alarm went off and the screen text went blood red as -chip screamed a dire warning. An extremely large, unidentified object shaped like a spear was on a direct collision course with the Thunderhawk. There was no time to ask where in the warp it came from, which was undoubtedly an accurate statement, because evasive action was immediately required. Focused as a space marine would be, even in a state of panic, Xepherial engaged thrusters and felt the gunship lurch forward with all its might. Through the rearview imagers he saw the thing in the last milliseconds before the collision, like a screaming bolt flying at the camera with unexpected speed, its nose alight with plasmafire like a flaming torch, yet all this terror was maliciously muted by the perfectly silent void of space.

The thunderous roar of tearing metal was deafening just before air pressure was lost and the silence of space claimed -chip and its occupant. The explosion of the left wing engine was laughable compared to the much greater blaze of the meltaweapon drill as it passed by microseconds earlier. The back quarter of the Thunderhawk and left wing were severed off as some prominence of the passing spear of death carelessly smashed through it. Xepherial had been completely unable to secure himself and was sucked out into the blackness of space as air pressure was lost, throwing him clear of the dangerous, spinning remains of his former companion. -chip was no more.

Long, out-of-use mechanisms on Xepherial's power armor quickly kicked in, responding to the aberrant sensor input on his life support and environmental detectors. The thermal waste disappators on his armor's power generator automatically directed themselves to negate his rotation and stabilize his orientation in zero-gravity. The emergency oxygen supply and air purification system quickly surged into his helmet, which thankfully he always wore, and the suit's cogitator set the internal temperature to a cool 18 degrees C.

Xepherial was miraculously unharmed. Stunned with awe, he watched at the monstrous spire sank deep into of one of the hulk's corpse-ship components. Looking back, his heart sank with grief as the body of his own craft careened into the blackness, bleeding small flares of blue oxygen as its morbid sendoff. Xepherial mourned his brave, doomed machine ally and felt a debt of penance weight upon him for its' loss.

With no other option, Xepherial directed himself to land directly upon the metal surface of the spacehulk. Magnetized soles on his armor allowed him to walk unhindered upon its surface. He glanced up in the direction of the Rigged Fortune, his auto-sensory display pointing it out. Was he about to be blasted into oblivion?
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Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Bright_Ops
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One couldn't help but marvel a little at the power of information at times. Despite the sheer size of the Rigged Fortune and the fact that unless they had dire business in the part of the ship were the relic experiments were taken (or were forced there because they were expendable), Fio'Ui Fi'Rios Gal'leath stilled managed to hear some of the rumors about what was going on elsewhere on the ship. Namely, the answer to what they were currently heading towards. He had needed to ask around in order to find out what exactly a 'Space Hulk' actually was, but once he had gotten the general jist of it... he had asked if they were serious.

The idea of several ships smashed together, making random jumps through space and covered with all kinds of horrors, monsters and lunatics was just... insane. The fact that Gue'la technology allowed such a situation to come about was both slightly impressive in how reliant their ships actually were to damage... and how stupidly dangerous their technology could be! The thought of a Tau ship being lost to it's purpose in serving the Tau'va, forced to become apart of a rusting graveyard of ships that served as a breeding pit for vile creatures was actually sickening.

While he was fairly certain that he was going to be dragged onto the rotting pile of dead ships by his 'Master' soon enough to investigate whatever prize had caught his eye, Fio'Ui took comfort in the fact that it would be a little while until that happened; After all, the armed forces first had to fight their way through the ship before he could be sent in to do whatever task was required of him effectively.
Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Sophrus
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Ga'duk: Aboard the Emperor's Might


Ga'duk waited next to the transport ship inside the Emperor's Might, a frigate that had dropped from the warp not long after the Hulk due to the warp disruption caused by the Hulk's exit to real space. The frigate had intercepted transmissions for assistance and decided to send a small boarding party to see what was in the Hulk, a simple preliminary threat assessment. Ga'duk however was nearly oblivious to this, all he knew was that he was being sent on another mission and would probably have to kill "Greens" or "Tratahs" or whatever, it didnt really matter to him. The sargeant was explaining the mission but Ga'duk wasnt listening, he rarely did but he was supposed to stand with the rest of the squad while they where being briefed. Growing bored waiting to depart Ga'duk began looking around and noticed that the hangar actually pretty empty. There where still pilots preparing their strike craft just in case the hulk sent something against them but it was far too quiet for a full call to battle stations.

The reletave quiet bothered Ga'duk for some reason that he couldn't place, other than it simply wasnt normal. As his mind wandered he began idly chewing on one of his fingers softly which brought a harsh reprimand from the sargeant. "Ga'Duk!" he shouted, "stay at attention until im finished!" Ga'duk dropped hand back to his side and rumbled "yes, uh.. Sir!" before he started ignoring the sargeant again and tried to puzzle out why he was being sent anywhere while the ship wasnt busy like before. He was drawing a blank even while the sargeant explained that it was a data collection mission and they should avoid combat if possible. Once the sargeant had explained the mission twice so that every trooper, except Ga'duk, was sure of the mission he ordered them onto the small transport. The transport was actually a logistics ship, much lighter and less armored than most combat ships because they had decided to not use the boarding pods so they could get their toops back easier. Not to mention the logistic ship would be easier to replace than a heavy transport if something went terribly wrong.

The unit was ordered onto the light transport and told to preform a ready check, a phrase drilled into Ga'duk that meant a series of motions that where nothing more than routine. Ga'duk went through the motions mindlessly, allowing his muscles to do the thinking for him. He grasped his heavy combat shield by the handle and automatically activating the magnetics locking it to his forearm gauntlet. he then pulled lightly at the axe strapped to his belt, ensuring it was tight and not going anywhere and did the same with the Grenade launcher gauntlet strapped across his chest. All of his equipment was present and secure so he held out his hand in a thumbs up, waiting for the sargeant to push his hand back down confirming that his ready check was done and noted.

Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Hank
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"You are serious?" Naamah asked, the slightest hint of an incredulous look on her face.

The Rogue Trader nodded. He had appeared in the hangar just a minute ago, flanked by his bodyguards, and followed by a procession of slaves. Nykerio decided to attend the boarding of the Space Hulk himself after observing a rather sizable ship with what appeared to be a melta drill on the prow had pierced the Space Hulk and embedded itself deeply within. "Strange things are afoot, Naamah," he said, speaking quickly with excitement. "Who knows what we are going to find? We have to be fast. If we don't strike now, the opportunity could be lost. Imperial forces are undoubtedly already on their way. We won't linger, but I won't waste this chance."

"As you wish, master," Naamah replied.

The shuttles, now ready for departure, were quickly filled with slaves and men-at-arms alike. Naamah spotted the Tau being herded along by his handlers, one of which turned out to be the ex-Guardsman with the ragtag outfit. He still stood out like a sore thumb. Snorting with derision, Naamah boarded the command shuttle with Nykerio.

Their flight towards the Space Hulk was swift. Their pilot called out the presence of an armored figure on the Hulk's hull below them, which gathered everybody's interest for a brief moment, but Nykerio elected to ignore its presence. "Nevermind that," he called over the comms, sounding impatient. "Focus on finding a point of entry. We can deal with whatever that thing is later."

As it turned out, their point of entry was not far from where the armored figure was spotted. Still ignoring the mysterious stranger, the shuttles gingerly navigated their way through a large crack in the Hulk's outer shell and mag-clamped their rear ends against the much thinner hull of an ancient ship of unknown origin just beneath the surface. Using external laser cutters, an opening was created and the shuttles nestled up close against the hull, sealing themselves to the pitted surface, shutting out the vacuum of space. All members of the crew (even the research slaves) had been handed rebreathers and a canister of oxygen just in case the air inside the Hulk wasn't breathable, and Naamah fitted hers to her face with a frown. She didn't like to deprive friend and foe alike from her enchanting visage. What's the point of being gorgeous if nobody can see it?

Hesitantly, the crew of the Rigged Fortune inched forward into the Hulk.
Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by DepressedSoviet
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Boarding the shuttle he had been assigned to, Joran noted that its passengers were a different assortment than usual. Sure, there were the various men-at-arms, with their vast assortment of gear and uniforms, but there was also an alien. A blue-skinned Tau, to be exact, one that the Trader had hired as a researcher for various reasons. Joran had no real like or dislike for aliens, despite his time in the guard, but his general distaste for people in general was often misconstrued as an attack on someone because of their race. Joran usually did not hesitate to inform them that he did not hate them because of their race, he just hated them because they were another person. After a brief glance at the alien, the shuttle took off, and Joran focused on getting ready for the boarding.

The Hulk was a massive conglomeration of ships, larger than even the biggest troop transports Joran had been aboard in the past. There was a figure pointed out by the pilot of the transport along the outer edge of the Hulk's hull, supposedly heavily armored. This made Joran's grip on his lasgun grow a bit tighter. The transport slowly dropped down into a breach in the hull of the massive vessel, cutting a second breach deeper into the ship, in order to make a secure, vacuum-sealed entryway for the passengers. Rebreathers with air tanks were handed out, and Joran carefully slipped it over his head, ensuring it was properly secured, before following the others out into the vessel.

Joran had been assigned to act as an escort for the Tau that Nykerio used as a researcher, and so exited the shuttle alongside it. Turning to the alien, Joran spoke, his gruff voice slightly muffled by the rebreather.

"So, fishface. I'm assuming you have some kinda idea as to what in the blazes we're doing 'board this ship? 'Cause if we're gonna be leading you, I'd like ta have some idea as to where we're goin', an' what we're lookin for."
Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Jb
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@Sophrus@Wraithblade6@Necroes@BCTheEntity@DepressedSoviet@Hank@Bright_Ops

Like leeches they came...so many leeches...latching on to the warplogged flesh of the amalgamated carcass, intent on sucking from within it something that they knew not the identity of but knew they had to have; in many forms they came – mercenaries attuned to the Immaterium, a ship of rogues and xenos, and once loyal servants of the Emperor now intent on their own gains in their nearly immortal lives.

Although some vermin already scurried about within the bowels of the filthy wreckage, as new lives set foot upon decks not trod for centuries on end things began to awaken within. Foul alien life-signs down in the belly of the beast, heretical and flesh-eating cults that had been kept alive only by the queer flow of time within the daemon-infested Warp, and other older things that flitted in the shadows and had no name to call them.

From the floor of a deck aboard the once noble Aquila a lone figure began to shudder, their Catalepsean Node and Sus-an Membrane causing the entire transhuman structure to lash out in spasms not of their own making. The figure did not realise what they did, huge fists hammering at the decking, the lit eyes of their helmet far different from the eyes beneath the ceramite which rolled back into the skull of the unfortunate one.

What was happening? Where am I? How long have I slept?!

These unspoken questions came out as grunts and moans from between clenched teeth, everything at once tense and locked up, only for the entire armoured behemoth to go as limp as a fish the next.

The Seventeenth Legion cannot get their hands on them...they must not be allowed to succeed!

Slowly but inexorably the figure lifted itself from the deck, somewhat dazed and curious as to why it's boltgun was no longer present at its side, sweeping its helmet in one direction and them looking to the other – what it saw made the blood within it boil, for all around lay fallen warriors, tens of them, clad in both perfect purple and gold or rusty crimson and gunmetal.

No...no...no.

With a superhuman effort, his legs still ceased up and the power armour doing little to solve that internal problem, Decurion Vedius Celer of the Emperor's Children limped off into the darkness to find both the tools of his trade and that which he had sworn to protect.




It could smell them, and it could hear them, and that was enough for it to wish for their demise.

Unfurling itself from where it had been resting, conserving what strength it had for any interlopers, it now allowed a psychic pulse to probe for both its fellows and for threats – and a threat there was, something odd about the psychic field it produced but also something powerful, a non-Human entity that must be torn asunder along with the others.

It was most fortunate that his broods were not ill-fed nor weakened by millennia of travel, the millions of serfs and prisoners from the Human vessels having fed them well, and when those ran out the foolish creatures that believed they could board the drifting wreck and take what they wished without consequence.

No, this it could not allow.

With a hiss of something serpentine and another mental shudder of command, mere moments passing before an unheard 'alarm' was triggered, the Tyranid inhabitants of the vessel – Genestealers off all generations – began to rouse themselves and once more serve their apex overlord.




Celalyth watched the Hulk as her fleet took up position around her own ship, the Void Dragon vessel known in the Mon-Keigh tongue as Pride of Mymeara, their solar sails catching what little sunlight could be found in this region of space and their sleek hulls of teal and blue glinting in wan light of stars all around.

For several months they had been tracking the Hulk through the Warp, using their Warlocks to divine the next location where it would burst into realspace, only to come upon it now. They had already intercepted barbarous communications between a Mon-Keigh outpost and a force of their warrior caste known at the 'Storm Hawks', a force that would be here sooner rather than later – and by that time she intended for them to be gone.

Craftworld Mymeara had been able to provide but a small flotilla, big enough to scatter most opposing ships and take what they had come for, but too small to mount a true threat to any Imperial force or otherwise.

Two cruisers, three light cruisers and a number of assorted escorts now sat silently outside of detection range – at least for any primitive Mon-Keigh vessel – and awaited the command from their Admiral to engage.
Hidden 8 yrs ago Post by Bright_Ops
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It would seem that once again, Gue'la pride and insanity proved Fio'Ui Fi'Rios Gal'leath wrong. While logic would have dictated locating and securing the source of... whatever it was that had lured the Rogue Trader to this graveyard of broken ships before sending in a research team in order to try and work out what it was, it appeared that Nykerio either wasn't using logic anymore or he didn't want to waste time.

Considering what he had seen of the man so far, he wouldn't have been surprised if the former had happened a long time ago.

Rebreather mask covering his face as he stepped out of the ship after all the armed Gue'la, Fio'Ui glanced at his 'bodyguard' with a flat expression for a moment before turning away. "You assumed wrong. I suspect I have less of an idea of what we are actually looking for in this twisted wreck then you do Gue'la."

@DepressedSoviet
Hidden 8 yrs ago 8 yrs ago Post by Klomster
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Normally he knew the corridors by heart, the years of service aboard the cruiser had etched the deck plans into his mind. He knew it like his own robes. Every nook and cranny, every shortcut and path.
However, this was no longer the same ship as he had arrived upon, it wasn't actually a ship at all anymore. It was now part of the hulk and the hulk was not just a regular ship, it oozed with change.

The trip took longer than expected, it was impossible for a man. The passages which he moved through were far too small for even a child, luckily, Zuriel was no longer trapped in a single form.
As he flowed through the old ventilation shafts, damaged doors and ripped open bulkheads he heard voices.
'Help me!' 'Stop your pathetic attempts.' 'The thirst, when will it end?' 'You assumed wrong....' 'Are you satisfied?'

A few were directed at him, others were echoes, of the past..... and of distance.
This was an interesting turn of events, perhaps the impact from earlier was someone boarding the hulk, someone here to loot and pillage?
He would watch them, in time.

For the moment he had arrived, he stepped out from a battlement depressed into a wall which was covered in darkness, stepped out onto the floor covered in dried blood coloured black from the environment and caressed a data terminal.
In the middle of the room stood a serial linked set of plasma reactors, with small reactors forming back-ups to the primary ones. This terminal was one of the controls for the generatorium.

Zuriel tried to revive the machine spirit. It was alive and well, not for long.
He performed overrides on the systems warnings, the safety parameters were not within acceptable percentages, risk of radiation. Mortal problems, he cared not for any humans or similar which would enter this place in any foreseeable future.
He forced the generator into life, it hummed and shone with blue light. Zuriel began the operation of kickstarting one of the main generators, it spat and fluctuated, for a moment there was energy enough to light the emergency lights. Before an explosion to the fore of the ship, probably a mangled torpedo tube which launched its torpedo which immediately impacted and thus detonated.
The explosion shook the Justifiable violently, however the main hulk barely noticed it.

It seemed the machine didn't want to cooperate, pity, another more.... potent, source of energy was needed to kickstart it.
Zuriel strode atop the access ladder which went over the struggling reactors, he gently stood in front of one of the main generators access ports, considered a moment, then began the incantation.

With a hand gesture the eight-pointed star emerged, it floated like smoke which struck the generator and stuck to its surface. With increasingly dramatic gestures he directed the flows of the warp, with incantations which made the air hiss and the metal corrode he called upon the eddies of the immaterium to give him power.
It would take some time, but time was something Zuriel had.
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