In the Segmentum Obscurus, where a planet had once sat, a fleet of ships prepared themselves. At the head of the armada sat The Roar of Caliban, and inside its hallowed boughs resided the leadership of a new chapter of space marines. At the head of the room, giant frame covered by off-white robes, the new Supreme Grand Master of the Lions of Absolution cleared his throat. In front of him stood the towering Lion’s Absolution, the mace too big even for the superhuman to lift outside of his armour, but serving as a reminder of what the chapter was to stand for.
“Brothers.” He would finally say. “When we look at the sins of the Lion, we find none.” His voice carried, clear and deep, throughout the front part of the ship. Although few were there to hear it, those few that were heard him well. “When we look at the sins of his sons, we find them to be innumerable.” His hands would rest themselves on the burnished metal of the power maul, hands calloused and worn from centuries of fighting.
“Today, we receive our first true orders from the Lord Commander of the Imperium. In his venerable wisdom, he has sent us to the Segmentum Tempestus. It is here that we will find the foulest of criminals- heretics against our Emperor and our Imperium. We will, no, we must pull them out, root and stem,” he would clench one hand into a fist. “Forever showing those who would fall to chaos what their deserved fates will be.”
He would pause for a moment. “You are all warriors of superlative skill and power. I expect you to fulfil your duties and carry out what the Emperor requires of you.” His hand would unclench itself and move from person to person, until each of the men in front of him had been indicated to. “Prepare yourselves for the campaign. Make ready the weapons of war…” He would let a steely glare sweep across the room, gaze hanging on the Forgemaster and Chief Librarian for perhaps a little too long. “And always, keep an eye for the brothers that have spat on our legacy and impunged our honour. Spare none of them. Abjure them of their wretched lives.”
The year is 30,021. Mankind's spread beyond the stars, lead by the almighty force of the God-Emperor of Mankind and his Space Marines descended into the bloody mire of the Horus Heresy, brother pitted against brother and God clashing against God. Seven years after the Emperor was interred upon his Golden Throne, Roboute Gulliman, the Master of Ultramar has finished his seminal work: The Codex Astartes. This great work details how the vast Space Marine Legions must be assembled. For the First Legion- reeling from the loss of their Primarch, Lion 'El Johnson, has agreed to abide by these new rules, and as such the Sons of the Lion, now the Unforgiven, find themselves broken into individual chapters.
The Lions of Absolution, from the ruins of Caliban, rise to their feet. Although a new chapter, with reliquary and library far emptier than those of their progenitor chapters, will carve their name, by blood and bolter fire, into the pagers of the Imperium's history books. In the name of the Emperor, who the Unforgiven must redeem themselves in the eyes of, in the name of their deceased Primarch, they will destroy heresy wherever they find it- the Emperor wills it.
Welcome, brothers of the First Legion. Although no longer of the Dark Angels, the Unforgiven nonetheless share the shame of the fall of their brothers. As the Lions of Absolutions are formed they too must take up arms against their former companions, to give them the Emperor's peace once and for all and redeem themselves in the eyes of their father.
The Dark Angels has not left their new chapters with nothing. The Lions of Absolution start with a tried-and-tested armoury, including enough suits of terminator armour and bikes to continue their parent chapter's unique organisation of their first and second companies. Although marines of the Lions of Absolution are unlikely to see the remains of Caliban again, they instead earn the chance to become the first names in a long line of superlative service- names echoing on in history for thousands of marines to emulate. No astartes could ever receive a higher honour.
The Lions do not have long to linger however. The Lord Commander of the Imperium has given them an important task- crush the last few planets that have not learnt of the death of the treacherous warmaster in the Segmentum Tempestum. To prevent these planets from dragging more down with them into another civil war, action must be swift, decisive and brutal, crushing all dissent and restoring the Emperor's light to its proper place.
Paint pattern of the Lions of Absolution. Weaponry is painted the same colour as the eyes.
Chapter symbol of the Lions of Absolution.
1. Characters must be a high-ranking member of the new Lions of Absolution Space Marine Chapter. Obviously. 2. This is 40K. Understand that gore and violence will be commonplace, although I would prefer it if we kept clear of SAW-esque torture porn. 3. Character sheets will be accepted based on merit alone, not 'first come first serve'; the more odd/powerful your character, the more exceptional your character sheet will need to be. 4. A decent grasp of the 40K lore is welcome, but newcomers are entirely welcome as well- if you need guidance, Lexicanum or the 40K Wiki are excellent sources, and if you don't mind the less formal writing style, 1d4chan can give some useful information as well. 5. Sort your squabbles out in private. If you persistently disagree with another player or they're grieving you, involve me. If necessary, I will get the moderators involved. 6. Try to post semi-frequently, and let us know if you must go away. 7. Join the Discord! Find us discord.gg/KXhVcSc . The Reliquary is detailed there, so it'll be very confusing if you're not there.
Rather than giving you a long list of boxes to tick, I’d rather have the CS be organic and written in prose. This can be as long or as short as you please as long as it gives us a good look at what your marine is like. For a reference, see my character sheet in the character tab.
“Neophytes.” Gedeon’s hoarse, drab voice pierced the ceremony hall’s deep silence. It was a room in the setup of a chapel, a consecrated ground with gleaming floors and lavish furnishings, a hall which stretched on yet carried sound perfectly, yet it resonated with silence. A few dozen men, Neophytes, clad in their ceremonial robes, had been packed into rows on kneeling pews, attention now fixed steadily forward to the figure at the podium.
Gedeon stood lumbering above an altar fit for a cathedral, adorned heavily with the effects of the Lions. Lion’s heads were carved of gold and bronze, manes buffed so they seemed to flow readily beyond open, hungry mouths. Angelic wings of embossed silver harkened to their lineage, and symbols of similar theme seemed to coat the walls of the ceremony hall.
But yet, the thing that stood out was Gedeon himself, who, at the altar, stood at his stature of a modest 7’7” for an Astartes. He was the Master of Recruits. He was the one who had rend and broke all these Neophytes which sat before him used to be, and rebuilt them. Drill after drill, combat after combat, and many had not survived. This group which was soon to graduate paled in comparison to that which they had begun with. But these men were hardy. Not of Caliban, but all had come from societies similar, Feudal and Death worlds giving the harsh upbringing which the Unforgiven desired.
Gedeon, adjusted the beige robes which flowed over him, clutching in one hand a tome which he did not once look at, for he did not have to. Such texts were long committed to memory. In the other hand, in a reverse grip, a blade which pulsed with idle electricity, its exterior masterfully crafted of some dark metal.
“Let us begin with a story. Yes, a story which began in the Rock, some years after the Heresy. The world of Caliban had collapsed, its very essence consumed by the taint of the Eye of Terror itself. Of it, only our grand Fortress Monastery, the Rock, had survived, and fleeing such horrors as that of the very Warp itself, it found itself aloft above the lashing sands of Al-Baradad. In the change of gravities, the Rock found itself assailed by a hail of meteorites, but yet avoided all hits save one, which on impact split open like a mighty beast and ejected a core of pure obsidian.”
Gedeon embellished his points, his voice achieving a crescendo with motions of occupied hands for emphasis.
“And such, a sign of the protection of our Lion and indeed the Emperor himself, the Angels of old forged from that core a series of blades dubbed Heavenfell. Blades which accompany the Angels and all the Unforgiven, and at one time indeed our own chapter. Wielded by our Supreme Grand Master Kushiel, the blade was a feared weapon which was the bane of all taint of Chaos. And it is in our story that it meets such foes. Traitors, Astartes which betrayed their Emperor in the name of false gods and empty promises, they often dared to challenge the Lions, taunting the lineage of the Angels. They were not prepared to meet our steel. And at that crucial moment, in the killing blow struck, when all traitors laid dead or dying, the blade shattered.”
He lowered his voice, taking a more somber tone, firmly bracing himself on the altar, tracing his two dull brown eyes across the rows of Neophytes.
“Its pieces gathered, its spirit was reforged. Ten blades were, one for each company of the Lions, and at its pinnacle, the Blade of Benediction, that which I wield before you today, the fabled induction tool which shall this day see you all become Brothers. Not just to the other companies, not just to your fellow Neophytes, but mine own Brothers, worthy of the title of Lions!”
Crying out the final stanza of the story, he raised the Blade to chest height, and commanded heartily.
“Neophytes, on one knee!” Immediately, almost robotically, all Neophytes came to a single knee, heads bowed in pseudo-prayer.
“I, Master Gedeon of the Tenth Company, the Lions of Absolution, do dub all Neophytes here with the title of Brother, and their own right to keep and bear the title of Lions! Go forth, hunt for the Lion!”
By the time the choral music erupted from multiple places around the cell, unseen within the deep shadows but helped mightily to reverberate by the cavernous chamber, Eliphalet Terach could no longer remember how long he had been strapped face-down on the table; for what seemed like an eternity he had been kept there in darkness, his face pressed against the cold surface, and his abnormally warped body almost as naked as the day he was born – a day, like most Astartes, he could not actually remember.
“Are you ready to repent?”
The voice that spoke from somewhere nearby somehow managed to cut through the music - turned up to aberrant volumes even for his superhuman ears – and, in spite of all he was and knew, sent the smallest sliver of anticipation (not fear) down his spine.
He tried to move, tried to turn his head, tugged against his bindings, but all was in vain and so he was forced to simply reply as best he could, shouting over the rising and falling of the music.
“Repent? I have no need of redemption, for I have committed no sin. How can you even speak of repentance?!”
Sergeant Eliphalet Terach, like all those upon the surface of Caliban when it was lacerated and torn asunder, had been flung into the warp by powers beyond the reckoning of those now living. He had seen things that were to come, had travelled light-years through an Imperium that he did not recognise and fought all manner of adversaries, in the Warp he had lived many lifetimes only to be spat back out one day near shattered Caliban...and to find he had been gone no more than an hour.
Those of his brethren that fought still for the Lion had wasted no time in capturing him and, what truly was an eternity ago, locked him within this cell.
Now his time of reckoning had come.
Once upon a time the individual known as Narcariel, now Master of Repentance (a new form of Chaplain) for a formation organised by the Ultramarines Primarch, had been the most talkative and jovial member of his brothers – he had laughed, joked, and even been told on a number of occasions to silence himself lest they do it for him. As time had worn on, as secrets had been laid on his mind and shoulders, and as he had descended further into the duties he must now perform of his infant Chapter, that old Narcariel had been expunged from existence and replaced by the dour figure that now circled the prisoner like the big cat from which the Chapter took its name.
In a leisurely fashion he removed his gauntlets, setting them reverently aside on a table made of now extinct Calibanite wood, having learnt that they only caused his hands to be less dexterous – and therefore useful – when it came to his secondary but most important duties.
Next he laid aside his skull-faced helmet in a hiss of seals and otherwise soundless movements, revealing a face that would, had it not been grown large by the hormones of his wild father, fit perfectly to the profession of teacher or clergyman. It was a forgettable face that retained the middle-aged look had he been mortal, golden hair with streaks of white cut close to his head, but it was the eyes that held his true personality for they seemed everywhere at once, glacial blue orbs like chips of ice which appeared to pierce as daggers into anything they viewed be it armour, flesh or the soul.
“Oh you have much to repent for,” half-whispered the Chaplain, one hand gently pulling back a cloth to reveal a long and extensive line of 'implements', one hand running almost lovingly over them, “and repent you shall, Eliphalet. Should you do so, you shall be granted the Emperor's Mercy and purification but should you not...well...”
A large scalpel was already in his hand, his almost ethereal voice once more swallowed up by the droning music, and it was only moments later that the Fallen Angel known as Eliphalet – as many had suddenly gleaned before him – that he would repent and he would break.
'So, you alone have recognised my ploy. This will not help you.'
The Fallen Traitor drew his power sword, its ignition a tainted red glow far removed from the usual blue fire of a power field, and Knight Zechariah answered with a silent, contemptuous charge - this traitor had fallen thanks to the Arch-Heretic Luther's honeyed lies, and now his corrupted psychic abilities were put to use in creating a false legion of his brethren, who the rest of his squadron were occupied with to no avail. Only he had realised the truth at hand; and so only he could defeat this black-clad heretic.
The Indomitus pattern of Tactical Dreadnought armour offered far greater speed and flexibility of movement than the Cataphractii pattern, Zechariah had found. Though it was somewhat less protective, the presence of a potent storm shield made up for this downfall and then some, and paired with his Mace of Absolution, he like the rest of the squad were nearly unstoppable. Not that this assumption would hold, if he didn't destroy the Fallen Angel immediately - and whilst he'd expected some disparity in mobility, the Traitor wore his power armour like a second skin, despite the spikes and the stars of Chaos adorning its frame. His initial dodge around Zechariah seemed impossibly light. That too was Chaotic influence, no doubt.
The Traitor's returned sword strike barely deflected off of the storm shield's surface, the deflector field briefly failing to hold the weapon at bay, and Zechariah's own weapon flew toward the Traitor again, and was again dodged - just as Zechariah anticipated. If the Fallen could outspeed him, then he simply had to be prevented from moving. In a single fluid motion, he dropped his shield and snatched the Fallen's sword arm before the slab hit the ground, ramming the empowered head of his mace deep into his foe's armour, crushing his guts beneath its force. Even then, the Fallen Traitor continued to fight back, drawing his bolt pistol and attempting to aim it toward Zechariah's skull; for his efforts, he was kicked in the leg to throw him off-balance, his knee snapped back on itself as the Terminator armour's enhanced strength easily overpowered the defenses of the Traitor's joint armour. The offending weapon, hand and all, was crushed by another swing of the mace, and a third and final return blow staved in the skull of the Fallen.
And like that, one more instance of shame on the part of the Unforgiven was cleansed. Relaxing, his squad safe for now, Zechariah pulled his mace away from the corpse he was now holding up - only to startle, as the perfectly intact face of the Fallen Angel was that of-
The illusion passed, and naturally, as others had before him, Zechariah immediately began assessing the change in scenery, only to settle as he recalled at last what had happened. The dark metallic room they were in was akin to a standard training room, the machine spirits tapping into Zechariah's nervous system and restricting his movements realistically through wired plugs inserted into, and now one by one removed from, his Black Carapace ports, playing illusory situations into his mind. Far from being used for training, however, this room was purposed to generate scenarios for potential Deathwing Veterans, Knights, and Knight Masters to overcome; Brother Zechariah's situation had not been dissimilar to one Saraqael had encountered in the Horus Heresy, as a matter of fact. Back then, Saraqael had not been so lucky as to escape without injury, his stubborn refusal to change tactics costing him an arm, since replaced with a bionic that was, whilst a blunt beacon and reminder of his failure at the time, more functional than the original limb for it. The opponent provided in both the reality and the illusion was "a black-armoured Traitor Marine", of course, rather than the Fallen Zechariah had fooled himself into fighting- just in case a Techmarine working on the device learned too much from the spirits within- but even so, he'd outdone himself in both skill and determination.
'Brother Zechariah, you have passed the penultimate test of Knighthood,' Saraqael announced once Zechariah was free of the device, half a cold blue gaze and half an augmetic orange glare examining the unarmoured veteran from within a mass of scar tissue across his face, and in turn beneath a neat shock of short black hair. The burgeoning Knight's outfit more or less matched the Grand Master's own armourless robes in form if not in deed, though not his round eight feet of height. 'One more challenge lies before you, however. Follow on.'
As one silent unit, they moved deeper still into the bowels of the chapter barque that served as the fortress-monastery of the Lions of Absolution. Saraqael pondered for a while what he was about to tell Zechariah - a much more grim story than Master Gedeon liked to peddle to the Scouts, and yet a crucial aspect of testing new recruits. Those joining the First Company fresh often feigned ignorance about the Fallen, even when they'd been present during Caliban's Fall, and yet many had been entirely absent for the Shattering, Zechariah included.
'What have you been told about the Shattering?' Saraqael asked abruptly, their only audience now a cadre of Watchers.
'Of the Heavenfall Blade? Only what I have been allowed,' Zechariah replied, a polite and suitably formal response. 'As Master Gedeon has stated, the blade was formerly wielded by Supreme Grand Master Kushiel, only to shatter as it struck down the last of a band of Traitor Marines.'
'Indeed. And I suppose you recognise that you have not been told the full truth?'
'...I have supposed nothing, Grand Master. It is not my place.'
'Yet, knowing what you now know compared to the original telling, do you believe the story in full? Or do you suspect it is falsified?'
'Well, if I am permitted to say so, Grand Master...' Hesitation, just long enough for Saraqael to nod his approval. 'In this context, I imagine the foes that broke the Blade were not mere Traitor Marines.'
'Indeed.' Nothing more was said until they reached their destination: the heart of the Lions' Chamber of Judgements, a place of black marble and grey stone. The shadowed arch was a far cry from that of the Rock which the Dark Angels held sacred, but it was decorated with the names of those who had previously passed beneath, and it would more than suffice for this final test.
'The truth of the Shattering is as follows,' Saraqael uttered monotonously, halting Zechariah's motion with an arm as he stepped ahead of the veteran before turning back to face him. 'Much of it has been relayed faithfully, but the foes the sword broke against were not mere Traitor Marines. As you have surmised, those it faced on the day were Fallen, at least in part.' Zechariah's face contorted to a scowl, but he said nothing in response. Good. Contempt for the vile, more than proven before now.
'It did not, however, break with the last killing blow of battle. Rather, it broke at combat's height against the weapon of a Fallen Angel, when its edge was needed most.' This revelation caused more reaction. Not much more, but a widening of the eyes in disbelief. 'The Shattering alone marked the destruction of a priceless relic, but the blade's failure was not Sin in itself. The consequences thereafter were what was and still is unforgivable - because of the Heavenfall Blade's destruction,' Saraqael proclaimed with great condemnation, 'and in spite of our best efforts thereafter, several Fallen escaped their due punishment, an unfathomable blow to our efforts.' Now Zechariah was reacting - some mixture of uncoiling horror and disgust and righteous fury, filtered through the psycho-conditioned mind of a Space Marine to produce no more than a locked jaw and, perhaps, barely-suppressed twitching as his muscles clenched tightly.
Saraqael sympathised with his reaction. He himself considered the Sin of the Shattering a blight that the Lions of Absolution should never have experienced, and if Zechariah ever achieved the rank of Knight Master, he too would learn why this was - a stray shard from the broken blade, sharp as the obsidian it was forged from, had been what cut out Saraqael's eye and damaged much of the rest of his face, and surely his blinding, on top of his failure to react properly despite his mere wound, was what had led to the Fallen Traitor escaping with his life and too many of his unrepentant comrades. No matter how one looked at it, Saraqael surely had personal responsibility in the Sin of the Shattering.
'How dare they.' Zechariah's statement conveyed his hatred of the Fallen all too aptly, heightened yet further by another drizzle of truth. Just in time - the Watchers in the Dark had positioned his new equipment, mace and shield and black Indomitus armour with orange lenses, each attached to a pedestal on the other side of the arch. All he needed to do was walk to them.
'The Blade of Mourning,' Saraqael continued, taking the weapon from the Watcher who bore it up to him and drawing it from its sheath, 'has been intentionally warped. In bowing so, it bears the weight of the Sin of the Shattering, so that its brothers retain their parents' purity despite the Sin's marring. Kneel.' Zechariah did so, going down on one knee before Saraqael before the Grand Master continued. 'As a part of the First Company, you were dubbed with this blade, taking on the burden of both Sins, the Shattering and the Fallen. In joining the ranks of the Deathwing's Knights, you shall be dubbed again, taking on the burden twofold. If you can bear its weight, you will be accepted. If you cannot, you will die here as though you had failed any preceding test. Do you understand?'
'Yes, Grand Master.'
'Then, by my power.' Saraqael took up a two-handed stance with his Mourneblade, before bringing it down toward Zechariah's left shoulder - not a full-speed swing, but fast enough to threaten a slight cut if he flinched. He did not.
'As Grand Master of the Deathwing of the Lions of Absolution.' Another swing, directed towards the right shoulder.
'I dub thee.' One last swing toward the center of Zechariah's skull, and once more halted just before it would wound.
'Knight Zechariah, of the Deathwing.
'Now stand, and receive your reward,' he concluded, keeping the Blade of Mourning unsheathed. Zechariah stood, perhaps wondering why the Blade was still in Saraqael's hand - only to strain, and then tense up as he realised what was happening, before slowly and carefully beginning to walk toward the arch.
The first time a Marine of the Lions of Absolution was dubbed with the Blade of Mourning, they took on the burden of both the Sin of the Shattering and the Sin of the Fall. And Sins had Weight - not literal, but metaphorical, psychological, dragging all but the most utterly righteous down even when fully unburdened, and somehow the Blade of Mourning imposed that Weight upon them for a time. A member of the Deathwing had to be capable of bearing that metaphorical Weight - and with each subsequent step up the ladder, each dubbing from Veteran to Knight to Knight Master, and each new bearing of the Sins, the Weight grew heavier. To bear the Weight at all was proof of one's devotion to the cause of the Unforgiven; yet the Knights bore double the Weight of the Veterans; and the Knight Masters bore that Weight thrice over.
To date, the only man who had taken the Sins on a fourth time was the Deathwing's own Champion. Not even Saraqael had taken such a Weight, nor did he fully understood how the Champion had achieved it, and for that he held great respect for his functional second.
Yes, Zechariah would have his rank, his equipment, his reward. All he needed to do was walk to it.
"Ensign, release the mooring struts and pull us out of port."
Virgil stared out of the view port on the bridge as the ship around him shifted as massive clamps let the ship loose out into the vase expanse of space.
"Operator, signal to the rest of the fleet to form on us once we are clear of the station."
He took a breath in, smelling the paint fresh from his shoulder and chest, his gauntlet running up the hilt of his new sword, feeling the ancient metal meet the metal that encased his hand. His head moving down in a uniform manner as he lost himself in a train of thought as his eyes fell upon the darkened steel that he wrapped his hand around.
"I will not fail you or the title you left in my hands." he whispered softly before staring up at the view port and walking forward to grasp the railing that separated him from a lower deck that serfs and naval officers moved about working in. He looked down and ran his hand over a worn plate with writing, telling of the earliest history of the ship. It was nice knowing the ship was older then him, it meant that she had gone through far more then he.
Virgil listened to the voice coming from his collar and looked down speaking.
"Sergeant Uriel, Tell your squad to meet me in the main flight deck in ceremonial armor, their weapons shined and polished. I wish to have the best of the company when in front of the others when we go to the Supreme Grand Master's ship in an hour."
He turned on his heel, and started marching towards the back of the bridge closest to the lift down, stopping when he reached it.
"Captain Fedor, the ship is your hands again until I return... and maybe you can tell me more of the ship's history, and her many strengths and weaknesses."
"Of course my lord," replied the man with a deep slavic accent.
He stood in the space of the roaring thunderbird, surrounded by the three remaining members of Verti squad. All four silent as he stared at the ramp, waiting for his embark upon the flagship of the chapter.
He closed his eyes for a moment, he had been given the title some day or two Terran days before, after what remained of the chapter returned from a quest that none of them were to speak of. There were barely twenty men left out of the fifty two who went, and most of those were wounded, even one of three behind him was only out of the medicae deck because he managed to talk the apothecary into early release. These four knew each other for a long time, and the three would see this out for their friend and try and propel him further as he would have done for any of them.
His eyes reopened to the light as the ramp slowly fell.
The day was won, the field of war rightfully belonged to the 1st legion, as did this begotten little world and the lives of every man, woman and child on it. To apothecary Baltheus there was nothing special or particularly interesting about the barely worthwhile ball of rock that was Onara IV. But then again it need not be of great strategic importance, nor rich in resources to matter to the Imperium. It was a human world and it's destiny was to be brought unto compliance. Able to add and contribute what little they could to the future of the crusade. These poor, defeated souls might resent their conquerer's this day as butchers and war criminals, but tomorrow they would awaken under the safe protection of the Imperium, and they would know greater peace and prosperity for it.
None of that was the concern of Baltheus. His concerns were those of his own legio. The scions of the 3rd chapter of the 1st legion may have been more than a match for this world's meagre defences but that did not mean it was a victory totally without cost. Even Baltheus's own wounds were of little concern to him. His once gleaming white armour was caked in rockcrete dust and blood. Most of it wasn't his own. But his left eye was a raw, gaping hole. The shrapnel that took his sight, still lodged inside. His broken helmet hung magnetized at his hip, the left side shattered and the eyelense clearly punctured.
Kneeling down by the fresh corpse of his brother legionairre, Baltheus took a moment to ascern whether or not the fallen angel still drew breath, or if his hearts still beat. But even if they did, there was no blood left for them to pump. It was all spilling out from his ruined abdomen into the ruined urban pavement. His lower half was obliterated and this confirmed his brother was well and truly dead. He did not have to deliver the Emperor's peace this day.
But the grevious nature of this wound was itself a sin. One of the brother's progeniod glands was destroyed, lost to the explosion that claimed his life and his limbs. Baltheus didn't waste any further time. Quickly unsealing and removing the breastplate, and with a sinister whine that could only be produced by a chainblade, His narthecium made quick work of the soft armour beneath, and cut through augmented flesh and bone with equal ease. Within moments the surviving gland was delicately removed and safely stored.
A momentary inspection was all he needed to rest assured that at least some of this brother's genetic legacy remained intact. He had little time to reflect on his brother's death or the comments of mortality there raised. There were other brothers dead or dying, and only so many apothecaries to perform this necessary work.
A quick look at the fallen brother's helmet markings gave him a squad number and name. He voxed the location of the body to his sergeant and left to find the next brother, living or dead who needed his attentions. His own ruined eye socket throbbed with dull, aching pain, He felt his temperature rise as the Larraman organ in his chest worked hard to combat the intrusion of rust, grime and dirt in his bloodstream, and stave off subsequent infection. No doubt his enhanced flesh was already beginning to heal around the shrapnel, which would make for a minor annoyance later, but he did not believe any of this to be lethal. It hadn't punctured his brain cavity, Thus it wasn't an urgent concern. His own pain's were unimportant as long as other brethren lay fallen.