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4 yrs ago
Current What's the worst thing about the Roleplayerguild and why is it the status bar?
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"Mr Stark, shall I deploy countermeasures?" The sweet song of F.R.I.D.A.Y's voice chimed within Tony's helm as the dots of light danced across his armour, mechanical systems whiring within as the artificial intelligence responded to the percieved threat. Not that it was situation worth spiting present company, but he waited a solid view moments before dimissing the prompt with a flick of his eyes. Not today, Friday."

His suit almost hummed with disappointment as he stepped forwards off the ramp, surverying the camp they had ditched down in while Clint bickered with the mutants, rolling his metallic shoulders as his onboard sensors ctoninued to attempt to decipher the situation.

"Jury is still out on whether god and basic bitch are mutually exclusive terms." From behind the mask TOny's tone didn't quite have the previous scathing tone to it, but it was still clear his attention was mostly not on the traded barbs between parties, instead the gleaming eyes of his helm settled on Reed, a like mind, of sorts.

"Picking up any galaxy ending power flares?" Of course, he'd also know by now if there were, but it was always a good way to bring up a conversation, the metallic tread of his suit carefully avoiding stepping on any of the discarded guns without obviously appearing as if any effort was made to do so. "Try to put their minds down more gently." He offered backwards to Miss Frost. Much as he was one to enjoy the suffering of the suits at her hands, it did a very good job of representing why any state might be concerned with the sudden arrival of mutants like these, let alone Jean Grey, and let alone the promises Krakoa had forced out of them all.

"But lets for a moment put aside the frankly, very silly, idea that his is a mutant plot from start to finish, and brainstorm our ways to something close to a solution we can all stomach, without starting a war. That would be great." Trusting the mutants enitely might have been a few steps too far for Stark in this situation, but he couldn't pinpoint what they would have to gain from this display. Sure, they would no doubt do their best to end out on top and not care too much how that impacted the average human in their wake, but that was very different to a deliberate mastermind, and treating them as such only put them all in greater danger. "So lets not play Cyclops Bullseye, Clint."
"I don't think I'll be taking lessons on morality and soverignty from the members of the Facist Five." It would be safe to say Tony didn't mirror Emma's dismissive lack of attention, although the dark expanse of his psy-damping glasses prevented his careful study of her from appearing anything truly lecherous. Just because the plant was poisonous didn't meant you couldn't admire the flowering. "Consider me America's babysitter to make sure you all don't start snorting Phoenix Dust and thinking yourselves Gods again."

It was textbook Stark, his lips moved, delibertaly aggrevating those present while his mind kept track of a thousand other details. It worked in the boardroom, and for all their atom-granted power, it worked on mutants as well. How many times had he got the up on someone who should have been far more capable, far more powerful, than him simply because they were trying to imagine his many painful deaths while he multi-tasked the solution? It was hard not to view these people as enemies, they were certainly rivals, and their actions had endangered more than even he could claim, but for now at least their interests seemed parallel. Not aligned though, he would have to remember that.

"I think a whole lot of us are going to be asking questions there are no comforting answers to." The tap-tap of Tony's suit-clad fingers sounded along with his words, the activity of his mind expressed in the coping mechanism of pressing each digit to another in turn. It helped hone a man who had never really mastered sitting still. No longer distracted by the calculating sway of Miss Frost's hips, Tony's focus was free to roam among them all, taking in each of them in turn. Despite his earlier words, Tony's strongrest sense of distrust twinged not towards the members of the Phoenix Five, but to the furred form of Beast. His instincts were often wrong, which was a shame, he'd at least been polite.

Tony stood as the bird touched down, rising with what should have been the most intensive aspect of flying, his suit's dampners easily accounting for the motion, and if it had not, mag clamps in his soles would have no doubt activated. As the access ramp began to descend, the iron helm of his suit shifted over his features once more, the eyes lighting up as he briefly turned back to face his fellow passengers, walking backwards towards the growing light of day.

"What is it you say? 'To me, My X-men." With the line delivered, he turned in full, stepping out of the jet and into the danger of another day yet to be Avenged.
The presence of the bird was an intensity that Logan struggled to bear. His mind had shut away the infinite deaths and rebirths of the endless moments before. In shielding him from Jean, the Phoenix had condemned him to a momentary eternity of pain. Some infinities were smaller than others, but even his psyche, made stronger from several mortal lifetimes of the same, could not entirely hide the pain of reaching for her. While Jean spoke with the cosmic force, it was all he could do to not collapse into the formless, identityless presence that he had become in the White Room. Perhaps he would have, had he not possessed the honing force of her presence. Jean Grey, a ghost that lived. He couldn't quite hide the exhale of release that shuddered out of him after the bird left, his eyes falling on her in full as the presence dimmed. Still, her form swam with white and gold intensity, but even now it was beginning to fade, like the tempered glare of a setting sun.

With his mental fortitude freed from the presence of the Phoenix Force, the impact of her words returned. To suggest Scott and Logan had a fraught past was to downplay matters somewhat, but to have such things laid out was another matter entirely. It was true, he could not believe that he could ever not love her. Something had called to him from Jean Grey that was more than just a love of her spirit and his bestial nature called to the curving beauty of her form. He was bound to her in a way that demanded more than any suffering could break.

"If I do this, am I going to look a right duster?" There was no pause between his words and movement, even as he asked the question and her hands crept around his, he pulled her towards him, his lips claiming her's in a kiss that was infinity in the making. As his question showed, he had little understanding of how this might look to anyone looking on, a man kissing a ghost that could not be seen, even if he suspected she would eventually become one with this time and place as he was. Heedless of any cosmic question, he lingered in the soft embrace of her full lips, the harsh gristle of his own features against the pampered smoothness of her own. Jean Grey had been one with the power of life itself, but that would be no excuse for the New England Prom Queen to lose track of her skincare routine. The thought made him laugh, which finally broke off the kiss. Sometimes he didn't vocalise these things to her, always sure his surface thoughts were as much hers as his own.

There was an ache in him to simply remain, or to ask her to flee back to the warmth he had seen in their future, or some other time he had not yet seen, where comfort and safety together but finally be real, but it was only a moment of doubt before he shared his answer with her.

"You need to put us back when and where I was, Jeanie. It's a powder keg, and I don't trust all the different suits to sort it out if we both wink away." He spoke softly, reluctantly, but with sure purpose as the fingers on his free hand stroked her cheek. "More importantly, whatever you...or the Phoenix, or both of you, did, Jubilee got stuck in it, and I don't think they're going to stop chucking people in until they find you." The true concern in Logan's nature was of course for his fellow mutant. No matter how Logan had railed against them at the start, Xavier and Jean truly had ensured he could never abandon any of the kids that had called their school home. "Take us back before I let you keep us here forever."
Within the Infinite


The man who was Logan had died countless times before. The alteration of humanity running through the very substance that was him always bringing him back from the emoty release of death. As the long years had dragged by, he had spent much of it in agony, being rebuilt from a shattered core which had, in every observable sense, been dead. One time, long ago, Jean had asked him if he felt it, if in the worst moments where he had been shredded and burned down to little more than flesh dragged across rent bones, had he at least been allowed the mercy of unconciousness. He had told her yes. In what possible way could someone be aware when flesh had been stripped away and even their brain was pulped by heat and force? It had been a lie, no one could truely lie to Jean Grey, but from what he knew she had allowed it. Somehow he felt every moment.

That was nothing next to this.

In the time it took for a human heart to beat once, the thing who had been a man who had been Logan was annihilated and reborn countless times. To even witness, to observe, the infinite nothing-creation before him was to die. It overwhelmed him in every possible manner, in ways he knew and ways he didn't. By the time the thing-that-burned spoke to him again, there was nothing left of him. The hand that reached for the door forged of the bird itself bore no sense of recognition to the smoldering soul of who he had been. He turned the doorknob not out of familiarity or muscle memory, but simply because it was the only thing to do. All creation had narrowd to this simplest of portals.

If the reality before the room had been fire, the room itself was the burning heart of a solar cauldron. The infinite before had been without scope, but somehow this equally blank space of nothing had something finite to it. To behold the walls-that-were-not set every remaining iota of his beind ablaze, as finally he behld the being at the centre.

She was perfection, and all the fire and pain of the room bled from her. Each death and rebirth, already faster than perceptible, increased in scope and speed. Anyone else would look away, but the seared core of a man remembered who he was, and who she was.

"Jean."

He didn't so much speak it, there was nothing of him that could consitute a physical being to do such, but still the noise pushed through to her, through the space that was there, yet wasn't. From the man who died a thousand deaths to simply gaze upon her for a moment, yet still to look away, to abandone her, would be a worse pain. At first it seemed futile, that it still wouldn't reach her. Then, the cosmic eyes beneath her crown of death and creation looked upon him. For the barest slither of time there was recognition, and then the intensity of her shredded his being to nothing.

Logan awoke to nothing once more, just him and an expanse of nothingness so vast it was beyond scope. He uncurled himself, feeling the pain of every countless rebirth in the ache of his metallic bones, his own blood dripping from the extended length of his claws as he fought to stand. Only then did he remember the words of the Bird-That-Was-Flame.

"Y....You don't get to choose...for her."

Earth, Krakoa


Tony Stark had stared down monsters and gods before, but that didn't neccesarily make it easy. Especially when the being before him was a monster and a god. Not that anything was ever truely hidden from the mutants, but he was thankful enough for the concealing plate of his helm to soften his reaction as he rose up from his signature kneel-landing to stand before the Apocalypse itself. He may have been mortal, but he was still Tony Stark. Starks had a habit of defiance in the face of those who wished to make slaves of humanity. Sure, at least when his father had done it those tyrants had been simply other humans, but he liked to think it was a core they shared.

The mask flipped down, although the shades remained. In truth he didn't know quite how effective they were. That was the problem with Mutants, they defied all the rules he had spent a lifetime learning to master.

"Well, as it turns out, when you spend the last few years ensuring your ability to get away with whatever you want, the rest of us have some pretty concerning questions whenever you mark an issue as 'yours," He didn't give the tyrannic god-thing the respect of replying to them and their state-speak, his concealed eyes instead focusing on Scott. He'd always seemed the most human of them, other than perhaps Logan, but then that's why Logan got to be in the Avengers friends club.

"Sounds like you'll need a genius to tag along, if that really is the best plan you all have come up with so far." He didn't bother with anything else, of accusing them of once again putting more human lives at risk to save a limited number of mutants, to playing God and Spymaster all at once. His presence itself was that accusation all at once.

"When do we leave?"
"So, just to circle back." The boardroom speak wasn't entirely necessary, but it always rankled Steve Rodgers, so what harm was it really.

"Tony..."

"A Shi'ar representative has shown up demanding action, probably wants to enact their own will, we have Krakoan gates popping up, Mutants probably wanting to declare their own jurisdiction." Stark's suit whirred as he brought a drink up to his lips, slurping down a gulp of the pleasing enough aloe water in much the way he would once chain margaritas even in the middle of the day.

"Tony..."

"American sovereignty really isn't what it used to be." That rustled a few feathers of the various alphabet agents milling around the place, particularly when it only earned a slightly condemning look from Captain America himself. If the shining beacon couldn't offer much in protest, then what was their really more to say?

"If you hadn't been paying attention, we've given them plenty reason to keep their justice in house over the years, and our alliance is important." Steve Rodgers eventually sighed, studying his old friend, often rival, wearily as the armour clad man took another sip from his drink, his psy-blocking shades mirroring Rodgers' sparkling blues back at him.

"I'm always paying attention. Small island nation. Weapons of mass destruction, an imported drug problem...sounds like you need a Kennedy to fumble this mess just enough to fix it." Stark always found himself too amusing, that was a vice even he'd admit to, waving one armoured finger through the air as he demonstrated, as ever, the cyclical nature of international relations.

"Russian Nukes in Cuba and mutant kids learning to control their powers are not the same."

"Maybe not, but you end up just as dead. I'm going to speak with them." As Stark turned away from Rodgers, the usual smooth clank of metal heralded the mask of the Iron Man suit folding over his features, the eye slots blazing blue as the HUD activated.

"We, ah, would really rather you didn't do that, Mr Stark." Someone in a suit tried to intervene in his motion, which earned them a reaction that was pure Stark dismissal.

"Yeah and I'd really rather not fund half your budget, but here we are." Without another word, the boots on his suit fired, launching Stark into the air as he hovered to survey the increasingly sprawling complex, hunting for those who he wished to speak with. That was, until the shockwave of psychic energy rushed over the camp, and half of them winked out of existence.

"Alright...Find me the 'next' person I want to speak to." He exhaled, before speaking to his onboard suit AI, as ever, missing the old tones of JARVIS as the suit began to scan for anyone remaining.
"It was you or everyone else." Logan wasn't sure if he truely spoke the words before the world swam once more, but he felt them. In his heart, he would have burned it all down for her. The world, humanity, all of it, had never been kind to him, and pure, sweet Jean had been. How easy it would have been to let her sear it all away. It hadn't been his call though, even if it seemed like it was. He couldn't sign the death warrant of a world, of more worlds, and so he had signed her's. Or so he thought, right now it certainly didn't seem it.

Much as he could take most things in his stride, he was unprepared to be further back in the land of memory. It took half a heartbeat for him to feel how much he missed those days, though he of course wouldn't have known it at the time. For how insufferable many of his colleagues had seemed, it had been the first time in a long time that his life had meant more than suffering.

He knew the memory the moment he was in it, so profoundly that he found himself moving as he had at the time, despite his free will and despite the fact that to him he stood as he was now, not the being of the time. With his gifts he didn't so much age in the linear sense, but the memories of the intervening years still weighed on him. When she touched him the sensation was akin to the brief flashes of a warm life before he was turned into the murderer he had become. She was sunshine rising over the horizon and the smell of Spring.

"It's Logan." He managed to reply, less gruffly and dismissive than he had tried to sound the first time round, his eyes following her such that he almost missed that look from Xavier, the look that the original time over had always put ice between the two men. He didn't much care for the presence of those who did not belong behind him. He didn't much care what was going on, the memory was as real as it had been the first time. That was until he touched down on the ground from the ramp of the plane and his eyes fell once again on Xavier. Jean was speaking with him as she had at the time, breaking down what had occured, in her ususal manner, not that he'd known it yet, ignoring any reference to just how much the ordeal had overstrained her. Xavier wasn't watching her though, despite Jean acting as if he did. His eyes were on Logan, and within them blazed a true flame that had never been there. Not the cold, controlling look that rankled the Wolverine, but cosmic furty.

Phoenix

It hated him, and in that moment he knew, it feared him too. Good.

He took steps towards her, reaching for her shoulder as he felt the true heat of wrath thrumming through the air.

"Jeanie, we need to ta-"

As he touched her, speaking a name that was years in advance, and her young, pretty smile turned in confusion to his actions,reality spun about again.

"It's me or it's none of us! She screamed at him, the angriest he'd ever known her. As fresh as her smile had been on the jet, her anger was just as intense in this moment. He recognised the space shuttle around them in a flash, although as before not all of the inhabitants were those who had truely been there. The new X-men, the suit, replacing and alongside those who had truely made the journey. Now it wasn't the anger of the Phoenix Force which threatened to consume him, but her very real anger. Without his advanced senses, those which let him known in the tilt of her form and the gentle musk of her human body that she concealed feelings she would admit to no one for some time, he would have sworn at the time that she had begun to truly loathe him. If this was Jean, or simply his own mind, to the being infront of him this was as real as it was a memory to him.

"Jeanie, I don't know what's happening, but we need to wake up, you need to wake up." He spoke to her, reaching for her, a motion that only seemed to repel her and enhance her fury.

"I told you, it's Jean, and what nonesense are you trying now!? You do not get to do this, Wolverine, I cannot doubt, if I do, we're all dead, and not all of us get to come back from that." In retrospect, that was a highly ironic statement from Jean Grey, but he did suppose back then, fleeing from the Sentinel Station, it had made rather more sense then now.

"But you didn't doubt, Jean Grey, you were right, and we lived, we made it home. We won." His hands gripped her now, forcing the woman to remain in place, trying to hone her mind, if it was indeed her, a fact he couldn't doubt, back into the present, into reality. The pressure immediately thrummed in his head as her mind set to forcing him back, off of her. It was an awful feeling, not just because his metal bones hummed with the force of her power, but of making the woman he loved feel the need to do so.

"Enough! Get in the pod like everyone else, you are not different. I have tried to be kind, but you are....insufferable." Even in rage she was impossibly diplomatic, even as her mind threatened to pull him apart, and the window for her to act in the memory shortened. He could feel her desperation, and almost began to doubt it himself. If this was real, he was about to damn everyone aboard all because he wasn't going to let Jean go. As he told her, no time to doubt, and with a snarl, he fought through the wave of force battline against him and squeezed his arms around her. He felt her shriek of anger builidng, and then...

Nothing

Logan blinked as he emerged from the void into the sight of the Sun rising over a sparkling sea. It was a view he didn't recognise. He stood upon a balcony, attached to an apartment far nicer than any he remembered staying in. Below the sea lapped at the base of the island as he performed his daily ritual of watching the new day.

How did he know it was an island?

Hands laced around him, gentle, elegant hands that looped over his shoulders, and he felt the press of lips on his neck. He didn't react, pull away, but found himself slinking into her warmth.

"You're always up so early...it makes me feel lonely every morning." Her husky, morning voice, purred in his ear as she nuzzled him, her body pressed to his.

Home, this felt like home.
Logan would have appreciated the suit's discomfort if he had anymore positive feelings for the Mutant government than he did Washington. Instead he simply had additional people to do his best to ignore. Thankfully it would rather cut down the travel time.

When they arrived, he immediately felt it. Off in the distance, the rhythmn of that song, drifting over the horizon. He didn't hear it, he felt it. In his mind, through his body, down to his adamantium clad bones. He shimmered with the memory of the long years, of pain and loss and joy. All at that song.

And you leave on your own

"I didn't leave, Jeanie." When he spoke, the world around him ceased to be. The present medled into the past, into the rolling estates of a school he had once called home. Of course, she was there waiting. Every moment he beheld her she seemed to flicked in a different time of their being, from the young woman he'd first met, to the blazing conqueror of the cosmos, and everything in between. Perhaps his mind couldn't settle on who Jean Grey should be to him, perhaps neither could she.

"I didn't leave." He spoke again, as much to himself as to her, stepping forwards, impossibly drawn to the woman he had buried, buried on the ends of his own claws. Any distance melted in a moment, before his arms met around her, pulling her to him with as much force as he could bring, the surge of her hair cascading around his senses. He could not bring himself to question, not for now, not for this moment. For this moment she was back, and she hadn't left.
The Council of Nikaea
Interim
The Great Reception Hall


Almost silently, three more figures entered the room. Two Astartes of the Daughters of Iron, headed by the representative of the Sixteenth, made their way through the ornate doors of the chamber and took up positions near the wall, mutely observing the proceedings. They were bedecked in raiments inspired by traditional fashion of Kayaamat, preserved and cherished even through its many wars and the degradation of its natural biosphere. Ayushmatki, standing well below the heights of her two companions, wore an elaborately embroidered dress that hugged her form. Intricate layers of silken thread in a dazzling array of reds and blues, golds and silvers snaked their up to rest upon her shoulders and hips in a low cut, provocative display of bare skin and ornate tattoo work. Behind her trailed a strip of the same fabric used to secure the garment around her waist, its painstakingly woven patterns forming a shimmering trail that seemed almost as a living river of stars when she moved. The Astartes, her bodyguards upon Nikea, were clad in similar attire. Their heads and bodies likewise adorned with the same unusual swirling tattoos, and the distinctive hairstyles favored by many in the far distant stellar empire were striking to see worn by the Astartes of a space marine Legion - a tribute to the origins of the first inductees to the Legion, drawn from the underhive gangs of Kayaamat on which the Primarch herself had built the foundations of empire.

Though they had come dressed for the occasion in such ostentatious outfits, the three seemed visibly ill at ease. Ayushmatki had set herself a mission that night, a mission in blatant disregard for the orders of her own Primarch. Instead of lying low and in wait, she had donned the most flamboyant of clothing in hopes to seem as if she belonged at the party - keenly aware as she was of the growing resentment of her presence in the absence of Eiohsa. As well, Saravata was a region that had seen the near annihilation of its noble classes - and with them, high society such as this. Regal clothing, opulent rooms, such were utterly foreign to the women from Saravata, and Ayushmatki alone seemed comfortable with even the clothing she wore, let alone the sights now arranged before them and the task at hand. As such, Ayushmatki and her guards, Kumari and Devaki, remained almost motionless against the wall, seemingly hoping to blend in and go unnoticed.

For once in his life the Primarch of the Eighth sought to match those representatives dispatched from the Sixteenth Legion, entering the hall of light and sound without fanfare and indeed without his usual boisterousness to go before him.

As was his wont he had come alone - his subordinates having better things to do with their time than attend functions - his olive complexion nonetheless offset by a knee-length tunic of the purest white, edged at cuff, collar and bottom with a shimmering cerulean blue, his upper body meanwhile encased in what his people termed a lorica musculata, an armless cuirass formed into the shape of the Primarchs own torso bearing upon its silver-faced surface scenes of battle and victories in miniature. On his head remained perched the laurel wreath, a sign of his legion and his people, while his feet continued to be covered by a pair of sandals sized for his towering personage.

Moving into the room at a pace and speed that likely seemed somewhat overactive to others, though perfectly normal to himself, Kaelianos plucked some Mithran dainties from a nearby table, smelling them and then allowing them to circulate within his mouth for some moments before swallowing, all very much to his taste he had to admit; a goblet of something found its way into his other hand, and upon further inspection he found it to be a wine not too dissimilar from a vintage found on his own homeworld! A surprise to be sure, but a welcome one.

Grasping a few more pieces of food, he proceeded to take a seat not completely out of the way, but instead from where he could observe everything…

There he could see dancing couples, a number of his siblings included, while his brother Augor availed himself of a select group of rather important individuals, and Ayushmatki continued her duties of apparently doing very little but remaining still… no, that wasn’t right… she and her sisters were doing much the same as he now did, watching and noting everything.

Popping another foodstuff into his mouth he momentarily forgot to consciously keep track of things, even if his subconscious still continued to run and absorb as it always did, finding that the food here was delicious and that he would need to acquire more than one recipe before the gathering was over.

The crescendo of the first waltz of the evening ended with as much flair was one could expect, the elegant form of Sekhmetara tuned into another spin by her brother, longer then the last with the shimmering cloth of gold of her gown catching the lights about her, before she fell sideways, carefully choreographed so in the moment, into a catch from the other primarch, the Mithran primarch laughing and patting Wode’s arm at the success of the dance.

“Well danced, brother, though I shan’t keep you forever, I would not like to risk Nelchitl’s claim of having the most noteworthy dance of the council.” She chuckled, returning to her full height, just as the momentary lull in music was replaced with a voice she knew well, but never grew tired of hearing in song.

Wode took a step back, and bowed to his sister, a gesture that was as sincere as it was consciously poorly executed. “I don’t believe you about not wanting to risk that, but, dissemble if you must, Dear Sister, I know the truth - you’d love the attention either way. I’m going to make sure my boys aren’t trashing the place.”

Sekhmetara was silent for a moment, regarding Wode before she drew in closer again, her voice a pleasant, but dangerous purr. "We all want it, we were born for war and glory, some of us just feign ignorance." As she pulled away from her brother-primarch she placed a kiss to his far more grizzled cheek, drawing away with both warmth and a strange sense of menace. In another blinked was moving away, the long trail of her gown shimmering behind her.

He laughed, striding away to where Grieg was attempting to climb a table, Saul egging him on. The smaller man was wearing an empty punchbowl, and the Astarte’s service khakis were smeared with the sauce of god only knew how many dishes. Wode’s laughing turned into berating, shooing them away from their hijinks the way one might shoo a cat.

As the dance had reached its crescendo another pair of dancers moved in fluid motion, from skill of movement and learning rather than the gifts of superhuman ability and recollection. Even as Wode had spun Sekhmetara, Kvasi led himself and Catalina into a true waltz spiral, their feet gliding around each other in a motion which turned ever faster. While his hold may technically have been bad form, that had been entirely deliberate and in all other details he performed as well as any High Terran noble. He released her only right at the end of the dance, coming apart to bow to Catalina, right at the heart of the presence of the dancing primarchs, even as the song of his true born sister began.

The excitement of the moment, of sharing the dance floor with such divine beings as the Primarchs, would have been enough to drive any Terran High Noble to tears where they stepped. But Catalina was not Terran born, and she was no regular noble. Rather than collapsing into a puddle of shear emotions like most mortals would have been liable to do in her position, she summoned up the same mental shield she used when she piloted her exalted machine. A shield of her own soul, strong enough to keep the murmurs of the minds of untold pilots that had piloted her Knight before her from devouring her mind. Though only this time she used it against beings of such dazzling existence it was nearly not enough.

As Kvasi spun her faster and faster, she began to lose sight of the demigods surrounding them, though the feeling, and the knowledge that they remained proved nearly as dangerous as the sight. With a start they came apart, her dress whipping around her as she came to rest bowing her head to her partner. Lifting her gaze she couldn’t help but to smile as she huffed for breath, the beauty of the woman before Kvasi, though far outscaled by the beings surrounding them, was undeniable in her radiant smile, the brilliant sparkle in her eyes and the rosy red filling her cheeks.

"I hope you know a faster dance, my lady, I do not think my sister would summon my other to have her sing the drawl of a Terran waltz." He grinned, resuming his hold of her, his fingers tracing softly down her back rather than simply resuming their position. "Although you do dance as dangerously as you hunt." He spoke with a grin.

“I can dance more than a waltz Kvasi.” she grinned as he came back to her, his hands proving to be even more scandalous than earlier as he spoke. With a laugh Catalina took herself out of his hold and hooked an arm into his own before leading him from the dance floor, “I’d love to continue our dance, but I must admit, I don’t want to share the floor with the two of them dancing together.” she inclined her head to the forms of Sekhmetara and Daena taking the floor. “I’m afraid we could never compete with that, my beauty and your charm notwithstanding.” she joked as she grabbed a glass of something bubbling from a passing server.

For the first time in a considerable while Kvasi’s attention drew away from Catalina as she motioned towards the twined night and day of Daena and Sekhmetara. Even with the familiarity born of so much time with his adopted sister it was not a sight a mortal being could shake off easily and he was a moment behind Catalina in recovering as she stepped away. When he did turn to follow her, a warm smile had spread over his features. It was good to see his sister enjoying herself in the company of her other, grander family.

"I don't disagree that this is no longer the arena of mortals, but those are two things I could never discount." Kvasi grinned as he returned to her side, lifting a glass of amasec from a different tray as he did so, sipping the drink as they came back together. As if not time had passed and they were still dancing, one hand of his hold returned, as low as before, pressing to her well into the steady transition to emerald upon her dress. "One could suggest that if mortals have no place here any further, it might be our duty to find somewhere else to be."

Her drink swaying slightly in her hand, Catalina regarded the demigods taking the floor with a wistful envy as Kvasi returned. His hand slipping back into place she could practically feel the blood rushing to her cheeks as he spoke, “Surely you’ve misspoke Kvasi.” she said quietly as she pressed herself more into him, “You mean to miss such a spectacle?” she teased.

“When you spend much time with Sekhmetara, you begin to learn that every moment is just another spectacle waiting to happen. If you don’t find the time to find your own distractions, you’ll spend your life gawping at her.” Kvasi grinned, his whole form drawn close to Catalina as he sipped his drink, moving the glass languidly slowly as he did so, his eyes not meeting her’s, but instead nakedly moving up and down her form as he examined her as to the point of his words. “It’s a relief, in a sense. In their presence, we can do what they want, and no one will even notice. It’s rare people like us get to feel that freedom.” Even as he spoke again, his words were punctuated by sips of his drinks and further enjoyment of her appearance, his hand squeezing gently as he continued to hold her close, exhaustingly so in the crowded confines of the ball.

“So it would seem.” Catalina agreed as Kvasi came in close, all the tradition and decorum she’d been raised on simply melting away. Her hands moving to clutch at him as he spoke. Far faster than Kvasi, the Seneschal of House Cadaval finished her drink and planted a light kiss on his cheek. “So Huntmaster,” she began as she traced her fingers down his flank, “ let he find somewhere else to be.” she agreed with a laugh before she took the lead for the first time that night, her hand clasping his as she pulled him from the dance floor and toward the exit with a grin.

Before Isabis had taken up a greater role in the organisation of her fellow remembrancers, she had earned her particular fame through the art of music, composing songs that enshrined the great works and conquests of the Imperium. She did so on the merits of her own voice, and it had proven too great a waste for Sekhmetara to bear to not have her perform in some way. First her voice stood alone, a flowing song which shattered the usually rigid and archaic nature of the High Gothic she sung in. Then the instruments of the evening kicked in, and Daena’s prediction about Sekhmetara’s plan for a higher pace of music proved correct, even as Sekhmetara approached the lady in question.

“Lord Usriel, Beloved Sister, I trust your dance was not too much to bear?”

“I will say that I enjoyed it, despite my lack of knowledge of such dances,” Usriel answered, his face as stern as ever as he turned to face the Mithran Primarch.

“Our brother is a splendidly swift learner,” Daena praised, favoring Usriel with a smile. “And he even indulged me in my excesses,” she added, turning to Sekhmetara. The thinnest amount of power bridged their minds, the two sisters continuing the conversation privately. A discordant haze of amusement, frustration, and a flurry of images ranging from a martial parade ground to a pile of shorn rose petals flowed between them, resolving into words. One of his auxiliaries has eyes for him, the situation has developed more than he seems to realize, she thought to the Mithran, letting her eyes guide their mutual gaze towards the glaring form of Belloris.

How terrible for her, all this time and yet I am the one to peel him out of his armour. Sekhmetara fostered Daena with a wry grin as their thoughts shifted through the air, a practiced display of imagery that became words only through the depth of their bond and power of their geneforged minds. Despite her mocking tone, the Mithran primarch looked thoughtful for a moment, full lips pursed as she no doubt incorporated this new information into the web of social connections in her mind. I hear from Nodis that he will be attending us on the return to Obscurus. She mused to Daena, but did not add further to their psychic connection before she smiled to both Usriel and Daena, speaking again in the physical sense.

"I am glad you were both such good company to each other, although I do hope you won't mind me stealing our lady Daena, Usriel. She did make me promise." Sekhmetara spoke with unbridled joy and no little amount of mischief as she offered one hand towards her sister.

“I’m afraid she speaks true,” Daena said, smiling softly as her attention turned away from Belloris. “Even I can be moved to jealousy. It would not do for only one of the ladies of Praxia to have a renowned dance after all,” she explained, inclining her head towards the distant figure of Wode, who was arguing, loudly and with much profanity, with Grieg about the merits of sickle-pattern versus box pattern bolter mags.

“As you wish,” Usriel said, bowing his head to Daena before speaking directly to her, “I pray that all our future meetings be as pleasant as tonight’s, Daena. Now if you will excuse me, I must deal with my serf.” With those words, the Primarch stepped away from the two and made his way to Belloris, arms crossed behind his back.

“He will need to handle that, one way or another,” Daena said with a sigh, shaking her head at their clueless brother before finally taking her sister’s hand. “Now, what was that compliment you paid to me?” she asked in a far softer voice, her other arm pulling Sekhmetara close as the two moved their way to the center of the dance. “If the sun and moon each rule their own sky, then together we are sure to blind them all.”

"On Mithra it is known as the Kupatwa, when Sun and Moon dance, sisters who can only embrace after the turn of centuries, for mortals to look upon it would blind them." Sekhmetara spoke with both reverence and mischief as she drew closer to Daena, melding into her hold as the music swept through them, her adopted sister’s voice melding with the dance of her gene-sister. The pace was too fast for the formalised waltz, the music chosen to bring the guests together in a way they might refrain from usually. Sekhmetara and Daena needed no aid however, their closeness born in more than proximity. As they danced, Sekhmetaea found herself, in her mind’s eye, on Terra once more. When it had just been them, that was all that mattered. Despite her greater height, Sekhmetara allowed herself to be lead as the submissive half of the dance for now, her sister's wings more than making up the difference. She remembered well, Daena smiled far more often back then. When she gazed at her sister now, she felt a spark of joy as the ghost of that lost sister returned, inhabiting the mournful soul her sister had become. "I must give you something bright before all this is over sister, a piece of me to take with you, even when we fight apart." She laughed softly, just between them.

The sisters' thoughts remained in tune even with the closing of their psychic connection, Daena’s mind following Sekhmetara’s own. “None who have gazed upon the face of the sun can forget it for so long as they live,” she replied, her wings slowly lowering her down as they melded into the flow of the music, lead naturally passing from one to the other as her own memories of their time within the Palace welled up inside of her. “Do you remember our debut? Your first dance, with one of father’s generals. He had to conquer worlds for the right, such is Sekhmetara. So tell me, what gift could possibly compare to you?” she mused, by now having settled firmly upon the ground, forcing her to crane her head up to look into her sister’s eyes. “Not that I’m saying no,” she finished with a private laugh of her own.

“And how many worlds have you conquered since sister? Father sold me short.” Sekhmetara’s response mirrored her sister’s laugh, her form easily stepping into the role of the leading party, her hold easing the strain on her sister to remain looking up to her as they moved together, becoming the mote of motion upon which the other dancers turned.

“Is that jealousy I hear in your voice?” Daena teased, relaxing as lead was passed from one to the other. “Father did give you the right to request who you wished to dance with, rather than giving it as a prize. You would never though, would you? You were ever the dutiful daughter, all too attuned to the needs of politics and court,” she added wistfully.

“You speak truly, but gifts are not replacements, they are icons. A standard of affection to bear. That is a much harder spoil to win than a dance.” Sekhmetara turned Daena into a graceful spin, before pulling her back to her, with enough grasp of her muscular arms to shudder the motion even through her fellow Primarch, but never enough to disrupt the fluid rhythm of the music and dance. “I preferred the nights we ran off into the city. Now those Terrans knew how to dance.” She laughed with mischief, a noise that would no doubt be described as a private giggle was it not reverberating through the gene-forged perfection and grand scale of a primarch.

Daena remained silent as Sekhmetara spoke, resting her head on her sister’s shoulder after being pulled back in. Memories of their wilder days put a smile back on her face, the shorter Primarch beginning to glide and skip across the floor as her wings slowly came back to life. “Of course you only remember the nights, and not the mornings afterward. I don’t think I’ve ever seen Malcador so upset since, you’d think we had found something they were ashamed of,” she said coyly. But all of that only served to build her confidence enough to ask a question she had yet to voice. “Tell me though, what is a fitting icon for the sun?”

“Only because we were his favourites.” Sekhmetara spoke softly, in a conspiratorial whisper, a theatrical grin on her features as her lips brushed by Daena’s ear, as if they were all children hiding secrets from each other, how they should have been raised, together. “I think he feels a lot of pain for what Terra has become, something lost from the time of his own youth, or perhaps one of his visions.” She mused softly, their dance turning more gently as they discussed personal matters, the Mithran primach’s thoughts turning to the rarely considered emotional soul of the man who sat at the right hand of their father.

“That is the problem with suns, we are incomparable.” Sekhmetara’s whisper became playful once more as she answered her sister’s question. “On Mithra we have many symbols for such things, maybe I can make a gift of one of those for you.” Her tone suggested she felt that idea a little uninspired even as the turn of the dance continued, Sekhmetara stepping in and out of the trail of her own gown to cause the light of it to shimmer around her. A lesser being would surely simply tangle themselves, but the primach created a sea of silk and gold around herself with ease for a moment, even while holding her sister.

A distant part of Daena’s mind, ever thinking and ever calculating, worked unconsciously to weave her own body such that the light from Sekhmetara’s gown caught upon and reflected from the diamonds studded upon her own, the Primarch making sure to put on a worthy show even as the sisters whispered to one another. “It should remind me of those days,” she responded in a soft voice, her own mind focusing on the closest thing that they had to a shared upbringing. “When we were together, at home.” She made no attempt to hide the yearning in her voice, the desire to return to a when that never was. “Give me something to remind me of how things should have been, Sekhmetara.”

For a moment her words were delayed, not from a need to focus, but a desire from Sekhmetara to be in the moment, to watch her own light shine from her sister and to take in the admiration of those around them, before she drew close again to speak. "What should that be sister? A scornful portrait of Malcador….a recreation of those radbikes we stole….the entire contents of the Lex Imperialis as we read each day?" She teased, but not cruelly as they spun. "Maybe I shall conquer a world for you, all to build a house upon a lake so that we can be alone, together, again. Just us." She mused for a moment, before adding. "And maybe a select few others." As her good humour remained however, she took her sister’s request to heart, already deciding what the gift might be even as they danced together.

For a moment Daena too said nothing, exulting in a precious moment in which she could forget the horrors of unending war. The smile on her face only grew through Sekhmetara’s incessant teasing, fond memories coming to the fore with each one. “I’m sure that you can think of something,” she said offhandedly, too caught up in her own reminiscences to give a proper reply. As she did, the height disparity between the two seemed to vanish, the Angel shamelessly taking advantage of her affliction to glide off the floor and look her sister in the eye. “Do you remember the day I finally agreed to take you flying?”

The Mithran primach laughed softly as her sister took wing again, and her joy only extended at the question, her eyes settling evenly with Daena’s, "I remember more than that, I remember the struggle to convince you. For a while I thought you might be the only person who could refuse me something for so long." Sekhmetara’s eyes gleamed with a victorious mischief as she spoke. "Tell me of my final victory."

Daena rolled her eyes at her ‘older’ sister’s impertinence, taking a small measure of revenge by stealing the lead. The Angel twirled her sister about, her feet now freed entirely from the ground, as she relented. “We were supposed to be studying, but you had insisted we could do so just as well in the gardens,” she said in feigned outrage. “You somehow managed to convince me of that each day, and each day you somehow managed to find a different garden. But I remember the one we were in on that day. It was open to the sky, and you saw… how did you put it? ‘A mountain that yet defies me’,” she continued, her voice dropping into Sekhmetara’s huskier tone. “I have no idea why I agreed to take you there,” she admitted with a small shrug, rising even higher as she did, the floor becoming less firm underneath the Mithran’s feet. “Perhaps I was born to see you conquer.”

As Sekhmetara left the ground, the trails of her sleeves and gown descended, like swirling ribbons of golden silk trailing from her. With pinpoint grace, she allowed one hand to trail away from her sister, framing the swirling sculpture of their dance while her sister’s genehanced ability enabled her to hold the other primach aloft with but one hand. “There is none other with a better view, than the one who does so by my side.” She smiled, closing her eyes as she gave into the motion, her mind’s eye filled with an observer’s view of the two turning together, the psychic impression of the whole room washing over her as a tide of emotion. “There was no mountain on Terra that was worth conquering, only you.”

Outwardly, the mechanical motions of keeping Sekhmetara aloft as the living centerpiece of the celebration proceeded with an almost mechanical precision. Such was the importance placed on the performance that Daena compartmentalized the act itself, leaving her mind to deal with her sister’s incessant teasing without impacting the show the two were putting on for the entire galaxy. “Sekhmetara the goldentongued,” she murmured back, attempting to regain her mental footing as their physical rapidly receded beneath them. “But you’ve gone too far this time,” she added in a sudden teasing voice. “What glory is there in a provincial heathen oracle more accustomed to barbarians than courts?”

"There is glory in everything I do, dearest." While her expression remained serene in the outward performance of their soaring dance, Sekhmetara’s tone was full of the usual smirking grin such a comment would be accompanied with. With languid grace, the Mithran primach arched her back, one arm outstretched, she plucked a glass of wine from a passing tray from above, downing the contents in a manner which still someone expressed elegance before setting the used goblet down on another passing gilded tray.

With a deft agility belying the greater size of a Primach, Sekhemtara seemed to spin and turn back up her gown to Daena’s hold, one hand touching her cheek again. “No court that would reject Daena io Azrael is worthy of Aurelia, none of them have wealth richer than the blessing of Onwa.” The name of the Mithran Moon goddess slipped from her lips in a particularly conspiratorial whisper, before the true grin finally returned to her features. “Let me go, Sister.”

For those with the eyes to see through the blazing light of sun and moon entwined upon one another as they neared the hall’s vast ceiling, a faint blush was visible upon Daena’s face. Stunned into silence, or perhaps merely choosing to remain so out of prudence, the Angel obeyed her sister’s wish. Eventually.

Higher and higher they flew, the light emanating from and enhanced by the Primarchs growing ever brighter as they neared the grand chandeliers hanging from the ceiling. Only then did she obey, Daena spreading her arms wide as she released her grip upon Sekhmetara. Remaining within the air, wings splayed, the Emperor’s Angel could only watch as the huntress pounced.

Sekhmetara spiralled through the air, the height to which her sister carried her before releasing her hold allowing her to turn over in a full rotation before she landed. The sight would have been dramatic enough for such a gathering on its own, but the Mithran primach was not content with athleticism and grandeur alone. The soft silk of her gown seemed to ignite, shifting on her form. A mesh-weave underlayer forged by those of technological worth with enough whimsy to entertain such an idea springing to life, reforming the outfit in the time it took Sekhmetara to turn over and land on the dance floor.

As the weave swam over her form, gold shifted to a deep blue, the silken cloth becoming more akin to the more structured outfits of the Imperium. When she stretched to her full height once more, Sekhmetara appeared clad in an outfit of red and night blue more akin to officers of the fleet, or indeed the titan princeps, writ for her larger form. A hushed mumble rippled through the Princep onlookers who recovered their senses from the display fast enough. While more intricate in detail and ostentatious than any true uniform, the shades of the outfit were unmistakable to those familiar with titan heraldry.

Mortis

Sekhmetara glanced up over her shoulder. to her sister above with another grin. All matters of larger metaphor aside, the outfit was very much closer to her flying sister's own sense of dress from the evenings aboard the Ultis Solis, and Sekhmetara was not above enjoying the comparison. With a dip of her head to her dancing partner, she was back among the crowd, as much as a Primach ever truly could be.

Some distance away and to the side from where the Primarchs spoke, Saul Imogen and Grieg both recovered from their antics by the buffet table after having been dismissed by Wode for their revelry. The rest of the guests at the affair were giving the two a wide berth - between the Princeps and the retinues of the Primarchs, the most consideration the pair were afforded was a blind eye at best and dismissive scorn otherwise.

And then out of the crowd emerged the comparatively unremarkable Baron Sigveyr. He appeared to be having a quiet if animated conversation with his own servo-skull hooked to the base of his spine by a bionic tether. as he moved between the huddled crowds of attendees, but when he saw both Saul and Grieg standing off to the side of the chamber of their own he halted in his tracks and almost seemed to glance hesitating towards the skull. After a brief moment of indistinct murmuring he then approached the two, and despite the evident refinement of his own garb he seemed eager to converse with them.

“Hail, Lord Astartes.” He inclined his head to Grieg, seemingly not even remotely offput by his otherwise astoundingly grotesque visage. “And you as well, Adept.” He addressed Saul. “I am Baron Sigveyr Archarnon, a pleasure to have found both of you in all of this.” He gestured emphatically to the surroundings. “Forgive me if I am disrupting you, it is just as far as I can see we’re the only three proper soldiers here and I could stand to get away from all these Princeps and Priests and the like.”

When the newcomer had approached the Lancers and greeted them, Grieg almost lept out of his chair at the baron, his coal-train face in a rictus of anger. He’d opened his mouth to correct the man, but Saul, smiling faintly, placed a hand on Grieg’s chest, stopping the Astartes as surely as if it were Wode doing so.

“C’mon Grieg, no one gets the rank right the first time.” Saul said softly, “I’m, what? One of two humans in all the legions with Astartes rank? It’s a pleasure to meet you Baron, I’m Saul Imogen.”

“Grieg.” The Astartes said, calming somewhat and sitting back down, “Of the Tenth.”

“And I mean, I wouldn’t worry about disrupting us, sir.” Saul said, looking up at the man. “We’re mostly here to disrupt everyone else, it seems, but one weakness of the Pact is that we’ve put very little thought into diplomatic reception, unlike… well.”

He jerked his head in the direction of the beautiful, peerless figure of Sekhmentara. “It’s not Lord Wode’s style, nor mine, if I’m being honest.”

“It is a little bit more mine, as you can see,” Sigveyr indicated his immaculate bodyglove and long coat, “...but after I left Caelrumoste - my planet of origin. A Questor Mechanicum world - that sort of thing just...lost all real meaning. This is the first real social gathering I have attended in decades.” He treated the two Astartes to a morose smile. “What about the both of you? How has the voidborne lifestyle been treating you?”

Saul smiled back, and Grieg seemed to soften some from his initial hostility. It was still Saul who spoke, though. “I can’t lie, friend, it’s not great. I never did much spacing - in fact none - before ah… before Arnie met his father, I guess.”

“Gives me gas.” Grieg said, chuckling. “And a headache fit to split my skull in two.”

“Yea, that.” Saul said, laughing. “It’s not agreeable to my system. Some people were just meant to live on the ground I guess.” He cleared his throat.

“You said a Questor Mechanicum world, that’s…” Saul furrowed his brow. “That’s the High Gothic for the Knight walkers, right?”

“Yes - though not to be confused with the Questor Imperialis.” The Baron added hastily. “I am a pilot myself - although before that I was a muckslogger. Knight worlds are not quite so backwards as reputed, but we do indulge in a plethora of ancient traditions. Including amassed cavalry charges and bayonet lines.” His look went distant and his smile turned from morose to fond briefly as he recalled something before reorienting.

“Right. Right so it’s the Questor that’s the important part.” Saul murmured. He continued. “I mean, they can’t be that backwards, right, if there’s battle walkers like that walking around?”

Grieg chuckled, his ugly, diesel-engine laugh. He’d clearly had more experience than the human Lancer in that regard, but said nothing, letting the derisive response speak for itself. Saul rolled his eyes at him. He spoke again.

“We’re learning, at least I am, that some forms of war thought obsolete on Salient, that’s where I’m from, mind, live on in other parts of the Imperium.” Saul continued, “Am I to take it that you rode a horse before a knight? Or were you leg? Ah, I mean… infantry.”

“Both. I was originally a spearman - not even powerspears like that Praetor of yours presented in that one hearing, just sharpened Adamantine alloy believe it or not.” The Baron nodded. “Back before our Compliance they were made of some common carbon-based metal I forget the name of and somebody like me would have rode an actual horse - I understand they use actual horses on Questor Imperialis worlds. On Questor Mechanicum worlds, or at least mine - I hail from Caelrulmoste by the way, although I doubt it is well known enough for you to have heard of it - we ride on sulphurhounds. A gift of sorts from our patrons in the Mechanicum. Ever seen them?”

“Presented.” Grieg smiled. “I spose that was a word for it. I heard Kohl drove the damn thing through the lectern he was given. Doesn’t like speaking tours, that one.”

“Does anyone in this mob?” Saul asked, though the question was rhetorical. Grieg simply shook his head. He took in the Baron’s explanation of his world, shaking his head to confirm that he had not, in fact, heard of Caelrulmoste. That was no great insult in the Imperium, as the Lancer was fairly sure Salient was similarly backwater.

“That’s fascinating, Baron, and yes, I have heard of the sulphurhounds. We actually had some on Salient, though we called them ah… auto-horses, if I remember right. A lot of technology like that survived on my planet, though somewhat degraded through years of copying and iterating away features we couldn’t understand. They weren’t as hardy as the ones you rode to war, the rich mostly rode them in the streets as a sign of status.” Saul laughed, “Ground cars weren’t flashy enough, I suppose.”

“Salient!” The Baron snapped a pair of fingers. “Yes, I suppose you would have to be from there - pardon my saying so. The name was eluding me, but that must have been Primarch Arnulf Wode’s planet, yes? I hear he rode to battle with the Omnissiah himself in his tank. Any truth to that?”

Saul blinked, not quite prepared for someone to recognize his planet, but, then again, he kept forgetting Wode was a lot more than just his friend and fellow officer these days. “Right, I’m still not used to people recognizing the name, sorry. I’m gobsmacked.”

“I can tell you one thing, sir.” Grieg spoke up, “He sure fought like a fury. Atop that old Baneblade of his. Never missed a shot. Killed the old Legion Master in his first shot, he did, passed right through his Predator like it was so much tissue paper.”

‘Yes, you must be talking of the Return to Sender.” Saul said, “Wode’s personal tank. It’s an old, old tank sir, I’m told it’s had quite the service life. It was ah, passed down in the merchant house army we served in since the Long Night as I understand. Destroyed when the Emperor found us, of course, but Wode had the thing repaired when the Lightnings became the Pact. I’m not sure how much of the Omnissaiah lives in such things, I’m not very spiritual in that regard, but it’s a relic all the same.”

“A relic baneblade. I’ve only ever seen the standard patterns in picts.” The Baron shook his head in wonder. “Can’t even fathom what his must be like…” Abruptly, a sly and mischievous expression flashed across his face. “Say, I do not suppose your Legion has any of its tank detachments down here in the depot area?”

Saul smiled. Ah, now he knew where this conversation was going. “Oh, of course. We’ve brought a surprising amount considering the diplomatic nature of the Council, but the plan was to bundle it up for transport once… certain deployments were confirmed. We’ve got the Sender here, as well as the Fellblades of the First Company here, along with a great deal of our Predators, our Sicarans, the gun motor carriages…”

Grieg cut off his friend with a hand on his shoulder. “He’s tryin’ to say we got a lot of it, if’n you wanna see. Includin’ the Baneblade.”

“I would be honored.” Sigveyr treated the two to a modest bow of the head and chest. “And, if you would be so interested - the Ordo Astranoma also has a full Knight Lance planetside if you have an interest in seeing them in return. Perhaps we could even bring a few of our officers with each other, have them broaden their horizons a little?”

“I think that would be lovely.” Saul said, standing up to shake the man’s hand. “You might even draw Arnie - Lord Wode, I mean, out of the depot if there’s a chance to see a Knight up close. He’d never admit it but he loves those machines, the way a child obsesses about prehistoric carnosaurs.”

“Carnosaurs - I don’t suppose those are like Wyverns, or Drakes?” The Baron mused as he gestured to the side, and the three of them began walking towards the exit, his words getting caught up and lost in the murmuring of the crowd.

A lot of murmuring. Too much, in fact. The Baron could only stop then, along with perhaps all others idle conversations, as the loud blaring of trumpets engulfed the hall.

Total silence followed, only broken by again another blaring string of trumpets disrupting the dancing again. The great hall’s main doors were swung open, and a teeming ensemble of characters - a combination of shining armour and bright colours, had ordered and filed themselves on either side, forming an arch aboves themselves with halberds carrying flamboyant colours and iconography.

Thorny Roses. Fleur de lis. Bees. The colours of maroons and pinks against backdrops of greys and bronzes. The Primarch of the Seventh Legion, Nimue Arcadia, the Fay Enchantress and Damsel of Engraila with golden light preceding her... had arrived.

Her arrival, far, far too late to be fashionable or appropriate could only be balanced out instead by the sheer outrageous audacity of it all. Free from the Emperor’s immediate gaze, Nimue could return to her usual, smug, all-attention grabbing self.

After-all, while regrettably perhaps she was too late for the dance and to greet Sekhmetara on more polite terms, it was never too late for a party-crashing.

The trumpet blew again for good measure.

“Yer right, now instead of this pomp and pageantry filled mess we can get a real event going now. Should we call her out on it and see how it goes now wee muffin?” the bear of a primarch growled out with a toothy grin down at the warrior woman beside him.

“Hail Nimue!” shouted the mortal guardsmen in unison, probably IA elements of Nimue’s own troops, as the Celestial Inheritor’s Primarch passed under the arch of polearms - more pikes really, so to actually form an arch above her superhuman height. The Primarch was still wearing the attire that she had attended the second session of the Council of Nikaea in, only it seemed that the armoured segments and curaisse had been removed and replaced with yet more frills, cleavage and a gleaming golden corset-bustier like combination designed to be as attention-stealing as possible, aquila birds engraved into the bustier so to deliberately draw attention towards them. This was Nimue in full “yes, Sekhematra, that piece is such a lovely design” modus.

Nimue, and the four Astarte retinue that followed, each with their own uniquely glossy, gaudy or provocative appearances, passed now into the hall proper. Nimue was glad to see the murmurs became nervous whispers or hesitant bows and curtsies. The Primarch and her retinue then quickly turned to scanning the hall for the Primarch of Tears, whom Nimue had her business with. Finding, somewhat irritably, that her elder sister was not immediately present, she instead drew her attention to the few mortals that moved themselves to the front of the throng - confident, rather than hesitant in her presence.

‘Salutations, good sirs and ladies’ Nimue said, more specifically to those confident few, but in politeness to the rest of the crowd. ‘I must beg forgiveness for my interruptions of this fine event’ she said, with little to no actual remorse aimed at the attendees. ‘Carry on if you will’. Even though she said these words, none continued, except a few at the back and, somewhat unsurprisingly, one of her sibling Primarchs who continued his dance.

‘Honoured Primarch, welcome’. Announced one of those who brought himself to the front of the throng. It was a man with well-disguised augmentics around the back of his head and wearing fashionable and ornately regal highborn attire - the colours, she knew, marked him as a delegate of the Knightly House of Devine, a house closely linked to her own Legion. She recognised this man, even, after some brief moment. The irritated heir, angered by her stealing his beloved half-sister and, as part of Molech’s customs, sister-wife for her own Legion.

‘It is a splendid sighting that you are present, Sir Raevan. I would have you know that your sister and Adoratrice Drakina of Molech, Lyx, is well and serves with glory and honour as thy own right-hand. It is unfortunate that she is not present here, however I assure you that this tragedy may soon be resolved in some manner…’ Nimue suggested, indicating her intention to assemble further Devine resources for her campaign, including perhaps Raeven and his Banelash Knight Errant.

Other than the Devines, and speaking to her sister concerning the matter of Augor’s contemptible lieutenant… She also intended to gather resources for her upcoming campaign against the Intcomese, Mitu and the mysterious Benefactors. Specifically - she required a Titan Legio, something that this party was, after all, designed to facilitate. It was for this reason, even as she spoke with the Heir of House Devine concerning the well-being of his sister-wife, she had psionically commanded her Equerry Elizabeta to seek out representatives of the Titan Legios so she may speak with them. Of those she sought, the most desired was the Legio Defensor, who she had worked with before during the Kynarzarid Campaign. She had, to some extent, fond memories of the Princeps and Ordinatii of that particular Legio, her talks of religious principles and philosophy with The Princeps Guillame Ferre being comparable to similar talks she had with The Sol Invicta while Nimue was on Terra.

Clad in her reforged outfit, Sekhmetara made her way steadily towards Nimue after her arrival. Unusually for her, she remained mostly hidden, quite willing to frustrate her sister's efforts to find her using the architecture of the room, and the forms of her own siblings to do so, given the remarkable inability of any of the Primachs to hide in crowds of the rest of humanity. Still, once her fellow primach was allowed to bask in the presence of the peacock-like Devine for a few further moments, she approached, moving into view with a smile that was both warm and edged with mischief.

"Sister I would bemoan you for lateness, but your timing is fortuitous, I was almost bored of the room's whole attention," It was of course a lie on multiple fronts, but the pleasant feeling behind it was true as she closed the remaining distance to Nimue, leaning to press a kiss to each cheek of the paler primach before leaning back, her eyes moving up and down the presented form of her sister, at first with a look entirely of appreciation before her eyebrow raised at the particular use of the aquila.

Nimue, too, having all but forgotten Raevan Devine's presence with her ebony sister's approach, smiled, and engaged the greeting kisses - her face showing somewhere between a self-satisfied smirk and genuine cheer. It was the shared expressions that the two sisters knew of each other well. They were... close friends and yet rivals. Companions of years on Tera yet always measuring each other's greatness against each other. Advisers and confidants, yet holding many secrets. Helpful, yet competing.

"Darling-Sister, you are looking marvelous as ever, and 'very' patriotic." The personal sigil of the Emperor was, of course, a great honour to bear, one that the Primachs themselves would fight over. Sekhmetara couldn't quite decide if she felt excited or slighted by her sister's choice for the party. She decided on the former as a slight smirk graced her features. "Such an honoured place they sit, too." She laughed slightly, almost a girlish giggle as one onyx-skinned finger traced over one of the eagles, albeit just shy of truly touching. "I am glad we could meet again without the room being filled with angered yelling, at least for now."

'It is as I have always said, Beloved Sister' Nimue announced, shifting into a pose, easily swayed by appeals to her vanity. 'That we should express our love of The Imperium just as its people express their love of us. Though, as much as it honours them... I would have you know that it honours you too' if Nimue was speaking of the Aquila or other things now, she did not elaborate. As she spoke and observed her Mithran's sisters' own eye-movements with a self-assured sense of superiority, she too made similar - if yet unspoken, judgements. She eyed the details of the golden markings across Sekhemetara's skin. While she did so, her mind's eye sifted through the crowd of onlookers, gauging them, measuring, to see who's attention their eyes fell more between them. It was how their game was played. Who’s name was more gloried, whose dress drew more eyes, even who’s bustline was more impressive, it was these infantile fights that characterised their sisterhood - and truthfully, it was one of the truer, humane relationships she had with her Primarch-born siblings.

‘’Yet still, indeed. I too am glad of this… good fortune” Nimue said. Her words were pleasant, but also conspiratorial. She glanced slightly and knowingly to the Primarch Usriel, who was doing his utmost best to ignore Nimue’s presence entirely. ‘I will deign to keep this peace, as it is not my intention to breach it here, not without cause certainly’. Nimue’s ‘peace’ of course, did not include her sudden and abrupt assault on the hall’s ears.

"Peace, sister? Never that, this is just a more civilised kind of hunt." Sekhmetara laughed quietly. Before her change of attire, while remarkably different, her outfit had been of similar approach to Nimue’s. Revealing yet grand had been the theme. Now she struck something of a contrast with her sister, the sleek military-lite look of her clothing against the more direct ostentation. In many ways, the contrast did more to highlight their similarities than conceal them, particularly as Sekhmetara slipped her own arm within Nimue's, standing together as she surveyed the room alongside her, allowing her to mutter an even more girlish, teasing comment, "The Emperor’s Eagles are noble indeed, they carry a great burden." It was evident in her tone that far from making fun of her sister but instead playing to their shared sense of mischief. She allowed the good humour to remain for a few moments, before speaking more seriously.

"You have something to say, Fairest, you were looking for me and much as we both appreciate a good entrance, there is much going on, do speak freely." Her tone remained friendly as she moved on to the nominally more important matters, even as her fingers squeeze Nimue's arm in a show of familiar affection. "Time to heed the wisdom of Sekhmetara once more? Or a more direct request?"

“It is, as you expect of course. While I would certainly never seek to miss a talk of beautiful things with the Mithran Sun... unfortunately, I come to speak of far uglier things”. Nimue glanced towards her sister’s eyes, giving a brief pause so that her sister would understand and brace herself. Her expression was still bright, the self-satisfied smile drawn but diminishing from Sekhematara’s particularly unique form of playful observations. Those who surrounded them and the few that dared try to pry knowledge only saw two demigoddesses, arms intertwined and likely reminiesciening of the past. But to those in the know, Nimue’s eyes squinted ever slightly in disgust, the slightest pull on the corner of her lips. Her pose no longer self-aggrandizing her chest but more neutral. It was a similar pose she took when speaking on ‘best behaviour’ in the presence of the likes of Micholi.

“Would the name Corneceus Sicanus mean anything to you?” Nimue asked, the words spoken polite and formal to nearly any observer, but the sheer fact that it lacked her usual signature hauteur or gloat told the sole true recipient of the seriousness of her question.

"The Stargazers apothecary?." Sekhmetara’s voice did not drop any quieter, already a conspiratorial whisper, however her tone shifted from jovial teasing to the rather more serious matter of political intrigue, a battleground in which she had few peers. "I cannot admit to knowing such details about all legions, but that one has made quite the stir. Not the most popular of names. He is present, or so I have been told."

The intricate web of informants the Mithran had woven could do far more than pick out individuals at so grand an occasion as the council, a web whom the majority of actors did not even know they were a part of, tugging on the strings. "Do you have further secrets to spill?" The slight tease of her voice return now, a hint of a smirk as she drifted yet closer, more intimate, to her sister. Nimue was a capricious creature, and keeping her mood light would no doubt help to keep her own improved.

“It is quite simple, really.” Nimue suggested firmly, though her slight relief at being acknowledged apparent. “The man’s acts are abhorrent to any who hold values beyond those of mere utility. My daughters who were butchered by his grotesque meddling need be avenged… but you would know well that I cannot simply take this matter to Augor, for he surely must defend his charges as strongly as I must mine… however, nor can I bring this matter to The Emperor,” a brief pause, the aftershocks of the second council meeting, certainly “for reasons you, Beloved Sister, have likely heard of by now. For this reason, I wish to petition you instead, to speak on my behalf.”

"My my, sister, it is not like you to be shy." Sekhmetara jabbed, if gently, her lips practically at Nimue’s ear as their hushed conversation continued, before she craned back a moment, her face a picture of consideration even if her answer was nere truly in doubt. "It was a matter I wished to bring to the Emperor in any regards, although I would have otherwise left it to those more directly affected by his overreach. It is a matter I will seek a short end to." She nodded at last, further allusions as to the idea of her false choice, made well before Nimue had even spoken the suggestion.

“My desire is a duel against the man, Sicanus - so to teach him respect” Nimue finished, hand clenched into a fist for dramatic purposes.

At the suggestion and the gesture, Sekhmetara laughed with enjoyment, the gently pleasing notes of humour drifting much wider across the room than their quiet conversation, looking at her sister with genuine appreciation of the theatrical. "You do not need the Emperor’s permission to seek redress of honour, I am sure, but I will ensure that he does not seek to halt it for matters of unity. More pressingly, I will make sure he impresses upon the Stargazers this is not to continue with or without their chief stitcher." As the Mithran primach finished speaking, her fingers shifted to grip a drink from a passing tray, now a red wine, spiced with the modifying Fenrisian herbs, to which she took a drink, holding the servant in place with her half-attention so that her sister could claim her own should she wish, only to find that Nimue too had already taken a wine from the servant, the glass held dainty in a hand that had only moments before been clenched in righteous indignation.

"Is that all or must we ‘main severe all evening? I am in the process of teaching the joys of pomp and circumstance to our siblings but they still wilt in comparison to us, we must try to at least have some fun while duty permits." She laughed again, quieter this time and with no true suggestion that she did not equally enjoy the matters of dramatic justice they had been discussing.

With the matter of Sicanus now given certainty in the eyes of Nimue, as quickly as it came, the edge of seriousness vanished, sated with the promise of soon to be delivered justice and the further tasting of wine. “That will of course do, Dear Sister… though, perhaps, I question your endeavours here then, for our Siblings would always wilt compared to us” Nimue then joined her sister’s laughter with her own haughty peal, their arms not holding glasses of wine still intertwined, Nimue then redirected their gradual steps towards the general location of some of their siblings “but even if they cannot be taught, certainly, it is always an opportunity to demonstrate” Nimue shared.

"Sometimes there is honour to be found in struggle, even if the goal is ever out of reach." Sekhmetara flittered one eye in a wink to her sister as they moved about, arm in arm. The Mithran primach made sure to note any of the particularly important Princep guests as they passed, although the presence of these two particular Primachs had an impact on the wits on even the augmented minds of the titan legions. Nonetheless, primachs were not difficult to find in a crowd, and the pair did not have to hunt for long.

After their dance had concluded and Daena had done her part in Sekhmetara’s designs, the winged Primarch had retired to consult with her own lieutenants. Shortly after the trio had been dispatched to consort with those Princeps the Angel found most amenable, she had the peculiar fortune of raising her head to regard her two siblings sauntering towards her, arm in arm. Raising herself to her full height, she girded herself for the most formidable combat yet.

“Darling sisters,” Daena said as she approached, her voice more guarded in tone than its contents, “‘tis like we are back in the Palace.” Nimue’s pomp and ceremony, and her provocative dress, did little to upset her calm composure - it was, after all, expected. “I trust our host has been a fine escort?” she asked Nimue politely.

“Ah, Daena! There you are. I almost didn’t notice you” Nimue’s tone was saccharine and cheery, as Daena stood out obviously amongst the collection of Princeps. “And yes, of course, Sekhmetara has always been the most gracious of hosts…” Nimue then however looked over to her side, glancing to her arm-entwined sister.

“Though, if it were truly just us three once more, I am sure our sister would instead be hosting us to another of those ‘adventures’ into sewers and what-not, rather than the Palace”. It was, while less considered, a matter of fact that Sekhematara’s Terran adventures did not always include merely dragging along Daena.

"That is either an admittance that you enjoyed them, or that you were willing to do something purely because I wished you there. I will take either." Sekhmetara grinned to Nimue as she spoke, before addressing both of her sisters. "If only we could, much as that might be a tradition of ours to finish off a gathering in such a manner, I feel we would only find smoking rocks and primordial wasteland here. A stunning view, no doubt, but hardly one to replace what we have here." Her latest glass of wine was already finished, her now freed other hand adjusting some of the long sweep of her dark hair. "If I could go back I would instead suggest we go on a greater number of escapes from the Palace. Our lessons could be learned at any time, we had such a finite time, the three of us together."

“Perhaps another time then, when present concerns are less… explosive,” Daena said cautiously, taking her own glass from a passing servant. “I do hope that you’ve been enjoying yourself, I know how keen you are to make an impression,” she added, turning to Nimue. “Is there anything else that could make your time more pleasant, sister? I would like to think that we can be civilized.”

“Dear sister, your presence here has made this festivity pleasant enough already… although, pray tell, I did notice both your absence during the last session of this… spectacular Council. You two were up to something… civil… I hope?” Nimue asked with a quizzical narrowing of her eyes, and the motion of her pointing and middle fingers to her lips.

“Far more civilised than what occurred within the chamber no doubt.” Sekhmetara replied with a similarly mischievous expression, her eyes alight with taunting enjoyment. Rather than delve further into the issues, the digits of her fingers squeezed Nimue’s arm gently, as the Mithran primach nodded towards the general crowd. “On the note of civilisation and our great charge to spread it, we should certainly make sure you do not leave tonight empty handed, Busithanda.” Sekhmetara’s spoke to the sister she was linked with, the sweet Mithran delicacy something of a pet name for her elegant sister, her eyes already moving across the crowd in search of a prime target. Much as Nimue had predicted before, the evening continued with Sekhmetara dragging one of her sisters away, although this time back out into the crowd of the party, her warm smile a parting gift for her winged sister.

It would be impossible to say the sisters prowled through the crowd, the towering figures of the extravagant demigods entirely unable to hide among the shifting groups of those invited, but certainly a hunt was on. With a momentary pause, Sekhmetara’s focused narrowed on a small group of the more impressively dressed mortal guests, red and black dappled with yellow. The representatives of House Ignatum. They had few rivals and were largely uncommited thus far, a situation that had interested Sekhmetara greatly untill her as-yet-unrevealed master stroke. More importantly, however, they would be entertaining.

“My Lord Princeps.” Despite their scale, Primachs could move with quiet grace when they needed to, and with the help of the noise of the crowd and music by the time Sekhmetara spoke the pair where behind the Ignatum representatives as they spoke and laughed with those of lesser houses tied to them. The principle repressentative of the Legio, a not entirely unimpressive man by the name of Enkir Morova turned hastily at the sonorous tone of Sekhmetara’s voice. While no doubt used to a rather diffferent dynamic in social interactions, even a Princeps was stunned to engage with the sight of a Primach so close and so suddenly, let alone two, let alone these two.

“Your….. My Lady Sekhemetara Khafre, My Lady Nimue Arcadia, to what do we owe this honour of your company?” While his words momentarily failed him, his actions did not, the well kept posture of the man dipping into a smart and formal bow as he addressed them, taking after the fashion of Imperial nobility over the Martian Priesthood which some Princeps favoured. Sekhmetara smiled a little more kindly at that, a habit of greeting she much preferred, dipping her own head in a far less sweeping motion.

Nimue however, in typical Nimueian fashion, did not bow, rather she placed her hand out lazily towards the Princeps, her palm facing downwards.

“Why you, of course” Nimue said, gesturing slightly to her outstretched arm in expectation of subservience.

Nimue’s actions earned another grin of amusement from her sister, even as the Princeps, only slightly shaking, digits took the Primach’s in his own, tilting her hand towards him before his head bowed to place a kiss to the alabaster of her skin.

“A man like you, unclaimed? The indignity. I am sure I could put you to.. Far better uses” Nimue gently breathed, the meaning of her words muddled, perhaps intentionally, by the odd phrasing the Primarch used. This would hardly be the first time.

The unclear meaning of Nimue’s words no doubt passed through the mind of the Princeps like a thunderclap, a moment of doubt as to whether the situation could even be real. Nether the less, a mind built to withstand the rigours of bonding with the ancient machine gods was quick to recover, a gentle, if proud smile spreading across the man’s features.

"Our Legio fights upon as many fronts of the Crusade as any other, and we earn glory and honour upon each, but it is true, the maniples under my direction have yet to swear ourselves to any new deployment since Ullanor, although we are now once again at fighting strength." As with any of the greater titan legios, their order of battle was impressive even in the realms of demigods, and a princeps of his caliber could not forget to mention this, even when under the crushing attention of two scions of the Emperor. "Should we be assured that our talents would be put to good use, it would be our privilege to be directed in how we might do so by the Jewel of Arcadia."

"I just knew you two would get along." Sekhmetara practically purred, giving Nimue’s arm another playful squeeze as she spoke, her eyes drifted across the other princeps of the Legio that waited as their commander spoke for them. "And fine company to, I am sure."

Outside The Hall


"This is a breach of the covenenant, we should not -" The voice of the Moderati Primus was cut off by a dismissive noise from his Princeps. The command crew of the Dies Irae waited beyond the main hall, the decorative attire of their ceremonial uniform gleaming with the honours earned by their Titan and Legio, yet their mood was sour.

"Enough, Aruken, the time for such protests is past, we will not allow them all to see any weakness." Princeps Turnet did not turn to look upon his seconds as he spoke, adjusting the the line of allocades on his chest before resting the spoke of his cane upon the stone floor. As with any Princeps, his mortal body was weakened with every communion with the god-machine, and no more so than the enraged call of the Dies Irae. To be forced to walk the world in a fragile shell after spending so long joined with the ancient being of an Imperator Titan was particularly galling, and no amoung of music and fine wine could entirely distract from it. "We have earned honour upon honour, and will continue to do so."

"No Legio of our history has ever been assigned wholesale, we are supposed to be allies, not servants." Despite the warning, the Moderati continued, if only to be interrpted a second time by his peer rather than superior.

"Have you behled a Primach, Aruken? A moment in their presence and you will find it laughable we could ever see ourselves as equals." The pair were close friends, but in many ways could not be more different. Ambition against duty, Mars against the Imperium as a whole. Still, their differences aligned to create a perfectly functioning command team in the roar of combat. With a dismissive sigh, Princeps Turnet looked to his personal chronometer, before signaling the pair behind him with the tap of his cane.

"It is time."

The Grand Reception Hall

The entrance of the representatives from the Legio Mortis would normally have sweapt through a gathering such as this, of prime power and influence as they were. In this chamber, however, it was many moments before they were even noticed. The pull of charisma, personality and sheer physical force that the primachs represented allowed for the entirity of the room's attention. Eventually, however, the whispering began as they neared the epicentre. Where the primachs forged space without effort, the space cleared for the Mortis crew to move with ease through the revelling throng occured through reputation alone. The Legio Mortis had vassals and rivals, they possessed no peers.

In but a few moments the trio had reached their destination, coming to a half in the presence of Sekhmetara and Nimue as they spoke. The Mithran primach had but a moment to smile to her sister, knowingly, before untangling her arm and turning to face the group face on. In direct comparison it was all the more obvious that the outfit the Primach now wore was akin to those of the titan crew, writ large and stylised by her form and preference.

"Lady Sekhmetara of Mithra, Honoured Primach of His Majesty's twentieth legion, The Unconquered Sun." Princeps Turnet spoke with genuine respect, dipping his head. The withered man had remarkable stoicism in the face of one of the Emperor's scions. The rage of his god-machine burned in his mind and purged him of doubt. Whatever punishment the folly of his superiors had brought upon the Legio, there were few Primachs with the scope of conquest Sekhmetara could claim.

"Honoured Princeps, I welcome you to our father's halls, for there are no stauncher allies of his crusade." The Mithran did not bow her head, but the warmth of her smile still washed over the command crew, as she outstreched one hand, palm up, towards the Princeps.

Without hesitation, Turnet moved to place the cane he held in the enlarged palm of the Primach, who's elegant digits soon closed around it. There was a long pregnant pause as the identity of the rod became evident. The command scepter of the Legio, writ with the emblazoned skull of Mortis' heraldry. "We do so pledge our service to your fleets, your enemies shall be our enemies, your allies our allies, and none shall stand before the fury of our wrath."
"I reckon if it ain't you or yours, there's no damn way you can trace who that is. Besides, woulda just said, it's a good song." Logan didn't particularly want to terrify the man, but that didn't also mean he was entirely against doing so. It was always good, is his mind, to keep up a certain reputation. Made it all the more easier to scare the suits when he needed to. Rather than directly answer the man and his concerns, and questions, immediately, he instead chased the scant remaining food around on his plate for a few long moments, scraping up the scraps of his meal before pushing the plate away.

"Seems like the sort of place I'd expect you folks to be watching all 'round the clock anyway, lest some poor mutant kid gets the idea he matters to people beyond some far off island he's never heard, starts a movement, gets people thinking." Logan tapped the table repeatedly, before he stood, flexing the knuckles of his hands as he did so. A reflexive action, feeling the shards of adamantium beneath his skin, rearing to be set free. Men in suits always made him itch like that.

"If you're lying about Jubilee, either your or whoever fed you that line, I'll be lodging a complaint." The tone with which Logan spoke the words instead suggested he'd be lodging something sharp and painful rigth up someone smug and superior. "You can tell me more about what some crazy alien is ranting about Jean Grey on the trip down the mountain. Give me five." Without another sign of recognition, Logan turned to head further into the cabin. As was his nature, he always kept a go-bag ready, it took him less than half that time to acquire it and sling it on, he additional minutes he spent gazing into the mirror of his bathroom. He'd let himself get reasonably rugged again, even if he hadn't quite devolved into the wild thing that the X-men had originally found. With a growl, the claws of his right hand extended, puncturing through his own flesh with a flash of pain that one could never quite get used to. Shaving raw wasn't much next to that, the worst of the tangles and errant length in his beard trimmed away on the sharpened edge of his own blades. He rinced away the blood and hair that fell from him, watching again in the mirror as the minor knicks upon his features healed and sealed before his vision. He spat once in the sink, before turning.

Guess they'd dragged him back in again. Despite everything, he still needed to find new ways to say no.

Back outside he caught the nervous mortal human still waiting, and grunted to him.

"Lets see if with me guiding it doesn't take us all day to roll back down a bloody hill."
For the earlier portions of the man's spiel, Logan did little to acknowledge what he spoke of, instead focusing on tucking into the freshly prepared meal, determined to finish it all despite the much superior quality of two out of three of the constituent foods. The topic interested him, but that was an obvious play, they knew it would. Did he think they would entirely lie just to drag him out out of his home? Unlikely, not these days anyway, but there was always the possibility he wasn't getting the whole truth. Scratch possibility, it was highly likely.

The mention of Jubilee was another probably-true-but-obviously-selected element of the briefing that finally turned Logan's focus up from his now almost entirely finished meal, one hand drumming on the countertop as he examined Theodore for longer than a second for the first time, he was about to clarify if he was the first person they'd told that, before the phone rang again.

He was already moving before he was 'given permission' to do so, pulling the phone from its stand before answering again, this time not bothering with his own words first.


You could meet somebody who really loves you
So you go and you stand on your own
And you leave on your own


This time he let the growl be pulled from his lips after only a moment of losing himself in the song, eyes focusing on his visitor with more than a casual sense of hostility.

"If this is your lot, whoever your lot really are, quit it." He didn't hang up though, setting the phone down on the table to play. His hearing was good enough he didn't need it on speaker to pick it out clearly. It wasn't 'her' song, it was closer to home then that. It was the song she loved that made him think of her, the pain of her passing and the burden of trying to live how she would have wanted. His heart, aching with jaded rage at the world, felt the pull of every chord.

"You want me in on this, is that because you need someone good but expendable, or because you've already sent your a-lister and not heard a peep back? Hoping a connection to the place might help? Well, I hate to break it to yah bub, but Jubilee's as tied to it as any of the rest of us. Plenty of Avengers have made friends with mutants these dasys, why not drop them in and save you the trip out here and having to smell my air?"
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