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Newly arrived to join in on Warhammer 40,000 roleplays at the invitation of one of my friends.
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Slaughter of Sanctii

The Wail of Cocytus






Sanctii Catacombs

Gathering the survivors of the advance up the thermal flue was a muted, sober prospect. Stavin found that his count of the auspex’s active collar signals had, in fact, been optimistic. The auspex, after all, only counted collars that could detect a pulse.

And, as Stavin knew, having a pulse didn’t necessarily mean you were combat capable. Some men had concussed themselves in the drop. Others had sprained ankles, shattered legs, cracked ribs. Some had scorched hands, down to the bones. Others were psych-cases, so undone by shock or trauma they simply froze up. In any case, all had to be put down. Severina carried out this grim duty, and in a perverse way, Stavin was grateful to have the discipline mistress for this, if nothing else.

They were in the sharp end of combat now, the very tip of a brutal struggle for survival against an implacable foe. The normal rules of civilization did not apply. The normal rules of etiquette did not apply. Just as he was grateful that Severina was executing the men and women who could not carry their own weight, he could see the other legionnaires were grateful that they would not have to lower their own chances of survival dragging around the unfit.

No one would say it, of course. But they all felt it. They distributed the kit of the fallen, with particular care given to the photon flasks for the arc rifles, which were light, simple matrices that carried conductive metal in a thin film encased within a light sheet metal canister. Arc riflemen could carry enough ammunition for several wars on a belt. The radio-isotope slug clips of the radcarbines were the next priority, ensuring the rest of the war party wouldn’t run out. Then, food and water.

Duly equipped, the now one hundred strong assault party advanced into the catacombs of the city, their only guiding light the soft blip of the projected location of the thermal flue operating station.

-

Sergeant Whitaker and Caleb advanced into the darkness, Whitaker checking the auspex, shotgun slung over one shoulder, Caleb scanning the darkness for targets for his arc rifle. They had been walking for quite a while, inside a cavern that was only partially tamed by Sanctii development. Indeed, the only real use for this space was as pressure proofing for the city’s intricate thermal exhaust, with Imperial tacticians figuring that there would be minimal security or defense, if any. Indeed, there was no historical evidence a Terran hive had ever been undermined in such a way.

These facts shot through Caleb’s mind like hot tracers from a stubber, stitching into his grey matter, kicking up little rivulets of dust in his mindscape. Anything to keep his mind off the gnawing fear that ate at him every time he let his mind touch the full, awful reality he found himself in. It was his coping strategy, he decided.

If he lived, he decided, he would write an account of this action. Then history would know it was possible to breach the walls of a hive in such a way. There would be some memorial for the sacrifice they had made, he decided. If it was his book, then good. If that didn’t work out, then he’d settle for strangling the highest ranked Imperial citizen he could find with their own entrails.

Such thoughts would have horrified him, but that was a past Caleb. A dead Caleb. What dead Caleb thought about the world no longer mattered. Dead Caleb was dead wrong, and Alive Caleb would make sure he didn’t suffer the same fate.

Whitaker’s hand shot up. His Auspex began to flash, dots suddenly appearing behind the advance party.

“We’ve got company, Troopie.” Whitaker growled.

-

Stavin saw the advance element, Whitaker, call a halt. He relayed the order, having the assault element hold in place. Team leaders checked auspices, and saw the same information that had stopped Whitaker in his tracks.

“Get me eyes on these contacts.” Stavin said into his microbead. “Only shoot if they’re obviously hostile. I don’t want our cover blown because one of you gun apes decided to light up a crustaecid.”

Severina’s bolt pistol was in her hand. Stab lights on weapons swayed back and forth across the darkness, revealing nothing behind the assault element.

“Above us.” Severina hissed.

Stavin looked up. He could see a veritable horde of skittering, chitinous-looking bodies crawling across the ceiling. They easily outnumbered the assault party, but they didn’t seem to notice them. They were deep-cavern crustaecids to be sure, or maybe some kind of deep-ground arachnaed, obviously displaced from their homes by the queer geological vibrations caused by the chaos above.

Stavin was about to key his microbead, when, in the center of the horde, one crustaecid stopped. Despite their small size, it was easy enough to see, as the rest of the horde crawled around it, creating an image not unlike a small rock in the middle of a river.

A red light on the body of the crustaecid lit. It was then Stavin knew that Deep Winter had found them.

They weren’t crustaecids at all. They were some kind of drone.

“Open fire!” Stavin said. “Above us!”

The guns of the damned began to shatter the night.

-

“Troopie!” Whitaker bellowed. “You heard ‘em!”

Caleb swung his arc rifle up, pressing the trigger in anger for the first time. The gun hummed, lighting up along the vanes in the boxy barrel assembly. Caleb thought the gun might not be functioning at f-

CRRR-ACK!


The report of the arc rifle was like lightning, but inches from the face. The bolt of electricity, so impossibly bright and fast, slammed into the horde of crustaecid drones, frying what must’ve seemed like hundreds in a chain-lightning light show that put any thrash band to shame. The ceiling was illuminated in eerie red as the drone’s bodies all lit up, stopping their patrol to maneuver themselves to where they could -

One dropped onto a trooper. The trooper cursed part in pain, part in fright, grabbing at the drone.

Son of a bitch!” He wailed. “Get it o-”

Whitaker and Caleb were thrown to the ground as the trooper exploded. They scrabbled to their feet, backing away, firing with wild abandon at the ceiling now.

“Sergeant, they’re gonna fucking kill us!” Caleb shouted, and received a whack on his helmeted head.

Stow that, you bastard!” Whitaker yelled. “Keep fucking firing! Keep fucking shooting or I’ll scrag you before these bloody things could!

-

Stavin watched in horror as the sight Whitaker and Caleb saw repeated itself several more times.

Colonel!” Severina shouted. “Orders!

Stavin shook his head. So what if an all-powerful AI knew they were here? What was that against the murderous god that sent them into these horrible depths? Into hell itself?

Who knew hell better than the Damned?

“Advance to the objective! Bounding! Your collar lights will be set to green and amber!” Stavin bellowed into his microbead, hammering the commands into his auspex. “Green advances! Amber covers! When Green is past, reverse! Do it, by the numbers people!”

Order was immediately restored. Relief surged through Stavin as he realized he had made the right call at the right time. Like clockwork, the soldiers of the Damned poured fire into the advancing horde of crustaecid-drones, never letting them drop to the ground where they could grab a soldier and detonate.

The arc rifles were doing the greatest work; punching great gaps in the horde of automatons that even their ceaseless numbers had trouble refilling. The radcarbines were less effective, but they added weight of fire, and with the numbers opposing them the Damned could hardly miss.

Slowly, they advanced towards the objective. Slowly, the Damned purchased the progress that would grant them victory.


A man cried out in agonizing pain as Aeternus’ searing great blade bisected him. The plasmic edge of his weapon cut cleanly through personal shield and ivory armor in milliseconds. Their harrowing howling was cut short by Rex’s boot, firmly shattering the defender’s helmet. Brain matter and vitae ejected outwards from his armored soles, coating the Imperial black in crimson-pink fluid.

He slid forward, arcing his blade and cleaving into another group of Sanctiian protectors. Their defenses, despite the technological differences, fell short to his genewrought might and Apocrypha’s ancient plasmic nullifers. Surprise, horror, and anger shrieked forth from their helmets as their bodies slumped into an expanding pile of carcasses. The primarch swept his left arm out, venting hatred through the forearm-mounted weapon at nearby defender clusters. Explosions riddled the areas in which he fired, detonating into great balls of cobalt flames. Each burst of flame consumed bodies, unlucky auxilia, and unfortunate sentinels alike in uncontrolled fury.

One of the God-Slayers roared out as a trio of Sanctiians stabbed elongated, glowing spears into their opponent’s body. Helmetless, the thunder warrior grinned in delight as he threw himself back off of the wall. The defenders fell with him, shortly falling to their death along with their suicidal enemy. Aeternus had seen the same scene occur over and over again during this assault on the wall. How many of his warriors perished in this siege, he asked himself in a small moment of clarity. The thought diminished as another group of sentinels emerged from their towers, followed only by skittering swarms of malevolent drones.

“More are coming, commander! We’ve already lost squads Didact and Raziel, Nero is forsaken somewhere in the city, and Tiberius has already left the wall!” Caligula stated as he chopped into another protector, who bitterly fought back with equal genestrength. The first cadre captain rammed his helmet into the Sanctiian, momentarily stunning them and using the momentum to bisect them with his powered blade. “We’ve lost the wall! Any longer and we’ll end up losing you, Rex!

He knew better than most the futility of assaulting the wall, yet it had taken its toll on the defenders as much as the invaders. Many of the airships had been dealt with, some of the large-scale bombardment cannons had been silenced, and whole platoons of the Sanctiians had been defeated. Aeternus gritted his teeth in a mixture of emotions, threatening to break his own jaw in frustration. If only they had more time, more men, and more thunder warriors to deal with the invasion. Rex silenced the intrusive thoughts by accurately firing into the oncoming groups of defenders.

“Then it seems we’ve lost our edge as deity-annihilators, Caestus! Keep fighting, killing, and slaughtering to stall their advance.” The primarch demanded, raising the flat of his obsidian great blade to block a hail of magnetically-driven slugs. Each bullet melted on contact with the sword’s plasma-field, followed shortly by another spattering of wrist-mounted death from Aeternus. Those arriving sentinels backpedaled as their drones burst into flame, falling back into the cover of cadavers or broken turrets. “Temper your expectations and hope that Lady Amalasuntha is feeling particularly generous today!”

As the defenders fell into their cover, Aeternus removed a peculiar grenade from his belt and launched it high into the air. An explosion of crackling light mixed with clouds of phosphorus erupted from the device. In a synchronized effort, the thunder warriors on the Primarch’s portion of the wall began to coalesce around their commander. Bolters, disintegration carbines, and lasrifles bit out against the encroaching forces of Sanctii. The signal had been sent, clear even through the harrowing blizzard that tormented invader and sentinel alike. A signal that filled the invaders with hope and frustration in equal amounts. It was a call for retreat.


Aboard another of the airships, this time flanked by two other Venatari, Amalasuntha stalked through the cramped and short halls of the vehicle. They slaughtered near all the crew on this one, and yet it continued to spit death as if crewed by ghosts. The trio made their way to the command bridge, once more dispatching those stationed to fight them. There was no chance for them to save themselves as the venatari stormed the bridge, slaughtering its defenders to a man.

The Black-Hawk walked towards the view port, casting her gaze as the others planted Melta charges behind her. Her crimson gaze watched the walls of the damned city, knowing that it would fall no matter the cost for no abomination could be suffered. Yet, her head slanted ever slightly as she made out the form of a massive beast fighting in the wall like a Lion. She knew him, Aeternus, the only of his ilk to earn her respect for his loyalty and honor to the burgeoning Imperium. She watched as his plasmatic blade carved through a man - but his assault was futile as the defenders surged forth with renewed vigor once more.

“Shield-Captain, charges are set,” came the low voice of one of her compatriots, wordlessly exiting the room as if already knowing his future order. Amalasuntha went to turn but she caught a glimpse - Aeternus turning from the wall and abandoning his assault. Yet, he had overextended, she could tell in that moment that both he and his men were threatened with a most gruesome death.

No, Aeternus would not die here under her watch for the Emperor still had use of him and his legion. She spoke clearly to the vox, a voice clear of emotion, “Gunship Axium, turn to Wall Segment 8-A2, ensure that Aeternus has cover in his retreat.”

“Do you wish to dispense those waiting for landing or extract the Primarch?” The pilot asked, unhesitatingly.

“Negative, you need only give him cover,” Amalasuntha stated, turning away from the viewport to stalk out of the room. Her claws danced along one of the control consoles she passed, half-tempted to attempt to turn the guns of the ship on the city. Though, she already knew she didn't have the time or the means to properly do so, knowing she’d likely have to overcome whatever safety mechanisms the intelligence had thought to install. As the Hawk moved to rejoin her companions, she decided to relay a message to the Primarch, “Cover incoming. Retreat and regroup.”


One kilometer behind Imperial siege lines

The reserve force of Astartes, fewer in number after the withering bombardment they had endured, continued to stand as still as statues as they awaited the order to advance. While the gene warriors had scattered for cover upon being alerted of incoming fire from the enemy’s airships, nothing could have prevented every loss.

Here the superiority of the finished product told, more than one proto-Astarte having been a second too slow, reacting with an instant of delay that their siblings were not burdened by. Malformed secondary hearts took an extra beat to hyper-oxygenate the blood, minds dulled by the pain of extraneous bone perpetually digging into flesh were slower to process the warning. They were beyond anything human, but they were simply not good enough.

A full tenth of the First Legion’s advance force perished in the rain of archaeotech explosives, and of that number, half were of the older generation. The Legion Mistress processed this information dispassionately as she reviewed her smaller force, the arms of the dead having been stripped to match the proclivities of those under her command, inasmuch as any of them could be said to have personality. They were of the new imperial breed after all, and all that truly mattered to them was victory.

Standing in formation amidst their own dead, they waited to bring just that. They had been born and bred for this day, if not this mission, and if the thought that so many of them had fallen without having even seen the enemy gave them pause, they did not show it.


Thirty kilometers behind Imperial Siege Lines

While nominal operational command of the Sanctii theater had been entrusted to the Primarch Aeternus, certain concessions to practicality had to be made to coordinate as vast a force as was besieging the city. Especially with the situation having drawn the personal attention of Malcador, and through him, the Emperor. Over a million and a half souls had been dedicated to the effort, and that was only counting combat personnel, which meant that a great mass of humanity needed to be equipped and sustained through the grueling horror of grinding war.

Dwelling within a hastily erected command center well behind the auxilia’s artillery batteries, and protected by puissant void shields of ancient design, the minds that kept the operation functioning - greasing it with blood and rations as the situation dictated - held their court. Sigilites all, it was they who had conveyed the vast treasures of vaults best lost forgotten to this warzone, and it was they who kept a careful watch over the military commanders whom they had reposed such potent forces of destruction in. The Imperium, after all, only needed the one warlord.

“Life-sign losses among the 31-3 are congruent with a thermal exhaust event,” one of the junior scribes reported, having been ordered to determine the root cause of the sudden vanishing of so many so quickly some time ago. “Secondary losses most likely correspond to elimination of non-combat-viable elements.”

The Scribe-Intendant who he was reporting to pursed her lips slightly as she took in the news, her eyes gazing round the collection of robed scholars. “The time table was exact, attrition rates among the 31-3 were projected under the assumption that the majority would pass the flue. Explain.”

“It seems that our calculations of thermal exhaust events were…. Inaccurate. I have taken the liberty of rerunning the numbers, and the original estimate did not take into account the increased power draw prompted by the siege.”

Her lips pursed tighter, vanishing into a single thin line. “The scribe who provided the initial calculations shall be flogged once per instance of relic destroyed by this extreme negligence,” she said flatly before turning her attention to more important matters. “The worst case scenarios had similar attrition rates, based around the possibility that a sizable protection force was waiting in ambush at the flue exit. Presuming that this is not the case, the mission is still viable.”

“I would concur. The current rate of attrition suggests incidental, rather than intentional, opposition.”

“Very well. We will not initiate extirpation protocols yet, and instead hope that the remaining relics are retrievable.”

The surrounding scribes all bowed deeply as they went back to their work, cogitators humming as the mission trackers updated their assumption set. None seemed perturbed by the horrifically low survivor count, reassured by the soothing news that it was likely the majority of such losses would not permanently damage any relic weapons.


Credit: @MarshalSolgriev (Aeternus/God-Slayers/Sanctii), @Lauder (Lady Amalasuntha/Stygian Talons), @grimely (Legio I Astartes/Scribe-Intendant), @BornOnBoard (Colonel Stavin/Thirty-One-Third Penal Legion), @FrostedCaramel (Sanctii/The Administrator)
Slaughter of Sanctii

Blazing Assault






Sanctii AOR, Inside Thermal Flue A00034/76B

Five thousand souls trudged down the gigantic flue, each step kicking up a cloud of ash and carbon. Each member of the 31-3’s assault party wore a rebreather to protect them from the bad air quality, which the tacticae scribes assured Stavin they would definitely clog the lungs of an unaugmented human in seconds. They illuminated their way with high-lumen lamp packs, the beams cutting back and forth across the darkness.

Twenty minutes had passed, which was good. It meant they were five minutes from their designated exit points, a gap in the flues that allowed excess pressure and carbon build up to void into the cavernous space below the hive without stressing the walls of the flue. It was also why they simply couldn’t block the exit to the flue to get the same result - such gaps were spaced every few kilometers. You could strike the exhaust path with orbital lances, atomics, missiles, it simply wouldn’t affect it.

The flue, like all of Sanctii, was a marvel of engineering.

Stavin’s auspex began to beep at his hip. He unhooked it from his pistol belt, and peered at the screen, holding his lamp pack to it. The air temperature had raised. Ambient humidity had dropped sharply. The air began to smell charred as the carbon particles in the air gathered heat.

Stavin’s eyes widened. His body broke into a cold sweat. He was aware of the stink of it, trapped in his rebreather, which suddenly felt as claustrophobic as a casket.

Their estimate for thermal purge - it was flawed. He realized that now. He and the scribes had estimated this most critical detail based on the average geothermal power load of a hive the size of Sanctii.

Tell me, John, he thought. Is a city firing defense batteries and powering an entire defensive grid in wartime constituting the average geothermal power load?

He cursed, and keyed his vox as he began to run. Severina followed him.

“Colonel?” She shouted. “Colonel, what is it? What does the auspex say?”

All elements, double time!” Stavin shouted, “Go, go, go! Get on you bastards!

Shit!” Severina said, her legendary facade of bravery cracking. “Shit! I thought we had ten minutes!”

“We would if the city was at peace, Augusta!” Stavin shouted. Soldiers began to scramble with them, kicking up huge clouds of ash as they began to run for their lives.

_____

When Whitaker and Caleb heard the vox command, they began to run as fast as they could.

Other soldiers jogged, some even just speed-walked. What was the hurry? The colonel could sprint ahead and get a medal if he wanted. They jeered as Whitaker and Caleb passed them.

Only a few troopers took the Colonel’s warning seriously - they were running too.

“Never you mind them, Troopie!” Whitaker yelled, “They won’t be laughing when Sanctii turns the burner up!”

Caleb saved his breath. He would need it - wearing the rebreather felt like breathing through a straw. They shot from the middle of the pack to the front of it, and suddenly, the Colonel’s warning made sense. The tunnel, which had previously been quite dark, suddenly had a very bright light at the end of it, kilometers distant, but was putting out enough light to render everyone inside clearly. The air, still, began to move in a fetid breeze.

“Oh fuck!” Caleb shouted. “Oh shit! The vent! I thought we had-”

“We don’t anymore, Troopie!” Whitaker yelled. “Push on!”

Caleb, who had been flagging, felt fear surge adrenaline through his body. Tired limbs, stressed lungs, none of it mattered. His body had made its decision, and it wanted to live.

Other soldiers, that had jeered, or jogged, or lollygagged, now cursed or shouted or begged or pleaded in fear. A relatively ordered advance disintegrated into a pell-mell dash for safety, the pressure gap that for the slowest soldiers was a klick away, with only a minute or so to get there.

Not all were gonna make. Not even close to all. The tunnel began to get very hot. The breeze turned into a full on gale. The wind was hot, drying his eyeballs with the heat and pressure. The insanity of the plan now fully dawned on Caleb - they were not meant to survive at all. The assault party was 5,000 strong - a ridiculous number for a stealth raid - because they knew, they knew, that after the flue the amount of people left would be enough for the job.

The cruel insanity of the Imperium. The empty platitudes Caleb had filled his pamphlets with, those dry, stolid refutations of the Imperial Truth, of Unity, suddenly burned bright and hot in him. They made sense now. They mattered now. They were the truest things he’d ever said.

And to live, he’d have to discard all of those human sentiments. He would have to become as insane as the Emperor .

He and Whitaker were close now. They reached the gap and jumped, not even looking what was beneath them. Fortunately, they landed on worker’s gantry not ten feet below, a jarring impact that knocked the breath out of the both of them. They had landed on their packs, however, and their spare uniforms and rations had soaked up the blow. Others climbed the access ladders down, and some lept, landing on the gantries sometimes, sometimes missing, screaming into the caverns below.

When the flue vented, it was sudden. A roar with no buildup. A pillar of fire burned through the gap that Caleb had just exited. There had been men on the edge of the gap - gone now. So utterly destroyed not even ash remained. Men still on the ladders going down to the gantry suffered a similar fate, their torsos and heads caught in the incredible heat and pressure, burning up just a fiercely, though a millisecond or two slower.

The soldiers on the ladders, but not in the path of the flames screamed as the metal they held superheated in seconds. They let go, falling, landing badly, breaking legs, knees, necks. Some joined the ones that missed the gantry in the first place, falling into the depths. Caleb had never seen so many people die all at once. He closed his eyes against the horror, curling up and covering his ears as the 31-3 suffered their first, terrible casualties.

-

The slaughter seemed to go on and on, but when Stavin checked his watch after the flue’s heat dissipated, it had only been thirty seconds. The longest, most dearly paid for thirty seconds of his miserable life.

He checked his auspex, slapping the thing to get the display to show clearly. He switched it from atmospheric detection to collar signal detection. He cursed.

Of five thousand souls, about one hundred and twenty had made it. One company.

But they were in.


The alabaster walls of Sanctii stood before them as a mountain of otherworldly metal, yet the world around them remained consumed by the combined calamity of war and nature. The Urschic lands refused to bow to mankind, relentlessly whipping into a furious blizzard unlike any other. Where men and women hadn’t died to the vicious torrent of Sanctii’s defenses, the bitter cold and diamond-sharp hail sank through auxilia thermals and exposed flesh alike. Some fell mid-sprint as they finally succumbed to wounds, frostbite, and exhaustion. Others persisted through lakes of dead bodies, their uniforms caked in vaporized ash and blood. Their endurance had paid off as hundreds of thousands of auxilia still battered limb and rifle against the Sanctiian bulwark; however, it was in vain as the void shields prevailed against any and all attacks.

The primarch observed an entire squad of auxilia tossed from the top of the wall, slamming into the snow in a geyser of blood and ice. Several more individuals fell in a continuous rain of warriors, each dying either during their descent or on landing. He noted that none of the carcasses were his God-Slayers, perhaps they had managed to establish a foothold atop the Sanctiian defenses. Those useless thoughts were discarded from his mind, and replaced with the current situation at hand. Caligula had remained near him along with fifteen other gene-warriors they had rendezvoused with. Tiberius disappeared once they had successfully integrated with the frontline, venturing off to accomplish some unforeseen task. If the third cadre captain had been unreliable, then Aeternus would’ve cursed his name for such cowardice. Luckily, he knew what his fellow genewarrior was capable of.

Several red-garbed auxilia and thunder warriors roared in strained effort, a jury-rigged battering ram hefted amongst their number. It was a disgusting thing of precise, rudimentary engineering. A super-heavy battle tank’s primary cannon with several plasma cores, grenades, and rockets attached to the front end. The group ran forward in a suicidal attempt to breach the wall for good, cheers from other nearby soldiers driving them to further heights. The culmination of their efforts was rewarded with a beautiful explosion that quaked the nearby area. A hundred men began to swarm the area, believing that they had actually created their godsent relief.

Horror awaited them as the wall held strong against the improvised weapon of mass destruction. Hints of the shimmering shield only further drove their assault into new levels of despair. Wall-mounted turrets and Sanctiian protectors fired down from their positions, slaughtering those that had attempted to penetrate into their beloved city. Men cried, meat squelched, and armor broke in a cacophony of death. Aeternus refused to avert his dark eyes from the mass murder that occurred several meters away from his position. It sickened him that he couldn’t defy all of the odds set against them, but perhaps their deaths would mean something once victory was attained.

Aeternus! We’re ready to climb the wall. Tiberius reports success in attaining some degree of foothold, several other of our kin are with him. Fortunately,” Caligula began to rapidly speak as another group of thunder warriors joined their party. Archaic grappling gear was passed from their hands into the climbers awaiting gauntlets. Genewarriors swiftly affixed their armor with the components, assisting where necessary, and began their climb in earnest. “The path is clear for us due to a bloody wake, most likely made by Nero and his Despoilers. It is a calming thought knowing that he thought this far ahead!”

“Then let it begin.” The joke was hollow at best, and haunting at worst. Aeternus knew that he would one day have to deal with Nero’s affliction, but Rex was content with utilizing his genewarrior’s rage to achieve his goals. He affixed one of the harnesses to himself, a titanium tactical web of hooks, tethers, and diamantine spikes. Several footholds, cracks, and other embellishments in the walls became clear to him. Past attempts to scale the bulwark in the past hours had led to the continual success of their siege. The primarch turned one last time to witness the nightmare behind him before beginning his ascent.

The golden dropship of the Stygian Talons danced in the sky against the airships, while several jet bikes circled in flanking strikes with guardian spears and andrastite lances. His Destroyers, those that ambushed the aircraft from the ground, continued to shatter and break voidshields across the emerging fleet. Even as they died to blinding beams of supernova energy, those thunder warriors refused to falter in their perpetual onslaught. Hundreds of thousands of auxilia continued to rush from the backlines, pushed on by mortal commanders and great lines of battle tanks. It was an endless horde of onrushing flesh, marshaled by the greatest commander in humanity. The thought nearly brought a smile to his scarred lips, yet it was forgotten altogether as he began to climb the wall.

They fired on his position and those beside him as they climbed. His great obsidian blade, Apocrypha, seared with plasmic furry as he ascended the alabaster bulwark. Every inch that Aeternus climbed felt like a mile of mire-trudging as his refractor field sparked over and over again in protest. Other warriors, fellow wallclimbers that defied destiny, were not as fortunate as him. Beams of energy, disintegration rays, and iridium slugs annihilated those on either side of the Primarch. Wrath, fresh and hot, spilled into his body as his genewarriors unceremoniously died. He raised the weapon attached to his wrist, unleashing a storm of infernal rounds that detonated flesh and metal into cobalt flames. Even if momentarily, they were allowed to scale the wall with minimal resistance.


Credit: @MarshalSolgriev (Aeternus/God-Slayers/Sanctii), @BornOnBoard (Colonel Stavin/Thirty-One-Third Penal Legion)
Slaughter of Sanctii

Annihilation






Above the cacophony of esoteric weapons discharge, iridescent bolts and solid rounds, above the shriek of the void shields as artillery shells fell upon it in vain, a war horn blared. So deafening was the horn that amongst the attackers and defenders, heads turned to the direction of the noise. An incongruent shape, cast in the shadow of the hive, began to rise from behind the curtain wall as another horn blared some distance from the first, followed by several more.

Above the battlements, a wing of six airships rose to their combat heights. The crafts were clad in platinum armor, each were as tall as a habblock and several times as long, cutting lazy paths through the air as Imperial gunnery crews hurriedly trained their sights upon them.

A lance of redhot energy spat from a superheavy tank at the first of the airships, the beam connecting with impressive precision on the central structure of the vessel. An explosion ripped across the hull obscuring it from view as Imperials cheered at the kill.

A moment later, from within the black cloud, a searing beam so bright that it simply blinded any unlucky enough to have been looking in its direction, lanced out of the smoke at the superheavy tank. The cheers ended as the airship revealed itself once more on it’s ponderously slow track above the killing ground, the superheavy that had struck first now merely two melted tracks with no sign of the machine that once existed between them.

The airships, now at combat height, unleashed salvoes of energy weapons fire at the foot of the curtain walls. The remains of Imperial units that had been lucky enough to make it that far, mortal and Thunder Warrior alike, were converted into superheated vapor as the beams traced across the bloodied snow in beautiful hues of blues and reds.

Out further from the wall, the beams began to track through the advancing Imperials, and salvos of missiles were let loose from the airships. Sparingly, the missiles overflew the masses of armor and infantry approaching the curtain wall, instead targeting the artillery outside the voidshields and the masses of Imperial forces mustering to join the carnage at the foot of the venerable city of Sanctii.

It was at this in which the the perfected warriors of the Imperium turned back to the fight - sensing a use for their might in this battle. Jetbikes roared upwards, the ancient ship of the custodians lowered its ramp as it flew closer to the airships and out slipped eleven of the Emperor’s finest. The Stygian Talon moved as one, yet their electronic signatures became distorted as cogitators that tried to find the gene-warriors became filled with blight-codes and malign falsehood. Rounds slammed into the Orion, its flare shield coating the vessel an eclipsed black.

“Aeternus, vacate your position lest you wish these beast land upon you,” came the spark of Amalasuntha’s vox, sounds of beams screeching past her could be heard faintly in the background. Yet, any who looked up could see that the Venatari looked like gnats approaching these ships, almost two each. The Jetbikes flew circles around the guns of the airships swooping beneath their void shields to spit death through las and cannon upon the weapons of the airships.

Meanwhile, the venatari began forcing their way into the airships, ripping open hatchways or even using their lances to break through the viewports. Amalasuntha, for her part, unleashed her blade and carved through the boarding hatch of the lead vessel. Alarms blared and automated defenses attempted to offer resistance, but she moved much too fast. A turret dropped from the ceiling only for her blade to cut the connections, many were simply unable to properly target her as her personal arae-shrike confused their systems and made her impossible to locate. Putrid gene-warriors awaited for her at the door to the command room. Three fired an array of lightning whilst the others stood at the ready with horrid blades drawn.

Unable to dodge the lightning, the custodian’s refractor field sprung to life, absorbing the energy as she sped towards her combatants. The Black-Hawk rammed her shoulder into the first warrior to meet her, blade flashing to slice another in two. In her other hand, her misercordia came to life, stabbing upwards to tear out another warrior’s throat. She danced between blades, her opponents unable to find her as she met the three who dared fire upon her. One turned to run, but her deft movement saw her sword plunged through his back, leaving it there as she lobbed the head off another. The last of them fired his ancient weapon into her, even managing to breach her refractor field. Were it not for her masterfully crafted armor, she would have been grievously injured. He could not let loose a scream before her talons wrapped around his head to crush it.

Amalasuntha wasted no time, retrieving her blade before she began carving through the doorway. She heard panicked screams inside, orders being barked. Before any help would come she was already in the command room, throwing forth a Melta bomb before she ducked out. The explosion rocked the ship, the bridge had been ripped asunder and the blizzard found its way in through a massive hole where the officers once were. The ship began to lurch and Amalasuntha wasted no time as she flew out of the new hole she had just made and back to the Dropship.


Aeternus heard the screams from across the voxnet even before the Sanctiian airships had began their genocidal retaliation. A hundred-thousand men cried out as they died, slaughtered by magnetically driven slugs or deatomized by rays of horror. He felt nothing for their loss, each soul having given their lives in pursuit of Unity. They knew what they fought for, nothing could deter their Master’s goals. Nothing ever would. Rex watched as entire columns of sprinting, red-garbed auxilia disappeared in a manner of milliseconds under crimson beams of man-made calamity. Vehicles, support personnel, legionnaires, and more ceased to exist in their assault of Sanctii. And he felt nothing short of disappointment in their inability to climb a wall.

A ripping, tearing sound drew his attention back to the world around him. One of the Sanctiian protectors, a genewarrior in resplendent armor, had been desperately crawling away after being launched from the wall. Nero had found him first, hefting the warrior up and ripping him in half with his barehands. The second cadre captain screamed in delight, succumbing to the madness of combat and evicting himself from their cover. He disappeared into the battlefield, followed by four other God-Slayers. Caligula had tried to stop him, but Aeternus held him back to allow their friend to rampage. Tiberius sprinted from their already-faltering cover, eyeing the shattered remains of a bisected superheavy battle tank. The primarch, first cadre captain, and three other God-Slayers followed with all the speed a geneforged giant could muster.

A flurry of missiles arched in a hunting pattern overhead, aiming for the vulnerable backlines of their offensive. Aeternus calmly listened as the Forty-Third’s artillery platoons cried out in terror over the voxnet. Their howls were silenced moments later as a wave of explosions erupted with enough force to momentarily shake the entire battlefield. As their small formation of genewarriors found cover under the bisected wreckage, the familiar humming of shields emanated from the backlines. The primarch listened as the Imperials cheered, saved by technology courtesy of Malcador and their long campaigns across Terra. A short-lived joy, the airships tore through a plethora of the deployable shields. The artillery continued sending salvo after salvo in suicidal fury.

“... Aeternus! Where are these ‘Astartes’!? Why haven’t they joined the battle!?” The sound of Caligula’s angered voice drew his attention away from the voxnet. His tone was filled with frustration and betrayal as if the Astartes had personally offended him. Rex felt his ire rise at Caestus’ suggestive tone. They were the Master of the Line’s thunder warriors, what did it matter if the Astartes joined now or later?

“The Sigilite has given them a different mission. They won’t be contributing to the assault until the walls are breached. Trust in our Master’s plan, Caligula, for he has always steered us to Unity.” Aeternus roared, his voice as commanding as a waking lion’s. It was enough to silence his first cadre captain, but Rex knew that his old friend would fester on it. Tiberius made no comment, perhaps he understood the necessity of high-quality reserves in a prolonged siege. The Primarch’s helmet turned to address Tiberius in the same breath. “Give the order. We’ve waited long enough for our Destroyers to unveil the machinations of the Old Night. Once that is done, we’ll move forward three-hundred more paces.”

The third cadre captain didn’t respond, his hooded helmet dipping away to speak into his helmet-mounted voxcaster. Aeternus turned his attention away from the wall to several predesignated positions across the battlefield. Although many of them had already been claimed by the crimson beams, many more still survived to hear the call of their commander. Several groups of thunder warriors, three in each grouping, stood from their positions armed with an array of heavy, nightmarish weapons. Lascannons, laser destroyers, plasma cannons, disintegration rails, missile pods, handheld atomic mortars, and more unleashed a hellscape of munitions into the sky of Sanctii. Where the golden hovercrafts of the Custodes couldn’t reach, the God-Slayers could with an overwhelming amount of concentrated fire. Craftborn voidshields broke in a matter of seconds from the surprise attack, several more of the vessels sinking from the sky in blossoms of explosive furry.

Do not falter! Do no let the dredges of the Old Night batter your spirit! Fight in the name of the Emperor, fight in the name of Terra, and fight in the name of Unity! Raptor Imperialis! For the Emperor!” Aeternus picked himself up, pressed an armored foot against the tank wreckage, and kicked it a hundred meters forward with the force of an unhinged titan. His cohort lurched forward, sprinting in the shadows of the flying wreckage as it careened towards the wall. Turret fire, mugshots, and scything pulsar beams cut into the debris long enough for the Primarch and his team to advance closer to the wall. He heard the response of his cry over the voxnet, a near-million people shouted in unison to his call-to-arms.

For the Emperor!” A million people and more cried out in their suicidal advance.


Credit: @MarshalSolgriev (Aeternus/God-Slayers/Sanctii), @Lauder (Lady Amalasuntha/Stygian Talons)
Slaughter of Sanctii

Operation Winter Phoenix






Sanctii AOR, Outside Thermal Flue A00034/76B

Stavin checked his watch from the stubber-cupola of the centaur prime mover he rode in. If the deep-scan auspex and Imperial tactical planning had been correct, the next exhaust dump would be in 5 minutes. They had made excellent time, the 31-3’s assault element using the cover of the blizzard to advance their motley collection of tractors, trucks, prime movers, and yes, even some armored personnel carriers, to an exhaust port several klicks from the hive itself.

Taking the thermal flue station had been simple. As predicted, there was only a skeleton crew guarding it, a platoon of the city’s militia, armed with adrasite rifles and carapace. Those fifty men perished under the hail of radium slugs, bolts of lightning, and good old fashioned steel core solid shot from the stubbers of the 31-3’s motley motor fleet. It had been a textbook assault of superior numbers against an under-defended position. No, far stranger was the mission itself.

In all, it had been the strangest operational work-up Stavin had ever experienced in his brief time of being an Imperial soldier. He had not just been ordered, but invited to tactical meetings, asked for his counsel, even politely requested to repeat the fairy tales he had heard about the Deep Winter construct by important looking administrative officials. He had eaten with other officers, and, in what felt like a fever dream, had measurements taken for a new dress uniform.

His men, the ones he had selected along with Severina and her cadre for the assault, had been fed, deloused, issued state of the art flak armor, and issued, one for every five of them, a boxy, ribbed barrel weapon that Stavin had initially mistook to be plasma guns. In fact, they were something far more dangerous; arc rifles, weapons capable of frying a man at lasrifle ranges. More to the point though, the ancient weapons were far more effective against delicate circuitry. A boon against such a technologically advanced enemy. The other eight men in each squad were issued guns Stavin had never heard of, nor in his most violent and cruel moments, even imagined; radium carbines, baroque looking weapons of brass and steel that shot radio-isotope impregnated solid shot. They were armed to the teeth. They would have to be - the mission promised to be brutal.


In a truck half a klick from Colonel Stavin, Caleb Raum squatted on the truck’s hard, uncomfortable bench, his arc rifle between his legs, heavy and unfamiliar. He had initially been issued a slightly rusty, manual-action rifle that shot big stubber cartridges, the biggest he’d ever seen, but before this mission it had been snatched away. This gun made that rifle feel as outdated as a stone spear - part of Caleb was relieved that his first taste of combat would be with a weapon he was confident could kill whatever he hit squarely.

Across from Caleb, Sergeant Whitaker cleaned his shotgun, looking at the driver’s cab in annoyance whenever a bump in the rough terrain interrupted the reverie of cleaning the weapon. Whitaker was a scary man, whipcord thin, tall, and scarred. Caleb, however, was slightly grateful to the old soldier - being assigned to Whitaker’s squad came with an understanding you were not to be fucked with. At the cost of all of Caleb’s lho sticks and the good parts of his (rare) rations, Whitaker made problems disappear. A legionnaire, feeling her oats, had attempted to extort Caleb early in his career in the 31-3, and Whitaker, hearing that someone was muscling in on him, disappeared that night.

The next day, Caleb’s would-be racketeer was found dead in her bunk, her head twisted all the way round.

“You know what we’re doing, Troopie?” Whitaker yelled to Caleb.

“We’re going to advance down the thermal exhaust line.” Caleb said, “Then, using Auspex, find the vent control console, close the port, and destroy the console.”

“They make it sound so bloody simple, don’t they?” Whitaker yelled.

“...It’s not?” Caleb asked.

“It’s gonna be a mess. Trust me. When we get in that thermal flue, you book it. Stay behind me. Don’t let any other cunt get between you and me. Kill ‘em if you gotta. I ain’t gettin’ stuck in that flue when the city decides to vent again.”

Caleb imagined what would happen. It didn’t take much mental sweat. Anything caught in the flues when they vented would be, in short, obliterated.

“And after?” Caleb asked.

“Same shit, Troopie.” Whitaker said, racking the shotgun. His radium rifle was slung over one shoulder, but it was clear he preferred the shotgun, an old, battered thing he’d clearly carried for a long time. “The first one that gets to the cogitator stack to disable it stands the best chance of living. We get pick of the places to hide when it goes nova.”

“And brings down the gate…” Caleb said, finally understanding. “...Sarge, are we meant to survive this mission?”

“No Troopie, but I intend to anyway.” Whitaker said, spitting a thin stream of lho-dip onto the deck. “Safest place in this mob is behind me, so stay there.”



Stavin checked his watch, again. Severina looked at him in clear annoyance. Stavin had been checking that piece of shit chronometer every thirty seconds for the past five minutes.

“Checking to see if it grew extra hands, Colonel?” She said.

“No, discipline mistress, I’m just trying to be efficient.” He growled. “There’s a mean woman who will shoot me if I’m not.”

She laughed, her laugh surprisingly pleasant and tinkly for a woman of such hard musculature and scars.

Then, there was a loud, whirring noise, then a clank, then a thump so violent it shook icicles from the rockcrete surrounding the exhaust flue. A whoosh. Fire so intense, so hot, that briefly it warmed the faces of everyone looking at it so quickly that sweat broke out over their entire bodies. Stavin blinked sunspots from his eyes, his skin feeling slightly sunburned. He cursed, as now the pain of the icy winds was extra evident. The flame went on for minutes, eventually dying out with a sputter.

Stavin keyed his vox. “Alright everyone. Rebreathers on. Dismount. We’ve got thirty til the next vent, and five til the vents close. Only one way out of this. Get it done.”

He let the handset hang, and jumped down, helping Severina down, then the rest of his command squad. They began, along with the other five thousand damned souls of the assault element, to double time towards the exhaust opening.


One kilometer behind Imperial Siege Lines

One thousand power armored figures stood in perfect lines one hundred by ten, arms and armor still unmarred by conflict. The sons and daughters of the First Astartes Legion had barely tasted combat, kept in the rear of the Conquest of Ursh by the taunting command of the Thunder Primarch Gilgamenses.

So swiftly had they been sent to the front that they had not been equipped with their full wargear, only a tenth of them given full Thunder Armor. The Legion had endured the indignity of Gilgamenses’ castoffs, their ready wargear consisting only of gleaming chainswords untouched by blood or battle. When the order came, the newborn Astartes had dropped the lasrifles and slugthrowers in great heaps before the Thunder Warrior’s command tent before taking their leave.

Malcador himself had given them the order to make for Sanctii with all due speed, and they had obeyed. Lacking any mechanization, the thousand warriors with powered greaves had charged out of camp as fast as their legs could carry, running without pause for over eighteen hours. They had stopped only to accept a shipment of fresh arms from the Terra-Watt Clans, heavily laden snowskimmers disgorging horrid Volkite weaponry freshly stamped from the forges.

Onward they had run as the remnant of the Legion followed far behind in their wake, rushing ever faster at the first sound of guns off in the distance. At last they fell in, Calivers braced across their chest, as the Mistress of the Legion Vairya Kurus took their measure.

Nine hundred, Vairya herself included, were Astartes in truth, the perfected fruit of the genecrafting process, warriors who could be mass produced without fear of degradation. The remainder of her advance force were her elder siblings, the First Hundred, failures so close to what they ought to be that they had been granted the dignity of a glorious death in their creator’s name. These proto-Astartes were already visibly ragged from their exertions, not-quite-right organs failing to fully sustain them through the hellish march they had undergone to enact the Sigilite’s will. She paid them little heed, for they would do as they were bid in the end. All would.

Though their armor was painted in conscious imitation of the God-Slayers, the First mirroring the First, they made no move to support them - or any other element of the Emperor’s forces. Instead they simply stood, stock-still, within sight of the walls, beyond the fury and fire of the assault and artillery. They knew their mission, and they would not permit anything to delay it. The Thunder Warriors and auxilia were distraction enough for the moment from the true strike force, and it was only if and when the condemned penal soldiers succeeded that the Astartes would take the field.


Merlon 2295-B, Curtain Wall

Insanity fell well short of describing the slaughter taking place on the other side of the curtain wall. The Imperials, damned be their souls, had simply appeared out of the blizzard in fully formed battle lines over a million strong. They’d advanced upon the curtain wall with what Commander Yaroslav could only define as wreckless abandon, throwing themselves to be butchered wholesale at the hands of his brigade and the many others beginning to join the original defenders at their battlements.

Yaroslav turned to a compact holodeck of the battle, scoffing at the shear size of it all. He’d seen Sanctii through more combat than he cared to admit, but this, this was beyond his wildest imagination.

“Merlon 2112-A, reports Imperial troops at the battlements, they request aid from adjacent Merlon’s for fear of being breached.”

Yaroslav brought up a live holofeed of the merlon in question and was surprised at the group of Imperials taking up what cover they could against his wall. He did not see any of the genewarriors of the self-proclaimed Emperor, and thanked the stars for that.

“Is that the only battlement with Imperial rats at their feet?” he asked pensively as he surveyed the battle taking place outside.

“Negative,” the professional voice of the vox operator came back, “Imperials advance on most of the battlements Sir, there are reports of genewarriors attempting to scale the walls in nine different locations.”

Yaroslav cursed and brought a hand to his own voxbead, “Captain Lebedev, I assume that your Wing is ready for combat?”

The voice on the other side seemed distracted as it answered, “On your command.”

“Take to the killing field Captain, burn the rodents from the foot of our home and push them back, the wall will assist, as always.”


Credit: @grimely (Legio I Astartes), @BornOnBoard (Colonel Stavin/Thirty-One-Third Penal Legion), @FrostedCaramel (Sanctii/The Administrator)
The Slaughter of Sanctii






The snowscape of the Northern Urshic lands stretched infinitely in a mesmerizing pattern of brilliant white, broken seldomly by jagged rocks and cresting hills. Great mountains topped with alabaster frost leered over the lands as forsaken guardians to a ruined world. A massive crevasse yawned with cragged teeth beyond them for miles on end, an immense void slept unperturbed for time immemorial. Vast blankets of roiling clouds congested the skies of Terra, thick and dark with calamitous intent. Wind snapped through the land, biting and howling as a savage beast fraught with abyssal rage. Snow, sharp as serrated daggers, rushed alongside the wrathful gusts, cutting raw skin and rock alike. An impenetrable haze of frozen madness hauntingly lingered for unknown distances. Yet one thing stood defiantly amongst nature’s wroth.

A gleaming, alabaster city with walls as tall as megastructures of old Terra reigned audaciously in the glower of the raging blizzard. Sharpened hail uselessly pelted against an invisible, shimmering aura that protected those within. Shadows of great humanoids with sleek, glowing armor stalked through the haze in short distances from the walls. Grand turrets, brimming with indescribable power, scanned the horizons for threats with an unusual intelligence. Small silhouettes floated through the air in great lengths, their sublime forms flitting about as curious wraiths in a perfect wonderland. Lights from towering monoliths, divine structures, and a thousand domiciles illuminated the encroaching darkness of Terra’s night. Lingering in the shadows of the walls slept the remains of foolish warriors, Urshic raiders effortlessly slaughtered in sprawling swathes from previous invasions. The supreme hive remained, eternally undefeated in the wastelands of their dying world.

Until now.

The first shell blossomed across the prismatic barrier in a grand explosion, waves of flames and plumes of smoke cascading to either side of the city. Night was unveiled in a glorious reveal of the surrounding area, silhouettes released of their umbral cloaks. The second shell fell far from its intended target, snow and rock exploding upwards in a geyser of destruction. Humanoids shifted with urgency, some swept from their feet in surprise. The third shell impacted forward of the city, detonating precisely laid mines in a beautiful display of combustion. A volatile web crackled across the frozen fields, ice and snow surging in several directions. The fourth shell impacted a tertiary building, jettisoning flames and metallic fragments in a cacophony of deadly noise. From that point onward, the shelling never halted once as night gave way to artificial day.

What had once been an innumerable torrent of lingering shadows over the Urshic plains, now revealed themselves to be a staggering rush of incalculable bodies. Figures clad in crimson sprinted across the landscape with the hurried gait of a fleeing herd. Fat, laboring vehicles with belching engines kicked into overdrive in pursuit of their ultimate objective. Screaming, preposterous machines on metallic wings screeched overhead from every angle. Even over the rushing sound of a raging blizzard, the howling of men bellowing orders threatened to break nature’s deafening calamity. Gigantic warriors, clad in tremendous armor, dashed with astonishing speed beside the warmachines and beyond the vast waves of red garbs. Missiles sang a dreadful dirge above as they sailed on shrieking rockets.

Panels along the walls of the city unveiled hidden defenses, turrets and spotlights reaching out into the raging frost to beseech fresh targets. Violent rays of prismatic energy danced from yawning rails, searing snow and flesh in equal droves. Humanoids in pristine armor, some towering as large as the oncoming giants, unleashed bolts of magnetic pain from the barrel of remorseless weapons. They backpedaled in a slow motion towards their city, aided by those floating machines that released hails of small, energetic lances. Enormous, gargantuan cannons across the pristine wall swiveled on their axis to dauntingly stare down at the invaders. Horrendous spheres of growing power began to coalesce on automatically-cooling rails, discharged upon completion of an unknowable charging cycle. Entire swathes of human life disappeared in an instant, red-garbed figures permanently removed from the tethers of existence. And yet they pressed forward.

War had come to Sanctii.

Aeternus watched from one of the snow-capped hills south of Sanctii’s walls. His dark eyes traced every individual that marched to their doom into the hive city’s horrific defenses. Miles of their forces stretched in an endless sprint of carnage. Lasrifles snapped beams of brilliant red, cannons howled shells of volatile incendiaries, and boltslingers barked dense bullets uselessly against the voidshield. Corpses already began to pile up wherever their forces weren’t immediately vaporized by disintegration carbines. Some of the Sanctiian protectors, he assumed, laid strewn about as they were trampled to death under a million feet. Those were few in comparison to the devastation already caused to their own forces.

An enormous, scorching ray of volcanic energy erupted from behind his position, earning a quick glance. Those that surrounded his armored form, his cadre captains, equally turned to address the source of the beam. The mammothine form of their mobile command center, the Imperialis Praetorios, vented heat through several thermal vents along the barrel of its primary armament. He turned away from their armored vehicle to address the battles as it began to evolve, though Rex already knew it was in vain. The Primarch clenched his blackened fist around the handle of his precious blade as another wave of Imperials dissolved into nothingness.

Sheer insanity.” Captain Caligula stated with no shortage of revulsion. Aeternus could hear the phlegm building in his captain’s voice, despite the fact he wore a helmet. Caestus’ weapons were already born in both of his yellow gauntlets, tightly gripped in raw anticipation.

“Discard those emotions, Caestus. This is the war that we have earned. The war that will infamize our name for eternity. In His name.” Primarch Aeternus replied solemnly, turning his attention back to the impossible stretch of the battlefield. His command earned a grumble from the veteran, yet compelled them forward deeper into the combat zone. Each step of their armored forms sent short gushes of ice and slush around them. Armored vehicles sped past them, sponsons and cannons firing with intense urgency.

“Tiberius. Status of our forces.” Rex spoke, his voice growling with the sleeping rage of a lion. The response from his third cadre captain was instantaneous.

“The Astartes that Malcador promised are nearby. The Black Hawk has reeled back to organize her ‘Stygian Talons’. The 43rd, 71st, and 88th Excertus Imperialis have engaged the wall, as you can plainly see. The God-Slayers are spread out amongst the dredges.” The monotone genewarrior coldly replied, releasing the dataslate from his left hand into Aeternus’ free gauntlet. An attached auspex confirmed the geopositions of their invasion, while the rest of the tablet sculpted information from a prewritten bank of cogitator-fed knowledge.

“And the Sanctiians?”

“Their voidshield was just as Negotiator Popov stated. It’s holding strong against even the trinkets of the Sigilite’s Vault. Squads of their protectors on the outskirts have been slaughtered wholesale, but not before taking dozens of the unaugmented with them. Everything else is as you can see. Turrets, drones, and bombardment cannons.” Captain Tiberius scoffed.

Primarch Aeternus grimaced at the dataslate in his gauntlet, dredging up the memory of the extraordinarily short conversation with the Sigilite. He will never forget the quickness in sealing Sanctii’s destruction, opening the forbidden vaults, and approving the request for reinforcements. Perhaps, to a degree, it was fated that the hive city would fall in this manner. “And what of Colonel Stavin and the Penal Legion?”

“Enroute to their objective.” The genewarrior replied, clicking his tongue in distaste. Annoyance was evident in his attitude, something that Aeternus knew would occur when their invasion was planned.

“Mind yourself. They were entrusted with this operation for a reason. Settle for slaughtering into the breach should they succeed.” The Primarch growled, chidding his superior officer. Tiberius responded with a nod, firmly sealing his lips in favor of enraging their commander. Aeternus quickened his steps, delving into a genewrought sprint as they began to approach the backline of their allied forces. Caligula, Nero, and Tiberius echoed Rex’s armored gallop with their weapons ready.

“Nero, what’s the status of the assault drills?” Aeternus asked as adrenaline cocktails began to empty into his veins. A pair of gunships careened overhead, releasing a torrent of screeching missiles before azure beams of blinding corona pierced their hull. Metal collided against metal as the gunships dove, smashing into a far-off collection of red-garbed auxilia. An explosive plume silenced their dying cries as fire ravenously ate flesh and snow alike.

“Same as the last attempt. Failed. The foundation of the city is too thick to be penetrated by our drills. What did you expect from a city as well defended as this!?” The second cadre captain replied, hefting a fallen auxilia in his left arm to use as a meatshield against a flurry of drone fire. Spikes of energy bit into the corpse, dismembering limbs and chunks of meat in seconds. A bolt round saw the drone explode in a ball of fire, allowing Nero to unceremoniously toss the body aside.

The genewarriors momentarily hunkered down behind the ruins of a battle tank, several other red-garbed auxilia using the husk as improvised cover. A vibration of raw energy began to violently hum as a ball of indescribable power landed, expanded, and dissolved several squads of soldiers twenty meters away from them. One of the auxilia dropped their weapon as their hands trembled in fear. Quicker than Aeternus had ever seen a human perform, the auxilia unleashed their sidearm and pointed it against their own skull. A splash of gore painted their fellow comrades, brain matter decorating helmet and uniform alike. None dared to pay attention in the heat of battle, ignoring the death of their companion to continue suppressive fire.

“Caligula, what status do you have on the Astartes?” Primarch Aeternus asked, picking himself up from his position to unleash a salvo of ammunition from a wrist-mounted weapon. Several drones, red-garbed auxilia, and stray protectors burst into an inferno of blue flames as the projectiles exploded. The Primarch ducked as turret fire began to pocket their position, slicing through metal with ease. Those auxilia that remained beside them were pierced, cut, and slaughtered. Without a second thought, the genewarriors swiftly egressed from their cover.

“They’ll arrive in the next wave of reinforcements! Hopefully with our fair lady alongside them!” The ancient veteran said with a grunt of effort, sliding into a half-dug trench devoid of sandbags or barbed wire. Several other of the God-Slayers remained here, their brutal bolters firing without care or coordination. Tiny explosions plumed from spots on the voidshield the bolts contacted. They ducked to reload as Aeternus, Nero, and Tiberius entered the trench.

“Amalasuntha will arrive, so too will these Astartes. Trust in the Sigilite’s words.” Primarch Aeternus stated, recalling the last words spoken between himself and Malcador. An enormous vehicle rolled to a halt next to their trench, smaller than the Imperialis but larger than the standard battle tank. A heavy cannon the size of a carnosaur swiveled to aim up at the wall-mounted turrets. The roar of a thousand guns echoed all at once in a single shot, perforating the sound barrier and deafening the unaugmented around it. The shell impacted the voidshield in a cloud of rippling detonations, yet failed to pierce the city.

“It would be easier to butcher them all if they would come out of their fortress! How much longer ‘till we reach the walls, Tiberius!?” Nero demanded with a roar, his ears slightly ringing from the heavy battle tank’s ineffective shot. He watched it roll forward on enormous tracks, the engine pushed to ridiculous heights to advance their assault. Several moments later, the tank exploded in a flurry of beams and plasma.

“Approximately a kilometer and three-hundred-and-seventy meters. At our current pace, we will reach the wall in thirty minutes. If we survive.” Tiberius replied, his body already moving out of the trench to scout for a new piece of rubble. He spotted it several meters away, the ruins of a building blown away by their first shelling. One of his yellow-armored digits signalled to the rest of the genewarriors, who began to follow him.

“Not if, Tiberius,” Aeternus stated as he swiftly moved to the front of their formation, pushing the third cadre captain back into the trench. Brilliant energy pierced the air in a matter of seconds, threatening to sunder the Primarch’s form in a flurry of volatile death. Power accumulated in a spherical barrier around the thunder warrior, golden light illuminating Rex as his refractor field activated. Instinctively, his gargantuan, obsidian blade was brought up to protect him. The harmful rays dissipated, reflecting away from the shimmering Primarch. The knightly helmet turned to address the thunder warriors in the trench. “When we survive. Raptor Imperialis!

As if on cue with the Primarch’s words, golden jet bikes flew over their position alongside a similarly golden clad Dropship making full haste to the walls of the city. Turret fire slammed around the vaunted fire of the custodians, who ducked and weaved, unable to give the defenders a beat on their path. The Dropship let loose an esoteric las shot that slammed into the void shield. In response, a single ray of energy impacted the Orion-class, and it seemed for a moment that the custodian vessel would fall had it not been for the flare shield roaring to life. In the moment, the Emperor’s finest turned and sped away from the walls, the defender’s resistance too much even for them to break through for the time being.
Hope In The Frost






There was something soothing about the frozen land that helped to calm his soul. When the sun jumped off the glittering snow drifts and the wind sent shimmering clouds of swirling white through the air, he could see the lost beauty that made Terra worth protecting. The flicker of hope that made Sanctii worth saving.

He stepped away from the insulated window of the meeting room and took one last chance to look over what he had painstakingly arranged for his coming guests. The room, nothing more than a conference room for the supervisors of the world engine beneath them, was sparsely adorned. There were scuff marks in the floor where a large industrial table had been removed to accommodate the finer seats that had been arranged within the room to facilitate the purported size of his coming guests. A small table of refreshments, still steaming, was set equally distant in the center of the fine furnishings, and finally a number of seemingly brand new datapads had been placed on the arms of every chair.

He allowed himself a small smile, happy that he had managed this much in the time that he had been given to prepare. Yet he was still frustrated at the location that had been chosen by the Administrator for the meeting. Was he not Stefan Popov, High Negotiator of Sanctii and Her Illustrious Holdings? Did his position not grant him the right to arrange the meeting? The menu? The venue? The seating? He chafed at the idea that the Administrator had overstepped him so boldly, and fumed that the Prime Minister had disregarded his complaints at this blatant power grab.

“Negotiator Popov…?”

Popov started, turning to face the aide with a smile as he smoothed over the frustration on his face. “Yes?”

The aide shuffled a datapad from his hands and held it out to Popov with an uneasy smile, “They’re on final approach, Sir.”

Popov nodded as he took in the auspex return of the Imperial craft coming in from the South, “Good, good. Make sure they’re not bothered, as planned. Bring them right here, not a single weapon in sight. No one speaks to them before I do, of course.”

The aide gave a curt nod and hurried off through the door, a quiet hiss following as Popove watched the door slide shut behind the young man. He sighed, took a small clear pill from his pocket and swallowed it dry. He turned back to observe the world outside the window, the billowing smoke of the world engine beginning to cast a shadow over the land as the wind shifted. He spotted the telltale signs of a blizzard brewing in the distance. He swallowed another clear pill, his pupils constricting slightly as he focused on the storm and calculated time and trajectory. He concluded it would arrive during the meeting, an unfortunate omen.

A dark, boxy silhouette began to materialize on the horizon, torrents of snow blasting behind it in a rapid advance. It contrasted harshly to the frosted wasteland of Terra’s northern territories, dull yellow and black plating covering the oncoming craft’s exterior. A great symbol of a raptor emblazoned upon one of the vessel's bulky surfaces, an unpolished eye glaring out at the planet’s sad state. Multitudes of brutal weapons mounted to the lower side of the transport while long-barreled monstrosities idly pointed from turret sponsons. The stormbird approached the tall, billowing world engine with haste. Quad engines churned black smoke out behind the craft as a platform lit up some several kilometers away to signal their landing. A silent exchange of binary communication flitted across the air, exchanging transponder codes and clearance access onto the world engine’s landing pad. Large, flat footed gears unfurled from beneath the transport as it settled down on the reinforced structure.

The platform, illuminated by austere glowglobes, groaned beneath the weight of the stormbird. Hissing mechanisms reverberated in the local area as the assault ramp began to extend down and outwards. The source of the craft’s superior weight became evident as seven individuals began to amble down in an unsorted formation. Five of their number were tall, herculean warriors covered from head to toe in powered armor, while the two others were average sized humans dressed in combat armor. The first of the arrivals was a giant in black armor, an alabaster pelt flowing behind them and a great helm worn tight against their skull. The next two were similar in size, differing only in yellow armor and styles of knightly helmet. One carried a great, whipping banner embroidered with a raptor crossed in front of thunderbolts attached to a long pole. They were followed by a woman in penumbral armor with folded, metallic wings accenting their half-covered facial features. Lastly were the standard humans, adorned in military attire appropriate for Terra’s northern lands. None of these individuals held armaments, for they were unneeded when their own strength would suffice.

Each footstep of the four, larger giants threatened to break through the platform they walked upon, their long strides allowing them to quickly cross the distance in a span of seconds. The one at the front of their procession, the black armored one, halted some distance away from an entrance into the world engine. Crimson lenses spied the hurried form of a human approaching their entourage, yet further identified a plethora of hidden defenses veiled into the austere environment. A manner of seconds passed as the human halted within reasonable distance of the arriving retinue.

Hail, Sanctiian.” The black-armored giant spoke first, a lion’s roar of a tone booming from the voxgrill installed into their great helm. A masculine voice that radiated with cool, supreme confidence. His crimson lenses stared down at the man as if he were infinitely smaller than the giant was. The alabaster pelt attached to his back whipped rapidly between frozen gusts and spinning engines. “Do I have the pleasure of speaking to the High Negotiator?” The title awkwardly rolled off his tongue, uncertain of Sanctii’s parliamentary positions.

The aide stood statue-still as the booming voice of the giant rolled over them, cold sweat beading on their brow as they searched for the right words to attend to the Imperials. He took an uncertain step backwards followed by another, far more confident one as he tore his gaze away from the terrifying monstrosity of plate and flesh. With a simple wave of his hand he gestured for the entourage to follow before hurriedly leading them down the central hall and toward the meeting room.

Popov, smiling as the indicator light over the door blinked from amber to green, spread his arms wide in welcome as his aide stepped quickly to the side of the room.

“Hail, Imperial. I apologize for my aide’s silence, they’re unfortunately not cleared to speak for such a meeting as this,” he laughed as he motioned for his aide to make himself scarce in a corner of the room, “I, however, very much am,” he offered a respectful bow of his head and motioned for the massive beings to come forward and take seats, “High Negotiator of Sanctii and Her Illustrious Holdings, Stefan Popov, at your service.”

His smile thinned as he directed his attention to the chairs. They were far too small for these mutants.

“I had arranged seating, but I must say, you’re I appear to have underestimated the requirements,” he chortled.

The humans, to the eyes of the relatively well fed and clothed Sanctians, looked decrepit. There were two that seemed to hold the same office as the giant mutants, or at least an equivalent position. The first was a man, who, to put it politely, looked haggard, decrepit, and pale. He had large, dark circles under his eyes and a gaunt, ever so slightly jaundiced look of someone balancing on the precipice of malnutrition. His uniform, while appropriate for the Urshic cold, was mismatched and of ill-repair.

“We’ll take that seat, if you don’t mind.” A female voice, sharp and clear, stated.

She was healthier than the man, tall, strong, and with pink, healthy skin, but an ugly pink scar ran from under one eye, bisecting a cheek, going through both lips, and onto her chin. She had a crude, but serviceable military bionic crammed into the eye socket where the ugly scar started. Her uniform, compared to the man’s, was intentional, austere, and stark. Black jhodpurs, black boots, a black tunic with gold frogging, and a leather stormcoat. She wore a red cap and ear shields against the cold, but the flush of her cheeks suggested that as impressive as her garb was, it did not protect against the elements the same way the man’s did.

“I am Discipline Mistress Augusta Severina.” She said, and bowed. “And this is Colonel Stavin, of… Imperial Army unit 31-3.”

The man looked sullenly at the woman, as if he detected some slight or falsehood in that statement, but said nothing.

“We are the ranking Imperial Army presence for these talks.” She continued, seemingly oblivious to her comrade, “And most importantly, we are here to be a human face. Our regent understands that the Thunder Legions and Custodians can be intimidating fellows.”

She reached out, briefly touching the closest Thunder Warrior’s gauntlet, and the winged custodian’s.

“You’ll forgive me for saying that of course.” She said to the other members of the Imperial delegation. “But we must be open and honest, no?”

Though Severina couldn’t possibly see beneath the great helm of the blacked armored giant, she could certainly feel the unpleasant aura forming when her hand touched his vambrace. Instinctively, as if feeling their leader’s discomfort, the other two yellow armored warriors stepped forward with a couple of trudges. An obsidian gauntlet raised up from the dark one, waving off their small amount of worry. He took a step forward to position himself directly across from Negotiator Popov, crimson lenses carefully observing the stature of the man.

“Mistress Severina speaks correctly, but know that we are no less human than any other. I am Primarch Aeternus Rex of the First Legio Cataegis, the God-Slayers, agents hailing from the Master of the Line and his dominion. I have known many names in my time, but only refer to me as this. Behind me are a pair of my Thunder Warriors, Captain Caestus Caligula and Vexillarius Gaius Felix.” The primarch gestured with one of his gauntlets to the warriors behind him. The one named Caligula, a yellow armored giant with a crest upon his knightly helmet, gave a short chuckle and nodded his head. The other thunder warrior, Felix, responded with a short nod while gripping their beautiful banner tightly in one hand.

Although hesitantly, Aeternus understood the necessity for an even playing field between negotiation forces. A pair of black gauntlets reached up to his helmet, unsealing the atmospheric protectors and lowering the great helm to his side. Bronze skin marred with a plethora of aging scars met the quickly adjusting temperature in the chamber. Dark orbs as umbral as the void stared down at Popov while strands of black hair complimented a rugged, charismatic face.

“It is a pleasure to meet you, High Negotiator Stefan Popov. I will be the primary negotiator for our liege and his dominion in these talks. Our secondary negotiator may interject at any time she wishes as she sees fit, as is her duty. The tertiary negotiators, as Severina has previously spoken, are granted a level of interjection as was decreed by the Master of the Line. Firstly, though,” Aeternus began to speak, his voice as commanding and dominating as a lion upon his pride. He slightly cocked his head in the direction of the final member of their cohort, motioning for the black armored knight to come forward and speak. “We have one last member of our entourage. One of the highest importance.”

Amalasuntha, one of the Emperor’s chosen Custodians. I have come to oversee that all goes in the Emperor’s best interests,” the Black-Hawk said, her voice harsh and cold as she looked over the humans, her eyes carefully watching those of the Imperial Army before stepping back. That was all she needed to say and nothing more would be pried from her, such was the nature that Aeternus and any of his Thunder Warriors would know. The Ventarii maintained her grip over her Lance, before her gaze shifted back to carefully watching over the gene-warriors she had sworn to watch over, no longer concerned with the humans.

Popov waved a welcoming hand toward the chairs for the Discipline Mistress and her Colonel before turning his full attention back to the two mutants before him, “Of course, Primarch Rex, do correct me if I should use the full name for I may be unfamiliar with your proper use of formal title and name,” he said with due deference.

He turned his gaze toward the Custodian, a feeling of revulsion rising in his stomach at the way she had so confidently declared she was here to ensure things went “the Emperor’s” way. He gave her a respectful nod and a curt smile, “I have heard much of the Emperor’s vaulted Custodians. It is an honor to make the acquaintance of two of the mightiest warriors on Terra.”

Popov moved his attention back to Aeternus, and with a hint of curiosity on his face offered an open palm, “Forgive me, Primarch Rex, but it was the Imperium that requested this audience, and while I am more than honored to hold it, I must admit that your side was not exactly… forthcoming, with the details of why,” he shrugged, allowed himself a small laugh and continued, “Though I am rather certain why you would wish to seek this negotiation, I must ask that you voice your goals aloud.”

Primarch Aeternus internally prepared himself for the political battlefield laid out before himself. He couldn’t help but feel as it if were an actual battle amidst a brutal war, something that he was aware wasn’t the correct mindset for peaceful negotiation. A simulation of the possible events had been conducted beforehand with the Colonel and the Black Hawk, though it paled in comparison to the actual series of events. Nonetheless, he was ready to deliver whatever his master required, no matter what may come of it.

“Then allow me to be forward with my Master’s ambitions. He has seen that the great city of Sanctii is a bastion of humanity in a sea of chaos and lauds it from His domain. The Master of the Line - the Emperor - would see humanity unified to claim our birthright amongst the stars. In lieu of His goals, He wishes to create everlasting ties with the great city of Sanctii as an ally in pursuit of unification.” Aeternus momentarily paused to allow Popov a chance to digest the words he spoke. Rex lowered his usual lion’s roar of a voice to much more calm and deep level of speech. He physically controlled each movement of his body in such a way that the genewarrior’s demeanor balanced out between solemn and domineering. An effective gift from one of the Emperor’s Ephroi.

“Yet he does simply ask for an alliance without reparation. He has sent His Legio Cataegis - my Thunder Legion - of the God-Slayers to assist in dealing with the Kalagann of Ursh. No doubt you’ve heard of our accomplishments in middle Terra,” An obvious two-faced statement. It was equal parts a threat and a gift for those with the ability to understand the nuances of negotiation. Aeternus’ form failed to radiate a threatening aura, nor did his speech pattern alter to allude to a dire warning. He continued to speak, aware already that their promise of intervention wouldn’t be enough to fulfill the negotiations. “But it has been told by our Master’s favored companion that the great city of Sanctii has no want for superior forces. To allay any disparity for lack of commitment, the Emperor has given His approval to a technological agreement.”

The Primarch felt as if he had expended a lifetime's worth of diplomatic flair in a single conversation, something that the thunder warrior was nowhere near proficient in. He had wondered if it was a test set by the Sigilite in cruel mockery, or perhaps it had been a trial to gauge Rex’s abilities by the Emperor. It loomed on his mind just as each of his own words possibly hung over Popov’s musing form. Regardless, Aeternus’s black orbs never fell away from the negotiator nor did they blink once during his entire speech. Those endless pits of darkness now awaited the Sanctiian’s response.

Colonel Stavin sighed as the thunder primarch stated the purpose of their coming. It was as simple as that. Join or die. But he had spoken himself hoarse at the tactica and strategis meetings before this diplomatic intervention - it would never work. Stavin was half Urshic. He knew of Sanctii. They were proud, but they were naive. Sheltered. A dangerous combination.

Insulated as they were from the rest of Imperial conquest, and so convinced of their enlightenment, they'd never acquiesce to the requests of a butcher like the Emperor. That's what he was, after all. A butcher. A mass murderer. But only he could see it, only he, a damned soul, trapped in the interstice of Imperial truth and Imperial violence.

It was the highest irony that not only did he have to usher the other souls of the damned, his penal soldiers, to their dooms, but now one of the oldest bastions of learning and civilization as well.

He decided to speak. In Urshic, rusty and halting, to make his point.

"Bratya Popov." Stavin said in the lowborn thieve's Urshic of gutter criminals and soldiers, "It is in your best interest to say yes."

Popov would know of the Urshic criminal cant. That phrase was well known amongst the Urshic people, it was an almost comical cultural touchstone. The stereotypical threat of a vidscreen extortion, by the old mafiyas. It was so trite as to be almost humorous, and never said in anything but jest.

That dissonance might give Popov the hint of what this meeting really was; murderous extortion, with Sanctii as the Emperor’s prize - that refusal was no option at all. It was Stavin's only throw of the dice to avoid what he knew would happen with certainty.

Popov had known it was coming, anticipated it. The Administrator had warned him, along with just about every other sitting member of the Council. And yet, it was still a shock to hear it from the lips of the Emperor’s dog before him. He suppressed a snicker at the primarch’s insistence that some sort of technological exchange would benefit Sanctii as much as it would the Imperials, an easy task given the amount of focus drugs pumping through his system, and was about to speak when he found himself genuinely surprised by the Colonel’s rough criminal cant. He sneered in disdain at the realization of what such a thing meant from a Colonel, but went no further to engage with the gutter scum.

He felt a haptic implant pulsing in his neck and raised the datapad in his hands just enough for only him to read the text beginning to scroll across the screen. He suppressed further anger, easily washing over the emotion with overwhelming calm as he read the Administrator's words.

“Primarch Rex, I am sure that an alliance would benefit both of our states, but Sanctii will not, under any circumstances, share the technology vital to our survival. For reasons of security, it simply can not be arranged,” he nodded solemnly, “An alliance may benefit us yet, but our technology must remain ours.”

The hulking leader of the Thunder Warriors muled over the words spoken by Popov. He refused to acknowledge the Colonel’s statement in the brutish tongue of the Urshites nor would Aeternus really need to. An armored gauntlet from the First Cadre Captain, Caligula, had been carefully placed on the Colonel’s shoulder mere moments after the words left his mouth. A stern look was given by the genewarrior, Caestus’ ugly smile growing wide across an already repulsively scarred face. Rex had felt the movements behind him as they happened, silently thanking his geneson before beginning the next part of his practiced speech.

“That is rather unfortunate, Negotiator Popov, but it is His will that our alliance be on even footing. The Sigilite will have that conversation with your leader at a later point,” Aeternus began to speak, an initial air of disappoint surrounding his form before returning with renewed energy. Perhaps if his original orders had been to kill and claim, then negotations would’ve broken down there yet he persisted with the Emperor’s wishes regardless. “But you have no qualms with a military alliance against Kalagann of Ursh, is that correct? You said it yourself that we are the mightiest warriors on Terra, would it not be beneficial to deal with the Urshite threat together?”

Popov smiled as the Primarch updated his terms to fit squarely within the Administrator’s boundaries. He brought his shoulders back in confidence and nodded respectfully, “Indeed, to quell and even stomp out the Urshic hordes would be beyond beneficial to us. Though Sanctii holds no ambitions beyond our small collection of territories, to remove the Urshite raiders threat for good, would allow us to focus more on our greater tasks, such as the purpose of this world engine we meet on tod—” Popov’s haptic pulsed painfully in his neck, and he once more raised the dataslate to his eyes.

He bit his tongue as he read the scrolling text, cursing the Prime Minister for allowing the Administrator so much control over his negotiation. There was supposed to be none higher within Sanctii, no other that could agree or deny terms today… and yet.

“I apologize, Primarch Rex, but my lords change their moods once more. I’m sure you can understand.”

Popov shifted where he stood, casting a glance back in the direction of Sanctii, its walls obscured by the storm outside the windows.

“There can be no troop deployments from Sanctii outside our borders,” he took a breath and turned his gaze back to the hulking mutant that called itself a man, “we will be able to offer no direct support in the conquest of Ursh, I am afraid.”

Finally, Primarch Aeternus narrowed his eyes in inquisitive disapproval. One of his black armored gauntlets raised to his own mouth, stroking at the scarred flesh in thought. He felt that his words had reeled in the High Negotiator, even going so far as to decline one of his Master’s directives to ensure their alliance. Rex felt something was amiss. His black orbs glanced down to the dataslate that Popov held to himself, watching every glance between the Sanctiian and the pad from then on.

To the surprise of the Sanctiian, the Primarch audibly sniffed the air and breathed deeply of the surrounding area. He closed his eyes in a moment of silence. Perhaps it appeared as if he were frustrated by their dialogue, but in truth, he had simply tasted the air for faint hints of the wyrd. Disappointingly, he failed to taste any amount of the sorcerous energy that afflicted their species. He opened his eyes once more to stare down Popov. He still had ammo in his satchel to fight with, but it would be a stretch to throw such a bone. Rex already knew that Amalasuntha would react to his next words, internally preparing himself for the eventual berating.

“I see. No sharing of your precious technology and no mustering of your garrisons against Kalagann. You’ve pushed me into a corner, Popov, something few are able to do.” The Primarch flashed a surprisingly charismatic smile at the Sanctiian, offering a slight chortle to deescalate the rising tension. “Very well, if you cannot directly support the destruction of Ursh, then perhaps the great city of Sanctii can offer indirect assistance. If your leader requires proof of skill to acquire their approval, then we shall orchestrate an all-out assault on all of the Urshite warbands harassing Sanctii’s outskirting territories. Then, perhaps, your leader will be more forthcoming to an alliance.”

Popov breathed a silent sigh of relief as the Primarch opened his eyes and continued with his amicable mood. He had been convinced that the mutant was deciding on the best way to dismember him, having seen the picts from Memphos and across Gyptus, he was well aware of what the being before him was capable of if given a good reason to perform.

“Support could certainly be arranged I believe,” Popov stated with certainty. He had the city's food and industrial earnings report pulled up on his pad, and with a simple flick of a finger sent a curated version to the datapads before the Imperial delegation. He offered a grin, happy his head remained on his shoulders, and motioned to the dataslates.

“I’ve provided a select view of Sanctii’s output, and would be more than willing to negotiate the more boring discussion of tonnage, shipping, and compensation now if--” his haptic stung painfully, and the dataslates before the Imperials chimed horridly once and cut to red screens at the same time.

He brought his own dataslate up to his eyes, reading the words scrolling by with disbelief.

Acting on his previous suspicions, Aeternus glared with extreme focus on Popov’s face in an attempt to gleam even the slightest hint of information. His dark orbs observed every detail off of the Sanctiian’s sculpted face from how open his pores were to the molecular hair on his face rising in ire. He carefully watched every shadow that passed beneath the Negotiator’s eyes, scrutinizing every single hurried glance.

//OVERSTEP.
//CRITICAL INFORMATION NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION.
//CEASE NEGOTIATION POINT. REORIENT.
//HIGH NEGOTIATOR, YOU TEST MY PATIENCE.
//ALL SUPPORT TO IMPERIALS DENIED.
//CA_062 “”DW””


Primarch Aeternus felt ire rise from deep within his person. He considered every single avenue that could possibly be taken in preparation for these negotiations. An Ephroi had personally taken their time to equip a genewarrior of his low stature in accordance with the Sigilite’s will. Had it all been for nothing? One more push, he thought to himself, simply one more before we orchestrate His will in a different manner.

“All support to Imperials denied, Negotiator Popov?” The Primarch’s voice shifted several decibels lower, losing the facade of diplomatic favor for one in exchange for one relying on intimidation. A disappointed, angry look crossed the facial features of Aeternus, yet it wasn’t the emotion that was played off by the genewarrior. It was the look of someone betrayed. In accordance with his Master’s will, Rex dared not move to commit violence on the grounds of diplomacy, yet he balled his fists hard enough for the servos to audibly whine in protest.

What is the meaning of this?

Popov, a man who had risen through the cutthroat politics of Sanctii’s ruling class from a simple diplomatic aide, found himself stunned. He physically reeled at the Thunder Warrior’s change in tone, the focus drugs barely allowing the so-very-human Popov to remain in some modicum of control.

“I assure you--” his haptic stung painfully, he ignored it, “I wish only the best for both our peoples, But Deep Winter--” his haptic stung so painfully that Popov brought a hand up to the spot in his neck it had been surgically implanted on the day of his birth.

“The Administrator--” he fell to a knee as the pain spread beyond the known bounds of the small device just beneath his flesh.

Around the room the dataslates came to life once more, green text scrolling across the reflective screens for all in attendance to read. Popov let out a whimper as he clutched at his neck, reading the text through tears of pain.

//NEGOTIATIONS CEASED EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATE.
//DISINFECTION OF WORLD ENGINE EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATE.
//GLORY TO THE CITY. GLORY TO SANCTII.
//CA_062 “”DW””


Popov’s ears rang as he fell fully to the floor, blood weeping from his eyes and nose as he convulsed on the cold faux carpet of the world engine, so far from the Sanctii he loved.

An unease entered every organ in Aeternus’ augmented body. He understood what was happening even before his brain could fully compute the truth behind the events. Internally, in the brief seconds that mattered, he cursed himself for allowing treachery and deceit to befall him. Perhaps it was to be expected. Regardless, the Primarch and his warriors began to move in sync with eachother. Rex crossed the room in seconds, scooping up Negotiator Popov and slinging him delicately over his pauldron. Caestus swept the Colonel under one of his armored gauntlets and then echoed the action with the Mistress. The final thunder warrior swept the banner in a low motion, aiming the adamantium tip of the polearm at the portal that they entered from.

Each of their voxbeads, voxcasters, and voxrelays crackled to life with the urgent voice of the stormbird pilot. “Emergency egress! Oncoming heat signatures from several locations, unknown source and unknown designations! Lady Black Hawk, Primarch Aeternus, we need to leave!” She screamed into her helmet-mounted headset, the sound of engaging engines in the background echoing throughout her communication.

Almost instantaneously, the custodian began to dart - not waiting for the door to open and instead cleaving it with her lance and sending it across the hall. “Be quick, Aeternus!” Her call came as she sprinted down the way, her pack activating and propelling herself forwards to expedite her retreat.

Stavin cursed as he was scooped up, apparently valuable enough now to not sacrifice as a rearguard for the Imperial withdrawal. Sanctii was as good as leveled. He knew it though. He knew it would play out exactly like this. No one listened, but why would they? He was Damned, after all, and the moaning of the damned was something that was to be ignored, if you could help it.

But it was as he feared. Sanctii, in their hopeful naivety, had created an intelligence to run their city-state. That is why it was a verdant, learned, civilized paradise. And no matter how benevolent this ‘Deep Winter’ was, the Emperor would butcher everyone in the city to stamp it out.

He strained to look past the armored figure holding him, looking forlornly at the last bastion of real learning on Terra. Sanctii was a techno-utopia, one of the last verdant places on Terra. No more. No more. He closed his eyes, and allowed himself to be carried into the future.

A hundred different thoughts chased through the synaptic nodes in his brain as he sprinted down the austere hallways of the world engine. Defeat was amongst the foremost of these. Failure was rare for the God-Slayers, majority of their campaigns in the pursuit of Unification ending in his Master’s satisfaction. This, however, was a forlorn feeling that ate at the edge of his consciousness. Aeternus felt as if the odds had been stacked against him at every angle, no matter how hard he had prepared to ensure glory for the Master of the Line. Fearful and confused, Rex tuned out his deepest thoughts to replace them with the current matters. One of his gauntlets slammed the great helm from his belt atop his head, pressing the seal into activation with a twist of his wrist. Crimson lenses glared out in hidden fury as they pressed further out of the world engine.

None plagued their urgent sprint through the halls, genewrought might pushing their enormous forms through miles of corridors in minutes. The unconscious body of Popov’s aide was swept up by the banner-bearer, an unspoken command by Aeternus for later usage. Each reinforced door that threatened to block their escape was cut aside by either Amalasuntha or the banner-bearer with ruthless efficiency. Every screen they came across repeated the same message by the infamous Administrator, green text floating in an infinite loop on each digital surface. Eeriness crept like looming darkness in every alcove devoid of human life. It was if each stride of their armored figures was watched by an otherworldly entity unknown to them. And it wished for their death tenfold.

The final door onto the landing platform was blasted off of it’s sliding hinges by the black armored form of Aeternus Rex, who sprinted out of the world engine into the biting blizzard. Both of his thunder warriors followed after with a sense of urgency in their step. All four engines of the stormbird were loudly whining, flames jutting out of the spinning turbines with an eagerness to launch. The assault ramp was lowered to the frosted platform, a pair of crimson-garbed auxilia crouched on either side with lasrifles actively firing at unveiled defenses. The Primarch suddenly stopped, shifting Popov into the banner-bearer’s grasp before turning to ensure no member of their cohort was left behind. Rex then proceeded as the last member of their team entered the craft. Both the Colonel and the Mistress were released the moment the thunder warriors crossed into the vessel. The defending soldiers followed shortly after the last turret was melted into slag.

Inside of the wide deck, Aeternus trudged his way into the cockpit with several dozens questions nearly vomiting from his lips. The pilot, a woman of average stature and hidden features beneath augmented helmet, was rapidly preparing countermeasures for their immediate escape. “Are they so willing to kill us that they risk destroying their own infrastructure? How many signatures are you reading? Do we have identification codes? What is coming our way and would the most venerable Amalasuntha be able to intercept?” Each word was a booming command from the gullet of a lion, nearly deafening the mortal in a fit of pain. She clenched her teeth together as all relevant information was thrown onto one of the several screens in the cockpit.

“Unknown. At least several dozen. No identification codes, but trajetocries similar to any Terran intercontinental ballistic missile. I theorize that Lady Black Hawk could slaughter several of them, yet they would crash into the installation all the same. We must leave, Primarch Aeternus, to carry on the word of the Master!” Her voice was a shrill of logical defiance. One that Rex hadn’t expected as she closed all external access ramps into the stormbird. The stormbird began to shake with the familiar jostle of retracting landing gears.

What in His name happened!?” Aeternus asked to the gathered members of his entourage, red lenses turning to regard Amalasuntha, Colonel Stavin, and Mistress Severina. Perhaps if he had taken longer than a second to consider the situation, then the answer would become apparent to the genewarrior of the First Legion. It was clear, at least to the Black Hawk, that the Primarch was in a mindfog the likes of which dulled his mental capacities.

Stavin wiped his mouth as he was set down, along with the discipline mistress.

“The rumors were true, Primarch.” Stavin said, “Sanctii is governed by automated intelligence. Do you remember when Popov said ‘Deep Winter’? It caused an automated haptic response. A pain response. Popov said too much.”

“You can’t mean-” Severina said, her eyes as wide as dinner plates. “Abominable Intelligence?”

“Right. I suppose that’s what He calls them.” Stavin said, suppressing the urge to roll his eyes in front of three people who had the right to kill him with little recourse, “I’d bet good money it was Deep Winter that told Popov to cancel all ties with the Imperials. It is as I feared it would be. As I said it would be, in fact. There will be no allegiance with Sanctii because the AI that runs it knows the Emperor will murder it.”

“And murder it we shall! For the Emperor and Imperium, we will destroy Sanctii for this blatant treachery! Aeternus, contact the Sigillite and tell him what has been revealed,” her words came out harsh but determined, turning away from the thunderous Primarch as she willingly ignored his mindfog. Yet, her piercing gaze fell onto Stavin, a massive talon reaching out to grasp the human, as gingerly as she could, and lifted him by his throat. The words that came from her mouth reverberated with a thick malice that she had since only reserved for mindless thunder warriors, “You will reveal all you know of Sanctii, lest you make your love for the Intelligence known to me now.”

“Your- Our Emperor," Stavin began, seeing the harsh glare Severina gave him, even as the custodian threatened to flense him, “Compelled me into his service after I surrendered. I was a mercenary in pay to an Urshic castellan in one of the border forts. I don't remember which one. Doesn't matter."

Stavin cleared his throat, gasping for air, then continued. “He told stories, this castellan. I dunno if they're true. He was from Sanctii, or was a visitor. He said that at the center of the city, Winter slept. She dreamed of a green terra. She ordered the men around her like pawns on a chessboard and was dreaming a machine into reality that would rend the fallow ground green."

“When Popov said ‘Deep Winter' it reminded me of those old stories." Stavin said, “And you people, I mean, us, we live in a rational age, right? What else could ‘sleep in the center of a city' except an AI idling away in a massive cogitator bank?"

Enough.” Aeternus finally spoke after the mindfog had cleared from his head, listening in on Stavin’s words and Amalasuntha’s threats. Even if he hadn’t arrived at the conclusion first, Rex eventually managed to piece the puzzle together between the four of them. The Primarch trudged forward, gripping the Custodes’ forearm with one of his black armored hands. Though she couldn’t see beneath his great helm, she would certainly feel the piercing orbs of the Himalazian knight.

“Stavin, Severina. Remove yourselves to the bay and see about tending to our guests. We need to gleam whatever we can from them, no matter how that happens. Use the tools at your current disposal to handle it, otherwise wait until we’ve returned to the Imperialis Praetorios.” The Primarch said, momentarily turning away from the Black Hawk to address the two mortals. He could sense their fear, even if they didn’t show it. No doubt facing one of the Emperor’s personal guardians was a fearsome task, yet Rex had never felt fear around them. Perhaps it was Amalasuntha’s influence. “Release the man, Amalasuntha, we have more pressing matters to deal with… and we have a war to wage in His name that will require Stavin’s cooperation.”

Rightfully ignoring their conversation, the pilot had been gracefully tracking each and every signature that locked in on the world engine. She had guided the Stormbird away to an acceptable distance, yet she gritted her teeth in disapproval as they would feel the concussive force of the oncoming missiles. A multitude of measurements appeared on each monitor, indicating the time until impact. She didn’t feel the necessity to call them to brace, unwilling to interrupt their important conversation for something that wouldn’t affect the genewarriors.

The custodian relinquished her grip, not by Rex’s word but more from her own need to do something other than threaten meaninglessness drivel. She did not speak, but her blackened form shuffled back, away from the mortals. “His majesty will not be pleased by this,” her words came in a still coldness, speaking the obvious before her head tilted to the side for a moment, thinking.

Stavin fell to the ground in an unceremonious heap, hands grasped at his throat in protective instinct that was both too late and unnecessary; even if the ‘Black Hawk’ had decided against sparing him, there would have been little protecting his own throat could’ve done.

Severina’s heels clacked on the diamond-etched plasteel. The discipline officer held a hand out, and Stavin took it, her only acknowledgement of his near-death experience. Augusta’s strong arms easily pulled him up from the decking, though for pride’s sake he had assisted the process as best he could. He stood up, brushing himself off, forcing himself to be okay with one of the Butcher’s creations coming within a hair’s breadth of killing him.

He didn’t like to admit it, but the lower he fell, the more afraid of dying he became. Paradoxically, when he had been a successful mercenary commander, he thought nothing of crossing swords with the worst Terra had to offer - it had all been a game back then. Now though, as a dreg commander of a dreg outfit for a man (god?) he, on his best days, feared, and on his worst, hated, he found the idea of death deeply terrifying. There was a legacy in his younger days, a reputation that would survive him, even if it was only until the next amasec sodden pub crawl his former men took part in.

Now? Who would mourn him? Curse his name? No one. His name would be crossed off in a ledger and he would sink into anonymity just as surely as ants do when their hive perishes. The Black Hawk had swooped low, and plucked him from the river he swam in. Only luck had preserved him, and now he had to continue swimming upstream knowing at any moment it could happen again.

He straightened his ushanka, and nodded to Severina.

“As you order, Primarch Rex.” He said, in his best military voice, some sand back in his craw, “We will begin advanced interrogation immediately.”

Another nod to the discipline mistress, and the two mortals went to their duty.

Behind the turmoil aboard the Stormbird, an array of lights streaked across the sky in lazy arcs. Each missile was tracked by the Stormbird, an array of datapoints and analysis streaking across the pilot’s screen as the missiles made their terminal burns at the helpless world engine.

A number of the smallest missiles, the Stormbird tracking as low-priority threats, made their impacts first. Rolling explosions, orange, and firey red, ripped across the outer buildings of the complex. Entire warehouses went up in flames as warheads of unknown yield gutted them from within. The pilot trained her attention on the exterior pictfeeds, whistling as a particularly small building simply evaporated in a flash of orange.

The Stormbird’s machine spirit selected a missile from the next incoming volley, throwing an alert at the pilot even as she managed twenty other tasks at once. Her hands didn’t stop flowing over the controls even as she read the highlighted warning.

“Radiation alarm,” she stated cooly over the Stormbirds troop compartment intercom, “strap in.”

The Stormbird’s engines, already roaring at high power pitched into afterburner as the machine spirit took some level of control from the pilot. She banked the aircraft into a steep dive, unsecured boxes and items flying through the compartment at the sudden change in direction. Behind them, the Stormbird diligently tracked the missile in a highlighted angry yellow. The Stormbird ripped across the tundra, the pilot making a straight line for a massive canyon to their front, all as she continually checked the missile’s position.

Behind them a star blinked to life above the world engine, a roiling ball of plasma over a hundred million degrees flashed the snow and ice into steam in the blink of an eye, the dark of night around the Stormbird blazing like the Gyptian midafternoon. The pilot gritted her teeth, registering the stark shadow of her own aircraft as they ripped into the canyon just ahead of the shockwave from the atomic detonation.

Thunder filled the ears of the occupants as the venerable craft was buffeted by hurricane-force winds, but the worst was above them, outside the canyon. The howl of the engines subsided as the Stormbird stopped its desperate run to safety. Behind them, a mushroom cloud began to peak over the edge of the canyon, the pilot couldn’t help but think that was an ill omen for the coming compliance.


Credits: @MarshalSolgriev (Aeternus/God-Slayers), @BornOnBoard (Colonel Stavin/Mistress Severina), @FrostedCaramel (Negotiator Popov/The Administrator), @Lauder (Amalasuntha)
The Urshite Threat

-Fifty Years After The Invasion of Memphos-






Gusts of freezing wind snapped ferociously at rock and stone alike amongst the Himalazian mountains. Extraordinarily tall peaks covered by snow dominated as far as the eye could see. Sporadic clumps of ruined vegetation dotted across frosty ridgelines, momentarily brightening the dark majesty of the range. Silhouettes of large, furred creatures on multiple limbs swiftly darted between abundant patches of snow, baleful snarls and feline roars echoing throughout the frigid corridor. At random intervals small buildings made of unknown material jutted out as impromptu platforms where earthen slabs would normally rise. Dim, crimson glowglobes illuminated a soft, repeating light at each corner of the metallic stages. Veiled, malicious turrets stood several meters away from these on their own separate towers, forever hidden and quick to tag incoming objects. Icy bastions of indescribable stone rose beneath the towers, stretching for untold miles in both directions. Few called this inhospitable area their home for far fewer could prosper in such an environment.

Yet, he called it home. Aeternus’ crimson lenses stared out of a stormbird’s eastward viewport, lingering on every shadow that passed their craft. He swiveled away from majestic nature to grim reality within the gunship’s interior. Several other entities languished in uncomfortable bucket seats, rocking as their vessel lurched under freezing gusts. A pair of yellow-armored warriors sat directly across from him, Captains Caligula and Tiberius. One held a concerned smile on their ugly face, while the other remained nonplussed as a wooden board. Observing them like a hawk nearest to their side was Lady Amalasuntha, her dark armor nearly blending into the interior. Several other of her kin remained close, their black visors lasered in on any and every movement that the God Slayers took. It would’ve been a discomforting leer were it not for the Black Hawk’s persistent guardianship of their Thunder Legion. Rex felt their tension even without his and his companion’s weapons, the Custodians less afraid and more prepared in case of an emergency.

As the stormbird flew in silence, save for the occasional jostle, so too did the inhabitants remain voiceless amidst their journey. The Primarch stewed on the events leading up to their current predicament during their brief moments of tranquility. A recall on a level such as this, immediately after the fall of the Ethnarchy, was cause for distress. Daunting dropships bearing golden raptors had interrupted their armored convoy’s resupply in Ururatu, demanding his presence for an immediate announcement in the audience of their liege. Oddly, the Black Hawk was additionally requested to join their voyage as if they were attached at an indescribable level, or perhaps He simply wished to see one of His many creations again.

A soft klaxon rang throughout the bay as the stormbird initiated a landing descent, pneumatic pistons audibly hissing as landing gears unfolded from far beneath their greaves. Crimson warning lights flashed across the gunship’s interior to alert those within of their voyage’s end. Gene warriors rocked in their bucket seats as they finished descending onto one of the few available platforms. The ringing klaxon muted itself, the lights cut, and the assault ramp dropped as quickly as a hydraulically driven system could in a frozen environment. The Primarch shared a look between Caligula and Tiberius before wordlessly unbuckling to clamber out of their craft. Both shortly followed after their commander, stalked by those Custodes that had accompanied them from Ururatu onward.

Blizzarding snowflakes coated the God Slayer’s helmet in swift, uneven clumps as he marched out of the stormbird. Black gauntlets reached up from his side, removing the great helm to admire the freezing temperatures. A small smile grew on Aeternus’ cracked lips, pushing a plethora of scars further up his admirable face. His dark eyes swiveled from the beautiful, Himalazian mountains to a pair of leviathan doors guarding the sanctuary of his master. Sentinels in ornate, midnight armor stood as eternal guardians over the gateway, snow blanketing their forms and melting in the same moment of contact. Those warriors that defended their liege’s realm allowed their entry with a simple activation of a hidden rune.

The Master of the Line’s abode sprawled for countless miles, enormous pillars of reinforced stone rising from floor to ceiling along ornate walls depicting endless eras of humanity. Scribes and data savants paced the labyrinth interior, a single tracked focus driving them deep within the Himalazian bastion. Custodes in dark armor proudly patrolled the halls carrying brutal spears with ranged armaments at the tip. Great glowglobes hung overhead as long, fluorescent illuminating devices that brightly shone over the width of their master’s alcoves. Grand, crimson rugs fashioned from material of Terra’s past covered carefully laid foundations beneath their greaves. Tapestries of unknown events clung to blank surfaces in specific intervals, positioned in a chronological pattern yet known to several onlookers.

The procession of thunder warriors and custodes marched on throughout their master’s astonishing abode, servants and savants splitting away in droves to avoid their gait. Dark lenses all equally fell on a single destination furthest away from their arrival point: a gateway etched with an enormous raptor and thunderbolts. Those genewarriors that had accompanied Aeternus, save for the Black Hawk, separated into a different corridor with practiced ease. Himself and Amalasuntha pressed on as if the waltz through His domain had been performed an innumerable amount of times. Midnight clad knights that awaited their arrival allowed their entrance, turning to speak softly into their helmet and activating the portal’s activation runes.

A wide, spherical chamber opened up before Aeternus’ eyes with several gateways leading into it. His eyes fell to an enormous, magnificent circular table sat at the center of the room. Rows of ornate seats sized for beings of greater stature than his own nestled along the rim. Hololithic images swirled overhead, casted by a projector at the table’s center and illuminating part of his armor in a blue hue. He noticed sculpted glowglobes etched into several pillars lining the room’s edge as he pressed forward, Amalasuntha following close behind him. None of these drew Rex’s attention insomuch as those that had already been inhabiting this location before him. A grin broke his tensed lips.

Several giants in armored suits similar to his own loudly bickered from their seats. Aeternus counted five of them in total from least deafening to most thunderous. All of them bore some manner of their liege’s yellow armor combined with heraldic colors of their own. Few of them wore capes or cloaks as he did, while others donned hardened leather tabards or chainmail hauberks at their waist. None wore their helmet or had their weapons present for such a gathering. A plethora of different hairstyles defined their rugged, ugly features as they intensely spoke with one another. Rex lingered only a moment before he was spotted entering the chamber with Amalasuntha.

“By ash and flame! Aeternus Rex! It’s been nearly a decade since we last fought together on the Jermani hills!” The most gregarious one lurched from his seat in a feat of bundled joy, a pure and ugly smile permanently plastered across his homely facial features. Dull red and ashen gray locks spilled around an unevenly shaped skull of the warrior, a thin beard scissored by crisscrossing scars amplifying his image. A cloak of forged scales clinked across his armor, yellow coating half of his plating and scarlet the other amount. The Raptor was proudly displayed on his chest, while an emblem of a phoenix blazed across his left shoulder.

“That it has, Primarch Alexamandes! Glory upon Unity, it is good to see you alive!” The two, great thunder warriors approached each other and embraced with enough force to shatter a mortal man’s skull several times over. They split away from their exchange with a hearty laugh echoing from deep within their breasts. Aeternus noticed the Black Hawk edge away from the event to stand next to more of her kin.

“To see you alive is a boon, Aeternus. Our Unification greatly prospers from your survival.” Another spoke, picking themselves up from the table to approach the pair of Primarchs. Their tone was nasally and deep as if their nose and throat were clogged with bullet shells. A gaunt knight with raven hair tied in a warrior’s knot linked arms with the God Slayer, a thin grin growing on their cracked lips. Aeternus admired the midnight blue, talon tipped gauntlets of the other warrior as they separated. A mechanical eye darted across Rex’s armor, scanning and consuming data in expedient droves. Flattened feathers loosely fell from a dark, plumed cloak that billowed behind their back. A sigil of a moon and a raptor hid itself well upon his left pauldron.

“You honor me, Primarch Corvinius, but do not sell yourself short of achievements. That coup in Franc would never have been as successful if I were commanding the legions there!” Aeternus said, wildly gesturing as if he were displaying a map before him. Corvinius snickered before moving away from the other Primarch, returning to his seat to renew a conversation with Alexamandes.

The God Slayer, finally free of distraction, began to find his seat before he was ambushed by another of the guests within the chamber. A woman wrapped Aeternus in a familiar headlock, threatening to choke the life out of him were it not for his own strength. Rex broke free from the headlock with a quick jab behind him using one of his armored elbows. Tension released from around the armor protecting his neck, swinging his body around to address his assailant.

“You’ve grown more timid, Rex! Any further deviancy and I’ll need to have a word with our Master about your lackadaisical attitude.” Her voice boomed, roaring akin to the likes of a Terran ursidae. She rose as a behemoth of meat and muscle beneath a suit of yellow armor and verdant green. A strong jaw set with fresh scars blended up into a half-shaven head of gray-blonde. Where one part of her face was deeply etched with wrought facial tissue, the other half was a mess of freckle and dried paint. Emerald eyes stared down at his slightly shorter form, yet his own dark eyes glimpsed at the antler-horned raptor on her pauldron. A chain hauberk hung between her armored thighs, shaven skulls hanging from silver hooks.

“Perish the thought, Primarch Bodiciia, I would like to avoid the Butcher of Europa’s wroth if I could help it. I will simply have to train more earnestly with Amalasuntha to live up to your expectations!” Aeternus spoke with a hint of rivalry in his tone, a challenging smirk revealing an array of sharp teeth beneath the other Primarch’s lips. Bodiciia returned to her seat beside Alexamandes, a heavy hand weighing upon the auburn-haired warrior's pauldron.

“It would do you some good to learn from her, God Slayer, perhaps then you’d be able to uphold our Master’s plan more efficiently and claim more territory for Him.” Another voice remarked with a boastful tone to his immediate left. The moment that their lips had opened, Aeternus knew who finally awaited him at his end of their meeting. A rogue in partially yellow, partially amethyst powered armor sat beside Rex with their elbows propped up and their hands clasped. A man with the least amount of facial defects for a thunder warrior peered back at him, gray orbs boring holes into his skull and full lips drawing his ire. A leather cloak faintly dyed in a dark, purple hue clung to their back, complemented only by the lilac hawk set in laurels etched on his left pauldron.

“Know that my achievements are worthwhile to Him, Primarch Gilgemenses, but I do greatly appreciate yours and Bodiciia’s concern for my success. Your kind regard for my accolades is worth a thousand blades.” Aeternus shot back with a playful tone, earning a spurned glare from the Primarch sat next to him. The gathered warriors, with the exception of Gilgemenses, exploded into laughter as Aeternus finally took his seat. “Where are the other legion commanders? I’d imagine Hannibal of the Caged Dogs and Ushotan of the Fourth would certainly be here.”

“The last I’d heard from Hannibal and the Fifteenth was from their push into the Midafrik Hive Polity. Ushotan, damn him, was previously seen assaulting the southern border of Nordyc with his Steel Lords. All of the other legion commanders are spread out thin between garrison duty and dealing with daily insurrections.” Corvinius’ dour voice replied, responding to Aeternus as if he were reading from a dataslate. Rex always knew that he was a brilliant, capable warrior, yet it still surprised him in the brief moments they spent time together.

“The First Legion? Concerned? The Dragon of the Himalazians, the Scourge of Northern Indoi, the Black Knight, the Gyptian Menace, the Great Blade of the Raptor, the Ururtanian Ruiner concerned? Perhaps we were doomed from the outset if Aeternus Rex grows worrisome for others.” Gilgamenses scoffed, venom dripping from his words in heavy clumps.

The throng of hyper augmented gene warriors exploded in a fit of discord, throwing insults and threats across the table at Gilgamenses. The amethystine Primarch responded in kind with similar slurs and gibes. Only Aeternus did not participate in the shouting match, his elbows propped and eyes staring down Amalasuntha as if to request for an amount of assistance. It was not his place, nor his duty to silence those outside of his responsibilities. As Rex awaited intervention from his bloodbound Custodes, his ears perked as mighty footsteps of unknown origin resounded further down one of the great many doors built into the chamber.

Sensing another entity coming, Amalasuntha slammed the butt of her spear into the ground three times and three times did the noise reverberate around the grand hall. The noise drowned out most of the explosive arguments, but the Black-Hawk did little to speak to the bickering gene-warriors for they were beneath her. Unlike Aeternus, they did not garner the respect of the Custodian and how they acted would ensure that she never would. Others continued to argue, bringing her predatory gaze to them. The roar of her pack destroyed all other sound, her blackened form looking down from them from a ledge just big enough for her to stand on. Only when the last looked at her did she make it clear, “You are within the Emperor’s halls. He, nor the Sigillite, shall listen to bickering children.”

That other entity was likely very underwhelming to what the Black-Hawk believed it to be. It was, instead, Theadon Red, Commander of the Eighteenth. Theadon was thick and broad. His aged face was riveted with pockmarks, and the right side was plagued with patches of where a recent fire left a wound upon it. Though somewhat intact, his right arm had piecemeal mechanics holding it together and supporting it. The rest was under armor, and a thin black cloak, with small bits of red and purple highlights underneath the thin sheet that wrapped around most of his body. Helmet and plume tucked neatly at his side, the warrior just stared at what was the rabble he had heard walking towards the procession, but now he saw the scene as it was. He was thankful that none under his command but for a few underlings decided to make the journey; if another had come, it would have turned into a bloody brawl. His eyes went up to the woman and her staff, then back towards the rabble.

"While I thank you for the entrance, I hope I am not late as usual," Theadon said calmly with a slight smirk, looking up to the ledge above one last time before making his way toward the seat he assumes is his.

Aeternus released a breath of relief as Theadon’s arrival and Amalasuntha’s intervention was enough to either stupify or pacify the other Primarchs from further provocations. He watched as Bodiciia and Alexamandes stared daggers into the custodian, while the remainder turned their attention to the late arrival of the Eighteenth. Rex nodded his head thankfully to the Black Hawk before opening his mouth to speak with the final legion commander.

“It’s good to see you alive, Theadon. I grew worried that you’d get chewed out by the Sigillite if you took any longer.” The God Slayer remarked with a small smile flashed in Theadon’s direction. He reached up with one of his gauntlets to rest it upon the Eighteenth Primarch’s shoulder in such a way a long friend would. He silently thanked fate that the other commander had arrived in time for he still sensed another, mightier presence approaching their council. “Though I hate to admit, you are as late as I am.”

The sound of his staff upon the ancient stone rang louder than any bell of doom, for all present had seen the fury that its master could unleash. He seemed frailer than at the last such grand council, the all too human form vanishing into the folds of his robes such that only the fire of his eyes and the gnarled husk of his fist about his staff were still visible. And yet, when he sat at the throne at the right hand of his master’s, he still seemed unbent and undaunted by the mighty weight of his years. Standing behind him, rendered almost invisible by the scale of his presence, was a severe woman in a pressed blue uniform adorned with a triple helix.

“Amalasuntha,” Malcador said softly, his voice somehow carrying throughout the hall, “you have my thanks, but you need not worry about such things upon my account. Though my Master has long disputed it, I can think of nothing better to retain my youth than to hear the cries of children,” he added with a soft grin, the Sigilite relaxing slightly upon his throne. “But she is right, she is right,” he continued with a wave of his wave. “We have work to do, children, that which you were best made for.”

At some subtle gesture from the man, the hololith suddenly redirected its focus, the image of the wartorn world’s surface rendered down to a single front. One that every soul in the room knew all too well. Ursh. The vast realm stretched across the breadth of the world, poised above the Emperor’s own domain, fat and hungry.

“Now that Kalagann has destroyed Xozer and overthrown their wyrds, fear has come into our hearts that witchery shall compound witchery. His realm must fall, his covens destroyed, and their lore burnt, before they can do lasting damage to the great work. You may bid amongst yourselves for positions amongst the fronts, with one exception,” Malcador said, his eyes turning to Aeternus. “I have special need of the God-Slayers.”

Aeternus’ gentle demeanor fell as the Sigilite addressed his legion. An uneasy chill descended over his body as their liege’s closest advisor bore into him with eyes that could strip away any mental resistance. Several of the aforementioned Primarchs bit their tongues after a quick dismissal, Alexamandes and Bodiciia in particular silently fuming. Rex rose from his oversized seat, bowed his head low, and opened his lips to speak. Long strands of silky, black hair similar to the Master of the Line’s draped across his lowered forehead.

“It is an honor and a privilege that you would require us, Lord Sigilite,” Aeternus spoke in a humble tone, dark eyes glued to the table as a sign of respect. He feared nothing in physical form, yet the Sigilite’s burning orbs never failed to force him into some notion of dread. Others glared daggers into his fur-cloaked back, Gilgamenses, in particular, radiated some level of envy. Thus Rex never falters in his genuflection until responded to. “We will conquer and kill for Him and Unity, where would you have us slay?”

“Enough of this petty jealousy,” Malcador whispered wearily, slouching into his throne at the immediate sense of being slighted by the Thunder Primarchs. “I give the bulk of you honor and glory, blood and war! Is this not what your hearts bay for? Is this not what you have come to this council in the name of? You shall have your pick of Ursh, and neither I nor my Master shall stand against the biddings of your murdermake. Is that not enough? Is the Raptor no longer enough? Shall I gift to each of you a trinket, so that you may think yourself beloved by your father?”

“Foolish children,” the Sigilite said with a bone-weary sigh, lifting his face out of his robes and for once appearing every day of his nigh thousand years. “You wish to know why I have called Aeternus to my side? It is for no errand any of you shall care for, and there is far less glory in it than you shall gain by bringing to my Master one of Kalagann’s battle standards. I require the God-Slayers to engage upon a mission of peace. Now silence this pride, and leave me to my business, Aeternus and I must speak of Sanctii.”

The Primarch of the God-Slayers raised his head after the Sigilite’s remarks, turning a pair of dark eyes to his kindred. A small amount of pity flitted through his orbs before he turned away and stood apart from the gathering, awaiting the moment when Malcador would call for him. Aeternus would watch as a smaller feud began to break out between the gathered throng of bloodthirsty legion commanders, beginning with the largest of their assorted rank.

“The Raptor is plentiful, Malcador! I do not require trinkets. Those will be taken from those that will be slain in the southern city of Kaspia.” Bodiciia rose from her seat, planting her fist on the table and grinning wickedly between the Sigilite and the hololithic projection. A voice that threatened to shatter even those gene-altered around her boomed with each and every syllable. The thunder warrior raised a finger to the southwestern part of Ursh’s fringe territories. “The Verdant Raiders of the Second Legion will prevail in the name of Unity, our Master, and for Mankind!”

The next of the genewarriors moved with a swiftness, Primarch Alexamandes echoing the Fourth’s overexaggerated movements with his own. A great laugh thundered from deep within his breastplate. “As the Butcher of Europa said, blood is enough, Sigilite. I would rather have waged war with the great Aeternus Rex, but I will claim Monggol Tertius! I expect you ‘lot to see the red and gray of the Tenth’s Infernal Phoenixes in southern-central Ursh!” Alexamandes blared, a pair of nearly manic eyes swapping between the remaining thunder warriors. One of his dull, red gauntlets directed the precise location of his assaulting target before the legion commander backed away from the table with Bodiciia.

A brief moment of silence filled the air as the remainder of the Primarchs, those that had spent longer than a fraction of a second to think, considered their own plans. Corvinius’ eyes darted between several suitable locations marked across the hovering hologram, especially lingering on the southeastern portion of Ursh’s great territory. Gilgamenses idly spoke to himself as his own orbs drifted to the western territories of the Khaganate. Both shared a look between each other before finally beginning to speak, the raven haired thunder warrior voicing his target first.

The Ruined Hive of the Asiatic Dustfields will be conquered in the name of the Master. We would never expect Him to grant us trinkets, only that He understands that we will use our enemy’s weapons against them. The Thirteenth’s Obsidian Crows will plunge into the depths for Unity.” Primarch Corvinius calmly stated, affixing their wargoal on the hololithic map with a single, midnight digit. The gaunt thunder warrior offered a short bow of his head, a light tap of his gauntlet against his chestplate, and backed away from the table’s edge. The amethystine knight nearby rose as he began to speak in earnest.

“I will not share the same sentiment as other commanders, Lord Sigilite, our Master would do us a great justice if he threw a bone or two to our feet. A relic from your treasury, a platoon of more dignified warriors there, or another fresh batch of newly crafted genewarriors.” Gilgamenses voice dripped with venom, carefully tiptoeing the line between subservient and defiant. His last words rang closer to an accusation rather than a request for reinforcement. Gray eyes glared at the feeble form of Malcador then turned to glower at the God-Slayer. “The Sixteenth’s Amethyst Tridents will plunge into Khaganate territory and starve Ursh of their grasp on the Terrawatt Clans. Perhaps then some of us will gain proper recognition.” The amethystine Primarch pushed himself away from the table after annotating his wargoal over the tribute state of the Russ Khaganate.

Theadon looked up and down the map, but his eyes looked towards the north. “My warriors will enjoy the eternal nights in the north… I will tell them to move Europa at once before meeting them, we will do what we do best and cut a line of fire through their heartlands until we reach the eternal night of winter in the Siber Ice Plains .” His good eye turned towards Gilgamenses and then back forward at the map. He rolled his shoulder letting it pop quietly as he just stared at the map. “But temper, temper, Gilgamenses, you have renown… You have prestige, your warriors are fine, I just hope that I can finish gutting the heartlands out from the north before the Urals are flattened.”

Amalasuntha had been gazing down at the Thunder Warriors, content to let the Sigilite deal with their bickering and savagery until the end of the meeting. That was until Gilgamenses had spoken, his voice grated her ears like nails on chalk and her anger swelled with each passing word. The Black Hawk would have descended upon him in a fury, but her eyes merely burned into his head even as Theadon spoke. She could not resist, her own brand of venom spilling across the room as she spoke, “Worry about glory is a fool’s errand. Asking for relics, many beyond your control, is a death sentence. Make do with what you have, barbarian, just as Aeternus and his God-Slayers do.”

Her words were not as diplomatic as Theadon’s and she certainly did not hide her hostility, everything from her posture to her gaze held only resentment. The Black Hawk was prepared to pounce on Gilgamenses further had he dared speak against her or Malcador, only being content with him being brought back into place. The Venatarii’s lance remained hummed with deathly life as she made her threat to the Thunder Warrior clear. Though, it could be construed that her words were meant for all but the God-Slayers for their future desires and wants of the Imperium.

Malcador paid little heed to the bidding of the Thunder Warriors, the Sigilite’s attentions upon far more important matters than which of his Master’s princelings would raise the Raptor over the ruins of Kaspia. His thoughts were upon Sanctii and its promise, and the strange role he was thrusting upon the God-Slayers and how best to send the men of Thunder upon a mission of peace. That is, until, the most impudent and boastful of the Primarchs raised his voice, and the old man’s eyes were lit with an inner flame.

“You wish for new genewarriors, Gilgamenses? The freshest weapons from our lord’s forge? Why, I had feared none would volunteer for the honor,” the Sigilite said, clutching his staff tightly with a soft grin. “Amar,” he added, in a far kinder voice, to the woman who had stood behind him unnoticed and unremarked. “Ready your Firstborn, they shall march with the Amethyst Tridents. I trust that they shall prove their quality.”

With a wave of his hand, Malcador closed discussion upon the topic, his decree having been made. The true concern for this meeting had been ignored long enough. “Aeternus, I know I give you an unusual task. You shall be equipped with what information I have in my power to grant you,” the old man said to the First, settling back down upon his throne. “From what my agents have been able to glean, they are a prime candidate for Unity. They have kept the flame of civilization alive through the long terrors of Old Night, and have avoided the depredation of tyranny and strife, with a strong gene-stock free of mutation. They have maintained some semblance of democracy, though the details elude us as yet, with decisions made collectively by some sort of council. Many Standard Template Constructs are evident within their city, though it is unknown if they still possess the means to construct more.”

“Intriguingly, they have also maintained several voidships, including a venerable destroyer nigh on a kilometer in length - though for some reason they currently have established a lunar cordon. To take the city by force would be a slaughter, one that neither I nor my lord are keen to partake in, for their strength is vast and their treasures would surely be despoiled - to say nothing of your own losses. They maintain a military from among their citizenry, genehanced with arms and armor to rival and surpass your own. In addition, they have constructed a vast wall about the entirety of their city, inset in which are void shield generators.”

“As such,” Malcador said, staring the Thunder Warrior directly in the eyes, “it is the decision of the Emperor that they should be peaceably allied and brought beneath the auspice of the Raptor without bloodshed, as was done with the Achaemenids. This is your task, Aeternus Rex.”

The Primarch of the God-Slayers waited to respond as those beings similar to him began to leave in total. His dark eyes catch the seething form of Gilgamenses casting several proud, angry glares at members of their conclave before leaving. Bodiciia clapped Aeternus on the shoulder before taking her leave, followed only by Alexamandes gesturing to Theadon in a way that suggested the two will be drinking. Corvinius shared a knowing look with Rex, nodding to the God-Slayer before exiting the chamber. A small smile was shared with Theaddon as he left, hoping to once more fight alongside the Nightbringers.

Theadon stood and slowly raised his hands towards the two, “I hope to see you both soon, I have traveled far and although this was a brief meeting. I am glad to have seen you Brother.” He started making his way from the room, exiting the way he came in and disappearing into the halls.

Once the last of his kindred had left, leaving the chamber eerily quiet, Aeternus would return to the table’s edge that he had previously sat. His eyes fell on Malcador’s intense gaze, an indescribable feeling building up in his frame as he mustered a response. Within the frame of his mind, there was no doubt that he would ever reject such a calling, for Unity was all of their desires. The question was not in how, but why the God-Slayers with what afflicts them?

“It shall be done, Lord Sigilite, Sanctii will fall under the Raptor. No matter the cost.” Aeternus solemnly stated, bending down on one knee and placing his fist against the Raptor affixed across his breastplate. The Primarch inclined his head once more before standing back to full height. With the acceptance of his task, Rex began to speak again in a quieter tone. He expected no small amount of retaliation for his next statement and prepared himself for Malcador or Amalasuntha’s fury. “If you would allow me, Malcador, then I would beseech you for further knowledge. Absolute victory must be achieved in His name.”

The Sigilite arched a brow at the Thunder Warrior’s request, his full attention upon the man. “Did you think I would withhold a weapon of any sort from one of my master’s warriors? Upon so dire a quest, to achieve so needful an aim? I have spoken what pitifully little we know of Sanctii to you already. Now go, be about your business, unless there is some other light of knowledge you wish enkindled.”

“There is one thing that I must ask, Lord Sigilite, yet it is not for additional information on Sanctii. That city’s fate was sealed the moment the order was spoken.” Aeternus began to speak, his voice steadily rising to a stalwart tone. He carefully chose the next words that were spoken, aware of the potential insinuations that could be picked apart from it. The warrior steeled himself nevertheless.

“My warriors suffer relentless afflictions, deviations that have been steadily handled between senior members of the First Legion, myself, and Lady Amalasuntha. Unity will be achieved regardless of our lives, but if there were a way to alleviate their flaws, then we could more efficiently execute our Master’s plans. These are the answers I seek in pursuit of greater victories.” The information requested was accompanied by a bowing of the thunder warrior’s head to the Sigilite. Never before had he asked such a thing. Aeternus had always pursued the wishes of their Master with brutal, relentless efficiency. Something in his ambitions had changed.

The ancient man’s face softened at that, something resembling guilt passing over him as he slumped down upon his chair. “You, and all the Thunder Warriors, are children born of need. I will not deny this. Shortcuts were, are, taken in the process of your creation - a brutish transfiguration that cannot be considered to have the nobility of science. We cast ourselves as barbarians in the atrocities committed to make you, and for that we cannot be forgiven.”

“The process is refined, of course. Strength is set aside for stability. Mass applicability for ideal candidates. The Astartes. You will never be them. You are far more than they can ever hope to be, but at a terrible price that they need never pay. I have had… thoughts considering what may be done for my lord’s first and truest soldiers. I wish I had something more for you, Primarch.”

A flicker of a saddened frown passed across Aeternus’ lips before returning to a tightlipped straightness typical of his stoic demeanor. His eyes reflected a buried grief behind a curtain of stalwartness. He had received his answer, regardless of whether it had been one that he ached for or one filled with empty platitudes.

I understand. I hope that our creation has, at the least, helped our Master achieve all that he wishes. Thank you, Malcador, for your candor. Sanctii will soon see the Raptor fly over it’s walls.” Aeternus raised his head once more, pressing one of his blackened gauntlets against his chestplate in a salute. He stepped back from the table, beginning to turn away to exit the chamber. Before the Primarch pressed the helmet over his head, he turned to regard Malcador once more.

“Perhaps, once Unity has been achieved, our Master will find a cure for our afflictions. It will be a glorious day when it arrives.” The Primarch of the God-Slayers said with a sad smile, promptly fitting the knightly helmet over his skull.

“Aeternus. Know this. Nothing my lord has wrought could last without your sacrifice.” As Malcador spoke, the weight of years hung heavily upon him, and he looked every day of his thousands of years of life.

Amalasuntha looked to Malcador, hearing his words, only to look back towards the Primarch with an indecipherable look of pity. It was not an emotion she was precisely known for or one that she knew she could feel, yet she felt it. Warm, yet cold words, came from the custodian, “The deeds of your progeny will be echoed far into the future, Aeternus. Our Emperor would be sure of it.”


Credits: @MarshalSolgriev (Aeternus+Primarchs), @Lauder(Lady Amalasuntha), @grimely(Malcador), @Jamesyco(Theadon)
The Ring of Muahad

-Twelve Years After Arrival-






A great wall of ashen sand rose a hundred kilometers into Pandjoras’ northern hemisphere, dusken sky blotted by a tide of black grains. Darkness coated the regions surrounding the Dune Sea of the Lost, perpetually afflicted by raging storms and brutal waves of ash blizzards. New knolls of sublimated, umbral grist built up with each gust that blasted through the region. Little survived the bleak reality aside from the slithering forms of void serpents, fist-sized obsidian scarabs, and orange-eyed marsupials with needle-thin pelts. Fragments of broken palaces dating from before the cataclysm sporadically dotted the wastes, accompanied by tiny pools of silvery graviton particles. Devoid of the southern hemisphere’s penumbral stalks, small groups of azure roses bloomed in isolation around these miniature pools. Dusken-skinned humans in extremely low numbers carefully harvested the aforementioned flora, tending to one of their only food sources before disappearing into ancient ruins.

The brutal serenity of the wasteland was interrupted by the heavy thrumming of graviton engines speeding across the umbral sands. In their journey, a gang of harvester dropships blasted through swarms of void serpents and looming sandstorms alike. Each was a fat-bellied, austere craft with quadruple gravity shunts paired on the prow and stern respectively. Grizzly tethers with huge, monomolecular hooks freely hung from beneath the vessel, while variable firing ports passively held elongated gravrifles locked in place. The cockpit on the prow of the vehicle quickly burst through each wave of the ashen blizzards with reinforced umbral glass curved for superior aerodynamics. It continued to barrel through an aeronautical sea of sand, jostling those members within the hull.

A vast deck of vertical seats and gurgling cogitators spread across a boxy interior separated by a cockpit and a lower area. Twenty-four synthetic silk beds hung from skyward railing magnetically locked in position for comfortable, space, and ease of access. Twelve variable vanes acting as firing slits remained closed mid-transit with several Pandjoran-sigil runes lingering nearby for activation. Crackling screens sufficing for external viewports lined the cabin furthest from the bay floor. A short staircase led down to another level full of macabre tools for dissection. Bay doors, shut tight by graviton-powered hydraulics, formed the center of the chamber, while quadruple gravity tethers hung freely from enormous reels at all four corners. Weapon racks lined the walls from the lower and upper decks with a plethora of blades and guns varying in quality. All of these were closely inspected by a dusken deity of staggering proportion.

A team of ten Pandjorans of one House would normally embark on one of the dropships to hunt an elder serpent. Instead, the Malik of Pandjoras, Ramses ibn Varranis, and a mixed group of Bahamutians, Nathazians, and Urahalians resided within the craft. Each one was as solemn as the next, focused on any manner of duty that filled their minds. Pandjoran-powered armor, of a unified design akin to the Varranian-pattern, adorned their patient forms. Sleek rebreathers fit snug to their faces, overshadowed only by midnight-hued cowls of serpent silk. Each individual wore House Varranis’ sigil, the blade and dusken sun, boldly on their armor, while personal sigils from other Houses were emboldened on a single shoulder. Only the dusken deity, Zaphariel, wore vastly different attire than the rest of his retinue. Sleek, modified powered armor of a custom design befitting his station fit his enormous form, and yet the Malik was devoid of a rebreather. A coy smile, typical of his demeanor, was proudly displayed across his lips as he watched Ramses deal with movement illness.

“... Even within a year, you’ve already changed the dropships this much! I’m not certain that I could handle any further advancements.” Ramses stated, kneeling against the bulkhead leading into the cockpit. Sweat perspired on the mature hassan’s forehead as he held open a sack. Flecks of bile dripped from his lips while his rebreather hung around his neck. Gall sloshes inside of the fabric, threatening to spill over with every jostle of their craft.

“I warned you about the transit, uncle. If you cannot fathom such changes on Pandjoras, then I cannot fathom how you remain so obtuse to my warnings.” Zaphariel chided the hassan, shaking his head in feigned disappointment while offering a hand to Ramses. His adoptive uncle refused with a shake of his head, allowing the bile to resettle within his stomach.

“I couldn’t let the Malik of Pandjoras travel without his closest advisor or any hassan. The old man of the mountain would cleave me in two with Azrael. No, I believe it’d be best to-” The dusken-skinned man began to speak before catching his words to spew bile into the cloth. His adoptive nephew patted Ramses’ shoulder in a comforting, pitiful manner. Exhaust, orange eyes turned to regard the promised dreamer with a mixture of gratitude and contempt. He continued to speak after wiping his mouth clean of filth. “-accompany you no matter the distance. No matter what happens to me. Even if I continue to spew gall for thirteen days and thirteen nights, then I’ll simply do so quietly and without you noticing.”

Ramses’ words earned him a toothy grin from the Malik of Pandjoras, who lifted the mature hassan from his slumped position. The bay around them shook under pressure from the oncoming ashen storm, forcing those within to harshly jostle. Zaphariel handily stood his ground, keeping a firm grip on the mature hassan lest he fall into a pile of his filth. His adoptive uncle gave an appreciative nod as he regained his footing against the metallic floor. A single, lightning-quick step was all that was required for the dusken deity to help the Varranian noble into a vertical seat. One of his talon-tipped digits activated a Pandjoran-sigil rune, locking the straps for his mentor.

“If you wanted to help me, Ramses, then you would’ve stayed behind to handle all thirteen of my wives. I can only handle a thousand and one different tales of the same serpent song before I feel the need to wander for thirteen days and thirteen nights. You handle women much better than I, after all.” Zaphariel stated with a playful smile, ruffling the freshly grown beard beginning to compliment his face. The hassan gave his adoptive nephew a worried look before tiredness overtook him, closing both of his orange orbs to savor a single moment of oneness. A glance from the dusken deity to the Pandjoran seated next to Ramses, an Urahalian seer, was all that was required for them to overlook his defeated uncle.

The portal into their dropships cockpit slid open with a press of a rune, the Malik sliding through even before the opening sequence had finished. His golden, serpentine eyes gazed around the austere interior of the craft. A pair of rooms flanked him on either side, one leading to several furnished bunks and another to a faculty. In front of him, five chairs arrayed in a pentagonal shape. Large blocks of terminals surrounded each one, save for the most forward seat. A miniature throne with a worming nest of metallic cables peered out into the ashen blizzard their craft flew through. The Pandjoran pilot at the helm, a Bahamutian experienced with atmospheric flight, was slaved to the harvester’s neural feedback umbilicals. Slithering, chromatic tendrils hooked into several ports augmenting the back of their skull, irritated skin bubbling up around the fleshy plugs. Unlike other Pandjorans, the salvagers of Bahamut had ashen skin dyed by the relentless graviton tempests that raged down endless flakes upon their unprotected forms.

We will be arriving momentarily at Neu Babylos, my Malik.” A deep, reverberating voice hailed from several voxcasters arrayed in the cockpit, yet it failed to shout from the lips of the Pandjoran before Zaphariel. One of the few upgrades he had managed to ply from the fallen palaces was a seat-mounted neural network - or a command throne, as he liked to think of it. A mechanism hissed on the back of the throne, pumping fresh narcotics and other stimulants into the Bahamutian pilot. Tubes full of silvery, black liquid continuously fed into a port around the Pandjoran’s wrists, while smaller drains full of filth emptied below them into the faculty behind them.

“I see Saahir has managed to develop even more ways to synthesize void serpent venom. His industrious attitude never ceases to surprise. Have the ashen platforms already been hailed?” The Malik of Pandjoras said with carefully veiled disgust, actively intrigued by the Malik of Bahamut’s infinite creativity and repulsed in the same thought. His hidden abhorrence wasn’t detected by the pilot, who continued to monitor an unseen field of view. A soundless sigh escaped Zaphariel’s lips, disappointed in the lack of communication with the Bahamutian. Crackling voxcasters burst to life once more as the Pandjoran spoke through neurological connections.

A platform has been designated for your imperial presence, Malik Varranis. The House of Bahamut advises you to change into heavier armor upon arrival.” The pilot stated through the blaring voxcasters, an advisory tone entered into their otherwise monotone voice. Confused, the Malik of Pandjoras eyed the seated form of the Bahamutian with peaked interest. A sly smile began to creep across his lips as he pondered the Pandjoran’s words.

“Is that so? Why is that? Does Saahir think that I’ll blow away with a thousand and one grains of black sand?” The dusken deity asked with his eyes beginning to narrow on the command throne, Zaphariel’s enormous body looming darkly over the Bahamutian. A shiver passed through the seated pilot even while their nerves were synced with the harvester dropship. Sweat began to build up on their ashen forehead, threatening to drip down over their exposed skin.

It is so that we can hear you arrive, Lord Zaphariel, your steps are as soundless as a serpent.” They blurted out around the cockpit in a mixture of fear and anxiety. Zaphariel’s eyes widened in surprise, his serpentine pupils dilating as if affixed on a new type of prey. Thin lips spread wide as laughter burst forth from the dusken deity’s lungs.

Pfuha! Pfuhahaha! A joke? From one that has wandered the umbral sands without dusken shroud for thirteen days and thirteen nights!?” The dusken deity boomed, his laughter filled with enthusiasm and majesty. He laughed heartily from deep within his body, threatening to drown out the sound of graviton engines with his guffawing. Although the pilot couldn’t shift in their throne, Zaphariel was certain that they watched him with fearful eyes. “I demand your name! It shall be enshrined within my mind for eons to come!”

While Zaphariel’s laughter slowly died down, the pilot of the harvester dropship silently mused on the correct words to speak. After the last of the dusken deity’s guffaws, their voice came through the voxcasters in a hushed tone. “Zahia al-Bahamut of the Ta’allan.” They said, announcing their name and their tribal suffix. The Malik of Pandjoras committed it to memory, a toothy grin remaining on his lips after a hearty laugh. Before he was able to respond, warning klaxons rang throughout the interior of the craft. They had finally arrived at their destination.

The Dune Sea of the Lost stretched out endlessly around them in a tidal ocean of ashen dunes. Perpetual graviton tempests blasted the dusken sands with silvery flakes, flattening and cascading new formations across this stretch of Pandjoras. Towering mesas of grey rock crackled with fresh energy, frequently stricken with lilac lightning by each passing storm. Incredible ruins of fallen palaces dotted the landscape in vast quantities, each picked cleanly through by the nomadic tribes of the ashen wasters. Only one object held their particular interest in this corner of the penumbral planet: The Ruins of Old Pandjoras.

A great and terrifying gravity engine the size of Pandjoras’ grandest massif stuck out of an umbral mountain range. Enormous chunks of rusted metal and bulbous domes scattered around the fallen engine in vast quantities. Colossal weapons of unknown caliber or design lay dormant as they stretched from one end of the range to the next. Sheer kilometers of metallic fragments, carbon fiber clumps, and technological clumps filled the gaps between mountain, mesa, and desert. Lonely as it appeared, Pandjorans stalked the haunting corpse of the cataclysm in substantial swathes. Serpent silk tents, carbon fiber yurts, and swarms of broken dropships acted as impromptu settlements for those that ventured into the abyssal depths. Brilliant glow globes dotted locations where the populace was most dense, while tremendous banners of House Bahamut and House Varranis indicated structures with high importance. Each structure, impromptu domicile, and salvaged compound paled in comparison to the hovering citadel tethered nearby.

Eight immense tethers with monomolecular hooks dug into eight towering mesas reinforced with metallic scaffolding and topped with frequently used landing platforms. Each tether rose to an enormous reel attached to one of the many hovering palaces of Pandjoras. Thirteen gravity shunts of preposterous size lifted a series of towering structures atop a circular platform encircled by a rustic wall of metal. Electrifying coils and tarnished cogs heavily decorated the gravitic seraglio, paled only by the billowing smog spilling from leviathan smokestacks. Carbon fiber awnings sheltered gangplanks and causeways between closely dispersed buildings, yet tempest flakes still managed to savagely warp parts of the palace.

“Neu Babylos never ceases to amaze me, the foremost location of the greatest inventors in all of Pandjoras all located in the same place. A labor of love, a dusken desire, and part of the great plan. Wouldn’t you agree, Zahia?” The dusken deity spoke through the klaxons, marveling at the palace that had taken beyond thirteen days and thirteen nights to construct. He fondly remembered combing the Dune Sea of the Lost with Saahir and his ashen tribe, recruiting each nomadic clan they passed, and finishing their home with bits from Old Pandjoras. His conversing partner failed to respond, focused on using their neurally linked network to land the harvester dropship.

The cockpit door slid open behind them, Ramses ibn Varranis stepped through with vastly improved confidence compared to the start of their journey. Flecks of bile that had once decorated his facial hair had disappeared along with his beard, stubble decorating his scarred visage from chin to jaw to lip. Exhaustion still lingered within his orange eyes and fatigue afflicted parts of his movement. The mature hassan still managed to confidently stumble through the dropship to stand beside the dusken deity. He flashed the Malik of Pandjoras a small smile, offering a bow of his head in apology.

“Apologies for the wait, Zaphariel, I hadn’t expected to be so prone to illness. Muahad would be ashamed of me if he were to see me in that state.” The hassan said with humility on his lips, turning his attention away from the dusken deity to the glorious form of Neu Babylon. He whistled in appreciation of the architecture while resting his body against the command throne. Ramses' closeness earned him a slight, angry twitch from Zahia, who guided their craft ever closer to one of the many platform-topped mesas.

“You should be more worried about my approval, Ramses. You looked dramatically better with a full set of facial hair. Not that your wife, Yaminah, will complain though.” Zaphariel said in a playful tone, eyeing every specific detail on the hassan’s matured face. Ramses raised a hand to fend off a wave of fluster at the mention of his spouse and in a vain attempt to hide from the dusken deity’s scanning. A pair of talon-tipped gauntlets slowly rose from the Malik of Pandjoras as if prepared to attack his adoptive uncle. Their momentary event was interrupted by the voxcasters blaring to life once more with Zahia’s voice.

Cease your play-fighting, my lord. To all other crew, prepare for the final approach. Reel the gravity tethers, roll the weapon cages, and close all variable portals. We have arrived at Neu Babylos.” Zahia stated in a monotone voice. A great cacophony of noise blasted behind the trio of Zaphariel, Ramses, and the Bahamutian pilot. Pandjorans that had once been buckled to their vertical seats were now unleashed to perform their aeronautical duties. Partially open vanes were closed after the heavy gravguns were rolled in. Gravity tethers were reeled in via automated graviton-fed miniature engines. Weapon racks, filled with jostling weapons, were magnetically locked for descending procedures. All twenty-four of the vertical seats were actuated, allowing them to fold skyward to open the deck for superior movement. Four Bahamutians urgently barged into the cockpit, deftly avoiding both of the hassans to occupy co-pilot seats and terminals alike.

The oncoming dropship quickly approached one of the many enormous, reinforced mesas that encircled Neu Babylos. Specifically, their craft descended upon one illuminated by four harshly blinking glow globes with crimson-hued bulbs. A small group of Bahamutians awaited a distance away from the landing platform, one of their number more highly ornate than the rest. Four landing gears unfurled from the vessel, flat-footed mechanisms aiming to squarely complete the arrival sequence. Once the harvester was fully landed, all three reinforced doors on the left, right, and back opened up to roll out boarding ramps. Many of the Pandjoras trickled out from any of the exits except the pilot, Zahia, who remained synced to their command throne. As the dusken deity turned to disembark, one of the Bahamutian’s hands grabbed hold of his arms. Turning around in surprise, the androgynous pilot rewarded him with a small, thankful smile beneath their trio of crimson lenses.




The last of Zaphariel’s retinue left the harvester dropship, turning to watch as it rose into the ashen sky once more. Night had begun to fall on an already dusken world, further casting great shadows over all of Neu Babylos. Glow globes grew brighter as darkness loomed over the Bahamutian edge of the planet. Hundreds of red lenses glinted in the brief bit of artificial light, revealing large pockets of House Bahamut Pandjorans skittering about Old Pandjoras like mechanical insects. It all paled in comparison to the crimson hive that swarmed before their procession. Five individuals wearing the ashen cloaks of the wastes surrounded a greater being of staggering proportions. A dusken shroud of exquisitely woven serpent silk cowled over its features, allowing only thirteen crimson lenses and a heavy rebreather to remain visible on their person. The thrumming of a graviton-fed engine could be heard within their apparel, though they weren’t bulky enough to hide such an unfathomably large component. Hissing mechanics revealed a cluster of metallic arms from beneath their robes, each gripping some form of intricate cane to steady themselves.

+’Welcome once again to Neu Babylos, great one.’+ The thing said in a voice that reverberated several times over. The tone would’ve been pleasant were it not for the abyssal masking over their lips. It earned a small smile from the Malik of Pandjoras, yet he couldn’t help but feel dejected at the thought of what the former ruler had become.

“I see you’ve continued to augment yourself once more, Saahir. I expected that type of fervent attitude from the Urahalians, yet it doesn’t surprise me that you went against my advice. Was it the elder venom or the tempest flakes that forced you this time?” Zaphariel asked as he closed the distance between himself and the Malik of Bahamut. Saahir reached out with his only remaining, fleshy limb to grip forearms with the dusken deity. The rest of the umbral king’s cohort remained several meters back, suspicious of the thing that called itself Saahir. In a sense, he also shared their unnerving reaction to the ashen waster’s absurd growth, yet it was his intervention in the Dune Sea of the Lost that had propelled this outcome.

+’The tempest flakes had churned my body during our magnetic shielding experiments, but the latter half of my body was augmented due to the venom. Save your worry for our future, Lord Zaphariel, I gladly forsake my humanity for your vision of Pandjoras.’+ Saahir responded in a solemn tone, his voice filled with humility and gratitude. Zaphariel felt a part of his masquerade chip away, yet he resolved to utilize whatever was left of the great ashen waster’s vitality for their dusken world. He simply smiled, lowering his golden, serpentine eyes to gaze into each crimson lens.

“It will not come to that, my friend. You will see the great plan come to fruition upon a thousand and one grains of black sand spread across thirteen hundred worlds.” As Zaphariel spoke, he could sense Saahir shift where none other could. It was as if he was trying to prostrate with limbs that he no longer had. An air of fervent exaltation swam around the being that rose just shy of the dusken deity, propelled by any manner of hidden mechanism.

+’You honor me, yet it is not for myself that you have come to Neu Babylos today. It is to claim dominion over Pandjoras once and for all, is it not? Come and see what I have mused upon for thirteen days and thirteen nights.’+ The mechanical monstrosity that was Saahir shifted upon unknowable components, gliding away towards a heavily shrouded mesa to their immediate right. All five Bahamutians around the Malik of Bahamut followed him, carefully lifting parts of his dusken robe lest it dust against the masonic stone. Ramses shared a look with Zaphariel as they watched the great being move across the magnetic railing connecting each platform. The dusken deity merely shook his head, moving forward to follow after their terrifying host.

Magnetically driven platforms on metallic rails delivered the combined cohorts of Zaphariel and Saahir to the experimental mesa. Awning stretched from far above the reinforced column, draped by a hovering machine on miniature gravity shunts. Several Bahamutians in ashen robes patrolled the edges of the veiled structure, gravrifles and Varranian-powered donning their aggressive forms. As the biomechanical monstrosity that was Saahir grew closer, a pair of the Pandjorans spread open a dusken curtain to allow their entry. As the dusken deity passed, he witnessed the sheer size of the Bahamutian sentinels. No doubt, he thought, Saahir had augmented them with a thousand and one different reinforcements.

Inside the veiled mesa was an extraordinary amount of projects tended to by ashen wasters of all different sizes and scales. Multi-limbed engineers tended to minute, precise components, while hulking warriors with plentiful, venom-filled tubes hefted large chunks of metal to be crafted together. Miniature machines with gravitic shunts wandered back and forth, delivering smaller items constructed within the depths of Neu Babylos. Urahalians dotted their number with dusken shrouds covering their bald heads, wyrd weaving from their hands to afflict reality with fresh sores. Nathazian dropship masters fiercely spoke with Bahamutian pilots on the details of certain specifications. It was an accumulated series of projects that brought their world together, one way or another.

Each experimental machine was a wonder to Zaphariel’s eyes. Bipedal, humanoid machines of gargantuan proportion rose above his head with menacing claws and shoulder-mounted gravcannons. Vastly smaller, sleeker vehicles fit for a single operator idled nearby with singular gravitic engines. Behemoth war machines on a variety of gravity shunts attempted the first activation, while gravweapons the size of an elder serpent were lowered onto a swivel-mount. Back-mounted, personal-use gravity engines were tested with some success nearby, influenced only by the weight of two-handed armaments. It amazed him to no end what the Pandjorans were capable of, nearly bringing a tear to his eye with a sense of achievement. All of these inventions paled in comparison to the hulking vehicle at the center of the mesa.

A vessel that he could’ve only imagined in his dreams lay before the umbral king’s eyes. What had once been a harvester dropship was unlike anything that it had once been. A pair of gravitic engines triple the size, a body double the size, and a length as long as the great wyrm of the void stood on the platform. Heaving graviton tanks were mated to areas where turrets, gravity hooks, and the lower deck would normally reside. The term ‘dropship’ was no longer an accurate title for what awaited them on the platform. It instead stood as a penumbral corvette of improbable power, though lacked any offensive demeanor.

+’The Bahamut-class Corvette, a craft with no military purpose and built for the sake of breaching Pandjoras’ unusual atmosphere. A great being that would’ve taken me a thousand and one years to assemble without the assistance of House Nathaz, House Urahal, and House Varranis. It had begun as a converted harvester dropship, but it quickly become apparent that the original design was not intended for spaceflight. Everything needed to be rebuilt up from umbral sand. Heavier plating, denser engines, graviton pods, Urahalian meditation chambers, experimental magnetic shielding, hyper synthesized venom-fueled generators. We used every note from our ancestors to achieve a creature somewhat resembling our ancient starcrafts.’+ The Malik of Bahamut said, beginning to explain every small detail that led up to the creation of the corvette. He spread all of his arms wide in an excited gesture. The great plan had been conceived, gestated, and was ready to be born anew into Pandjoras. Scarlet lenses turned to regard the dusken deity, who eyed the corvette with wonder in his golden eyes.

“Impossible, within three years you’ve managed to create something like this? This wasn’t the only project, either. You’ve managed to invent machines of all purposes from war machines to commercial novelties. I am… beyond pleased with your progress. The great plan is ready to be born, my friend,” Zaphariel stated with a hearty chuckle, planting obsidian talons on what could only possibly be Saahir’s shoulder. The Malik of Pandjoras was responded to with harsh and awkward coughing, construed only as the ashen waster’s sheepish chortling. The dusken deity opened his mouth once more to speak, a toothy grin spreading across his lips. “But is it prepared for immediate launch? You wouldn’t have invited me to Neu Babylos for anything less than a finished product.”

A short, pregnant silence overtook the Bahamutians that lead them to the corvette. The thirteen crimson lenses of Saahir seemed to whirl as if to muse upon the inquiry. Each of the great ashen waster’s attendants turned their augmented visors toward their House ruler in anticipation of his answer. The enormous mechanical being began to address the dusken deity, a solemn air overtaking the scholarly attitude he had performed earlier. The heavy rebreather unleashed a coughing fit that echoed across the experimental mesa, turning the attention of every worker towards himself. One of his fleshy digits was raised to point upwards toward the darkened sky.

+'It is with utmost certainty that it is prepared for atmospheric flight. The great plan is within your hands, Lord Zaphariel,’+ Malik Saahir announced, earning a beaming smile from the dusken deity. The rest of the cohort exploded into a cacophony of cheers. Praises of glory were shared between the Pandjroans as the long-awaited dream rapidly approached. If one could discern the Bahamutian ruler’s facial features, they surely would’ve discovered the smile on his long-forgotten lips. He cleared his throat once more to refocus the attention of Zaphariel’s cohort. +’Will you travel beyond a thousand and one grains of black sand, my Malik?’+

Perhaps it was the way that it was said by Saahir that forced his next action, or maybe it was the excitement that had already built up in his body. Zaphariel exploded into a fit of howling laughter, confidence woven into each guffaw. Sharp teeth, capable of puncturing serpent scale and meat alike, flashed with each howl. Even with his plentiful augmentations, the great ashen waster felt fear and awe filter through his mechanical body. It only further propelled his inherent loyalty to the Malik of Pandjoras, desperately compelling his altered form to prostrate where it no longer could. The Malik of Bahamut settled for bowing his head as deeply as he could.

I will do more than that, Saahir! The void will be claimed by no less than the duskenborn of Pandjoras! Come, my friends, witness our glory!” Zaphariel said with a voice that thundered for miles, reverberating a thousand and one times over. Wyrd coagulated in each syllable, further enforcing the excitement and confidence he felt in those around him. A great chorus of cheers erupted from all of the Pandjorans, ranging from those of the dusken deity’s cohort and the augmented ashen wasters of Bahamut. The colossal form of the promised dreamer stepped forward toward the corvette, leading his cohort who loudly bellowed the glory of their Malik into the night. Saahir watched from afar as many of their number congregated around his liege.

As Saahir was left to himself with his retainers, he felt a long-forgotten emotion well up from his being as each crimson lens watched Zaphariel leave. Each of his hands were brought together in a steeple, his head inclined towards the dusken deity, and his rebreather muttered words in a spirited chant unheard by those around him.

+’O’ dusken deity, may the stars and sands align to ward over His journey, and may He claim His rightful dominion over the universe. Umbral sands of Pandjoras, guide His hand over the Star Serpent for eternity.’+




The inside of the corvette was similar to the harvester dropship, yet staggeringly different in several areas. A singular, long corridor made up the vast majority of the vessel, sectioned off by bulkhead and quarters alike. Devoid of a lower deck for hauling fresh meat and resources, a singular chamber for an Urahalian sand seer was placed where an ascender normally would remain. Weapon racks, gravrifle turrets, and terminals were all replaced to save space for storage, weight, and larger seatbeds. Several Bahamutian entourages awaited in this area, strapping themselves to the vertical placements. Atmospheric suits complimented their forms, bulky powered armored retrofitted for the possibility of void expeditions. Rebreathers stretched up into full helmets of reinforced obsidian glass, doming over facial features and skulls alike. Only Zaphariel, Ramses, a veteran pilot, and a Nathazian shipwright sat in the cockpit.

An entirely reconstructed cockpit surrounded the umbral king. Where obsidian glass would normally allow those within to view Pandjoras were thick layers of blast-shielding. Several monitors tied directly to different functions of the corvette actively read old, new, and present data in near-instantaneous statistics. A command throne sat at the center of this chamber, larger than any of the recently retrofitted harvester dropships had. Prolific cables spread out in a web across the room, stretching beyond to unknown areas of the ship. Their pilot sat on this throne, slaved to the system that would’ve overwhelmed normal Pandjorans. Plentiful augmentations bolstered their dusken form, yet none-so-much as the mess of mechanical serpents that snaked out of their skull. To Zaphariel’s dismay, the ashen waster’s nerves had been stapled some time ago through intensive surgery, leaving a remarkably humorless Pandjoran to discuss with.

The dusken deity sat on a slightly raised platform behind the command throne, his seat angled to watch a monitor connected to an externally mounted pict-recorder. Opposite the umbral king sat his adoptive uncle, who was silently chanting the teachings of Muahad to himself. All of the excitement that initially paraded the Malik of Pandjoras onboard had diminished to a significant extent, yet he was still enthralled by the wonder of Saahir’s progress. He knew that in a manner of moments their craft would be spearing through the atmosphere of the dusken world. The mere thought of it was enough to keep a toothy grin plastered across his thin lips.

All souls have been counted aboard the corvette, Lord Zaphariel. Safety restraints - satisfactory. Trajectory - satisfactory. Graviton storage - satisfactory. Approval for launch - satisfactory. We are prepared for an experimental launch. Requesting clearance for atmospheric flight...” The voice whispered across each voxcast, their voice trailing off as if focusing on another matter leagues away from their current affair. Zaphariel knew of the Bahamutian sigilic language, one of precision, logic, and faith that belied the suave tone of the Pandjoric dialect. Perhaps unconsciously, their pilot reflexively twisted their fingers in a practiced code that reflected the secret tongue of the ashen wastes. An invisible conversation was held between the waster and their leader, ending as quickly as it had begun. “...approved. We will now begin the first flight beyond Pandjoras. Glory unto the black sands of the umbral world.

“Let it be done! Glory awaits us in the void!” Zaphariel echoed the final phrase of the pilot, a myriad of cheers and cries from within and outside of the corvette. Ramses flashed a smile to his adoptive nephew, turning away to enter oneness in avoidance of his rapidly changing environment. The Malik’s eyes were perpetually glued to the monitor, eager to see the fruits of their labor in real-time. Many of the Pandjorans on the experimental mesa had since cleared out, a barrier erected around the corvette to avoid damaging any prototypes. Only Saahir and a handful of his personal cohort watched from the edge of the platform. The awning that veiled the dock had been untethered, allowing free ascent into the dusken sky above. Everything had been prepared specifically for this single moment, and hundreds of Bahamutians watching with bated breath.

Enormous gravity engines thrummed to life with an impossibly ear-shattering sound that defied any cry heard on Pandjoras. Heavily sublimated graviton particles propelled the elongated shuttle upwards in a shaky ascent. Convergent nozzles began to narrow, shaping the stream of jettisoned particles into a roaring torrent of aetheric liquid that ushered an urgent climb. The hulking drop ship roared upwards with an intensity that belied the chassis it was originally based on. Several magnetically fused panels began to chip in pieces from raining tempest flakes and graviton rock alike. A great pulsation of energy spread out from the center of their craft, lilac bubbles coalescing into a wide shield that propelled debris and environment away from the vessel. Unhindered by Pandjoras’ raining refuse, the corvette burst forward through the atmosphere with the speed of a serpent swarm. A second shield activated as darkness greeted their view, magnetic barriers further reinforcing the Urahalian wyrd. Clouds of metallic detritus slammed against both aegises in their sprint through Pandjoras’ celestial ring. Intense vibrations threatened to knock the starship off-course, rocking those within to an extremely uncomfortable degree. This persisted for several long, anguishing minutes before the craft was finally free of impending doom. The lilac barrier faded away as their voyage came to a thankful halt.

Launch - successful. Glory unto Pandjoras. Affirming crew survival status...” The voice of the pilot broke through the tension in the cabin. Pandjorans began to stir in the chamber behind them, several unbuckling from their seat and floating into non-existent gravity. A pair of ashen wasters hovered close to assist the Urahalian seer, who seemed nearly on the verge of death from wyrd strain. Others began to slowly grab analyzing tools, slave to terminals, or repair minor damage across the bay. “...affirmed - satisfactory. Beginning scanning procedures, Lord Zaphariel, await confirmation of celestial presences.

Ramses felt ill, more so than he did originally on their journey to Neu Babylos. Luckily, this time, he hadn’t vomited inside his helmet. The hassan turned his eyes to witness Zaphariel clamber out of his seat, freely floating within zero gravity. Although he couldn’t tell how his facial features were arranged, Ramses could tell that his adoptive nephew held an impossibly wide smile on his lips. Their attention was drawn to the monitors as exterior lights on the corvette began to awaken in a desperate search of the surrounding area. Beams of highly concentrated light searched the celestial ring that orbited their dusken world, eager to discover whatever was possible to gleam about their home.

Wait,” Zaphariel stated as he narrowed both his golden, serpentine eyes on a piece of floating formation passing by their craft. His floating form rapidly approached the monitor, scanning over every shadowy detail unhindered by concentrated beams of light. A taloned digit rose to hover just above the screen. “... Something lingers here, adjust the vessel and aim all light sources on this piece of rock.”

Adjusting to the commands of the Malik, the pilot guided the corvette through their interlinked nervous system. The vessel groaned as it shifted several degrees, aiming a myriad of high-intensity lights where turrets would normally be. As the craft grew closer to the object of Zaphariel’s desires, the truth of the elongated piece came to be known to them. It was not, in fact, chunks of celestial rock that had impeded their ascent into the void. They were remnants of ancient, forgotten void craft from before the cataclysm. Husks of Old Pandjoras listed in a death spiral, unmanned and unoperated for countless millennia. All around the singular vessel were several other void wrecks weaving through cosmic dust and shattered moon fragments alike.

The umbral king could feel the attitude of the Pandjorans in the craft shift. Fear, anxiety, grief, and hopelessness wafted through like a repugnant oder. Zaphariel refused to bow before such defeat, floating away from the monitor to hover beside the command throne. The Bahamutian pilot turned his crimson lenses to the dusken deity, curiously watching the leader of their world act unperturbed by the revelation. One of the snaking appendages unlinked from a nervous connector, allowing the Malik of Pandjoras to connect it to his powered armor. Reign of the voxcasters, external and internal, were surrendered to the promised dreamer.

I am Zaphariel ibn Varranis, Malik of Pandjoras, Umbral King of the Dusken Sands, Caliph of Neu Alamut, Hassan of House Varranis, and Emissary of Falak. If you can hear this transmission, then know that you are no longer alone in the darkness of the void. We have claimed destiny! Rise from your tombs, respond to my voice, and join us in glory!” The Malik of Pandjoras was no fool, he already knew that not a single soul was alive aboard the plethora of spiraling wrecks around their dusken world. His voice reverberated several times over, flowing with the unseen energies of his destiny. Every word of his outward cry was heard from those within, Pandjorans hanging off every syllable that he spoke. The effect was immediately felt throughout the vessel. Hope bloomed as an azure flower from a graviton pond. The aura of defeat dispersed, replaced by enthusiasm and ambition. The dusken deity turned his head to regard the pilot, disconnecting the metallic tendril and moving away from the throne.

Wordlessly, the corvette began to move further along Pandjoras’ ring as Zaphariel traveled further back into the residential deck. Starships, orbital stations, freighters, warships, observation decks, and more floated in destroyed masses along the celestial ring of Pandjoras. Fragments of broken moons, likely destroyed by the cataclysm, cast wide shadows over the dusken world. Ramses marveled at the sheer amount of debris, rocks, and ruins clustering around their homeworld. He thought to himself a moment longer when it finally struck him with an epiphany.

“It cannot be… the shattered rocks, the wrecks, and everything that makes up the ring around Pandjoras is the reason our world is eternally dusken?” Ramses whispered to himself as the dusken deity passed through the portal into the next chamber. Stirred by the departure of his monarch, the hassan unbuckled himself and accompanied Zaphariel with urgency in his floating figure. He arrived just as the Malik of Pandjoras was beginning to gather each of the crew members in a partial circle around himself. A singular monitor displayed the entirety of Pandjoras’ dark surface with its celestial ring in constant orbit.

Zaphariel pointed to their homeworld with a single talon-tipped digit, drawing the attention of each Pandjoran with his strange movement. Ramses watched intently, even as he felt their corvette lurch to a full stop with Pandjoras on full display. Unconsciously, the hassan pulled out his dataslate to record anything and everything that his adoptive nephew was about to say. Damn near everything he spoke was worthy of recording after he became their world’s monarch. His fingers moved as the Malik of Pandjoras opened his mouth, breathing words he hadn’t expected into reality.

Do you see what has become of our umbral ancestors? Forgotten, dead, and decaying in a death spiral around Pandjoras. I cannot fault them for how they passed during the cataclysm, nor will I shame them for their demise. We will grow stronger from their sacrifice, we will rebuild what our ancestors had left for us, and we will go beyond what they had achieved in their lifetimes. Their spirits will be avenged when we claim dominion over the Star Serpent,” His voice was somber and solemn, each word emphasized to draw the most emotional response from the gathered Pandjorans. Ramses watched as each of them drew closer, hinging on every word spoken by their umbral liege. They danced on the palm of his hands, yet his nephew seemed consumed by his own desire to claim destiny. “And so I promise every Pandjoran on our world here and now! We will fill the stars of Pandjoras a thousandfold as our ancestors once did! Every wreck that orbits our world will breathe life once more as an umbral armada for the Star Sultanate!

Their cries of adulation flung from trembling lips, every Pandjoran prostrating as much as they could in zero gravity. None held the attention of the dusken deity. Only the swirling world of Pandjoras held sway over his golden, serpentine eyes. Hesitantly, Zaphariel turned away from his beloved homeworld to glance at Ramses’ recording figure. The Malik of Pandjoras was no stranger to his adoptive uncle’s habit of encapturing every one of his speeches. He had even grown used to the idea of dedicating someone to chronicling his reign, yet it all paled in comparison to the far-flung dream of a united Star Serpent. He desired more for his people, no matter what it may cost him. The promise dreamer gestured for their return to the cabin, further echoing the movement to the Nathazian shipwright accompanying them. Both followed him shortly after he floated back to the cockpit.

“Let it be known here and now to both of the highest present representatives of your Houses,” Zaphariel began to speak to the pilot of their craft and the shipwright from House Nathaz. Unable to turn their head, the Bahamutian simply nodded their head while slaved to the command throne. The Nathazian woman dipped her head in respect, awaiting the next words the dusken deity would speak. “House Bahamut will oversee the restoration of everything in the celestial ring around Pandjoras, including every starship that can be repaired. House Nathaz will refit every vessel in the creation of an Umbral Armada, our future starfaring fleet for the Star Sultanate. Know these tasks well and report back to your House leaders with these. I’m certain Saahir and Jericho will be quite pleased. Let the Umbral Mountains become the first grounds for a starport as was depicted by our forlorn ancestors.”

Each nodded their head in agreement, perhaps happy to simply be the focus of the dusken deity or exhilarated to personally assist Pandjoras’ technological advancement. Both began to return to their duties when Ramses cleared his throat to draw their attention to him. Zaphariel cocked his head in confusion for the hassan never made a severe comment about his plans. He listened intently to the mature hassan as he broached a new subject for their ears.

“All is good and well, Zaphariel, but there is a severe lack of knowledge in one regard for Pandjoras,” Ramses stated, pointedly referring to the celestial ring that surrounded their homeworld in a perpetual spin, “our ancestors never had a ring around their world, nor had they ever anticipated the shattering of their moons. It is your discovery, nephew, but I would advise that you name it on this occasion. Lest someone take it upon themselves to bestow an unfitting name upon it.”

The dusken deity broadly smiled beneath the helmet. It had slipped his mind to even consider using this occasion to name the celestial formation that he had watched for two decades. He floated close to Ramses, ushering him closer to the monitor that watched over Pandjoras. The mature hassan felt an unexplainable emotion build within himself as if fate listened in on their conversation. When Zaphariel opened his mouth next, his voice was a serpent’s song of reverberating beauty. It felt as if reality shifted to perfectly orchestrate that very moment.

The Ring of Muahad.
The Great Conclave of Pandjoras

-Ten Years After Arrival-






Neu Antioch. Formerly the seat of House Sulkat in the eastern Dune Sea of Hassan. A great bastion of masonic stone, crackling lightning licking off of a thousandfold armament emplacements. Grand banners of serpent silk flowed from carefully crafted bricks, their insignia of intertwined snakes and blades once proudly displayed on dark fabric. Now, however, the dusken sun and sword fly from the highest battlement for those to witness the glory of House Varranis. Where once the citadel was forced to sit between gargantuan dunes and the Obsidian Reach, it now hovers through dusken sky upon prolific gravity shunts. A thousand and one grains of black sand drip from sculpted orifices unto Pandjoras below it, graviton tempests and void serpents alike avoiding the sky fortress. Hulking, graviton-fed turbines hovered to a halt above the Korvaix-Tuturan Massifs, several other dark shapes beginning to grow closer to the leviathan castle.

Within the once austere halls of the Great Dune Marshals, bright glow globes illuminated large passages to reveal Pandjorans within. Sulkatian warriors in heavier variants of the Varranian-powered armor journeyed throughout on routine patrols, gravity spears tightly held in both hands. Their orange eyes were particularly trained for any threat, yet the men-at-arms were glued to the hassan that skulked their House’s home. The assassins of House Varranis, armed in their signature lithe powered suits, walked their former adversaries' halls with serpent silk banners in hand. In a callous display of superiority, Sulkatian insignias were tarnished, removed, and replaced with the sun and sword of Neu Alamut. Many Pandjorans would’ve ferociously fought against disrespect upon one’s domain, and yet the Sulkat house guard simply watched as their history was overwritten with sad eyes.

Across the entirety of Neu Antioch, Sulkatian and Varranian Pandjorans cautiously coexisted for a singular, grand council unlike any the dusken world had seen before. A pair of colossal, metallic doors etched with Pandjoras’ long history led into a great, circular chamber a hundred meters in diameter. At the center of the chamber stood a large, round table inscribed with an accurate map of their dark planet. Vast dunes, graviton oceans, House palaces, and beautifully sculpted icons emphasized the sheer majesty of it. Arrayed in a full sphere around the table were thirteen seats, each as unique and magisterial as the next. Great effigies hoisted from these magnificent chairs, reflecting the various insignia of the Exalted Pandjoran Houses. Each held a spot of importance correlating to the exact positions of their domains. Only one seat rivaled the rest in stature and size.

The Throne of Varranis. Stony, coiled serpents as armrests, a titanic slab of supreme sculpture for the backrest, and a lofty dais complimented by superior serpent silk filled its anatomy. A great effigy of House Varranis’ dusken sun and sword hovered over the throne upon a metallic pole, purposefully positioned to express supremacy. As if it were sculpted by a dusken deity of penumbral night, only the most worthy could sit upon the silken cushions. And so it was filled by none other. Zaphariel ibn Varranis patiently gazed down from his position at the table that he had crafted himself, eyeing imperfections and flaws to his critical regard. Unlike his usual appearance, the Malik wore an exquisite, void-hued robe fashioned from elder serpent silk and embroidered with his prophecy in ocher colors. A midnight cloak hung from his shoulders, cascading down his body past regal gloves with talon-tipped rings and imperial balgha with metallic tips. A marigold laurel complimented an eight-pointed, obsidian coronet that sat atop his dark, groomed hair. His appearance echoed the divinity of Old Pandjoras, further enforcing the image of a prophetic individual.

The Malik’s golden, serpentine eyes switched from his imperfect piece to those that stood beside him. On the right side of his throne, the old man of the mountain in an alabaster mask and austere, black robes silently waited. A glance from Muahad’s piercing blue orbs affirmed the former sheik of his quiet comfortability. To Zaphariel’s left, Ramses ibn Varranis stood with a dataslate in one of his armored fingers, refusing to part from his Varranian-powered armor. Unlike his mentor, the mature hassan failed to notice the promised dreamer’s scanning and pressed on with data surety. Beyond the three of them, another pair of Pandjorans sat several paces to his right-hand side. In a seat with blade-sculpted arms and legs, the Dune Sultan of Sulkat sat proudly with his eyes drawn to the intricately carved table. Skin as dark as the dusken sands, brown hair cut tight to his skull, and scarred facial features complimented the aging face of an elder. Two others perched to either side of the Sulkatian Malik, a younger boy with similar qualities and a grown man with an even greater plethora of scars accenting an unkempt beard. The great hassan peered at the effigy behind their seat, the serpent and blade of House Sulkat met his gaze.

“Will they arrive soon, Father?” The younger one spoke as quietly as one can in a wide chamber. The Dune Sultan nearly jumped in his seat as if shaken awake from a long dream, turning away from the etched table to the youth beside him. A warm smile formed across his lips, one of his augmented hands reaching up to pat the adolescent on the shoulder before beginning to speak.

“They will be arriving momentarily, Aswin, I’m sure some of the other heirs are keen to see you once more. Remember to practice your patience, my son,” The Dune Sultan’s voice was raspy and deep, certain syllables emphasizing occasional loudness in his speech pattern. Aswin, the apparent son, beamed with a smile and returned to an idle stance with small, giddy movements abound. As if noticing the attention drawn to them, the Malik of Sulkat inclined his head towards Zaphariel. “My apologies, Malik Varranis, my son grows weary from sitting idly and wishes to see his playmates once more.”

The dusken deity propped an elbow against the sculpted serpents upon his throne, leaning his chin into an open palm. A small smile danced across his lips, predatory eyes lowering down to the frivolous adolescent. Like an animal knowingly stalked by a predator, Aswin swiftly hid next to the Sulkatian Malik once noticed. The youth’s actions failed to affect his smile, perhaps even making it grow slightly larger in a wide spread. Fearful, curious eyes occasionally glanced back at Zaphariel’s larger serpentine orbs.

“No apologies are needed, Asghar, I admire the spirit of our dusken world’s children. Though, I certainly hope Aswin will one day grow to be as legendary as Pandjoras’ High Sultan of the Obsidian Reaches. Your House’s expertise is unrivaled in overt war, a trait that will be necessary far into the future.” Zaphariel responded with a voice as sweet as honey and as soft as serpent silk, a wonderful trill naturally woven into it. He witnessed a physical response within Asghar as his words crossed the distance between them. Eye dilation, slight flushness, and short breathlessness. All symptoms that the promised dreamer had become accustomed to when dealing with all others aside from his adoptive father. It disgusted him.

Before the Malik of Sulkat was able to respond, the first of the other Houses arrived. Malik Zaphariel straightened himself out to witness every person that would cross the threshold into their council chamber. Asghar picked himself out of his seat, gaze readjusted to those that would enter his former home. The old man of the mountain silently watched with unreadable emotions. Ramses lowered the dataslate, taking a step towards the table to become the official announcer of their event. The mature hassan cleared his voice only once during the entirety of his announcements, a testament to a lifetime of endurance.

“We welcome the arrivals of the Pandjoran Houses to the Varranian-Sulkatian abode of Neu Antioch! Glory to you, Malika-i-Zarmira ibn Gallax, and her heiresses Farahdia and Maharwa, of the Serpentine Dune Sea!” The hassan announced as a trio of dusken women sauntered into the council chamber. Impossibly thin veils of serpent silk complimented their forms while living void snakes of miniature size coiled around their bodies. At the forefront of their procession was a tall woman with a coronet of clinking, ophidian trinkets trailing across her celestial veil. Long strands of variously dyed hair fell beside an ethereal, gaunt face. A robe of similar fabric to the Malika’s headdress clung to her body, embroidered with gravitic oceans and gleaming stars. A pair of younger women, the heiresses, ambled beside her in heavier, exquisite robes. One wore their dark hair in braids, while the other wore their lighter strands in sleek, straight lines. All three carelessly displayed serpentine inscriptions and images upon their skin, a prideful tradition of Gallaxian tattooing.

The women seemed to glide across the chamber similar to the reality-defying serpents that lingered over their forms. All three passed by their beautifully sculpted seat to stand before the visage of Zaphariel, staring up with mesmerized eyes hidden behind majestic veils. In one fluid movement, the Gallaxian women dropped to their knees and bowed their heads low to the Malik of Varranis. None of the Varranian hassan appeared surprised, but Asghar seemed particularly perturbed by their sudden, humiliating genuflection. Malika Zarmira was the first to rise, her darkened lips opening to speak.

“O’ Master of Falak, the tamers of the Serpentine Sea come as requested for we are your humble serpents. As you have previously, please treat us well.” Zarmira spoke with utmost reverence, a soft and meek voice dancing across a serpentine tongue. The Malik of Pandjoras, guided by ceremony, lowered one of his talon-ringed hands to the Malika of Gallax. She pressed the dusken hand against her forehead, a momentary pulse of indescribable energy connecting the two for only a moment. Zaphariel held a small, thin smile playing on his lips, but he truthfully felt utterly repulsed by the exchange.

“Certainly, Malika Zarmira, I could not possibly begin to describe the necessity of your serpent pools and the quality of Gallaxian silk. I look forward to our continued interaction.” The Malik of Varranis responded as if perfectly spinning the words that Zarmira wished to hear. She trembled for only a moment, succumbing to temporary weakness from words alone. Both of the Gallaxian heiresses placed their soft hands on the Malika’s shoulders, assisting her and retreating to their seat with apologies on their lips. Zaphariel’s serpentine eyes watched as the Malika of Gallax sat upon an exquisite chair of reinforced, black glass. Their effigy, a pair of hands praising a serpent, hovered over the three women.

Another trio entered the council chamber as the Gallaxian women took to their seat. A tall, thin man in a majestic robe of embroidered Pandjoran sigils, runes, and bone trinkets led a pair of similarly dressed attendants. All three were cleanly shaven, silvery-green Pandjoran characters dyed into their skin on all visible parts of their body. Vials of penumbral sand slowly leaked onto Neu Antioch’s floor from across their bodies, swaying and clinking as they walked. The head of their process wore no coronet unlike the other three in the chamber, allowing their dusken skin to drink warm air. The pair that followed behind him, a younger woman and an elderly man, carried two heavy grimoires bound in serpentine flesh.

Glory to you, Malik-i-Azahar ibn Urahal, High Seer Kadar, and heiress Raaina, of the Spiral Palaces!” Ramses loudly announced as the Urahalian attendants crossed the chamber in a few strides, all three of their long legs propelling them to the foot of Zaphariel’s dais. Similar to the Gallaxian women, Azahar and his cohort lowered themselves and deeply bowed before picking themselves up to address the Varranian Malik. A broad smile, unfettered by any emotion chain, greeted the promised dreamer’s sight. It was only then within their proximity did he notice that the Malik of Urahal and his seers were purple-eyed, instead of bearing the Eyes of Hassan. A singular, great eye of ink was etched upon the flesh of their foreheads, eternally looking outward.

“Great Prophet! Brilliant Soul of the Dusken Sands! We humbly come before you in a show of gratitude! Your insights have proven beyond resourceful in our pursuit of knowledge! Please, take these grimoires as gifts. My daughter, Raaina, had spent thirteen nights and thirteen days pouring over a thousand and one grains of black sand to craft these for you!” Malik Azahar’s words were rapid, manic, and filled with ecstasy. He wildly gestured with his hands for every spoken word. The heiress, Raaina, meekly walked forward to deliver one of her tomes to Ramses. Her other grimoire was delivered to Muahad by Kadar, the pair of elderly Pandjorans sharing a knowing look before reassuming their rightful positions.

“You honor me with your praise, Azahar, yet it is not I that should be honored. Your seers and prophets are essential to the future of Pandjoras! I accept your gifts, friend, and I will pour over them for thirteen days and thirteen nights. Truly, Malik-i-Urahal, glory upon your name,” Malik Zaphariel said with enthusiasm, intentionally leaning forward to incite a positive spark within Azahar’s soul. In truth, he despised the way the Malik of Urahal spoke with such fervent energy. Another individual he felt repulsed by, yet required for the sake of Pandjoras. The promised dreamer turned his attention to the smaller form of the Urahal heiress, who slightly cowered when directly looked at. A wicked grin hid beneath a coy smile on his lips. “I will personally thank you for these when the time comes, Raaina Urahal.”

Honored by Zaphariel’s words, all three of the Urahalians bowed their heads before moving to their assigned position. Their seat, a panoply of midnight serpent silk and carved skulls, was positioned between the Varranian throne and Ashgar’s Sulkatian seat. An effigy of House Urahal’s sigil, a skull and shining star, rose from behind to hang perpetually over their forms. As the southern seers began to relax, another group of attendants entered the conclave’s spherical chamber. Five hooded figures in modified suits of powered armor and heavy rebreathers strode from the entrance to their seat immediately. Tiny, modular graviton jetpacks were mounted to their backs, painting them as the one and only Nathazians of the western reaches.

Glory to you, Malik-i-Jericho al-Nathaz, and his attendants, of the Scarab Oases!” Ramses' voice boomed, reverberating against Neu Antioch’s reinforced walling. The Nathazian Malik, Jericho, inclined his head in the direction of Zaphariel. An average-sized, broad man without any prestigious iconography for him to stand out as the leader of House Nathaz. Only an obsidian brooch in the shape of a scarab, a pair of fierce eyes, and a burgeoning bodily form picked him apart from his cohort. Those that had accompanied him were smaller in stature, younger than their leader, and yet as disciplined as a Varranian hassan. No doubt, the promised dreamer thought, they were all his children.

“Malik Jericho! It is good to see one of the brightest minds on Pandjoras join us from Neu Constanoplis. We are always in your debt for the limitless amount of harvester dropships that House Nathaz prepares out in the Scarab Oases. Let it never be forgotten the gratitude I feel for the season I spent learning the Nathazian way. I look forward to your assistance in future endeavors, my friend.” The Malik of Varranis said with a trained smile, his words responded to with a deep bow from all five of the Nathazian attendees. Their House was a silent one, almost as hushed as the hassan of Neu Alamut. A strong people that spoke little and worked hard to ensure their livelihoods out in the dark sands. People that he would need for eternity and beyond.

Zaphariel watched as Malik Jericho carefully sank into a seat decorated with prolific scarabs for arms and legs, while a large backrest in the form of a harvester dropship held up his form. An effigy of House Nathaz’s insignia, an obsidian scarab mid-flight, hovered over their heads attached to a lengthy pole. Their perpetual silence only served to enhance the raucous arrival of two Houses at one time. Six individuals approached the council chamber, two of which pushed their way in as if it were a competition of sorts. A man and a woman, similar in facial structure yet vastly different in appearance, managed to squeeze through the chamber’s enormous doorframe. Each huffed as they awaited at the foot of the circular table, ready for their presence to be announced.

Ramses shared a look with his nephew, questioning as to which one should be announced first. The Malik of Varranis simply shrugged with a coy smile, raising a pair of fingers in response to the mature hassan’s silent inquiry. A sigh escaped from the lips of Zaphariel’s mentor, who prepared himself for a lengthy introduction.

Glory to you, Malik-i-Nader al-Korvaix, and his heirs, of the Western Massifs! Glory to you, Malika-i-Tayyeb al-Tuturan, and her heirs, of the Eastern Massifs! Do not degrade into infighting while in the presence of the other Houses. The Korvaix-Tuturan feud is known and it is not tolerated.” Ramses sternly stated, eyeing the pair of warlords that stood before their gathered council. The man, Nader, stood rigidly in ornate powered armor with a variety of melee weapons decoratively etched into the plating. Dusken skin complimented his smarmy smile, yet heavy eyebrows and slicked hair darkened an already-lined forehead. The woman, Tayyeb, apathetically idled with eyes narrowed in on Nader. A bodysuit fitted with a decorative tabard of ranged weapon embroidery complimented her slender form. A long ponytail trailed out of her hood, which hid similar qualities to the Korvaxian Malik excluding burn marks and kind eyes.

“Thank you for your hospitality, Malik-i-Zaphariel, you’ll have to excuse my twin’s disgraceful actions on arrival. If he were more like our mother, then Nader would be more patient than a thousand and one grains of black sand.” Malika Tayyeb spoke first, bowing her head in apology to the seated form of the Varranian Malik. Both of her attendants, a younger boy and a grown girl, repeated the action of their leader. Ramses disappointingly clicked his tongue in response, clearly aware that her words were likely to spark an argument between the two Houses. Zaphariel lightly chuckled from the audible disappointment.

“Such ugly words from such an uncouth mouth, please forgive my sister’s transgressions and arrogance! If only our father had taught her how to properly forge and wield a blade, then perhaps she would be less volatile.” Malik Nader spoke next, bowing and swinging his arms up in a dramatic display. His tone was akin to an envenomed blade, overtly courteous and secretly venomous. Zaphariel was familiar with the act, one that he had played time and time again. A masquerade of emotions. The Korvaixian artificer was sloppy, however, at least in the promised dreamer’s eyes.

“I see the feud between your split homes is alive and well! Raise your head, Malika-i-Tayyeb, I would never have Pandjoras’ finest armament maker feel the need to prostrate herself. The sleepless, Tuturian workshops have always assisted ruin delvers and serpent hunters alike. So glory to you, Great Artificer!” Zaphariel said with laughter upon his lips, a toothy grin growing on his features. He approved of the candor in her speech, the ruggedness of her personality, and her worthwhile abilities as a master craftswoman. The promised dreamer made a note to keep her well within his pockets. The Tuturians raised their heads, Tayyeb adding a thankful nod with a bright smile before moving to her seat. A small throne of gears, barrels, and stocks awaited beside Zarmira and her attendants. An effigy rose behind it bearing the Tuturan insignia of a cog and a shield.

The promised dreamer could see Malik Nader’s anxiety build up like an overstimulated serpent, aware of the fact that his words had been ignored. Zaphariel hid a wicked, gluttonous smile behind his emotional masquerade. His eyes fell on the Korvaixian noble like an elder serpent to a relic salvager. “Worry not, Malik-i-Nader, you are similarly prized for your blade masters and weaponsmiths! Not a single Pandjoran could craft a monomolecular dagger quite like the Korvaixian gravity forges! Glory upon you, Bladesinger of Pandjoras.” His voice dripped with deceptive honey, intentionally kind and overtly flattering. It was enough to satisfy the man who attempted to play Zaphariel’s own game, a beaming smile influencing his smug looks. The Malik of Varranis hadn’t lied, the Korvaixian forges crafted the greatest blades from across Pandjoras. Though it displeased him to admit it their greatness, he would at least have this man dance across his palm like a puppet.

The Malik of Nader positioned himself opposite Malika Tayyeb, Jericho ibn Nathaz directly to his right. He found his crafted throne to be a mixture of metallic talons, blades, and other melee weapons. An effigy of House Korvaix, a saber gripped in a clawed gauntlet, rose above the Malik as a shining representation of their domain. The smug, satisfied man sat himself down with both of his heirs, a pair of grown men, flanking him. Conversation began to flow from those that attended, first from Nader to Jericho and then from Zarmira to Tayyeb. Asghar and Azahar idly chatted about issues in their conjoined domains. Boredom began to set in for Zaphariel when the next of the Houses arrived, all other dialogue silenced in lue of who had come to the conclave.

Five dusken women poured through the conclave’s great portal dressed in unnaturally elegant robes that flowed as if a gravity tempest had blown through. Weightless, light, and temperate in their attire, they effortlessly glided from the table’s head to Zaphariel’s dais in a manner of seconds. Each individual was as awe-inspiring as the previous, with a variety of rare cosmetics preciously applied beneath their flowing veils. Regardless of their individualistic schemes, all of their eyes were shaded by bright orange to accent already golden irises. The female that led them was small, lithe, and sublime in serpent silk spun in as many shades as the dusken world could offer. A coronet sat upon her head, stars dangling from gilded chains.

Glory to you, Malika-i-Fariyah ibn Abdullahar, and her heirs Inaya and Fatima, of the Gravity Ocean!” Ramses stated after shaking himself from the stupor of their arrival, the mature hassan had found himself stupified by how quickly they crossed the room. He peeked over to Muahad, attempting to decipher the old man’s attitude yet found the elder comfortably standing still. Curious orbs sought the Malik of Varranis for guidance, and yet only found a smirking deity playing a hidden game sat upon his throne.

“It has been too long, Malik-i-Zaphariel, your absence has been sorely missed in Neu Sallah. We appreciated your visits even when you were a young sheik traveling Pandjoras. Now, you call for us when we have endlessly called for you. Do you seek to play games, little hassan?” The woman who spoke, Fariyah, held a serious and ridiculing tone. One that had drawn the ire of those like Malika Zarmira and Malik Azahar. Despite this, her voice was as lightweight as a thousand and one grains of black sand, yet as soft as freshly baked penumbral bread. She refused to bow before the great hassan, her attendants echoing her defiant actions.

“You’ve grown quite beautifully, Ayra Abdullahar, but you are decades away from being able to fool me. The Gravity Ocean is ruled by Malika Fariyah, but the Abdullaharian Coasts are lorded by a Malik,” Zaphariel said with a chortle, a smug smile dancing across his lips as the procession before him began to break. The one who had been called Fariyah jerked forward for a moment, surprised that she had been discovered so quickly. Slowly, all of them dropped to their knees in a low bow. All save for one of their numbers. “Or am I wrong, Malik-i-Avdol of the Shimmering Coast?

A hearty laugh gurgled from the remaining Abdullaharian standing, their hands reaching up to remove the veiled mask to reveal the slender face of a man. His androgynous form stepped forward past all four of his heiresses, stopping short of the Varranian dias to smile up at Zaphariel. Within a single step, the dusken deity had left his throne to embrace the other Malik. Both laughed to their heart’s content amid their conclave.

“A trueborn hassan is what you are, little sheik! My wife would weep silver tears if you hadn’t exposed our eldest daughter, yet she will cry a delightful song regardless for allowing us to attend. Glory to you, Zaphariel!” Malik Avdol released the promised dreamer, beaming with delight in an ecstatic tone that threatened to illuminate their world. The Varranian Malik felt no small amount of true joy blossom in his chest at the sight of the Gravity King. “You will have to forgive Ayra for the little test I put her through, her training isn’t complete and her sisters have already been promised to House Rassnar. She has grown quite aggressive in the absence of a suitor!” The Abdullaharian man stated with another laugh, aware of his daughter’s growing wroth behind him.

“Fret not, Avdol, you and the sirens will always have a place in my being for the time we’d spent together! I couldn’t possibly hold any ill-gained anger towards the finest diplomats across all of Pandjoras. Consider yourselves forgiven, by my name as Zaphariel ibn Varranis.” The Malik of Varranis stated, his tone dancing between playful and courtly. Surprised, Malik Avdol prostrated himself before the dusken deity with a smile on his lips. He rose once more, clapping the promised dreamer on the shoulder before guiding all four of his heirs to their seat. They found their decorated throne beside Malika Tayyeb, elegantly carved with half-women, half-serpent ornaments. An effigy of House Abdullahar’s sigil, the siren serpent, comfortably watched over their gathered forms as the next attendee arrived.

It came as no surprise to the conclave as the next to attend were a trio of individuals shrouded in dusken robes. Their raiments were devoid of ornamentation, sigils, or expression of gender. They appeared as a lesser form of the hassan, thin veils coating their visage where a cowl would naturally suit a Varranian asasiyun. Malik Avdol gave them a warm smile as they crossed the room, short bows of their head acknowledging the Gravity King’s gesture. Silent footsteps brought all three of the individuals closer to the dais. To Zaphariel’s surprise, his presence was completely ignored in favor of Muahad’s idleness. Three heads respectfully inclined to the old man of the mountain, their bodies prostrating before the eldest man on Pandjoras. The alabaster mask of the grandmaster hassan drew in a long breath.

Rushdi ibn Rassnar,” Muahad announced his name before Ramses had a chance to evoke the Rassnarian’s titles and domains. The old man of the mountain’s heavy cloth swayed as he stepped forward to gaze down upon the one named Rushdi. Piercing blue eyes witnessed a Malik without a crown, an individual that truly upheld the tenets of a hassan. Zaphariel watched with modest interest at their exchange, leaning forward to prop his chin onto one of his hands. “Former heir of mine, I am no longer your master. A Malik must not casually bow their head, or have you forgotten all that the hassan had taught you?”

“You misunderstand me, Old Man, I bow my head in defiance,” The Rassnarian stated in a gruff voice that dripped with venom, spittle freely flying beneath their lightweight breather. Rushdi removed himself from his prostration, lowering a pair of glaring, orange eyes on the Malik of Varranis. Hostility built up from the Malik of Rassnar, his focus entirely turning from old master to new heir. “The dusken sands have taught me that no man can tame Pandjoras, nor can a single individual rule over the hassan. It is folly to name this one the Malik of Varranis while the Grandmaster yet lives.”

“Calm your blood upon a thousand and one grains of black sand, Malik Rushdi. Are you so guided by envy and jealousy that you would not seek a grander future for Pandjoras? Your hassan, even if they aren’t Varranian born, are legendary across the dune seas. I would see their legacy heard for thirteen thousand nights and thirteen thousand days to come.” Zaphariel chortled, initially laughing at the pettiness shown by the Rassnarian Malik before delving into his plans. For better or worse, House Rassnar has proven a firm ally to Neu Alamut and continued to train optimal assassins of near quality to the Varranian hassan. His rise to Malik had soured their House’s relationship, calling back to a time when Rushdi studied beneath Muahad. A playful smile plastered across his lips as the Malik of Rassnar’s face scrunched up in anger.

As tensions began to ramp up between Malik Rushdi’s silently fuming form and Malik Zaphariel’s overbearing confidence, the Gravity King rose from his seat to beckon toward the Rassnarian leader. “Come now, come now! This is a conclave of Pandjoras’ great houses, do not let a sour history bleed into our world’s bright future. Sit with me, Rushdi, please.” Avdol asked with a warm smile, utilizing their established relationship in a gamble to reel in the hot-headed hassan. It proved successful as Rushdi turned away from Zaphariel, his attendants quickly following after him as they approached their seat. A vastly smaller facsimile of the Varranian throne awaited, complimented only by plentiful, dark-hued sheets. An effigy of House Rassnar, the serpent-coiled dagger, rose behind to loom over the other attendees.

Tension ebbed away from the conclave as the Rassnarian Malik claimed his seat, conversation shortly returning between all of the members in attendance. Their dialogue lasted for only a moment as the next to arrive barreled through Neu Antioch’s enormous doors. An enormous man built as thick as an elder serpent’s body led a party of five others of smaller, similar builds. Dark bodysuits fitted to their forms, enwrapped by long stretches of midnight-hued serpent silk. The leader held a great smile on his face, one of such intensity that those that witnessed thought of him as simple-minded. A great coronet complimented by obsidian filigree sat upon his exposed, cropped hair. Zaphariel ibn Varranis knew, however, that this man was one of the most important figures on the surface of Pandjoras.

Glory to you, Malik-i-Aadil ibn Delukar, and his children of Nahyira, Shuhria, Khafifa, Azariel, of the Penumbral Fields!” Ramses boomed in an enthusiastic voice, content to deal with less irksome Houses in comparison to his prior announcements. The mature hassan lowered the dataslate as the Delukarian giant approached the Varranian dais, orange eyes eternally set on the Malik of Varranis. Zaphariel rose to greet Neu Alamut’s most generous neighbor with a fresh grin on his lips. Aadil thundered with laughter as the two embraced, the Malik of Varranis nearly disappearing in a mass of muscles. The two separated with a chuckle, Aadil’s giant hand remaining on the promised dreamer’s shoulder.

“Young Zaph! It’s been some time since we last met, I hear you’ve been relatively busy as a fellow Malik! You look a little gaunt! Has Muahad not been feeding you the knafeh that Nahyira and Khafifa have been baking!? Azariel, bring the young hassan his favorite halawa!” Malik Aadil spoke with a voice reminiscent of a harvester dropship’s heavy engines. Each syllable was a crack of torrential thunder, physically forcing more sensitive Pandjorans to recoil in audible agony. His infectious energy afflicted even his children, three of which were his daughters and one of which was the House heir. Zaphariel delighted in the Delukarian Malik’s energy, such that a look from Ramses had to draw him back to reality.

“Glory to you, Aadil! There is no need to worry, but I won’t pass up Delukarian sweets! I am thankful to the dusken sands that your joy has never faltered! Without you, our planet would be forced to dine on a thousand and one grains of black sand.” The Malik of Varranis responded, watching as Azariel hefted a great box of food onto the council table. Plates, confections, and drinks were distributed amongst the Houses in even portions. For everywhere Aadil went, there was always the certainty of a feast. The Malik of Delukar granted Zaphariel one last smile before moving over to his seat, positioned directly to the left of the Varranian Throne. A seat heavily ornate with penumbral stalks and gluttonous, laughing faces awaited Aadil. An effigy of House Delukar’s sigil, the grain and sun, rose behind their forms. As the last dish was served, even to the absent attendees, the heirs returned to the side of their father with smiles on their faces.

And so they dined while they awaited the last three Houses to arrive. Mulled serpent blood, penumbral oat-roasted coffee, and distilled stalk whiskey were imbibed from shadowy glasses. Juicy serpent kebabs, umbral kanafeh with scarab bits, and azure rosen dates disappeared in a matter of minutes. Pastries, stacked nearly as high as Malik Aadil, were all that remained of the feast. Marble bricks of halawa glazed with scarab honey, thin cubes of dark cakes drenched in purified snake venom, and baked spheres of umbral dough dusted with tempest flakes decorated the feast. The Malik of Varranis received a single brick of halawa with a thin smile, sipping upon a goblet of ophidian vitae while the rest of the deserts disappeared.

A group of Pandjorans entered the conclave as the Delukarian feast began to die down. Three individuals dressed in ornate robes specifically tailored for ease of arm movements walked towards the council table. At the head of their process resided an average-sized woman with dark hair pulled into a bun, dusken spectacles, and a thin coronet that belied the extravagance of Pandjoras’ ruling castes. A pair of piercing eyes scanned the wide chamber beneath her glasses, momentarily halting on each House ruler for seconds at a time. An aging face pulled into a scrunched frown as her name was announced by Ramses.

Glory to you, Malika-i-Thanaa al-Tallora, and her heirs Zaniya and Laifah, of the Twin Lakes!” The mature hassan thundered after quickly consuming a piece of halawa, one of his hands still coated in bits of sticky honey. His eyes scanned the newly arrived before casting a glance at Zaphariel, who had leaned forward with a serious look.. A feeling of unease entered Ramses’ stomach as invisible tension built between the Malika of Tallora and the Malik of Varranis.

“The great thief of Neu Jerusal sits upon the Varranian throne? Has Muahad finally succumbed to his aging mind, or have you replaced him with an agent of your own, Zaphariel of Neu Alamut?” Her tone was fearless, a voice that dared to question where others would not. Thanaa crossed her arms as she awaited Zaphariel’s answer, aware of the angry stares given by many within the conclave. Curiously, the old man of the mountain was not amongst those that glared. Both of his pale blue orbs were focused on the Malik beside him, watching with interest to see how the promised dreamer would respond. Much to her chagrin, a toothy grin broke out across the dusken deity’s thin lips.

“How could I possibly pass up the information stored in Pandjoras’ greatest library, maintained by Neu Jerusal’s exceptional scribes? Should I have counted a thousand and one grains of black sand, or instead delved deep into the valuable knowledge of Tallora?” Zaphariel’s voice was playful, toying with the emotions that played across Thanaa’s face. He couldn’t help himself from growing a wider grin as the dialogue continued, his voice as soft as serpentine silk. “Hate me as you wish, Malika Thanaa, but your vaunted tomes are the very reason I’ve grown as powerful as I did. I cannot thank House Tallora enough for their safeguarding talents, a set of skills that I would see continued.”

A broad variety of emotions shifted her face in several directions. Anger, frustration, confusion, appreciation, and surprise all flashed in a manner of seconds before Thanaa recollected herself. She clicked her tongue in defeat, offering a sudden bow of her head, and retreated to her assigned position between House Gallax and House Tuturan. A throne of sculpted parchment, quills, and Pandjoran sigils decorated House Tallora’s seat. A great effigy of the Tallorian sigil, the quill and laurel, idly lingered over Malika Thanaa’s silently fuming form. The Malik of Varranis calmly sank back into the Varranian throne, a thin, smug smile replacing the toothy grin previously worn. A glance at Muahad confirmed whether or not his actions were correct, yet the piercing blue eyes always seemed to judge every one of his actions. While his mind began to drift onto that subject, the second of the last Houses marched into their great conclave.

Three, majestic figures waltzed through the leviathan doorway adorned in magnificent raiments of brilliant orange and dusken black. Heavy jewelry jostled with each step, Pandjoras’ precious metals and obsidian glass echoing throughout the chamber. The man at the front of their cohort was a giant of majesty and gluttony, rivaling even Malik Aadil in quantity of meat. A pearlescent crown with thirteen points sat against a lion’s mane of hair. A pair of women clung closely behind him, one vastly younger than the other. They, too, wore exquisite and ornate robes bedecked with glass and jewelry of supreme qualities. The attendees halted just shy of the circular table, golden eyes lingering on Zaphariel’s enthroned form.

Glory to you, Malik-i-Saladin ibn Gallos, his daughter Miska, and his wife Qaima, of the Gilded Heights!” Ramses announced, raising the dataslate to ascertain House Gallos’ arrival. Immediately, the mature hassan felt a ping of disgust when his eyes rolled over Malik Saladin’s rotund form. Fury built up in his gullet the longer he stared, calmed only by a glance from Zaphariel. The great, golden eyes of his nephew seemed to share his thoughts exactly. He entered a state of oneness as the Gallosian ruler began to speak.

“Glory to you, Malik Zaphariel ibn Varranis! It has been some time since last you visited the illustrious halls of Neu Alepp! Your presence is always sorely sought by the Gallosian people, more so than other Pandjorans,” Malik Saladin spoke with a cocky, exuberant voice that echoed the luxurious raiments he wore. His eyes fell on every Pandjoran that complimented the chamber, an air of superiority building up around him with every second that passed. Only the dusken deity sat upon the Varranian Throne gave him pause, perhaps finding a worthy foe or ally in Zaphariel. “You simply must return with all haste, Miska has long awaited the days when you two would play together in the golden palace!”

The final comment was followed by a gleeful smile from Miska, the young daughter of Malik Saladin. The Malik of Varranis offered a warm smile back, momentarily reminiscing the time they shared. A smaller melancholy wormed into Zaphariel, keenly aware of his abhuman growth as Miska and himself were physically the same age. Yet, she was much smaller and much younger in appearance. His golden, serpentine eyes adjusted from the spritely girl to Saladin’s burgeoning form. Behind his emotional mask, the dusken deity felt unending disgust and fury over the Gallosian’s plumpness. A sign of selfish gluttony, one such trait that is abhorred in Pandjoran culture.

“You will have to forgive me, Malik Saladin. Many things have happened since last I stepped into Neu Alepp. This conclave is one such reason for that. I hope that the minor houses of Pandjoras have given you less trouble in recent years. I would hate to hear that my childhood friend was in dire straits.” Zaphariel replied with a tone that danced on a threatening edge. Sweat began to perspire on the Gallosian’s forehead, a worried look spreading across his wobbling face. Nervousness was apparent in the Malik of Gallos’ stance, yet it was quickly replaced with faux confidence as he straightened up. The dusken deity’s orange orbs narrowed as if he were a predator eyeing wounded prey.

“W-Well, the rabble do tend to stir trouble amongst themselves! No worries, dear Zaphariel, they have been handled for the time being. Your worry is greatly appreciated though! If ever I require assistance with the minor houses, then I shall call upon the greatest hassan of the dusken sands! Glory to you, Malik of Varranis.” Malik Saladin quickly spurted out in a tone that belied his faux confidence. He swiftly patted his forehead with an embroidered rag of serpent silk, partially unveiling a heavy set of cosmetics applied to his aging skin. The trio departed, bowing their heads and attending to their assigned position between House Nathaz and House Korvaix. A sculpted throne of filigree, jewelry, and glasses awaited them with an effigy of House Gallos’ sigil, a ring and a sun, lifted overhead.

Zaphariel observed the Gallosians for only a moment longer, silently planning for the disposal of Saladin Gallos. His thoughts were disrupted by the arrival of the last major House on Pandjoras. A single individual hobbled into their chamber clothed in a storm of dark robes, hissing mechanisms clotting the air around their form in processed gravity particles. A pair of circular, crimson goggles peered out from beneath their hood, accompanied only by an impossibly large rebreather fitted to their face. Mechanically driven legs brought the attendee forward to the final seat in the council chamber, each step slow and motor-assisted. The tapping of a metallic, decorated cane echoed each footstep the figure took. Several of the House rulers glared at the newcomer with eyes full of contempt and ignorance.

Glory to you, Malik-i-Saahir ibn Bahamut of the Fallen Palaces! We welcome you as the newest Pandjoran House to achieve major household status in this conclave. With your addition, we now number thirteen in total as it once was and forever shall be,” Ramses spoke with a smile, aware of the nature of Bahamut’s rise to power. The dataslate was sheathed into one of his various, armored pockets before turning to address Zaphariel. “My lord, all of the dusken Houses have arrived. Every minor House shall be represented by House Gallos. Those who are not present include the varying hassan clades of the dune seas, the valley clansmen of the void, and those currently operating harvester dropship incursions.”

The Malik of Varranis stepped up from the Varranian Throne with a great smile on his lips. His golden orbs scanned the room before falling onto the frail form of Saahir ibn Bahamut. “Thank you, Ramses, refresh your throat with a fresh drink. You’ve earned it. Glory to you, Saahir! I do apologize for pulling you from the great work to attend this council, yet I require you now more than I ever did before.” Zaphariel spoke with a calm, accepting voice. Serenity spilled forth from his lips, easing the tension in the chamber with words alone. A slight reverberation affected each syllable in his speech, noticed only by Muahad’s cunning ears.

“... You honor me, great dusken one. We would… never not heed the call of… our great founder. The ashen tribes… owe you their loyalty… on a thousand and one grains of… black sand,” Malik Saahir began to speak in a heavily modulated voice, momentary hisses breaking his speech after several words. His body shifted forward to his assigned throne, a great cacophony of cogs, gears, and scavenged metal carefully sculpted together. An effigy of the newly risen House Bahamut, the cog and shattered moon, hovered over his hobbled body. “The great work… will continue in the hands of your… most aspiring aspirants. Once this conclave concludes… I shall personally resume it… with great efficiency… my lord.”

Satisfied with Saahir’s answer, the Varranian Malik spread his arms wide in a gesture to each House ruler currently assembled in Neu Antioch. His golden, serpentine orbs scanned all of their expectant forms. He knew with calm certainty that there would be a great many opinions throughout their council. Regardless, Zaphariel prepared himself for every possibility should things go awry. The dusken deity’s smile grew to a wide, toothy grin at the thought of Pandjoras’ future, peaceful or bloody.

Houses of Pandjoras! I am Zaphariel ibn Varranis of the Caliphate House of Varranis and I welcome you to Neu Antioch for our dusken world’s grandest council! With the arrival of House Bahamut, I announce the beginning of the Great Conclave of Pandjoras! Glory unto us!” Malik Zaphariel roared, sending a course of rippling excitement through the gathered rulers. Empowered by the dusken deity’s enthusiasm, each ruler rose from their seat and rhythmically clapped in anticipation of their conclave.


Several moments passed before the enthusiasm in their council chamber dispersed, each ruler taking to their dignified thrones before falling silent. All eyes fell on the dusken deity as he sat upon the Varranian Throne. Both Ramses and Muahad stepped backward out of either respect or necessity. Zaphariel’s gravitas dominated every aspect of the council chamber, every word or movement from then onwards a deliberate action. The dusken deity’s serpentine eyes scanned each of the House rulers, halting momentarily on those he considered allies such as Houses Bahamut and Gallax. A silent breath inhaled through his nostrils, filling enhanced lungs with fresh air to begin a long-winded speech.

“For six years I have ruled over Neu Alamut as the Malik of Varranis. With Muahad, my adoptive father, as my witness, I claimed the gravity wyrm of the void as my own and finished my trials to become hassan. Soon after, I set out across the dusken world atop Falak to see our planet as it was. I must thank each one of you for the hospitality that you had shown me,” Zaphariel chronicled, inclining his head in gratitude to the thirteen houses of Pandjoras. He continued before any of them could express their emotional responses. “When I had returned to Neu Alamut after two years of traveling through dusken sand, Muahad and the hassan proclaimed me as their Malik. So it was that I began reforming parts of Pandjoras through my experiences.”

The dusken deity removed himself from his throne, stepping down the dais to the edge of the circular table laid out before them. One of his talon-ringed fingers pressed a Pandjoran-sigiled rune, activating a hololithic project at the center. A wide hologram of Pandjoras’ surface hovered over the thirteen rulers, wide marks and notes annotated in varying forms. Malik Zaphariel allowed them a moment to scan over the various paths, careful projections, and blurred locations that made up his plans. A small smile grew on his lips as Aadil, Thanaa, Azahar, and Jericho leaned forward with peaked interest.

“When I traveled across Pandjoras, I brought together all of the ashen salvagers to create the House of Bahamut in the Dune Sea of the Lost. Together, we delved into every fallen palace from Neu Alepp to Neu Jericho with Falak clearing the way. Many of these were reconstructed and tested for the sake of the gravity citadels you use today. Thus far, with the assistance of House Bahamut, we have risen Neu Antioch, Neu Alexandrios, Neu Sallah, and Neu Constanoplis. Even as we speak, Neu Damasc and Neu Maccos are in the process of gravity reinforcement,” The dusken deity said, carefully illustrating every subject with colorful displays across the hololithic map. Each city named by his lips was echoed by the associating symbol rising into the sky. His golden, serpentine eyes fell on the lords of those named citadels. Asghar inclined his head, Zarmira sweetly smiled, and Jericho nodded, while the remainder of the unnamed held a silent, neglected fury amongst themselves. “This is only the beginning of a long, serpentine plan that I have for the fate of Pandjoras. Already, between House Bahamut and House Nathaz, our world has become increasingly different in nearly a decade. Faster, safer harvester dropships, variations of grown crops in the graviton ponds, and much larger grav-rifles for elder serpents. These are only a taste of what our people can do! With enough time and focus, we could see Pandjoras covered in azure roses instead of choking sand.”

He felt their attention draw to him even more intensely than before, ferociously devouring every word that was spoken with the hunger of a starved man. Of the many, Aadil of House Delukar and Tayyeb of House Tuturan felt the most sense of accomplishment with their aforementioned projects rising as topics. The dusken deity was well aware of the other ruler’s disinterest, such as Nader of House Korvaix and Saladin of House Gallos. Rushdi of House Rassnar kept a loathsome stare upon Malik Zaphariel, never faltering in his perpetual envy. The promised dreamer didn’t worry about their current disinterest, for he knew well enough of their eventual certainty in his plans.

“All of these facts bring me to a single, important conclusion. I would see Pandjorans fill the void around the dusken world once more for we now have the technology capable of breaching the sky," Zaphariel stated solemnly, collectively watching as each one of the Pandjoran rulers suddenly widened their eyes in surprise. Those that had begun to falter in interest began to lean forward at the mention of intersystem travel. He accepted it as a small victory in a long, drawn-out war against his primordial foe. The Malik of Varranis continued, refusing to wait for several gasping responses to his statement. “House Bahamut, House Urahal, House Nathaz, and I have seen fit to reconstruct the harvester dropship from the ground up. Larger, focused gravity engines capable of blasting a thousand and one grains of black sand into the atmosphere. The stars are within our reach, friends, we only need to grasp it within our hands.”

A myriad of murmurs and gasps rippled across the conclave in an explosion of excitement. The possibility of space travel had, once again, become possible for the Pandjoran people. Every dusken entity grew a broad smile on their lips, even those disinclined to share their true emotions. All save for one individual, Saahir, who simply stared at Zaphariel with an unknowable expression. The Malik of Varranis knew what the Malik of Bahamut was thinking through his crimson goggles. He had just lied before their conclave, a great and terrible fabrication of the truth. The ashen waster failed to raise his voice, nor did he allude to a disappointed expression. Behind the umbral sheikh’s masquerade, an ugly smile grew on his soul.

“Since the moment I was born in Pandjoras’ black sands, I had dreamed of the void. My one selfish desire, the true goal I want for our people, is to see the return of Pandjoras to the glory it once had. I would see what is rightfully owed to the dusken people and claim the length of space our ancestors had lorded over: The Star Serpent.” Zaphariel said with immeasurable glee, pressing one of the Pandjoran runes once more to switch the display. The map of Pandjoras disappeared, replaced only by several documents and ancient star charts. Each piece of data coalesced into a hololithic projection of a great and terrible expanse that stretched several stars like a winding snake. Unknown worlds, unknowable regions, and immeasurable depths filled the blotches beyond Pandjoras. Many narrowed their eyes in concentration, focusing on the raw data that the dusken deity has curated. “Our ancestors ruled from their palaces on Pandjoras and in great, leviathan ships that sailed through the void. They were of such great quantity that they cast shadows over entire planets. All of which brings me to the only, golden path for our world.”

Tension built in the air as every Pandjoran in the grand council hung on his following words. A swarm of orange eyes, occasionally broken by Urahallian purple or Muahad’s blue, stared at the dusken deity with endless anticipation. Some began to perspire, gravely desiring the conclusion that would bring their people into the void. Others leaned forward on their thrones with one of their aides unveiling dataslates to record upon. Several seconds passed before Zaphariel spoke next, intentionally allowing those around to perceive feigned gravitas.

We must unify the Thirteen Houses of Pandjoras.

He had anticipated some level of outburst from the rulers of the dusken sands, yet they exploded in such a way that Zaphariel never would have estimated. Thrones burst backward as greedy, arrogant Pandjorans erupted from their seats. Pandjoran slurs that would turn an elder serpent flush red were tossed without regard for those present. Insults flew in dire protest against those with pre-existing tensions between each other. Malik Nader and Malika Tayyeb violently gestured to one another in open conflict. Malik Rushdi openly growled at the Malik of Varranis, earning distasteful words from Ramses. Malik Saladin pointedly insulted the House of Bahamut, vowing to never work with bloodless ashe wasters. Each House feud reached a boiling point resulting in the conclave doors opening to reveal Neu Antioch’s armored sentinels. A single, loud tap of a metallic weapon hit the tiled surface of the graviton palace, forcing the feuding Pandjorans into silence.

Silence yourselves. I refuse to allow Pandjoras to devolve into the violence of the Umbral Jihad. Become like the dusken ancients of old Pandjoras,” The old man of the mountain began to speak in a heavy, slow tone as he stepped forward. Piercing blue eyes harshly glared at each ruler behind his alabaster skull mask. An obsidian great blade was delicately held in both of his gloved hands, pointed downward against Neu Antioch’s tile. An ancient weapon with an extensive history across the dusken world. Eyes widened in fear at the very object that had cleaved legends throughout Pandjoran history. “Or will you proffer your heads as compensation?

As requested, a deathly silence wafted across the conclave of Neu Antioch. Where once a roiling horde of dusken individuals had furiously bit at one another, now only a hushed crowd of whimpering rulers bided their tempers. Satisfied, Muahad wordlessly stepped back from his position with the great blade slowly sheathed across his back. Azure orbs turned away from those Pandjorans in the conclave to rest upon Zaphariel’s nonplussed form. His golden, serpentine eyes had simply watched everything with vetted interest, having not attempted to halt their screaming. Aware of the old man’s attention, the dusken deity nodded his head in gratitude to his adoptive father. A responsive nod was returned before the Malik of Varranis spoke again.

“Your frustrations are justified, my friends. I proclaimed something that is equal parts selfish and selfless, yet I propose unification as it is the only way forward. There can be no star-spanning Pandjoran empire without the Thirteen Houses conjoining together. There can be no future for Pandjoras without unity.” Zaphariel said with a calming voice, easing the tension that Muahad had built up for him to disperse. Already many of their number had leaned into the idea of unity as he spoke, perhaps the silence had given them time to think about the future. Few remained stalwart and ignorant, such as Gallos, Rassnar, and Korvaix. Truthfully, however, he didn’t require a single one of their number to make his star empire. They were easily replaceable.

“Malik Varranis, perhaps I speak for myself in this endeavor, but none of those gathered here would see their identities - their cultures - wiped from Pandjoran history. I, for one, will not stand for my House being eradicated from the annals of this future star empire.” Malik Saladin stated, standing from his throne once more with his rotund body pressing against the council table. Fierce, orange eyes stared down Zaphariel, while a scrunched face of one severely insulted uglied his wobbling features. The Gallosian’s mere presence was enough for the dusken deity to feel bile rise in his gullet, yet Saladin wasn’t wrong in his speech. Several members nodded their heads in agreement, wishing to preserve their unique part of Pandjoran culture. The dusken deity shook his head in disappointment, his message misunderstood by the vast majority of the conclave.

“You confuse my words for a serpent’s song, Malik-i-Saladin. I don’t seek to eradicate the Houses to reform a new government. All Houses would survive under the banner of one - the Malik of Pandjoras. Allegiances will be pledged to the holder in the name of unification, territories will only grow in size, and our Houses will prosper across the Star Serpent. As it has been for time immemorial, so too will it within our stellar empire. Only Thirteen Houses will ever rule as the nazim of their territories, ruled over only by the Malik of Pandjoras.” Malik Zaphariel explained, leaning into the council table to activate another rune. The hololithic display began to savagely cut up equivalent territory along the projected expanse of the Star Serpent. House sigils, like those current in the council, hovered over different sectors as an example. “The Malik of Pandjoras will only hold the dusken world itself and all the closest territories around it. As the Star Serpent grows, territories will be divided equally and with merit as it has been for many millennia on our planet.”

Malika Thanaa stirred from her throne, straightening herself out as she regarded the Malik of Varranis. Unlike Saladin, the Tallorian held a more inquisitive air about her. Her golden eyes, however, held the intense flame of curiosity and excitement dancing between them. “These terms are, indeed, more acceptable now that we’ve had the chance to discuss them. Only one question remains to be answered: who will be the Malik of Pandjoras? Who, amongst our number, would rule over Pandjoras?” It was a question that Zaphariel had awaited since the moment of their arrival. A toothy grin plastered across his lips as Thanaa finished speaking. Fear, or perhaps awe, caught in her throat as the dusken deity eyed her down.

I, Zaphariel ibn Varranis, will lead the Thirteen Houses as the Malik of Pandjoras. I know I am not liked by some here, but I have walked over a thousand and one grains of black sand to see Pandjoras for all of her beauty. Perhaps that is egotistical of me to say, yet I desire to grasp destiny as one would a void serpent. I would see the stars tamed by Pandjoran hands, just as Falak was tamed by my own.” The dusken deity said without any fragment of his masquerade, momentarily letting it fall away to speak his earnest feelings. His words were felt across their number, even by those Pandjorans that chided his existence. Zaphariel could feel their want, could see their anticipation, and could hear their breathing quicken as he spoke. He pushed them further, his lips spreading once more to speak of a glorious future. “I will see the creation of the Illuminated Star Sultanate of Pandjoras and raise an umbral armada to spread our kind across the universe.

To his surprise, Zaphariel watched as several Pandjorans pushed out of their seats to prostrate onto Neu Antioch’s tiles. His golden, serpentine orbs widened as he counted each of their forms. Sulkat, Urahal, Delukar, Nathaz, Gallax, Abdullahar, Tuturan, and Bahamut all bowed their heads to the Malik of Varranis. Even the old man and Ramses had bent their knees to either side of his risen form. Only House Tallora, Korvaix, Galos, and Rassnar remained unbowed, yet even they were beginning to falter after such an impassioned speech. The dusken deity couldn’t help but chuckle as he was humbled by the arranged Pandjorans.

“You honor me. All of you. Even those that have not bowed their heads, you honor me in the fact you so furiously resist against one aiming to claim power. Tell me what it is that I can do to become acceptable in your eyes. And to those who had shown their loyalty, what is it that I can do to cement our relationship?” Zaphariel asked, inclining his head in gratitude to those that had shown their loyalty so suddenly and fiercely. Regardless of their necessary involvement, the dusken deity felt inclined to hear their requests. He gestured to Muahad and Ramses with either of his talon-ringed hands, the former upending a large slate of masonic stone and the latter unholstering a dataslate primed for usage. He had planned for there to be requests, yet the Malik of Varranis hadn’t expected what was requested.

The first to request anything from Zaphariel was Malik Saladin, as he had expected. The Gallosian stroked his thick beard as he spoke. “House Gallos will bow its head in acceptance so long as every single ruler here is granted a gravity palace.” Saladin said, his jewelry jostling against his rotund form as he eyed the rest of the conclave. Some cast a distasteful look at the Malik of Gallos, but the Malik of Varranis had been prepared for such a request. The dusken deity nodded to Muahad, who began to quickly sculpt upon the gravity slate.

“I will do more than this, Malik Saladin, I will raise thirty palaces into the air for each ruler and their heirs, followed by minor Houses and their heirs. The great engines of yore shall blot the sky with majesty.” The dusken deity stated, earning him a broad smile from Saladin. The Gallosian bowed down to the tile in an offering of his allegiance. Zaphariel gave a respectful nod full of gratitude to the Lord of Neu Alepp, turning his attention then to Malik Nader of House Korvaix.

“House Korvaix will follow the Malik of Pandjoras if we receive equal, equivalent, and priority territories to House Tuturan. I refuse to fall behind my twin, nor will my House accept less than this!” Malik Nader stated, his insecurities freely aired to those around him. A troublesome soul, even his twin found the statement as revolting as Malik Saladin’s previous comments. The Korvaixian leered at Malika Tayyeb as if he had won a conclusive battle over her. Zaphariel intentionally mulled over the request for several seconds, a plan having already been formulated long before the man had even spoken.

“Granted, but I will extend this to each ruler of the Thirteen Houses. None shall be stronger than the other, save for the Malik of Pandjoras who rules over the dusken world. Merit and personal conquest will influence where one’s territory expands, but it will ultimately fall to the Malik of Pandjoras’ decision in how the Star Serpent grows.” Malik Zaphariel concluded the matter, watching as Nader contemplated the decision for a terse moment before bowing his head in acceptance. Malika Tayyeb inclined her form once more in thankfulness, swearing allegiance on her lips for the second time this day. The dusken deity despised their feud, yet he understood it drove their craft to greater heights. As Muahad inscribed the current proposal, Malik Rushdi of House Rassnar maneuvered from his seat to speak.

“You will not have House Rassnar become a part of your Star Sultanate, not while the Varranian hassans already fulfill a position that we are proficient in. Would you exile your hassan all for the sake of unity, Malik Zaphariel?” Malik Rushdi asked with venom dripping from within his rebreather, a pointed question that failed to move the dusken deity. The Rassnarian had fallen into the Varranian’s trap, one that he had set from the very beginning of their conclave. A sly smile grew on Zaphariel’s lips, drawing unease from deep within Rushdi’s spirit.

“Dear Malik-i-Rushdi, you think you are the only one worthy of a specific position within the Star Sultanate? You underestimate how long I have desired to see Pandjoras thrive. On this matter alone, I had spent thirteen restless days and thirteen restless nights deciding how each House would govern the Star Serpent,” Zaphariel chortled, thoroughly enjoying that his trap had been sprung by the old man’s former foremost pupil. Another rune was activated on the council table, shifting the hololithic view from the estimated Star Serpent into a list of all Thirteen Houses with their sigils. Roles, positions, estimated governed sectors, and several other factors were listed under each House. It was as if the dusken deity predicted that all of them would bow their heads to his unification. “Behold, I have devised how every one of our Houses will govern the Star Serpent!”

“House Gallax as the Star Sultanate’s Void Diva, Malika Zarmira personally leads her serpent tamers to examine all newly discovered lifeforms! House Urahal will skein the void with Malik Azahar as our Penumbral Archseer! House Nathaz has long governed our planet’s harvester dropships, it is only reasonable to grant Malik Jericho the rights to build the umbral armada and beyond as the Obsidian Shiplord! House Korvaix and House Tuturan will jointly lead security across the Star Serpent as the Spears of Pandjoras! Malik Avdol of House Abdullahar shall lull those scattered remnants of the Star Sultanate back in as the Dusken Emissary!” The Malik of Varranis was a blur of logistics, every title and duty spoken was greeted with fresh data translated into hololithic form. Heirs and assistants recorded new information with strained urgency. Malik Rushdi found himself backed into a corner as if he had unleashed a vault full of void serpents. Relentlessly, the dusken deity continued.

“Malik Saahir of House Bahamut will continue to develop new technologies and progress our civilization as the Ashen Hierarch! Malik Aadil of House Delukar shall wreath the Star Serpent in new, impressive crops to feed our expanding population as the Umbral Harbinger! Malik Asghar of House Sulkat has always marshaled a dusken army and for that, he will continue to do so as the Dune Sultan! Malika Thanaa of House Tallora has upheld the greatest administrative effort on Pandjoras, for this she shall continue to do as the Shadow Administrator! Malik Saladin of House Gallos openly lords over the minor Houses of Pandjoras, he shall continue to do so as the Dawn Lord!” Every administrative effort to keep up with Zaphariel ibn Varranis’ rant was in vain as he spoke with such speed and certainty that their hands failed to keep in sync. Only Ramses of House Varranis managed to keep a steady pace with the Varranian Malik’s incessant, breathless speech. Rushdi of House Rassnar merely bit his lips in silent fury, blood easily drawn from the endless torrent of words spawned forth from the dusken deity.

“And finally, Malik Rushdi of House Rassnar, you will claim all clandestine operations across the Star Sultanate as our foremost assassin and former hassan. You are the sole individual I trust with gathering new hassan and ensuring our empire remains free of outside influence. In this, I trust only you as the Shade King.” Zaphariel said with a toothy grin, small hints of reverberation evident within his voice. Defeated, humbled, and risen once more within minutes of the dusken deity’s speech, Malik Rushdi bowed his head in acceptance. Tears fell from the Rassnarian’s eyes, silently crying in awe of his new task. One final challenger remained to be confronted. The Malik of Varranis threw his gaze towards Malika Thanaa of House Tallora, who had just finished typing the last of the newly processed data. She met his gaze, rising from her throne to stand against the Varranian.

Malika Thanaa removed her spectacles, allowing them to sit against the warm surface of the council table. Without any stated requests, the Tallorian bowed her head in acceptance of fealty to the dusken deity. He narrowed his eyes, suspicion growing from the sudden genuflection. It was only as she raised her head once more that her lips parted to speak.

“House Tallora offers allegiance. We request only one thing from the future Malik of Pandjoras. To firstly verify, however, are you currently engaged to any member of the Thirteen Houses?” Malika Thanaa inquired, earning a raised eyebrow from the Malik of Varranis. His golden, serpentine eyes turned to regard Ramses, who simply shook his head in confusion. Zaphariel echoed the movement, earning a sly smile from Thanaa. “I see. Then as sand turns to glass, so too will our Houses be conjoined through Zaniya and Laifah, my daughters.”

Realization dawned on Zaphariel at the same time as the rest of the conclave. Another explosion of activity erupted amongst their number as a new conflict boiled over. Malika Thanaa of Tallora had proposed a direct tie to House Varranis through her daughters. Houses Gallax, Abdullahar, Galos, Urahal, and Delukar all immediately offered their proposals through their heirs. Ramses unleashed howling laughter, tears forming at the edges of his eyes at the sudden excitement in their council. Muahad releases a single, deep smirk as the Houses fought over arbitrary rights revolving around his adoptive son. The dusken deity watched the events unfold with a coy smile, yet he truthfully felt unending exhaustion for this singular moment compared to the rest of the gathering. As Malika Zarmira began to threaten Malika Thanaa with her void serpents, the Malik of Varranis raised a single talon-ringed hand to halt their feuding.

“I… shall accept. Not just to House Tallora. I will accept all of the heirs and heiresses from House Gallax, Abdullahar, Galos, Tallora, Urahal, and Delukar. May we find some level of peace in our Houses being united, hopefully for more than just matrimony.” Zaphariel finally spoke with a tone equal parts exhaustion and acceptance. Of the many requests he had planned for, several marriages from all of his closely allied Houses had not been one. He felt little and less desire for the carnal acts, yet the dusken deity understood the necessity of it. All of it was for the sake of Pandjoras’ unification.

With the final issue resolved amongst their number, Zaphariel ibn Varranis walked up his dais to seat himself on the Varranian Throne. The air around him became more solemn as each House stepped back from the council table to prostrate themselves to the dusken deity. An uncomfortable feeling built up in his chest. Loathing, revulsion, and exhilaration mingled together within his soul. He despised their genuflecting forms, yet the Malik of Varranis found himself drawn to their overwhelming faith. Pandjoras had no gods, either dispelled by the cataclysm or slain by the old man of the mountains’s hands in the eternal night. The power of belief was nonexistent in the dusken sands, and yet he felt empowered by their convictions. How could he wield it? His thoughts were interrupted by Muahad’s footsteps.

Lo, behold, Thirteen Promises have been made for the sake of unity. Intone thy fealty for Pandjoras’ unification. Prostrate thy body and spirit to the regent of the umbral sands. Bear witness and constellate thy will in eternal loyalty to the dusken one. He, prophesied by sand wyrd and sung by serpent alike, who claims destiny. Sing ardently in glorification of the umbral king. Glory to you, Malik of Pandjoras!” The old man of the mountain spoke ceremoniously, his voice a deep dirge that reverberated across Neu Antioch. An indescribable energy perforated the walls of reality with each syllable of his speech, seemingly tying his words from one existence to another. Whatever Muahad was doing, Zaphariel felt uncontrollable emotions dig through the fabric of his being. Tears welled at the corners of his eyes as the grandmaster of the hassan removed the coronet from his forehead. A new crown sat where the coronet last was. Eight horns split in even distances were decorated by thirteen, eye-shaped gems topped by a dusken halo lifted by a miniature gravity engine within the jewelry.

The Malik of Pandjoras, Zaphariel ibn Varranis, raised his head to witness the bowed forms of the Thirteen Houses once more. The piercing, blue eyes of Muahad turned away from the dusken deity as a multitude of voices mingled together to form a cacophony of allegiances. Their voices mixed into an ugly, saturated tone that disgusted and excited him in equal measurements. He closed his eyes to the world as he listened to their cries of loyalty. A cry of allegiance that he would remember for years to come.

Until our blood becomes dusken sand, we give our lives to the umbral king! Glory to the Malik of Pandjoras!
The Beginning Purge

-After The Invasion of Kush-






The March through the wastes was a tedious one, Gyptian marauders had fled to the countryside and continued out savage harrying attacks on Imperial convoys, civilians, and others. More and more of the God-Slayers had to be pulled to deal with these attacks, despite Aeternus forcing the three-hundred to make haste to aid with the main assault force. Never once did the Black Hawk personally travel with them - her shadow only being seen and never was a voice heard. A squad, known to the God-Slayers as Immortalis Squad, no more than five strong, was hunkered at the edge of the encampment. A small fire illuminated their massive forms and still they wore the power armor that was their uniform.

“I grow tired of these Gyptians,” growled Tyrannus, setting his helmet to the side as he gazed out to the waste’s horizon. He knew they were out there, waiting for them to let their guard down despite their Dynast-King having been killed. He spoke again as he looked back to his brethren, “I don’t know why we have to fight what the army should be doing - bloody mop-up.”

The eldest of the group, Hox, spoke back, “The Primarch told us we’d be on march. It comes with the territory Tyrannus. Keep your eyes upon the horizon else they may fall upon us at any moment.”

They conversed like this well into the night, their augmented bodies unburdened by only needing a short rest. It was not even dawn when Squad Immortalis continued their movements across the waste, scouting ahead of the main force of God-Slayers. Their steps sent sand scattering across the dunes, moving fast through the desert heat. Occasionally, the gene-warriors would stop to survey the area and report over vox to the rest of the legion. Hox gripped his chain-sword ever savagely, eager for the fabled Gyptian warriors to fall upon them at any moment.

There was nothing but heat, rock, and sand.

Hox would speak in paranoia, “I know they are here. The Gyptians shall fall upon us at any moment.” His head turned to watch haze dance across the horizon, spires ever so distantly flicker with the heat. It was a moment before he took a knee in the sand, his eyes watching all that could possibly move.

“How can you be certain, Hox?” Another spoke, taking a knee to follow the movements of the eldest, allowing himself a moment to breathe. The two slayers looked at each other before the others came upon them, feeling the sun blast its heat down upon them. The group was gazing in all directions before Hox could give an answer, his voice lowering, “There.”

He pointed his sword in the direction of a distant settlement - nothing more could be seen but a handful of buildings and what seemed to be a central market. Hox had the look of insatiable anger in his eyes, “They hide there. I am sure of it.”




Dark, polluted clouds wafted over the crumbling roadways of the old world, sharp droplets of poison rain pattering against destroyed asphalt. Static threateningly charged the air as the harsh crackle of thunder boomed overhead. The beating heat of the sun in the deserts of southern Gyptus only worsened the environment, corroding waves of temperature haze drying and blinding those traveling in the desert sands. Ruins dotted the sides of the roads, looming towers broken down by sandy debris and smaller, metallic huts that had been rusted for an unknowable amount of time. Small groups of humanoids traveled on foot, some on mutated pack creatures and others in rare vehicles ramshackled into functionality. None, however, dared to travel directly on the vehicle-laden path as great plumes of smoke billowed from a great distance away.

Vehicles of mixed proportions rumbled down the highway with all the power given to their chugging engines. Some were heavy, tracked blocks of metallic terror mounted with terrifying weaponry, while other crafts were small, agile machines ramshackled together with available scrap. In extremely finite numbers, no more than a handful, aerial jetbikes swooped on gravitic shunts above the metal swarm speeding through the Gyptus desert. In sporadic intervals, pairs of assault wagons would split off to travel into the depths of the dunes. At the center of the churning horde drove a leviathan tank of titanic proportion, ungodly amounts of turrets mounted across the entire length of it.

Deep within the leviathan tank walked mortals and augmented supersoldiers alike in a hurried pace. Menials stood at belching cogitators, partially slaved to the terminals through neural links. Auxilia stood guard over entrances, exits, and the like, despite their duties being vain in comparison to the yellow-armored giants they accompanied. Voxrelays constantly screamed new information that scoured the entirety of the Gyptian invasion, highlights of engagements and sieges particular amongst the topics. Every transmission was an amalgamation of the same word in different connotations - victory. The Gyptians were on their last leg and soon Memphos, too, would fall beneath the Raptor. Despite the guaranteed outcome, there was unrest in the ranks.

Caestus Caligula, captain of the First Cadre of the God-Slayers, hurried down the corridors of the mammothine vehicle with a dataslate in one hand and a voxbead in one of his ears. Mortals scurried away from his enormous, armored form like fish splitting away from an oncoming predator. Devoid of his helmet, the thunder warrior wore an uncomfortable look on his heavily scarred, bruised facial features. Just a look from his mismatched eyes sent menials into trembling fits. He despised that feeling the most.

Both of his legs brought him to the center of their command vehicle, a chamber wide enough to support twenty genesoldiers shoulder-to-shoulder and tall enough for a pair of them to stand atop each other. A hololith table stood at the center, a hologram hovering over it displaying the entirety of Gyptus. Cogitators along the edges, linked both to the table and to a mortal menial, spat out fresh information that instantly updated the current affairs of the invasion. Arrayed around the floating images were the core commanders of the God-Slayers. Primarch Aeternus Rex spoke without his helmet, his voice as commanding as a lion's. Captain Victorius Nero of the Second Cadre impatiently waiting for orders to fight something, anything. Captain Curzio Tiberius of the Third Cadre patiently watched the ongoing battles along the Delta Nilus, consuming knowledge and data as it appeared. Commander Eddith Krayl, the mortal commander of their non-augmented forces, hotly debated with the Lord of the Legion.

“... The logistics battalion will not support further raiding incursions into Gyptian territories unless the Legion is prepared to facilitate appropriate garrisons. Be reasonable, Primarch, a garrison of no more than five of your warriors would make controlling the southern parts of the Delta Nilus impervious to rebellion.” Eddith barked at the genefather of the God-Slayers, a dataslate in one hand and a stylus in the other. Her aged face was scrunched up in a mixture of anger and frustration, a pair of vividly green eyes staring daggers into the thunder warrior. Her conversational adversary, however, remained nonplussed and unwavering in the face of worthless threats.

“The logistics battalion has no choice but to do as they’re ordered. You are a liaison, Eddith, not the primary commander of my Legion - the Emperor’s Legion.” The Primarch said with a threatening smile, leaning forward on the table and eyeing her back down with his own dark eyes. “Gyptus will be scoured of the remnants of the Dynast-King’s forces. When that is completed, I will acquiesce to your requests. Until that moment has passed, cooperate with Captain Tiberius on our next list of targets.”

The mortal commander seemed frightened at first, remembering her position amongst the legion and her duties to the Unification. Her facial features softened at the end of the Primarch’s words, a look of short gratitude passed between them before she stepped next to the Third Cadre captain. Tiberius shifted in his data-adled stupor, turning to Aeternus and banging his fist against the Raptor before leaving the command chamber. Caligula saw that as the opportunity needed to step forward.

“The Raptor never rests, does it?” The wisened genewarrior joked as he approached the edge of the table, drawing the attention of Nero and Aeternus. A more genuine smile shone on the Primarch’s lips, while a toothy grin sprouted across the Second Cadre’s captain. Rex moved around the hololith to clap Caligula on the shoulder, while the other gave a playful punch to the opposite side.

“It’s good to see you back in working order, my friend! That abomination nearly killed you in that fight. I am thankful that you did not die, I don’t think I would be able to readily choose your successor in the event that you pass in such an untimely manner.” Aeternus' voice was nigh angelic to the First Captain, such praise bringing a wide smile to his lacquered features.

“Aye, I wouldn’t have anyone to argue with on every possible occasion! Tiberius would be without himself if he didn’t have his job as a mediator!” Captain Nero spoke loudly, slinging an arm over the older thunder warrior in a familial manner.

“Ha! I never tire of you lot. Practically kin with the amount of blood we’ve spilled together. Alas, there is a reason that I wasn’t in attendance originally, my Primarch.” Caligula laughed initially, drawing off the other thunder warrior’s arm before growing somber. He passed a dataslate to the commander of their legion, then he maneuvered over to the hologram hovering over the table with a finger raised. The yellow digit pointed approximately to a zone off the path of the road, several kilometers ahead of the armored column.

“As you know, several squads have split off since we left Kush to deal with increasing reports of raiders further north into the Gyptian territory. Squads Aurelius, Utalitum, and Immortalis were our recon force ahead of the Legion. Squad-” Caligula stopped dead in the middle of his briefing, an emotionless look crossing his face as he halted speech entirely. The heterochromic eyes glazed over, his body remained upright but slack, and a sliver of saliva began to dribble down the corner of his lip. Several minutes passed by like this, Captain Nero throwing a knowing look at the Primarch. Aeternus wore a worrying frown as he patiently waited for the moment to pass.

And it did pass. Caligula snapped straight back into the middle of the command chamber, quickly wiping the saliva that had accumulated on his lower lip. Sweat beaded across his forehead as his eyes returned to their typical appearance. A dry chuckle gurgled up from the draconic genewarrior, clearing his voice and starting once again. The pair of thunder warriors before him continued to listen as if nothing had happened in the first place.

“- Aurelius and Utalitum have reported back, confirming the destruction of insurgent compounds that offered resistance at first sighting. They have since resupplied and ventured out again. Squad Immortalis has gone dark. No contact has been heard from them in approximately three hours. Their last known location was at this location. How would you like to proceed?”

There was a tense silence as the information was absorbed by the remaining Legionnaires on the bridge, some menials had listened but did not act on the newly received data. Aeternus crossed his arms, shifting his view to the location marked by Caligula’s finger. Nero fought back a snarl at the prospect that something had managed to defeat a squad of their thunder warriors. The First Cadre captain shifted uncomfortably, somewhat aware of the possibilities regarding the missing legionnaires.

“We’ll branch off. Anything that can kill a squad of our advanced scouts is worth our attention. Nero, you will continue the forward march to Memphos with Tiberius. Caligula, you will join me with the First Cadre on the hunt for Squad Immortalis. We will take no more than five squads. The Imperialis Praetorios will remain in formation, command is relinquished to the Second Cadre captain.” Aeternus’ commands were firm and invigorating, forcing the hairs on the other thunder warrior’s skin to stand. Both of the thunder warriors slammed their fist against the sigil on their chestplate in response.

Captain Nero displayed his usual, manic grin before setting off to the bridge, pausing briefly only to relay new orders to a menial to vox across the armored column. Caligula watched him leave, turning his attention to the Primarch. Aeternus’ held a worried look, staring at the location marked on the hololith. He was a warrior that exuded great amounts of confidence. In this moment, though, a small break of confidence was minutely prevalent.

“Contact the Black Hawk. Lady Amalasuntha will certainly join and I would rather her be with us than the alternative.” The Primarch spoke carefully, cautious of the words that he implied to the ears around him. Caligula understood immediately, exiting the chamber with a finger pressed up to his voxbead. Only the menials, ever at work, remained in the chamber besides himself. A flick of his black gauntlet saw the hologram expand on the location indicated by the First Cadre captain’s report. It enhanced large enough to notice several blocky shapes in the form of towns, villages, or settlements. An eerie feeling crept into his bones. Urgently, Aeternus’ left the command chamber as orders were relayed from one vehicle to the next.

The call had gone out. Vehicles rearranged in the metallic swarm, blocky craft swarming around the leviathan tank that was the Imperialis Praetorios. Several shapes disembarked the hulking warmachine onto fat, armored personnel carriers mounted with a ramshackle assortment of weapons. Seamlessly, as soon as the figures had entered the transports, they roared forward ahead of the column with a location set for the last known location of Squad Immortalis.

Overhead came a blackened shadow, circling the transports of the God-Slayers as a buzzard over a carcass in the vast wastes of Gyptus. As the transports kicked up dust, soot, and rubble from the broken infrastructure the form followed, circling and circling as if a bad omen followed the First Legion. All knew the omen and it stilled no hearts as to the fate of Squad Immortalis. Aeternus’ vox spurred into life and a grim voice came - a grim call barking to the Primarch, “Your warriors not calling in could mean one of two things.”

Thunk. The outer shell of one of the transports as the Black Hawk perched atop the hatch of the vehicle - her black form casting a long shadow over the front of the vehicle. Her voice spoke harshly again, grating and drilling into Aeternus’ head as a horrid reminder of all that he had to do countless times before, “If it is what I believe then, then you best honor your duty, Primarch.”

My duty is eternal, Lady Amalasuntha, I will honor my word unto death. I trust that you will honor your duty as well, Custodian. Let me know when you’ve spotted your prey, we will only be a short distance behind. ” The Primarch spoke into his helmet as he stood amongst his brethren in the transport. Aeternus’ voice was confident, as if there was no possibility of the actions that Amalasuntha insinuated. He counted at least ten of the thunder warriors he assigned to this specific task. Caligula strode through the cramped space, standing between the driver and passenger seats. Each bore their weapons of choice, including his own greatblade. Every one of their helmeted lenses turned to regard their genefather with a mixture of excitement and anxiety. They understood just as well what their hunt could unveil.

Aeternus made his way to stand beside Caligula, setting a hand on every shoulder of every thunder warrior that he passed. The simple act was enough to reassure them, reinforce them, and invigorate them with confidence exuding from their genefather. Words were typically the Primarch’s way of handling the Legion; however, this particular matter required fewer speeches and more actions. His view settled on the armored windshield of the transport, several terminals displaying auspex data and visual input at a quick glance. The Captain of the First Cadre watched as well; however, he held a grim look on his lips where there would otherwise be a playful joke.

“I will handle it.”

Caligula heard, raising his head to the speaker next to him. Aeternus’ knightly helmet was staring at him, an unknowable look behind the voxgril and lenses. A small, pained smile grew on the lips of the elder warrior. Caestus wished he could echo the worries in his Primarch; however, he knew that the commander of their forces needed to keep appearances. He raised a yellow gauntlet to rest on his old friend’s pauldron, the gesture reciprocated by a black gauntlet falling on his own shoulder.

“Aye, it’ll be damned awful to see Ursh raiders deep in Gyptus territory.” Caligula said, reinforcing his lie with a small, typical chuckle.

There was a light lurching of the transport - Amalasuntha had left, leaving a small bit of relief for the force of gene-warriors. Silence followed even after Caligula’s attempts to lighten the mood. The rumbling of the engines were the only things to bless their ears and it was a welcome sound to focus on as it distracted from the possibility of what had to be done. Engines roared and men steeled themselves amongst the transports.

The Black Hawk seemed to know of the fates of Squad Immortalis though she dared not speak it over the vox directly. Even as she flew high above them, she had kept eyes upon all of the Three Hundred warriors - a simple task for one of the Emperor’s chosen. The sands began to whip. Churning great dust clouds that would hinder vision for those on the ground. Even though the sun blasted down upon them, the cloud left everything in a near red mist. The air seemed to grow charged the further the transports moved and a great wall of sand threatened Amalasuntha’s flight and so she would descend once more.

Aeternus’s transport allowed the ramp to open momentarily for the custodian to take refuge. Her blackened form seemed to dim the very lights as the ramp raised behind her. She spoke simply, “A storm is coming upon us, Primarch. Adjust your path towards the village ‘Tarajue’.”

Silence had festered by the time Lady Amalasuntha arrived in Aeternus’ transport. The belching of vox relays and pinging of auspexs filled the void. Every thunder warrior turned their attention to her, save for Aeternus, Caligula and the pilots. A mixture of anger, awe, and fear lingered in their eyes. Only in times where she was required to perform her duty would she close her distance with the Legion. Therefore, her sheer presence amongst their number caused no shortage of anxiety in the form of adjusting stances, rapidly checking armaments, and lip biting.

“You heard our guardian, Aurelia, perform your duty.” Aeternus’ spoke with a commanding voice, his tone as dominating as a roaring lion’s.

Aurelia gave a nod of her head in affirmation, pressing several runes on a terminal to adjust auspex settings. Her co-pilot swiftly activated several runes from his console, their transport beginning to shift in response to new information. Armored panes rattled as shutters began to tightly lock against their transport, shielding those within from harsh, desert winds. Their vehicle lagged momentarily as a perceivable shift in speed was noted. Terminals burst to life in the rear cabin along every pane that had access to a swiveling turret. Eagerly, those anxiety driven thunder warriors planted themselves in sponson seats as preparation for carnage to come.

Similarly across their formation, three other vehicles of similar caliber adjusted for oncoming weather by adjusting armored panes, closing hatches, and slowing their speeds. The lead transport, Aeternus’ carrier, seamlessly swapped their route to a village visible in the distance. A harsh blanket of sand rose as a monstrous effigy over their destination, lightning jolting from dusty veil to the next. Electrical tendrils licked out at openings in the storm, threatening to strike at anything close to it. Chunks of broken, rusted metal twisted within the tempest as it tore across the land, sweeping up every loose article from their wartorn world.

“Tarajue in sight, Lady Amalasuntha, Primarch Aeternus.” Aurelia stated after several tense moments of navigating desert and narrowly avoiding storm debris. She reached over to a console to her right, thumbing a rune and listening as every terminal within their cabin swapped displays. Tarajue appeared on their monitors, a small, indistinguishable settlement nestled deep within Gyptian sand. Several sporadic sculptures of rusted metal stood sentry on the village’s perimeter, crude effigies to forgotten gods created in a desperate attempt to appease uncontrollable forces.

“Relay a spread order to the other vehicles. Prepare for possible contact. Open a general voxline to the local area. If Squad Immortalis is alive, then they will respond.” Aeternus’ ordered as he turned his attention to one of their monitors. Aurelia was quick to respond, swiftly relaying her Primarch’s directives across their formation and opening up their voxcaster for general use. The Lord of the First Legion momentarily turned his attention to Amalasuntha as their voxrelay incessantly requested input. He felt a lump in his throat. He hoped for the best. He knew better than to think like that.

“Broadcasting to all local subvoxs. I am Primarch Aeternus Rex of the First Thunder Legion. Do not be afraid, do not cower, and submit to the Emperor’s unification. All hostilities taken against us will be responded to with extreme prejudice. You have been warned. Prepare for our arrival. To all other agents of our Master within vox range, you will rendezvous at our position.” It was a practiced statement. One that he had made hundreds of times in service to their Master. It was a statement that was never responded to with appropriate measure. It was a statement that always led to massacre. His attention never faltered from Amalasuntha as their transport rapidly approached Tarajue.

And yet there was but static over the vox, no response from the fabled Gyptian attackers nor from Squad Immortalis - it was all static. As the transport ground to a halt at the edge of Tarajue no shot came their way, save for the occasional bit of rubble ratting against armored transport metal. There was a tension in the air as the wind howled and the static roared for a straight minute. Then, a single utterance came to the ears of the Primarch, the familiar voice Hox, ”Gyptian! Come to die then?!” The sound of lasfire sounded over vox, screams echoed.

Amalasuntha gazed to the Primarch expectantly, a hollow look for the genefather.

A moment of silence followed as their vox burst to life with perturbing noises of gruesome mayhem. All movement halted to a grounding stop inside of their transport. Tension within threatened to boil over as thunder warriors began to grow increasingly anxious. It lasted no longer than a mere second as Aeternus’ finally turned away from Amalasuntha to address his Himalazian knights. They couldn’t tell his facial expression behind their Primarch’s conical helmet, yet all of them could feel compulsory stalwartness emanating from him.

“Go. Bound them. I will deal the killing blow.” Aeternus’ words reverberated across their transport, each syllable felt deep within every thunder warrior’s pair of hearts. His tone was reminiscent of a disappointed, remorseful father that had lost his child. Despite this, the Primarch’s voice was as booming as it was commanding. Those thunder warriors that hung on his very word snapped into action, grabbing their wargear and swiftly egressing out of their transport. Caligula accompanied them with a mournful look spread across his scarred face.

As the last thunder warrior left their cabin, Aeternus marched his black armored form into the aft chamber. His great, obsidian blade was torn from a magnetic weapon rack and swiftly mounted to his back. He felt Amalasuntha’s piercing gaze tearing a hole into his helmet from behind. The Primarch ignored her imperceivable glower for he had a duty to perform. One which he had no real want to execute, save for acting in the name of the Emperor.

“Come. Follow me. I will show you the duties in which I’ve pledged to uphold. You will see with your own eyes that the God-Slayers will not falter .” A new resonance slipped through his voice, one of hardened resolve and muted fury. Beneath his helmet, Aeternus’ clenched his teeth and narrowed his eyes in preparation for what awaited him. Artificial adrenaline was already beginning to spill into his body as he stepped next to Amalasuntha. Even in close proximity, the Primarch emanated an aura of war and violence.

It was that very aura that Amalasuntha could feel - the power and command this brutal Primarch could field would have been overwhelming to the average man. Yet the Black Hawk was no mere foot-soldier and she would certainly not tremble by the coming of the barbarian’s wrath. She propped herself upon her Lance, feeling no need to fly in the raging sandstorm that whipped around them - scratching paint off the armor of those who fanned out around them. Her eyes snapped forwards and she spoke into vox as the wind and roaring torrent drowned out her normal voice, “There is no doubt that you will carry out such duties. The Emperor’s Will encompasses all.”

As they began their path forwards, red flashes, drowned by the haze of the sand, could be seen in the distance - illuminating the silhouettes of ruined buildings. Even at the edge of the village they saw it, blood soaked the sand and limbs could be seen, bodies stuck into the very sides of the building, hardly impaled and more having been thrown with such force. Scorch marks from rogue las shots clung everywhere. Even in the dim light, it was clear at what the scale of the slaughter was, but it also appeared as if a battle occurred- a traveling firefight down the main avenue.

Amalasuntha would speak once more in a low tone, “See as to what the gene-instability brings, Aeternus.”

The Primarch’s muted fury held his lips closed in response. He knew exactly what their inherent flaws brought upon their enemies, their friends and their allies. His crimson lenses scanned every piece of broken rubble, lasburn, and mutilated body that painted Tarajue. Aeternus took mere milliseconds to remember every grizzly detail that they passed. Both of his narrowed eyes demanded to be closed, wishing to not behold unwarranted violence caused by his genekin. Regardless, he tempered his mind as they passed the next row of ramshackle homes.

“An unwarranted consequence in the name of Unification, an inexplicable must for Humanity, and a disgusting necessity for the Future. It is not their fault - nor that of our Masters - that they experience it as they do.” Aeternus Rex coldly replied through the vox, his great helm turning slightly to regard Amalasuntha in their stride. Many of his brethren were ignorant and blind to their flaws, only glory in combat hounded their actions. The Primarch was far removed from his kindred in that regard, fully aware of their - his - volatility and instabilities. His mind wondered for only a stray moment if it truly was the fault of the creation or the fault of the creator for their problems.

Movement entered his field of vision as thunder warriors from his personal retinue knelt beside a fallen knight. Their left pauldron displayed the God-Slayer’s numeral, while their other pauldron presented a raptor perched atop a skull. To Aeternus, it was clear that this was one of Squad Immortalis. The corpse was devoid of skull, limb, and weaponry with a variety of scorch marks peppering their armor. An odor of burnt flesh wafted in their vicinity.

Leave them. Find whatever remains of Immortalis immediately.” The Lord of the God-Slayers roared, startling those thunder warriors that began to inspect their fallen brethren. His knights swiftly saluted with a fist against their heraldry before sprinting off into the oncoming storm. Their forms disappeared as quickly as they had arrived, veiled behind great gusts of sand and debris. Aeternus strode forward to observe the cadaver himself, refusing to kneel in reverence. He felt his lips part in a disgusted sneer. The body’s head hadn’t simply been decapitated. It had been torn off with brutal, violent strength well known amongst Imperial forces.

Amalasuntha stood behind the genefather of the God-Slayers, her eyes looking upon the cadaver with a cold indifference. Her grip tightened around her lance before tilting her head towards Aeternus, casting a watchful look as to what his reaction would be. Judgment loomed over the Primarch as a mighty mountain over any man. She dared not step towards him, not out of fear of his anger but merely to allow him the moment to collect himself. The howling wind served as their ambassador - killing the silence between them. Then. The crack of munitions filled the air once more, barely audible over the wind. The Black Hawk turned away from the Primarch.

“The hunt continues, Aeternus,” she said grimly.

The Primarch didn’t respond as sharp cracks of lasfire erupted in their local area. Aeternus calmly collected himself, offering a respectful nod to the dead, before removing his obsidian blade from behind. A black gauntlet hoisted the greatsword’s hilt allowing it to lightly rest against his pauldron. Footsteps reverberated in unintended stomps from the thunder warrior as he pushed on further into Tarajue. The disappointed scowl he wore earlier persisted beneath his helmet, gloomy thoughts threatening to spill over within.

As the Black Hawk and the God-Slayer rounded a shattered building into Tarajue’s singular plaza, lasfire danced past in brilliant, crimson streaks. Several yellow armored giants fought desperately behind makeshift barricades, toppled carts, and stacked corpses in a gnarly firefight. Their opponent stood by themselves at its center, bodies of fallen thunder warriors and Gyptian commoners in small numbers scattered nearby. Sergeant Hox, the veteran member of Squad Immortalis, maniacally laughed as he fired a lasrifle on full auto, stray beams scorching limestone buildings and barricades alike.

“Damnation, Hox, throw down your weapon before we have to disobey the orders of the Primarch! I’d rather you be bound and tied for Aeternus’ judgment!” Caligula called out with desperation on his lips. A lasrifle smoked in both of his yellow gauntlets, several warning shots having already been fired in a vain attempt for parlay. Several thunder warriors outside of Squad Immortalis shielded themselves nearby, tending their wounds with synthspray and quicksalve. Not a single Gyptian remained close to their firefight, either killed in action or having urgently fled Tarajue during the mayhem.

As Caligula bemoaned his failed attempts at diplomacy, Primarch Aeternus trudged between a set of barricades shielding warriors from their Legion. The first cadre captain watched as their genefather allowed his body to be riddled with scorch marks from Hox’s lasfire. No amount of volley fire slowed down their commander, even an aimed shot to his helmet failed to halt his steady advance. Slowly, thunder warriors rose to watch the scene unfold before them with a mixture of sorrow and awe. Terran sun glinted off blackened armor as Rex removed an adamantium dagger from an unseen scabbard.

“Be not afraid, Hox,” Aeternus’ softly spoke as he gently closed the distance to his afflicted knight. An adamantium, curved blade with a golden hilt ending in a raptor’s head shone brilliant within his blackened fist. A weapon that had been used countless times for the same express purpose. The Primarch could see palpable fear begin to grow on Hox’s facial features. No retaliation came from the thunder warrior, his lasrifle having long since dropped into Gyptian sand. “Find peace in having performed your duties in His name”

In that solitary phrase, Hox’s eyes had widened and the storm opened - giving way to the bright Gyptian sun and the heat that swiftly followed. Clarity. It came in awe as the veteran warrior sank to his knees in the presence of his gene-father. There were no words in the moment that he could say as his eyes darted around the plaza as he took in all that happened. He saw his brethren, alive and dead and the recollection came in a wave.

Tears began to stream down his face, sputtering out apologies came in an incoherent stream as he sank further into the sand. A singular wail came from him. He didn’t want to believe it had happened and yet it had - a brother had killed a brother and there was no return from that. All that the God-Slayers stood for; Imperium, Honor, Brotherhood, all washed away by his clouded actions. There was a moment as he looked back to his gene-father, a crushing weight upon his face. They were warriors made to bring Imperium through gene-wrought might, but they were still human.

“I have failed you and the God-Slayers, Aeternus.” He wept, leaning back on his knees. There was no moment between his words, “I have failed Him. I killed my brothers! They were to die honorably and I butchered them like dogs! Like nothing more than Gyptian filth! How am I to find peace now? How am I to find my peace in my own death, Aeternus?”

He did not wait for an answer to his lamentation, “I deserve a most gruesome death, there can not be anything less. I can’t atone. I can’t mourn. I can only be given the death that I deserve! Hark! Hark upon how I, Hox, am nothing more than a kinslayer! Please, father, put this mongrel out of his misery just as you did those Gyptian monsters.”

Adamantium blade met throat as Aeternus granted a swift death to Hox. The Primarch’s obsidian greatblade fell to his side, abandoned to pull his kindred into a death’s embrace. An inaudible gasp escaped the thunder warrior’s lips as life spilled out from his neck. Genefather watched as his geneson’s piercing black eyes dilated. Armored limbs dropped limp, head nestled against black pauldron, and tears stained his furred cloak as death arrived. Tears failed to fall from Rex’s eyes, nor did his lips tremble for the loss of his kin.

“Ave Imperator, Gloria Excelsis Terra…” Primarch Aeternus whispered as the adamantium dagger was carefully removed from Hox’s throat. The cadaver was gently raised by Rex’s black gauntlets, held aloft as if it were a precious artifact. Several thunder warriors slammed yellow fists against their own chest plates in salute, echoing their genefathers previous words in mournful repetition. Caligula approached with both of his arms open and turned upwards to receive their fallen comrade. Delicately, the legion commander relinquished his subordinates body into the captain’s awaiting limbs. As Caestus carried off the deceased knight to their transports, Aeternus turned to address those that remained.

This is our duty. This is what it means to be one of His warriors. Do not falter in His cause. We were given purpose because of Him. Without Him, humanity is lost. Raptor Imperialis! Gather our fallen brethren and return to the transports.” Aeternus roared, resolve and pride threading into his vocal cords. Genewarriors of the First Legion yelled out in response, some roaring as he did and others screaming to their lungs capacity. His thunder warriors left in short succession, collecting bodies of those that had fallen to Hox’s rage and assisting few that had been wounded. The plaza emptied as quickly as it had been filled, only the sound of sand tempests and belching engines remaining.

Primarch Aeternus stepped back into the plaza, retrieving his greatblade and twisting around to stare at Amalasuntha. Rex was well aware that she had been watching from beginning to end with her hawk-like eyes. Despite their few feuds, he did not envy the task she was forced to carry out. The legion commander walked towards her with his sword resting against his black pauldron. Black greaves halted approximately three steps away from her, the great helm’s crimson lenses level with the Black Hawk’s eyes.

Do you understand now, Amalasuntha?” Aeternus asked, his words lacking any of the hostility one would expect from experiencing such a situation.

“My worries have been assuaged for the time being,” Amalasuntha stated, not bothering to meet Aeternus’ own gaze and instead gazing straight forward with her lance by her side. The custodian began to move past the Primarch with a slow gait, almost desiring to move on. Yet, she stopped a few paces away, looking to the imperious sun. An utterance came that only the two could hear, her stern voice cutting through, “You showed great humanity, Aeternus.”


Credits: @MarshalSolgriev (Aeternus/God-Slayers), @Lauder (Hox/Lady Amalasuntha)
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