I all but ground my teeth in frustration. One of the problems with the kind of geas I had used was that the dominated tended to an over literal interpretation of order. I made a mental note to review the technique in the Malus Codicum when we were back at Agesalia, once void shielding and a lessening of Hadrian's curiosity allowed.
"Lead us to the Lieutenant, if anyone asks you have been assigned by the Inquisitor to guide us," I told him. Tears of gratitude brimmed in his eyes at the thought of being of use.
"Yes Mistress, this way," he gushed, springing to his feet and striding off down the hallway retracing out steps. As we re-entered the plaza we received more than our share of looks. The strange could be forgiven on a Rogue Trader, taken for granted even, but a party retracing its steps was more unusual. Fortunately, we headed down the passage before any comment could be made. I strode commandingly, with all the arrogance that life time of masquerading as Imperial Nobility had granted me. Hadrian was similarly gifted, though with a more martial gait. Clara could not help but effect the wary skulk of the professional soldier, but fortunately that relegated her to the entirely understandable category of Lifeward or hired muscle in the eyes of the on lookers.
We wove our way down a network of twisting ramps before emerging into what might have been a church at one point. A large statue of the Emperor stood at the far end flanked by flying buttresses. The statue had been altered, maybe sand blasted, so that its features were oddly indistinct and androgynous. Jagged Aldeari runs had been daubed on it in what I hoped was paint and a necklace of precious stones hung around its neck. The walls and floor were covered in what I first took to be an intricate sculpture of green glass, but on closer inspection proved to be a plant of some kind. It’s ivy like vines seemed to be climbing the buttresses and spreading tiny, perfectly symmetrical leaves of a disquieting green blue, with black veins running through them. It was an eerie combination of the beautiful and the sinister, the more so when the air recycle played over the leaves, rustling them just enough to reveal hook like thorns concealed beneath the greenery. Here and there small purple fruit shone opalescent, though they had a strange oblong cone shape to them which made them oddly repellant to my eye. I felt queasy at the sight and suddenly wished very much that we had brought Lucius with us. Better yet that Lucius had come instead of me. A hand caught my by the wrist and twisted my palm upwards.
"You stink of the warp," a strangely alien voice hissed. The Aldaeri warrior's grip was firm and its eyes were flat, red, and utterly alien. Followers of my career, with sufficient clearances, might be surprised to learn that this was my first encounter with the Aeldari. I knew nothing about them save for what all Imperial subjects do with a slight admixture of more esoteric tales of their decadence and debauchery.
"And you smell like a fire in a whore house," I snapped back, my aristocratic persona translating fear into anger. There was some truth to the insult, the alien had a disquieting scent, something like burnt cinnamon that cloyed at the back of the throat and tickled the sinuses. There was a gasp from the several humans that were emerging from an alcove behind the xenos. I jerked my hand free in the instant of shock and pointed my finger at the man in naval uniform that my thrall had identified as Naftor Sybdol.
"You, come with me," I snapped at the Lieutenant.
"Who are you?" he asked, bewildered and off balance by my deliberate insult to the deadly looking alien warrior.
"I am Heretoguidus," my thrall put in running the words together into a kind of name. The Lieutenant gazed at the peon in wonderment that an engineering-serf would dare speak in such company. I managed to cover my wince only with great effort.
"Something is wrong here," the Xenos hisses, "I do not know you."
"If you were meant to know who I was, the Master would have told you," I snapped. Something between a growl and a shriek was rising in the alien's throat. I had to get out of here and fast. I crooked my finger at Sybdol who took an uncertain step forward. Hadrian grabbed him by the front of the tunic and shoved him towards the door, deliberately forcing me to do the same while simultaneously interposing himself as a shield.
"Stop." the Aldeari commanded in a voice that could cut glass.