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Inspiration Friday 2016: Thousand Sons (until 1/13)


Kierdale

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A little story about a Guard regiment dishonored:

 

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Honestly I'm not 100% sure if it fits the theme but it's the only thing that came to mind for this prompt for me.

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I thank you for your entries in Tales of Dishonour over the last week.

I have not yet finished reading them, but look forward to it when I can grab a moment.

I hereby close that topic for the purposes of rewards (though, as always, if you have more tales to tell feel free to post them at any time. I myself have one idea I did not have time to write, which I hope to post eventually).

And here begins our fifteenth challenge of Inspirational Friday 2016:

Campaign II - Assault!

Continuing the campaign initiated in Inspiration Friday: Campaign I - Opening Moves, we now come to the assault. Be it a landing action to make a foothold, a spearhead attack upon a vital objective or an all-out pitched battle, tell us of your renegades following up the first steps of the campaign with a full assault.

If you did not take part in the first chapter of this series, fear not. Please feel free to submit a part I and a part II (though this week you’ll only be judged on part II), or summarise the warband’s opening moves of the campaign within the first part of your entry for this week.

Inspirational Friday: Campaign II – Assault! runs until the 27th of May.

Let us be inspired.

And who shall judge this new challenge? That decision lies with our current judge: Son of Carnelian. And to the victor chosen by Carnelian, step forward and claim your Octed Amulet:

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EDIT: and a note, that the next (and penultimate) chapter of the 'Campaign' series will be a choice of 'The Tables Turn' or 'The Crucible', to be decided individually as best fits the flow of your piece.

Hello everyone! I thought I would give everyone my thoughts on their stories before announcing the winner. I included my favorite line from each piece as well, as that is an exercise we did in my creative writing classes back in the day. 

 

  On 5/11/2016 at 4:08 AM, Carrack said:

The Sparks of Rose

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Not quite John Locke, The Book of Common Prayer, or 2 Timothy, but I tried for a bit of moralizing, in grim and dark fashion, of course.

 

"Considering what he knew of Zanizar the Younger's ways, which was considerable, the young man had likely been influenced by one of his paramours. Lavam would have to put a stop to that, but not today."

 

A wonderful, perfectly-sized story. Set at the end of a narrative and taking on almost a television recap tone, Carrack's The Sparks of Rose has a lot of life to it. Sprinkled throughout are these marvelous character details, things that hint at a wider narrative without getting in the way of the reader's imagination. The story possesses a few moments where the reader is told rather than shown something, but these hardly detract from the overall effect. 

 

  On 5/13/2016 at 3:15 AM, Scourged said:

An entry running unopposed? Not on my watch! Anyway, check out Among Thieves

 

 

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"Of the few Slaanesh cults that he had met, yes, Rahaund’ul would admit they were among the more tolerable."

 

I like how Scourged's Among Thieves really plays up the fact that even newer warbands like the Scourged who haven't been around for 10,000 years still have an extensive history, with alliances and oaths stretching back through time. One hardly ever sees such an expansion of the lore in that way, but I think that this story accomplishes a lot in a short amount of time. I would have enjoyed more of a dialogue between Dhel-mas and the Dark Eldar. It's a racial dynamic rarely explored and I think the story could have benefited greatly from more of that exchange. 

 

  On 5/13/2016 at 5:31 AM, Warsmith Aznable said:

A prequel to my most recent story!

 

I hope you like it.

 

Hidden Content
"Brother, are you sure about this?" Rifat asked of Asil.

 

"How many times do you plan to ask me?" Asil answered, and concentrated on working the crude bellows of their makeshift forge.

 

The two armourless space marines were crowded into the ancient, rusted shipping container that had served as their home since they had jumped ship what they believed was several months before. Their temporary home was one of thousands in the shanty town surrounding the unnamed space port on the ludicrously named New Terra. It was night, and bands of multi-hued arouras undulated between the surface and the stars that shone above, along with a million tiny points of light from the home fires of the countless hovels. The two lived in what was considered the "quiet" part of the shanty town, though the night was still filled with the chattering of late night revels, worship, brawling, and terror.

 

"To give ourselves to a God when we have only recently won freedom..." Rifat stared at the glowing hot brand that Asil moved about the bright coals.

 

Asil turned the brand over a few more times before answering him.

 

"This is more than freedom," Asil gestured toward Rifat with the white hot brand. "This is power. We choose this path, and if we are worthy we will be Chosen. But in the meantime none will dare to attempt enslave us again."

 

There was more that Rifat wanted to say, but he saw the determination in his brother's eyes. Asil had always been stronger, smarter, and luckier than Rifat. Asil had never acknowledged this, but Rifat knew that without Asil he would have never been selected to be a space marine, nor would he have survived the trials, and he would have been dead many times over since their so-called ascension to the status of post-human warrior-slaves of the Dread Lord Batuqan.

 

"Steady your hand if you cannot steady your heart." Asil smiled at his younger brother, offering him the handle of the brand. As Rifat took up the brand and held it at ready, Asil ran his hand over his bare chest to make sure it was clean. "Do it right the first time. I want a collection of skulls, just not on my skin."

 

Rifat seared the stylized skull of Khorne into the skin of his brother, directly over his primary heart. Asil startled Rifat by snatching the brand from his hand and immediately plunging the still red hot brand into the flesh of Rifat's chest.

 

"There!" Asil clapped Rifat on the shoulder and discarded the brand. "I saved you the trouble of worrying about it even a second longer!"

 

"So what, do we chant about blood and skulls or something?" Rifat, newly made warrior of the Blood God, was very uncertain as to how he had should feel or what he should be doing. He had thought he might feel different after it was done, but he did not.

 

"Chanting is for those who are not uplifted." Asil said after a quiet moment of consideration. "Let's just go kill some people."

 

"With what?" Rifat asked. "All we were able to make it off the ship with were a pair of dull knives and a bolt pistol with no bolts."

 

"We rise from nothing; that is good I think." Asil said, looking around their hovel, finding their knives and handing one to Rifat. "First we find someone with sword or an axe, then we use those to find chain weapons, and maybe those to find power weapons. We can do this."

 

"Well then, blood for the Blood God, I guess." Rifat said with an uncertain smile.

 

"Skulls for the Skull Throne, brother." Asil said gravely, then used his old combat knife to slash a deep gash across one side of his chest.

 

Rifat, seeing a different look in his brother's eyes already and afraid to be left behind, immediately copied Asil's slashing gesture, spilling his own blood in kind.

 

+++++++++

 

Asil and Rifat had never been on an Imperial world before Auriga Prime. A sleepy backwater with nothing of note, Auriga simply had the misfortune to be a necessary stop for fuel for the so-called Black Corsairs, the hodge-podge of a warband that the two brothers had joined in order to get off New Terra and find a proper war to participate in. Asil now led a squad of 8 space marines, including himself and his brother Rifat. They wore red power armour and chased their victims with an assortment of homemade axes, only Asil having a working chainaxe.

 

"Where are their warriors?" Rifat asked Asil. The would-be Berserkers strolled through what looked like a market area. The cleanliness and permanence of the buildings caused Rifat to stare, especially at the strange goods in the shattered shop windows. "Of what use is this place or these things to anyone?"

 

"Can you imagine a people so decadent in their obscene safety?" Asil sneered. "I see now why the Legions of Old turned against these weaklings."

 

The sounds of bolter fire echoed through the streets from a distant firefight, causing the Khornate space marines to stop and look to Asil for guidance.

 

"Who would waste bolts on slave stock?" Rifat asked.

 

"No one in their right mind." Asil said, looking above the line of roofs at the spire of an unknown structure less than a kilometer away. "I have heard from the other war leaders that Imperials gather at fanes to their dead Emperor to stand and fight. Perhaps there is a fight worth having on this planet after all."

 

Asil needed to issue no orders, but simply picked up his pace to a quick trot. The others, eager to follow a leader with strength and conviction, simply followed.

 

++++++++

 

"BLOOD FOR THE BLOOD GOD!" Asil's chainaxe roared as the space marine waded into the panicked crowd.

 

"SKULLS FOR THE SKULL THRONE!" His squad answered, following him into the herd of prey.

 

Rifat followed, lashing out with his homemade axe to the left and right. He cleaved great wounds into those who strayed near him as he followed his brother and the squad, but he did not chase down and end his victims. Rifat did enjoy the scent of blood and terror, but he did not feel the passion for slaughtering these weak, pathetic Imperials that his brother and the others obviously felt. This did not seem like a worthwhile use of their time. There was, perhaps, treasures or great weapons and artefacts to loot, something useful to take that would make their lives and positions easier to maintain among the Black Corairs.

 

"Get out of the way, idiot!" Rifat shoved a particularly slow old woman to the side as he made his way into the temple of the Imperial's Corpse Emperor.

 

A sudden crescendo of bolter fire erupted, and the mass of humanity suddenly surged away. Rifat ducked behind a stone pew, but the heavy bolter rounds were chewing through a group of people several rows ahead of him. Rifat was not sure he understood the situation.

 

"Kill! Kill! Kill!" Rifat heard the voice of his brother Asil above the crashing din of combat. The sound of Asil's voice inspired confidence in him, and Rifat scrambled to his feet to locate and rally to his brother.

 

A spiritu dominatus,

Domine, libra nos,

From the lighting and the tempest,

Our Emperor, deliver us.

 

A lone voice, somewhere through the smoke and dust ahead, rang out. It was quickly joined with several others.

 

From the blasphemy of the Fallen,

Our Emperor, deliver us,

From the begetting of daemons,

Our Emperor, deliver us,

From the curse of the mutant,

Our Emperor, deliver us,

A morte perpetua,

Domine, libra nos.

 

The rattle and bang of bolter fire continued, joined by the revving of chainswords, and past Asil and his surviving warriors of Khorne, Rifat beheld the warriors of the Emperor for the first time in his life.

Rifat had never seen anything like these females, these small, pale imitations of space marines. He laughed and raised his bloodied axe, eager to join his brother's assault on their position around the altar. Rifat saw Asil raise his chainaxe in defiance and prepare to charge, and then in horrifying slow motion, Rifat saw his brother's shoulder explode in a shower of gore, his precious and hard won chainaxe spinning away. In those few horrid moments, Asil's squad was gunned down to a man. All except Rifat, who stood in the back of the Imperial temple, disbelieving his eyes.

 

"Sic haeretici." Intoned the older woman who had fired the shot from her bolt pistol that had laid low Asil. Asil, rasping for breath through blood filled lungs, struggling on one knee to stand, retched a gob of blood and growled.

 

"Asil." Rifat whispered, taking a step toward his brother, anguish in his heart. The brand of Khorne upon his chest began to itch.

 

"We welcome with open arms all who would repent their sins." The elder Sister of Battle stepped down from the dias, leveled her chainsword in Rifat's direction, her eyes meeting with his and transfixing the would-be Berserker with their malevolent zealotry.

 

Rifat's head swam and his vision was suddenly vivid and sharp. The air burned his lungs in short, ragged gasps, and his hearts painfully hammered the walls of his ribs. He looked at each of the power armoured women in turn, the looks of haughty, pitiless scorn searing into his brain forever.

 

"Ecce perfidiae." The elder woman sneered at Rifat, striding to stand before the still struggling Asil. With a swift motion, the Superior gunned the throttle on her chainsword and flicked her wrist, never once looking away from Rifat.

 

"Asil." Rifat moaned, feeling his blood run cold as he watched the head of his brother roll toward him down the aisle.

 

Rifat dropped his axe and ran, unsure if he would ever be able to stop.

 

Warsmith Aznable's tale of brotherhood explores the advancement of one in the eyes of the Khorne, and how sometimes we take the equipment we always see Space Marines wielding for granted. Not since AD-B's stories have I read such a desperate account of the state of the resources available to servants of the Dark Gods. That being said, I found the action just a bit hard to follow and didn't grasp what had happened at the climax of the story upon first read. 

 

  On 5/13/2016 at 3:09 PM, Fulkes said:

A little story about a Guard regiment dishonored:

 

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Honestly I'm not 100% sure if it fits the theme but it's the only thing that came to mind for this prompt for me.

 

"Rising on a plateau of ceramite and steel over the city the building was a fortress unto itself, an island amongst a sea of corpses. And now the waves of man crashed against it."

 

An excellent story with lots of twists and turns. Much of the story feels natural and character driven, which I appreciate. Still, the dialogue could use more work to go along with the excellent prose on display here. Honestly though, the descriptions create such an incredible atmosphere I also feel like more dialogue might bog it down too much. 

 

An excellent week! Believe me when I say that choosing a winner took all of today, with my mind going and back and forth across all the entries at different times. Still, we can only have one champion this week and with all that in mind, I choose Fulke's Quietus as this weeks victor! Claim your pendant in the name of Chaos!  

Firstly congratulations, Fulkes :tu:

 

 

  On 5/15/2016 at 1:51 PM, Teetengee said:

Is there any chance we could have two weeks for this one, given the start of the ETL?

I thought about it but will the first week of the ETL make us that much busier than other weeks of it?

If enough members want two weeks I don't mind making the change though :)

  On 5/15/2016 at 2:10 PM, Kierdale said:

Firstly congratulations, Fulkes thumbsup.gif

  On 5/15/2016 at 1:51 PM, Teetengee said:

Is there any chance we could have two weeks for this one, given the start of the ETL?

I thought about it but will the first week of the ETL make us that much busier than other weeks of it?

If enough members want two weeks I don't mind making the change though smile.png

First four and last four will probably be busiest. It was more because it is just generally busy that two weeks gives more time than one. At least for these more interconnected stories, I don't write them in one sitting.

 
Hope I'm not bending the rules too much with this Inspiration Friday, since technically the assault isn't being enacted by my 25th Grand Company, though rather they are defending against it. However, I found the need to share this little tidbit, and hope perhaps I can serve to inspire some other brothers in Chaos even if I do not win. Enjoy!

 

"A Debt Paid"

 

 

“Greigor!” He could hear his Warsmith roar over the vox, the intensity of which threatened to blow out both the bead and the warrior’s own eardrums.

“Greigor you damn whoreson, take you’re men and fall back to the inner walls immediately!”

All around the Iron Warrior, the signs of a fiercely pitched battle were evident. Bodies that had once been members of the 25th’s mortal auxiliaries lay twisted and bloodied amongst flaming industrial wreckage, shattered cybernetics stemming from their dark skitarri cohorts mixed in with them in equal number. Yet, in comparison to the amount of enemy that lay dead at the Astarte’s feet, they were merely a drop in a vast ocean.

Four other Iron Warriors stood with Greigor, each covered in the blood and viscera of their attackers. He had known these men since before The Heresy, fought and bled with them on countless worlds. They had battled at the gates of Terra, fled into The Eye of Terror, and spilt blood in the name of vengeance for ten thousand years. They had followed each other to hell and back, yet Greigor knew in his twin hearts that today would be their final battle.

“I’m afraid I cant follow that order Lord Warsmith,” Greigor replied sullenly, looking out at each of his men with sullen eyes, “the Blood God calls us to his hall.”

Each of those warriors, though obviously members of the IV Legion, bore the distinguishing features of Khornate devotion. Pieces of armor had a coat of red where once gunmetal shined bright, while skulls and brass icons were chained, tied and bolted across their plating. Axos and Vathian bore skull-capped topknots atop MK III helms, Brennal’s power pack had sprouted several vertebral columns that clacked and pulsed with the promise of bloodshed, While Feram had grown nearly head and shoulders taller than all his brothers, his muscles barely contained by the confines of his power armor.

Greigor took this moment to examine himself, a deep sense of shame coming about him. His chest plate was wrapped in thick, rune inscribed chains, a brass icon to the Blood God hammered into the center. Somewhere between the present and his descent into berserker status, the yellow hazard marks on his shoulder pauldron had turned a deep red below the iron skull of the legion. Hooked chains hung from his waist, while trophies of skulls and teeth clattered together in the chemical-smelling breeze.

A dread sense of deja-vu had descended amongst the Astartes, each full well knowing that the events several millennia earlier had come to a climax, one which entailed death which they had so wished for since that fated day. Cramped for almost three months in the lower levels of the crumbling fortress, locked in with only serfs and slaves with untold millions of greenskins overrunning their brethren above, Greigor had led his men in their efforts to find salvation. Using up their mortal companions as labor and eventually nutrition, they managed to breach their way into the chambers of their former lord’s heretek coven.

+Break this vessel that binds me+ the voice that seemed to be made up of a thousand cries of anguish and roars of rage had whispered through the dank air.

+I can give you power. The power you need to save yourselves. That you need to continue you’re Long War+ the daemon had promised the desperate mortals +All you need do is free me+.

When Greigor had found the source of the being’s calls for aid, the exoskeleton of some unfinished daemon engine bound by thick obsidian chains, he looked to his brothers, bloody and ragged, with no hope for survival left in them. They were operating on pure instinct, knowing nothing else but survival and not having the ability to give up. Greigor was not ready to die, nor was he ready to let those who he had fought alongside of thousands of years go to the grave.  He knew his actions were selfish, yet when he broke the chains and smashed the runes of sealing, he didn’t particularly care.

“Damn it Greigor, you are brothers of the 25th and Iron Warriors, do not throw you’re lives awa-“

Greigor couldn’t bare it anymore, cutting the vox feed. Since that day he had been indebted to the herald he had freed, blood and skulls for Khorne being the tax. It was an existence where he could feel his senses and rationality slipping away, a constant war to retain his sanity in the face of an overwhelming bloodlust. It was exhausting for all of them, and Greigor knew this was not a life any of them particularly wished to live for anymore. Theirs was not the path of the World Eaters; they were Iron Warriors, sons of Perturabo. They had paid their debt ten times over as far as he was concerned, and if Khorne disagreed, he could have words with them at the gates of his realm.

“Brothers,” Greigor proclaimed loudly, stepping amongst his men with a new fire in his eyes, “the enemy comes for us once more, and it is apparent that this time they will triumph on this field.”

They looked on at him silently, and he hoped that, in their final moments, the god that had shackled them to his will had enough respect to allow his warriors clarity enough to understand what he had to tell them.

“Our brothers have ceded this land to move to a more advantageous position behind the inner sanctum. I pray they may yet survive the battles to come.”

He could hear them now, behind a shroud of industrial smog and debris from burning factories and breaches in the outer walls. A sea of bodies, each individual possessed by a murderous frenzy that drove them forward.

“Brothers, we do not go silent into the Valhalla we have yearned for!” Greigor raised his chainsword, revving its teeth as he somehow felt the spirit returning to his men.

“The bastards who forced us to this point knock at our door! They come to slaughter our brethren and topple all our accomplishments to the ground!”

The air was electric, a clairvoyant rage descending over his brothers, who cursed and reared their heads at the thought of such a thing.

“We will not allow this to stand! We have yearned for this day, yet we will not just roll over and die for this menace!”

He could see their silhouettes through the smog now; the vanguard would be breaking through in mere moments now.

“Ours is a noble death! We are sons of Perturabo! Warriors of the Blood God!”

The hulking forms of the first orks barreled through the shroud like wild beasts, beady red eyes spotting their adversaries and faces erupting into toothy grins at the promise of a fight.

“IRON WITHIN! IRON WITHOUT! BLOOD FOR THE BLOOD GOD AND SKULLS FOR THE SKULL THRONE!

“WAAAAGGGGGHHHHHH!!!!!” 

 
  On 5/15/2016 at 4:23 AM, Son of Carnelian said:

Hello everyone! I thought I would give everyone my thoughts on their stories before announcing the winner. I included my favorite line from each piece as well, as that is an exercise we did in my creative writing classes back in the day.

...

I like how Scourged's Among Thieves really plays up the fact that even newer warbands like the Scourged who haven't been around for 10,000 years still have an extensive history, with alliances and oaths stretching back through time. One hardly ever sees such an expansion of the lore in that way, but I think that this story accomplishes a lot in a short amount of time. I would have enjoyed more of a dialogue between Dhel-mas and the Dark Eldar. It's a racial dynamic rarely explored and I think the story could have benefited greatly from more of that exchange.

Many thanks! I great do appreciate it, as trying to expand the wealth of lore on renegades is something I try to do every week. The Legions, fractured as they are, don't deserve to have all the fun. And I see what you mean about more of a dialogue between the factions. I probably could have used more of that... but now I have many fun ideas to play with later.

  On 5/15/2016 at 3:50 PM, Teetengee said:

  On 5/15/2016 at 2:10 PM, Kierdale said:

Firstly congratulations, Fulkes thumbsup.gif

  On 5/15/2016 at 1:51 PM, Teetengee said:

Is there any chance we could have two weeks for this one, given the start of the ETL?

I thought about it but will the first week of the ETL make us that much busier than other weeks of it?

If enough members want two weeks I don't mind making the change though smile.png

First four and last four will probably be busiest. It was more because it is just generally busy that two weeks gives more time than one. At least for these more interconnected stories, I don't write them in one sitting.

...if possible, I'd like to throw my hat in the ring for two weeks as well.

Campaign Part II: The Psychopomps Attack

Hidden Content
Farseer Emrana turned as soon as he sensed the anomaly. His second sight seemed dulled, numb, as if a greater power had laid a veil across his mind and now he realized it he could not recall when it had begun. Still, the rift in reality was as clear as if someone had gashed open his own flesh. Such an intrusion was near impossible in realspace but for the art of the Warp Spider Aspect, who achieved it with far greater finesse. Some crude form of teleportation? But the heavens were clear. No xenos ships, indeed no starships at all but for the craftworld’s escort of dragon- ghost- and other ships...but perhaps for how long?

The warlocks at his side turned a microsecond after him, sensing the same. An intrusion yet not an invasion, they could sense as much. Who would be insane enough to attack craftworld Carth-Lar in such small numbers with even a madman’s confidence of success? Unless the attackers knew of the losses the Eldar had sustained on Viarphia not long ago...

His attending warlocks immediately made for the rift they had sensed, Aislin turning back when she noticed Emrana was not following them.

“Go,” he jerked his sharp chin in the direction the other warlocks were headed in. “Rally and direct our defence.”

Aislin nodded, her fine features already hidden by her tall helm, “And what of you, master Emrana?”

He looked up once again to the star-field overhead, searching the void but finding naught, before replying.

“I will ensure no more come.”

 

 

The Erinyes had not dallied in the houses of healing. They were no butchers who bent their knees to lay skulls at the foot of Khorne’s throne. There was no glory in the butchering of invalids. It was true that Slaanesh thirsted for every Eldar soul, but the Dark Prince would have a fine banquet soon enough if the Warp Talons stuck to their mission rather than lingering to slaughter the sick. The urge to revel in killing, to desecrate the bodies and minds of the Eldar pulled at their souls. Pulled achingly strongly, but they steeled their wills and denied the lust of the neverborn ichor pumping through their veins. They cut their way through patients and healers alike, bursting from a high window, their jump packs screaming like hellhounds and spitting baleful green fire. Though their mission was paramount in their minds they were not without a spite born of their devotion to Slaanesh: The last of their number to leap from the window gave in a little to temptation and jumped with an injured Eldar under each arm, the turbines of his jump pack screeching in protest as they were pushed past their limits...until the Erinys, at the apex of his leap, released the two Xenos, letting them fall to their deaths below.

Before their jumps took them back to the wraithbone streets and paradisiacal gardens of the craftworld, there came a high fluted note which carried eerily throughout the great starship from its towering minarets through statue-filled courtyards to winding labyrinthine alleys.

A call to arms.

The pavement cracked as their claw-toed, ceramite boots struck its surface. One of their number came down upon an Eldar rushing to the nearest armoury, crushing the slender alien under his immense weight. Before the Eldar could even get a good look at the intruders the Erinyes leapt into the sky once more. No deception, no misdirection, they made directly for their target as they knew time was paramount. Should they fail in their mission the craftworld would slip from the fleet’s grasp...and they themselves would be stranded aboard it. Thus they shot upwards, kicking off walls and rooftops as they bounded, beast-like toward the aft quarters of the craftworld.

Towards its engines.

 

 

Angra, dark apostle of the Psychopomps, turned his asymmetric visage upon the sorcerer Holusiax across from him on the bridge. Truly they embodied the fallen chapter’s worship of the Dark Prince of Chaos: the former master of sanctity had been struck down, his body split from crown to groin, by a chaplain of the Black Templars during the flight from their homeworld and had for his multifarious sins been saved by Slaanesh. The left side of his face - and perhaps that of his mind too - was now that of a Q’tlahs’itsu’aksho. A daemonette.

Holusiax, once the chapter’s chief librarian, had lost his lower body in the blast of a battle cannon on the planet where they had all fallen. Captured by the cults of that world he had been visited, tempted and seduced by a herald of the Lord of Pleasure, and his body remade in the form of a naga, complete with a second pair of daemonic arms beneath his great Astartes limbs.

The sorcerer ended his meditation, his astral communion, opening his eyes to meet Angra’s steady gaze and nodded.

The daemonette half of Angra’s mouth pulled wide in a feral grin revealing ranks of needle-like teeth and its green eye widened in anticipation while he turned to the bridge crew. The deck plates beneath their feet shook and the moan of stressed metal echoed throughout like the wails of a tormented captive, for Charon’s warp engines were propelling the craft beyond its limits. Nor was it alone, for the chapter had gathered its disparate cults and ships for this climactic assault. The favour of the Dark Prince and the infernal artifice of his daemonic servants stilled the sea of souls before the Psychopomp fleet, both aiding its swift passage and dampening bow waves of wild emotion which might have alerted their prey of their coming.

Receiving the signal from the dark apostle, the helmsman began the countdown. As soon as he began, the two senior officers turned and made their way aft toward the launch bays for the entire warband would descend upon Carth-Lar to feast upon the souls of the Eldar and they would not be absent from the reaping.

 

 

No two craftworlds were identical. Vast spaceships constructed countless millennia earlier, many had at their core originally been trading vessels sailing the void betwixt the worlds of the Eldar empire. Journeys between the stars took centuries and so the massive crews - communities in their own right - had had a sense of independence and self-reliance. In this way they inadvertently saved themselves to a large extent from the decadence of their species. Making contact with Eldar worlds only a handful of times each millennium, the changes coming over their people were glaring to those of the craftworlds. As the end approached, the starfarers had fled the madness of their worlds, finding their planet-born kin wanton and debauched. Sick in both mind and body.

Thus it was the craftworlders were saved from the Fall of the Eldar.

Ulthwé, Biel-Tan, Alaitoc, Saim-hann...some of the largest and strongest of craftworlds. Carth-Lar had forever been in the shadow of its greater cousins; a position it did not resent, for those of Carth-Lar held the rebuilding of their race’s once-supreme empire above all else. The creation of and tending to maiden worlds, and the shunning of contact with the lesser races of the galaxy; that path led only to temptation at best and destruction at worst. So the seer council had ruled and Carth-Lar had sailed the course they charted. The `reign` - for so it was referred at the time with mirth and now with sadness by the Exarchs - of autarch Qarasion had been a thorn in the side of the farseers. A thorn now excised and expelled.

Captain Aedan rested his chin atop his slender, steepled fingers, sat upon the command throne of his dragonship. A barren, lifeless rock of a planet hung in the darkness beyond, and in the foreground the mass of Carth-Lar powering its way through the void off to lower starboard. From this distance - within extreme range of both vessel’s weapons so that each could cover the other - it was impossible to judge the craftworld’s size. The only hint was that fellow ships, on picket duty as he was, were tiny in comparison to the mothership. Still, it was hard to imagine that it could accommodate millions of individuals comfortably. But now a great many of its halls and towers were empty. Entire structures of apartments were devoid of life, the populace having dwindled over the millennia; the desperation of his race weighing heavily upon their souls. Few young, pitifully few young, had been born over recent centuries. That steady decline had been aided by war. No matter how much they strove to avoid conflict, theirs was a universe of unending war, and the populace of Carth-Lar had paid a heavy toll.

He stroked the armrests of his throne. The Spear of Brionach had recently completed repairs after its battle with the Psychopomp fleet in orbit over Viarphia. That his ship of wraithbone had been healed faster than the ghastly injuries of his kin had shaken him. A ghostship, it was crewed by the dead as much as by the living, spiritstones implanted into its superstructure so that Eldar souls might crew it in a manner akin to wraithguard and lords. The Spear had given as good as it had got, taking a good tally of Chaos ships...likely the last combat it would see, he reflected. Since Viarphia the council would be even more careful with the lives of their people. They would sail the interstellar depths, tend their worlds and likely only seed new ones if surveys and prophesies were exceedingly promising. Aedan’s martial training, centuries at the batteries, helm and later command throne of an Eldar battleship, fought with what he knew his destiny to be. The battles he had fought under Qarasion’s fiery command...the assault on Espardu, campaigning through the Tuldar Rift, battling the Orks on Vulkna, Peisu and a dozen other worlds and systems, the nerve-wracking face off with the Tau at Klemetri, the ill-fated mission to Fulcrum...perhaps that last had been the beginning of the end. Their attempt to head off the corruption of the Mon Keigh’s Astartes. Again and again Qarasion had attempted to destroy that cancer, while the council had ordered her to step down and let them take the craftworld as far away as possible. Then they had lost Mesusid...and recently Viarphia. And the Avatar with it.

He nodded gravely to himself as he watched the craftworld on the viewscreen. It was a hollow world now in more ways than one. No longer would anyone oppose the council. No longer would Carth-Lar’s forces sally forth. He would become a custodian now over the crumbling remnants of his people.

And so it was, in his melancholic reverie, that he barely registered the transition alarms as the membrane of reality was rent asunder and ships poured forth from the loins of hell until the psychic scream, the roar of a hungry god come to finish gorging itself as it had ten millennia before, shot out from the rent in space filling every Eldar soul on and above Carth-Lar with terror. Many of the infirm and elderly, those whose time upon the mortal coil was nearing its end, and what few newborns lived on Carth-Lar had their minds torn asunder and their souls ripped from their bodies.

 

 

The Charon - capital ship of the Psychopomps - lead the renegade battle fleet: Harbinger of Hades, Dionysus, Briseus, Enorches, Supreme Excess, Satyr’s Spear and other battleships following with lesser destroyers and frigates, Naga’s Bite, Nimiety, Rudra’s Trident, Silenus Priapus’s Blade Durga’s Call and the cult troopships Kronia, Pan’s Gathering, Aeogocerus and more in their wake. As soon as they tore their way back into realspace, eddies of impossible colours rippled away as their Gellar fields dropped to be replaced by void shields. Before many had even fully decanted from the warp, they opened fire upon the craftworld and its escort fleet. Lasers split the void with crimson blasts of energy, cannon shells and missiles streaking out painfully slowly in comparison. Caught unawares, many of the Eldar vessels failed to raise their holofields in time and much of the attackers’ opening salvo struck true. Wraithbone was sliced and burned by the blasts of turbolasers, the hulls of ghostships torn outwards by explosive decompression after being punctured, crew screaming impotently as they were sucked out into hard vacuum. Shells similarly chipped, cracked and then tore into hulls, some primed to explode within, blasting apart ships, buckling bulkheads designed to protect against decompression. Others detonated incandescently, vomiting forth payloads of promethium that ran like water within the innards of the alien ships. More reached past the escorting dragonships, aurorae and shadowhunters to strike the craftworld itself, targeting its own formidable armaments. Again and again the Psychopomp fleet fired, great capacitors on gundecks running hot, blistering the flesh of their servitors and filling the arming chambers with the reek of hot electronics and roasted meat. Overseers whipped gun crews to haul vast shells into cannon breaches faster and faster, the strong trampling the bodies of those who fell. Great guns rolled back as they spat forth rounds larger than battle tanks, black clouds of burnt propellant gusting from within breaches hauled open once again, the overseers flogging and gesturing to their deaf-mute charges for more shells to be loaded and launched. None knew whom the enemy were, only that rounds needed to be loaded and fired, loaded and fired lest the ship they were aboard be blasted from the void.

Explosions stitched the cityscape-surface of Carth-Lar, sending plumes of debris and smoke up into the ship’s sky. As point defences were activated torpedoes began to be swatted from the skies by lasers, but one torpedo found its mark: a large pulse lance housed within a dome of thickened wraithbone panels. The resulting fireball threw debris up, out of the craftworld’s atmosphere and sent cracks shooting through the surrounding sectors. Screams echoed through the rubble-strewn avenues of their world as Eldar tore themselves from the casualties of the attack, racing to their guardian arms and armour to prepare defences.

 

The escort ships raced to react to the sudden assault, activating their holoshields so that they dissolved into blurs of multicoloured light; the faster they moved, the more diffuse they became and thus the harder to target. Even ships’ augurs had trouble locking onto them. They darted away from the craftworld, drawing the enemy’s fire. One, an eclipse carrier whose name translated into Gothic as Bloody Rookery, failed to raise its holoshields fast enough and claxons sounded throughout its hangar bays. The deck crew raced to launch the ship’s compliment of darkstar fighter and eagle bombers before the captain positioned Rookery between the enemy and the craftworld itself, engines failing yet burning brightly with stuttering thrust. She was already taking fire and he knew that he could but sell his life and that of his crew as dearly as possible. Shots speared through her solar sails and engines, crippling her for Satyr’s Spear to skewer her with a concentrated blast of lances followed by shells. Even as she broke up, fighters were screaming from her hangars, the last ones engulfed in a fireball as her engines detonated. While the captain had been valiant in shielding his world with his ship, the sheer volume of fire with which the enemy assaulted his craft drove its burning remains down into the upper reaches of the craftworld’s artificial heavens and, captured by Carth-Lar’s gravity, she fell.

Solidified warp energy shaped by boneseers, wraithbone was one of the toughest materials in the universe yet as the destruction of the Rookery proved it could be broken and as the ship’s hulk plummeted through the craftworld’s atmosphere it burned and fragmented further. Great lengths of superstructure smashed down into the surface of Carth-Lar. Buildings were crushed and flattened, the lives of those within extinguished in an instant, parks and forests peppered with flaming debris which ignited the rich foliage there. A great cloud of dust was kicked up.

 

As if in vengeance, Satyr’s Spear was the first of the Psychopomp vessels to be destroyed. As soon as the Eldar vessels raised their holoshields it became far more difficult for the forces of Chaos to target them and the Eldar vessels began to make use of their speed and maneuverability. The once-Imperial vessels focused their assault on the craftworld, their eagerness to feast upon it like starved buzzards was both startlingly obvious and their main weakness. The dragonship Wavebreaker came about, forward batteries hammering the Satyr’s escort vessels, but she saved her plasma torpedoes for when the battleship’s drives came into its sights. Concentrated fire from sister ships stripped its rear shields and before a single void could be regenerated Wavebreaker launched a salvo of torpedoes before rolling and pulling away. The plasma warheads struck the engineerium, great blasts of superheated gas burning through thick adamantium plate with ease and destroying several of the Satyr’s engines. The battleship was not driven from her course, however the Wavebreaker’s torpedo run was not the full extent of the attack for as soon as the great dragonship had pulled away a trio of aurora cruisers had fallen into an attack vector behind it, such was the speed and maneuverability of the Eldar vessels that they could change their course and perform deceptive attacks with ease. These three too loosed their torpedoes and the Satyr’s engine decks were punched clean through. Her main reactor went up a split second later, bursting the ship from within like an overripe seedcase. Eldar and Psychopomp vessels alike peeled away as the battleship was engulfed in explosions, having fired off only a fraction of her ordnance. The great barrel of a turbolaser from one of the port batteries flew off into the void, launched by explosions within, cartwheeling a hundred kilometers in seconds and scything through the spine of an escorting cobra destroyer which had not evaded fast enough. The smaller vessel too went up in a blinding blast.

As the chain of explosions reached Satyr’s forward magazines there was a tremendous eruption which momentarily drew the attention of all ship crews who could see it, and those on the surface of the craftworld looked up to the skies, cheering and screaming words of bloody vengeance.

 

 

The Erinyes had been drawn from the elite of the Psychopomps’ premier companies and specifically those marine most receptive to the touch of the warp. They had fought on Mesusid and Viarphia amongst other clashes with the forces of the Eldar, and so Eldar architecture and design was not entirely alien to them. To one who had not fought for their life in the twisting confines of Eldar settlements before, the labyrinthine passages and tessellating courtyards of the craftworld would have been disorienting. There was yet one more factor which drove the Warp Talons on toward their target with precision. While the consuming of the Banshee Exarch’s hand had enabled them to track down another of the Exarch’s squad through the warp and facilitated their coming, they had also been granted a feast of Eldar brains. The alien’s equivalents of the hipocampus, amygdala, the cingulate gyrus, the thalamus, hypothalamus, epithalamus...every part of every Eldar brain which could be pried from heads taken on Viarphia had been set before the five Erinyes for consumption. They had gorged themselves upon this grey matter, in some cases too impatient for their servants to kill and scoop the meat from captives, the daemonic astartes had cracked the aliens’ skulls and eaten their brains whilst the captives were still alive. Assailed by the memories and anguish of dozens of Eldar as they ate, they exercised supreme concentration in sifting that which they needed - a sense of familiarity with the craftworld, knowledge of its highways and byways - from what would simply incite and excite them: the memories of pleasure, of wrath, of horror.

But in cutting such a direct course they showed their hand to the Eldar and defences could be directed against them.

 

 

Farseer Emrana alit from the gunner’s position of the viper and hurried into the edifice before him, past squads of guardians, their shuriken catapults arrayed outwards. A pair was quickly setting up a weapons platform. Within, he found the bonesinger Aedh.

The two exchanged deep bows, even during such dire straits formalities were not put aside.

“We are assaulted, from within and without.”

The bonesinger, his pale robes decorated with the glyphs of his trade like that of the armour he wore atop it, nodded and bade the senior seer continue. He would not ask questions, for he knew the farseer would tell him all he need know exactly as he needed to know it.

“We must take Carth-Lar to safety.”

Aedh’s eyes immediately moved to the planet far ahead of the craftworld, a barren rock with its star burning brightly beyond, but no more than a second later he realized the true meaning of the farseer’s words and he took a deep, calming breath.

“Open a portal here? With war waged in the void about us?” Perhaps it was born of desperation, their homeworld assaulted, but protocol be damned, he would ask questions, for what the farseer was suggesting was far from standard protocol!

He received a solemn nod in answer, but could feel the Farseer’s anger at his questioning of his superior’s order. So be it; if they survived he would willingly face sanction.

“What you ask of me risks the lives of our fleet-“

“Lives they would give willingly, for it is their duty,” Emrana replied curtly, adding quickly to forestall further protest, “I and the rest of the council have communed.”

Aedh closed his mouth. What good would it do to question the council, his betters? It was they who plotted the craftworld’s course.

“Act quickly while you can, for the enemy are already on Carth-Lar,” Emrana continued before looking to the heavens. Through the collapsing fireball of the enemy battleship’s death could be seen streaks of fire. Engine trails, and worse.

“And have your brethren rouse our sleeping kindred. They will be needed.”

 

 

The heavens above burning as starships dueled and brawled, the Erinyes sped toward their target. Human reactions, even the enhanced ones of an Astartes, could not alone have saved Tisiphone, it was the daemonic blood - the ichor of the neverborn - filling his veins which allowed him to fire his jump pack in time and take himself to safety. One of his kin was not so lucky and the Warp Talon screamed in anger as a monomolecular web shot out and spread over him, tightening rapidly. In less than a second the razor wire net had constricted over his twisted power armour and, unimpeded even by the armoured ceramite, it began slicing deep into his armour and the meat within. The other Warp Talons spared their doomed comrade not a glance as they spread out, seeking their foe. The netted Talon’s body collapsed in diced, wet chunks and the pitter-patter of ceramite fragments as his killer stepped from the shadows of the forest the Talons had been traversing. Clad in armour of white and red, of a bulk greater than most aspect warriors, he hefted a bulky, heavy-barrelled weapon. A Warp Spider. The knowledge they had consumed in their pre-mission feast had taught them as much. Though knowledge could not make up for lack of experience: the Talons had never faced a spider before and as the Eldar charged at them the Chaos marines raised their assorted claws, tridents and whips only for the Spider to disappear just before their weapons made contact with him, his jump generator taking him into the Warp.

Megaera’s trident and one of his brothers’ claws raked the air where the Spider had been a split second earlier, their blades merely catching the wispy edges of the rift as it sealed, the wound in reality curling and fading like smoke. The two shared an angry look, both having wanted the kill...neither realizing how easily they had been played, for another Spider appeared from the warp with impeccable timing, positioned so that one Talon blocked the other’s view, immediately unleashing a blast from his deathspinner to catch the two renegades so close together.

An elbow shove by Megaera drove his brother into the still-expanding web of wire, eliciting a blood-curdling scream and saving Megaera’s own hide.

This second Spider though was not as agile as the first and he found himself tripped by Tisiphone’s whip of daemonic flesh. The barbed weapon wrapped itself about the aspect warrior’s ankle and cut deeply as it constricted. Before the Eldar could activate its generator, Megaera drove his trident into its abdomen, punching through the carapace armour with ease and pinning the Spider to the wraithbone floor. Tisiphone uncoiled his whip rapidly and though the three knew that they had to keep moving toward their target, for surely there were more ambushes awaiting them, yet the deaths of their two kin demanded immediate retribution.

Alecto, Megaera and Tisiphone gathered round the skewered, struggling spider.

 

 

The thunderhawk Whipoorwill roared across the void betwixt the Supreme Excess and craftworld Carth-Lar, weaving through the debris which filled the skies, its pilots throwing it into rolls and spiraling dives as Eldar vessels tried to swat it. Even as it closed distance toward its target, a landing zone highlighted on the cockpit HUD, its gunners fired at targets of opportunity: the turbolaser blasting apart a nightwing fighter before it could turn its own weapons on the gunship, and as they neared their destination the sponson and wingtip guns opened fire. While the ship had originally been armed with twin-linked heavy bolters these had since been replaced with great skull-muzzled hades autocannons, their barrels spinning rapidly and roaring like Cerberus himself as they spat hundreds of cannon shells at Eldar ground forces. Squads of Guardians were mown down, support weapons exploded under the fusillade and even darting jetbikes were clipped and sent spiraling into buildings, crews tossed from their mounts.

Even before the Whipoorwill’s landing gear touched down on the greensward its front ramp was down, roseate-clad Psychopomps firing their boltguns, boots mag-locked to the deckplates. Many jumped to the ground before the hawk landed, firing one handed and drawing chainblades, so eager were they to slay the children of Isha. Screaming prayer to the Dark Prince and challenges to the Eldar they raced across the grass toward the hurriedly constructed defences.

As Whipoorwill was pouring power back into its engines and lifting off once more, sister gunships were landing about it, disgorging their forces. From some came more squads of renegade marines, havocs who set their suspensor-fitted boots in wide stances on the turf before opening up with their heavy weapons, the elite of the fallen chapter with their sonic weapons which cut a destructive swathe through the defenders regardless of cover or armour, possessed Astartes from several chapters - a fearsome number of whom had once been fellow scions of Dorn as the Psychopomps had - who bounded toward the enemy with loping gaits, each now more beast than man. Some had the heads of daemonettes and other daemons of Slaanesh, many had powerful slashing claws, some were winged, others quadrupedal and a few were of such unstable form that they changed in the blink of an eye. The armour of many had merged with their flesh so that they were inseparable.

From the mouths of other gunships came the whine of anti-grav engines as landspeeders shot forth, skirts of hook-tipped chains whipping in their wake. The lead speeder struck a wave serpent, its multi-melta penetrating the xeno tank’s shield and obliterating it in a huge explosion. The crew of the speeder howled with joy and banked their vehicle to charge along the line of defenders surrounding the park the gunships were coming down in, a hook caught a guardian who did not manage to duck fast enough, and yanked him screaming into the air.

From yet another gunship’s ramp leapt a squad of pastel-painted bikes. The Black Stallions: scouts and reavers for the Psychopomps with a lust for speed to match that of the maddest of greenskins, they could not wait for their ship to land and launched their promethium-guzzling mounts from its ramp still half a dozen meters from the ground, screaming as they went. Turf and soil exploded upwards as their huge tires bit into it and they accelerated across the grass toward the park’s edge and the city beyond, their eyes wide with the electrifying thrill of racing madly into battle, delirious and frantic wordless cries emanating from their mouths. Most of their bikes were armed with twin boltguns, leaving the riders to their chosen melee arms: whips, axes, chains, tridents and a good number of weapons stolen from conquered enemies. Some had replaced their bolters with melta guns, others plasma. Yet more lacked any armament on their bikes but a second marine rode behind the rider - or even stood, chains anchored to their armour or flesh keeping them from falling - armed with flamers fed from the bike’s own fuel tanks. With these they played flames across the enemy, into buildings they raced past, or onto the chewed up ground behind the bikes, lighting their own trails.

It was with the Black Stallions that the sorcerer Holusiax came to the field. His mount was what had once been an attack bike. The gunner’s low sidecar and its heavy weapon had been stripped out and replaced with a platform upon which the fallen librarian stood, his snake-like body coiled beneath him. His upper arms, his Astarte ones, gripped the armoured, spike-festooned and glyph-etched front of his chariot-like platform while the lower pair of arms - those of slender daemonic flesh lilac in hue, lay ready upon the hilts of a pair of deep red-bladed daggers, each decorated with the glyph of the masculine or the feminine, sheathed in scabbards of flayed daemon skin. While the Stallions howled with joy he exercised his iron will, repressing his urge to give in to the thrill of the chase and destruction, and maintained vigilance: the Eldar were psykers supreme and while he had clashed with them before, never had there been so many as there would be on the craftworld itself. Here he would find himself tested to the full. A moment’s thought passed over his mind: he would be tested, as his predecessor Diarthet had been by the Cypriusian Magi. Diarthet had burned out and fallen becoming a twisted devourer of souls, a plaything of a rival god to spite the witch.

Holusiax breathed deeply of the warp-taint miasma which flowed about the Psychopomps, fed by the reaping of Eldar souls. No, he would not fall as Diarthet had. Their work here was blessed from upon high.

 

 

What had once been a Stormhawk exploded in a ball of fire, twisted flesh-sheathed wings folding as the fighter was torn apart by its detonating engines. Riagan pulled hard on the controls and his nightshade interceptor left its pursuit of the renegade fighter as the burning remains smashed into a wraithbone hab-tower before plummeting to the streets below. The Crimson Hunter spared no thought for any of his kin who might have been within that tower, for all those of Carth-Lar who were able of body were by this point engaged in its defence, and though those fighting-fit like he had been able to recover from the psychic scream which had accompanied the Enemy’s arrival, a sadness deep in his soul told him that many of his less hardy kin had not. That the crash might have inadvertently slain a child or the infirm he could not contemplate for while their soul would be consumed by the ever-hungry She Who Must Not Be Named if indeed it had not already, would they fate not be the same had he hesitated in taking his shot and thus put their life, his own and perhaps more in peril? Such was the aspect of the Crimson Hunter: the embodiment of Khaine the supreme hunter. There was him and his target, and those who could not aid in the hunt were as nothing. And this had turned into a lone hunt for the enemy were numerous and the fighters of Carth-Lar pitifully few. Those who had once flown as his wingmen now fought for their lives in their own duels.

Instinctively he dove, his fighter responding to his every touch, at the earsplitting howl of some new airborne monstrosity inbound. The nightshade wove effortlessly through valleys formed by the cityscape of the craftworld and Riagan’s helm projected apparition-like images into the air before him, indicating the larger enemy attack vessels - the dropships - coming down in the plains and parks toward the center of Carth-Lar, the swarms of bastard fighters and bombers scouring its surface, the latter targeting ground defence batteries...and hot on his rear came some new threat. He had little time to study its form, noting only that if it had once been a plane akin to that he had destroyed scant seconds earlier. The powers of the warp had played cruelly with it, for his fighter’s sensors could make no distinction betwixt craft and crew. As he wove, slaloming through towers, cutting each turn tighter and tighter in an attempt to throw his pursuer into one of the structures while at the same time denying them a clear shot at him, he realized that the vessel hadn’t taken a single shot at him. The once-Stormhawk he had out-flown had sprayed cannon shells wildly, the pilot as happy to let his fire impact the city as much as chancing hits on the crimson hunter itself. But this abomination risked no shots, rather it steadily gained on him, unleashing fearsome bestial roars as it did so.

Riagan, a seasoned pilot in both the void as much as atmosphere, decided to test his stalker and took their chase vertical: throwing his interceptor into a tight turn and nosing over to drop into a deep chasm which ran across the craftworld. Here gantries and transitways spanned the gulf, the dark depths of which glowed red with the forges and generators deep within the craftworld’s innards. Down they dove, Riagan still pushing his fighter and his skill as he threw the nightshade into near-misses with the bridges. Gone were the days when he might have led a foe upon a merry dance whilst his wingmen picked off the pursuer.

He could now hear the baleful roar of the warped creation chasing him and a second later it was beside him. He could not help but glance and look in horror at the madness now flying upon his wing.

From the sides of an armoured carapace which might once have been the fuselage of some form of air or spacecraft came numerous blade-like wings tipped with spikes and horns like saw blades. Where once there might have been a cockpit there was a great bestial head, eyeless or blinded he could not discern but its maw, the jaws opened impossibly wide, glowed with green potency. It lacked any visible undercarriage even clawed limbs as one might have expected, their mind unravelling, such a fiend to possess.

He was unwilling to sell his life in ramming the beast but rather pointed them both at a slender bridge spanning the depths below and accelerated. He held the controls tight as both flyers were buffeted violently by thermals from the depths and he watched as his kin raced back and forth across that bridge. Jetbikes, vipers and guardians sprinting aft to the thickest fighting.

There came a howl from the beast at his side as the bridge drew closer and closer and Riagan smiled, confident that he would have the beast trapped. It would be forced to break off its pursuit and he would be able to come about onto its tail. He glanced at it to see its maw glowing brighter and his brow creased. If it meant to brake and fire upon him with whatever armament it possessed, he would have to be ready.

The bridge grew large before them and some upon it spotted the descending flyers, unable to stop themselves from ceasing their crossing of the span and looking up to watch the chase.

It was not the nightshade that the helldrake fired upon, but rather it spat forth a tremendous blaze of fire as it rolled away to one side of the bridge, Riagan taking his fighter the other and into the rain of burning bodies as his kinsmen panicked and fell, their bodies wreathed in unholy fire. The impact of bodies at such speed tore chunks from the nightshade’s wings and fuselage, sending it spinning uncontrollably to its doom.

 

 

Angra watched through the lenses of his skull-faced helmet with satisfaction as the invasion continued. In space overhead - and indeed to the sides and `beneath` the craftworld - the Psychopomps fleet continued to engage the Eldar defence fleet in a strange clash of styles: the Astartes vessels brawlers, hitting hard and taking hard hits in turn upon their shields and thick armour, versus the agile, darting fencers the Xenos vessels were akin to. But there were not enough of the latter, either starships or aerospace fighters, to prevent the Chaos forces’ landing. While the battleships of the Psychopomps alone were no match for an Eldar craftworld, even a relatively minor one such as this, the fallen chapter had called upon the Exalted Fecund: their puppet cult, and the faithful from dozens of Imperial worlds had cast off the guise of loyalty to the Corpse God and had answered the call of excess. And the daemon half of him could feel her sisters and other kin being drawn through the veil by Holusiax’s sorcerers even now.

While his own coterie of bodyguards made their way off his personal thunderhawk Violator he observed the warpsmith Thenaros directing the deployment of carriage-mounted conversion beamers and the unleashing of his former superior Zenelaius: now entombed within a twisted dreadnought’s sarcophagus. The towering, slab-armoured construct lumbered off into the thickest of the fighting, wailing morosely. The former master of the forge had been denied fulfillment, denied entry to the gates of their lord’s palace, and his daemonic consort had been destroyed before him. Angra could only jealously imagine such agonizing distress and wonder at how it might drive one to greater feats.

Rockets streaked out from high towers and balconies overlooking the gardens the two thunderhawks had come down in, detonating against the ground and a couple impacting Zenelaius’ thick armour hard enough to stagger him. The ambushers revealed - a squad of Dark Reapers - Thenaros directed the Havocs accompanying him and they fired one of the beamers. A most curious and ancient weapon, it shot forth an energy beam of extreme intensity, transforming matter into purest energy. The greater the density of the matter, the more explosive the blast. And the further from the weapon, the greater the intensity.

The beam caused a massive explosion in the building overlooking the gardens, a blinding flash of light followed by tons of debris sent out on a blast wave. Those caught within the blast were simply erased from existence, their very beings converted into energy, and those nearby were thrown by the explosive release of that power.

A roar went up from the charging renegade Astartes and Thenaros clapped approvingly, nodding to the Havocs.

 

A greater roar came then: that of retros, signaling the arrival of the huge troop transports. Not as fast or as maneuverable as an Astartes craft, the great shuttles had once been Imperial Guard vessels.

The first was intercepted by a flight of Eldar planes - a hemlock leading nightshades, the hunters having formed a pack to take down this larger game - and their precise fire raked its engines while the shuttle was still high in the air. There was a scream of tortured metal and the roar of retros died, replaced by a growing whistle as the huge vessel plummeted earthward, its killers immediately splitting as Enemy fire chased them. The great shuttle punched through the ground of the Craftworld and through three sub-levels, its nose compacting and lower decks compressing together with the impact, crushing the hundreds within - cultists and more who had been packed tight, hungry to attack and ready to charge from the assault ramps - crushing them into a thin paste.

But even as smoke rose from this wreckage, a sister shuttle settled to the turf, shots impacting its thick armour impotently from panicked defenders further off, its hatches opened and from within poured forth a maddened horde of braying Slaangor. With skin ranging from the palest pinks one might find in the petals of priceless roses through to shocking shades of fuchsia, the mutants were barely clothed, their skin adorned with black tattoos in myriad patterns, and a great number of piercings and chains. Weapons were secured thus to bodies, mouths were pulled wide open by chains and spikes, some even hobbled themselves deliberately with hooked chains which pulled at their legs agonizingly as they raced from their shuttles, flailing about with their weapons. Some particularly blessed members of the flock sported swaying mammaries upon the right side of their bodies and carried standards aloft, declaring themselves slaves to pleasure, excess and damnation.

The dark apostle removed his helm, stroking the left side of his face, the daemonic half, with his human right hand as he watched the Slaangor. He had, before his death, been so envious of the Children of Chaos. Their purity of form and devotion, for they were born of Chaos and lived for Chaos. But since his rebirth he now looked upon them as kin to a degree, though in truth he had surpassed them by merging with one of the neverborn.

The revving of Rhino engines behind him signaled his personal forces were ready. Mounting up he motioned with his blasted crozius and they charged forth into the fray.

 

All across Craftworld Carth-Lar the forces of Chaos began their assault, the majority landing in the gardens and open plains toward the center once air defences had been sufficiently battered, and forcing their way bloodily to unite with one another, while terminators teleported directly into the fray and obliterator teams stepped forth from hellgates behind the Eldar defences to unleash their fearsome arsenals.

 

Parks, gardens, streets and artillery-pummeled buildings became choked with smoke and dust and splattered with gore as hundreds of Psychopomps pushed outward, some riding dozens of rhinos, others advancing alongside tanks, behind their bike and speeder scouts. More numerous were the thousands of Slaangor and cultist mobs and turncoat guardsmen, driven to berserk madness and elation as the warband’s sorcerers summoned forth neverborn from the empyrean to further bolster their numbers. Grass rotted and wraithbone aged unnaturally at the tread of such abominations upon the surface of the craftworld. And opposing them was the entire populace of Carth-Lar. All those who could wield arms took them up, even those too old or too young for guardian service, for if they did not fight now then their souls would be naught but delectable viands for the Great Corruptor. Hundreds of aspect warriors, the veterans of the battle of Viarphia - all too few in number - were at the forefront of the battle once more. Even those who had taken the very youngest, the treasures of Carth-Lar, to sanctuaries deep within the craftworld quickly took up arms and hurried to the front once their duty was done.

 

The three remaining warp talons, Alecto, Tisiphone and Megaera looked down from their high roost. Below them lay the huge structures which housed the craftworld’s engines, both realspace and otherwise. Their objective.

All three had fought harder than ever to come this far. Temptation had forced them behind schedule and in turn this had forced rashness upon them. Ichor dripped sluggishly from wounds dealt them by monofilament webs, hails of shuriken and various blades, but they had the trophies to show that they had not only overcome their foes but had destroyed them completely. Weapons, helmets, heads, severed ears, flayed faces, hands, jewelry and more adorned their armour, hanging from chains or skewered upon spikes.

Alecto stood, his hook-clawed boots perfectly balanced upon the thin spar the three were perched upon. He raised a clawed fist, brandishing a dozen spirit stones upon his palm and called out to the Dark Prince to witness him! To witness his offering, and his mouth yawned wide - unnaturally so, like that of a serpent - as he poured the sweetmeats into his throat.

 

It was he with his eyes cast to the heavens who first saw the change that came over the dueling starships overhead. As one almost all the closest of the Eldar vessels swooped close to the craftworld and the warships of his own fleet, daubed with the mark of Slaanesh and other foul sigils, struggled to follow suit. Those Xenos ships further off, as if overcome with a madness, threw themselves into the nearest Psychopomp vessels and Alecto stood speechless as a dozen ships erupted in gigantic fireballs as they were rammed.

The Nimiety and Priapus’ Blade, the Aeogoncerus and even the great Dionysus, Enorches and Supreme Excess were engulfed in blinding explosions and he staggered to behold such wondrous destruction. Thousands of lives wiped out in seconds. Immolated and torn asunder by sudden suicide attacks. The willful giving up of lives by the Eldar, offering up their souls to Slaanesh and taking countless of the Dark Prince’s pawns with them. For a moment he was overcome. The sheer unadulterated madness of it.

It was bliss.

It was glory.

It was rapture.

Then the gate swept over them.

The stars went out, as if a veil had been pulled over them, and only the knowledge they had garnered from the Eldar brains they had consumed allowed them to recognize what had happened.

They were now with the webway.

That Eldar nexus within the warp itself.

The Eldar, in a last resort, had plunged the craftworld into the webway!

He looked back as more destruction was wrought upon the Psychopomp fleet as the gateway began to close behind Carth-Lar. In confusion, some ships tried to veer off and escape the closing portal whilst other went full-burn into order to continue the chase and inevitably ships smashed into one another. Dropships, bombers, gunships and fighters throttled up to make it through, to stick with the craftworld, unwilling to let their quarry escape. But what of the flagship!? What of Charon?

Alecto swore he saw, though the inferno of destruction, the great battleship pull clear before the portal winked shut.

The Erinyes had been too late, for this is what they had been tasked with preventing, and now the Psychopomp forces upon Carth-Lar were stranded.

 

 

 

Deep within Carth-Lar bonesinger Aedh nodded to his kinsmen.

“Awaken the dead.”

Thank you!

There are still a few names and units I hope to put into the next chapter of the campaign.

 

And I realise I have been remiss!

I did not yet tell the name of the next chapter in the campaign series (not that it'll be for a month or two)...

The next (and penultimate) chapter of the 'Campaign' series will be a choice of 'The Tables Turn' or 'The Crucible', to be decided individually as best fits the flow of your piece.

  On 5/20/2016 at 7:18 AM, Kierdale said:

Thank you!

There are still a few names and units I hope to put into the next chapter of the campaign.

 

And I realise I have been remiss!

I did not yet tell the name of the next chapter in the campaign series (not that it'll be for a month or two)...

The next (and penultimate) chapter of the 'Campaign' series will be a choice of 'The Tables Turn' or 'The Crucible', to be decided individually as best fits the flow of your piece.

Oh, oh that's superb. I was so very much hoping that's where this campaign would head, as I've already got my full plan outlined. Good to know everything I already have written out fits the direction you were heading with little to no revision. I guess you could say everything is going... Just as Planned.

I'm working on my submission for this contest, and I think I've found my story after a few false starts. In the meantime, I'll post a few background stories that lead up to the assault. They are not necessary for my story, but I like them, and they do add to the story I'm writing. Consider them out of competition. The first takes place sometime before the assault, the next three immediately before the assault.

 

The Shield

Aspis, Sub-Sector Seat

 

 

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Slipping Away

Garland System, Aspis Subsector

 

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Blood in the Water

Garland System, Aspis Subsector

 

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Eighth Catacomb

The top deck of the Blood Eye, Garland System, Aspis Subsector

 

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Bonds

 

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Continuing what I started here and here with the first part of the campaign, I present the second installment below. And, uh... just like with the first part, I'm including my prefaced apology for length. Sorry in advance, Fulkes

 

I:

 

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II:

 

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III:

 

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IV:

 

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V:

 

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For reference, this campaign is the culmination of several stories throughout the life of this competition:

The Dark Apostle Harnak announces his arching of Warsmith Bolverk in this story from the Chaos Nemesis competition.

The Iron Hounds carry on with their usual activities, including recruitment in "A Gift For A Gift."

Harnak and his Word Bearers strike their second blow, preaching the Primordial Truth to the unknowing victims of Bolverk's blasphemous cult in the Interview With A Dark Apostle challenge.

The Warsmith, frustrated by his inability to locate the Dark Apostle Harnak, strikes at the Word Bearers Legion in general, interfering with the dedication of another Dark Apostle's attempt to construct a Gehemanet in Imperial space as told from the perspective of a loyalist space marine and an Imperial Guardsman caught up in the destruction.

Through the fallout of this action, and from the Warsmith's forging of a critical alliance with a desperate Dark Eldar House, the Iron Hounds gained the means to end their game of cat and mouse and strike directly at Dark Apostle Harnak in his own lair.


 

The 49th Grand Company mobilized an unprecedented percentage of their available assets, nearly emptying out their precious space hulk and calling in an avalanche of pledges of loyalty and favours from allied and client warbands. This apocalyptic force marched through dark and forgotten passages in the Webway and even transiting secret Eldar Maiden Worlds on their route to a surprise attack upon the planet Sicarus, home of the Word Bearers Legion itself.

The Iron Hounds and their allies struck deep underground on Sicarus, aided by a well positioned accomplice within the Word Bearers Legion who acted for his own nefarious reasons, securing a bridgehead with the heavy use of advanced parties of Warp Talons and Raptors in the Upon Cursed Wings/Jump Assault challenge.

And now Chaos Lords and Chaos Ladies, the Warsmith is upon the Dark Apostle's very door:

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The outer vaults leading to the main gate of Dark Apostle Harnak’s cathedral filled with thousands of mortal soldiers and cultist fanatics. They manned hasty barricades of sandbags and concrete and older palisades of stone. Razorwire criss-crossed the dark expanses, and armoured redoubts with their vicious cannons rose high over the heads of the defenders, and defiladed tanks of various descriptions protected key avenues among the maze of defensive positions.

 

They waited in the darkness and silence.

 

There was nothing to say, for all of their devotional promises had been made hours before. All that was left was to live up to them or die trying.

 

A sudden fury of sound and light burst forth as the retro-thrusters of a dozen unidentifiable flyers flared. The war machines came screaming out of the main access tunnels and burned to a fast stop, the air instantaneously thick with the red and green streaks of their tracers and the chasing flame of rockets. The response from the Word Bearers ground forces was nearly as instantaneous, filling the space in between the floor and the vault ceiling with a wall of lead and fire. The strange war machines were torn from the sky in seconds, but not before they had wrought crippling damage on the big guns defending the cathedral.

 

Before any of the shocked defenders could gather their wits, colossal knight-class superheavy walkers had rushed the defensive lines. Ear drums ruptured as warhorns of the Knights blatted out apocalyptic challenges. Thousands tumbled to the ground, swept off their feet by the earth shaking tread of the enormous war machines. Hundreds were crushed underfoot as the Knights lashed to and fro among the tanks and artillery carriages, seeking their true prey.

 

The challenge of the Knights was answered by an eerie wail, thousands of voices joining into an infernal chorus. The darkness itself gathered in a swirling maelstrom toward the rear of the defenders ranks, coalescing into a monstrous form. Its physical makeup was a collection of the impossible and the insane, a mess of tendrils and teeth, grabbing claws and lashing tails. The very stuff of reality caught fire where it met the vile flesh of this daemonic creature, bursting into a hellish green and purple fire. Its war cry was the angry voice of untold numbers of the damned.

 

The party of Knights fell upon the infernal monster like a pack of lions bringing down an great horned oliphant. The thousands who perished beneath their feet as much from the mad panic to avoid being trod upon as fell victim to their iron-shod feet, and a significant number simply went insane from the fear of such an inexplicable brawl of titanic fury.

 

The great daemon was borne to the ground at great cost to the Knights. The few Knights that remained operational began to contend with the many lesser creatures that emerged from the supernatural corpse of their victim, aided by a wave or arriving Dreadnoughts, Defilers, Forgefiends, and a menagerie of other bespoke walkers.

 

Great armoured troop carriers ground their way into the vaults behind the walkers, smashing down barricades and tearing through the razorwire. The hardened bunkers and redoubts of the Word Bearers mortal troops maintained an effective defensive fire for four minutes, cracking dozens of Iron Warriors tanks and troop carriers into jagged, burning hulks. But for every track that was destroyed, two more bulled it aside and crushed forward into the onslaught of fire and steel.

 

Ramps dropped and thousands of mortal soldiers of the Iron Warriors rushed into the fury of the battle. They fell in droves, but there seemed to be no end of them. Soon the last of the fortifications screening the main walls of the cathedral were themselves burst open, spewing forth red fire and black smoke.

 

Pushing the wrecked hulks of the armoured corps’ assault aside, huge armoured carriers crawled forward to lay their guns on the cathedral gate and the defensive bastions protecting it. As soon as the first was came to a halt and quickly sighted in it bleched forth a plume of fire and smoke. One by one the others rushed to follow suit, and inside of two minutes the din of their withering cannonade was so intense that no single gun could be picked out. The walls of the fortress might have tumbled from the noise alone given time, but the explosive shells took less than an ten minutes to batter down the great black iron gets and punch holes deep into the thick granite walls around it.

 

With their furious battlecry lost to the resounding roar of the Iron Warriors cannons, the space marines of the Word Bearers of Dark Apostle Harnak rushed out of the broken defenses of their cathedral. Like a crimson tide they swept around the feet of the lumbering war machines, butchering the mortal infantry of the Iron Warriors and those of their own surviving thralls alike. There was no time for discrimination in the bloodlust as they made a maddened effort to steal the initiative away from the Iron Warriors.

 

A second wave of armoured transports clattered past the heavy artillery, many various modifications of the space marine Land Raider, with Predator tanks and Rhino APCs in their dozens. This well timed and crushing answer to the anticipated counter-attack rolled over the ranks of Word Bearers, breaking their line and forcing them into skirmishing groups. The transports poured forth nearly four thousands Iron Warriors. Less than half were clad in the quartered orange and black scheme of Warsmith Bolverk’s Iron Hounds, but all chanted the litany of Dark Apostle Harnak’s crimes against him.

 

The Word Bearers space marines fought like men possessed, as many of them assuredly were. To their credit they did not immediately break before such superior numbers and firepower, but fought the main force of the Iron Warriors assault to a standstill before the open gates of their Dark Apostle’s cathedral.

 

A third line of armour pushed its way into the battle, super-heavies spearheaded by the Warsmith’s own customised Shadow Sword. These rolling metal fortresses held even more Iron Warriors firing from their troop compartments, from makeshift gunpits on their upper decks, and hanging from railings and running-boards alongside. The tide of the battle turned once more, and the last semblance of order among the Word Bearers counter-attack vanished.

 

The threshold of Dark Apostle Harnak of the Word Bearers was crossed, and the Iron Warriors led by Warsmith Bolverk himself plunged into the darkness of that lair of devotion to the Ruinous Powers.

 

No dialogue or much story, but pure fury. I hope you like it.

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I thank you for your excellent entries in Campaign II - Assault over the last two weeks.

Warsmith Demetrios gave us A Debt Paid. A tale of Khornate Iron Warriors making a last stand against a greenskin horde! I liked the details in their armour variation showing the squad’s allegiance to Khorne (if you have models, please post some images!).

I gave you The Psychopomps Attack. My warband bringing to bear it’s full strength in an all-out assault upon their long-sought foes: craftworld Carth-Lar. I promise greater carnage in part III...

Carrack set us up with four excellent short pieces (The Shield, Slipping Away, Blood in the Water and Eighth Catacomb) before hitting us with the main course: Bonds and an excellent surprise at the end, which keep us on tenderhooks until part III comes round.

Scourged continued his chronicles of the Scourged with a mammoth 5-piece entry (which I must admit I haven’t finished yet). Which I just finished. It was excellent to see you pulling out your full cast as I had. And a great cliffhanger ending too!

And Warsmith Aznable told us of the massed assault of warsmith Bolverk’s Iron Warriors upon his nemesis: dark apostle Harnak of the Word Bearer’s stronghold, to settle an old score.

In particular these last four entries showed what I really like about IF: the regular contributors building forging a narrative and a wealth of background on their warbands. I hoped the Campaign series would help push this along and I think is succeeding. I look forward to Campaign III – The Crucible/Tables Turn in a month or two’s time...

I hereby close that topic for the purposes of rewards (though, as always, if you have more tales to tell feel free to post them at any time).

And here begins our sixteenth challenge of Inspirational Friday 2016:

Knight Fall

Back in November of 2014 we had Inspirational Friday: Chaos Knight House. Since then Forge World has provided us with rules for Chaos Knights and more recently Games Workshop themselves have given us Renegade Knights, thus the 16th topic of Inspiration Friday 2016 is the Fallen Knight. Be they a renegade, a Chaos knight or something else, tell us not of a house but of one single knight. Tell us of what made them fall: did they embrace it, fight it or was it thrust upon them by external forces? Tell us of their victories and their losses, and their goals: what drives the knight within the huge warmachine?

Inspirational Friday: Knight Fall runs until the 3rd of June.

Let us be inspired.

And who shall judge this new challenge? That decision lies with our current judge: Fulkes. Take your time, Fulkes, you have a lot of reading to do! And to the victor chosen by Fulkes, step forward and claim your Octed Amulet:

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Wow. I haven't done an Inspirational Friday since November 2014? That's... wow. That's a while, isn't it. Longer than I thought, at any rate. Welp, seems as good a time as any to get back into the groove of writing. Let's see if I can't come up with something good for the House Malvora. My servants, they hunger... msn-wink.gif

Tailspin (WIP for the Assault Inspiration, I think it is ok, but it isn't finished, but I wanted to post something to force me to finish it later) Reminder, this is out of competition.

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Captain Hyun stood with his gauntlet on the engine controls and his eyes glued to the vidscreen. The Dread Sky, covered in impossible rust and spraying yellow fluid over the islands closest, was the third ship into the Insanity Janus. A piece of its hull snapped off as it entered the portal, landing on a nearby continent. Hyun watched with no small disgust as screaming cultists swarmed out of their hovels, swarming across the blasted countryside to strip the piece for relics. Boils and weeping sores errupted from their flesh as the came in contact with the black ooze covering the Nurgle cursed metal. Hyun shivered slightly, absentmindedly brushing specks of dust that had disturbed the many coloured diamond print covering his armour.

Hyun whistled impatiently as the Bitter Hope followed into the Janus. His hand clenched tight on the throttle, his blood rising in anticipation. Every moment the flagship took sliding into the void was slow torture, coupling the agony of being denied the vanguard with the shame that had denied his crew the chance for first blood. When last they had come to Fragment, Hyun’s Ambition had been first to break through to reality, but before they could make planetfall, defense lasers had taken out their engines. Hyun smiled as he remembered the source of the sacrificial blood he had used to ensure such an event would not cripple them again, then grimaced again at their failure to claim for the gods.

Finally, the moment came, Bitter Hope finished it’s transition through the wound in space and Hyun threw open the fuel lines. Gouts of green and blue balefire shot out of the accursed engines as they sent Ambition rocketing forward to ride the wake of the Bitter Hope. Hyun did not care that his action had incinerated a herd of mutant cattle that had been on a nearby landmass. Hyun did not even care that he forced Sans Sanity to smash through a separate one as the Ambition knocked it off course. Today his shame would be absolved, his fate reclaimed, and the whispers of the twins of plots and pride return to him. Today he would show lesser races their place in the void, beneath his heel, or beneath the ground!

His jubilant reverie ended abruptly with the cold of the Insanity Janus. A sort of negative existence overtook the ship. All noise, all heat, all that was bright and good washed away in the tide of that emptiness. None dared disturb the silence by moving, few even by thinking, though Hyun remembered once again his doubts as to whether it was truly warp travel at all. Surely pure daemons would not fear such as that. But as soon as the moment came, it was gone, the bright stars shining into the vid screen as Ambition was born anew from the hateful rent in the sky.

 

Sensor data once again flooded the Ambition’s databanks as servitors and dark magi sought to parse the information quickly enough. Ten planets within striking distance, seven inhabited, one an astartes homeworld, orders to strike against the second hive, an asteroid field. Five minutes out of the Janus, when the last of the assembled fleet had translated into the space surrounding the newly identified Balikil system, an unknown vox signal spread throughout the fleet.

 

“‘Ullo there you bunch a pointy ‘ard boyz. My weirdboyz saw you lot comin’ and told me ‘ow you was fixin’ to take wot belongs to da Ork. My name’s Warboss Thresha, and I fink you won’t got the stones when you see my big ole rock here. Too bad I got no plans to let you lot leave. So ‘ear this Boss Scar. I’m gonna pull out your teef and take dat nice shiny choppa. Get zogged, ‘umies.”

As soon as the transmission finished, warning runes lit up the fleet. From behind the warpgate inched out a massive spacehulk, bristling with weaponry of an uncountable number of designs. Crude ships shot out from it like hornets whose nest had been disturbed in wave after wave. Suddenly the vast vessel opened fire, hundreds of defense lasers and thousands of missiles blossomed out. The lasers lanced into the Midnight Star, the last ship to enter the Janus. Explosions rocked it sideways before the volley of missiles landed home.  A cascade of explosions started from the bow and went two thirds down the ship before hitting the ship’s heart. The psychic deathscream from the daemon-core’s detonation reverberated through the Balikil system as the ship was torn asunder, it’s stern riding a shockwave of destruction back through the gate.

 

Hyun braced himself against the control throne as the wave of psychically impregnated force passed through the Ambition. “Well, it looks like we have lost the element of surprise; I do not imagine that the explosive death of most of Balikil’s psykers will go unnoticed. Get the ship turned around, I do not intend to sit in orbit about an uninhabited rock whilst some other lord captures my new ship.”
 

The vox lit up with a message from the Bitter Hope: “A seat on my council for whoever brings me Thresher’s head.” Hyun saw the flashing markers depicting the rest of the armada beginning to split. Those already a part of Escharon’s council continuing toward the center of Balikil’s system, the other’s slowing or changing course. His was first to turn though, first to reach full burn. Suddenly a separate warning rune flashed over his screen.

“Captain Hyun, there are several unknown objects approaching from the dark side of the planet we are nearest. They are coming ---”  Ji-Hye, the old master of the fleet, was interrupted as the Ambition lurched violently. Three impacts rocked through the hull as ork boarding torpedoes slammed straight through the left engine, knocking the Ambition into a spin sending it careening into the gravitational grip of the barren orb below.

“Vastra,” Hyun hailed over an internal vox, “take the slaves and drive off these ork scum. We need not stoop so as to sully our fine blades on such low filth.” Hyun watched with trepidation out the viewing windows until he saw red tendrils snaking out to grab onto the engine pieces that had been blown from his ship. “Nox, Lucan, scan the enemy ship for the highest concentration of ork technology. We need to find their bridge.”

Knowing not to question their captain, the two marines reconnected their cerebral tethers to synchronize with the ship and each other as they begin long distance scans. No one left their post as Hyun restarted the engine and begin wrestling with the controls as the ship spin faster and faster towards the rising rocky crust. One thousand meters from the surface the ship began to slow, but none dared show surprise when Hyun leveled it out bare fractions of a second before impact, rocketing back upwards toward the ork hulk. The fact that instead of repairing the engine the ship now sported one engine and one wing formed of blood and metal was known to none but the few orks trapped in it’s sanguine sinews. Had Hyun known, he would not have cared.

 

The Ambition shot towards the ork hulk even as battle raged on its lower decks. The ork kommandos had abandoned the engine room assault when the engine itself had grown bladed tentacles with which to dissect them. Their numbers slowly fell as wave after wave of tongueless cultists fell upon them with sleek autoguns of a thousand hues. On higher decks, astartes in a riot of colours ordered slaves to bring them weapons and helmets; some engaged in more profane precombat rituals. In the darker corners of the highest decks huge hulking figures adorned robes emblazoned with concentric circles of blues, yellows, and pinks over their misshapen and ever changing metallic flesh. In the captain’s quarters, Hyun had assembled the strongest of his warriors, fell monsters trusted to arm and armour themselves however they saw fit.

 

They picked up speed as the last of the orks were drowned in a tide of human flesh and hail of autogun bullets. Hyun’s three hundred or so astartes and forty times that in human auxiliaries assembled around neither launch bays nor boarding torpedoes, but the main ship entrances. “Nox, Lucan, keep us on target and at full burn. I do not want to waste resources on their defenses. Energize the power ram.”

Both the emerging ork fleet and the chaos vessels that had turned to fight them looked at the Ambition as it sped ever faster towards the space hulk. The daemonically charged engines drove the ship toward the limits of subwarp speeds. The hulk’s defense weapons landed few blows against the Ambition, as it moved faster even than the tracking systems could effectively follow. A lucky lance blow tore through the bridge right before Ambition made contact. Whether or not the blast had been telling was lost in the cataclysmic shockwave of the impact.

The glowing golden ram, crackling with a thousand colours of light, cut through the shields and armour of the hulk with ease, only slowing as the protrusions of the vessel following behind it ground apart and shattered. Points of contact instantly disintegrated into a wave of superheated plasma that travelled through the tunnels and paths of the space hulk, annihilating uncountable hordes of greenskins before they could even comprehend the event unfolding around them. What remained of the Ambition only came to a halt at its engines, stopping as a nail driven by the gods themselves. The wave of plasma and debris shot out a hundred escape hatches, blowing apart dozens of nearby ork fighters that had already taken flight. The force of the impact was so great that the hulk itself was knocked off course, visibly listing as the momentum transfered through it, buckling bulkheads and knocking the entire crew from their feet.

Aboard the Ambition every being that was not in power armour was instantly slain. Their bodies forming a shock absorbing pillow of mangled flesh that allowed the astartes of Hyun’s Sons of Glory to survive such a suicidal charge. There was a short period of respective quiet and swearing, as both astartes and orks clawed their way to their feet. Suddenly a shout went up, three hundred voices in unison, “DEATH TO THE UNWORTHY! YOUR GREATEST HONOR SHALL BE TO DECORATE OUR BLADES!”

Oof you guys definitely buried me in reading and work hasn't been kind to my schedule. I'll try to have everything read by Tuesday just because that'll be the first day I can sit down in front of a computer and cover the novelles posted here.

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