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Final Inspirational Friday - Legends of Chaos (until 11/9)


Kierdale

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Welcome to Inspiration Friday 2018.

Inspiration Friday is a chance for members to write pieces of fiction on set Chaos-related subjects, with a winner chosen at the end of each period and awarded a medal. As in the previous Inspiration Fridays, images accompanying entries are most welcome.

As in IF2017, I may give two weeks or more to work on some themes. I should also point out that, living in Tokyo, my Fridays start earlier than many of the Frater and so likely I will close and open themes early on Saturdays, Tokyo-time. Likely still Friday for most of you.

From 2016 onwards there were a couple of changes to Inspiration Friday:

While I, Kierdale, set the topic each time (or another member I appoint to take the helm in my absence), the winner of each topic will be given the choice of judging the next topic’s entries and choosing the winner from those entries. Should they, for any reason, wish to turn down this duty then judging will revert to Kierdale for the next entry.

Judging Rules

1. Many of our members are non-native English speakers so grammar, spelling and punctuation should not be too harshly judged. That said, members are encouraged to type their entries in a word processor program which can help them with their spelling and grammar.


2. The judge should choose the one entry which, in their mind, exemplifies the IF topic of that week. Not necessarily the most action-packed, the longest, the coolest, etc.

3. The judge may, when posting their judgement, choose to give feedback on each entry. What they liked and didn't like, what they wanted to see more or less of.

Past Inspiration Friday Topics

Links to previous incarnations of Inspiration Friday, for reference:

Under Brother Nihm:

Aspiring Champion

Chaos Banner

Regarding the Legions

Favourite Model

Paint a CSM

Favourite Primarch

Why Chaos?

Under Tenebris:

Chaos Cults - Winner: Disease

Legacy Weapon - Winner: Xenith

Rank and File - Winner: Kol Saresk

Chaos Worlds - Winner: Marshal Sampson

Chaos Vehicle - Winner: Loesh

Call of Chaos Test model - Winner: Alan of Angels and Loesh

Chaos Battle - Winner: Cormac Airt

Minor Daemon - Winner: Tdf4638

Spooky Chaos - Winner: Dizzyeye

Chaos Stronghold - Winner: Carrack

Nemesis of Chaos - Winner: Kierdale

Chaos Navigator House - Winner: Marshal Sampson

Chaos Knight House - Winner: Kierdale

Chaos Santa - Winner: Castellan Cato

Chaos Dreadnought - Winner:Urauloth

Chaos Warship - Winner: Conn Eremon

Interview with a Chaos Lord - Winner: Warsmith Aznable

Interview with a Chaos Sorcerer - Winner: Kierdale

Chaos Space Marine Bolter - Winner: Son of Carnelian

Chaos Assassin - Winners: Carrack, Kierdale and Zhaharek

Intel Report on Warband - Winner: Kierdale

Betrayal - Winner: Warsmith Aznable

Chaos Sword - Winner: Castellan Cato

Chaos Spawn - Winners: Carrack and Kierdale

Champion of Khorne - Winner: Slipknotzim

Chaos Heraldry - Winner: Teetengee

Equerry - Winner: Zhaharek

Chaos Tome - Winner: TDF

Chaos Crossover - Winner: Lord Pariah

Dark Mechanicus - Winners: Carrack and Kierdale

Daemon Forge - Winners: Zhaharek and Beachymike123

Battles of the Space Marines - Winners: Carrack, Warsmith Aznable and Tipper

Cult Leader - Winner: Zhaharek

Familiar - Winner: Kierdale

Nemesis of Chaos II - Winners: TDF and Conn Eremon

Ruination - Winner: Carrack

Chaos Sidekick - Winner: Warsmith Aznable

Chaos Skirmish - Tactical Squads - Winner: Kierdale

Under Kierdale:

2015

Interview With A Warpsmith - Winner: Carrack

ETL Background (care of Carrack) - Winner: Kierdale

Lair of the gods - Winner: Scourged

Signature Tactics - Winners: Scourged and Majorbookworm

Berserkers of every creed - Winner: none.

Chaos Geneseed - Winner: Warsmith Aznable

Tales of... ...Chaos Glory - Winner: Warsmith Aznable

A Stolen Relic - Winner: Beachymike123

Summoning - Winner: Warsmith Aznable

Treadheads - Winner: Scourged

The Primordial Annihilator versus...the Greater Good - Winner: Warsmith Aznable

Replenishments New Meat - Winner: Scourged

Chaos Halloween Horror - Winner: Dammeron, Scourged, Zhaharek and Teetengee

Interview with a dark apostle - Winner: Carrack

Chaos Power Armour - Winner: Scourged

Tales of Hubris - Winner: Teetengee

Chaos Titans - Winner: Scourged and Teetengee

Chaos Icons - Winners: MaliGn, Teetengee, Carrack and Scourged.

Bonus Challenge: Chaos Objectives - Winner: Carrack

2016

Memories of Terra - Winner: Warsmith Aznable

Possessed - Winner: Captain Malachi

Chaos Steeds - Winner: Scourged

Traitor Regiments - Winner: Teetengee

The Primordial Annihilator versus...the Vlka Fenryka - Winner: Carrack

Campaign I - Opening Moves - Winner: Diabolist

Interview with a Daemon Prince - Winner: Warsmith Aznable

Skirmish II - Upon Cursed Wings/Jump Assault - Winner: Teetengee

Lost in Space - Winner: Scourged

Imperfect Beings - Winner: Carrack

Obliterators - Winner: none

Lesser Daemons I - Winner: Warsmith Aznable

Tales of Honour - Winner:Son of Carnelian

Tales of Dishonour - Winner: Fulkes

Campaign II - Assault - Winner: Scourged

Knightfall - Winner: no contest.

Architect of Fate - Winner: Carrack

Chaos Flyer - Winner: Kierdale

Schism - Winner: Scourged

A Chaotic Alliance - Winner: Squigsquasher

Chaotic Rites - Winner: Krautscientist

Retro-Chaos - Winner: Carrack

ETL-V model - Winner: Scourged

The Primordial Annihilator versus the Inquisition - Winner: Carrack

Interview with a Chaos Apothecary - Winner:Kierdale

Chaos Trophies - Winner: MyD4rkPassenger

The Primordial Annihilator versus the Sons of Sanguinius - Winner: Carrack

The Primordial Annihilator versus the Bugs - Winner: Teetengee

Aquatic Combat - Winner: Kierdale

Campaign III - Tables Turn/The Crucible - Winner: Warsmith Aznable

Halloween 2016 - Winner: Carrack

Tales of Vengeance - Winner: MyD4rkPassenger

Unit Champion - Winner: Warsmith Aznable

Iron Warriors - Winner: Carrack

Thousand Sons - Winner: Zhaharek

2017

Black Crusade – A Call To Arms - Winner: Warsmith Aznable

Campaign IV - End Game - Winner: Kierdale

Seeds Sown... - Winner: Scourged

The Fallen - Winner: Trevak Dal

Chaos Bikers - Winner: Kierdale

The Warp - Winner: Scourged

Hive War - Winner: Carrack

Propaganda - Winner: Kierdale

The Ends Justify The Means - Winner: Carrack

The Witch - Winner: Honda

Rivalry of the Gods - Winner: none

The Primordial Annihilator versus the Sons of Guilliman - Winner: Caius/DogWelder

Death Guard - Winner: Azekai

Alpha Legion - Winner: Iron Father Ferrum

Desert Warfare - Winner: P3AKHOUR

Abhumans and mutants - Winner: Gunnyogrady

The Primordial Annihilator versus the Adeptus Mechanicus - Winner: ColonelSchaeffer

The Primordial Annihilator versus the Imperial Guard - Winner: Warsmith Aznable

Images of Chaos - No contest

If Horus had won... - Winner: MaliGn

Exalted Champion - Winner: macbeefin

2018

The Black Legion - Winner: hushrong

Winter Warfare - Winner: Scourged

The Primordial Annihilator versus the Asuryani - Winner: Hushrong

The Hunt - Winner: EesiOh

Chaos Artefacts - Winner: Kierdale

The Night Lords - Winner: Barabbas Sogalon

Ambush! - Winner: Hushrong

Chaos versus T’au - Winner: Kierdale

When Old meets New - Winner: Scourged

Solo Mission - Winner: Gederas

Prophecy - Winner: Honda

Cry ‘Havoc!’ - Winner: Kierdale

Temple of Chaos - Winner: MaliGn

ETL Model - Winner: Azekai

The Primordial Annihilator versus the Drukhari - Winner: none

Legends of Chaos - Winner:

While each topic will close (with respect to who can win the medal for that theme) after a set period, members who find themselves inspired to write about previous themes are most welcome to post these as and when they can, but I ask that you please title your entry accordingly (e.g. “Chaos Warship”).

Inspirational Friday: Timelines of Treachery is a companion thread to this (and past and future Inspirational Friday main threads) for those who wish to organise their IF entries and present their warband's timeline. I know I just about my warband's timeline a lot, so the thread is to help both readers and writers to get their heads around which stories come where. By all means please add your own timelines as and when you can :smile.:

  • 2 weeks later...

Not a Black Legion piece per se, but they do feature and it is a continuation of my entry for Black Crusade-A Call To Arms from exactly a year ago(!): Telling Tales. It also brings the Psychopomps into the Dark Millennium, I guess.

 

Visions Of Afar

Hidden Content

“This was not unexpected.”

“...cares that his messenger did not return?”

“...Or that his ‘request’ was snubbed?” The inflection indicates that all there knew it had been an order, a threat, rather than a true request for aid.

The human remained knelt, head bowed before the half-dozen gathered giants as they debated the content of the astropathic communique he had brought them. He was as nothing to them.

One of them, his armour carved on one side into lines resembling musculature as one would find on the statues of heroes in ancient Athena, the other side carved into a more realistic representation of exposed, striated human muscle, looked their master in the eye and spoke unreservedly. “Why did you say ‘no’? Why deny us the glory of taking part in the crushing of the Gate?”

There came a gentle sound of laughter from the corner and the serf, knelt upon the deck plates, could but glance toward the dark alcove from which the tittering emanated. He had not noticed the presence of anyone else in the room upon his arrival, though in all honesty even having served most of his adolescent and adult life upon this fallen chapter’s vessels, he was still in awe of his post-human masters and had fixated upon them as he had entered the briefing chamber. Raised within the Eye upon a barbarous world of tribes he had from an early age known pain and suffering, and been taught to take pleasure in it, as was his people’s way. But having been taken in the renegade Angel’s raid they had taught his people new depths of agony and debasement, beyond the wildest nox-dreams of the flesh-masters of the plains. In the early years of his servitude he had dreamed of elevation to their numbers, to be the one who delivered the pain, the one who took the greater pleasure. And he who had been his master -the one who had captured him- had urged him on, telling him of the transformation awaiting him, the glory of being an enlightened one in the service of the Prince. And so he had toiled, he had fulfilled his master’s whims and desires.

And how had his master laughed when he had finally denied the man his dreams, shewing him another delicious morsel: despair.

He blinked frantically, fighting down the memories he had kept locked away. He cursed himself and tried to steady the rising panic within himself. What had caused those visions to resurface?

The laughing grew and a figure stepped from the shadows. Though the alcove was barely large enough for a stooped Astarte to stand within, the beast which stepped from it seemed to grow with every step. Before it had taken six steps to stand at the shoulder of the largest of the marines, it towered over them all, at least four times the height of a man.

The serf was struck simultaneously with both revulsion and desire, to degrees he had only touched upon during the longest of his master’s sessions, and never at the same time. The creature was a bastardisation of Man and beast, the latter in its crustacean-like claws and more so in the almost bovine head upon its shoulders, long arcing horns crowing it. Yet it’s body was humanoid if on a grand scale and an amalgam of the male and female, for swollen breasts hung from the right side of its muscular chest, six of them down its right side. The nipples of every second one were pierced, with chains suspending small thuribles from them. These gave off a musky scent which called to him. Yet the revulsion came at his mind’s rejection of this twisted form and at his own body’s longing for it. He could not yet but wonder what gender held sway beneath the monster’s long loincloth.

“Why did you command us not to join the Black Crusade, my lord?” The former captain of the 8th company asked again once the greater daemon had made its presence known. Though those present doubted the captain would dare accuse their lord of cowardice, though there was something about the leader of the raptors that leant a mocking, braggart tone to his voice.

The lord of the Psychopomps, the Doom of Carth-Lar, former chapter master of the Stygian Guard -as the renegade marines had once been known- stood opposite his lieutenants, though in his terminator armour he was a head taller and far broader. The huge brass organ atop his suit added another meter. His armour was as ornate and as colourful as any of theirs; the roseate characteristic of the war band, and other pastels as was the taste of their patron deity, yet covered in far more and more intricate runework and glyphs in the Dark Tongue.

Aware that the Keeper of Secrets had moved -yet oh so quietly it tread for a being so large!- to his side, he turned a fraction toward it and it lowered its head. A nod or the acknowledging of a secret leaked?

Sophusar then turned his gaze upon the kneeling mortal at the center of their circle as if noticing him for the first time. The lord of the Psychopomps wore a mask of leather which held a brass grill over his mouth, only revealing his shaven scalp and the circular trepanation scars there, and his asymmetrical eyes. While the left was human, a warm brown, the right was swollen and glowed with a scintillating green light. Not merely the iris but the entire eye was baleful green, penetrating the membrane of his eyelid the few times he did close it. He knelt, taking the man’s jaw in a gentle grip with a gauntleted hand so large and strong that he could have crushed the man’s skull with ease, and lifted the serf’s head until the eyes met.

“You have served the chapter long, Helis,” to pull the man’s name from his mind was a simple cantrip, but the look on the man’s face revealed its power. His abject fear was quelled and in an instant he was captivated. “Would you do me one more service?” The lord’s voice was rich and powerful yet differential and concerned.

A rapturous smile broke out on the man’s face and he nodded.

“Bless you, Helis. Bless you,” Sophusar stroked the man’s shaven, tattooed head and turned his own head so that his right eye was before the serf’s face. The man was entranced by the glow, though this did nothing to dull the pain which came. Agonising, exquisite pain, a climax to the man’s life of servitude to insane masters.

The flesh of his body ran, and even his bones warped and twisted. He fell forward, catching himself on his hands and crouched there on all fours, quivering like a newborn quadruped as layers of skin and muscle peeled from his back. His rib cage was soon exposed and it opened like the petals of a blooming flower. Within, his organs had already reduced to slurry but as his body reshaped itself into a form of table supporting this wretched pool, the liquid began to clear. Upon the membrane was an image of war on a colossal scale. Tanks sailed through a sea of bodies, pushing aside the carcasses of their dead peers and grinding infantry beneath their tracks. Huge war machines strode across the battlefield, crushing soldiers and vehicles underfoot without breaking stride. Tens if not hundreds lost their lives in the blink of an eye as titans unleashed their weapons. And the infantry. Millions upon millions of combatants, clad in myriad colours now all stained and dyed with filth and blood. Astartes of several chapters towered over Skitarii and Sororitas, the latter of whom fought beneath the soaring figure of a winged, haloed saint. But most numerous were the Guardsmen fighting for their world under the watchful gaze of the lord Castellan.

And they were opposed by an army the likes of which none of the watchers had ever beheld, under oath to the Imperium or during their years within the Eye. Massed daemons, legions of the damned, and at the speartip the Black Legion itself. Sable armour trimmed in gold. At their head strode the Despoiler, laying into the enemy about him with claw and daemonic blade.

The titans cast shadows over those who fought beneath them, but even these goliaths of war passed through the shadows of towering pylons of unknown design reaching up far above the largest of Titans.

The Psychopomps looked on, all but Sophusar and the Keeper of Secrets Ki’mah’gureh riveted to the image before them. The majesty of the great battle. Though no noise emitted from the ghostly pool they could in their minds hear the intoxicating sounds: the deafening roar of gunfire and explosions, the screams and cries of victory and despair. Their hearts raced and Dophesia, captain of the 8th, broke the silence, tearing his eyes from the mirage to look -openly accusingly at last- at their master.

“You denied us this? This glory!”

The others, the dark apostle Angra and the naga sorcerer Holusiax among them, glanced from him to their lord. He had voiced what they all now thought.

“This was revealed to me at great cost,” Sophusar went on, ignoring his subordinate’s tone. “Look on,” he indicated the pool with his taloned index finger.

The gargantuan alien obelisk began to vibrate and give off a sound that captain Castor picked up on first, his senses honed maddeningly sharp as were those of the noise marines under his command. The sound grew until it began to eclipse the cacophony of battle, and warriors -even those clad in powered armour- began to fall to their knees, clutching their heads. Yet those were the luckiest, for as a shaft of light blacker than the void itself shot forth, piercing the firmament, those touched by the Warp had their minds torn from them. Wyrdvane psykers dropped dead like trees in an atomic blast, even Astartes librarians died as their psychic hoods proved no protection against the pylon’s effect. The daemonic legions accompanying the Black Legion were smote to dust in the blink of an eye as their essence was snuffed. Those possessed amongst the Astartes had their neverborn flesh torn from them. And far above, overhead, the great Eye began to shrink!

Castor looked from the pool to his right hand, the enlarged claw of daemonic flesh and chitin there, then to the others in the room - master of sanctity Angra bore a clawed hand as he did, and a full half his face was that of an alluring Q’tlahs’itsu’aksho, Holusiax’s lower torso was that of a serpent, there were none of them untouched- then back to lord Sophusar.

“You saved us.” He knew there was no sentimentality in their leader - there had not been amongst any of them as the Stygian Guard and their fall had only instilled within them a hunger for destruction and maddening sensation, at the expense of one’s lessers if need be. They were as instruments to him, and indeed all including Sophusar himself were pawns within their patron’s great games. Thus he glanced to the Keeper of Secrets, wondering what price the daemon had exacted for this vision of the future, before looking back to his lord once again. “To what purpose?”

This time it was the greater daemon that took a step forward. One of its great taloned hands reached up to cup its uppermost swollen breast and squeezed a single pearly drop from the teat.

It dropped into the pool, milky white spreading across the scene of battle until it was obscured. Seconds passed as the cloudy mixture roiled within the bowl of twisted flesh, until a thin shape rose to the surface. At first it seemed to be crafted of the twisted bone of the serf but they soon recognised it for what it was.

Wraithbone.

That material of the Eldar, psychic energy itself harnessed and given form. It was shaped into a simple rune of spars and arcs and as they watched, blood rose from the depths of the pool, rising to the surface between the arms of the rune and unmistakably forming a heart before both it and the rune fragmented. In the last second before all fell apart, even the malformed body of the sacrificial serf Helit falling to the ground, his life spent, a face too rose to the surface, one which only Sophusar recognised from their duel decades earlier. On the maidenworld of Viarphia.

The last autarch and only survivor of craftworld Carth-Lar.

His nemesis.

Qarasion.

 

Sophusar looked to his lieutenants.

“She has fled to Biel-Tan.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bone cracked noisily, followed by wet slurping.

“Well?” The champion looked down at the eater. Both wore the crimson favoured by their patron, but the Black upon their shoulders. “He awaits an answer.”

The eater spat fragments of skull and jellied brain. “The servant of the Dark Prince taste foul,” he belched.

“Were his words to be trusted?”

The eater wolfed down the last of the Psychopomp envoy’s brains before closing his eyes as his omophagea worked. Finally he nodded.

“He spoke the truth as he knew it. He knew of no Black Legion summons.”

The champion looked at the beheaded corpse. “Or Sophusar just sent someone who hadn’t been there. Bastard. Either way, take the corpse to the apothecaries, they’ll be interested in getting their hands on the gene seed.” A placatory offering, a concession, from the lord of the Psychopomps?

Recruitment

 

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These past 2 weeks have been incredibly draining for me (physically and emotionally) so I thought I wasn't going to be able to write anything down. It's a bit shorter than what I originally had in mind but I'm just happy I managed to write anything at all. Not only has this served to improve my mood (despite the plot) but I also think I like it better this way.

The Fire Rises

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I've tried to write my short story since the Black Legion was announced as the subject. Being motivated by the recent BL novels I have changed allegiances to the Black Legion on the tabletop. This has been a great way to begin fleshing out my warband and their motivation. I've wrote quite a few drafts, restarted writing, suffered writer's block for some reason, and still think there is room for tons of improvement. So I would like to take this moment to give mad props to authors! I can barely imagine the insanity they go through for their art and craft.

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Thank you for your entries in Inspirational Friday 2018: The Black Legion.

Warpmiss gave us Recruitment in which a berserker’s warband answers the call of the Black Legion only to find out they are not the only ones to whom the offer was extended. I liked the deviousness of this one and I’m very glad you persevered to get it done, Warpmiss.

Hushrong’s entry was The Fire Rises. A tale of a Black Legion war band’s first excursion out of the Eye after the flight from Terra, and their discovery of the changes that had come over the Imperium, and the deification of the Emperor. Great action, but I particularly liked the choice of setting.

I hereby close that topic but if anyone has more stories on that theme, at any time, please post them here with a suitable title.

And here begins our second challenge of Inspirational Friday 2018: Winter Warfare

Combat in cold conditions, be it snow, ice or thawing, presents combatants with new obstacles and concerns, be it on land or at sea. The cold saps strength and takes lives. Those lucky enough to live risk trenchfoot, frozen supplies and war gear.

New tactics are required and the advantage lies with the defender provided that logistics are maintained and protected.

And upon the nightmare battlefields of the 41st millennium who knows what additional horrors stalk through the blizzards and the dark night?

In the past we have have IF challenges on the subject of Aquatic Combat and Desert Warfare and with the northern hemisphere of Terra now in the grip of winter tell us this time a tale of winter warfare.

IF2018: Winter Warfare runs until the second of February.

Let us be inspired.

And who shall judge this new challenge? That decision lies with our current judge: MacBeefin.

The winner of IF2018: Winter Warfare shall claim the Octed amulet:

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And the honour of judging the next challenge.

Thoroughly enjoyed all the stories again, but I particularly liked the imagery of doomed guardsmen defending the basilica against a tide of living dead, praying for deliverance, and even performing acts of heroism and sacrifice (such as driving a tank into the throng and self destructing). My winner would have to be hushrong. Well done.

You know, something I always had problems with Skallathrax was the "extreme night cold"...all Astartes except for World Eaters in "wife beater" pattern power armor would be in armored space suits that can handle combat in the void of space...which would be a lot colder than a planet.

 

But maybe it was especially daemonic world cold or some noise that was some how colder. *Rolls eyes* I think when they wrote that, they jumped back to Warhammer Fantasy in their heads for a bit.

 

I don't see any way space marines could be bothered by winter warfare. Normies? Oh yeah. But super soldiers in armored environment suits? Nope. Their equipment would be capable of handling mud and muck.

 

I also don't get how any Seige involving space marines lasts longer than a week (in various codex timelines, it talks about 7 year long sieges) it's like..."really?" They are super special forces and do in hours what takes the guard days.

 

Most bases/hives/whatever with voidshields can be bypassed by cyclonic torpedos on either side of the city, causing a tectonic shift which will cause mass damage, lower the shields and kill a lot of defenders because they turtled up, unless they got cyclonic torpedos interception systems...

 

Now what a Skallathrax like place COULD do, is have it so cold/whatever that combat in it overrode the armor's ability to self seal/repair, and so any armor integrity loss would result in rapid loss of consciousness and eventual death (like fighting in void).

I guess that while the Astartes themselves may not have so many problems with the cold the rest of things around them might: human troops, supplies, guns, tanks and other machines. Also, there snowy terrain may be more treacherous that it would seem, specially if you are a heavy Space Marine clad in your armor. I suppose it depends on how extreme the conditions are.

That’s where the ‘inspiration’ has to come in ;)

 

How could Astartes be hampered by extreme cold? Or perhaps they aren’t: show us how they take advantage of it versus their mortal foes?

And daemons?

Cold never bothered them anyway.

 

EDIT: Then again I now have the image in my head of a plaguebearer with icicles of frozen snot/puss hanging off his hose and drooping innards :D

Hey guys,

 

time to throw my hat into the ring here once again -- it's been far too long :wink:

 

Now I am not perfectly sure whether the following story qualifies for winter warfare. It does take place in winter, though, so there's that much at least. I wrote it way back when, to accompany a model built by fellow Frater (or rather, Soror) Flint13, and I am still pretty happy with it. Please enjoy:

 

Hunters

 

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My thoughts on Skallathrax - I think there could be some scientific basis here that justifies the cold night freezing them (where GW intended it or not) whereas the void does not. Supposedly that while space may only be a few Kelvin in temperature, there are so few particles present that heat transfer actually takes a very long time. However, on a planet with an atmosphere (presumably Skallathrax) and therefore lots of particles, heat transfer occurs much more quickly, especially if the night temp on Skallathrax was only a few Kelvin. Maybe its not so far fetched to think that a few minutes of hours of exposure on Skallathrax would be enough to freeze over an Astartes in power armour.

 

Although with that said, there's probably no way a planet with an atmosphere could fluctuate in temperature that much between night and day so I guess we just take it and try not to think too hard about the scientific accuracy of our sci fi 8ft tall post humans that fight daemons in outer space 

I've always liked snow. I spent the first half of my life with it, and the second half without it. Only now, just these past few months, have I returned to it and it to me. And it's made me happy.

 

When I was still living down in the subtropics, I based all of my models with snow. Every Scourged and Changemonger in my collection saw their feet surrounded by drifts of white powder. In my head, this is because my models were a snapshot of the Scourged defending Tachylite, home of the Changemongers, in the dead of the planet's long winter (when they're Tzeentch-forged alliance was born). It helped me feel a bit closer to home. But the snow kept its influence on me.

 

When I crafted the backstory for Inquisitor Tsalie Krejcik, nemesis to my Scourged since the day that Gallus sealed their fate, I was compelled to place her in a Vostroyan forest, her tragedy tempered by the frozen cold of their winters. it just felt right to me. 

 

And a while back, in 2016, when this very thread challenged us to tell the stories of Chaos vs. the Vlka Fenryka, I once again found myself staging a scene in a wintery world. I just always seem to gravitate toward the serenity of the cold and snow. Perhaps that's why, now that I've returned, I haven't built, painted, or based a Scourged in the snow since moving here. Sure, I blame that more upon the revival of Chaos Legions and just how much I enjoy painting my Hydra... but perhaps there's something more there...?

 

Anyway, forgive me for waxing philosophical for a moment. What I bring you all today is a sequel to the story I've linked above, a continuation of the battle that day. I couldn't really get inspiration for anything new until I remembered that old tale the other day. Seemed like a nice place to revisit, given the theme this week. So, due to a lack of any kind of more creative title, I give you all Red Snow II.

 

Hidden Content

Red Snow II


The heavy steps in the snow originally had been long in gait, from prey sprinting away through a blizzard. He had followed, amused by the careless footsteps. No doubt the sorcerous fiend responsible for the death of two Blood Claws was seeking refuge deeper in the coniferous forests of this world. But no prey could escape the hunt of the Vlka Fenryka, and none had ever once outsmarted the hunter Hallfred Whitesquall.


Each minute that passed brought heavier snowfall. Light dusts of frozen motes had become a torrent of wet clumps. Winds had shifted from calm and guiding to raccous gusts tearing at the tanned loincloth and hanging totems along his blue-grey armor. The more the snow fell the faster the footfalls of his prey had filled, concealing the tracks as he followed. Not that Hallfred couldn’t still see them - the faintest indentation of new snow in old, the faint heat still radiating in the background of the white forest floor, the disturbed collection of flurries on nearby underbrush. Even a half-dead Scout could track the clumsy movements of this heretic!


But then there were no tracks to be found. What had been once and easy and obvious trail quickly devolved into a complete absence thereof. In this impossible clearing within the heart of the forest, the snow was calm, undisturbed. It rested in a solid white sheet, slowing growing taller as the blizzard pounded harder. The fresh powder was up to Hallfred’s ankle and piling gently upon his pauldrons. There was nothing to see in this ring of white, save the silent runes blinking about decreasing atmospheric temperatures within his helm’s display. He had lost the trail.


No, no… not that. The trail was simply gone. The prey had vanished.


Hallfred deactivated the maglocks on his painted helm and pulled it away, stowing it at his waist and letting him feel the cold whip of the wind on his face. It tugged at the braided pleats of his beard, shearing off of the rise of his shaved head. The cold in the air quickly chilled the bionic implant replacing his left eye, spreading a cold sensation within his skull he had come to know many times before. He spit, watching the wet glob crush into the undisturbed powder to his right, seeing a bit of steam rise before the wet glob of acidic saliva froze unseen on the ground.


He chuckle-grunted to himself. Summers on Fenris were colder than this.


With his face now bare, Hallfred was no longer held back by the artificial confines of his armor’s “enhanced” senses. It was pathetic how deeply his brothers from the other chapters depended on their armor. Could they not taste the air and smell the odors of their prey like a true hunter? Of course not. They were not blessed with the Canis Helix, they were not forged by the uncaring touch of Fenris. Were they here, hunting the Sons of the Cyclops in his place, they would have failed long ago. This was what the Vlka Fenryka were made to do: hunt, and kill.


Hallfred focused his senses, closing his eyes to let his ears and nose guide him. The visual world faded away, and the auditory opened to him. He automatically filtered out the howl of the wind and the shaking of tree limbs to hear everything else beneath those roaring sounds. He heard the snow falling with with wet taps upon itself, all around him. He could hear the underbrush straining to stand upright beneath the weight of frozen precipitation. He smelled the faint taint of pollution within the frozen crystals. The smells of decaying flora and recently fled fauna tickled from this direction and that. Through his feet he felt the vibration of his armor’s powerpack traveling through the ceramite plates, and the burrowing of vermin far beneath the soil.


He could sense everything except his prey.


Hallfred opened his eyes again, annoyed with the dead trail. More snow, more wind, less visibility. Soon he would be forced to leave, to abandon the hunt until more favorable conditions developed. At least that’s what the Wolf Lord would say. No, he would not give up. Not until that cerulean and gold armor was covered in liquid crimson, a haunting facsimile of the original Legio XV.


There! Ten degrees west, one hundred twenty meters out. Footsteps. Large, and quiet. Hallfred stayed statue still, lest any movement show his prey that it had been spotted. Foolish heretic, thinking the torrent of snowfall concealed him. It only served to make him easier to find! Stealing a  sideways gaze to the source of the imperceptible steps, Hallfred saw…


...nothing. No figure in power armor, no impressions of footfalls in the pristine powder. Nothing. He had misheard something, somehow.


No, over there now! Fifteen degrees south-southwest, ninety meters. He was sure of it now. He had heard the movement, and smelled the faintest tinge of accelerant from a firearm. It was the heretic, to be sure. Not daring to move so slowly and lose his quarry again, Hallfred turned with bolt pistol drawn, facing to the southwest to confront…


...nothing again. He was being played, manipulated. There were mind games from the tainted sorcerer, trying to toy with him, catch him unawares as he chased ghosts in the snow. There were no footsteps, and there never had been. They were illusions, toying with his mind. The only footsteps in the clearing were those of Hallfred, leading back to…


...they were gone too. No trace of Hallfred’s movement into the clearing. No evidence of from where he had come on this hunt. He looked as though he hand landed in the center of this clearing and not yet taken a single step away. Everything they eyes could see was just varying degrees of white blurs.


Another set of footfalls with no one there, twenty-four degrees southwest, sixty-two meters. It was as empty as the others. Again, at six degrees south, forty meters. Again, nothing. On and on the sorcerer was toying with him, playing with his mind, attempting to confuse Hallfred. Fifteen degrees south-southeast, thirty-two meters. Zero degrees southeast, eighteen meters.


Closer and closer the fake-footsteps fell, pretending to circle Hallfred, pretending to surround him. It was all a game, all a trick to toy with his mind. It was all to amuse the sorcerer as he played with his Warp-magicks safely from a distance; just like a true coward. The sorcerer toyed with Hallfred because he feared the warrior Astartes, and rightfully so.


Due north, zero meters. Two solid steps, planting right in front of Hallfred’s own feet. Except there were no feet, there was no person there. Just snow - untouched, unblemished, perfect snow.


“It won’t work, you cyclops-worshipping mongrel! End these mind games and fight like a true Astartes! You will not trick me!”


The voice that replied was not heard by Hallfred’s ears, but by his mind. It was calm, rich, and brimming with a haughty confidence. It spoke in High Gothic, but with an accent that was decidedly not Prosperan. The invading touch on his mind and soul caused Hallfred an uncomfortable pain as the voice teased him.


+Don’t be so sure, pup.+


That is when the glamor faded like an illusory snowfall all its own. The falsified reality of the world around Hallfred tumbled in little flakes to the ground where it melted away into nothingness. The raging blizzard fell away as well, the winds and snow calming in quick moments. It, too, had been an illusion.


Free now to finally see, all around him was a coil of footsteps circling his position, a serpent constricting around a helpless mouse. They were all there, plain as day, and always had been. Every sound and sight and smell had been forever knocking at his senses, desperate to be perceived by a mind that had been blocked.


How long, then, had the muzzle of a plasma pistol been held mere centimeters from Hallfred’s face as he squirmed in confusion at the heart of the illusion? And how much longer until the sapphire and crimson sorcerer - now obviously not one of the thrice-damned Prospero-born - pulled the trigger and evaporated his head and ended his life with a ball of pure energy?


“When you see him, give our regards to the Wolf King.”


Damn him. Hallfred’s arms and limbs reacted on instinct, muscled corded and taut as they moved on their own, arms raising bolt pistol and power axe to a killing position, legs pushing down and into the ground to lunge forward. His lips curled away to bare fangs and his jaw opened to let loose a snarl, rage of purest indignation festering in his chest. All of that within fractions of fractions of a second. And none of it fast enough.


What remained of his headless body fell into the snow long after the ball of orange plasma tore through his angry face. The stump of his neck had mostly cauterized from the superheat gas, but enough remained fresh from the wound to slowly leak thick scarlet upon the pure white ground. It pooled as it partially melted the snow it touched, the cold of the air quickly coagulating the thickening liquid. Soon the plasma burn was a dichotomy of burnt and frozen flesh. Even as the Scourged sorcerer took his casual leave from this place, the sanguine stains of the Astartes blood spread wider, leaving yet another mark of red snow on this white world.

 

A cold winter's mourning

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The sensation was as if needles punctured his flesh in a million places simultaneously. His body was afire.

Pain more real than the ministrations of the blessed nerve glove wracked him as he danced through the white, his armour and weapons discarded as the whim had taken him. To experience what no other dared.

The deathly touch of cold on this accursed world.

The only other sensation he was aware of – and only this tarnished the bite of Jordgon II’s cold, stopping it from eclipsing all other sensations – was the eyes of his comrades on him. He felt them watching, his fellow Astartes and their mortal servants. In the latter he sensed their wonder and, in no small number of them, mockery. Fools! They could not understand how he opened himself to exhilaration. None of them would dare. None of them would survive more than a minute. And in his fellow marines he felt jealousy and anger. Many of them wished to join him, if only because he had done this mad thing first. And anger, for he danced upon the pristine snow of no-man’s land. He cared not, for-

 

The brilliant, pure white of the snow was splashed vivid red and a single shot rang out in the crisp morning air.

The ratling sniper’s hand shook as he worked the leaver of his rifle, due to the insanity he had just witnessed in his kill as much as due to the planet’s bitter cold.

As soon as he had scurried away, his white suit and thick headwear camouflaging him against the snow, he detached his long-rifle’s magazine and depressed the top round, as he had every few minutes since he had left the trenches and the (relative) warmth of his dugout. Weapons seized all too easily, froze all too quickly, in this cold. Thus he checked and rechecked his gear before finding another good location to snipe from. Then again, was he likely to have another chance? Were the enemy likely to be stupid enough? Mad, they certainly were...but he doubted it, and hunkered down in the hollow of an old fallen tree, glad for the respite from the wind.

His squad, and the Guard regiment they were auxiliaries assigned to, had been ordered to change their deployment and had been dispatched to Jordgon II with little notice. The ratlings, as the diminutive abhumans were (in)famous for, had quickly scrounged winter gear while a great many of the longshanks had to shiver in their trenches and foxholes, which had been backbreaking to dig in the frozen ground.

He could smell them: the white paint on crates, rifles and even tanks and chimeras not having been able to dry properly in the cold. It made for shoddy camo and too many lives had been lost already.

Their foes were predominantly humans – the uprisen populace and elements of the local guard that gone turncoat, but the real problem was the renegade Astartes. That the Emperor’s Angels of Death could turn from His light was rumoured – never within earshot of a preacher of a commissar – but who hadn’t heard the scuttlebutt? But to witness them for real had shaken the sniper, and everyone else who had been witness to the Enemy’s first assault. The climate had not been to blame for trigger fingers freezing that day, nor for the shakes which had taken the legs of so many men. Memories had flashed through the minds of those blessed enough to have fought alongside Astartes, recalling how they had cheered to see the droppods of marines falling upon the enemy, and tried to forget the horror of the devastation they had witnessed in their savours’ wake. Now they were the target of that wrath.

Bastion after bastion had fallen and the Enemy had rolled up defensive lines, trenches filling with crimson slush awash with body parts and debris.

He blinked hard, looking from the shadows of his shelter back out across the snowy fields, squinting as his eyes had to adjust. He cursed himself. He cursed whoever it was further up the chain of command who had managed to stop the retreat and had the mad thought of trying to put up a second line of defence. He cursed the priests of Mars; other scuttlebutt had it that they were the ones who had insisted this icecube of a world be liberated.

He glanced back toward the trenches. He couldn’t see them as the guardsmen had at least done a good job of camouflaging them, and the constant snowfall had done the rest. He could imagine guardmen in their foxholes, checking and rechecking their weapons. No lasers bigger than a rifle, unfortunately: they had quickly learned that the portable generators of cannons put out too much heat and the autosenses of the renegade Astartes spotted them with lethal ease. So the action of heavy bolters and autocannons had to be constantly worked, checked and oiled.

Perhaps one more kill.

One more notch to cut into the stock of his rifle.

A grin split his face under his balaclava.

As he crawled his way up an incline, pushing his way through the powdery snow, the clouds above only a shade or two darker, he felt it through his belly pushed to the ground.

A vibration.

The wind died and he felt it again.

Snow flakes fell gently and sound carried easier in the still air, so that he was forced to slow his crawl...and that he could hear the source of the sound the next time. A mechanical grinding from off beyond the enemy’s own lines. A turncoat chimera? A rhino?

It came again, and the vibration was harder but short.

Bigger than an APC. Battle tank-sized. One of their Russes? God-Emperor forbid it were a Land Raider!

Again, the shakes.

But no one drove a tank so sporadically.

He swallowed back a measure of fear: he had fought alongside knights – titans even – and this was not the earth-quaking impact of a war engine that size.

As he crested the rise he saw it emerging from the falling snow out across no-man’s land.

A mechanical beast as big as a Russ, bounding forth on four pistol-like legs, partially sheathed in raw muscular flesh like some bastard amalgam of man and machine. Nothing like the blessed augmentations of the priests of Mars. A neck craned forward from its armour-plated body, terminating in a bestial head which yawned wide to emit a fearsome bellow.

And still it bounded onward toward him, toward the Guard lines, whip-like tentacles of metal snaking out from its midsection.

Though his mind had frozen at the chaos it beheld, his training prevented him from raising his rifle and loosing worthless shots, leaving him a witness as the monstrous speartip of the renegade assault was spotted by his own lines and shells began to impact its vividly painted armour, showering sparks.

The ground shook heavier as more beasts came in its wake. Each was similar but no two were identical. Some stalked forward bearing no limbs but massed bunches of the whiplike tentacles, other crawled on treads. Behind them came the vehicles of the renegade Astartes, and finally the turncoat guard.

As the daemon engine bounded past the ratling it seemed to pause mid-stride, one tentacle leaping out to skewer the sniper before popping the morsel into its maw. Two bounds later it was into the trenches of the Guard...

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Thank you for your entries in Inspirational Friday 2018: Winter Warfare.

Kraut Scientist returned to IF (it’s been too long!) with Hunters: an excellent tale of a Dark Eldar warrior stalking a berserker of Khorne. And as in all good tales like this, you never know quite who is the hunter and who is the hunted?

Red Snow II was Scourged’s entry, a follow up to a previous story. One of the Vlka Fenryka gets considerably more than he bargained for!

And I gave you A cold winter’s mourning. I make no excuses for the pun. It was hard for me not to write the Chaos side simply using summoned daemons to overrun half-frozen guardsmen, but as I had used a similar idea in the aquatic warfare challenge I didn’t want to do so again. I then saw my maulerfiend on my shelf...

I hereby close that topic but if anyone has more stories on that theme, at any time, please post them here with a suitable title.

And here begins our third challenge of Inspirational Friday 2018: The Primordial Annihilator versus the Asuryani

One of the elder races, once with a galaxy-spanning Empire, the children of Isha brought about their own doom. Ignoring and forgetting the prophecies of the Old Ones, the Eldar became proud. They turned to hedonism and excess. Their society became divided as cults sprung up. Corruption spread and the aliens sought newer, more fulfilling sensations. At any cost. Their madness climaxed in the birth of the fourth god and the dark prince of Chaos – She Who Must Not Be Named: Slaanesh.

Slaanesh’s birth brought about the devastation of the Eldar Empire, tearing a hole in the fabric of reality and swallowing so many of their worlds. It is said that trillions died as the new god devoured their souls.

Only the Exodites, craftworld Eldar and the degenerates of Commorragh within the Webway, survived the end of their Empire. And for millennia they have been a dying race, only for the recent emergence of Ynnead, the Eldar god of death, to bring a seed of hope for their souls.

For those renegades and servants who bend their knee and dance to the will of Slaanesh, the hunting of Eldar is a pursuit unmatched in challenge or rewards, for their fay souls are the sweetest of morsels and likely to earn the greatest rewards from one’s patron.

Nurgle has a unique tie to the Eldar as within his garden he holds captive Isha: the mother of the Eldar herself! On a personal note I would dearly love to read a piece featuring this.

To the followers of Tzeentch their own mastery of the reading of the fates is rivaled only by that of the Eldar farseers.

And for those who harvest skulls for Khorne, what better challenge could there be than to pit oneself against the aspect warriors of the craftworlds: warriors who have dedicated their centuries-long (millennia-long?) lives to the honing of one aspect of combat?

I thought about limiting it to Craftworld Eldar only (or craftworlders and Exodites) and keeping Harlequins and the Dark Eldar for when they get their own codexes, but why shackle people. Kill ‘em all! Kill ‘em all! Kill ‘em all!

IF2018: Chaos versus the Eldar runs until the sixteenth of February.

Let us be inspired.

And who shall judge this new challenge? That decision lies with our current judge: hushrong.

The winner of IF2018: Chaos versus the Eldar shall claim the Asuryani amulet:

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And the honour of judging the next challenge (which they can forfeit to me if they so wish).

This is a difficult decision as I enjoyed all the stories. Nothing gets the heart pounding proudly knowing the blood of the enemy covers the snow at our feet!

A winner must be chosen and I declare that Scourged to be that winner. To see the proud wolf bested in his own type of element was an enjoyable cruelty. Congrats!

Congratulations, Scourged! The story was very well done -- in fact, it somehow felt like a better, more elegant (and ultimately, more Tzeentchian) version of my own entry when reading it which made me gnash my teeth. A well deserved victory! Kierdale, I really enjoyed your story as well, especially the dramatic irony of a Slaaneshi dog going bareheaded for the extra sensual input and paying the ultimate price for it. What a deliciously meta touch. We can probably rest assured that it was ultimately just another experience for him -- if the last one ;)

 

As for the new subject, gee, I guess I can just re-use the exact same story again, eh? ;)

Congratulations, Scourged!

 

 

  On 2/4/2018 at 1:28 AM, KrautScientist said:

Kierdale, I really enjoyed your story as well, especially the dramatic irony of a Slaaneshi dog going bareheaded for the extra sensual input and paying the ultimate price for it. What a deliciously meta touch. We can probably rest assured that it was ultimately just another experience for him -- if the last one ;)

Actually he went totally naked :D

 

  Quote

As for the new subject, gee, I guess I can just re-use the exact same story again, eh? ;)

No :P

I have a lot of topics planned for the future, but a couple on the ‘soon’ list happened to be Chaos versus Eldar and The Hunt...

Scourged’s and your entries made me push back ‘The Hunt’ :D, and I’m going to insist on a new entry for the next one!

My thanks to all for the congratulations. This was one of those instances where the desire to write came before the story idea, so I'm glad it panned out in the end. This new topic, however, already has a fun idea brewing. That sweet, intoxicating corruption of this thread has once again claimed my soul. Time to show some more love to my boys in sapphire and crimson.

 

@KrautScientist: I, too, noticed some similar themes: solitary hunters outdone by their quarry, their natures and strengths juxtaposed into weaknesses by polar adversaries. The same story, but told in such different ways. Ah, but is that not our differences to a tee? My work, with the subtle elegance of Fate's Architect, and your work with the brutal aggression of the Blood God. I think it works quite nicely! 

Riven

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The grass was soft, the dew tingled upon the skin of his bare feet. He closed his eyes, savouring the sensations: the greensward beneath his feet, the gentle breeze upon his skin, tugging at his long hair and swaying the leaves in the trees about him. He could smell food from the markets toward the stern, beyond the high towers which surrounded the park. He could feel the heat of the star above, as their craft passed close to it – close on an astrological scale at any rate. Close enough to veil it from any who sought it: their sensors would be blinded by the brilliance of the sun. Not that theirs was a cowardly race – far from it: they sought the restoration of their species’ supremacy, at the expense of lesser races if need be – but they were also a patient race. One that could wait centuries. Millennia.

And yet now, the farseers told them, a storm was gathering. Fates were aligning. Already autarch Melineil had sallied forth in defence of their maiden world Ursulia and those left aboard Biel-Tan eagerly awaited his return. Was this the beginning of the Rhana Dandra – the end of days?

He turned about, scanning the towers he could see above the treeline. Something...he had felt someone’s eyes upon him. He looked from window to window, balcony to terrace, his eyes not taking in the simple yet beautiful architecture – how his race had crafted buildings of such refined form from psychic power given shape – but seeking whoever it had been whose gaze he had felt.

But it was gone, and as he turned about his frown was replaced with a warm smile and his anxiousness was temporarily banished. She had arrived. He watched as her diaphanous robes fluttered in the breeze.

Taking her hand, he led her into the shade of the boughs and they embraced.

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The neverborn, the spawn of the primordial annihilator, upon the blessed ground of their craftworld! He knew not how they had been deceived but word had spread rapidly as they had raced to arm themselves. Clad in his pristine white and green armour he slid a magazine home into his catapult’s receiver and nodded to his squad mates. Gardeners, artisans, farmers, sculptors, poets...all guardians now.

They filed out of the arming hall, turning left toward the aft quarter and the Great Gate, yet as soon as he stepped out he took a step right, raising his catapult and searching the branching streets before him. He swept the fluted barrel of his weapon left and right, his nerves taught, until a blue-gauntleted hand gently grasped his barrel and turned it skyward. Only then did he notice the presence of the other and turned to look into the yellow mask of the Avenger.

“The foe are entering via the Great Gate, brother. There is no danger here. Make haste.”

He nodded absent mindedly, his eyes still searching the shadows. Even as he turned about and jogged off to catch up with his comrades he could feel eyes upon him, as if someone floated only meters from his shoulder, observing him and all he did.

Hatred and wrath incarnate in two towering bodies, each as red as metal from a smith’s furnace, clashed before the Great Gate. The great spear of Khaine, the Wailing Doom, was pitted against the massive axes of the Exiled One. The greater daemon emitted a bellow, blood-like spittle flying from it fanged maw before it charged once more into combat with the craftworld’s Avatar. All those who beheld the duel were filled themselves with a bloodlust which harkened back to the madness which had consumed the children of Isha so many millennia ago. They fired their weapons into the daemonic hordes pouring forth from the breached webway, shuriken cutting down dozens upon dozens of dancing, claw-handed fiends of all shapes and sizes. And when the children of the Dark Prince came close, loosing ululating war cries, the aura of destruction emanating from the Bloodthirster overcame even the most stalwart of the defenders and sent them charging into combat where training would have had them retreat under their comrades’ support.

Madness reigned until both the Avatar and its foe toppled. Cries of anguish went up from the Eldar to see the embodiment of their war god bested, and raucious laughter from the endless ranks of daemonettes as the champion of their patron’s greatest rival was felled, his purpose fulfilled. But with the enraging madness of the Bloodthirster no longer holding sway over their minds, the Eldars’ centuries-long training took over once more and they would brook no spawn of She Who Must Not Be Named upon their world.

Little did the flagging defenders at the Great Gate know that their innermost sanctum, the Infinity Circuit itself, had already been penetrated...

And in their darkest moment, she who promised to open the Seventh Way appeared. The emissary of the Ynnead, the bearer of the cronesword Kha-vir. And from within the very wraithbone of Biel-Tan she drew the great blade Asu-var and summoned forth the Yncarne.

The God of the Dead had come.

He watched with awe and no small measure of fear as his world was sundered. Biel-Tan, the Rebirth of Ancient Days, was broken. The birth of the Yncarne had driven out the daemons infiltrating the Infinity Circuit, and the spiritseers raced to transfer the essence of their world’s ancestors into bodies of wraithbone, but Biel-Tan would never been the same again. Would they, the Eldar? he wondered. There arose the Ynnari, the faithful of Ynnead, clad in crimson. He watched as comrades flocked to this new faith. He watched with sorrow as his love did too, he watched her go, yet he held back.

His place was with Biel-Tan, upon one of its fragments. He would join others who guarded their world – be it whole or fragmented – as they always had, while the bonesingers tearfully sought to save it.

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He looked up. That feeling once more. Someone or something was with him yet again. Why had he not consulted one of the seers? Had he been psychically assaulted during the daemonic incursion? No, for he had sensed this presence since before the attack on Biel-Tan. And why did he feel now that even his present actions were as if he were looking back upon memories misted by time? He gazed at his hands, white gauntlets rarely taken off since the Fragmenting. No longer pristine, they were cracked, grey and tarnished. As was the wraithbone of Biel-Tan itself, ever since the spawn of the Dark Prince had set foot upon it. Would it ever recover?

Above hung a lush planet in the heavens. A globe of azure seas and emerald forests. As he was guardian of Biel-Beithir – the name given the fragment he now lived upon – so Biel-Beithir had been charged with the custody of this world. The maidens of Biel-Tan were more precious than ever.

The crack-riven wraithbone ground shook as a towering form moved to stand at his side and he craned his neck to look up at the bulbous face-plate of the wraithlord. Upon it was fixed a great scintillating ruby soulstone, containing the quintessence of one of his world’s elder heroes. He knew not which, only that this construct had chosen to come with he and his kin upon Biel-Beithir. It spoke not and he could but assume it too felt the horrific loss of the spirits that had not been rescued from the Infinity Circuit in time.

Some said that much of the Circuit and the souls within it had been corrupted, though the seers claimed to have purged all taint.

The construct appeared to watch him and he looked up, from within the shadow of that great warrior, from its inscrutable visage, to the planet above.

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“Ceiba-ny-shak!” he spat as he fumbled to fit a new magazine to his catapult. The trees about him shattered and fell as bolts penetrated and exploded within them. But not his body. Not yet.

The Enemy moved with a speed born of hunger. A hunger to slay him and his kin, yes, but also an eagerness to capture them alive. He knew the markings upon their twisted armour, for the daemons which had assaulted his world those years ago had born the same sigil. To the mon-keigh it appeared to be the fusion of the symbols of their ancient war god and their goddess of love. To the Asuryani it was the mark of She Who Must Not Be Named.

The magazine slid into its receiver and he leaned out from behind the truncated stump long enough to fire off a burst of shurikens. The majority caromed off the roseate armour of one of the renegade brutes – a twisted, fallen version of the Corpse God’s `angels`, but he thanked Khaine that a few made it through a joint, sawing off the bastard’s entire lower leg. As it sprawled he leaned out once more, sending another blast of razor-sharp discs into the face of its helmet. It dropped, motionless, but the others had spotted him and once more the forest about him erupted in explosions.

Where were the others? Where were the Scorpions? He had become disoriented when the Enemy had sprung their ambush.

No, that wasn’t it, was it? He had felt it again, hadn’t he? That presence. That haunting. Within his mind. It had looked out through his eyes, it had heard with his ears. Even as he gripped his catapult firmly in his fingers he knew that it too gripped his weapon. It felt the air he breathed in and out as he did. It rode him. It felt all he felt. Had it left him? Had it ever left him? Had he been born this way and only the coming Rhana Dandra had awakened it?

The feeling was maddening. He almost turned his weapon upon himself.

“Mael dannan!” No mercy

The cry went up from his left and he watched as two squads of guardians strode forth, their armour as ragged as his, catapults spitting at the Enemy in their ornate armour of vivid hues and blasted symbols. In their middle strode the wraithlord, cannons and flamers raised.

The Enemy fell back as their flank was assaulted and he raised himself to his feet, rushing to his kin, his own catapult spitting as he moved.

But the wraithlord stumbled. He too faltered as he watched it. It had taken no fire, yet its grand stride became hesitant and still its weapons were silent.

The forest howled with the sonic weapons of the Enemy and their daemonkin, and the chief guardian ordered them on before the spawn of Chaos could regroup. He watched, his sprint slowed to a jog, to a walk, as the wraithlord staggered, raising its great hands toward its long head.

His eyes were drawn to its soulstone, that cyclopean eye upon its tapering brow, which had been narrowly saved from corruption and oblivion. And as the howling, screaming of the Dark Prince’s horde grew in intensity, the glow of the gemstone died as it were consumed from within by some great blackness.

“no...,” the words had barely left his lips when the guardians before him were engulfed in sheets of flame, the wraithlord extending its arms toward them. The scatterlasers upon its shoulders screamed as they spat at his kin. Even as he watched cracks spread like hoarfrost across the face of the towering war machine and foul lilac ichor bubbled up from within those rents.

As he screamed in horror he felt the presence within him again. Unabashed mirth, exhilaration at the depth of sorrow he felt.

Then blackness.

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The marine’s chest heaved. His eyes were so wide it was as if they might erupt from their sockets.

Apothecary Kuru reached under the catafalque-like table and yanked the jacks from the marine’s Atlas socket.

“Noooo!” the marine mewled, gasping for air, pupils dilated like black holes, eyes rolling, “Let me return! Let me return! The excess! The sensation! Such love, such anger, such sorrow. The horror! The horror!” It broke into hysterical laughter.

Kuru nodded sympathetically and patted the restrains over the noise marine’s chest before looking to the comatose figure on the catafalque on the other side of the machine, wires snaking across their scalp. Their Infernal Engine. The Eldar lay still yet its face was contorted terribly. It reminded him of the harlequins they had once faced. Not a pleasant memory.

But it was alive, that was what counted. Riding them via the Engine all too often burned them out entirely. And the soul that was left was a pitiful morsel. Ah but the sensations one could experience! Beyond the ken of man or post-man. To describe it as the autosenses of powered armour allowing one to see beyond the spectrum perceivable by the human eye was a woefully inadequate paradigm.

The large presence at his side shifted. “Has she made contact with them?”

Kuru firmly took the raving marine’s head in his hands, wrenching it round to face him and his superior. His eyes ceased their wandering and attempted to focus.

“Has autarch Qarasion of Carth-Lar made contact yet with Biel-Tan?”

Kuru had a feeling – it was something he could see in the noise marine’s eyes, a mischievous, deceitful glint – that his `patient` would plead failure and request to go under again, but one did not toy with lord Sophusar of the Psychopomps and the noise marine’s eyes finally focused on the Chaos lord in his terminator armour.

“No, my lord.”

The master of the Psychopomps grunted in frustration and stepped away, pacing about the apothecarion.

Kuru released the marine’s head, and the Astartes began mumbling to himself about all that he had seen.

“What of our newfound ally?” the lord looked at the apothecary askance.

“Apostle Angra informs me it is no less than a daemon prince, my lord.”

“Its name?”

“You know how the neverborn are, my lord.”

The servoes of his gauntlets strained as Sophusar cracked his knuckles within his gauntlets. “I will have its fealty. Or its soul.”

Kuru watched as the lord stalked out of the chamber before turning back to the two figures before the Infernal Engine. He unfastened the restrains over the noise marine.

“My turn,” and he grinned over at the prone Eldar.

Kierdale’s notes

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I wrote an IF bit about the Psychopomps’ `Infernal Engine` machine way back when IF started and I wasn’t entirely happy with it, so this theme gave me a chance to revisit and improve upon it, as well as covering Gathering Storm II a bit and introducing a model I’m eager to make this year: a daemon prince from a wraithlord kit.

The Beginning of the End

 

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