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An Interview with a Night Lord
Posted by Tim Sweeney
(A little character building exercise I worked on as I seek to turn Cerck the Night Lord into a worthy antagonist for a novel or series of short stories. This here is a straight quote, which is a little different to anything I have done before.)
“Ah yes, ‘honour’. You thin-bloods rant on and on about your honour as though you invented the concept; as though none of us knew what the word meant as we slaved away creating this crumbling Imperium you serve. But, tell me this, Brother Kruss of the Executioners Chapter of the Corpse-Emperor’s Adeptus Astartes: Have you not done distasteful things for the sake of your honour? Have you not attacked those you thought innocent, killed those you thought did not deserve to die, simply because honour dictated you obey your orders?
Tell me, O Honourable One, did you not betray the very Imperium who names me heretic and traitor, all to honour an oath sworn to the Astral Claws by your ancestors?
What makes you so different to me, then? Was it enthusiasm, perhaps? Did you have to be dragged, kicking and screaming like a child, into doing that which your honour demanded?
I gladly betrayed the Imperium, as did the rest of my Legion and my Father, Konrad Curze himself. The Imperium was built upon the corpses of the Legions – our corpses – brave warriors fighting and dying for the lies of a man who would be a God.
I gladly betrayed a Grandfather who used us, who encouraged us to be the monsters he created and then discarding us as unclean when we were of no further use.
I was a murderer, you know, back on Nostramo. I slit more throats before my tenth birthday than you have in whatever infinitesimal period of time you have served your upstart Chapter. I was a murderer, a rapist, a vicious, violent criminal, and yet I could not in good conscience stand by while the Emperor condemned the Night Lords for being what his Imperium needed us to be. How could I, a noble warrior of the Legiones Astartes, swallow my pride – my honour – while my father and my brothers were so mistreated, ordered to be destroyed by the Emperor who created us?
Kill me if you must, for I have lived and fought and killed for ten thousand years; I have murdered whole worlds and I have eaten the geneseed of loyalist and traitor both. Death holds no fear for one such as I.
You may claim my head and have vengeance on behalf of the mouldering corpse you so fervently serve, but remember this, O Mighty Executioner: The only difference between you and I is that, when the stakes got too high, your Chapter crawled meekly back to the bosom of the Emperor you once betrayed.
We, at least, have the honour to stand by our convictions.”
- Lonalios Cerck (aka ‘the Faceless’), Champion of the Night Lords Traitor Legion, during his interrogation by the Executioners Chapter of the Adeptus Astartes.
Posted in Fiction
Tags: 40k, Chaos, chaos space marines, fan fiction, Fantasy, Fiction, Games Workshop, Night Lords, quotes, Sci Fi, science fantasy, Science Fiction, scifi, short fantasy, Short Fiction, short quotes, Short stories, short story, Space Marine, Space Marines, Warhammer, Warhammer 40000, Warhammer 40k
The Price of Purity
Posted by Tim Sweeney
(a fun little piece I worked on briefly to help me establish a character I might use as an antagonist in a Black Library 40K pitch down the line.)
The Price of Purity
by Tim Sweeney
“I told you this would happen,” whispered Cerck as he drove his fingers through the Iron Warrior’s eyes.
He was very careful not to push too deeply, not wanting the energised talons on his fingertips to penetrate the brain and kill the enemy warrior outright. Oh no, they must pierce the eye lenses just so, and rest against the eyeballs, razored claws ever-so-gently slicing through the pupil. Vision would begin peeling away in black curtains for the instant before the gelatinous masses burst, hissing and popping in the sparking lighting field that encased the Night Lord’s gauntlets.
The Iron Warrior refused to surrender meekly, levelling a heavy punch into Cerck’s stomach even as he began to bellow in agony. Cerck took the blow easily, not bothering to dodge, his ancient armour more than a match for even the mightiest of blows.
“Now, now, a Legionary should never cry,” he laughed as the Iron Warrior’s screams intensified. Cerck took another punch to the chest, weaker this time, more frantic, ignoring it as he jabbed his thumb-talon through the mouth grill of the Iron Warrior’s helm. There was no finesse this time, just a rapid gouge that sliced the tongue down the middle. He gave a little shudder as he felt the gushing blood lap against his hand, bubbling around his claws.
Read the rest of this entry →
Posted in Fiction
Tags: 40k, Black Library, Chaos, fan fiction, fanfiction, Fiction, Games Workshop, Iron Warriors, Night Lords, Sci Fi, Science Fiction, scifi, Short Fiction, Short stories, short story, Space Marines, stories, story, Warhammer, Warhammer 40000, Warhammer 40k, WH40K
The Fabulous One: A Tale of Bile [Part 3]
Posted by Tim Sweeney
The Fabulous One
A Tale of Bile – Part the Third and Last
by Tim Sweeney
“Ah yes, my dear old brother,” continued Fabius Bile, inexplicably feeling as though weeks had gone by since he had last spoken to Gharghath the Unspleened.
“INNNNNTTTTTTRLLLLOOOOOD?!” inquired Gharghath, apparently unsure why Bile was forgoing his usual habit of leading into the story with some form of humorous aside.
Bile ignored the Berzerker bound to his operating altar, staring off into space in what he hoped was a suitably dramatic fashion.
“Him and I were just so very different. Sure, we looked like siblings, what with the chiselled good looks and long, white hair that just can’t be tamed, and we even share a penchant for human-skin trench coats,”
“SEEEEEEEEEEMMMMMILLLLARRRSH!!!” said Gharghath, somewhat smugly in Bile’s opinion. Read the rest of this entry →
Pride Goeth
Posted by Tim Sweeney
Foreword: This story is my attempt at writing something less character driven, instead focusing on a series of rapid viewpoint shifts while still hopefully establishing some hooks in each scene. I took some inspiration from Necropolis by Dan Abnett with what I wanted to accomplish with this one. It is also my first attempt at showing some non-human viewpoints. This has only seen me do a quick twice-over edit so far, so any help, comments, or criticisms will be very much appreciated.
This is another 40k story – Warhammer 40,000, Orks, Space Marines, etc, are all the property of Games Workshop, etc.
Pride Goeth
by Tim Sweeney
“This is my world Captain, not yours,”
The Governor leaned back in his chair, feet placed on the colossal beatiwood desk in a gesture of nonchalance rarely shown in the presence of a warrior-lord of the Adeptus Astartes.
The Captain simply snarled at him, not bothering to speak.
“The mistake you made was hubris,” the Governor withdrew a cigar from the Aquila-stamped case on the desk, voice echoing strangely from his augmetic jaw and throat, “You should have stayed in the void and commanded the fleet,”
He drew the pungent smoke deep into his lungs, the cigar mashed awkwardly between his flesh and iron lips.
“Instead, you decided to play politics on my planet,” the Governor laughed; it came out as a series of harsh buzzes and clicks, “Well, you can see where that got you.”
Bzzt-click. Bzzt-click. Bzzt-click.
Captain Kirov of the Hearteaters Chapter of Space Marines, resplendent in iron and ochre artificer armour, stared across the desk, desperate to lash out.
Unfortunately for him, his arms and legs had been removed hours ago, literally torn from their sockets.
Kirov sat there, little more than shredded armour and mangled torso, Astartes blood leaking slowly from wounds that would have killed a normal man thrice over.
Utterly helpless.
Bzzt-click. Bzzt-click. Bzzt-click.
The Governor continued to laugh. Read the rest of this entry →
Posted in Fiction
Tags: Black Library, Fiction, Games Workshop, Imperial Guard, Orks, Sci Fi, Science Fiction, scifi, Short Fiction, Short stories, short story, Space Marines, stories, story, Warhammer 40000, Warhammer 40k
A Smile Like the Emperor
Posted by Tim Sweeney
Another 40k story based around my Space Marines Chapter, renamed the Lords of Midnight for this story (this will also be altered when I redo the old trilogy). This story was very well received, and I am quite happy with both the concept and execution, particularly the frantic pace.
As usual, Warhammer 40,000, Space Marines, etc, etc, are all trademarks of Games Workshop, and I am not profiting in any way from writing these stories beyond my enjoyment of the wonderfully dark setting.
A Smile Like the Emperor
by Tim Sweeney
Cannot stop! Must not stop!
Brother Daimon Cael repeated this mantra over and over again in his head.
He was hurt; he couldn’t tell how bad, which was as ill an omen as any. His armour was battered and torn, rent in a dozen different places. He could feel the warmth of his lifeblood oozing slowly into his right gauntlet, gently caressing his fingertips.
In spite of all this, Brother Cael smiled. Read the rest of this entry →
Posted in Fiction
Tags: 40k, Adeptus Astartes, astartes, Black Library, Chaos, Fiction, Games Workshop, Short Fiction, Short stories, short story, Space Marines, story, Tim Sweeney, Warhammer, Warhammer 40k
Potential – A short story set within the Warhammer 40,000 Science Fiction Universe
Posted by Tim Sweeney
(This is the long overdue sequel to my story ‘Worthy’; it’s pretty dialogue heavy, so I hope it’s still an entertaining read when compared to the first one. My goal with these stories has been to show the Space Marines of the 40K universe in a different light by putting them in different situations to the usual battlefields. I hope the attempt has been interesting at the very least.
This story is in the process of being rewritten to bring it more in line with the quality I want, I’ll always be proud of this trilogy as my first attempts at getting back into fiction writing, however.
Warhammer 40,000, Space Marines, etc, etc are the property of Games Workshop, and are used here because I love the universe and am not turning a profit based off their work)
Potential
By Tim Sweeney
Corwyn Novak blinked groggily, and attempted to raise his head from the cold, hard surface it was pressed against. The pain hit him before the room had even swum into focus, and it hit with all the power of a narcced-up heavy.
He felt consciousness slowly ebb away, but not before noting that he was not alone; male voices, deep and echoing, seemed to fill the space around him in an unnatural way. Novak did not have much time to ponder this before darkness descended upon him.
Blinking awake once more, Novak lay perfectly still and resisted the urge to immediately curl up into a ball; he almost desperately wanted to welcome back the soothing darkness, the pain was that intense.
Trying to focus instead on the somewhat relaxing vibrations that seemed to be emanating from all around him, he began trying to puzzle out just where he was; this was a far more appealing exercise than thinking about the agony he was experiencing, particularly in his chest. Worse still, he could not seem to remember why he was hurt so bad.
Suddenly he remembered the voices. Sure enough, a deep male voice soon echoed throughout the chamber, speaking with a cadence that sounded unnatural to Novak’s ear.
“Any change in number two’s vital signs?” the voice spoke in a hushed tone, which nonetheless carried quite clearly due to the obvious power behind it, “I grow weary of playing the medicae; surely one of the med-servitors would be more suitable to the task?” Humour warred with tones of frustration in his voice, as though he were being less than serious in his griping.
“You wish to shirk your duties to our Chapter then, do you Brother Faer’dalis? Honour’s truth, sometimes I wonder how you became one of us; you should have ended your days in a Penal Battalion on your homeworld,” this voice was deeper, and sounded…older somehow, more cultured. Novak was struggling to understand what they were saying, and not just due to their peculiar offworlder accents; their voices were so deep, and reverberated in such a way that it almost did not sound like human speech.
As the pair continued trading jibes, he got the sense that this conversation was one repeated by rote; a verbal joust between friends, rather than legitimate criticism or words of anger. But something about these odd voices was making alarm klaxons blare inside Corwyn Novak’s skull.
“Sometimes, Brother-Sergeant Brachuss, I think you take the minor aspects of the Manifest too literally; why would two unconscious potentials need two full Astartes to dote over them like mother gernfangs after the rut?”
Novak had a sudden moment of horrid realisation. Brachuss echoed through his mind, and he knew this was the being that had caused all his pain.
All coherent thought ended when his mind caught up with the rest of what the one named Faer’dalis was saying; Astartes.
Oh God-Emperor, he remembered.
Astartes.
The Angels of Death.
ASTARTES!
Memory came flooding back. He had been on his final induction run with the Greenskinnaz, his soon-to-be gang. It was an easy run; follow some poor mark through the underhive, and scout the way so the rest of the gang could jump him and make off with the loot.
O, Lord Emperor, the beginning words of the Prayer to the Saviour of Reach’s World leapt into his thoughts, unbidden.
It should have been easy. But then this simple mark, seeming to be some idiot up-spire rich boy slumming it for the night, had somehow killed every member of the gang in no time flat. He had pinned Novak to the wall with a knife through his chest, and had casually revealed that his name was Brachuss, and he was a Space Marine.
When all appeared lost, You guided us through darkest night,
He had then beaten Novak into a bloody pulp and finished the job.
When we were alone, Your hand, the Angels of Death, saved us from oblivion,
Except, thought Novak, I’m obviously still alive!
And, just as obviously, he wasn’t lying in an abandoned building somewhere, bleeding to death in the ruins of Hive Guellermo.
His internal recitation of the prayer trailed off as quickly as it had begun; I’m still alive!
Now I just have to keep it that way.
Determination flowing through him, Novak slowly turned his head, the room finally coming into focus. The small space was dark, a dim maroon light source directly above him the only source of illumination. Even with this he had no trouble locating the two gigantic figures seated at a row of consoles on the opposite side of the room.
One had what appeared to be long, blood-red hair, but which probably would have been a pale blonde or white under more normal lighting conditions. He was obviously the younger, with a surprisingly boyish face despite the huge amount of muscle and copious amounts of scarring covering his huge, loin-cloth clad body. Novak noticed with a start that the young Astartes’ left eye was missing, replaced instead by a state-of-the-art (and thus incredibly expensive) mechanical unit, which glowed a fiery blue in the dim light.
The other was Brachuss. Novak remembered the scarred face, the short red hair, and the impeccably manicured goatee that was so unlike what he pictured an Astartes to look like;
It’s amazing what you take the time to notice, he thought, when there’s a knife through your lung.
During the encounter in the underhive, this monster had been wearing nothing more than a loincloth and holster rig; the rig was gone, but Brachuss still had his gigantic pistol clutched in his hands. He seemed to be polishing it.
“The most honoured Bautista may have been in a rush to leave that Emperor-forsaken place,” Faer’dalis was saying; Novak suddenly realised that he had not been paying attention to their resumed conversation. “But I think we should have taken a closer look at the local gangs; where there are two potentials, there may be more, and the Inquisitor’s precious schedule be damned!”
“You should not say such things about the Inquisitor, Brother Faer’dalis; I tolerate some of the vitriol that you spout, but rest assured that such comments will not go unpunished if you utter them where he-,”
He cut off abruptly.
Novak froze; he had groaned softly when he had heard the word Inquisitor; who in their right mind wouldn’t have, especially when added on top of Space Marines! But surely they couldn’t have heard him.
“Well Brother, it looks as though one of our guests is awake; Number One I believe…Novak, wasn’t it?”
Novak opened his eyes, and looked up into the face of a nightmare.
He couldn’t speak.
“I believe I asked you a question?”
When confronted in the hive, wounded and watching his friends being slaughtered, Novak had been full of defiance in the face of this monster. Now, looking into it’s eyes from his back, laying on what was obviously a medicae table, Novak struggled to find the nerve to even open his mouth.
“N-N-Novak,” he hated himself for stuttering, “Corwyn Novak, Greenskinnaz,” the gang name came unbidden to his lips, an automatic reaction in the gang-controlled underhive.
“Greenskinnaz?” Faer’dalis laughed uproariously, “As though any of your lot have even seen a Greenskin!” Brachuss’ lips twitched, as though he too was restraining himself from laughter.
Novak felt a bit of warmth rush to his face. “We have too; the gang fought and wiped out a whole infestation of Gretchin after the Great Invasion. We were heroes throughout the whole underhive!” he said angrily; they may have been Astartes, but they had no right to laugh at him…of course, he hadn’t actually been born when the battle had occurred against the Gretchin, but they didn’t need to know that.
“Gretchin? Gretchin! Primarchs alive boy, if you think Gretchin qualify as Greenskins, you are sadly mistaken. When your petty little gang has fought and slain Orks by the thousands, then we shall talk-,”
“Enough, Faer’dalis. They fought for their hive; they have their honour, and we should not take it away.” Brachuss was looking at Novak once more, his scarred face scanning him from head to toe and back again, as though he were acutely aware of exactly how far the honour of lying ganger scum ran.
“I am impressed that you are awake so soon; most that I beat wake up after many days of medicae treatment, if indeed they wake at all. This bodes well for you, young Novak, if not for your companion there.” Brachuss’ mouth twisted peculiarly; it took Novak a second to realise it was meant to be a friendly smile. It looked completely alien upon his scarred, patrician features.
Novak’s confusion must have shown on his face, although it was thankfully misinterpreted.
“Still haven’t worked it out lad?” came Faer’dalis’ taunting brogue, “you’re not in the hive anymore; you aren’t even on Reach’s World,”
Novak felt his eyes widen with shock; surely they don’t mean…?
“So you can think for yourself when pointed in the right direction, at least. Boy, you have the distinct honour of being aboard the Inquisitorial cutter Stiletto, bound for our Strike Crui-,”
Mercifully, the sound of his voice was cut off by the warbling of the vox-caster; as it was, Novak felt as though he was about to vomit.
Throne, he thought, I’m in space!
“Terra, I am becoming sick to death of being interru-,” Faer’dalis was cut-off by a sudden keening from the row of monitors behind him; even as he whirled around to face them, the noise cut off as suddenly as it had begun.
“It appears that your fellow potential was not as fortunate as yourself, young Novak,” Brachuss said solemnly, “he has succumbed to his wounds.”
“May he shelter in the palm of the Emperor’s hand,” the pair of giants intoned softly.
Novak stared at the corpse in shock; he didn’t even know the other juve, but they had at least been from the same city, the same world.
Now I’m truly facing this alone, he thought.
Staring at the two Space Marines, feeling almost numb from the shock of everything that had happened so far, he spoke without thinking, “Where are you taking me? Why kidnap me instead of just murdering me like you did the rest of my crew? WHAT DO YOU MEAN, POTENTIAL?”
He suddenly realised he was shouting; the pain, the shock, the anger, he just couldn’t take it anymore.
Why are they doing this to me?
Faer’dalis was talking softly into the vox-caster; Brachuss slowly raised his head and looked Novak dead in the eyes.
“We are taking you, young Novak, to our Strike Cruiser, the An Amber Mourning. I would draw your attention to the fact that your ‘crew’, as you put it, were planning on murdering me in cold blood…”
Novak gulped.
“I captured you as an enemy combatant worthy of honour, and I spared your life because I tasted your blood-,”
Novak interrupted as politely as he could, terrified by the reminder that his gang had tried (and failed) to murder this monster, “I’m sorry, my blood?” His voice sounded shrill in his own ears, and he noticed absently that Faer’dalis wore a mean-spirited grin upon his face, “why would you spare me because you tasted my blood?”
“I tasted your blood because my Neuroglottis organ allowed me to determine a wide variety of important things about you, particularly your age.”
Novak had the sudden feeling that he would regret asking the next question, but he couldn’t stop himself.
“Why is my age important?”
Brachuss’ lips curved in a smile; unlike the awkward, friendly effort of before, this one held no warmth at all. It was the look of an animal about to pounce on an unsuspecting prey, and it looked far more natural upon the Space Marines grizzled face.
“Your age is important Novak, because potential members of our Chapter must be in their teen years to be eligible to walk among us,”
Novak’s jaw fell open; he couldn’t breathe.
“When I saw how hard you fought me, even knowing how badly you were overmatched, I suspected you might have what it takes; when you awoke from the injures I gave you and showed the ability to remain calm in what is obviously a highly stressful situation, you confirmed that my instincts were correct…and all of this in a boy of only fourteen!
He continued mercilessly,
“You will come aboard the Mourning, you will travel with us to our home, and you will face the seven trials that will make you one of us,”
“Although you will most likely die in the attempt!” Faer’dalis threw in cheerfully.
“I may simply have delayed your inevitable demise,” continued Brachuss, “but if you somehow manage to triumph in the challenges ahead, young Novak, you will become a Lord of Midnight and we shall be battle-brothers! What say you, then, to a warrior’s life of violence, faithfully serving the Emperor and the Imperium until you finally embrace death?”
Corwyn Novak almost managed to speak before he fainted dead away.
Posted in Fiction
Tags: Fiction, Games Workshop, Sci Fi, Science Fiction, Short Fiction, Short stories, Space Marines, Warhammer 40, Warhammer 40k
Worthy – A short story set within the Warhammer 40,000 Science Fiction Universe
Posted by Tim Sweeney
(Space Marines, Warhammer 40,000 and a whole bunch of other things appearing in this story are the property of Games Workshop. This story was written for a 40k website, the Bolter and Chainsword
UPDATE: This story was recently chosen to be published in the Bolter and Chainsword Librarium, and as such I’ve gone through it and made some changes to bring it up to scratch.)
UPDATE2: This story is being completely redone (along with both sequels), the new versions will be available soon.
Worthy
By Tim Sweeney
The shrouded figure walked slowly through the flickering shadows of the under-hive streets. He was huge; as large a man as had ever been seen by the derelicts peering through shattered windows, or around the corners of crumbling habs.
He moved with his head down, face hidden within the all-encompassing folds of his plain grey robes. There was no way that he could have seen the dozen shadowy figures stalking him silently overhead. It didn’t matter.
He could smell them.
Brachuss had sensed the young men falling in around him some time ago; he had smelt the sickly-sweet sweat and the cloying musk of obscura smoke that clung to their unwashed bodies. He had heard the slight noise of their breathing and he had tasted their exhilaration, as well as their fear.
He knew that a particularly dark, abandoned manufactorum was but a few hundred metres up the road. He tensed imperceptibly as he prepared for the gangers to finally work up the courage to make their move.
Brachuss knew the impoverished gang members had probably mistaken him for an up-hive guard or gladiator; a vat-grown slab of muscle, richly decorated by his even richer masters. They probably thought he was slumming in the underhive for amusement; perhaps he had had too much to drink and was looking for trouble; maybe he sought to impress a particular lady friend with his sheer courage.
The poor fools could not have been more wrong.
As he crossed the road towards the abandoned factory, he sensed one of the men snicker at their unbelievable luck; the mark was walking right into a dank, decrepit, and completely soundproof abandoned building! The soft click of weapon safeties being flicked off followed Brachuss as he strode into the pitch-dark entrance way.
The first shots rang out with alarming celerity; clearly murdering their victim and robbing his corpse was more important to the impoverished, desperate gangers than bravado or empty threats.
Brachuss moved out from behind the old cogitator he had taken cover behind, fully thirty metres further along the manufactorum floor than it should have been possible for him to reach; they had only lost sight of him for the split second it had taken him to walk through the complex doorway.
As the gang members swung their rifles around to aim at this surprisingly fast target, Brachuss shrugged out of his robes and sprang straight upwards, latching onto the catwalk opposite the gangers and pulling himself to a standing position in one swift movement.
Brachuss heard the gunfire wane as the gangers felt the first inklings of true fear; he could smell it on them, a thick miasma as they realised their intended victim was not what he seemed.
He stood there, an errant beam of pure white light shining upon him through a fissure in one of the structure walls. His seven-and-a-half feet tall, perfectly muscled form was clothed only in a brief loincloth and bandoleer, but the stark white light seemed to encase him in the armour of an angel of death.
The enemy stood stunned for only a moment; they recovered their wits quickly, and autoguns that had fallen slack in their owners’ hands rose to target the terrifyingly majestic form standing before them.
They were fast, but not as fast as he was; they were good fighters, cunning and forged in the heat of vicious street warfare, but they were not as good as he was. They were only human.
He was more.
As the first shots began to ricochet off the walls around him, Brother-Sergeant Elkin Tileath Brachuss of the Adeptus Astartes Lords of Twilight chapter raised his bolt pistol and carefully squeezed off two perfectly aimed shots. Small explosions briefly lit the interior of the manufactorum, the bolt rounds serving both to kill his targets instantly and to reveal further enemies cowering in the dark.
As his first two victims were still in the process of detonating, Brachuss somersaulted off the catwalk. He landed amongst two more gangers that had dropped to the floor to seek cover; both died with shocked expressions on their faces. He sensed a fifth juve attempting to sneak up behind him; a backhand throw pinned this would-be attacker to the wall, a combat knife through his chest.
The Emperor had protected the marine, but he knew that His providence could only extend so far. With a few parting shots fired at the gangers still sheltering on the catwalks above, Brachuss fled into what looked like an old office, long abandonned. Once inside, he took little time to survey his surroundings; instead he leapt through the window and ran silently up the stairs that standard Imperial manufactorum design said would be in the next room. It took the Marine little time to work through the innards of the manufactorum, and soon he had doubled back on the remainder of the gang.
The gangers were still sheltering between old machinery on the first story catwalks. One figure, an obvious leader both by his bearing and the relative finery of his apparel, was exhorting his comrades to hunt down ‘the gladiator’. He told them that there would be more creds to go around now that there were fewer members of the band. It appeared that the efforts of the gang leader were finally having an effect; his men (some were little more than boys) were preparing to move out.
Brachuss smiled. He rolled off the platform he had been crouched upon, landing silently on his bare feet in the midst of the juves. The gang boss sensed the presence behind him and spun, his laspistol rising to aim at this new target; Brachuss’ fist exited the back of his skull before he could fire his first shot.
Before any of the stunned gang members could begin to react, Brachuss dropped into a crouch and clenched his jaw, spitting highly corrosive acid into the face of the nearest ganger. Reacting with preternatural speed, he spun on the spot, firing a bolt round into the chest of a startled-looking juve. He was darting around an old storage unit, scanning for the next enemy, before the agonised gurgling of the victim of his acidic spit had finally ceased.
In the entire combat so far, Brachuss had flawlessly killed seven enemies, possibly an eighth if his knife throw had been fatal. His precocious attack had been perfectly in keeping with the tenets of the Lords of Twilight; hit hard, hit fast and execute all actions to perfection. The Sergeant had lived up to his creed admirably, but his alacrity in getting amongst the foe had finally led to his first mistake.
The gang had shown themselves to be fairly skilled, making up for their lack of direct combat experience with the ruthlessness and cunning that life in the underhive often brings about. They had ambushed a target with close to military precision, and had adapted well when their target had begun systematically taking them apart. Yet with this monster close in amongst them, killing them seemingly at will, all discipline within their ranks broke down.
Four gangers remained in the fight; four young men with the focus of their terror appearing from behind cover straight into their midst. Four gang members stared at their enemy from four different directions, and as one they let rip with their rifles, spraying the area on full auto.
Brachuss realised his mistake even as the first round took him between the shoulder blades. He dove headlong into a roll and managed to avoid sustaining further hits, but even as he raised his pistol to kill the impertinent fool that had shot him, he saw the ganger become the victim of the vicious crossfire his terrified friends had begun.
He was angry now. Up to this point it had been a test; a game to challenge the marine and any of the young men that were worthy. But he had failed the test; he had not been perfect. The dogs had struck him, and now it was time to strike back.
With a roar like an avalanche, Brachuss broke from cover and charged the nearest ganger. He barely registered two more shots hitting him; one taking him in the thigh, the other the left shoulder. He clubbed the juve to the ground brutally, the butt of his pistol caving in his skull. Knowing what was to come, Brachuss lifted the broken body in his hand. Feeling the impacts of the solid slug ammunition hitting his makeshift shield, Brachuss stood in the open and coldly executed the final two gangers before tossing the brutalised corpse to the ground.
He stood still and focused for a moment, mentally castigating himself for the loss of discipline, the loss of perfection that had come about due to his hubris. He had decided to enjoy himself and he had paid the price for his arrogance. It was a mistake that he had made in the past; one that all the marines of his chapter had made in the past. He knew he would make it again. It was the curse of the Lords of Twilight; the pursuit of perfection always just out of reach. Although the physical wounds barely fazed the marine, they were a suitable reminder of the sins of pride.
These dark thoughts were interrupted by a scuffling sound from the floor of the manufactorum. Peering over the edge of the catwalk, Brachuss was surprised to find that one of his victims was still alive.
Dropping to the floor, Brachuss quietly approached the juve. He was still pinned to the wall, the combat knife thrown so viciously that the crossbar had become wedged in the ganger’s ribs. It must have been tremendously painful, but the ganger made not a sound; he simply attempted to pull the blade free with his one working arm, fingers scrabbling uselessly at the hilt.
He showed no sign of fear at Brachuss approach, instead going so far as to spit at the marine. The Marine noted the blood in the young man’s sputum; the knife had obviously ruptured a lung, and it appeared unlikely that he would live a great deal longer without medicae attention. Brachuss stood gravely in front of his victim, and his sheer size seemed to diminish the juve’s defiant posture somewhat.
“What is your name?”
It was the first time that Brachuss had spoken since the fight had begun, and it seemed unnatural to hear such a well-modulated, cultured voice coming from such a being, especially containing as it did a modicum of respect.
The juve tried to spit at him again, but did not seem to have the strength, instead mumbling “What are you?”
“I am of the Astartes young warrior, and I believe I asked you a question,”
The juve blanched, his face white with fear; even with everything he had seen this monster do, he could not believe that this was a Space Marine!
When no answer was forthcoming, Brachuss decided this encounter had gone on long enough. He stepped forward to break the young warrior’s neck, believing the fate to be more honourable than slowly drowning in his own blood. The juve had other ideas however, and as Brachuss stepped forward the ganger ripped the knife from his own chest and leapt at the startled marine. He was not so startled however, as to miss catching the young man’s arm and casually stop it from reaching his flesh.
“My name is Novak, you son of a twist, and I’m the man who killed you!”
Brachuss’ laughter stole some of the wounded young warrior’s thunder. “Well Novak,” he began, “I admire your single-mindedness, if nothing else. Perhaps this little encounter has not been in vain after all.” With that, Brother-Sergeant Brachuss ripped the knife from the juve’s hands and proceeded with incapacitating him.
After carefully landing enough blows to render the young warrior compliant, Brachuss removed the vox from his bandoleer and signalled Inquisitor Bautista for the pickup. Brachuss and his fellow Lords of Twilight had come here at the Inquisitor’s request due to the ancient debt, but perhaps this Emperor-forsaken journey to Reach’s World would have an upside after all.
“This is Brachuss. I have one that may be worthy, but he is in need of emergency medicae attention. The Emperor Protects,”
“Acknowledged, Brother-Sergeant. Stiletto inbound. The Emperor Protects,”
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Tags: Fiction, Games Workshop, Inquisitor, Sci Fi, Science Fiction, Short Fiction, Short stories, Space Marines, Warhammer 40, Warhammer 40k