[Crossover Fanfiction, Complete] Specialists

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Urist
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[Crossover Fanfiction, Complete] Specialists

Post by Urist »

Author's NotesShow
So, here's the Warhammer 40k crossover that I've been working on for the last few months. I've had a lot of fun writing it, and I hope people will enjoy reading it!
Prologue: Ambush

The watch-change bell rang, waking Alexander Jardin from his sleep. He rolled out of bed, placing both feet on the comfortingly-cool slate tiles of his chamber.

All twenty by thirty feet of it, that is. “Representative of the Family” or not, here aboard the Bellarmine his being the official House Trask representative — albeit from a cadet branch — bought him little personal room compared to the ship’s officers.

He knew cousins of his that had had people executed for trying to squeeze them into staterooms larger than this.

But it was all his, and so would more than suffice. After all, a refitted Cobra-class destroyer had little enough room to spare, anyways. His few personal possessions fit comfortably into a corner of the room, a neatly-stacked pile whose small size lent it a near-comical air.

He knew that many of the ship’s officers looked down upon his… ‘austere’ lifestyle. That they felt a proper Family representative should display House Trask’s wealth and influence as a sign of their Emperor-given authority over all aboard. That they grumbled about how his trainers and teachers must have failed to instill the proper lessons into their young pupil, for him to live a life so unseemly for a man born of his station.

They were right, in more ways than one.

He had not been trained for this duty, to be posted aboard one of the Family’s vessels and serve out his duty to the God-Emperor, House Trask, and the Family homeworld of Tallarn — in that order — as had so many of his cousins before him. He hadn’t even been born for it, technically.

But then had come the Great Rift.

Without warning, the Imperium was split in two… and so was the Family. More than half of House Trask’s vessels, planetary and orbital bases, contacts, all of it separated by this monstrous strike by the Great Enemy. It was only by the God-Emperor’s own Grace that great-aunt Mariya — the Family’s own head and holder of the sacred Warrant of Trade itself — had been on Tallarn itself at the time of the Rift.

She had reacted to the literally galaxy-shattering disaster as any Rogue Trader with her centuries of experience would do: she set about ensuring that the Family would profit from it.

New ships had been ordered from what shipyards remained in contact that owed the Family favors, and if those vessels were perhaps smaller than those that a Trask — or even a Jardin — would have been seen traveling aboard earlier, then that would serve only to remind them what they had lost and were tasked to regain.

New contacts were sought, among the disrupted power structures of the remaining Imperium. Admirals and generals who suddenly found themselves in urgent need of supplies to carry out their desperate new orders, Inquisitors whose normal routes of travel had been interrupted and required new transport... and Planetary governors whose preferred cosmetics or favorite bottles of Valhallan spirits were suddenly out-of-supply thanks to the rather rude machinations of the Great Enemy.

But old contacts were searched out as well, ones whose ties with the Family went back millennia… if only intermittently. And so it was that a very young Alexander Jardin had found himself assigned to liaise with… ‘foreign’ co-workers.

It had been best not to throw the term ‘xenos’ around too much after all, no matter how tempting it had been.

Once he had finished dressing, Alex knelt by the side of his bed for morning prayers. His daily devotions in the ship’s chapel would come later; those were meant more to keep up appearances rather than out of any public expression of faith. No, a man with his powers had a more… direct understanding of the Emperor, whose universal presence he was especially aware of.

“Our Emperor, who art on Terra...” he intoned his way through the stilted High Gothic of the morning’s Ave Imperators. The familiar white-hot glow tingled deep in his mind, as his inner eye picked up the distant glow of His light.

It had been that reassuring, holy presence that had kept him sane during those months aboard the Eldar vessel. The small flotilla led by Alaith Yndrael had long served as the link between Biel-Tan and those few on Tallarn who remembered the ancient alliance against Chaos. Derided as ‘Corsairs’ by their Craftworld brethren mostly because of that contact, they had strayed from the strict rules of their people far enough to agree to take aboard a single young human, as a ‘favor’ to House Trask.

Not a task for which the House would have risked one of its full-blooded children, but having been adopted into the Family as an infant Alex was perhaps judged as a more… ‘fitting’ choice of envoy.

While he had understood even then that he was there more as ‘hostage’ than as ‘student,’ it had been a duty which he fulfilled happily enough. After all, ever since his powers as a psyker had first manifested two years earlier, he had lived in constant dread of the inevitable arrival of the next Black Ship over Tallarn. But those craft did not visit Eldar squadrons, and the xenos among whom he found himself eventually taught him — mostly for their own amusement, he was quite certain — to… ‘shield’ his powers when needed. To hide both from other humans with the Sight and also — albeit with much less reliability — from the foul denizens of the Immaterium.

And so he had been carried along when Yndrael rushed to the defense of Biel-Tan when that Craftworld came under assault by the vile forces of Chaos. But the flotilla, ever scouting far ahead of the ponderous world-ship, arrived too late. Where once a single, grand Craftworld had soared defiantly through the stars, only a shattered fleet of fragments remained.

It had… not been a good time to be the sole resident human aboard Yndrael’s ship. The xenos normally kept their emotions tightly controlled, but for that first day he had seen what it looked like when they let their anger flow freely. None had turned their fury directly upon Alex, but he had spent many hours hiding in the most out-of-the-way corridor he could find aboard the strange, inhuman craft.

The only one to keep his temper had been Yndrael himself. The Corsair Captain had returned from a meeting aboard a fragment of the Craftworld and immediately called Alex to his cabin. There, he had explained two things:

One, that Biel-Tan’s own Seers had glimpsed a future discovery which must be made, an ancient weapon of their people last seen in an uncolonized sector of worlds, well beyond the fringe of even their pre-Fall Empire.

Two, that Alex would somehow be personally involved in that rediscovery. “The Searcher shall discover the Weapons, and he shall recover them, yet the Self-Taught Seer shall wield them.” indeed. And that he must set out on this journey by himself, supposedly, without any allies present. A worrying thought.

Remarkably direct and straight-forward as Yndrael’s explanation had been — for an Eldar, of course — it had left Alex’s head spinning. A condition which had persisted even as the xenos had provided him with the copied star-charts that would lead him towards his foreseen destiny.

Even as the House Trask shuttlecraft arrived for him a week later.

Even as he had been spirited away and assigned to the Bellarmine, an older exploration vessel of their House. The advice of Eldar was ever-untrustworthy, and so ‘he shall pursue this Journey alone’ turned into ‘alone with the exception of a House voidship and its crew.’

Only when that ship had leaped into the insidious embrace of the Empyrean had he been truly jolted from his reverie. Even with the Gellar fields fully-engaged — praise Him on Terra… and the ship’s Enginseers — any psyker, even one as weakly-talented as Alex, knew when they had plunged into those grasping, pitiless depths.

Which brought him to today.

Alex stood in front of his chamber door, drawing his shoulders back. His House uniform — bright orange, with blue and gold trim — was as immaculate as ever. Fitting, for clothes that he had only recently began to wear regularly. Now that his duties to the House had placed him in a position of no slight authority, he had only to see them carried out properly. And of course, to be seen by a ship’s crew as displaying anything less than a House-appropriate level of grace and wealth would be to disregard those duties.

With an image to maintain, he stepped out through the opening door.

“Good morning, sleepyhead! I was worried that you’d dozed through the alarm!”

There might be a… slight challenge to his air of formal authority.

Armswoman Kirkland grinned up at him, arms crossed across her chest. He knew that the House had to assign a personal guard to someone like him, even being from a cadet branch of the Family. Perhaps especially so, given that his ability to peer into the Immaterium — even if only faintly — warranted having a close guard to keep an eye on him.

Just in case.

But from all of the vast numbers of trained fighters that House Trask could call upon, did they have to pick Ellen?

“What’s the matter? Gyrinx got your tongue?” his childhood friend winked.

He glanced down along the corridor. Empty. He flashed a wry grin. “’Gyrinx,’ really? Have you ever even seen one of those xenos-pets?”

“No. But maybe you have, recently?” Even as she replied in the familiar teasing tone that he had grown up alongside, Ellen nodded meaningfully towards the next doorway at the end of the corridor.

Right. He started walking, Ellen keeping pace. “Yndrael had none of them aboard. At least, none that I ever saw.” He muttered “If anything, I think I was the ship’s pet.”

Ellen snorted. “Sounds like xenos, all right. But you survived, and it probably gave you a good taste of humility, mister high-and-mighty House hotshot!” The laughter in her voice took any bite out of her words.

One thing that his rank did get for him was a stateroom quite near Bellarmine’s bridge. And so it was that the two of them shortly stepped out into the cavernous room.

The heady scent of incense warring with sacred machine-oils, the droning hum of cogitators and the clacking of fingers against the control-runes, the radiant golden light of the overhead illuminators… it was all just as he had dreamed of as a child.

And if Bellarmine was not specifically his to command, at least he had a position of authority aboard her. One that the younger Alexander of several years ago could only have dreamt of, while being kept in seclusion by the Family and hidden from the Black Ships.

The tall figure at the center of the bridge turned to look at Alex and Ellen over his shoulder, fixing them with a knowing, calculating look.

One that was definitely familiar to him. Lord-Captain Hamilton was among the House’s seniormost ship-commanders, and while not technically part of the Family he was always to be found at any formal gathering of House Trask whenever he was available. And with his rejuvenat-extended centuries of experience, he had forever been a rather intimidating figure in Alex’s life.

“Lord-Captain Hamilton.” Alex inclined his head in a shallow bow. Family member or not, the man had earned such respect. And then some. “We approach our destination?”

“Within minutes, Liaison.”

And wasn’t it a weird feeling to have Carl Hamilton himself addressing him by such a Family title?

Alex walked up to stand behind and to one side of Hamilton, Ellen taking the same position behind him.

The Lord-Captain continued, in a quieter voice “Is there anything that you can… see about our arrival point?”

“No more than what I have shared already, I’m afraid.” Alex responded in the same way. “It is… uh, a great challenge to peer through the very Immaterium to see where our future lies ahead.” He stumbled slightly at putting his thoughts into words. “Especially in this region, despite our proximity to the Astronomican’s light.”

Which was part of why there were only the sparsest of records on what might be found in this area of space, even so deep within the Segmentum Solar. ‘Regio Silens,’ the astro-maps called it. A most unusual effect blanketed the region, presumed to be some inverted variant of a Warp Storm: the Mechanicus Explorators who had first attempted to chart the area many millennia ago had found their vessels utterly unable to force open an exit Warp portal within the area, and had to divert past their intended destination. Slower-than-light servitor-probes had confirmed that the area held little of interest, only the usual mix of near-habitable planets.

The latest probe, only two-thousand years prior, had registered a few primitive xenos races, but none worth worrying about. They were planet-bound and would remain so, being unfortunate enough to have developed in a region where no true interstellar travel could be possible.

It had been judged as not worthy of further investigation or expansion into an area that would be functionally isolated from the greater Imperium, and written off long ago as merely one more strange discovery in a galaxy teeming with far worse. A bubble of useless space barely three-hundred light-years across was of only trifling interest to Humanity.

Yet the Eldar had spoken with — apparent — certainty that Alex would successfully travel to the region. For whatever such assurances from xenos were worth. After all, their ‘vision’ had mentioned nothing of just how he would actually reach the area; Bellarmine planned to make a series of attempts to exit the Immaterium near the Regio Silens; if none worked any better than the Mechanicus’ earlier tries, then they would move on to more unusual methods.

Hamilton grunted. “I see.” Then, in a louder voice, he called to one of his bridge officers, “Ensure that all weapons emplacements are ready upon our return to the Materium.” To another, “Bring the void shields online as soon as we have completed transition.”

One did not survive to become an old voidship captain by taking needless risks, after all.

“Less than one minute until emergence, Lord-Captain.” reported the ship’s helmswoman, turning her head slightly to speak over her shoulder. The data cables which snaked up one arm and were implanted in the side of her skull rattled softly at the movement.

“Very well. Signal all armsmen to stand ready, and—”

Bellarmine trembled underfoot, ripping an exit vector out of the resisting Immaterium amidst a groan of stressed metal... and other things.

Alex shrugged. Estimating travel time through the Empyrean was a rather imprecise job at the best of times; if anything, the ship’s Navigator should be congratulated for being within a minute of the expected time.

And more to the point, they had arrived. He had felt how Bellarmine cut her way free of the Immaterium in much the same way that a human fortunate enough not to have been born a psyker would feel a great weight suddenly lifted from his shoulders.

At which point the magnitude of their accomplishment crashed in upon him. They were the first manned human craft — servitors didn’t count — to have ever visited this region!

The grand shutters at the front of the bridge rattled upwards, revealing the inky blackness of space. The empty void, stretching out before them.

Well, mostly empty.

“Contact!” shouted one of the bridge crew even as a cogitator shrieked its own warning siren. “Unknown vessel, directly ahead of us, nose-on. Range is thirty thousand kilometers and closing fast!”

The servo-screens of the bridge windows highlighted the target vessel, but Alex didn’t need their help.

After all, he could feel the unknown ship’s signature, through the Warp.

It was not a good feel.

“They are charging weapons!” he hissed, a moment before Bellarmine’s sensor officer gave the same alarm.

Alex’s eyes ached as they rolled back, the pain adding yet one more layer to the difficulty of peering ahead through the onrushing strands of time. But these were circumstances that certainly called for him to rush his powers. Even if he had never been able before to see past a mere minute or two into the future, that may prove decisive here.

After all, the other vessel’s perfect positioning, in the incomprehensibly-vast emptiness of space, could not be an accident.

It was an ambush.

Yes, he could see it now…

Bellarmine rumbled/would rumble underfoot, her single forward macrocannon loosing a round even as her maneuvering thrusters fought to shove her five-point-seven megaton bulk aside.

The round streaked/would streak through the intervening distance in a heartbeat, impacting and splashing against the armored prow of her target. A target which made no attempt to dodge, accepting the hit in order to line up their own return shot.

A shot which came/will come in the form of a lance beam.

The oversized weapon leapt out/will leap from the small vessel, grazing past Bellarmine’s forward hull and slamming into her bridge windows.

Which shattered/will shatter under the impact, sending spall fragments whistling through—

“Look out!” Alex shouted, turning and roughly shoving Ellen away from him.

For a frozen moment in time, her look of utter and complete confusion stared back at him as she hung in mid-air, off-balance.

Then, before she had time to hit the floor, the world exploded.

Bridge crewmen cried out.

Servitors shrieked their confusion.

Cogitators spat sparks and died.

A chunk of structural metal twice as thick as Alex’s own body whistled past him, a centimeter away from his skin.

Right through the space where Ellen had stood a half-second before.

Rushing air tugged at him.

The deck underfoot bucked, hurling him up off the floor.

Ellen reached out one hand for him, but she was so far away now.

And getting further.

The empty hole where one of the bridge windows had stood only moments before — had done so for the many millennia of Bellarmine’s proud service — enveloped him.

Flashed past him.

Dozens of other voidsmen were vented outside along with him, yanked through the gaping rents in Bellarmine’s structure by the truly explosive decompression.

Some were already motionless, blood flash-boiling into a hazy corona around their broken forms.

Others struggled, writhing pointlessly against the pitiless grasp of hard vacuum.

Trained reflexes brought Alex’s hand down to the breather-mask hanging at his waist. Not something he’d ever thought he’d need on this mission, but it would become useful now.

Slapping it across his face, he fixed the strap behind his head. And pulled in a ragged, hurried — not panicked! — breath.

Stars drifted past him. He was tumbling, but slowly.

Only allowing his eyes to move, he tracked Bellarmine as she spun into view. Her warp-portal closed behind her, the destroyer’s engines flaring as she continued to dodge aside.

Wreckage still streamed in a thin trail from her bridge.

A grievous blow, yes, but not enough to disable a vessel built to the ancient and sturdy guidelines of human shipwrights. Bellarmine would launch shuttles any moment now, to recover her drifting survivors even as she fought off her ambusher. A lance battery took much longer to reload than a macrocannon when mounted on a sub-sized vessel such as the enemy craft; Bellarmine held the advantage in this battle.

But then why was she still maneuvering?

A streak entered his vision, rocketing in from one side.

The enemy ship itself.

It slammed dead-on into Bellarmine’s bow, the splayed lance emitters of the enemy craft taking on the appearance of tentacles grasping at the bulkier prow of the House Trask warship. White-hot twisted metal exploded outwards into the void, torn and hurled asunder by the unimaginable force of impact.

Engines flared across both craft as they tumbled around each other, like wrestlers a kilometer long.

Now he could see the ambushing craft’s lines — Idolator-class, an escort.

A Traitor craft.

Blue and green paint graced the lean flanks of the vessel, silver trim highlighting her sleek armored plates.

Her main engines glowed brightly, exhaust plumes painful to look at against the blackness of space.

Inhuman, distorted faces grinned and leered out of those engine plumes.

A great pain split his head only a moment before a greater pain split the universe open, as a new warp portal was ripped open behind both craft.

No, ahead of them, as their twisting path shoved the two vessels ever closer to the yawning maw of the Immaterium.

Into it.

The last he saw was a point-blank shot from Bellarmine’s single macrocannon, muzzle flash indistinguishable from the explosion of the projectile deep inside the Idolator’s flank.

And then the portal snapped shut.

Leaving Alexander Jardin drifting through the depths of space, on the outskirts of an empty system in the Segmentum Solar that had been so utterly unimportant that it had only received a catalogue number in the Astronomer’s Charts.

This… was a problem.

///

Three hours.

For three hours he had drifted, with nothing to listen to but the fading cries of his fellow victims — at least, the other ones wise enough to wear emergency vac-suits with their inbuilt radios while on routine bridge duty.

Not that it had done any of them any good, in the end.

He had refrained from adding his own. There was nothing nearby. Nobody was coming to save them.

And so he had prayed. The Emperor had helped others through worse circumstances, right?

Then again, Alex had came out here as part of a joint mission guided by the Eldar.

By xenos.

Family business or no, Warrant of Trade or no, could it be that the Immortal Emperor took a… dim view of Alex’s presence here? His mission?

He suspected that he would be finding out personally, in only a few more minutes.

Not many more, by how his vision faded around the edges.

The hungering darkness, advancing second-by-second.

Well, better see that his last moments alive in the Materium were spent in a manner fitting of a Faithful Imperial.

“Yndrael, you knife-eared bastard! You knew this was doomed, didn’t you!?” he bellowed into the void, radio broadcasting his betrayed fury to the listening stars. “You and the rest of Biel-Tan’s vile xenos! Well, guess what? Your Craftworld is in pieces, and Tallarn’s still fine! So who’s laughing now!?”

Probably that Eldar’s second-in-command Meldrath, a hysterically-calm corner of his mind noted. You could take the Corsair out of the Harlequin Band, but it turns out you couldn’t take the Harlequin out of the Corsair. Always laughed at everything, the smiling, smug bastard.

In his last moments, Alex tried his hand at one thing that he’d always wondered, ever since he had first learned to use his powers of divination. If he could glimpse even a minute into his own future, would doing so when he had seconds left show him a glimpse of… Him? Resplendent on His Throne?

It would be a final image that any faithful adherent of His Creed would cherish.

This time, the pain in his eyes was as nothing to the pain in his lungs. Yet he cast his sight forwards, seeking, searching.

Nothing.

Well. Perhaps the Emperor wished to keep things a surprise.

“Ave Imperator, Immortal God.” Alex ground out, forcing the last traces of air from his aching lungs. “Master of Mankind, watch over—”

Suddenly, the thin column that was all which was left of his vision was filled with green.

And white.

Biel-Tan colors?

Alex blinked. He didn’t see that coming.

//////////////////////////////////

A/N:

Well, there’s the prologue. It’s actually shorter than Outsider’s own, in terms of how much happens. But it fit this story better than the more drawn-out ambush of canon Bellarmine.

Anyways, for this story (in contrast to my last Outsider crossover) the first few chapters will approximately follow Outsider canon events. At least, Alex gets picked up by Tempest, interrogated by Fireblade, then shuffled off to the shuttle and stuck in the middle of a Shell invasion. I’ll be skipping through and only ‘covering’ the scenes that are important to this story, but as you can imagine with Alex being a (mostly) devout follower of the Imperial Creed his interactions with the loroi will be… ‘amusingly’ different. From both sides.

But after they get picked up by that Shell ship? Then things start seriously diverging.
Last edited by Urist on Sat Mar 29, 2025 9:32 pm, edited 3 times in total.
Barrai Arrir
My Fanfictions:
The Past Awakens (Outsider + Halo) [Complete]
Specialists (Outsider + Warhammer 40k) [Complete]
New Horizons (Outsider) [In Progress]

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Urist
Posts: 318
Joined: Tue Nov 14, 2023 2:41 am
Location: Stuck on Earth.

Chapter One: Rescue?

Post by Urist »

Author's NoteShow
Okay, so it seemed appropriate to double-post the prologue and Chapter One at the same time. The prologue has essentially nothing actually Outsider-related in it other than a fading glimpse of Tempest, and that feels weird to post onto Outsider's own forums.
///////

A golden light approached him.

It was… not as he expected.

Where was the Throne? Where was His presence? Where was His glorious visage, all that was best about Humanity given shape and form?

Instead, as the light drew closer, it… burned.

Alex flinched away.

Or tried to.

His body didn’t respond —but then if this was the afterlife, he had no body.

The golden light came ever nearer.

Engulfed him.

It was all wrong. Wrong!

“Get back!” he shouted, his eyes finally snapping open.

Eyes?

He found himself awake, lying on a bed inside a room of unknown make.

And far worse, staring into the emotionless face of equally unknown identity.

A xenos face.

Voluminous red hair framed a blue-skinned complexion, piercing green eyes narrowing at him.

The alien jerked her head back, scowling slightly at him. Glanced aside.

Yet another xenos stepped forwards, shorter. White hair, light-purple eyes.

They were no xenos known to the Imperium. Or at least, not to House Trask... or to one Alexander Jardin.

The second alien jabbered something at him, entirely unintelligible.

Great.

He drew his scattered thoughts together. What had happened?

Bellarmine. The ambush. Betrayal by Yndrael. Then a flash of Biel-Tan green-and-white.

Well, neither of the two xenos in front of him — nor the two more standing off to either side — were Eldar, and none of them wore any Aspect uniform that he knew of. So who were they?

He took a swing at the most basic Eldar sentences, the ones that a human could grasp. “Who you? How I become here?”

The white-haired xenos paused. Tilted her head slightly. Repeated her earlier words.

Still nonsense.

“You then.” Alex turned to the red-haired one. “What warriors you? Where I?” His fractured sentences would have been intelligible to any Eldar, even if the arrogant bastards would have laughed at their crudeness.

“Warriors?” one of the bystanders repeated. The black-haired one.

“Yes warriors.” Alex said once more. Okay, one word that these xenos understood, that was better than nothing. “You warriors?”

The four aliens glanced between each other. After a few seconds, the little white-haired one pointed to herself with one finger. “Warrior.” Then pointed to the red-haired one at her side. “Warrior.” They were not armed in any way that he could see, for what little that might mean with unknown xenos.

“Yes warriors.” Alex was getting tired of repeating himself like a babbling child, but at least it was something. He pointed to the speaking xenos. Well, tried to. His hands were shackled to the bed. Great. “You warrior. She warrior. Her too.” He twisted his hand around as best he could, awkwardly pointing to himself with one finger. “I warrior too.”

Not exactly his training, but if these aliens insisted on calling each other 'warriors' it was probably wise for him to try to place himself on the same level as them. Maybe stave off — or at least delay — the unpleasant fate which he knew awaited any human captured by xenos.

And while the Imperial Creed preached that humans were to xenos as those aliens were to other base animals… there were times when it was best not to remind the xenos of that obvious truth.

“Warrior.” repeated the green-haired alien to his right. If he was reading her tone right, she sounded doubtful.

The four xenos paused once more, glancing between each other without a word. As bad as the Eldar, they were.

And they did have those disfigured ears, too.

It was all quite… discomforting. And—

Alex frowned, finally hitting on something that had been bothering him subconsciously all this time. He concentrated, focusing on his powers. His third eye looked closely at the four aliens, in turn.

And saw nothing.

No recognizable Warp signature.

Not even one as faint as that of a small insect or plant.

He drew in a sharp breath. He had heard of xenos who utterly lacked a Warp presence. But these four were a far cry from the shambling, metallic abominations that he had heard described in horrified half-whispers by Family members returning from particularly-distant journeys.

At his gasp, the white-haired one stepped closer to him. One hand raised towards him, and paused.

Red-hair snapped her head aside, practically glaring at white-hair.

The shorter alien froze, her hand almost touching him.

Close enough.

He had few other options.

His wrist banged painfully against the restraint as he lunged, grasp closing barely around the extended fingers of White-hair.

Emperor help him, it would have to be enough.

He surged his powers into that fleeting connection, seeking for anything he could glean.

Psychometry was not something that he had had much practice at — the Family had sought to have his limited abilities honed more towards divination — but he knew something of that art. And no matter how they hid from him, these aliens had to have some warp signature, some connection to the Immaterium that connected all living beings.

Unclean in the Emperor’s sight or not, Xenos were still living beings, right?

Like a blind man clutching at what he cannot see, Alex reached for some psychic imprint. Anything.

And he did get something. Faint, but it was there.

A heartbeat later, white-hair yanked her hand back, eyes warily searching his.

Alex’s head slammed back against the bed underneath him, forcibly held there by some invisible force.

The black-haired one sprinted for the doorway, reaching into a box there and withdrawing what could only be a pistol of xenos make.

Alex ground out one word. Just one that he had pulled from her mind. “Eilis.”

More than a word.

A name.

White-hair — no, ‘Beryl’ — froze, her eyes widening. She turned to face Red-hair, gesticulating widely.

The force holding Alex did not let up, pinning him to the none-too-soft bed. He struggled to breathe.

After seconds — which felt like minutes — Red-hair seemed to relent: the muscles bunching around her jaw slackened slightly. Her right arm waved, and Black-hair stepped past her.

Pistol in one hand — not quite pointed at Alex, but clearly reminding him of its presence — she reached out her right hand and grasped his.

Taking a deep breath, he repeated his search. Looking for more this time. Forcing himself to keep pouring energy into his power, until he had none left.

Collapsing onto the bed, he blinked away the stars that played in his vision. Eyes still closed, he muttered “Can you understand me?”

“Yes!” He could recognize ‘Beryl’s’ voice… and understand the meaning behind her xenos words, now.

Hah. He smirked, exhausted. ‘Mon-keigh too weakly-powered to match even an Aeldari child,’ eh Meldrath? I just copied an alien’s language straight out of her mind, while grasping blindly!

“It is most amazing, and—!” Beryl paused. When she spoke again, her voice was steadier. “And we must insist on knowing who you are, how you came to be here, and how you shield your mind from us so.”

How he shielded his mind from them!? “I am Alexander Jardin of House Trask. I was ejected from my vessel during an ambush by Traitor forces. And I am not shielding my mind from anyone right now.” Why bother hiding one’s warp-signature from what appeared to be xenos Blanks? It was not like they could perceive it anyw— oh.

The way the aliens had looked at each other, speaking not a word even while a conversation was obviously — well, in hindsight — taking place.

Somehow… these xenos could converse psychically even without having a detectable mind-signature.

This was giving him a headache. Hopefully not from the sheer presence of these Blank-creatures; he doubted that he would be getting free of them anytime soon.

Beryl glanced aside, at one of the mirrored-glass windows set into one wall of the compartment. “It seems that that answer is insufficient. The security situation in this system is one which requires that you be honest and open.”

With xenos? Not going to happen.

And besides, he genuinely wasn’t masking his mind-presence. If anything, his reaching out for the other two xenos should have been like a beacon to them, if they could truly somehow detect warp signatures.

“Look, I don’t know even how you are—”

The door hissed open.

Uh-oh.

Unfamiliar xenos these might be, but Alex knew ‘Senior Officer’ when he saw it.

The newcomer snapped out one hand, pointing imperiously behind her long blue hair even as her calculating gaze locked onto Alex’s eyes. All she lacked to make the impression complete was a grandiose peaked cap — and a greatcoat wouldn’t hurt.

Three of the four xenos who had been in the room with him filed out, Beryl sending one last frowning look his way. Only Red-hair stayed behind, along with the xenos Commissar and her two guards, Purple-hair and Yellow-hair.

The Commissar stayed back, arms crossed as the other three took station on each side of him.

Each set one hand against his bare skin. Their palms uncomfortably cold.

Then, suddenly, painfully hot.

As if the xenos fingertips had been high-voltage wires, pure fire poured from them into Alex's body.

His back arched, jaw clenching.

Unlike earlier, now he felt a connection forming. Wriggling around the perimeter of his mind.

Searching.

It was… strangely reassuring to feel that tendril of thought violating his mind. Positive proof that these xenos were not blanks, that they had some mind-signature of their own, however well-hidden.

If only it hadn’t required a psy-interrogation to discover that.

Now he did shield his mind, calling up what reserves of mental strength he held and walling off the core of what made him him.

He could instead have struck back at the questing filaments of the xenos minds — the two weaker ones, and a single much stronger one. But what would be the point? They were xenos, every Imperial citizen knew what they were like: at such proof of resistance, they would execute him immediately.

Or worse.

So instead he ensured that his mental barriers protected the core of his mind… but only the core. Leaving what fragments of memory and thought could be quickly identified as unimportant outside of those walls.

Let the xenos sift through unimportant details all they wished; he would be betraying neither his House nor his Emperor if he allowed his interrogators to discover that roast grox was delicious, or that Tallarn was a world of vast deserts.

It was a technique that he had learned ‘from’ — mostly by practicing against — the Eldar: if they pressed too strongly in upon his core mind he would slip into unconsciousness as autonomic functions no longer had the room to operate properly. Any further still, and his mind would unravel into an unreadable mess… as he slipped into a coma.

Not exactly the most self-preserving defense, but perhaps the only way for a low-powered psyker not trained within the Imperial Palace to at all prevent the Immaterium from surging forth through his very mind.

He split off one last thought from his core, checking to ensure that no extraneous thoughts were attached to it. Then left it outside his mental protections, positioned where the xenos would surely discover it.

After all, they had clearly announced their opinions towards Humanity by this interrogation. Why not leave them the gift of his absolute knowledge of the Imperium’s superiority and of Humanity’s destiny to rule — alone — among the stars?

///////////////////////////////////////////

Beryl stood outside the medical bay, anxiously shifting her weight from one foot to the other.

{Calm down, listel.} Sent doranzer mazil-toza Desire, one hand idly playing with a strand of green hair even as she also stared through the one-way window into the operating room. {Fireblade is in no real danger.}

{I am aware.} Beryl snapped back, before relenting with a sigh. {I apologize. But it is the alien that I am concerned about — think what knowledge might be held in its mind, possibly to be damaged beyond recovery by the teidar?} She paused, turning to the doranzer. {It… is actually an alien, yes?}

{To the core.} Desire responded. {We ran every scan we could think of. It’s alien, all right. ‘He’ is an alien, that is.}

{Oh. Well, yes.} Beryl acknowledged. {And yet after it — he — pointed to each of us and said ‘Loroi,’ he then pointed to himself and also spoke ‘Loroi!’}

The doranzer shrugged. {It seems that he didn’t speak Trade beyond that one word. Perhaps he did not understand its meaning. At least, not until he grabbed your hand.}

{Which is most strange! The alien can shield his mind so thoroughly, and yet read concepts from ours! I did not feel even the slightest contact when his hand grabbed at mine.}

{Really surprised all of us, too. I’m even more surprised that Fireblade didn’t turn him into a red smear on the wall immediately afterwards. We all thought he was going to attack you, or something.}

{She is more controlled than that.} Beryl defended her friend, before something the doranzer sent caught at her. {’Red’?}

{Their blood is bright-red. It seems to use a form of iron for oxygen transport, although not very efficiently.} Desire shrugged. {We took a sample as part of the tests.}

{Interesting. Iron?} Beryl wondered, before shaking her head. {But still, that he then went on to learn to speak Trade, from only a few solon of contact!}

The junior doranzer standing on Desire’s other side added {And I also felt nothing. Only then suddenly the alien was speaking Trade.} Her thoughts on the matter were more... cautious than Beryl’s own. {Mazil-toza, you are certain that this alien is not a threat?}

{I cannot guarantee that he is not some Shell trick, no. But his body contains no hidden weapons, no contagious or chemical agents, none of the things we have seen in other Shell-engineered infiltration attempts. I do not see how he could be a threat… aside from whatever his one-way form of sanzai seems to be. That I know nothing about; I have never even heard of something like it.}

The three of them paused in their conversation as the teidar inside the room suddenly straightened up. Fireblade turned to Stillstorm, and Beryl could faintly detect the aura of a focused and private sanzai discussion pass between the two.

Then Fireblade turned slightly, staring past Stillstorm and meeting Beryl’s gaze through the window. {The alien’s mind is… strange. But it knows nothing of the Shells, or of the Hierarchy, or even of any other species or event known to the Union. There is a region in its mind that we were unable to pierce, but I am satisfied that the alien poses no immediate threat to Tempest… or anyone aboard her. It will be held under surveillance until Parat Tempo decides what to do with it.}

{And do I get my medbay back?} asked Desire, crossing her arms. {The battle in this system is not yet concluded, and crew-sisters may soon have need of treatment.}

{The alien will be held under surveillance in the brig.} Fireblade clarified.

//////////////////////////////////////

Alex awoke to a pounding headache.

Wait, awoke?

That xenos was stronger than he’d thought, for him to outright lose consciousness.

There was good news, and bad news. The bad news was that he was clearly in some form of detention cell; while Alex had never been on this side of the metaphorical bars, he knew a ship’s brig when he saw one.

The good news was that this was the cleanest cell he’d ever seen. No piles of refuse — or worse — left by the previous inhabitant, dim but non-intrusive lighting… and also no half-cleaned blood left of the previous inhabitant.

Of course, he also saw no food, no water. Only the most basic of ‘facilities.’ And only a thin, barely-soft mat for his bed. A very austere chamber, in all. Perhaps these new xenos truly were Eldar in disguise...

Hopefully, the aliens wouldn’t be keeping him here too long.

Although that just left the question of what the xenos would do with their prisoner. As a member of one of the great Houses of Trade, Alex knew quite a bit more about the habits of non-humans than did most Imperial citizens.

Of course, the fact that so many branches of those great Families had been… ‘violently truncated’ also showed just how risky it was to attempt to negotiate with inherently duplicitous xenos. Which was all of them, of course.

A speaker-grille next to the door squawked at him, in the alien’s foreign tongue. Visitors.

Well, they wouldn’t find him cowering!

Alex jumped to his feet, one hand rising automatically to adjust his collar.

Finding nothing.

He was dressed in only his underclothes: a short-sleeved shirt and shorts, only the innermost layer of what any House member would ever wear. Missing several entire layers, and those the more impressive ones!

The door slid open, and it was not difficult at all for him to glare at Red-hair as she stopped just inside the hatchway. Dressed in his pajamas or not, he poured all of his contempt for the xenos who had first chained him to a bed and then stolen his clothes into his gaze. “Well, alien? Here to gloat?”

Red-hair didn’t so much as move a muscle.

“Greetings, Jardin Liaison Alexander!” Beryl stepped nimbly past the taller alien. “I am pleased to see you again!”

“I am, uh...” Alex’s train of thought derailed. For a xenos to address him in such a fashion was not anticipated. What angle was she playing at?

Alien language or not, reflexes trained into all House members kicked in and his mind automatically sought out the words to finish “...pleased to see you too?”

As if such cordiality between an alien and a human was the most natural thing, Beryl held out the wrapped-cloth package in her hands to him. “Here is your clothing! It seems to have been deemed ‘non-dangerous.’”

Anyone who thought that had clearly never seen the effect of a well-dressed officer upon the soldiers under their command. Or heard of his great-aunt Julie’s favorite court dress, which supposedly bore enough hidden weapons to outfit a Guard platoon.

But, lacking any House armsmen around — or krak grenades hidden in his coat buttons — perhaps he would have to concede the point.

He dressed himself as correctly as he could in the now-rumpled clothes — the ferrosilk ruffles were near-impossible to straighten out without an assistant, but none were present — only half-listening to Beryl’s explanation of the significance of her three names. Xenos customs, and all that.

Although come to think of it, that could explain how she had so butchered his own name. “’Alexander’ is my personal name. I am of Family Jardin of House Trask, yes, but I would ordinarily be addressed as ‘Liaison Jardin’ or simply ‘Jardin.’”

Truly, rather less formal than how he would have been spoken to within the Imperium. To any of the less-fortunate masses not possessed of a family history such as his or any other noble claim, he was ‘Lord Jardin’ even as distant from the Head of his House as he was. But such honorifics coming from the mouth of an alien would simply be… wrong.

“I understand, Liaison Jardin.” Beryl continued, still uncomfortably cheerful. “Are you prepared to depart?”

“Uh, ‘depart’?” he repeated like a fool, before shaking himself irritably. “Of course. To what destination?”

“Our vessel’s Diplomatic Officer wishes to meet with you, to discuss some of the information which was gleaned from your mind.”

He blinked. That was a rather blunt way to refer to his forced interrogation. “I see.” He also saw that he had little choice. Red-hair and Beryl were both unarmed, but it wasn’t like Alex was well-trained in the fighting arts. Besides which, presumably this ship had xenos armsmen around somewhere, likely nearby. “Lead on.”

“Certainly!” Beryl took a step back and turned to leave. Then paused mid-step. “Oh, and Teidar Pallan Leinnol reminds you that while you are being allowed to move about the ship without restraints, our ship is in contact with the Enemy and so no disruptive actions will be tolerated.”

Alex nodded at that, locking eyes with ‘Fire-blade’ as he stepped past her.

Ah, there were the armswomen. Glaring silently as Alex, his guide, and his guard — or perhaps ‘warden’ — walked by. Weapons held ready, not quite pointed at him.

Now that was the treatment he expected.

///

Over the course of a meandering conversation, Alex learned three important things:

1) These xenos — ‘Loroi,’ they called themselves — were embroiled in a war with another xenos race, the ‘Hierarchy.’ Couldn’t be much of a war, though, if the Imperium had never even heard of either combatant.

2) The loroi could not have been space-faring for long, given how much information that Beryl was revealing to him. Such openness was the mark of a people who had not yet truly discovered the realities of the universe.

3) That opened an… opportunity. For House Jardin — whose Emperor-given task did specifically cover dealing with whatever xenos may be discovered. Finding a void-capable civilization so close to Terra, right here in the Segmentum Solar, was certainly not expected. Yet their very naivete opened the door for House Jardin to step in and ensure that they never became a threat to Humanity. The other branches of the Imperium would have their own methods of doing that — all rather permanent — but as a representative of a Trader dynasty he saw a better option.

The loroi with their near-lack of Warp signature — and the Regio Silens nature of the local area, even if Bellarmine had managed to arrive — must be completely unable to enter the Immaterium, thus limiting them to sub-light travel within and near their home system. A minuscule power on the galactic stage, unworthy of note… but perhaps one that could yield some resources to a Family wise enough to establish trading relations.

Of course, he also made a fourth discovery: Beryl would not stop talking.

“I am very sorry, I thought you were making a joke.” the xenos said, finally bringing her laughter under control. “I think I understand what you meant.”

Alex looked down his nose at her with all that he could muster of his wounded pride. She was worse than his childhood speech coach! And thank the Throne that she and Ellen would never meet. “I see. Perhaps your people are more used to conversing psychically?”

“Over sanzai, yes.” the alien nodded.

They pressed onwards through a maze of corridors. Every smooth floor-plate, every pastel wall face, every brightly-illuminated passageway only reminded him further that he was well and truly among xenos. It was as if time and wear had not left so much as a single passing mark upon the ship.

Perhaps it was freshly-built, with not even a single century of use? That could explain the unnervingly smooth interior lines of the ship.

“What is the name of this vessel?” he interjected to ask Beryl, even while staring down a passing orange-suited xenos.

“You stand aboard the warship Tempest.” she answered quickly, as the three of them filed into a small elevator.

A fourth joined, green-armored and short with dark-blue hair. Silently took station standing behind Beryl.

He took a deep, calming breath. One that would have been more reassuring if the air had borne the familiar aroma of candle-wax and incense rather than… whatever this ship's xenos-tainted air smelled of. Perhaps vaguely similar to some of the recaf variants preferred by Tallarn tribesmen?

Either way, at least it did help steady his nerves. It was bad enough walking in proximity to xenos out in the normal-size corridors; the more cramped confines of the elevator truly drove it home to him that he was truly surrounded by xenos. Like Saint Danielus, hurled by leering Orks into the Squig den.

They stood in silence for a while as the elevator ascended silently. No honest, reassuring rumblings of ancient mechanisms underfoot.

Then Beryl asked “What is the significance of these markings on your garment?”

Alex twisted around, following her curious gaze to the Tallarni symbols woven into the rear flanks of his coat. “They are sigils marking my status within the Family. This one indicates that I am of a cadet branch, that one there shows that—”

The elevator chose that moment to halt. Combined with his awkward position, Alex lost his footing and toppled over towards Fireblade.

Only to be reversed mid-flight and flung backwards, head bouncing painfully off of the wall at his back.

He whirled around, glaring at the three xenos. Beryl and the late-comer looked back at him with faint consternation writ across their faces… while Fireblade glared haughtily.

His brow furrowed. That was a push from some invisible force, and yet he had detected no psi-signature! How? Alex clenched his jaw. These xenos were one infuriating mystery after another.

Opening his mouth to chastise the ‘Teidar’ for her arrogance in laying hands on him, he paused. She hadn’t actually touched him, had she?

He blinked.

And laughed.

Only a short chuckle, really, yet the three xenos reacted as if he had barked like a man possessed. Beryl frowned, the smaller one behind her flinched back… and even Fireblade’s brow creased slightly.

It truly was too amusing! Perhaps the first treatment that he had received approaching proper ‘deference’ for his station from these xenos, and it took the form of a mysterious faux-psi shove.

He plastered a smile onto his face, and briefly inclined his head at Fireblade. The shallowest possible nod. “Thank you.”

With that, he strode past the confused xenos and out into the corridor beyond.

“We are approaching Parat Tempo’s office, Liaison Jardin.” Beryl explained a short while later. “It is a sensitive area. Fireblade reminds you not to act or speak suddenly.”

His confident stride hitched briefly. ‘Diplomat,’ ‘sensitive area,’ and the fact that they could not have gone more than a thousand paces from the holding cell all lined up to one thing.

Perhaps ‘diplomat’ was a less appropriate term than ‘interrogator.’ Maybe even “Inquisitor.”

“Your ‘diplomat’ has an office this close to the ship’s brig?” he ventured.

“Yes?” Beryl answered hesitantly. “But it does not seem to be so close.”

Truly? They could barely have walked through more than a fraction of a kilometer; a small distance within any voidship. But any further questions from him immediately halted as the door ahead of their small party slid open.

And revealed open space.

Alex’s hand dropped down to his side, grasping for a vacuum-mask that no longer hung there.

A heartbeat or two later, and his mind finally processed that he had not been forcibly vented out into space. Even his luck did not seem to have such a fate in store for him twice within such a short period of time.

He recovered, striding out into what must be the bridge of the xenos vessel. A much smaller thing than that of the Bellarmine… if one only counted the crew present. Yet far overhead reached some form of techno-projection, a false-image of the void outside.

Nearby — very alarmingly close by — floated several vessels of xenos make. Presumably similar to the one he now stood upon.

Heh.

Green-and-white colors. What would Yndrael have thought of these aliens garbing their ships in the favored colors of his Craftworld?

Nothing pleasant, that was for sure.

With now a true smile on his face, Alex surveyed the personnel present.

The smile dropped.

In the raised center dais of the bridge, a black-and-green-armored loroi conversed with another… ‘projection.’

His third eye reflexively peered close at the pinkish monstrosity, even as his normal eyes confirmed that it was a semi-transparent image. Not actually present, either in the Materium or Immaterium.

Which suited him just fine — between the coloration, the skinny, distended limbs, and the prominent fangs of the creature, it was a very unsettling image. Was he so certain that these loroi truly had no interaction with the foul denizens of the Warp, when they had such a creature projected into their very bridge?

So distracted was he by the alarming visage that it took him some time to realize that even a third form of xenos was projected onto the display behind and above the two conversing. A tall mountain of plated blue flesh, garbed in a purple robe.

The three xenos were deep in conversation, speaking so rapidly that his new grasp of this alien tongue struggled to keep up. The Pink Horror and the Blue Ogryn seemed to both be arguing with the sole loroi.

If he deigned to project human body-language onto her terse and clipped gestures, it seemed that she was not enjoying the wordplay.

“—have truly found nothing, aside from faint echoes from a disappearing source?” Blue Ogryn asked.

“A search which is at best redundant.” Pink Horror added. “The Enemy’s continued presence in this system renders your attempts to pin down a precise cause for the failure to detect them before the ambush… dangerous.”

The loroi turned away from them, folding her arms across her chest and pressing her eyes closed. “A possible explanation has been found already, and recovered. He has been taken aboard this vessel.”

Her eyes snapped open, gaze snapping to Alex. “Liaison Jardin, please approach.”

//////////////////////

A drawn-out trio of introductions later, and Alex now had a better understanding of the xenos war in whose midst he had found himself.

The loroi were fighting a difficult battle against this ‘Hierarchy’ — a losing battle, if he read correctly between the lines. Their allies, the Blue Ogryn ‘Barsam’ and Pink Horror ‘Historians’, seemed to make up only a small fraction of the fighting effort.

Not surprising. Cowardly xenos each attempting to hide behind the other. The loroi drew the losing card in that contest, apparently.

And… while he was not entirely certain due to the language difference, he thought that the Historian might have bluntly outed itself as being an Abominable Intelligence.

By the lack of reaction from this loroi Inquisitor ‘Tempo,’ such a horrifying revelation meant nothing to them.

Then they all turned to him.

He had never expected a task such as this to fall to him. His intended place within the Family was to support the other members by using his powers, not to take the lead in fraught negotiations with multiple xenos powers himself.

Yet here he was.

“I am Alexander Jardin, Liaison from House Trask.” Perhaps it was fortunate that his status as an adopted son of a cadet branch of the Family meant that he had no long train of inherited ancestral names to explain. “I speak for my House and Family when I say that Humanity are newcomers to this conflict, unaware of it until our exploratory arrival to this system. The Imperium sees no reason yet to become involved in your war.” That should cut the right angle of ‘We can help you… for a price.’

Tempo’s eyes narrowed. “We have not heard of your ‘Imperium’ or this ‘Trask,’ but it is the policy of the Union that all friendly nations are expected to support us in this struggle for survival against the Hierarchy.”

It was all he could do to refrain from laughing in the alien’s face. He wasn’t sure which thought was more ludicrous: that this ‘Union’ could presume to demand support from House Trask — or even crazier, from the Imperium! — or that they seemed to think that a common war was of extra significance because it was a ‘struggle for survival.’

It was war. That’s what war was.

As the current state of the galaxy demonstrated quite thoroughly.

“That request can certainly be discussed in future communications with my seniors of the House.” Alex granted, “Although arranging such contact may prove something of a challenge.” Actually, he really wasn’t sure how to go about contacting any Imperial authority from here. He was no Astropath himself, and none of these xenos seemed likely to possess the means to get a message at faster-than-light speeds to even the nearest Imperial world.

“It seems that this leads to the question of just how you, personally, came to be here.” Tempo said next. “We detected signs of weapons discharges in this area, and yet when we come to investigate we find only a single living ‘Humanity’ drifting in a short-duration spacesuit. No starships.”

“The vessel which carried me to this system was damaged in battle and… forced to withdraw.” Rather more directly so than that phrase usually implied. Then a particular implication of what Tempo had said hit him. “You say that you found no other living Humans. I was not the only person lost overboard from my ship — have the bodies of the others been recovered?”

“Twelve others of your species were pulled from the void, yes.”

“I see.” He nodded sharply. “Their remains will be repatriated, of course.” Tempo wasn’t the only one who could make demands. Although his was more to keep Human bodies out of xenos hands than anything else. Having fallen in battle against a Traitor warship, their souls already stood beside the Golden Throne; the bodies themselves no longer held anything of value.

The ‘mizol’ quirked one eyebrow. “That request can certainly be discussed in future communications with senior officers of the Union.”

Parroting his earlier response back at him? Despite himself, a faint smile curled at Alex’s lip. After the unnerving honesty of Beryl and the blunt wariness of Fireblade, it was oddly reassuring to meet a loroi xenos who was just as wily as the Ecclesiarchy had always warned.

“Then it appears that we have a basis for trade.” Not much, but something. He forcibly broadened his smile. “Which returns us to my earlier point. Establishing communications with House Jardin may take some time, but other House vessels will soon return to this system in search of me.” Admittedly something of a long-shot, but it was his best — frankly, only — option right now. The only other choice he could see was leading the loroi on a decades-long slower-than-light journey to the nearest Imperial outpost. But at least if these aliens lacked FTL, that meant that this system must be inhabited by them and so it should not prove too difficult to wait here for some time. “We need only to maintain station here and—”

“This is not an option.” Tempo interrupted him. “This system is part of the Charred Steppes, a contested region between the Union and the Hierarchy. We have only traveled to this system to intercept a Hierarchy invasion force, and cannot linger.”

That brought him up short. The implications of how simply she referred to naval movements that should be decades-long endeavors for a people who lacked a Warp drive shot to the forefront of his mind. “You… traveled to this system? Faster than the speed of light?”

“Of course.” Tempo frowned slightly, unfolding her left arm and holding it out, palm-up. “This surprises you?”

“Yes… it does.” He answered distractedly, deep in thought. This revelation held many implications, few of them pleasant. “There are few known methods to travel the stars faster than their own light; some require great feats of technology, most require certain… abilities.” Abilities which psychic blanks like these xenos should utterly lack. And he had seen no evidence of the Dark-Age-of-Technology-level knowledge here that would be required to leap across the void without using the Immaterium.

Tempo briefly glanced aside at the Historian, then back to Alex. “Abilities such as this touch-only sanzai you have demonstrated?”

“Perhaps.” His thoughts were still whirling around the implications of her earlier statement. “For you to have ‘intercepted’ an enemy fleet, you must possess some ‘ability’ of your own to perceive events far displaced in time or space.” He had heard rumors of ancient tech-minds, impossibly-advanced cogitators that could peer ahead through the veil of time much as a psyker could. But once again, such advancements seemed to be beyond the current state of the loroi. “These abilities are possessed by some loroi?”

“Perhaps.” She echoed him again. “If you are open to a willing exchange of information, it seems that—” her speech cut off as she stared past him. He turned just in time to see the bridge doors slide open and admit the xenos commissar from earlier. She still wore the same Commissariat-pattern scowl, eyes flicking from him to Tempo.

Tempo spoke again, somewhat faster than before. “Liaison Jardin, you seem to be willing enough to trade information with us openly. In light of this, I would grant you a formal post for the duration of your mission here. In your learnings of our language, are you familiar with the term ‘Military Attache’?”

He nodded. The field of warfare was not one that he had been trained for, but any House member who was sent on field expeditions was expected to know enough to not embarrass himself… or more importantly, the Family.

“Then I declare you to be Military Attache from House Trask and a provisional ally until such time as proper negotiations may establish a more formal status.” She looked past him again. “This comes with the right to be addressed as ‘Attache’ or ‘Liaison,’ if you prefer.”

That was a not especially veiled threat of ‘as long as you keep feeding us information we won’t throw you back to the Teidar,’ but it was something he could work with.

The loroi Commissar strode up, circling around Alex while eyeing him distrustfully. “’Attache,’ is it? How convenient.” She glared at Tempo.

Who interjected “Attache Jardin, you seem to have already ‘met’ Captain Stillstorm. She asks for the meaning of your spoken name.”

He drew his shoulders back. “’Alexander Jardin’ means ‘Defender of the Garden’ in the most ancient tongues of Humanity.” It was a name that he had always been proud of — on the devastated desert world of Tallarn, actual gardens were a rare treasure to be carefully nurtured… and closely guarded.

Indeed, the Jardin family of house Trask could trace their ancestry back to one of those few groups that survived the Heretic virus-bombing of their world some ten thousand years prior; the (ruinously expensive) void shields of their fortified family Estate had preserved the walled fruit-tree garden that eventually gave the family its name.

While he had been reminiscing on proud Family history, Tempo had continued talking. Had even sent what was clearly a barbed order of silence to this ‘Stillstorm.’ Xenos feuding amongst each other even as they boast of their claimed ‘honesty.’

Hilarious.

“There is one more thing.” Tempo added, gesturing to one of the loroi sitting at a station nearby. “We would know the meaning of these alien words of yours, recorded shortly before you were recovered.”

A hidden vox came to life, eerily devoid of any of the familiar crackling static of a good Imperial vox-device. Alex recognized his own voice, albeit strained and gasping. “’Yndrael, you knife-eared bastard! You knew this was doomed, didn’t you!? You and the rest of Biel-Tan’s vile xenos! Well, guess what? Your Craftworld is in pieces, and Tallarn’s still fine! So who’s laughing now?’”

Heh.

On the plus side, the fact that Tempo was asking implied that Fireblade truly had not pulled any knowledge of Low Gothic out of his mind, earlier. Alex held out his hands wide, palms up. “A final curse upon the name of a so-called ‘ally’ of mine. A betrayer who sent me here to die.”

That said, a corner of his mind wondered if Biel-Tan’s distant Farseers had indeed predicted that he would be ‘rescued’ by these loroi. Unlikely; his own scrying much closer to the time in question had not foreseen any such thing.

But one never knew for certain with Eldar…

The three xenos before him devolved into bickering once more, with the Historian and the Barsam arguing with Tempo. Vying for whose alien ship Alex should be placed aboard, like children grasping for the last slice of dessert.

He pointedly ignored the conversation, instead sweeping his gaze across the bridge and staring down any of the other loroi there who met his eyes. His glaring match with a purple-haired xenos — the same one from his earlier interrogation, if he was not mistaken; was this loroi vessel truly so small that trained interrogators pulled double-duty as bridge officers? — was only interrupted when something that the Barsam said caught at his ear.

Alex turned only to see the image of the mountainous blue xenos blink out of existence. Tempo turned to face him, the Historian shrinking out of sight next to her. “Do not let Mozin’s assertions trouble you, Attache Jardin. The Barsam are trusted allies, but they have their own agenda and would not hesitate to exploit you for their own ends.”

So, ‘xenos are untrustworthy.’ And in other tidbits of great knowledge, water was wet, Orks were stupid and the Warp was dangerous.

“I see.” He looked past her at where Stillstorm sat, clearly impatient. “And was there any other topic you wished to discuss now?”

“Yes, there was.” Tempo leaned back on one foot, regarding him coolly. “Our… ‘detection device’ failed completely to detect either you, your vessel, or this ‘enemy’ vessel which you fought. The first that we knew of your presence was when the energy signatures of weapons-fire were noted.”

He raised one eyebrow. Any slacking among the xenos sensor-operators was not his problem.

“Indeed ‘it’ cannot detect you even as you stand here on our very bridge. Much as the Hierarchy presence in this system suddenly failed to appear on our ‘sensors’ when we entered it, earlier.” Tempo stepped closer to him, hands dropping to her sides as she leaned closer. “You claimed earlier that you are maintaining no barrier to mental detection, and yet you clearly have some powers of the mind. And we discover you here in this system at the same time as our Enemy ‘discovers’ some similarly-effective method of cloaking themselves. This is a remarkable coincidence, would you not agree?”

Incredulity warred with indignation within his soul. That this xenos would dare imply that Humanity would aid this ‘Hierarchy’!



Well, he had just now agreed to negotiate towards trading House support for the loroi xenos in return for some to-be-determined payment.

Anyways, this newfound ‘power’ of the Hierarchy had nothing to do with him.

“An unlikely coincidence.” He waved one hand dismissively. “But nothing more.”

Tempo’s eyes flickered. Hardened.

He continued “Neither House Trask nor the wider Imperium knows anything of this Hierarchy.” Admittedly something of a guess; Emperor only knows how much information disappeared into the Adeptus Administratum never to be seen again. But he had consulted the known data about this sub-sector before venturing into it, at least. “The most recent Imperial patrol of this sub-sector of space found nothing of note, and that was a mere two-thousand years prior. No Human presence has passed through here since.”

Indeed, the fact that the star-charts marked the area as “Devoid of any locations, objects, or creatures of interest” had almost dissuaded him from starting Bellarmine’s search here. He had been a fool to listen to the Eldar’s suggestions and press on all the same.

“’Two-thousand years.’” Tempo repeated, disbelievingly.

“The resources of the Imperium are not infinite.” he admitted. “We cannot patrol every small corner of the galaxy with absolute regularity.”

“I… see. You already tell us much of interest, Attache Jardin.”

Stillstorm snapped to her feet. “However insincere you choose to be, you shall not find me so.” Her eyes traversed over to pin their glare on Alex. “I would as soon believe that—”

Where the Barsam’s image had floated earlier, now the face of a new loroi blinked into being. Light-purple hair, tense demeanor. “Alert, Fifty-One. This is Winter Tide, reporting from forward six-one-seven. We have enemy vessels emerging from the dust clouds.”

///

A/N:

So Alex’s introduction to the Loroi goes a bit differently than in canon. Of course, here he demonstrates that he has some powers of his mind, so Stillstorm absolutely does not believe him when he says that he’s not putting up any kind of lotai. Hence things went straight to the mind-probing much faster. (Poor guy didn’t even get a blanket this time. Got probed in the buff.)
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Re: [Crossover Fanfiction] Specialists

Post by Urist »

And there's the prologue and first chapter. As with The Past Awakens, I'll be uploading a chapter every Sunday, Tuesday, and Thursday. The story is *technically* not complete just yet as I start posting it, but I've gotten everything up through Chapter 19 done, and I'm pretty sure that Chapter 20 will be the end of the (~130,000-word) story. Some epilogue ideas are coming together, but they'll be ready by the time we get to them in ~mid-November.
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Re: [Crossover Fanfiction] Specialists

Post by dragoongfa »

I can see why you elected for the 'ejection' to get Liaison Jardin out there but it would have been hilarious to see how the Loroi would react to the wreckage of a 1,5 kilometer ship only to learn that it is a small escort.

I also am calling it now: Eldar bullshittery abounds.

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Re: [Crossover Fanfiction] Specialists

Post by Cthulhu »

Okay, I have to admit, this is far better than I thought it would be. The ejection, and the "language database download" might be a stretch, but a crossover is always going to be a stretch. Anyway, it's quite hilarious how Alex tries to be "polite" with the xenos, but comes off as very rude.

Just one small issue, if you include so many instances of the protagonist's inner voice summarizing events, then you should anchor that to his character. Make a small reference to it being part of his training, or a personal character quirk.

P.S. It's Tzeench, right? If something weird is going on, it's always that plucked chicken's fault. Ever since being created by a certain wise-ass philosopher, that bastard is doing its worst to be as confusing as possible. Maybe it's childhood trauma.

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Re: [Crossover Fanfiction] Specialists

Post by Urist »

The first ~few chapters are pretty much an extended prologue, to get to the interesting parts of the story. Things 'slow down' later and lose a lot of the internal-summary bits; I just didn't want to have too many pages of just "a human on a human starship does human things without the presence of aliens" at the start of a story that is an Outsider fanfiction (Outsider being a story that sets far more focus on the aliens than on humans, to its great benefit). Likewise, Human-Eldar interactions (read: arguments and "I'm more arrogant than you" competitions) are fun, but other stories have done them better and I wanted to get to the Outsider-parts of the story quicker.

Which gets to some of the fun cultural clash between an Imperial human and the loroi. Both of them try to fit the other into their own assumptions about aliens, and neither one is accurate! And yes, there are several 'supernatural' powers that are each up to their elbows in this mess...
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Re: [Crossover Fanfiction] Specialists

Post by Tamri »

Hooray, it's started! It looks interesting so far, I'll wait for the continuation.

In general, the Imperium of Humanity is interesting in that you can pull out any input from it: in addition to the general constants, it is so large and diverse that you can easily find almost anything and justify its presence in history.

It will be especially funny to learn about the reaction of the loroi when they find out how small their problems are in comparison with the usual scale of human problems.

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Re: [Crossover Fanfiction] Specialists

Post by Urist »

Tamri wrote:
Sat Oct 05, 2024 8:15 am
In general, the Imperium of Humanity is interesting in that you can pull out any input from it: in addition to the general constants, it is so large and diverse that you can easily find almost anything and justify its presence in history.

It will be especially funny to learn about the reaction of the loroi when they find out how small their problems are in comparison with the usual scale of human problems.
Yup, there are a few bits of 40k canon backstory that I've woven into having a new significance in this story. Some obscure, others... less so.

And both the loroi and Alex spend the first ~half of the story making (wrong) guesses about the other: Alex believes that the loroi are primitive rubes ripe for exploitation, while the loroi believe the Imperium to be a near-peer power just outside of known space (no more dangerous than the Nissek, approximately). Only Fireblade caught enough glimpses in her interrogation of Alex to be a bit more wary of just what society this strange alien hails from...
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Re: [Crossover Fanfiction] Specialists

Post by Tamri »

Urist wrote:
Sat Oct 05, 2024 7:08 pm
Yup, there are a few bits of 40k canon backstory that I've woven into having a new significance in this story. Some obscure, others... less so.

And both the loroi and Alex spend the first ~half of the story making (wrong) guesses about the other: Alex believes that the loroi are primitive rubes ripe for exploitation, while the loroi believe the Imperium to be a near-peer power just outside of known space (no more dangerous than the Nissek, approximately). Only Fireblade caught enough glimpses in her interrogation of Alex to be a bit more wary of just what society this strange alien hails from...
The most obvious demonstration would be to mention several fragments of the Imperium's campaign to Bring to Compliance. It is not even necessary to mention the cases (numerous) when the primarchs destroyed quite peaceful and adequate species - a huge amount of all sorts of shit was also cleared out in those times, even with one case of which the Loroi would not have been able to do anything with certainty, without catastrophic losses and problems for sure.

It's a pity that Alex, an ordinary (almost) citizen of the Imperium, does not know anything about this...

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Re: [Crossover Fanfiction] Specialists

Post by dragoongfa »

He is a Rogue Trader scion; high enough that he was in nominal command of this mission. He may know a lot of stuff that would make the Inquisition cough, especially if his family (both branch and main) has run into certain types of trouble in the past.

EDIT:
Peaceful and Adequate species
There are no properly peaceful and adequate species in the setting, at least not for long enough to matter. Chaos is at a constant supercharged state after Slaanesh's emergence, as thus more warp storms than before, more demons and more everything. If a species has a soul it is in danger even if they have no psykers, a roving chaos warband would love to make sacrifices of anything within reach. Dark Eldar raids as well, they value 'innocent' minds a LOT, that would throw any peaceful mindset of the window. Orks would have genocided them, by accident if they weren't good sports about fighting when they would crash into their planet. Nids and Necrons are too 'new' into the setting to make lasting impressions.
Then there are all the other nasties that are not main players.

In short; if it is space faring it is suspect by definition due to warp travel. If it is not spacefaring it is inconsequential unless the star system has something of value.

EDIT 2: In this crossover it is the most ironic of circumstances that the very nature of the Imperium's Crusade and subsequent cleansing of anything hostile near Terra and Segmentum Solar in general that has kept the 'Regio Silens' safe for the last 10 thousand years. Orks would have found a way to infest the area if they were allowed to infest the nearby sectors. The Eldar webway in the region is probably either cut off or very obscure for the Dark Eldar not to make sport of everyone in it.

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Re: [Crossover Fanfiction] Specialists

Post by Tamri »

Rogue Traders come in different forms, but Trask in particular, or their unit
to which Alex belongs, are so far depicted more as "free artists" than as an unofficial unit of the Inquisition, Arbites or Admistrorum. Besides, what Trask knows, Alex doesn't have to know, more than basic, stereotypical knowledge, at least.

It would be more correct to say that they ALREADY don't exist. The codices of the First Crusade mention at least a dozen and a half xenospecies that were sane, non-aggressive and able to negotiate, but all of them, due to delusions, forgery or betrayal, were eliminated, although they could have been quite painlessly integrated into the Imperium on an associated basis.

What is characteristic, many of them - by Horus...

Which, however, can be attributed to the fact that the aforementioned codices are concentrated to a large extent on him, but other Legions doed shit too.

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Re: [Crossover Fanfiction] Specialists

Post by Tamri »

The Eldar webway in the region is probably either cut off or very obscure for the Dark Eldar not to make sport of everyone in it.
I would say that this is a reason not to relax, but to tense up.

In the WH lore, such places do not appear by themselves, and usually the roots stretch somewhere to the War-In-Heaven period, which smells of K'Tan, Necrons or some other Ancients, because of which careless movements in such anomalous areas can have much louder and more unpleasant consequences than the average in the Galaxy

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Chapter Two: Battle

Post by Urist »

Author's NoteShow
I'm just happy that people are enjoying speculating about the story :D Suffice to say that there's quite a bit of a tangled history going on here to explain why the Union and surroundings are as-yet un-marauded by 40k's various horrors, history involving quite a few parties (many without their knowledge).
///

The bridge of the xenos ship burst into activity.

It could have been mistaken for an Imperial bridge if it had not been for the lack of humans. Alex stood watching for several seconds — he might not have been trained in the art of voidship combat, but no man could resist the fascinating dance of orders and maneuvers which sprang to and forth.

Even if they were made by xenos, of course.

“Attache Jardin,” came Beryl’s voice at his shoulder. Soft, but insistent. “We have been dismissed. Please follow me.”

Alex’s eyes tracked the ship images projected overhead, and the smaller icons in some form of three-dimensional display off to one side. This was his first chance to actually see how these xenos fought — both the loroi and the Hierarchy.

“Parat Tempo, I would like to make one further offer.” The mizol looked back at him over her cogitator-station, one hand planted. Alex gestured to the screen behind her and added “You have said that the Hierarchy have somehow concealed themselves from your ‘sight.’ And while I know nothing of how this came to be... it is possible that I may see something in their vessels or maneuvers that you have not. Would it be possible for me to remain on this bridge and observe the battle which is clearly imminent?”

The silence that spread throughout the bridge would have been a major sign, aboard a human vessel. But with these xenos, there could be a raging argument going on for all that he knew.

“That… may be worthy of consideration.” Tempo responded after a pause, turning away from him and looking to Stillstorm.

The loroi Captain did not seem to agree. If looks could kill, the livid glare which Stillstorm gave the mizol would have sent Tempo to join Horus in oblivion.

An interjection from one of the escort commanders — or perhaps squadron commanders? He had no way of telling yet what marks on the sparsely-adorned xenos uniforms indicated rank — appeared to interrupt the contest of wills.

Grimacing, Stillstorm turned her back on Tempo. The mizol returned to her own station, sending a silent glance past Alex.

Behind him, Beryl spoke again. “Parat Tempo has granted your request. Please be seated over here, Attache Jardin.”

She led him to a tiny bench against one wall, and sat down next to him. “Please remain here and attempt not to call attention to yourself.” Always a wise idea, when surrounded by xenos. “If you have questions, please ask them quietly.”

Well, if she was offering… Alex glanced at the nearby holo-pic display. Counted the ships present, on both sides. Opened his mouth to give voice to the many questions forming in his mind.

Xenos cloth rustled, and the padding underneath him shifted slightly.

Alex glanced to his left, finding the narrowed eyes of Fireblade meeting his from an uncomfortably close distance. Well, maybe narrowed: it was hard to tell, with how the loroi’s eyes were not of a normal, Human shape.

Perhaps his first question should be ‘Why is she of all people sitting this close?’ But as tempting as that was, the developing battle pushed all thoughts of indignation from his mind.

It began much as any pict-recorded voidship battle that he had ever seen had done. Having completed their task in this part of the system — recovering one Alexander Jardin alive, for which he was grateful — the loroi squadron was clearly attempting to avoid direct enemy contact as they burned hard for the system boundary.

A strange choice. As far as they appeared to be from the system primary, an Imperial squadron would have simply cut their way into the Immaterium already. Perhaps they were more limited in just where their ships could engage whatever unknown faster-than-light engine they possessed?

Whatever the reason, the Hierarchy forces were positioned to intercept. The loroi vessels danced aside as the enemy formation’s momentum carried them past, neither side closing to within effective weapons range of each other.

Or at least, he assumed that the few weak shots which blazed back and forth represented a halfhearted volley exchanged well beyond any hope of actual damage. Certainly no voidships were lost by it, neither loroi nor Hierarchy.

Well, why not ask?

Alex leaned close to Beryl and muttered “Are such ineffective passes ‘normal’ for combat between your Union and the Hierarchy?”

She shook her head. “Only at the beginning of an engagement. Lashret Stillstorm is testing the enemy commander’s resolve, and forcing them to engage in maneuvers to maintain contact. Our Strike Group is freshly-arrived from its forward refueling base, while this Hierarchy battlegroup has already had to cross much of the Charred Steppes. Every pilo of fuel that each side burns is to our advantage: they will empty their tanks before we do. Eventually, their commander will be forced to ignore us and move to depart the system on a lowest-burn trajectory, at which point Strike Group Fifty-One can harry them at leisure and force a series of smaller engagements each entirely at her choice.”

“I… see.” That was more complex of a strategy than he had expected, from xenos. The display now showed the loroi formation diving away from the Hierarchy pursuers, their trajectory lining up on the relatively-dense protoplanetary disc ahead. “But surely the Hierarchy admirals are aware of this imbalance?”

“They most certainly are, but their options are limited. Their vessels are slower than our raider craft and possess shorter-ranged weapons, and so find it difficult to dictate the terms of engagement.”

The fighting seemed to have reached a lull, with the loroi formation drawing away and opening up the distance. It should be some time until the next exchange of shots.

He stared at the images of the pursuing Hierarchy craft. The loroi had said that these other xenos were suddenly ‘invisible’ to whatever sensors they used, and yet Stillstorm’s Strike Group seemed to have no problems detecting the voidcraft following in their wake. The loroi had not apparently remarked on this contrast, so perhaps the ‘sensors’ they referred to were… no, that couldn’t be it. They were blanks, they couldn't—

Well, he could check, himself.

“How many crew are aboard most Hierarchy vessels?” he asked Beryl.

She looked curiously at him. “Perhaps many hundred. Almost half a thousand on the larger craft in that formation. Why do you ask?”

A laughable number; that few ammunition-serfs wouldn’t suffice to keep even a single macrocannon loaded throughout an engagement, nevermind the rest of the ship! But it should be enough for his purposes.

“I wish to test something.” On a hunch, he leaned back on the bench, letting his eyes drift closed. Drawing in his focus and pushing it into his third eye.

The distance to the enemy craft — several light-seconds away — was far, far beyond the range of his ability to properly scry. But even if the loroi seemed somehow to have no Warp presence at all, several hundred of these Hierarchy xenos clustered aboard a vessel should—

He was blinded.

All was bright red-gold light, pressing in upon him.

Alex flinched away from its all-encompassing heat, his shoulder knocking into Beryl.

Which left him staring at the source.

In his third eye, Fireblade glowed, painfully bright. His mind swam with tears from staring directly at the—

“Attache Jardin?” Beryl’s voice reached out for him from a great distance. “Are you well?”

He ignored her.

HOW?

It… no other loroi had even the slightest Warp signature, and here this single one shone like a beacon! She had not burned this way earlier in the medicae’s room — had his fever-dream that prompted his awakening then been real? Yet she had not appeared this way when he attempted to sense any soul-signature among the loroi!

He sensed her eyes upon him.

Only two eyes, thankfully; there was no sense of any Warp awareness looking his way.

Alex opened his mouth to ask — but no, these loroi seemed utterly ignorant of the Immaterium. They would not know how to begin to answer any question he asked.

“Um.” He began. “Fireblade, could you possibly… give me greater room?” Alex withdrew his energy from his third eye, dropping back to normal awareness. There was little point attempting to sense any Warp signature — any other Warp signature — with her overwhelming presence right beside him. Like standing on a planet’s surface at night and attempting to chart the stars, all while a raging bonfire belched flames high into the sky at your side.

The teidar looked flatly back at him. Then craned her head slightly, gazing past him.

Then slowly stood up, took several steps away, and sat back down.

He peeked again — the light was still harsh, but now tolerable. Barely. “Thank you.” was out of his mouth before he could stop it. Too late now.

Frowning and turning back to the task at hand, he fed more power into his third eye. Consciousness expanded outwards, confirming that as far as his powers could tell there genuinely were only two souls aboard this xenos vessel. Himself… and Fireblade.

Further afield, he could not detect even the faintest trace of any of the other loroi craft in formation. A squadron of ghost-ships sailing emptily through the void.

The Hierarchy ships far behind them were a faint constellation, dim pinpricks of light only faintly visible against the blackness all around. So they were visible to psychic detection.

But—

A faint wisp tugged at his Sight. Drew it around, to peer with mounting horror along a new vector.

Ahead of Strike Group Fifty-One, in the roiling gases and loose debris of the protoplanetary disk, something moved.

Like a jet-black snake uncoiling within a tar-filled vat, it writhed languidly.

Turned to focus on Alex.

Blinked two burning-red eyes.

And smiled.

///

{What is he doing?} asked one of the two soroin guards, stationed at each side of the bridge entrance.

{I am not certain.} Beryl replied, leaning forwards towards Alexander Jardin with a frown. His eyes had rolled back in their sockets, and his mouth now hung slightly ajar. Not a single muscle moved as he slumped back against the backrest. {He did something a little like this earlier in the medical bay, but that was only for a solon.}

At least the soroin seemed more ‘curious’ than ‘alarmed.’ Her blaster carbine hung loose on its straps, her hand nowhere near its grip. The junior warrior glanced aside, frowning as her hair rustled in — a breeze? Inside the bridge?

Suddenly, Alex bolted forwards, his forehead slamming into Beryl’s.

The human’s eyes snapped open, and his mouth gaped in a silent scream.

“Attache Jardin?” Beryl queried, shaking her head against the brief twinge of the impact. “What was that you just—”

“A presence!” he gasped out. “Enemy ship. Hierarchy. In the disc, ahead of us. Waiting for us. Angry. No— Hungry.”

Beryl exchanged a look with Fireblade, who had stepped closer to Jardin, her mind-signature radiating wariness. “This is similar to your ability earlier to… pull language out of a touch? But it works at range?”

He nodded jerkily, arms wrapped around himself and hunched over.

{Like a farseer.} mused Fireblade. {An alien farseer.}

{If he can detect the Shells when we no longer can, I’ll call him whatever he wants.} came Tempo’s sanzai, suddenly close by. The mizol leaned over Beryl’s shoulder. “Liaison Jardin, you have sensed a Hierarchy craft? In the protoplanetary disc?”

He shook his head. “Not Hierarchy. Worse.” He raised his head, staring at Beryl. No, through her. “[Daemon.]”

She frowned at the human's accented words. Did he just say ‘Frontier’? Or no, that wasn't quite right; was it a word from his own language?

Distantly, she received Tempo arguing with Stillstorm. Ignored it, in favor of trying to figure out what Jardin had seen. “What is it?”

“It is...” he paused, “I do not believe your language has a word for it. You are fortunate.”

Long hours on the bridge had attuned her senses to the minute shifts of Tempest’s inertial dampeners as they shielded his crew from the harsh acceleration of combat maneuvers. And so even the slight change in her inner ear had Beryl glance up at the tactical display.

Strike Group 51 burned hard, angling away from the loose disc of star-formation debris ahead of them. A disc which then suddenly lit up with drive signatures only sixteen or so solon later.

“Alert, Fifty-One!” called out the Group’s vanguard commander. “A second enemy group is emerging from the disc! It is significantly larger than the first – twenty-two squadrons, twenty heavy vessels, ten superheavies!”

And while the last-minute maneuver of Stillstorm’s formation avoided a close-range confrontation with overwhelming Shell firepower, the two fleets would still pass barely within—

It all happened in a heartbeat.

{Weapons fire!} sent listel tozet Antimony, manning the station where Beryl herself had sat for so many shifts. {Multiple plasma discharges. They are—} her sanzai momentarily cut off in a blur of confusion. A quick flash of conversation with the junior sensor officers in the starboard gallery, and then {Energy patterns do not match known Hierarchy weapons signatures. Significantly reduced carrier-wave attenuation compared to recorded SR and MR energy-bleed rates.}

This was a most unpleasant time for the Shells to reveal a new weapons upgrade. Especially one that the surge of damage reports from other vessels showed to be quite effective.

{Light damage to war cruiser Falchion and escorts Whirlpool and Mace. Destroyer Thunderbolt reports loss of main power, recovery expectancy zero. Crew are evacuating. Light cruiser Winter Tide has lost his starboard engine and is at half-thrust.} With the now-combined Shell fleet still pursuing them and another exchange of fire coming soon, Tempo fell back on her combat role as communications officer and summarized the damage reports from across the Strike Group. It was faster than having each captain or squadron commander make her report individually.

From next to her, Tempest’s own subsystems chief added {We took a hit to the port-side ventral blaster turret. The traverse rails are jammed; damage-control teams are en-route.}

But at least the Shells had suffered even more. Two full squadrons of their craft had been reduced to drifting wreckage, and one of the heavier torpedo-craft had entirely disappeared in a searing fireball. Even one of the superheavies had been crippled by concentrated pulse cannon fire, although it would have fared worse had Tempest had the time to charge his Wave-loom Device.

But still, it was a harsh exchange.

Stillstorm stood, one hand gripping the other behind her back. {So the Shells have two new abilities that they show us today.} The lashret turned aside, and Beryl didn’t need to see her eyes to know that Stillstorm was glaring at the tactical display off to one side of the bridge.

Then she whirled on Tempo. {Your alien says that some great enemy of his people is present within that Shell fleet; ask him if he knows if this refinement of the Enemy’s weapons could be their work.}

Beryl spoke before Tempo “Liaison Jardin, is it possible that this ‘daemon’” she carefully mimicked his pronunciation “could... ‘enhance’ enemy weapons systems?”

The human craned his head back, looking up at her from his doubled-over position. He nodded. With a deep breath, Jardin pushed himself upright and added “There are ways to… ‘infuse’ machinery with a daemon’s spirit. Worse still if it willingly grants its aid. Cogitators process faster, engines burn harder, weapons strike more fiercely.”

Fascinating – these ‘daemons’ he spoke of must be some faction of skilled technicians and engineers! An idea struck her. “Can you see which of the enemy vessels it is present aboard? The singular daemon that you saw?”

The human stared at her for a few beats, glanced aside at the tactical display, and swallowed hard. Nodded again. Face pale, he whispered “Yes. But you know not what you ask.”

Suddenly, Stillstorm was at Beryl’s side. Glaring down at Jardin. “You say that this ‘daemon’ is a great enemy of yours. Do you not wish to see it killed?”

He closed his eyes, chuckling hollowly. “How I wish that were possible.”

A faint humming reached up through the decking underfoot.

The Wave-loom Device was charging.

{You have a plan, Lashret?} Beryl was close enough to Stillstorm to barely receive the focused sending from Tempo, hidden from the rest of the bridge crew.

{If a single ‘ally’ of the enemy is responsible for this improvement to their fleet, then its obliteration has become a priority. That this unknown alien nation appears to have sent only a single representative indicates that they may be few in number; the death of even a single one may dissuade them from continuing to support the Hierarchy.}

Tempo replied {You assume much from such limited information, but it does seem plausible.}

In the few beats that the sanzai conversation had taken, Jardin drew in two deep breaths. Then, in what Beryl now recognized as some strange ritual, his eyes rolled back.

{Do farseers — our farseers — look like that when they use their powers?} Fireblade asked Beryl, privately. {I have never seen one in action.}

Not surprising – even the most momentary flicker of a nearby teidar’s abilities was known to painfully disrupt a farseer’s sight, and Fireblade was among the strongest of her caste. {No.} Beryl shook her head. {Although I have only observed one, but this was not at all like how they acted.} Also not surprising; the human was an alien, after all.

Jardin extended one hand, pointing down and to his left. Beryl glanced at the tactical display — with the new orientation of Tempest relative to the distant Shell formation, the enemy craft were indeed in the direction that the human pointed to. “The group emerging from the disc, behind us. Central formation. Third squadron distant from the star, the one with three voidcraft left in it.” Strain rose in his voice, and he forced out the last words as if through a foe’s choke-hold “The Daemon stirs from the smallest vessel. It sees me; it hungers—!”

The human slumped bonelessly down against the couch, eyes still wide open as he toppled to one side. Beryl quickly sent to Fireblade {Don’t—}

But the teidar did not telekinetically shove the alien away from her as Beryl had feared, instead catching him as he fell and slowly lowering him onto his back to rest where she had sat. Fireblade hovered one hand over Jardin’s mouth. {He breathes, but seems to be unconscious.} After a moment of hesitation, she pressed two fingers to the human’s skin, just underneath his jaw. {Pulse is in the same place as it would be on us. It is steady, but fast.} She glanced aside and sent more forcefully, in clipped sanzai {Doranzer to the bridge.}

Stillstorm, unsurprisingly, had strode back to the center dais. {Tactical, you have isolated the Shell warship that the human indicated?}

{Affirmative, lashret.} replied tozet Antimony. {It is a Type-Z Specialty Destroyer; no unusual characteristics that we can detect.}

{Weapons, range to target?}

{Just over four-hundred-million mannal, lashret. Distance is opening, but at a decreasing rate.}

{I see.} Stillstorm nodded. {Helm, be prepared to slew the Wave-loom onto the target on my command. Weapons, fire as soon as it bears.}

A chorus of affirmatives came from the respective wings of the bridge.

The humming floorplates underfoot increased in pitch. Just passing five charges, if Beryl’s estimate was correct.

The bridge doors slid open, two doranzer jogging inside. One white-cuff junior at the first rank of her caste, and one doranzer mazil. Both knelt at Jardin’s side, the younger warrior holding open her medical kit while the mazil hesitantly pawed through it.

The more-senior of their caste must have been tasked elsewhere in the ship. That meant heavy casualties, somewhere. A cold feeling in her stomach told her it was that disabled ventral blaster turret. Beryl asked {You have both read through mazil-toza Desire’s notes on this alien?}

{Affirmative, listel tozet.} replied the mazil, while the younger doranzer instead only stared wide-eyed at Jardin. {As much help as that is, anyways. We dare not try any of our recovery chemicals for fear of unknown effects; he will have to reawaken on his own.}

From behind, another Group report relayed by Tempo. {Winter Tide reports that they have regained maneuverability control. Starboard reactor has been vented as a precaution; they can accelerate at half-thrust.}

{Navigation, how soon could the Strike Group line up on our departure jump vector if limited to Winter Tide’s reduced acceleration?}

{Three-thousand solon, lashret.}

{Tactical, time until the Shells bring us back into their new effective weapons range if we move at that same acceleration?}

{Two-thousand eight-hundred solon, lashret.} Antimony replied, her sanzai grim.

Stillstorm spun on one heel, fingers drumming on the back of her unused seat’s back-rest as she scowled across the bridge at the comatose alien in one corner. {Then let us hope that this shot strikes true… and that the Shell admiral has chosen to share his flagship with this important ‘daemon.’}

It was… not impossible that the disruptive effect of losing their commander might cause the Shells to flinch in their pursuit just long enough for the Strike Group to escape with no further losses.

But it was a long shot.

Stillstorm keyed one more command into her console. “Van squadron, be ready to resign and evacuate Winter Tide at a solon's notice.”

Even as the verbal acknowledgment came from that squadron’s leader, the lashret gestured to Tempest’s helmswoman. {Rotate us to bear on the target Shell vessel.}

The Vortex-class warship — last of his brothers — spun about. Maneuvering thrusters belched flame and reaction products, even as the protective covers lining his bow-prongs slid aside.

Now exposed to the void, two long rails glowed with barely-restrained energy. Nearly the full output of some of the largest reactors ever installed in a Union vessel had spent the last several hundred solon being crammed into increasingly-resistant capacitors.

Deep in Engineering and in a dozen places along the main hull, nervous gallen monitored the rising temperatures of superconducting conduits. Eyed the numbers flickering past on their displays… and wiped sweat from their brows that was not entirely caused by the rising temperature in their monitoring compartments.

{Fire.}

Invisible to the eye, an interwoven lattice of exotic particles surged forth from Tempest, tearing across the void in a heartbeat. Unleashed from its unwilling prison, raw energy clawed its way forward, hungering for a target on which to satiate its fury.

And found it.

{Target hit, lashret.} the bridge weapons officer reported.

{Target destroyed.} clarified Antimony from the main sensors station.

Craning her neck, Beryl could read enough of the display in front of the other listel. ‘Target obliterated’ would have been more accurate: literally nothing was left of the Shell warship… and the other two in its small cluster.

Hardly a surprise, using a superweapon meant to obliterate superheavy Hierarchy vessels and instead turning it on a mere destroyer.

But the other tozet was not finished. Her sanzai came rapidly, accelerating with each shocking update she relayed from her sensors {Multiple aspect changes from the Hierarchy fleet! Reading three squadron signatures fading, three more breaking formation!}

{Their whole fleet is breaking apart!} crowed one of the younger warriors manning the sensor stations.

The mood in the bridge palpably lightened.

{Update: three more Shell vessels have… detonated.} Beryl’s caste-sister added. {Make that five. Most of the rest have gone inert, drifting.} She paused. {The remaining three squadrons in the force behind us are breaking off. They are maneuvering to exit the system in the direction of Hierarchy space.}

Perhaps even the Shells had been shocked by the sudden — and unexpected — annihilation of their large ambush force? However that had come about, seemingly after the elimination of this daemon.

Stillstorm clasped her hands behind her back, surveying the display of the remaining forces in the star system. It was now a very different balance of power than had been present only eight or so solon previously. {It seems like there is something wrong with their shredded ships, today.}

The lashret tapped a toggle, and the faces of her squadron commanders blinked back onto the display overhead. Stillstorm barked aloud “Fifty-One! The few pathetic survivors of the Hierarchy in this system flee for their lives. They seem lonely without their comrades; shall we send this remainder to join them in oblivion?”

Hungry sanzai cries filled the bridge, and the four officers projected larger-than-life grinned sharply.

Over her shoulder, Stillstorm sent {Doranzer. The alien’s status?}

{Still unconscious, lashret. I am uncertain when he will wake.}

{I see.} There came a pause. {Return him to the medical bay, and notify me when he stirs.} Another pause, and when Stillstorm sent again it was with a grudging note in her sanzai {Inform Parat Tempo as well.}

Another bolt of sanzai flew past Beryl, tightly-controlled enough that she could pick up nothing of the message. At her side, Fireblade froze for a moment, and then nodded jerkily.

Hoisting the comatose human up by his shoulders and legs, they carried him out of the bridge while the two doranzer walked alongside, monitoring what they could.

Beryl’s curiosity got the better of her. {What did the lashret say to you?}

Fireblade did not answer immediately. They were halfway through the atrium outside when she replied {That my caste-sisters and I are to maintain a constant watch on the alien, ready to—}

She froze, suddenly enough that Beryl almost dropped Jardin. {What?}

But the teidar only stood frozen, head turned to one side and staring up at the mural of Tempest standing proud in the bridge atrium.

{Teidar, are you—?} the doranzer mazil began, but Fireblade interrupted her.

{Hold him.} The junior doranzer nearly buckled under the weight of the alien’s torso — why did he wear so many layers of clothes? Anybody only needed two: undersuit and armor!

Fireblade stepped aside, walking up to the base of the mural and holding out one hand, pausing just short of touching the wall. Then, hesitantly, reached out and dragged one thumb horizontally as if smearing an oil leak.

{Fireblade?} Beryl asked, {What do you see?}

{You do not see it?} her friend replied, confused. She brought her thumb up under her nose, and recoiled. {Blood.}

{What!?} Both doranzer and Beryl chorused, nearly dropping the alien. After exchanging a glance, they carefully set him down on the floor.

Now standing next to Fireblade, Beryl ran her hands over the mural. {I see nothing. Feel nothing. No liquids, no stains, nothing. It is dry.} She turned to meet Fireblade’s perplexed expression. Not an emotion that Beryl was used to seeing in the stoic teidar’s eyes.

{But it is right there.} The pallan pointed with her other hand, tracing a line from the floor all the way up to near the top of the mural. {The figure of Tempest, there is a partly-dried line of blood running from her eyes!} She took a step back, holding the ‘bloodied’ hand out in front of her and staring down at it. Rubbed thumb and forefinger together. It looked completely unmarred to Beryl’s eyes. {It… it is fading.}

Beryl glanced behind Fireblade, at the two doranzer who nervously eyed the intimidating teidar’s back. The medical specialists eyed each other, and eventually the mazil stepped forwards. {Teidar, I—}

Fireblade interrupted her again. {I… believe that it may be wise for me to be examined once we reach the medical bays. I do not feel unwell, but...} Dazedly, she returned to the unconscious alien and helped Beryl pick him up.

As the group made their way through Tempest’s corridors, Beryl eyed the slumbering Jardin’s face with curiosity… but also a new sense of wariness. First Shell ships exploding without having been touched, and now Fireblade — a stalwart teidar whom Beryl had known for years — was experiencing hallucinations.

And it had all began after they took this strange, loroi-like alien aboard.

Had they made the right choice?

//////////////////////////////////
Author's NoteShow
Huzzah, the probability table I ginned up finally had Alex roll Warp Phenomena! I’m using modified Dark Heresy lists, and there are some fun ones there that I really hope he’ll trip his way into in the future! Good thing he didn’t roll something like Tech Scorn; if Alex had blue-screen’d every bridge computer on Tempest I think Stillstorm would have put a blaster bolt between his eyes herself. (To be fair, an Imperial captain would probably have done the same.)

And don’t worry, I didn’t just vaporize the only Umiak with a speaking role. Ol’ Clicky-Click-27 hasn’t bit the dust just yet. [The Hal-Tik in question] has a role to play in this story besides being turned into just one more kill marker on some soroin gunner’s tally.
Barrai Arrir
My Fanfictions:
The Past Awakens (Outsider + Halo) [Complete]
Specialists (Outsider + Warhammer 40k) [Complete]
New Horizons (Outsider) [In Progress]

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dragoongfa
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Re: [Crossover Fanfiction] Specialists

Post by dragoongfa »

Did the stupid Husks create demonhost fleets?

Forget help beating them to submission; someone should give the Loroi enough exterminatus ordinance to make Inquisitor Kryptman envious.

EDIT: I wonder which of the four was responsible for that one, too clean to be Nurgle, their manifestations always become visibly postulant. Probably Tzeentch but the others are a possibility as well; the way the Hierarchy is fighting, direct and monomaniacal is up Khorne's alley and the suffering of the enslaved races could be enough to entice a Slaaneshi one.

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Re: [Crossover Fanfiction] Specialists

Post by Cthulhu »

Stillstorm was perhaps too quick to trust that strange alien's assessment, and fire the BFG, but otherwise, it's very good.

Anyway, a suddenly awakened psyker, which burns brighter than the sun? Yeah, that's a perfect introduction for a WH40 novel.
I, for one, would welcome our new daemon-prince overlord. (Umiak) blood for the blood god, (shell) skulls for the skull throne!
dragoongfa wrote:
Sun Oct 06, 2024 7:53 pm
EDIT: I wonder which of the four was responsible for that one, too clean to be Nurgle, their manifestations always become visibly postulant. Probably Tzeentch but the others are a possibility as well; the way the Hierarchy is fighting, direct and monomaniacal is up Khorne's alley and the suffering of the enslaved races could be enough to entice a Slaaneshi one.
The slave-race's suffering is too pragmatic for Slaanesh, and there's no sign of any pestilence. So I'd say either Tzeentch or Khorne, but my money's on the plucked chicken. The war is a bit too orderly for Khorne.

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Re: [Crossover Fanfiction] Specialists

Post by dragoongfa »

Cthulhu wrote:
Mon Oct 07, 2024 11:48 am
Stillstorm was perhaps too quick to trust that strange alien's assessment, and fire the BFG, but otherwise, it's very good.
It didn't cost anything to fire the BFG for Stillstorm and both potential outcomes would be worth the maneuver and energy expenditure. Either the alien was telling the truth and a 'ranking officer' of the new Umiak ally was present on that particular ship or he was lying and now has something for the Mizol to hang onto during negotiations/interrogation.
dragoongfa wrote:
Sun Oct 06, 2024 7:53 pm
EDIT: I wonder which of the four was responsible for that one, too clean to be Nurgle, their manifestations always become visibly postulant. Probably Tzeentch but the others are a possibility as well; the way the Hierarchy is fighting, direct and monomaniacal is up Khorne's alley and the suffering of the enslaved races could be enough to entice a Slaaneshi one.
The slave-race's suffering is too pragmatic for Slaanesh, and there's no sign of any pestilence. So I'd say either Tzeentch or Khorne, but my money's on the plucked chicken. The war is a bit too orderly for Khorne.
Suffering is suffering and we don't know enough about the deal with the daemon to say for sure; for all we know they tithed a few hundred thousands of each slave race, put them all on a planet which allows for more warp shenanigans than average and then had them do an interspecies murder orgy. As for khorne, in its more 'benign' initial offerings it starts by offering power in exchange for battle. It doesn't immediately start with 'Blood for the Blood god and skulls for the skull throne', there is a ladder of escalation for chaotic corruption.

But yeah, Tzeentch is the most probable culprit. The Lord of Change would want to make a mess at Terra's backyard, especially if the Loroi are the ancient weapon that the Eldar had been cooking up 200k years ago.

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Re: [Crossover Fanfiction] Specialists

Post by Urist »

I couldn't find an easy way to show Stillstorm's internal thoughts (having the scene from her POV wouldn't fit, and she's not the type to share her internal considerations with Beryl), but I figure it was something along the lines of:

{It is known that Shell squadron commanders eschew their larger warships (because those tend to be the first targets of the Wave-Motion-Loom Gun), so there's a decent chance that the Shell admiral really *was* aboard that small destroyer. So blasting it to atoms will both A) make me feel better about this ambush by massively over-killing some Shells, and B) actually have a non-zero chance of causing the Shell pursuit force to falter momentarily even if the human is lying about this whole 'daemon' thing.}

{And since we only need ~200-300 solon more time to be able to evacuate *with* Winter Tide limping along, it's worth the shot just to save a warship from having to be resigned and lost. If it doesn't work out, then I've *proven* to that obnoxious mizol that the human is untrustworthy, and we evacuate Winter Tide and escape the system ahead of the Shells anyways.}

Essentially, there's little-to-no downside for her; the only 'opportunity cost' is that she couldn't turn the Wave-Loom device on a larger target than one destroyer; but that's rather trivial compared to the potential upsides of her choice. And it ended up working out in the end... even if the loroi have no idea just *why* blowing up a single 'daemon' suddenly demolished the cohesion of the rest of the Shell force who were not near the device's area-of-effect.
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Re: [Crossover Fanfiction] Specialists

Post by dragoongfa »

No idea as to why YET.

They will have to get an idea soon; they won't survive as a species if they don't.

For us the question is in what way did they implement the Daemon in their fleet?

Was it a single Daemonic engine with a large area of effect? It looks like it but there are strings attached. It could be done if the Daemon is willing but they don't like to possess machines if they can avoid it so they are usually unwilling to do that. In either case the process would require a Chaos Sorcerer who knows the proper rites and summoning rituals to put the Daemon inside the machine and lock it in properly so it doesn't get drawn back into the warp. By the effects exhibited this was no minor Daemon but a Greater one to be able to enhance the firepower of an entire fleet over such great distances.

The alternative would be the possession of a relatively high level psyker (Gamma or Beta should do it) then have the Daemonhost mind control the crews and project Daemonic powers through them; would still require a powerful Daemon to do this but not necessarily a Greater one if the psyker was potent enough.

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Re: [Crossover Fanfiction] Specialists

Post by Cthulhu »

dragoongfa wrote:
Mon Oct 07, 2024 5:46 pm
Suffering is suffering and we don't know enough about the deal with the daemon to say for sure; for all we know they tithed a few hundred thousands of each slave race, put them all on a planet which allows for more warp shenanigans than average and then had them do an interspecies murder orgy. As for khorne, in its more 'benign' initial offerings it starts by offering power in exchange for battle. It doesn't immediately start with 'Blood for the Blood god and skulls for the skull throne', there is a ladder of escalation for chaotic corruption.
Well, if we consider that the demonic influence is a rather new development, then yes, the corruption could be still in its early stages. Even Khorne won't be quite as obvious then, especially during a major war. Now that I think about it, the mindless attrition attacks could be an even earlier sign, or perhaps they were the price for the farseer-jammer & other daemon-engines.
dragoongfa wrote:
Mon Oct 07, 2024 5:46 pm
But yeah, Tzeentch is the most probable culprit. The Lord of Change would want to make a mess at Terra's backyard, especially if the Loroi are the ancient weapon that the Eldar had been cooking up 200k years ago.
I mean, the Loroi are already blue, just add a wing or four, some extra eyes, maybe a beak...
dragoongfa wrote:
Mon Oct 07, 2024 8:31 pm
No idea as to why YET.

They will have to get an idea soon; they won't survive as a species if they don't.

For us the question is in what way did they implement the Daemon in their fleet?

Was it a single Daemonic engine with a large area of effect? It looks like it but there are strings attached. It could be done if the Daemon is willing but they don't like to possess machines if they can avoid it so they are usually unwilling to do that. In either case the process would require a Chaos Sorcerer who knows the proper rites and summoning rituals to put the Daemon inside the machine and lock it in properly so it doesn't get drawn back into the warp. By the effects exhibited this was no minor Daemon but a Greater one to be able to enhance the firepower of an entire fleet over such great distances.

The alternative would be the possession of a relatively high level psyker (Gamma or Beta should do it) then have the Daemonhost mind control the crews and project Daemonic powers through them; would still require a powerful Daemon to do this but not necessarily a Greater one if the psyker was potent enough.
I'd go with a Greater one, because it also needs to project that fleet-cloak, either deliberately, or simply as a side-effect.

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Re: Chapter Three: Shuttle

Post by Urist »

Author's NoteShow
There are a few more "Alex summarizes events to himself" bits in this chapter, but I think that's the end of it. I used them to skip over a few scenes that unfolded almost-identically to their canon Outsider equivalent ("Tempo summarizes the Union-Hierarchy war", "This Noillir could use some milk," etc.), and it didn't seem right to just waste everyone's time by transcribing those scenes here. This story fully leaves canon in the dust once we get to the boarding scene aboard the Hierarchy warship next chapter, so the summary-lists disappear after that.
///////

Alex groaned, one hand rising to massage his temple. Throne on Terra, his head… why all the fuss about amasec, if this was what it—

He blinked, memories flooding back. This wasn’t a hangover.

The Daemon.

It had been all-but-upon him, projecting through the Immaterium. How was he alive? He had felt its gore-fouled breath upon his very soul! It had been about to consume him, drag him into the Warp and—

He bolted upright, heart pounding and eyes wide as he stared around the room.

The medical bay from before, not his prison cell. Good.

He was lying on the same bed, but with his House uniform on… and was not shackled down this time. Also good.

That said, the headache pounding at his skull had not diminished just because he properly remembered its source. The powers with which the Emperor had blessed him were a boon, yes… but also a curse.

Throne only knew how he had evaded death at the Daemon’s hands. Unsanctioned psykers tended to meet quick ends — if they were lucky — the first time they drew the direct attention of a significant warp entity, and he had definitely done exactly that. Unconsciousness would have protected him from another mind searching through his, but against a Daemon it should have been no shield whatsoever.

Alex made the sign of the Aquila. “Thank you most greatly, oh Lord Emperor, for aiding me in doing thy will this day.” The High Gothic words were a balm upon his lips and his soul, after so much use of the xenos tongue yesterday. Or was it merely ‘earlier today’?

Perhaps even many days ago; the wounds left by exposure to the foul energies — and especially the denizens — of the Warp were… ‘unpredictable.’

He swung his legs out to the side, ready to stand up.

And froze.

In one nearby corner of the room, positioned where he had not seen when first awakening, Fireblade stood quietly. She had been within arm’s-reach of him without him having noticed until now. He really had to get used to looking around with his inner eye more often.

The two stared at each other, silently. Neither said anything, but he noted that the fingers of her left hand rubbed slowly at one thumb.

“Uh, hello.” The High Gothic had been nice while it lasted, but now he was back to this ‘Soia Trade.’

Fireblade said nothing.

Come to think of it, he hadn’t heard so much as a single syllable from this particular xenos ever since he had first awakened on this very bed. Perhaps her kind, these ‘teidar,’ were analogous to the ogryn: strong fighters kept around as dumb — emphasis on dumb — muscle and encouraged never to speak? Well, at least she was easier on the ey—

He squelched that thought immediately.

Formed another Aquila across his chest, just to make sure.

The door hissed open, and the little white-haired xenos — Beryl — bounded in. “It is good to see that you are once more awake, Liaison Jardin.”

“It’s, uh, good to be awake.” He answered lamely, unable to think of anything better to say with his mind still clouded.

“Are you prepared for travel?”

“Travel?” he parroted. Okay, this mind-fog was going too far. He shook his head to clear it— and immediately regretted that decision. The drummer beating against the inside of his skull left his post, replaced by an enthusiastic ogryn. “Travel to, uh, where?”

“To Seren, eventually. It is the nearest Union center of government! But for now, we will move to a shuttle that will carry us to our transportation craft for that journey.”

“I see.” At least he didn’t have much to pack. “You said ‘us’? Will you be going along on this trip?”

“Yes.” That was oddly welcome news. But xenos or not, Beryl had been the closest to ‘friendly’ of any of the loroi that he had met. As odd as it was, of course, to apply that term to a xenos.

He followed her out of the medical bay. Only a few minutes later, and they came to a corridor with one glass-lined wall looking out over a small hangar space. A single green-armored xenos stood waiting for them next to an open hatch.

“We will wait here for the others of our group to arrive.”

“’Group’?” He looked back over his shoulder, eyeing Fireblade behind him and then the quite large shuttle-craft sitting waiting just outside in the hangar. “Just how many of your people will also be departing?” That shuttle looked to be at least twice as large as a Valkyrie — it must be possible to fit dozens of people aboard a craft of its size. Although if it was a void-capable craft made for inter-planetary travel, that capacity might be much lower than that of a trans-orbital dropship.

Still, he added “And are you certain that your voidship here can still operate with so many crew sent away?” After all, if the ship was as absurdly small as it seemed to be by how close-by the compartments he’d visited were, it couldn’t have a significant crew complement. And he’d seen almost no xenos in the hallways or anywhere but the bridge: no work-gangs carrying fuel to the engineerium, no ammunition-haulers resting between shifts loading the guns, nothing.

Then again, it was a xenos ship; who knew how they did things.

“Myself, pallan Fireblade, and two soroin.” Beryl answered, laughing softly even as she accepted two wrapped packages handed to her by the green-armored loroi. “And Tempest will be most fine without us; Strike Group Fifty-One is an elite group and our intrepid crew can still handle their duties ably with four fewer warriors.”

And on that note, he had to ask: “The battle yesterday. Or however long it has been.” Two more green-armored xenos walked up, and the group set off down the boarding tunnel. “How was it… ‘resolved’?”

They approached the shuttle’s airlock, as Beryl answered “You seem to have been unconscious for five days. Strike Group Fifty-One left the system, and—“

“Five days!?” Alex exclaimed, shocked. He had expected maybe two at the worst, but if he had strained himself so badly as to be knocked out for five… A thought occurred to him, and one hand dropped to his stomach.

Perhaps anticipating his next concern — although why would a xenos care? — Beryl explained “Our doranzer were able to extract the chemical format of energy-packets from your bloodstream, and synthesize an appropriate match to be injected.”

“I.. see.” He rolled his sleeves back, checking. There were indeed some mostly-healed marks over the major blood vessels on his right arm. The thought of xenos extracting his blood — one of the most sacred aspects of the holy Human form — while he slumbered on unaware was disturbing, yet… “Thanks.”

Surely it would not draw the God-Emperor’s disapproval for Alex to thank xenos who had saved his life? If the Emperor had meant to call Alex to the Throne’s side, then the loroi would simply not have been allowed to revive him.

“You are welcome, Attache Jardin! As I was explaining, Strike Group Fifty-One has left the system and returned to outer Union space. Here, it is safe to transfer you to a transport vessel that will depart for the sector capital of Seren.”

“And the Daemon?” he asked. “It was banished?”

“It was destroyed.” Beryl said, as the airlock opened before them. Short stairs led down into an expansive passenger section, individual padded seats arranged in neat rows. A far cry from the impact-bench seating of the few House Valkyries that he had ever traveled aboard. The listel peered back at him as he descended the steps after her. “It was reported that the Shell ships became ‘visible’ to us shortly after the death of this daemon.”

He nodded, placing himself down in the seat that she indicated. “That is not surprising. The vile inhabitants of the Immaterium wield incomparable powers to confuse the minds of all living beings, whom they regard as their mortal foe... and prey.” Even xenos. In fact, if the forces of Chaos had laid their support behind one side of this Union-Hierarchy war, then it lent an even greater impetus for him to open trading relations with the loroi. “And if their support continues unopposed, the Hierarchy will win against you. Which—”

They will not!” hissed Beryl, suddenly glaring down at him.

He paused, looking back up at the unexpectedly-irate alien. With how friendly she had been up until just now, he realized then that he had essentially forgotten that she was, in the end, a xenos. Prone to unpredictable swings of emotion that no human could possibly anticipate.

After a few heartbeats, her face softened and she glanced aside. Then stepped down the two short stairs ahead of them. “Forgive my agitated response. But the Union has fought the Shells to a standstill for twenty-five years; we will not—” she halted mid-sentence, staring back past him.

“Greetings, Liaison Jardin.” came a voice from behind. The alien 'mizol', what’s-her-name… Tempo.

So he was stuck on a shuttle flight with a xenos psyker and a xenos Inquisitor.

It was going to be a long flight.

///////

A wandering conversation later, and Alex had learned several things. The loroi Union’s standard weights and measures would be good for trade, later, while the fact that their small conflict had only been going for a mere twenty-five years was good for a laugh.

Thankfully he managed to suppress his incredulous humor at the revelation that the ‘Great War’ which the loroi only spoke of in grim, serious words was in fact barely two Terran decades old.

For Throne’s sake, he was almost as old as this ‘war’!

But the loroi clearly did take their small conflict very seriously, and so he fought down his mirth. ...And with Chaos getting involved, it truly was no laughing matter.

He also learned that, of all titles, the loroi hailed their own leader as an ‘Emperor.’ Minor blasphemy aside, it boded well for future negotiations. A single powerful leader, selected (supposedly) for her competence and willingness to make hard, important decisions. It was certainly better than trying to talk sense into a Craftworld’s Seer Council… or trying to beat sense into a Freebooter Kaptin.

Thirdly, his gut-level sense earlier upon waking up had seemed to be correct: the loroi were noticeably less… casual when speaking to him now. Well, Beryl was, at least. Tempo had hardly been particularly ‘open’ to begin with, but Beryl’s energetic curiosity — while still very noticeable — was markedly cooler than it had been previously. Before he had demonstrated his powers on the bridge. Not unexpected – even humans were wary of a psyker, so one could hardly expect xenos to be any different.

On a less momentous note, he also discovered that Beryl could fall asleep anywhere. He’d met enough House armsmen — many with Guard experience — to know how useful of a talent that was; he almost envied the white-haired xenos. The sleep of a psyker, even a low-powered one such as he, rarely lasted more than an hour or two at a time and was frequently haunted by nightmares as his lowered mental defenses were tested by the ever-encroaching creatures of the Immaterium. Ironically, the near-death state with which he had approached 'sleep' the last two times seemed to have actually shielded him from such horrors... somehow. Perhaps his near-separated soul had wandered far from his body and close to the radiance of the Throne, and thus been shielded from predation? That was his only guess, given what relatively little he — thankfully — knew about exactly how daemons hunted.

Tempo sent a sidelong glance at the sleeping listel, and flashed a gentle smile. If a xenos could be said to be ‘gentle,’ of course. “Let us allow Tozet Beryl to rest for a moment. It has been a trying few days for each of us.”

That, he could actually agree with. “Indeed.” Although he did not enjoy being left with only this alien Inquisitor to speak with with. And he was quite aware of Fireblade’s eyes burning into the back of his skull from where she sat in the rear of the compartment. “It… would be appreciated if I could see a starmap of your local area, to determine how practical future routes of trade may be.”

That should get him away from these two xenos in particular, but even more usefully it might begin to answer his question on just how these xenos civilizations — multiple of them! — had come into existence here, deep in the Segmentum Solar. Surely there were enough Imperial worlds nearby that some sign of these Loroi — or Hierarchy, or Barsam, or Historian, or any of the others whose existence Beryl had alluded to — should have been noticed long ago. No Imperials traveled into the Regio Silens, of course, but the technology demonstrated by the loroi and their Hierarchy opponents must have been the product of many, many millennia of development; signs of their burgeoning civilizations should have been detected even if at a light-speed delay of many decades or centuries.

Tempo looked aside, as if staring through the forward bulkhead. “An officer will be ready to guide you through what starmaps we can show you.”

He caught the implied limitation. An expected one, of course; the aliens would be unlikely to be foolish enough to reveal to him the full extent of their empire. “Thank you. And—”

The door in the front of the passenger compartment hissed open. An orange-armored loroi stood there, eyes flitting from Tempo to Alex.

That would be his guide, then.

Following her into the small compartment between the passenger section and what was presumably the cockpit, Alex found himself standing uncomfortably close to the shorter xenos. Something about her struck him as familiar, perhaps—

“I think maybe you are not remembering me from earlier. Our first meeting was most unpleasant.” She raised one eyebrow at him. Her accent was different from that of Tempo and Beryl, and Alex struggled to translate the alien speech. “I am Chief Navigator Talon.”

That got through to his mind. The great Houses of Trade could — and often did — snub the authority of most every arm of the Imperial government. The Administratum, the Ecclesiarchy… even at times the Inquisition.

But no House could survive getting on the wrong side of the Navis Nobilite, the ancestral families of Navigators upon whom all star-travel was utterly dependent. An insult, however small, to one of those Navigators could doom a House in a way that few other acts could match.

And so even while his eyes saw ‘xenos,’ his mind heard ‘Navigator’ and ‘unpleasant meeting’… and reacted automatically. Worse, he belatedly recognized the cobalt-haired, orange-armored being in front of him: he had glared her down in a chance passing aboard the alien warship, days earlier.

“I apologize for any insult received; rest assured that none was intended.” slipped out of his mouth, even as he offered his hand in a reflexive apology.

One that this ‘Talon’ stared curiously at. “What is this you try to do?”

Right. Xenos. His conscious mind finally caught up with events. “Uh, it’s a customary greeting ritual.” He answered lamely, his hand starting to drop.

But then it was seized by two alien hands, cool against his skin. “There, now we are friendly met. Although I think maybe that no ‘apology’ is needed; you were not much in a state to grasp hands when you first were found by us!” Perhaps prompted by his frown of confusion, she added “Me and copilot Spiral were the warriors that went out to pick you up when you were floating in space much earlier. We thought you were most dead, sitting without a space-suit.” She looked him up and down. “Are those strange clothings truly proof to vacuum?”

The garments of a House member? “They protect against a great many more dangers than the simple void.” he boasted. “Is this not also the case for the armor which you and your co-pilot wear?”

“Certain so, yes.” She tilted her head slightly. “This is ‘armor’ of a sort that you wear? Then you are a warrior, Jardin Attache Alexander?”

Not strictly, no. But he had learned enough from Tempo’s brief description of these aliens’ society to know how much respect they placed on the martial class. Perhaps akin to Cadians, or Vostroyans, or any one of half-a-thousand other renowned Guard-dominated worlds.

Aside from being xenos, of course. “Uh, yes.” Close enough. And to emphasize that point in their minds… “But you can just call me ‘Enzin.’” ‘Guardian’ was a good martial name, and it might keep this accented alien from mangling the pronunciation of his High Gothic name each time.

“Now that is uncommon friendly, Enzin!” The alien Navigator beamed at him. “You may then call me simply ‘Talon’ and copilot ‘Spiral.’”

That was not quite the level of informality that he had aimed for, but perhaps it would be useful. After all, while the loroi had been cordial enough with him thus far — for xenos — it was unlikely that that would continue forever. And having two pilots trusted to operate a craft as doubtlessly expensive as this large shuttle feeling positively towards him may be a wise move.

Talon continued “You are perhaps a pilot?”

“I’m afraid not.” Not unless one counted learning to drive some of the House anti-grav vehicles around the trackless deserts of Tallarn. “I’m more of a… ‘scout.’” That was a poor translation of ‘Divination Pskyer,’ but this Trade language seemed to lack the words for the concept. “I, uh, see things from a distance.”

The pilot’s eyes widened. “It is true then that you are perhaps a Farseer? There were some faint sendings about that from crewsisters earlier, but I thought maybe that was rumors only.”

He frowned. The xenos on the alien ship’s bridge had seen him divine the presence of the daemon amidst that Hierarchy formation, but had they truly been so open with information that even this shuttle pilot had heard the story in such detail? “Uh… that may be similar, from what I have heard.”

The alien’s intense eyes stayed on him even as she led him by the hand into the cockpit proper. “But how is it possible? Since you—” she cut off, staring past him towards the rear bulkhead.

A second later, and the door hissed open again to admit Beryl. Apparently her nap had been a short one.

It was also a reminder to him that just because he could not hear them — neither with his ears nor with his mind — did not mean that the aliens were not speaking to each other. That made it rather more difficult to judge their intentions.

“Attache Jardin?” Beryl asked, her eyes dropping to where his hand grasped Talon’s. As if chastised, the tenoin dropped it and stepped back as Beryl walked between them. “You asked about star-charts. I will demonstrate.”

The next ten minutes of digging through the xenos cogitator was an… interesting experience for many reasons.

Foremost, it confirmed that the xenos truly were right on Holy Terra’s doorstep, barely a few hundred light-years from Sol itself! How in His Holy Name they had gone undetected for so long was utterly beyond his imagination.

Even worse, Beryl clearly expected him to show her where the Imperium ‘was’ relative to their current location. Laughable on the face of it, given how Mankind’s dominion extended the full length of the galaxy and utterly surrounded the Union… but not quite so funny given that these xenos were so immediately adjacent to the beating heart of that grand swathe. He carefully pointed off to spinward and rimward, nearly opposite to the direction of Holy Terra. It was honest enough: the Imperium was indeed present over there. And also in every other direction from their tiny bubble of known space.

The confused reactions of the two loroi to that answer also revealed that whatever non-Warp method of interstellar travel that they used carried a ship through multiple systems, rather than directly from departure to destination. That he had accidentally disclosed such a major detail irked him, but only in hindsight was his mistake obvious. Although hopefully telling the loroi that his ship had traveled ‘through’ their Union in order to reach his destination system would impress upon them the unassailable — and obvious, of course — superiority of Humanity.

It… didn’t seem to work.

“That is most fascinating!” Any trace of Beryl’s earlier tiredness was suddenly gone. “It is perhaps copied from a more-complete surviving Soia jump drive? Maybe this can be an artifact of trade between our two peoples!”

He boggled at her, mouth hanging slightly ajar. The sheer unexpectedness of a xenos not only insinuating that Humanity ‘copied’ anything from an alien society but that they would — or even ‘could,’ for that matter — trade away the design for a Warp-drive! It was ludicrous, preposterous, insulting—

And actually probably not necessarily harmful to the Imperium, come to think of it: the loroi’s seeming lack of any Warp knowledge meant that they would find little actual use for a Warp-drive. Fireblade's bright signature seemed to be unique... and it was a far cry from the Warp-focused perspicacity of a true Navigator. It would get one of their craft into the Immaterium, sure, but good luck navigating that treacherous domain without a Navigator on hand or very well-charted routes available. And if he and his House handled things correctly, the loroi wouldn’t discover that until after they had paid a Governor’s ransom in exchange for the ‘secret’ technology.

That said, talking any ship’s enginseers into either providing such a schematic or parting with an actual Drive would quite possibly be beyond even the power and ability of a Rogue Trader.

“Attache Jardin? Did I say something strange?”

“Uh, no.” He shook his head, more to clear his thoughts than to communicate. “It’s… complicated. We’ll discuss that idea later.”

The next thing he learned, a few minutes later, was that apparently this over-sized shuttle and its cogitator were tied into the loroi’s command vox network.

Which gave him a front-row seat to observing the assault of the ‘Hierarchy’ upon this very star-system.

A veritable parade of loroi officers armored in crimson relayed the growing battle. The loroi’s enemies had mounted a sudden incursion into the system, something evidently unheard-of by these aliens due to their reliance on their peculiarly-limited FTL system.

The thickening swarm of ship-markers on the cogitator’s display meant little to his untrained eyes, but Talon evidently saw something else in them. “Grab on to something!”

Alex had only begun to feel around the seat of his chair in search of a securing strap when sudden acceleration shoved him against the backrest.

And also hurled Beryl into his lap.

Her armor’s impact knocked the wind from his lungs… and the reflexive curling of his arms in response was of course the only reason why he grabbed hold of her.

Even as he gulped down air, more enemy ships arrived. He didn’t need to understand the system-map display — his purloined grasp of 'Soia Trade' extended only to its spoken form; the crude xenos letters meant nothing to him — in order to follow along with Talon and Spiral’s running commentary.

Although he could not say if the fact that the vessel to which his shuttle had been traveling suddenly fled the system was an example of a ship-captain making a bitter choice under harsh circumstances… or simply perfidious xenos turning on each other to save their own skin.

Talon’s furious invective did not clarify the situation.

Beryl spoke quietly “I am very sorry for having placed you in danger, Attache Jardin.”

He shrugged minutely, acceleration still pushing down on his chest. “You evidently did not expect this attack. Strange things have happened to each of us, today: you have a Hierarchy surprise-attack in your perimeter, and I have a listel tozet in my lap.”

Although if they all did perish momentarily as seemed quite possible, he might have a hard time explaining that particular circumstance to the Emperor. Hopefully He would be understanding.

She frowned at him momentarily, then blinked and her brow cleared. “I have been meaning to ask something, and this seems to be as good a moment as any. When you were first awoken aboard Tempest, you seem to have copied your knowledge of Soia Trade from a doranzer’s mind; she reported not having felt any mental connection. And then when the Teidar probed into your mind, they reported that what little information they could extract felt as if it was in a ‘vacuum’ of sorts.”

Huh. Well, this was not the moment he expected the loroi to return to that topic. “Yes…?” he responded, warily.

“This leaves me curious how this can be, as we cannot ‘sense’ your presence as we normally can with other living beings. Would you permit me to attempt to establish mental contact? I intend nothing harmful, only to satisfy curiosity.”

That was… the most polite request to allow himself to be interrogated that he could remember. The only ‘request’ at all, for that matter. Corsair Prince Yndrael’s crew had thrown their mental power against his without warning, laughing as he briefly lost consciousness in response. Entirely as expected for xenos, of course; it only motivated him to build up his defenses as best he could.

But now an alien outright asks for him to let her into his mind?

“Uh… sure.” Stuck on this shuttle with so many of the alien soldiers, he wasn’t exactly in a position to refuse. His hand now held firmly in Beryl’s grasp, he hurriedly arranged his mind once more into as strong of a citadel as he could. Hopefully she would be satisfied with the unimportant thoughts and memories left outside of his inner bulwark.

He drew himself inwards, withdrawing into his mind and leaving his body to its own devices. Ensconsced behind the mental walls that he had constructed, he waited.

And waited.

Waited some more.

Nothing.

His inner eye peered over the battlements, like a nervous guardsman checking if the heretic sniper had gone elsewhere.

And saw nothing.

In contrast to his earlier interrogation by the loroi, he felt no intrusion at all into his mind. But—

His inner eye rotated in place. Casting his view elsewhere than where he expected a probe from Beryl, Alex’s mind wept tears at the blazing intensity of the burning pyre which loomed near at hand.

Fireblade.

It could be no other. And yet why was he still perceiving only her, and none of the other xenos in the shuttle?

A loud screech echoed across the stark plains of his psyche. An alien warning, in a language whose knowledge he had detached and left outside his inner mind… unintelligible.

He jerked in his seat, body reaching up and dragging his consciousness back to the Materium. A heartbeat later, and he re-attached the Trade language knowledge that he had left behind, just in time to parse the last fragments of the hurried conversation between Talon and another loroi over the vox.

Then a small dot visible through the forward windows grew into a fingernail-sized white-and-green structure.

Then fist-sized.

And then it flashed past too fast to see.

Stars flashed behind his eyes as something slammed against his forehead.

///////

Fireblade floated aft through the passenger cabin, now tumbling slowly about her. She and Tempo had stayed in the cockpit for some time since the shuttle’s sudden ‘depowering’ several hundred solon earlier, but it was now clear that they were indeed to be stuck here for some time.

There would be nobody coming for them anytime soon.

They were on their own.

On their own with a crowd, apparently. The rest of the loroi aboard the shuttle were pulling padding off of the seats or milling about in front of the access hatch to the side-vestibule in which it had been decided that they would all wait out their rescue.

An entrance out of which Beryl pushed a faintly-pouting Talon to join the group, before the door shut behind them.

{?} Fireblade sent.

Beryl shook her head with a thin smile. {We convinced Attache Jardin to don one of our emergency survival suit’s thermal liner. He says that his own clothing protects against weapons-fire and atmosphere loss, but not so well against loss of thermal energy.}

{That is… surprising.} mused Fireblade.

Beryl cocked her head, as Talon pushed off towards the group detaching cushions from seats. {It seems even more surprising to me that his clothing provides any protection against weapons-fire. It did not feel like hardened material when I was pressed against it.}

{I meant more that he would don inner-layer clothing not manufactured by his people.} Fireblade clarified. {I saw enough into his mind aboard Tempest to know that his people hold a deeply antagonistic view of all species not their own.}

{Truly?} Beryl asked, pouting slightly. {I could see nothing when I tried.}

Fireblade grabbed hold of a vertical brace, pulling herself to a halt in front of the listel with a frown. {You attempted touch-sanzai with him?}

{Tried.} Beryl emphasized.

{It may be dangerous even to ‘try.’} Fireblade intoned disapprovingly. Beryl’s ever-present energy and determination were good traits in a warrior — and in a friend — but they could easily land her in danger if she was not careful. {We do not yet know for certain what his intentions truly are.}

{But you saw into his mind, earlier!}

{Only partly.} Fireblade narrowed her eyes, looking over Beryl’s head as if she could see through the bulkhead to the puzzling alien inside. But no, she could not even sense his presence at all. {His thoughts were not… ‘organized’ as those of normal beings are. I could find but few of them, and those largely inconsequential. No, he has been trained to resist a mind-probe.}

{But did you—} Beryl narrowed her sanzai to a private, focused burst {—try using your full force? Maybe he is only ‘insulated’ and requires unusual strength to reach his mind wholly!}

{Negative; he lost consciousness before I could ask Lashret Stillstorm for permission to escalate. I have reason to believe that that was a defense technique of his, however, rather than an effect of a too-forceful examination.}

Fireblade knew that vanishingly few other loroi could match the force that she could put into her sanzai if she so chose. Learning to limit her sending to the lesser strength used by normal loroi had taken up much of Fireblade’s early training as a teidar… and learning how to hone and weaponize that power had taken up the rest. Her reputation — a war orphan of Seren, and an escapee from Hierarchy experiments whose Shell-inflicted surgical scars had taken more than a decade to heal — had followed her ever since.

{I see. But still, he is strong enough to resist three teidar.} Beryl mused, turning in place to also stare curiously at the door.

{Trained… or built.} Fireblade added. {The doranzer say that he does not bear any traces of Hierarchy construction, but there are too many coincidences about his presence here to dismiss easily. He arrives amidst a supposed ‘battle’ whose ships disappear before we can observe them, he is invisible to sanzai and detection yet he can read our minds via touch, he claims to be from some ancient empire whose presence we have somehow never detected, and his mind is almost entirely shielded from even the most intense searching.}

{Then he is a mystery!} Beryl exclaimed, spinning again to beam at the teidar.

{One intended for the mizol at Seren, not us.} Fireblade met her friend’s eyes. {Those trained in examining ‘mysteries’ and determining if they pose a threat to the Union.}

Talon sent from right beside them {And a ‘mystery’ who’s had plenty of time to get his undersuit on. Now can we go inside?}

Despite the tenoin’s claim, the alien male whom they found upon opening the door once more was still buckling on his outer coat when the loroi floated into the room. He immediately spun in place, putting his back towards the loroi passing by as he hastily closed the front of his upper garment.

A brief burst of disappointment radiated from Talon as the last fastener clicked into place. {I didn’t even get to see anything.}

Fireblade rolled her eyes. {Tenoin, he is a loroi-oid. There is nothing there that you haven’t seen before.}

{I’d prefer to make that judgment myself, though.} the arrir immediately quipped back.

{Beryl can show you the scans and images taken by the doranzer if you wish. She has them on her datapad.} Before her listel friend could send her indignation, Fireblade added {In case the alien under her care requires further medical work, of course.}

Fireblade followed the others in, her eyes meeting Jardin’s stare as she passed. A great many questions tugged at her mind: Beryl was right when she had said that this alien was indeed a ‘mystery.’

Just hopefully not a threat.

She settled down off to one side, making herself comfortable and keeping an alert eye on the human as he spoke with many of the younger loroi milling about him.

A wandering conversation between the alien Attache and the two tenoin over the exact meaning of a diral-seii eventually turned into a strange ceremony in which the human boldly grasped the hands of several loroi in turn.

Fireblade was about to interrupt the risky procedure when Tempo’s mind from behind her sent privately {Don’t.}

{?}

{Let them each attempt their contact.} Fireblade turned to see the mizol floating outside of the compartment, her head peeking around the lip of the doorway. {Young girls, more than willing to take the risk. They have been informed as to the dangers.}

{You would allow this?} Fireblade asked. {The alien’s mind has not yet been fully examined; we do not know what intent or powers lurk there.}

{We have taken precautions.} Tempo replied, jerking her head towards the shadows that lurked opposite her beyond the door. Out of sight from the human’s position. The shadows moved, and one of the young soroin — Flint — briefly pushed herself away from the wall and into the dim light, locking eyes with Fireblade and nodding sharply. Cradled in her arms was a blaster carbine, ready at a solon’s notice. She then sunk back out of sight from the compartment. {And, of course, we also have a veteran teidar watching over the proceedings.}

Grimacing, Fireblade turned again to watch the rest of the warriors continue their ‘introductions.’ If they had seen what she had, inside the alien’s mind…

Tempo added {If he is indeed no hidden-agent of the Hierarchy, then the xenophobia you have found within him seems to be well-contained.}

{That is what worries me.} Fireblade replied. {It is contained thus far, but who can say for how long? He evidently does possess great willpower, to hold three teidar at bay even without us pushing dangerously hard, but what happens if circumstances propel him beyond his limits of self-control? We know little of what may be taken as deeply insulting for his culture.}

{Well...} Tempo floated up next to Fireblade, watching as it finally became the young paset’s turn. {At least we can say that having his disorderly hairstyle insulted is not some great taboo of his people.} she deadpanned.

Fireblade matched her artificially-controlled sanzai. {That is reassuring; I have seen too many fights started over an insult to one’s grooming back at the Teidar Academy.} Fireblade’s eyes slid to the side, meeting Tempo’s red stare.

Held it.

Neither of them — veteran warriors, trained to uphold their composure in order to inspire the younger warriors around them — let even so much as a thin smile creep onto her face, but the private sanzai exchange of amusement carried the point across just as well.

{Yes, I remember your stories. How each young cadet who lost a fight against a peer would have her hair shorn as a lesson.} Tempo sent, her eyes drifting to the back of Fireblade’s helmet. {And how your own has been growing uninterrupted since you left Seren.}

{Since I fought my way free of the Hierarchy on Seren.} Fireblade corrected, letting her pride ring true in her sanzai. As the old Deinarid saying went, ‘It’s not a ‘boast’ if it’s true.’ There were few loroi with whom she felt comfortable bringing up the details of her childhood, but Tempo was one of that select group.

{Indeed so.} Tempo nodded. She then pushed off from the wall and floated towards the main group, her own immaculately-coiffed locks floating weightlessly above her head. As the mizol spoke her sweetened, ingratiating words to Jardin, Fireblade watched.

And only now allowed a thin smile to tug at the corner of her lips. Fireblade had never traveled to Perrein; had only seen the infamous, predatory beimish of that world in videos… but watching Tempo at work she thought she felt that perhaps she didn’t need to.

A creature of Perrein, beautiful in both appearance and voice, using those traits to lure and ensnare unwary victims?

She was watching one at work right now.

///////

[Chapter split into two posts because of character limit]
Barrai Arrir
My Fanfictions:
The Past Awakens (Outsider + Halo) [Complete]
Specialists (Outsider + Warhammer 40k) [Complete]
New Horizons (Outsider) [In Progress]

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