Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Characters of the Rancid Blade: The Lady Hosphel

The Lady Hosphel 
The Lady Hosphel is often known as the Mistress of the Dragons.  She is the leader of the Screaming Dragon Wych Cult which makes it home in the many arenas of the Cabal of the Rancid Blade.  She and the Archon Actev Nu have had a long and profitable relationship through the years.  She and her wyches are happy to entertain and provide a never ending parade of victims for the amusement of the cabal. In turn the wyches are sheltered and honored amongst the minions of the Rancid Blade.  
The lady first rose to prominence in the arenas of The Cymbel.  As one could imagine she became used to the finer things in life while fighting in the arenas of the most privileged.  Cymbel is a small  arena circuit reserved for only the most powerful and wealthy of Commoragh’s denizens.  It was in this most elite circle that she came to be noticed.  When she struck out to form her own cult she did not want for wealthy patrons to support her and her clan.  The Archon Actev Nu was the most wealthy.  

None would call the lady a servant of the Rancid Blade because it if often unclear who in fact is in charge of the cabal.  Her and Actev vie for ultimate control.  Some years he is undisputed and others she is of clear prominence.  One of the closest warriors to Actev once said that the Lady and the Archon lead the cabal as though they were in a constant knife fight with each other.  The Lady is amongst the most powerful of leaders, especially in these dark days when for several years it was rumored that Actev had been slain.  The lady is a highly skilled martial artist and performer favoring an Agonizer as her weapon of choice.  Often she rides to war bare breasted on a reaver jet cycle.   However, recently she has been seen with a phalanx of Incubi.  Her fortunes must have increased indeed to have such assistants at her side.  

Lady Hosphel is an Archon. She is an HQ choice and an independent character.  She carries an Agonizer, a Shadow Field, a close combat weapon, and takes combat drugs.

Lady of Speed  Special Rule
Lady Hosphel is an ace at fighting at speed from the seat of her reaver jet bike. She may ride a Reaver Jetbike into battle for a cost of an additional 25 points.  She benefits from the following Special Rules: power through pain, acute senses, fleet (if on foot) or skilled rider if mounted.

Monday, December 20, 2010

Tales of the Rancid Blade: Part thirty six: His primary creditor

Burgoful had seen the body.  His crew had carried it, dripping, from the streets of the old city back to the oubliettes of Archimedes.  It was here that the old Homunculus had begun his cruel work.  His lonesome work.  It was here that the old Archon was reborn.  There were so many deals that the old one had made.  So many plans and schemes and bargains.  None of the partners on the other end of the deals, and the plans, and the schemes were prepared to let Actev Nu get away from their bargains through something as easily as being shot through the skull and having his heart cut out and stolen.  They paid in saves and in dark favors to make sure the old Homunculus brought the Archon back from the dead.  Despite what Burgoful knew about the dark ways he was still amazed when watched the Archon walk through the crescent door into the dank light of the antechamber.  It was him.  It was the man grown young.  

The Grand Archon, as he was known, had been the lord of the Chalice Pit, the Nightmare of the Chill Worlds, and the curse of a thousand million brothers.  He who had once been the old Archon of the once mighty Cabal Rancid Blade and lord of the Screaming Dragon Cult, now stood before Burgoful as a young man.  His head was shaved clean and the fine princely features of one of the sculpted class now only held a shadow of the old man’s face~ but a shadow was enough.  He wore a long dark robe, a dank green, and held a white cloth in his hand.  His eyes were the color of a glacier~ cold and blue.  They met the Sybarite’s and Burgoful saw the old man deep down.  Behind the Archon shuffled the form of Archimedes.  His long leathery head moved mechanically as the horror merchant stepped into view.  His hand curling out, from within long blue robes, two of the six fingers were scalpels.  

“My old steward” Actev said revealing a grim of evil energy “I see you are surprised.  You should not be.  Death and time have made me stronger.  Stronger than I have felt in an age.”

The Sybarite nodded. “You look young”.

“I feel it.  I feel as though a metal grip were released from me.  I feel as though I am as young as when I was in the elder days.”

“You are younger...” Hissed the Haemonculi “Your body and heart is that of a Trueborn who sacrificed himself for his master.  The form of your old body has been...” the creature thought of an adequate term. “... retired”.  Actev held out his hand, stretching his fingers, inspecting his nails.  

“It feels as though these are my own fingers.  My own hands.”

“It should.  The body hasn’t changed.  Just the brain.  All that remains of your old self is your brain”

“Then why does he look so similar to the man he was?  I mean his foes will know it’s him”.  Burgoful asked.  The horror merchant turned away  snarling at the question.  

“Do not ask of that which you choose not to experience”.  The sybarite was silenced.  “The lord of the Rancid Blade has many friends...  and they have paid well to see he has been restored to his former greatness.”  

Actev looked into the crimson darkness the surrounded them.  He knew he had no friends.  There were none who had friends in the dark city.  

“Tell me Archimedes,  what to I owe thee for this service?”

Silence for a moment and then: “Nothing great one...  nothing today... ”

Nothing today.  The Archon nodded.  He mentally added this item to a new list he was forming in his head.  Nothing to be paid to the Homunculus Archimedes.  He was sure that he would find out what compound interest would be paid to his creditors.  Those who would not let him be slain by a human’s pistol.  Those who would not let deals be undone and plans unravel so easily.  He nodded to himself in confidence.  

“Burgoful, what of my domains?” he asked as he began walking confidently from the Homunculus’ door.  Their footfalls echoing through the dark passageway before them.  The old leather face watched them leave with an evil smile on his maw.  He listened to their footfalls.  “What of the Lady Hosphel?”  

“She has been watching over your domains my lord.” The Sybarite replied  “She has secured your realms during your... convalensence”

Actev Nu nodded again considering the wych.  For a moment he was glad of her loyalty and then he reconsidered.  She, it seemed, was now his primary creditor. 

Cemephon Campaign Turn 1.7

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Tales of the Rancid Blade: Part thirty five: The Silvery Hand

There are many who can claim the mantle of greatness amongst these stars.  Many who can be called heroic, or gigantic, or even mighty.  The heroes of the Space Marines live to fight a thousand wars and that is heroic.  The ageless lords of the Eldar strive for the remnant of their race and that is timeless.  Even the flicker of greatness can be seen in an Imperial officer or a Tau colonist for the moment of his life.  But there are some beings who cast a longer shadow than those.  There is one who casts a shadow that the ages can not measure and time is fearful of.  The Silvery Hand is his name and he is bringing his children together.  

The mighty Actev Nu was not the first of his minions.  One of the greatest Archons of the fallen Eldar kin.  Perhaps the greatest.  Actev's greatness was born, like so many others, out of the fall.  But unlike his dark brothers something changed him as he fell.  When the birth scream of the Thirsting God occurred all those millenia ago Actev was but an Eldar.  At the moment he slipped toward the vortex of Slanessh, pulled into the horror, a silvery hand stretched out from the cosmos and caught him.  A molten dream captured him and carried him away.  He fled from the horrors of that moment and as he did a living silver crept into his eyes, crept into his mind and hid there.  It hid there and helped him carry his domains to the great crimson city of the webway.  The Silver Hand hid there and through its shiny influence Actev became a mighty master of the dark streets, an overlord of the horrible neighborhoods.  Through the millenia the Silvery Hand secreted away...  waiting... growing.  

When the great Confessor Sylax was but a preacher he was lead by the Silvery Hand across the blasted sands of Mordia.  His trek brought him renown and took him to the Sororatas that were cloistered in the mission there.  As Sylax marched across that furnace landscape he was sustained and changed by the melted glass and molten that existed there.  The spirit that lead him was the same that guided Actev Nu, unknown, for the millenia.  Unknown it sustained Sylax through his pilgrimage across the wastes and through the decades of war and conspiracy and tricks and schemes.  Sylax, guided by the Hand manipulated the 27th Mordian Iron Guard for two hundred years advancing schemes, unknown even to himself, but known by the Silvery Hand.  When the Inquisitor Gulofil learned and revealed Sylax’s true nature the Confessor fled.  Few believed the claims of Gulofil or his minions but Sylax was driven out, stripped of his titles.  He fled to and hid in Commoragh.  He was sheltered by the same Silvery Hand that had brought ActevNu to power so many millenia ago.  The Silvery Hand protected its own.  

Sylax returned to the real world hundreds of years later. The Mordian 27th regiment was long destroyed but the Sisters of the Cloistered Heart were yet to be unleashed.  Sylax continued the schemes of the Silvery Hand with the sisters at his side and none as faithful as The Nurse.  She stood by his side, bore his child, Sylvie and raised her to be a sister of the Adeptus Saroratas.  The Silvery Hand was at work in the universe through Sylax, preparing the way... Getting ready.  

Through the generations Actev Nu was also working the will of the Hand.  Though he only knew a faction of what he did.  His actions and the actions of the Confessor built the path the Silvery Hand needed.  Actev Nu’s eldar pirates disrupted trade fleets and delayed colonial settlers so they would not reach the Sleeping Worlds.  Sylax destroyed the moon of Palthanx so that the gravitational vacuum would activate long lost technology, technology frozen by those who once moved the stars and moons at will.  The minions of the Actev Nu included the corrupted Etherial Ari’Ashi who is but now leading a vast invasion on the Cemephon System to divert Imperial resources from discovering hidden worlds.  The attention of Inquisitor Nelthas was diverted so easily by the Tau invasion fleet.  She had been so close to finding the long hidden tomb of the Cyiontyr and all it’s secrets.  But the Silvery Hand knew best and it had for bllions of years before any of these character’s races had been born.  It’s manipulations had stretched though the eons, protecting, working, nurturing those who slumbered. 

Until one night both Sylax and Actev Nu were struck down on the field of battle~ the same field of battle.  Thrice wagered schemes played themselves out to that moment.  Sylax and his companions fled the field of battle with his broken body.  They cut the Archon's heart from its corpse and carried it in the bloody helmet of the Archon.  Sylvie, the daughter of Sylax, and her lover, Yanaloo, a minion of Actev Nu’s arena, carried the servants of the Silvery Hand back to the dry sands of Mordia.  They were lead down the winding stair by the Nurse, the last and most faithful of the sisters that dwelt in the old Mission.  

Down down down into darkness they ran.  Their feet falling on old stone.  Flaming torches held aloft they strode through dark passages carrying the bodies past watching eyes inscribed on anchant walls.  In the oval Chamber of the Eclipse The Nurse took a vial from the dusty shelf and as Sylax drank the universe groaned in horror.  The silver flowed into Sylax.  His old eyes expanded while the channels of his brain filled with quicksilver.  He grasped the dead heart of the old Archon and absorbed it's evil core into his new body.  It seemed to melt into his chest.  As the silver engulfed him he rose from the arms of his daughter, floating above the ground, lifting to center of the oval chamber.  His body expanded.  A dark green light flowed from his eyes while face reveled in the power of his new form.  His body expanded and his mind awoke.  The Silvery Hand was born into the world.  It lifted up and placed the old Archon's helmet atop it's head.  It swept the Nurse aloft with a broad long arm capturing her and cursing her to live with him forever.  

Sylvie and Yanaloo fled the chamber.  As they ran they saw the dark metal eyes of the newly awoken, the long sleeping, the Nercontyr reborn as the Necrons.  They stood and came to life.  The Silvery Hand was their lord of long ago, a son of the Star Gods, and imbued with their power.  His millenia of plans and works, orders, machinations, and schemes was almost fulfilled.  His minions were almost ready.  His silver tide would sweep through the universe.  His carefully laid schemes would now unfold.  He would prepare the way for the horror of the Necrons.  Few were left to stand in his way.

The Dolgath Legacy Part 15: despite the doom


The Adeptus Astartes fleet dropped out of the warp right on top of them.  Every alarm on his battle cruiser seemed to go off at once.  Dolgath sat down heavily in his chair and pressed his palms over his ears.  A flurry of functionaries swarmed his audience chamber, all babbling incoherently.  He turned away and gazed through his expansive viewport at the arriving fleet.  The looming bulk of the newly arrived strike cruiser – like some massive shark with its fins spread wide and its jaws gaping – dominated the vista, surrounded by multiple escort craft like remoras swarming, he watch as a shuttle instantly launched from the strike cruiser’s black maw and headed for the docking bay of his ship.  He turned back to the gibbering mass gathering in front of his desk. 

“Cancel the alarms!  Receive our guest promptly and courteously, and show them here at their convenience,” Dolgath said with and effort at calmness.   

The functionaries receded, taking their cacophony with them, leaving only a tall, solitary, silent figure shrouded in shadow.  Dolgath seemingly ignored the figure as he rose, walked to the viewport and stood gazing at the newly arrived fleet.  

“I have a feeling our lives just got a bit more complicated…” Dolgath spoke, as if to himself. 

“You did not expect the Tau to give up so easily?”  The shadowy figure spoke.

“They are annoyingly optimistic, aren’t they?” Dolgath chuckled. 

He turned as Nelthas glided forward and simultaneously reduced her height; the sight was strangely disconcerting as if she was racing toward him from a great distance.  She was attired in black underlain in creamy lace; her psychomorphic mask was rosy ping with lips as darkly crimson as newly shed blood.  He felt a great surge of happiness at the sight of her despite the doom the fleet’s arrival brought with it. 

“They expected this planet to fall easily.  When it did not and the rest of their advance thrust past it, they realized they had a glaring weakness in their flank.  They are turning now to address it,” Nelthas analyzed. 

“Makes perfect sense,” Dolgath nodded.  “I just didn’t expect reinforcements so soon.” 

“Treyquil...” Nelthas offered. 

Dolgath rubbed his temples.  “Could be, although I heard a remnant Imperial Dragon force struck the Tau as a target of opportunity with some success several months ago.  Perhaps the Astartes have taken a personal interest in the prosecution of this campaign?”    

Nelthas glided up to the viewport to stand close to him.  “They have arrived in force to be sure…”

Friday, December 10, 2010

Cemephon Campaign Turn 1.5

Tales of the Rancid Blade: Part 34: Fragments

Fragments.  Wood shards.  Stone chips. They floated in the air before him.  Slowly.  Light reflected off plaster dust as it splayed through the air.  It had been punched from the wall beside him.  The wall had erupted in a riot of noise and fragments and pain.  But he watched it move in slow motion.  As he must have been moving.  Moving through the air.  What once had been an abandoned room in a derelict building now became like the contents of a snow globe, swirling moving, rearranging.  As his body moved through the air his mind flashed thoughts through his head.  

He saw the recent arrival of two drop pods, Space Marine assault vehicles that plunged from the sky, delivering a monstrous payload.  Maturn remembered watching a mechanical coffin lumber from the pod, gout's of flame issuing from its arms.  He was embarrassed to recall that he was relieved the monster had moved off to focus on a team of Crisis Suits rather than toward his fellow Pathfinders.  His relief hadn’t lasted long.  The stationary Drop Pod’s auto sensors detected his team immediately and began launching shells into his position.  The wall beside him dematerialized, blowing outward and knocking him off his feet.  As his body crescented though the air his mind cast about trying to catch something familiar.  

Analop stood in a field.  It was a long time ago and the red Holhok grasses waved in the slight wind.  Trees and their yellow foliage waved and caught her attention.  She looked up in slow motion.  A long dark pony tail curved as underwater.  Her spring dress frolicked about her long body.  He watched the curve of her neck.  The skin, a slight blue, was dotted with the finest freckles.  It had been one of the first things he had noticed about her.  He had thought that they were like tiny river rocks amongst the stream of her skin.  Her attention was drawn back toward him now.  Her large dark eyes widened to see him approach.  It was Millliltan, the festival of the dry season.  He was meeting her to picnic in the field.  Six years ago.  As he approached her face brightened and her glands blossomed.  A roar swept over them and at first he thought it was a wind in the field...  but the fragments drew together and he was back in that building.  What remained of that building.  

He crashed to the floor and felt fragments in his shoulder snap apart.  Pain seared into him.  He genuinely thought his life had been flashing before him.  The sound roared back and he heard the punching of shell impacts.  He looked around and saw the bodies of several of his team mates.  He saw a pulse carbine, his, some distance off laying on the floor.  Then, he felt a presence nearby.  He looked up and saw the huge form of a Broadside Suit standing above him.  Its massive arms, supporting railguns,  faced away from him out the blown windows of the building.  It's dominant white form hadn't been touched by the impacts from the drop pod at all.  He followed the barrels to where they pointed.  The yellow of the morning light was still on the building across the street.  

Bolts ricocheted from the street below and another explosion threw debris and fragments across the room.  Maturn flinched at the concussion and tasted the thick of blood in his mouth.  His eye glanced back at the Broadside.  It’s relatively small head had turned to look down at him.  He saw the green of the optic lens looking at him from the tower of it's body.  Just as he thought the robot might say something it’s shoulder mounted smart missile pods opened.  Blunt missiles spewed from the pods, screeching and creating clouds of snaking exhaust that curled and twisted, following the missiles as their instinctive programming sought a target.  The suit looked on at him as though it were ignoring the fusillade that it was creating.  The missiles were gone in an instant, the smoke swept after them.  And the raucous detonations could be heard a moment later.  He could imagine what the recipients were going through. 

Thursday, December 09, 2010

Tales of the Rancid Blade: Part Thirty Three: For the greater good

The crest of the hill was rocky and strewn with brooms of brown tall grass.  The sandy dirt was a dull yellow color.  A brilliant blue sky reached from horizon to horizon interrupted only by the occasional dry rise in the land in the distance.  If one were to have cast an eye at the hilltop without a detailed inspection or the assistance of a view enhancer one would have missed the two small figures crouched amongst the rocks at the hem of the bluff.  A shelter field masked and distorted the colors of their uniforms so that they appeared yellow and brown as the surrounding landscape.  They had been crawling about on the bluff for a few hours now that so much of their clothing was the same dusty yellow of the earth.  Maturn sat amongst the Rockey outcroppings with a scope that he’d detached from his weapon held up to one of his large dark eyes.  His view carried him down into a slight sloped valley before them.  Nearby, Atticus, another Pathfinder in his team, cradled his pulse carbine in his arms while keeping an eye out for movement close at hand.  He would occasionally look through his scope toward the valley below and then shift back to the surrounding area.  

Through the scope Maturn watched a column of Imperial tanks advancing.  He pondered the many behemoths as they churned up the yellow earth.  The column was lead by three large battle tanks.  They were followed by six or so armored personnel tanks and then several dozen humans on foot.  He watched them march.  There was a spring in their step. It was a confidence that he hadn't seen on a human’s face since the start of the war on this world.  They were advancing on an enemy position.  Also something that hadn’t happened for them in a long while.  He tapped the top of his scope with a stubby blue finger as he considered the column.  He noted several preachers walking along behind the foot soldiers chanting as they went.  One of them held a censor. The smoke of their faith could be seen wafting from its innards as the holy-man swung it.  He could see some of the foot soldiers chanting along with the priests,  their mouths moving.  They were too far away to hear a sound.  He also observed several artillery pieces moving along behind the foot soldiers.  Large tracked guns.  

“If this is a typical column their advance will be slow” Atticus noted while viewing the slow progress of the foot march.  

“Yes” Maturn said slowly not taking his eye from his scope. “A giant can move slowly and blunder about and still wreak havoc all around”.  They both sat in silence for some time as the column passed them by.  The sound of a stutter bird’s call echoed in the distance.  Shhhii,  shhhi, shii.  They ignored it.  

After some time Atticus turned quickly to the east.  He pulled his weapon into an aiming stance. Matrun lowered the scope from his eye slowly and turned his head to observe an approaching human.  He was a soldier from the column.  The tau had been waiting for him.  Maturn rose from his seated position and walked toward the human under the watchful eye (and barrel) of Atticus’ weapon.  The man wore a camo green grey uniform and a green cap.  The insignia of an Imperial infantryman, standard barer class, hung at the man’s shoulder.  Maturn nodded as the human approached.  
“Maxwell, it is good to see you again” Matun spoke in the human language of this man’s homeworld with barely a trace of an accent.  

Maxwell nodded casting a nervous glance around.  “Maturn” he said in acknowledgement.

“I am happy that we can bridge the gap between our two races once again.  The peace that we force here will soon spread...” 

“You talk too much” the human cut off the tau.

Maturn attempted as close to a grin as his alien face could manage.  “You’re right.  Maxwell, brief as always.  I like that.”

“Sure” the human muffled and then coughed. “Did you bring the beans?”  

“Yes” he said.  At this the man’s hand shot out.  Maturn observed a quiver in the man’s hand and it sought the ‘beans’.  Maturn hesitated. “A partnership is always a trade” said the Water Caste member.  The man’s hand slowly withdrew to his pocket.  The human reached down into his fatigues and pulled a small datacard.  He presented it to the tau.  

“Troop deployment plans” he said.

“Are the Marines included?” Maturn asked taking the card from the man.  

“Yes.  I also got the communication transcripts like you asked.”
Maturn nodded.  Maturn liked to read the conversations between the human generals.  Their petty bickering conveyed so much information.  He imagined himself and his prying into their arguments as a thick viscous liquid closing about them.  He knew so much about these men who opposed him, yet they didn’t even perceive him.  The arguments between them were like the cracks in the massive wall.  He saw the cracks so clearly, so well.  Any monument can crumble with enough cracks he thought to himself.  All he needed to do was flow into the cracks and wider and wider they would become.  

Maturn took from his pocket a blister of pills.  Small plastic enclosed capsules in a bean shape.  They had a light blue color.  He handed over the blister and the man’s eyes focused on the pills.  “There are always more ‘beans’” Matrun said.  The man looked up at the tau.  A small laugh of self doubt issued from the human. “I need the communication codes next time.  I need to be able to intercept and modify the transmissions”.  The man rubbed his chin as if pondering the words.  “I need them soon” he said. “Once this war heats up again there will be few times for us to meet.  You’ll have to make the beans last much longer.”  

The man nodded. “It can be done”

“I know”.  

Maxwell started to back away slowly.  Maturn looked past him.  The light had begun to fade into the early evening.  Maturn raised his three fingered hand in a wave.  

“I think you’re forgetting something my friend” he said.  The human paused and swallowed hard.  Maxwell raised his hand in a similar fashion to the alien but in the human it seemed like a hand raised in surrender.  Maxwell spoke as a defeated man.

“For the greater good” he said

“Yes” said Maturn “For the greater good”.

The Dolgath Legacy Part 14: A voice that would haunt him for years to come


Inquisitor Trequill was feeling somewhat more charitable towards that Ordo Xenos spook, Nelthas, since she had loaned him her ship and Navigator to speed him on his journey.  The ship, the Nostramus, was a spartan thing, barely light cruiser class, but he had to admit; it had it where it counted.  His stateroom was as plush as anything he could want, but more importantly, the ship was outfitted with the most advanced Mechanicus systems available.  In fact, much of it was entirely unfamiliar to him; reverse-engineered Xenos tech, he assumed.  The command deck was a wedge-shaped structure three stories tall lined with matt-black cogitator stations each connected by a snaking mass of cables to a silent and immobile servitor dressed in the crimson and brass of the Adeptus Mechanicus.  Some of these stations would light up at unpredictable intervals as their particular functions were activated, the servitors suddenly twitching to life.  At the crux of it all was the navigator fulcrum, a transparent sphere of greenish fluid held in place by arcane field generators. 

The Navigator in question, Dom Hellaith of house Sennesh-Constantine-Matsumishi, was a horror to behold.  Yet despite the flapping gills, translucent skin, protruding eyes, bulging forehead and purplish veins; she was apparently considered quite the catch amongst the young eligible males of the great houses of the Navis Noblite.  She came with a host of suitors and sycophants – hideous unrepentant mutants all.  The worst part was she was apparently in the midst of some sort of extended copulation ritual, evidenced by the obscenely throbbing device that attached her and several of her suitors together at the nether regions.  This device, he was told, ensured that only the finest seed would be the source of the next scion of the Navis Noblite.  Just the thought of it made his skin crawl.  Never-the-less, Dom Hellaith was supremely proficient at her job.  They had made the transit from Schindelghiest to Cypra Mundi in merely six weeks, traversing nearly the full breadth of the galaxy, loosing only 22 days Imperial standard time.  Dropping out of warp after a seemingly endless stretch of boredom, Trequill was absolutely stunned to see the grand spindles of the massive space station of Cypra Mundi filling the view ports.  Not as stunned has his quarry would be, he was thinking…

The stop at Cypra Mundi was unfortunately necessary as he needed to check in with the Segmentum Obscurus Ordos command.  The wait in the foyer of the Ordos sanctum was interminable.  The chamber was vast and cold; but owing to the fact that it was limited by the confines of a space station, it was not nearly as excessive as similar Ordos edifices he had visited in his travels.  Never-the-less, the expanse of glossy black marble and towering ornate statuary was clearly designed to impart insignificance to those who waited.  No less than seven other Inquisitors loitered here waiting their turn for an audience with the High Lord.  Each was a singular presence, some surround by a host of exotic henchmen.  He recognized only one by reputation.  The massive suit of golden baroque terminator armor was an image widely circulated on the pictcasts and could only mean he stood in the presence of the Witchunter Borros. 

The hard-line puritan was flanked by a squad of stormtroopers in immaculate white carapace, arrayed in perfect formation.  Borros stood stone still reciting scripture as he patiently waited, making no effort to engage anyone in conversation.  Treyquill was extremely thankful for that.  None of the dogma Borros would inevitably spew was of any interest to him what-so-ever.  In his opinion, Borros was the embodiment of the worst the Ordo Hereticus had to offer.  That kind of blind adherence to doctrine was everything his master, Onrholt, had preached against his entire life.  Unfortunately, Borros’ aloofness was not shared by everyone… 

The wizened Ordo Xenos Inquisitor, Glaxx, endeavored to engage him in conversation nearly the moment he walked into the room.  The ancient and invalid inquisitor was held erect by a spindly brass apparatus and maintained by a host of support servitors.  He obviously had a wealth of experience to impart, unfortunately, his conversation consisted of a stream of disconnected trivialities interrupted constantly by inane contributions from his sycophantic hangers-on  Trequill heaved a huge sigh of relief when the nuncio called Glaxx into the audience chamber. 

Free at last. Treyquill spotted a refreshment servitor and immediately snatched a glass of something and downed it in one gulp.  Absinth – and a good vintage, he grabbed another glass in each hand before the servitor scurried off.  He made a bee-line away from the rest of his fellow inquisitors and stood looking up at an ornate tapestry depicting some bloody event in Imperial history – just which one he wasn’t quite sure...  He took another drink and noticed an individual who sat silently in a shadowed corner nearby surrounded by four intimidating Grey Knights.  At that moment, Trequill realized he stood alone.  Strangely, he had brought no entourage, he was traveling light these days and he was beginning to like it. 

“Grace,” a breathy and cultured voice said from the shadows. 

Treyquill wasn’t quite sure what that comment referred too.  He let it hang in the air for a moment before he replied.

“Indeed…” he said neutrally.  

 “Nocturne, the Enigma Cabal, I remember thee,” the shadowed voice said. 

A host of memories flooded through his mind, mostly consisting of death, darkness, and desperation, yet he could not place that exquisite voice. 

“You have me at a disadvantage,” he finally admitted trying to get a glimpse of the speaker between the hulking forms of the Grey Knights. 

“We have not met, yet greatly thou have aided me, though you knew it not.  I offer my thanks,” the shadowy speaker said.

Just then the nuncio came into the chamber and rapped his staff loudly three times on the marble floor.  “Inquisitor Treyquill, the High Lord will receive you now!” 

“Fare well in your endeavors,” the breathy voice said.

“Until we meet again,” Trequill replied with more conviction than he felt.  He doubted if they would ever meet again or if he would even recognize her if they did.

As the massively tall doors parted Treyquill ventured one last look into the shadows and saw the figure stand.  Long raven hair and a finely sculpted porcelain face were the last impressions of her that he took with him; along with that voice that would haunt him for years to come…

The audience chamber of High Lord Melphas was as ostentatious and obnoxious as anything he might have imagined; and Trequill could imagine quite a bit.  It was vast and designed to be awe-inspiring; at least forty stories tall and twice that distance long, decorated with massive gilded sculpture and impossibly tall marble columns.  Surprisingly, it was not a singular audience chamber; in fact at least two other Inquisitor Lords and a half-dozen Adeptus Arbite Judges were simultaneously conducting proceedings in this chamber.  The general din drowned out most of what was going on in adjacent venues, not to mention a good portion of the critical information imparted in the individual sections.  The High Lord’s dais was somewhere several stories up, Treyquill could only vaguely glimpse it. 

Trequill knew High Lord Melphas from his youth.  While still at schoolagem, Melphas was an occasional and dynamic lecturer emphasizing the importance of deductive reasoning.  Even then, he was a morbidly obese individual.  As the years passed he grew into a nearly unrecognizable grotesque mass of bloated flesh made marginally mobile by the resources of the Adeptus Mechanicus.  On this day, only his voice bore any resemblance to the man he once knew.   

“Oliver!”  That deep, rich, jolly voice resonated in the chamber.  “I remember you well, those bright eyes, that sharp tongue…” 

“My Lord, I am honored,” Trequill bowed deeply.  

“Nonsense, let us speak intimately,” Melphas said. 

Suddenly, Treyquill found himself rising smoothly and rapidly from the floor.  When he reached the dais level he glimpsed copious amounts of Imperial splendor, but his attention was focused on the High Lord’s seat.  Melphas was far less the man than he was expecting.  His once corpulent bulk was now a pile of pale flaccid skin.  The skeletal structure of his face was actually visible beneath the sagging folds.   

Treyquill bowed once again.  “My lord, you look…  thinner…” 

Melphas gave a low liquid chuckle.  “Yes, I suppose I do.  Cenobite parasites will do that for you,” he chuckled one again.  “You look… dangerous…”

Treyquill snorted in surprise. 

“No, really, you have cultivated an aura since I saw you last, what, fifty years ago?”  Melphas said. 

“Perhaps, or maybe it is merely the fact that I’ve been spending too much time in the company truly dangerous individuals…”  Treyquill offered. 

“Hardly, I have always recognized your dangerous intellect, I think it is only now just starting to shine through,” Melphas said.  “What’s the word from the Charadon Sector?” 

“The Tau have been acting up,” Treyquill said. 

Melphas sniffed.  “Better than a Tyranid invasion or Chaos incursion, I suppose.”

“Such an appraisal would be unwise.  The Tau are a more significant threat than most suspect, but then that is a matter for the Ordo Xenos.  “More importantly for us, Inquisitor Lord Dolgath has identified a considerably more insidious threat,” Treyquill offered. 

“Dolgath… Your old schollagem mate, yes?”  Melphas frowned.  “As I recall, at the last congress, Inquisitor Yerth forwarded a motion of Excomunicatus against him.  No others backed that motion, but it stands as a serious matter none the less.” 

“Yerth is a twit!” Treyquill spat. 

Melphas chuckled, “Yerth is but a tool, to be sure.”  He took a long moment before he continued.  “However, you may be certain other, more dangerous, individuals proposed that motion…” 

“As you know, I am a true student of Onrholt,” Trequill shot Melphas a long significant stare.  “Dolgath has become a radical, that much is clear, yet his record of service is exemplary.  For nearly twenty years he has been in exile, but when the call to service came he answered the challenge without hesitation.  New Boston would have fallen by now without him.  Moreover, he has thwarted two significant threats to the Imperium – at least one of which was a truly ancient evil…”

“Yes, I read the reports.  And now they are here, all the way across the galaxy in Segmentum Obscurus, on Mordian in fact!”  Melphas exclaimed. 

“They are merely husks now; they cannot harm anyone unless they are reconstituted…  Yet, this cannot be allowed to happen.  It is my purpose to snuff out whatever remains of this evil so that their shadows never again darken the galaxy,” Treyquill said.     

“This is a worthy mission,” Melphas nodded without hesitation.  “You have authorization to access whatever resources necessary to accomplish this goal.” 

“My thanks…”  Treyquill started to bow. 

“You realize the success of this mission will likely vindicate Lord Dolgath in the eyes of the congress?”  Melphas asked.

“I do,” Treyquill finished his bow.