118 – Liching Hour<h2><span style="font-weight:400">Roboute Guilliman</h2>
<span style="font-weight:400">The reborn Primarch had some atrocious days, this one not even being close to the worst handful. s, it had still proven to be a miserable experience.
<span style="font-weight:400">He knew the Tyranids were one of the primary threats to the Imperium, but he never thought they would have anything that could hope to beat <i><span style="font-weight:400">him.</i>
<span style="font-weight:400">Staring at the monster that towered even above himself, he had to reconsider. It had a missing arm, its head was scorched and its body had more scabs than armour on it, but he could feel the danger it represented deep down in his bones.
<span style="font-weight:400">If it weren’t for his father’s sword, he wouldn’t have a chance.
<span style="font-weight:400">In the momentary standoff, he cast a nce at the two people that he fought the beast with just before it knocked him out. Dante was sprayed against a wall, attempting to stand before he copsed back down.
<span style="font-weight:400">Echidna, that strange alien, was nowhere to be seen. For a moment, he thought she fled when his previous n backfired so atrociously. Then his gazended on a pile of translucent bones.
<span style="font-weight:400">So it was up to him, the fate of this mission, the, and quite possibly the Imperium as well. Again.
<span style="font-weight:400">He held down a sigh as power, unlike anything he had felt before flooded through his body. It was one part terrifying and one part relieving.
<span style="font-weight:400">His father stood behind him. Or what was left of him did so, anyway. The memory of meeting him still weighed on his mind and would continue to do so until the day he died.
<span style="font-weight:400">He felt a tiny fraction of that brilliant golden light suffuse his body, sink into his sword, and make the mes coating it re up.
<span style="font-weight:400">He took a step. He was before the beast, almost too fast toprehend even for him. It didn’t matter, his arm was already swinging the sword and just a momentter it cut into the beast.
<span style="font-weight:400">His body moved faster than his mind, but the light and thousands of years of experience guided it where his mind could not.
<span style="font-weight:400">He dodged a strike and struck out. An arm fell limp. He struck thin air and felt psychic power dissolve around him.
<span style="font-weight:400">He squinted, tracking dozens of barely visible bolts of power rushing at him.
<span style="font-weight:400">His power red for an instant, gone before even his eyes saw more than a mirage. Along with it went the psychic barrage.
<span style="font-weight:400">Heunched himself at the beast. He could feel his body straining from the power surging through it, he only had seconds, a minute at most before it failed him.
<span style="font-weight:400">The beast had to die by then.
<span style="font-weight:400">*****
<span style="font-weight:400">If I had an eyebrow still, it would have twitched in annoyance as I watched Guilliman battle the Emissary.
<span style="font-weight:400">The beast held out, for now. I doubted it would survive the next minute if things continued as they were.
<i><span style="font-weight:400">Well, fuck you too fate. </i><span style="font-weight:400">I grumbled internally. Guilliman stole any chance of this fight being interesting.
<span style="font-weight:400">I turned my attention toward the towering psychic shield, though I might as well call it a fortress. An idea formed in my mind. If he stole my fight, I’ll steal his spotlight.
<i><span style="font-weight:400">While we are at it … </i><span style="font-weight:400">I thought about regenerating my body … but it would be more fun this way.
<span style="font-weight:400">Psychic power wrapped around my bones, flowing through the translucent matter and linking them back together piece by piece.
<span style="font-weight:400">Then I stood. Arcs of energy took the ce of muscles and telekinesis filled in the gaps. I took a step, then another. My third step in my new bony form almost looked fluid, while by the tenth step, I could strut.
<span style="font-weight:400">Few saw me, but the few who did were staring. Who wouldn’t? It’s not like you saw a skeleton get up and start walking around every day, even in this gxy filled with all sorts of bullshit.
<i><span style="font-weight:400">Do I count as a Lich? … No, my soul isn’t anchored to a phctery or anything. I’m still just an eldritch puppeteer. Oh well, they don’t know that … but they don’t know what a Lich is either.</i>
<span style="font-weight:400">With how absorbed I was in getting stronger and staying alive so far, the distinctck of good old entertainment hadn’t touched home yet. There were so many shows, movies, and books saved to be watched/readter on that I never got around to. It really was a shame.
<span style="font-weight:400">Mephiston didn’t quite gawk, like the trio of Librarians who swung around and aimed various foci at me. Before he could stop them — if he was even going to do that — a trio of basic Smite lightning bolts rushed at me.
<span style="font-weight:400">I didn’t even raise a hand, just ring up the energy flowing through my bones. All three touched a translucent barrier just inches away from my bones and exploded against it without doing much. I kept walking; they didn’t even make me stumble.
<span style="font-weight:400">“<b><i>Stop that,” </i></b><span style="font-weight:400">I used my trusty Illusion spell to project my voice at them. <b><i>“It’s annoying.”</i></b>
<span style="font-weight:400">I think I saw one of them gulp. Then they collectively nced at Mephiston, asking for guidance. The man himself merely frowned. Feeling his aura brushing up against mine, I allowed it to linger for a second before brushing it off..
<span style="font-weight:400">“Get back to work,” he whispered, turning back to the wall. “Will you help us?”
<b><i>“That is why I’m here,” </i></b><span style="font-weight:400">I huffed, striding up to the wall and cing a palm on it.
<span style="font-weight:400">The Hive-Mind was unquestionably a master of the biological form, though I would much rather call what it did ‘controlled chaos’ than engineered perfection. The end result was very simr, but I could tell from all the Tyranid temtes I had that none of them were really a model made from a blueprint.
<span style="font-weight:400">It was really a ‘throw shit at walls and see what sticks’ method, cranked up to a thousand and on loop. Each loop optimizing the result just a bit more, which added up to produce spectacr results over the aeons.
<span style="font-weight:400">Its application of psychic powers was much the same. It was efficient, streamlined, and powerful. Still, it tasted of brute force and little to no creativity behind it. It was ‘good enough’ perfected, weird as that was.
<span style="font-weight:400">Which meant the entire thing before me was uniform. Every single psychic bio-form that was linked together to create this barrier was using the exact same tried-and-true barrier. It was something impossible for humans. I doubted <i><span style="font-weight:400">I </i><span style="font-weight:400">could cast the same barrier twice, and I had quite the control over my energy.
<span style="font-weight:400">That, of course, didn’t mean the barrier was easy to break. I poked and prodded as my aura spread over it and my energy pierced into its weave wherever the tiniest gap was found.
<span style="font-weight:400">It fluctuated, making it impossible to make out any weak spots, since while I was sure there were some, they popped up and disappeared in nanoseconds before new ones took their ce. No human would have noticed them, and I doubted even the most powerful psykers would have been quick enough to do anything, even if they did.
<span style="font-weight:400">I wasn’t most psykers. A hundred mind-cores watched with rapt attention for any signs of weakness as my aura wrapped around the entirety of the barrier. One second. That’s all it took to find one.
<span style="font-weight:400">A nail of psychic power pierced before even my enhanced mind could react. The barrier held though it weakened at that segment for a brief instant. Still, I grinned internally as two dozenrger Tyranids shrieked and copsed into bloody heaps and new ones rushed to take their ce.
<span style="font-weight:400">They probably would have taken up the ck in under a second. I could already feel the new power surging to reinforce the part I just weakened. Unfortunately for them, they were in for a ride.
<span style="font-weight:400">Over the next ten seconds, another twenty nails pierced into vulnerable gaps, another fifty just a moment too slow to do any damage. Still, twenty made it. Then thirty, then a hundred.
<span style="font-weight:400">I was honestly floored by how well the Hive-Mind was counteracting my attack, shifting the energy around and doing its best to keep the entire thing running. It wasn’t enough though; it was far from enough.
<span style="font-weight:400">When the thing was sufficiently weakened and my Librarian peanut gallery was suitably impressed, I let my power flow without holding back. If I still had flesh and skin, the amount of energy surging through my bones would have ripped them to shreds at this moment.
<span style="font-weight:400">There <i><span style="font-weight:400">were </i><span style="font-weight:400">positives to having a body made entirely out of soulbone. Even if the downsides made it impossible to sustain it most of the time. It took an exorbitant quantity of energy to sustain the body and control it. Doing so was only possible without exhausting my reserves much faster than I would have liked because I was currently syphoning even more energy from the Warp than I was spending.
<span style="font-weight:400">Still, as I opened the floodgates, I dipped into the negatives. Heavily. It was so worth it though.
<span style="font-weight:400">I didn’t bother with fancy coating, leaving the energy pure as it was and not turning it into mes or lightning. I didn’t use any spells, just letting it flow and st into the barrier. My old and trusty Eldritch st didn’t disappoint.
<span style="font-weight:400">The barrier cracked with a sound I felt more in my soul than through my ears the moment the burst of power touched its surface. Then the beam continued on and crashed into the densely arranged waves of Tyranids.
<span style="font-weight:400">It left nothing in its wake as I swung my hand from left to right. Matter, be it organic or not, a simple piece of rock or an apex Tyranid, evaporated.
<span style="font-weight:400">I cut off the beam, not willing to feed it more power than needed. I still wanted to have more energying out of this fight than I came in with, furthermore, I couldn’t get temtes and bio-energy from the carbon dust my Eldritch st left in its wake.
<span style="font-weight:400">I stepped through the widening crack, quickly followed by a bolt of lightningughing like a maniac and an armour-covered Selene, who fell into step behind me. The swarm was in disarray, only a few of the psychic beasts survived, the bacsh of the barrier shattering and their desperate attempts to meld what remained of it would only hold back the rabble for a few more minutes.
<span style="font-weight:400">I could feel Mephiston follow behind me, his power crashing into the crack and easily overpowering the few beasts. He held it open as his men flooded in, and then he pushed and widened the crack.
<span style="font-weight:400">Not that I gave him much of my attention. The Norn Queen had the dubious honour of being a target of my focus. With the way Guilliman was demolishing the Emissary, not even ash would remain of that thing once he was done with it.
<span style="font-weight:400">I had mostly written the Emissary off as a lost cause. I couldn’t even damage the damned thing. Unless I could get my tendrils on the entire corpse or some broken parts … didn’t Guilliman cut off an arm?
<span style="font-weight:400">A fraction of my mind split off to search for the thing and found it without fuss. What remained of it, at least? A ck scorch mark on the grey stone ground. Ster. Damned stupid overpowered ming sword. Whatever. I didn’t even want it.
<i><span style="font-weight:400">This one won’t get so lucky, though. </i><span style="font-weight:400">I grinned at the Norn Queen, hastily shuffling away even as its broken body failed it. I only touched it a tiny bit with the beam, and it was damaged goods even then. It was truly and utterly fucked.
<span style="font-weight:400">I didn’t give it a chance to do much, if anything. A blink brought me up behind the beast, a st of telekinesis sent everything other than my target flying, most of them in more chunks than they were a moment before.
<span style="font-weight:400">For the sake of dramatics, I opened my skeletal jaw just as a tendril of eldritch flesh phased through my skull and shot out of my mouth like a horrific mockery of a tongue. I could tell the Queen wanted to do something, and while I doubted it would work, I just … sent one of those mental sts right into the Shadow down in the Warp.
<span style="font-weight:400">The alien monstrosity shuddered, all of its minions falling into a mindless frenzy as I disrupted their connection to the Hive-Mind. Then my tendril split into a hundred hair-thin threads that wrapped around the towering Norn Queen.
<span style="font-weight:400">It would have taken minutes, if not hours, to break through its armour and flesh, had it been in top condition. As it was, the white cocoon I wrapped it up in shrunk just a secondter, my ‘tongue’ pulling back into my mouth and disappearing into my skull.
<span style="font-weight:400">I turned around.
<span style="font-weight:400">Carnage, utter carnage filled the cavern. Alien screeches, mad cackles, and much more echoed in the hall. The Tyranids were broken, their node creatures mostly dead, and with arge contingent of very angry gold and blue marines bearing down on them.
<span style="font-weight:400">I let my normal Psyker Form rebuild itself around my skeleton as I watched the battle. The barrier was all but gone, mostly a faint mirage that couldn’t hold up against even the weakest of marines crashing into it.
<span style="font-weight:400">Beyond it, I saw the other battle hade to an end too. Guilliman stared at me, into my empty eye-sockets as he stood above a giant ckened mark with his sword still glowing.
<span style="font-weight:400">As skin flowed over my newly made muscles and my set of emerald eyes finally popped back into their ce, I quirked a smirk. I didn’t know why, but I felt like I won somehow.
<span style="font-weight:400">I watched his grip tighten around his sword for a moment, his gaze steely as he stared at me amidst the carnage taking ce. Then his sword sputtered. Its light went dim and the mes all but disappeared.
<span style="font-weight:400">He stared down at his weapon, a measure of shock clear on his face, and my grin widened.
<span style="font-weight:400">[Notification: A chip of the Emissary’s sword has been collected by one of the insect-drones.]
<span style="font-weight:400">I let out a giggle at that.
<i><span style="font-weight:400">Take that fate. I don’t need a whimsy bitch like you to win, to seed and </i><b><i>to matter.</i></b>
<i ss="fa fa-exmation-triangle" aria-hidden="true" style="padding-right:5px;"></i> Announcement
<span style="font-weight:400">I finally figured out how to schedule posts on SH. Am feeling mighty stupid.
<span style="font-weight:400">Anyway, this means chapters will be perfectly on schedule from now on. 18:00 CET on every Wednesday and Saturday.