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MillionNovel > Getting Warhammered [WH 40k Fanfic] > 122 – Annoying Skeletons

122 – Annoying Skeletons

    122 – Annoying Skeletons


    <span style="font-weight:400">How did that saying go? ‘Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned?’ I’d wager neither came anywhere close to the fury of a Necron Dynasty with a prickled pride.


    <span style="font-weight:400">If I rolled my eyes anymore, I was sure they’d fall out of their sockets. Still, the urge was strong. I let out a huff and let my power flood through the ship’s psychic conduits and then activated Blink.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I’d have paid a fortune to see the Necron’s faces in the pursuing ships when I first did that. As it was now, I didn’t let up the channelling and as soon as we arrived at our destination I Blinked a second and a third time in a randomised zig-zag pattern.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Leave it to fucking Necrons to predict my random teleports. There was a trio of Necron cruisers already opening fire on the second location. Annoying, persistent fucking Necrons. Who knew bullying one ship would be like kicking the ho’s nest?


    <span style="font-weight:400">Would I do it again? Of course. I had a new fancy Death Ray — that I can’t yet use because I don’t know how Necron tech works, but still — and some necrodermis to experiment with. It was well worth it. Still, this was getting irritating. It had been two weeks since I got my cannon and they were still going at it with the same fervour.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“We should be reaching the edge of the Rift today,” I hummed thoughtfully. Would that deter them? Probably not, the Sautekh had a third of their territory on the other side of the Great Rift. I doubted that warp abomination did more than fuckall to theirmunication tech.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“How long can you keep this up?” Val asked, face stoic and back straight with his arms sped behind his back. If I didn’t remember himughing like a lunatic while throwing around bolts of lightning like a disco ball I’d believe he was some honourable and wise ancient Eldar … actually, he could be both. It was expected that a few thousand years of life in this gxy with an evil chaos god’s ws up your ass would loosen some screws.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I checked my reserves at his question. I could Blink up to two or three Light Years, and I’d been doing that twice or thrice ever since they started predicting my destination a few days ago. My reserves were plummeting.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“It’llst another month at least,” I said. I wasn’t shy back on Baal, I gorged myself on Warp Energy. Even with how wasteful this manner of travel was, we couldst until we reached the Tau Empire. “It should be more than enough if they don’t pull some nasty trick out of their robotic arses.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">It also helped that when they ambushed us for the third time a little over two weeks ago, I devoted a considerable amount of brainpower to streamline Blink as much as possible. The spell went through about twenty iterations since then and its cost dropped considerably; it also stopped giving different body parts extra velocity during teleport.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I had to heal up poor Bob after the first jump since his liver decided to meld with his kidneys. Oops. Anyway, he was good now.


    <span style="font-weight:400">The rest were more hardy than the poor human, so they came out with only some minor concussions and such. Well, there was Zedev too.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I nced at the Magos. He contracted his body into some semnce of a resting position in one corner and the only sign of his living status was his softly blinking mechanical eye and the faint whirling of his machine parts. He’d been like that since we came aboard.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Zedev being in battery-saving mode or whatnot aside, we were closing in on what could be the most dangerous stretch of the journey. Crossing the Great Rift. Technically, it should be easier since we aren’t using Warp Travel … but those were still some nasty Warp Storms, and I really didn’t like the thought of putting myself in the sights of the big four just yet.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Space grew especially fucky around Warp Storms. What if it let a daemon just pop out and nab our ship, or if the storm just decided to chuck us a few thousand years into the future — as it did sometimes — or even worse, what if it just swallowed us and left us in the deep Warp. We would be royally fucked then. I’d have to abandon my Avatar the moment it happened and everything else on the ship. That was too big of a risk, even for me.


    <i><span style="font-weight:400">Actually, I’d be the happiest little eldritch girl if I never had to so much as think about those four ever again.</i><span style="font-weight:400"> Stinky chaos gods and their revolting daemons could rot in hell for all I cared. <i><span style="font-weight:400">Well, that’s what they are doing and they are supposedly enjoying themselves quite well in there.</i>


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Okay, nning,” I turned to the assembled members of our little gang — crew, maybe hangers-on, it is still yet to be determined what they actually are to me, aside from Selene — “I am nning to circumvent that ugly patch of space by flying over or under it. How viable is that?”


    <span style="font-weight:400">Everyone gave me dubious looks, and I suddenly had the urge to pout. Come on, it wasn’t that bad of an idea. Well, not Fae, who was looking thoughtful, but her aura told me she thought I asked a silly question on purpose to test them.


    <i><span style="font-weight:400">Don’t pout. You are a big bad eldritch alien.</i>


    <span style="font-weight:400">“You do know that the gxy is about three thousand Light Years across vertically even in these sections, right?” Selene asked, some non-verbal agreement among the crew somehow always ending up with her telling me all the bad news. “And the Warp Storms of the Great Rift are at least twice that, both vertically and horizontally.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“This ship should be able to cross it in a week if I didn’t have to bother dodging Necrons every twelve hours,” I grumbled. “Two weeks if we are being safe and want to put some extra distance between us and the storms.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">And that was true too. It was mind-boggling, honestly. Assuming they were somewhere in the middle vertically, they’d need to fly up about two thousand light years, then move forward to cross over the rift, then back down another two thousand. That was at minimum six or seven thousand light years to cross and I’d imed it’d take no longer than a week or two.


    <span style="font-weight:400">This ship, made of flesh and bone and other alien organs, was a piece of technology so far above anything humanity came up with in the 21st century that it wasn’t even funny.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Rtivistic spaceflight was but a dream back then, still in the realm of science fiction instead of real physics. And this piece of alien goop took a colossal shit on all that, made a gravitational subspace for itself, and flew faster than the rules of the universe should allow it to.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Selene and Val looked at each other for a moment, like two parents trying to decide who gets to tell their kid they can’t go to the theme park today, then back at me. This time, I did pout at their gazes. What was with them anyway? It was a perfectly good idea.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“That would take us into deep space,” Val started. I waited. Then I looked back at him and blinked in confusion.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Aaaaand?” I drawled, unimpressed.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Four sets of eyes stared at me, seemingly unable to answer. Bob opened his mouth, then Fae’s hand mped down on his face like a w and kept him from making a sound.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Val was frowning mightily, like my question was some profound mystery he had to devote his entire mind to unravel, while Selene just worked her jaws, opened her mouth, then closed it with what looked like a lost expression.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Huh,” she blinked, then shook her head a little. “Right. I guess that … works?”


    <span style="font-weight:400">She nced at Val, but he was long lost in his thoughts so she poked him in the side.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Yes?” He asked. “What was the question again?”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Why are you two acting so weird?” I crossed my arms and red at them, feet tapping.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Well,” Selene turned back to me. “I suppose it’s just that deep space is … well, mostly outside of both of our reaches. The Astronomican’s light barely reaches the Gxy’s edges and any ship venturing further out would be lost to the Warp.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“The Webway also ends where the Gxy does … going beyond would be arduous without its gateways and help,” he rubbed his chin thoughtfully. “Aeldari voidships cannot travel faster than light without the Webway. We have some rudimentary Warp Travel capabilities from the bygone age, but only the most desperate of us dare to enter those hellish realms just to travel faster.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">Now the both of them looked slightly embarrassed, though that amounted to Val frowning and staring at the ground and Selene sporting a slight blush. It was adorable — the second one — so their doubt in me was thus forgiven.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Alright,” I grinned. “With that out of the way, any further objections or can we be on our way? I am getting tired of these skirmishes.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">The worst thing was that the damned Necrons were good, not only in the technological or martial way, but tactically too. Their one failing was pride, but I’d taken a colossal shit on that, so now they took me seriously. Still, they were a miserly bunch, so they calcted the bare minimum force required to give me no hope of victory in a straight fight only after three ambushes.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Three light cruisers, as it was, filled with Death Scythes — their fighters — was just that. Their firepower was just too much, and even if I got in some good hits, it at best fluffed up my ego with no other benefit.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I hadn’t managed to nab a single molecule of necrodermis since the first fight. Any ship I hit with anything close to a dangerous blow slunk back behind another one and kept up its Quantum Shielding, only taking potshots at me.


    <span style="font-weight:400">It was mighty irritating, extremely so. After getting over my initial — sizable — annoyance, I took to memorising everything they did. Their style of fighting and tactics were honed over a war that tore the gxy apart, they fought fucking <i><span style="font-weight:400">Gods </i><span style="font-weight:400">and <i><span style="font-weight:400">won. </i><span style="font-weight:400">If there was a race from which I could learn how to fight well, it was the Necrons — when they bothered to fight seriously that is.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Plus, I sort of considered being extremely annoying to fight, my thing. Annoying stuck-up assholes was a balm to the soul.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“No,” Val answered btedly, shaking his head. “I have no objections. It seems I must reassess my way of thinking and make it fit with our current capabilities … what an interesting conundrum.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">With that, he wandered off to the corner and plopped down. I felt his aura calm to a sereneke before his bum even hit the floor.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Selene just shook her head, still looking slightly embarrassed.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Good,” I smiled. “Let’s go then. Hopefully, that damned rift keeps these senile Necrons frommunicating with the other side as much as it does us.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">It was doubtful, but one could hope. We’d still have a week’s worth of Sautekh territory to get through before we reached the edges of Tau space by my estimations. Maybe two if I fucked something up.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I reached for that set of organs deep within the ships and cast my senses through them and out into the infinite expanse of space. I reckoned a human mind would have broken after a second of being bombarded by the endless stream of dataing as little mental nudges and electrical bursts.


    <span style="font-weight:400">This was how Tyranids travelled without the Warp, how they found star systems. Space was mostly empty, despite what most science fiction shows wanted the watcher to believe, and if one flew in a straight line through the Milky Way, they were more likely toe out on the other end without hitting a single than not.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I felt a nearby asteroid first, only a mere four Light Years away and about the size of arger continent. Then my senses went further and further, reaching across billions of kilometres. I felt gravity bend and dip, an asteroid belt, a, a star, a ck hole, each had its own distinct <i><span style="font-weight:400">taste </i><span style="font-weight:400">to my new, Narwhal-sourced senses.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I mentally zoomed out, reducing each blip ofary gravity to a tiny dot, and out and out I zoomed until I saw space tten. When I felt nothing with any substantial gravity for thest five thousand Light Years in one direction, I smiled and altered our course.


    <span style="font-weight:400">It seemed going under would be preferable, as we were only about a thousand Lightyears away from the bottom, while there were still star systems two thousand Light Years upwards.


    <i><span style="font-weight:400">Upwards. </i><span style="font-weight:400">I shook my head in amusement. There was no ‘upwards’ in space, but my silly human-sourced mind had a much easier time understanding it that way. The proper definition would be … what? I suppose it didn’t matter back when I lived as a human.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Gctic up and down would have to do.


    <span style="font-weight:400">This minor detour would probably be the most boring few weeks of my life since my rebirth here, but oh well, it beats taking a trip through hell and being jumped by an endless swarm of daemons.


    <i><span style="font-weight:400">Just a few more weeks, then I can bully some silly tau … how should I do it? Speedrun it and go for an Ethereal first? Copy their mindfuckery and take over a world? Do it all sneaky and worm my way up their society? Go undercover? Act the mercenary in some war to gain their trust? Or just conquer them, full on, with force. They have no Psykers, no hope to stop me if I really want to fuck their civilisation up.</i>


    <span style="font-weight:400">But I didn’t want that. I wanted … an empire. A little slice of space where I could make something nice. The Tau … they had something quite nice going on, even if I didn’t include the Ethereal’s soft-core mind-control. <i><span style="font-weight:400">I don’t want to destroy that. I should work to make it better.</i>


    <span style="font-weight:400">I squashed the sadistic little goblin jumping on my shoulder, whispering into my ear that the poor na?ve Tau would just be so fun to bully. So <i><span style="font-weight:400">fun </i><span style="font-weight:400">to break. But no. I promised Selene I would be good and keep myself from inflicting needless suffering.


    <span style="font-weight:400">With my obnoxious shoulder-devil banished for the moment, I felt my heart lighten. There was something entirely different, but simrly addicting about prevailing over my baser instincts.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Selene gave me such a pure look. I could feel she was <i><span style="font-weight:400">proud </i><span style="font-weight:400">of me. She felt what I went through and watched as I prevailed. It didn’t matter that I did it effortlessly. That only made her happier, more relieved. She was an open book when she wanted. Our bond made sure of that.


    <span style="font-weight:400">And her feelings surging through that bond at that moment sent a blush rushing up my face.


    <span style="font-weight:400">For once, I didn’t bother to control my body and hide it. Instead, I just smiled at her.
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