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MillionNovel > Getting Warhammered [WH 40k Fanfic] > 129 – Fishies Come Knocking

129 – Fishies Come Knocking

    129 – Fishies Come Knocking


    <span style="font-weight:400">"Identify yourself, Gue," he demanded, the word spoken like a curse. "You are trespassing in T’au space."


    <i><span style="font-weight:400">Well, someone’s having a bad day.</i>


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Am I?” I smiled back at the hologram with the best amicable expression I could manage. “The System seems pretty dead to me, but s, this is the only ce we could reach. You see, we’d been attacked on the way by dreadful creatures of living metal and had to stop to repair our ship.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">"It is indeed T’au space," he said. "Even if the infrastructure and poption are still developing. As for your tale, I care not. Leave immediately."


    <span style="font-weight:400">“I’m afraid that would end with our death in short order,” I said apologetically, while my gravitational sensors worked in overdrive. <i><span style="font-weight:400">There. Found you. </i><span style="font-weight:400">“Our ship is still a few days away from being serviceable.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">The fish head had the gall to harrumph despite my best attempts at diplomacy.


    <i><span style="font-weight:400">‘Tell him why we are here,’ </i><span style="font-weight:400">Selene’s voice whispered into my mind. <i><span style="font-weight:400">‘He thinks you are a standoffish human merchant captain at best. He’ll probably change his tune once he knows you want to join his glorious civilization.’</i>


    <span style="font-weight:400">“You see, good Sir,” <i><span style="font-weight:400">Who still didn’t bother to introduce himself- Fuck. I didn’t either. </i><span style="font-weight:400">“Me and my crew were just on our way to seek employment under your Empire. So if you would be so kind as to allow us a few days to repair our ship, we would be well on our way to the nearest popted.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">"Employment?" he asked dubiously, looking me up and down with what I suspected was a frown. "Are you seeking asylum? No. What is your true intent, Gue?"


    <span style="font-weight:400">“We are mercenaries,” I said. <i><span style="font-weight:400">His ship is locked in. If need be, I can st him into oblivion … but that would be the end of the diplomatic approach, which would be a shame. Let’s brown nose a bit more. </i><span style="font-weight:400">“We heard your empire employs various races as auxiliaries in their armies, and we decided it would be our best option. Since we’d be hunted down and burned for our presumed ‘<i><span style="font-weight:400">heresy</i><span style="font-weight:400">’ in the Imperium, our only hope was to escape and hope our services would be enoughpensation to take us in.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">"I … see." he squinted his eyes, long fingers thoughtfully stroking his chin. He nced to the side, as if receiving input from his drone before giving a nod. "If you speak with sincerity, you will be weed into the Greater Good with open arms. We do not discriminate. That is, provided you are being truthful about your intentions."


    <span style="font-weight:400">He seemed to smile before continuing. "We will need to verify this before transporting you to the nearest sept world. After all, we must ensure that no infiltrators or saboteurs threaten our harmonious society."


    <i><span style="font-weight:400">‘Val,’ </i><span style="font-weight:400">I connected to the Eldar currently flip-flopping between amusement and seething. <i><span style="font-weight:400">‘Can I trust you to make sure any of them thate to board us think this a regr imperial ship aside from the passengers?’</i>


    <i><span style="font-weight:400">‘Of course, Mistress,’ </i><span style="font-weight:400">He said. <i><span style="font-weight:400">‘As much as I’d love to have you test your psychic finesse by influencing an entire group of them unnoticed, we would have to start much smaller first. I will handle them easily. Do you want them to be impressed by the ship, or have them think it archaic and inferior to their own?’</i>


    <i><span style="font-weight:400">‘Go with the second,’ </i><span style="font-weight:400">I said. <i><span style="font-weight:400">‘It’s better for them to underestimate us.’</i>


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Well, when can we expect your arrival, then?” I asked the hologram. “We''d very much appreciate being escorted to safety.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">The Tau straightened up, his arms sped behind his back as he gave a single arrogant nod. “You can expect us in … 15 Terran minutes?”


    <span style="font-weight:400">I returned the nod with an amicable smile on my face, one which quickly disappeared once the hologram fizzled out. “We should have gone with stealth. I’m going to strangle that blue fucker if he keeps up that attitude.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Novel challenges are good for growth,” Val noted, though I didn’t for a second think he didn’t murder the Tau captain a hundred creative ways in his mind while that conversation yed out.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Selene hesitantly patted me on the back, still looking a bit sheepish over ourst conversation. I sent her a smile. She was trying to cheer me up, and that was what mattered to me.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Throgg,” I nced at the hulking Ork poking his head in through a door. “Make sure your little brats behave. I don’t want to fight the Tau just yet. Beat as many of them acting out into a pulp as you have to if it means keeping them in line. Also, assemble a small contingent that’ll act as guards.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">"Undastood, boss!” He nodded eagerly. "Dey''ll behave demselves."


    <i><span style="font-weight:400">Okay, fifteen minutes, let’s speed up this shipbuilding. </i><span style="font-weight:400">I rolled my shoulders before letting my power loose. I wasn’t creating anything too out there, I was just remodelling the ship to look like a run-of-the-mill Imperial Light Cruiser. With my mind-core’s help, making materials that <i><span style="font-weight:400">looked </i><span style="font-weight:400">like the ones the Imperium used in the few schematics Zedev had was not that much of a challenge.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Unfortunately, most of them were … trash. Garbage. Sure that thin sheet of bark sure looked like the metallic material they used for the hull, but a regr human could peel it back with their bare hands.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Look and function were much harder to aplish in tandem. Oh well, Zedev was working on that. Hopefully. I hadn’t peeked into his mind in quite a while and wasn’t really sure what he had been up totely.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Oh well, he wouldn’t havee along with me if he wanted to be a pain in my ass or the like. <i><span style="font-weight:400">Plus I think I would be able to feel if he had any sort of animosity towards me. Throgg certainly doesn’t hide how much he wants to beat me up, but I guess I shouldn’t reallypare an Ork and a Magos.</i>


    <span style="font-weight:400">Bio-energy flowed through the ship. It was already about one-third done and the schematics and temtes for the materials were also almost done, so when I pushed my mind-cores to the limit with a quick infusion of bio- and soul energy; I had the finished blueprint in mind.


    <span style="font-weight:400">From there, it was just a matter of throwing enough bio-energy at the problem. It pained me to waste it, but I’d hopefully be getting most of it backter. Plus, regr materials like these barely cost a thing, even when I had to make a ship’s worth of them.


    <i><span style="font-weight:400">Tyranids sure are jam-packed with energy. I could cover a smaller with a newly made forest and still have some change remaining. Baal sure was worth it.</i>


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Done,” I hummed, letting my aura epass the ship from end to end. “Not sure how we’ll fake an exhaust plume or the generator, but the rest should look how it should.”


    <b>“It is missing the millennia of wear and rot,” </b><span style="font-weight:400">Zedevmented, his mechanical eye flickering rapidly as he leaned on his war-stave-thingy. <b>“Do not let them examine the generators in detail. The Tau know how they should look, even if they don’t know the mechanisms behind their workings. They would be able to tell a fake on deeper examination.”</b>


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Alright,” I nodded. “Want a top-up? You are looking downright corpse-like today.


    <b>“Revitalising my organic parts would be greatly appreciated.”</b>


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Still don’t want me to change it up a bit?” I hummed. “Maybe some Eldar bits, or perhaps Astartes?”


    <b>“Negative,” </b><span style="font-weight:400">he said in his go-to static voice. <b>“Relying on another’s mastery over the flesh as a Magos Biologist to improve upon my organic parts would be shameful. If I have them reced, I will do the procedure myself.”</b>


    <span style="font-weight:400">“If you say so,” I shrugged. “Hit me up if you want any samples for that.”


    <b>“Understood. Your … help is appreciated.”</b>


    <span style="font-weight:400">I poked him in the side, sending a jolt of bio-energy through him and damn, was he all sorts of fucked up. There were more drugs in his blood than oxygen, and his flesh was atrophied, almost mummified. His body wasn’t too happy with being treated as hardware. Even his immune system was beaten into submission by drugs to ept the copious amounts of machine parts grafted onto him.


    <i><span style="font-weight:400">And all this after I healed him to tip-top shape just months ago.</i>


    <span style="font-weight:400">“All done,” I hummed. “Tell me when you need another healing, it barely costs anything so I don’t really mind even if I have to do it daily to keep you alive.”


    <b>“Acknowledged.”</b>


    <b>******</b>


    <span style="font-weight:400">I easily tracked the Tau ship as it closed in on us, even as it manoeuvred through the asteroid field. There was just a distinct taste to things that were <i><span style="font-weight:400">alive </i><span style="font-weight:400">or had something living on them in my Tyaranid-sourced gravity sensors.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Then they were there, docking with our knock-off cruiser. Honestly, our ship was as empty as the Sahara, even with the number of Orks and their lesser kin reaching the thousands. Light Cruisers — the oversized Imperial ones at least — were still almost a kilometre long.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I had all the cannons disabled and visibly powered down, unlike the blue asshole who had a dozen railguns ready to fire all the way till a smaller transporter docked with our ship.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Tiny drones shaped like flies and mosquitos watched on as a small contingent of Tau stepped into the ‘weing hall’ where Val waited for them with a contingent of his own spread out behind him menacingly.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I chuckled as the confident stride of the cadremander — <i><span style="font-weight:400">I think that’s what they were called? — </i><span style="font-weight:400">broke and he nearly nted his face into the floor as he noticed the dozen hulking Orkz eyeing them like a fresh cut of meat.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Those were Throgg’s strongest and biggest boyz so far. They were born from the pile of corpses and the rivers of gore that were left behind after we cleared out the Orkish ship. They’d been surprisingly well-behaved so far, probably because Throgg now stood at an imposing two and a half metres tall and had thighs thicker than their waists.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Plus, they could beat the ever-living shit out of each other on the lower decks if they kept the ship intact, and their overall numbers kept increasing. Apparently, Throgg also set up a rule as Da Boss that anyone who wanted to beat up the ‘Da Big Boss’ — Me — had to first beat him up. Which meant no Ork tried to jump me yet for a scrap, aside from some rabid newborns that I kicked away as if they were feral cats.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Greetings, friends,” Val said and I could tell maintaining that amicable smile and the gentle demeanour was causing him not insignificant psychic damage. Especially since he thought of the Tau as beings even more insignificant than humans due to their near imperceptible souls. “Wee to our ship. I am Valenith and I will be your guide, if you’ll have me.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">I was, of course, back on themand deck — the small room that had once been the only room in the previous ship — as I was only all too happy to hand over boot-licking duty to Val when Selene suggested the idea.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Of course, rifles snapped up as the Tau collectively took a step back. It was honestly admirable that none of them proved to be trigger happy enough to blow holes into my Orkz. They had discipline. I had to give them that.


    <i><span style="font-weight:400">And fancy weapons. Beautiful fancy weapons.</i><span style="font-weight:400"> I wasn’t sure what exactly they were, but they were clearly not the bulky, brutalist weapons of the Imperium.


    <i><span style="font-weight:400">Ion Rifles? </i><span style="font-weight:400">I hummed, having taken a quick glimpse into one of their minds. The Tau in question blinked in surprise, but shook it off after a second. <i><span style="font-weight:400">Nice. He seems fine, even though he clearly felt me poking around. I’m getting better.</i>


    <span style="font-weight:400">“No need for aggression, friends.” Val stepped forward and more than a few barrels turned to point at his face. His face twitched almost imperceptibly. “You won’t be attacked if you don’t strike at us first.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“You are in no position to make threats,” the cadremander barked, though his nervousness was clear to my empathy. “Keep your … men in line.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“I’m afraid that isn’t how it works with my green friends.” Val shook his head helplessly. “The best I can do is to keep them from attacking you.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">The Tau’s mouth opened for a retort, but no sound came out. Instead, he visibly calmed down as the angry lines on his blue face slowly disappeared. Anxiety and suspicion drained out of his aura, not entirely, but it went down to a level where logic could win out over emotions.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“I see,” the cadremander said. His eyes still roved the towering Orkz, but now took note of the fact none of them moved and none of them even had their weapons pointed at his men. “You will find railguns make short work of an unshielded vessel, should you fail to restrain them.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">He waved his hands, making a hand sign meaning something along the lines of ‘lower weapons, remain alert’. Me catching that from their surface thoughts meant Val surely caught it too. The old Eldar might be a master of throwing lightning bolts, but his mastery over Telepathy was leagues beyond my own.


    <span style="font-weight:400">As the squad of Tau lowered their rifles, pointing them at the ground, but not taking their fingers off of the trigger, the cadremander stared at Val for a lengthy few seconds before speaking up. "Should you keep your word, though, you have nothing to fear from us. We are here to ensure your captain spoke sincerely and to determine the best way to transport your ship to the nearest with a shipyard. My sincere apologies for not introducing myself earlier; my name is Shas''El Sha''draig Korvash."


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Wee aboard, Shas’El Korvash,” Val said with a smile I almost believed was sincere and gave a nod, having maintained his amiable demeanour even through the blue cunt’s continued threats and posturing. “Now, where would you wish to go first? I understand imperial ship designs are much different as to your own, so feel free to ask for my help in reaching whichever part of the ship you wish to see.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Your assistance is much appreciated,” Korvash said and stepped up to Val, giving wary nces to the Orkz. “I believe starting with the generators would be appropriate.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Follow me please,” Val said, then spun around and strode through the line of Orkz who jumped out of his way like a bunch of frightened cats. I let out a snort as I caught a faint sign of what he did there. A simple burst of induced extreme fear, imnted right into the mind. “You two came with me. The rest of you disperse.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">The Orkz obeyed, much to the wide-eyed amazement of the Tau.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“And off they go,” I hummed, leaning back into my newly made fluffy sofa. “That went well.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“They were unnaturally antagonistic,” Selene noted from my side, arching her neck to stare at the Illusory hologram floating before me.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Yeah, tough luck for us, I guess.” I narrowed my eyes, ncing at the tight grips they had on their rifles. “Though I suppose they must be mighty confused. They just saw a crew made up of a Human, and Eldar and a bunch of Orkz work together. The unknown can be terrifying and that is what we are to them right now.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Or they just had some horrible experiences with humans,” Selene countered. “That cadremander was Fire Caste, based on his name. And a high-ranking one at that, a Battlesuit pilot. Those aren’t supposed to be sitting around on spaceships.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“So a military transport ship had to be the one to stumble upon us,” I said. “Oh joy. Could be true. Fighting against the Imperium, especially defensively against an invading crusade, certainly wouldn’t endear Humanity to them.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">Selene just gave me a nod, frowning at the screen. “He influenced the Tau, didn’t he?”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“I think so,” I scratch my cheek.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“You think so?”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Yeah.” I nodded. “I couldn’t feel his energy moving at all. I don’t think he even drew on soul energy from my Pool, he just used what he had naturally stored in his body.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“I see,” Selene murmured, and a momentter felt tiny tendrils of energy y on her fingertips like questing snakes. They thinned further as her face scrunched up in concentration. She nced up at me, then back at the threads of energy. “How far away do you think these are from being imperceptible?”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Depends on who’s doing the sensing,” I shrugged. “For me? I think Val is doing something fucky with space to hide his own energy when he uses it stealthily. So he is kind of cheating.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“So you’re saying thinning them is never going to be enough?”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Not for me, no.” I rapped my fingertips on her thigh. “Want to do something I wouldn’t notice, do you?”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“No,” she sighed, and let the threads dissipate. “But what better measure to use than the detection of the strongest Psyker I know?”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“I think working smarter and not harder is the way to go with psychics,” I hummed as my fingers ran up and down her thigh. “Though finesse is certainly a must. Having some spatial maniption unravel on your head could end badly.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Mhmm,” Selene gave an affirmative sound, visibly restraining herself from squirming as my touch travelled further up her thigh.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“How long do you think it would take for them to find their way up here?” I wondered aloud, resting my cheek on a closed fist as I traced the side of her torso with my fingertips up to her bra, then back down to her hips.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“An hour, maybe?” she said, her voice trembling the slightest bit. “Long enough.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Long enough, indeed.” I grinned, then sent up a soundproof wall and separated the two of us from the rest of the room. “I think both of us had <i><span style="font-weight:400">much </i><span style="font-weight:400">to make up for, so let’s see how much we can squeeze into this hour.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“You have the best ideas,” she purred, now leaning into my touch as her own hand found its way over to my knee.
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