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MillionNovel > Getting Warhammered [WH 40k Fanfic] > 144 – Vallia! Sort of …

144 – Vallia! Sort of …

    144 – Vallia! Sort of …


    <span style="font-weight:400">“This is it!” I said to the small crew up on themand deck. “We are finally here!”


    <span style="font-weight:400">We stood on themand deck, arge screen spreading from wall to wall before us showing the scenery as if we were standing on the nose of the ship. Out there, in the vast darkness of space stood a small green orb, glistening like an emerald under the rays of a nearby yellow star.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Vallia.


    <span style="font-weight:400">s, even though it was this close, it wasn''t our first destination. The Taumanding officer who’d been ced in charge of all Non-Tau auxiliaries had shot down my idea of building our headquarters on the Death World faster than an Imperial Commissar a deserter.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I rolled my eyes at the memory, at the agog look on his long face when I suggested he let us not only first set up a base somewhere in Tau space, but that he let us do so on a as lethal as Vallia.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Instead, he directed us towards … that even tinier greyish thing in the vague shape of a ball orbiting Vallia itself. The moon was quiterge honestly, the size of Earth itself if my memory wasn’t ying tricks on me, but it certainly looked droll whenpared to the lush just below.


    <span style="font-weight:400">As for why I didn’t just ignore the order, built a fake base on the moon and then went down to the itself to build the real one? Well, being a dangerous world and all,bined with the fact that the entire damned sector was at war, there was a whole ass Battleship in Vallia’s orbit and another five rolling around the System’s edges, patrolling for iing foes.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Considering that only with Alvash putting his own neck out for me did themander even <i><span style="font-weight:400">allow </i><span style="font-weight:400">us to go and set up base before even making any contributions to their Greater Good, I was quite happy even with this setup. If there was one thing I could do, it was breathing life back into a barren chunk of space rock.


    <span style="font-weight:400">The only thing I couldn’t do just yet was making the dense enough to have the right gravity and to give it an atmosphere. Well, perhaps with Valenith’s extensive help I might throw together some gigantic ritual to aplish it, but that would be an enormous waste of good soul energy when there were thousands upon thousands ofs fitting what I need just under the Tau Empire’s control, then a million more under the control of some other power.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Let’s head down,” I said, grinning as I looked left and right. Selene, Val and the two lovebirds were up on the deck with me, as was Throgg and even Zedev. Apparently, what I had nned sounded <i><span style="font-weight:400">thrilling </i><span style="font-weight:400">to the old Magos, though he didn’t show it. “Who’sing with?”


    <span style="font-weight:400">Alvash was over at the battleship orbiting Vallia, envoying with the Captain there and such, so we were blessedly free of his nosy oversight for the moment. Sure, the Envoy was interested in helping us, but I trusted him only as far as I could throw Khorne with anything … touchy.


    <i><span style="font-weight:400">If he learned everything I could do, I’d have a whole bunch of Tau tooing after me and trying to lock me up in ab. </i><span style="font-weight:400">I mused, then shrugged. They were going to learn some of my abilities today either way. But I was going to y it off somehow.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Ideas were already springing into my head, diplomatic solutionsing along with more forceful military measures. My two new sub-brains were doing work. I wasn’t sure how long I was going to keep them, but for now the one with the Water Caste Tau temte and the Fire Caste temte based sub-brains were proving to be useful. They gave me internal second opinions, alternatives to doing things with either acute diplomatic solutions or with more thought out tactical stuff.


    <span style="font-weight:400">It was basic for now, since I had none of the education or experience either had, but the gene-edited instincts were there. That intuition was useful, and barely cost a dime in bio-energy.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I’d used the Earth Caste versions to study the knowledge I downloaded from Zedev’s sub-brain a while before, getting a more intimate understanding of it. The old Magos was not entirely willing to just … give me all of his knowledge, but he did give me everything a generic Tech Priest would have known, along with some of his own generic tech knowledge.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Sharing his own personal experience and expansive biologist knowledge, though? That was a no-go from the Magos, which he conveyed by saying I’d have to pry it out of his cooling, dead grey matter if I wanted it. With how many encryptions and scrambling algorithms I saw activating in his head as he said that, I think he at least partially expected me to really go ahead and rip the knowledge out of his head.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I wasn’t a monster though, not that kind anyway, not to my crew.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“I’ll stay and keep order,” Val said, sounding like the moon’s overall droll state had more to do with his unwillingness toe with.


    <b>“I request my presence be permitted on the surface when you terraform theoid.”</b>


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Granted,” I said easily, making Zedev’s unnerving dead gaze slide off of me and turn towards the small ball of rock. “Anyone else?”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Me?” Selene said, shrugging like she didn’t know whether that was a bygone conclusion in my head or not.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Throgg?” I asked after giving a nod.


    <span style="font-weight:400">"I fink I should stay so da boyz don''t wreck da ship while boss is away."


    <span style="font-weight:400">I shrugged in response, then stepped forward with a circr portal already forming before me. I had to keep the air on the other side from flowing through, as it was quite … lethal.


    <span style="font-weight:400">The damned moon we’d been allowed to set up base on was both barren, useless and had an atmosphere that was only barely less suitable for sustaining life than the void of space.


    <i><span style="font-weight:400">Many things to fix. </i><span style="font-weight:400">I thought, my armour flowing over me as I looked around the destendscape. Selene stepped through next, her own armour already over her and Zedev camest once his own protective tech thingy covered the fleshy bits of his body.


    <span style="font-weight:400">The portal closed behind me and I held back a wince. I didn’t even bat an eye at the soul energy cost of the portals back on Baal, but then again, I had almost a hundred times more energy in my stores back then than I had left after that <i><span style="font-weight:400">idiotic </i><span style="font-weight:400">stunt I pulled with Ka’Bandha.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I cringed inwardly, resisting the urge to grimace. Why did I think pulling my soul and the entire Realm around it closer to realspace would be a good idea? If every single Daemon within this gxy and the next didn’t know of me already, they did now.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Still, it was … satisfying to for once feel in sync, in body and soul. The moment my soul needed the veil and its power tore into my physical body felt divine, like I was a God. Like reality would bend and break if I as much as willed it, it was both terrifying and addicting and then … I almost ran out of power. I barely managed to scrounge up little bits of soul energy since then, because some dickhead Bloodthirster who I won’t name — Ka’Bandha — had been camping right under my Realm inside the Warp, waiting for the moment I tried to get a refill to make a nuisance of himself.


    <span style="font-weight:400">And he <i><span style="font-weight:400">did </i><span style="font-weight:400">make a nuisance of himself, numerous times, 34 times to be exact. Yes, I kept count. Yes. He is that fucking annoying. So I was living off of the little <i><span style="font-weight:400">sips </i><span style="font-weight:400">of energy I could get while I battered that pea-brained Daemon.


    <span style="font-weight:400">In contrast, my bio-energy stores were the highest they’d ever been. The trip over to the Jericho Sector had taken almost a month, and I’d been dutifully absorbing every single dead Ork on the ship. With there being at least a few hundred fatalities in their climb to the top floor per day, I wasn’t hurting for bio-energy at all. Though only the fact that there were almost fifty thousand of the Greenskin on my ship made that possible.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I scried the onest time, having given preliminary scries to the ce along with Val before. We found nothing, and even with my feet nted on its surface, that stayed the same. No Necron tombs underneath the crust, no leftover Tyranid creches, no hidden Death Watch strongholds. Nothing.


    <span style="font-weight:400">It was mildly disappointing, it made my ‘conquest’ of it much less fun, but s, sometimes things do indeed just go your way.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I nced up at the sky, behind the unfriendly beige colouring of it, and hidden behind dust clouds, I could see Vallia. The Death World really looked like an emerald from here with its deep dark green lustre. Well, it was time to make this droll little rock I got for myself match it.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I didn’t even browse through my by now gargantuan library of gic temtes and just had my mind-cores assemble a list of flora and fauna that would fit well together and would be … fun. Fun for the Orks that I was going to be rearing here, ‘fun’ for any invader that came knocking and most importantly, fun for me.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Well, most were regr stuff. Grass, ferns, trees, bushes, the lot. But I had a section of the stuff that I got from Guilliman, some stuff native to Catachan and other Death Worlds known to the Imperium. I also grabbed that obnoxious piece of moss that liked to pretend to be a puddle of water before sucking anything dumb enough to try drinking it dry of the life-giving liquid.


    <span style="font-weight:400">‘Thirstwater’, the Baal-ians called it. There was also that nt that liked to shoot out spikes the size of my fingers which then mutated any living thing they impaled into another specimen of their species.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Fun stuff, all in all.


    <span style="font-weight:400">The best of it was, that with the colossal quantities of bio-energy I had, I didn’t even have to take this slow. White tendrils flowed out of my body. Not many, only a couple dozen, but they quickly split and split some more until they looked like the myceliumwork of a mushroom.


    <span style="font-weight:400">My hundreds of mind-cores went to work and wherever the tendrils passed the nt life grew at an astonishing pace. There was no need for conserving my energy here, a single Ork body was so full of bio-energy that I could make an entire forest out of just that if the trees were simple enough.


    <span style="font-weight:400">The dreary greyndscape flushed green in mere moments as a sizable forest sprung up around us, filling up a square kilometre before I even felt the first of the trees starting to wilt.


    <span style="font-weight:400">With the atmosphere being as inhospitable as it was, that was inevitable. If I was anyone else, I’d have had to wait years, if not decades to find some very specific nt that could transform the atmosphere’sposition into breathable for both us and other nts.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I didn’t want to wait though, nor did I want to bother with that lengthy process. My mind-cores knew the answer the moment I stepped foot on the, they had the air analysed and had just the temtes I needed ready.


    <span style="font-weight:400">More bio-energy flowed through my tendrils, revitalising all the wilting nts in a blink and making minute modifications to how they photosynthesized or whatever other method each of the specific types of flora used to feed. Mosses, mushrooms and other, stranger nts grew by the hundreds across the slowly spreading influence of my tendrils.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Each nt had a function, a purpose. The stranger ones fed on the more toxic elements in the atmosphere, and exhaled useful ones or at least transformed them to benign ones. The process still would have been needlessly slow if I’d left it at that, but I supercharged every single little thing from the smallest de of grass to the towering mushroom-tree that rivalled the empire state building in height.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Bio-energy made the already vibrant green forest nearly glow with power. I could feel the hum of it in the air, the little arcs of energy zapping between the leaves and energising every molecule of organic matter. Just like with how it made my own body more powerful, resilient, durable, it did the same to the flora.


    <span style="font-weight:400">My forest covered the tenth of the moon in less than ten minutes, in another ten I had nearly a third covered and by the half an hour mark I had two-thirds of it. The rate of growth was exponential as my tendrils grew in length, size and number, the intricate web they made covering every square metre of the in forty minutes from start to finish.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I waited then, plopping down on a newly moss-covered rock and kept my mind focused. The nts were fighting, wrestling with the dreadful conditions of the. There was no nutrition in the soil, no helpful gases in the air and the rays of the sun were blocked out by the ever-present dust storms more often than not.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“This might take a while,” I said, my voice transmitting into the inner ears of both of mypanions easily. “It’ll be quite boring for a while, since I’m just waiting for the atmosphere to be breathable for the next phase.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">Selene nodded, having settled down into a lotus position in the centre of a little meadow I made for her. Zedev just stayed still, his head swinging from side to side. His mechadendrites were more active though, and he had one poking at the nearest tree, one at a fern and a third burrowed into the ground.


    <span style="font-weight:400">His aura was a mixture of wonder and amazement, mixed with a fair bit of … professional horror. <i><span style="font-weight:400">I guess I’m going about this in some horrendously inefficient or straight up wrong way again. He didn’t bother including the information on how to terraforms, so he’ll have to suffer through my amateurish brute force method.</i>


    <span style="font-weight:400">In the meantime, I went about fixing the ‘dead soil’ problem. The web of tendrils that mostly kept to the surface till now created new branches and those burrowed into the rocky ground. I broke up the rocks, created some strange, fertile mash of soil from bio-energy that my mind-cores swore — it was supposedly a mix of crushed nts, ash and various types of manure I had the temtes to for some reason — by and filled the cracks and even covered the surface in the new soil-recement.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Hours flowed by, and theposition of the atmosphere slowly changed. The nts were putting in good work, inhaling bad stuff and exhaling good stuff like they’d just ran a marathon and were trying to catch their breaths. Meanwhile, I burrowed deeper and deeper into the crust.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Caves were scarce, but I’d found several mineral deposits on the way down along with even a few chunks of ice here and there. Not that iron, copper and the other regr metals would be of much use to me. Not yet.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I held out hope for maybe a hidden piece of Adamantium deep beneath the surface that the survey ships the Imperium sent here identally missed, or deemed too small to bother extracting, but I had no such luck. Instead, I at least found some of the rarer minerals that I knew would be at least mildly useful.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Tungsten, titanium, aluminium and just about every metal was in there even if only in small chunks. It would have been a nightmare to mine these veins the old-fashioned way, or even with modern — 21st century Earth technology — but I could cheat with my tendrils.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Being bored out of my mind with the waiting and the repetitive task of keeping my-sized forest alive as it wrestled the atmosphere under control, I started digging up those minerals one after the other.


    <span style="font-weight:400">While I was at it, I also burrowed several thick tendrils deep into the deepest part of the crust I dare to go. The temperature was scalding hot down there, threatening to melt my tendrils if I went any further.


    <span style="font-weight:400">So, of course, I covered my tendrils in Ambull carapace and pushed even further. I thinned the tendrils, turning them into thousands of spikes covered in the heat-absorbing carapace. Almost instantly, the drain on my own bio-energy reserves to keep the forest alive lessened as the scorching heat of the molten crust of the got transformed into more bio-energy by the peculiar biology of the Ambulls.


    <span style="font-weight:400">It wasn’t enough to maintain the entire forest just yet, but it would be in another few hours when the very air wasn’t trying to melt their leaves off.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Progress.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Once the atmosphere was done, I’d go onto building up the fortress I had in mind as my headquarters for the near future and then I’d have to go about popting the empty forests with life. Insects, rodents and the lot. <i><span style="font-weight:400">That’ll be fun, and once that’s done I can sneak by that nosy Tau ship and check out what that ‘malicious collective intelligence’ they say controls the’s biosphere actually is.</i>
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