One of my more
popular tales on BL’s Fan Fiction forum.
Exactly what that says about folk is too Freudian for me to guess at.
The Scour
Foreword
‘Seek the Scour’s source, the voices told me, and bring us what you find there.’
The chance reading of the above
enigmatic phrase, my son, has resulted in the account that follows. I hope it
entertains you - I well know the tedium of long voyages. It better – we lost
the apprentices for three weeks in the stacks researching it!
You will recognise, I think, my
touches to the narrative. They were necessary to make the amazing, despicable
Junt’s words more comprehensible, mould them more into the form of Tale. The pict recordings of the scrawls
he left upon the walls of his padded cell called for a great deal of
interpretation (not to mention deciphering
– he was not allowed writing implements, and employed more, shall we say, natural inks).
There are numerous recorded
anomalies and uncertainties regarding Brother Junt. A whole team of Ad-mech
researchers did indeed vanish during that period. A Sergeant Mith was indeed
lost to the desert during Junt’s expedition. Junt confessed his guilt in all
seven deaths - but the situation
surrounding Mith’s, as Junt explained it, beggared credence. Discounting his
amazing story of necrons and floating cubes, discounting voices in his head, how had he survived the Scour without
the sergeant and the Silver Gallin?
He had been found at a small mining station
kilometres from the Cowl’s edge, naked and near death from exposure (and not
only to heat – frostbite was amongst his list of injuries, and entered in a
tiny, incredulous hand). Difficult to explain. But damned impossible to understand was that Junt’s retrieval had been on the opposite side of the Scour to that he had
entered by.
In the long history of Man’s
occupation of that world, nobody had ever crossed, at ground level, from one
side of the Scour to the other. How, then, had Junt?
I have seen recordings of him
ensconced in his cell. My, how he raved! Over and over, as he splattered his
words upon the walls, he would scream, ‘I don’t listen to you anymore. I am his!’ Or, in more introspective moments,
he would mutter, ‘It still sucks at my mind – I am ever falling down.’
His physical appearance in those recordings will
long remain in my mind. Even after the healing of his wounds and the return of
his constitution –miraculously fast, by all accounts- he remained closer to the
necron he so admired than the human he was. Flesh and musculature wasted from
him to the point where his near-black skin shrunk tight to his frame. He rarely
drank, never ate. How did he then live? Had he indeed been rendered a form of
life-eternal?
Was Junt’s story actually true?
You decide, my son.
Here
begins Junt’s account.
Seek the Scour’s source, the voices told me, and bring us what you find there.
-oOo-
To
say the sentinel looked weather-beaten would be an understatement – more
weather-blasted. It was a powerlifter
variant, huge hydraulic claws clamped about a large equipment container. And,
in the skin-searing sunlight of the mustering yard, its every surface looked
chromed. I had to squint to prevent lancing light from melting my retinas as it
strutted forwards. The splayed, metal-webbed feet thunked! with each step, following a rut in the sandstone ground
worn over innumerable years.
‘We call it the Silver Gallin.’
The stocky, middle-aged sergeant,
Anru Mith, was going to be my driver for our little expedition. The way he kept
his hand at my elbow for seconds longer than decorum dictated as he indicated
the walker, however, blatantly suggested a desire to become something more. Bold of you, sergeant. Still, that cabin looks cramped – intimacy
of one form or another is inevitable, I suppose.
I wiped sweat from my forehead and
neck, flicking it away – the droplets evaporated almost before they hit the
ground. Even standing in the shade of the steel canopy circumscribing the yard,
the air seemed furnace hot and utterly desiccated – I imagined each breath
blackening and shrivelling the inner walls of my lungs.
I had been on this virtual-death world for weeks,
and my body had yet to show any signs of acclimatisation. My skin was burnt a
quite embarrassing shade of pink (where it hadn’t blistered), as what they
called sun block here stinks of stale urine and I just refuse to apply it. I find myself glugging water from my canteen
almost constantly, while perspiration is
constant - even in the blessedly cooler nights (I regularly get through at
least five clothing changes a day, infuriating the barracks’ laundry no end).
Even my black, wide-brimmed hat –which, I have been told, gives me an
Inquisitorial air– serves only to make my head swelter. How I envy the locals
with their healthy olive –and quite dry– complexions, their white turbans and
loose flowing robes, and their tiny, dignified sips.
But what I envy most is their photochromic eyes.
Generations ago, the first settlers here, using techniques now lost and
doubtless proscribed anyway, had genegineered their conjunctivas and lenses to
adapt to the blinding sunlight. The adaptations were hereditary, and now,
throughout the sector, the people of this hellish world were recognised by
their uniform –and quite unsettling- all-brown eyes.
To my chagrin, I had neglected to bring sunglasses
to a world of blinding light and no need of such aids. Consequently, I suffered
regular headaches – and today’s was just beginning.
With a staccato double thunk!, the sentinel brought its admittedly fowl-like legs in line and
squatted on its hydraulic haunches before us. It towered fully five times my
height, and smelled –not unpleasantly– of hot oil, hot metal, and hot exhaust
fumes. The engine rumbled in contented idle. As its driver –taking care to make
as little contact with the scalding metalwork as possible– clambered nimbly
from the roof hatch and down one of the legs, I thought to myself, I suppose air-conditioning is out of the
question. Then I smiled ruefully when I noted there was indeed a kind of air-conditioning, the simplest
kind afforded by not having windows – the cockpit was little more than a frame.
‘Sergeant,’ I asked, ‘Wouldn’t a
tracked vehicle be better? Perhaps one of those nice, roomy, enclosed, salamanders over there?’
Mith shook his head. ‘The terrain out under the
Cowl varies too much, Brother Junt – ambulatories are the best way of ensuring
we can cross anything we encounter. Besides,’ and here he grinned an absolutely
filthy grin, ‘the Silver Gallin’s cozy, don’t you think?
I’m sure I’ll turn you on to her.’
With that he addressed the mechanic who had driven
the sentinel up to us, and the two went over the vehicle’s checklist. I could
only look on, flabbergasted by the sergeant’s brazenness. Evidently simple
civility and respect were as dried up here as most everything else – except, of
course, Sergeant Mith’s libido.
‘You look after me, don’t you, Simmons?’ Mith said
to the mechanic.
Here the mechanic looked
meaningfully –and quite impertinently– at me. ‘I know your wife, Sergeant –
she’d kill me if I didn’t.’
Motioning me into the sentinel, the
responding smile on Mith’s lips appeared somewhat sheepish; his farewell slap
on the mechanic’s back all false bravado.
Gingerly climbing, I wondered as to the character
of Mith’s spouse, and just how many illicit conquests the Silver Gallin had been party to.
Close by, somebody giggled.
-oOo-
My
head throbbed, each wince-inducing pulse drowning out the infant I could hear
crying somewhere.
The outpost on its little island of sandstone had
vanished over the rippling horizon behind us. A little voice suddenly spoke
from the sentinel’s dusty control panel, barely audible over the
squeak-and-hiss of pneumatics and hydraulics, the roar and clank of engine and
drive-shafts. ‘Caution. Home transponder signal lost. You have now left rescue
envelope and entered open desert.’
I raised an eyebrow enquiringly and
glanced at Mith.
His voice was muffled by his
respirator, but still quite clear. Doubtless
due to a lifetime of bawling out boys on the parade ground.
‘What? Oh, the transponder. Line-of-site only on
this planet, Brother, bar hardwiring. No satellites to bounce signals off –
dust-suspension layers make ‘em less use than chocolate flamers. I thought you
would have known that, being a cog boy.’
‘Tech-Acolyte to you, Sergeant – and
I’ll thank you to remember it. Of course I knew. I wasn’t asking a question, I
had an itch in my eye.’
To this my disrespectful driver
merely grunted knowingly, then said, ‘Drink your water. All that puking’ll
leave you dehydrated if you’re not careful.’
We were five hours out, and the
heat, headache, and hip-rolling gait of the sentinel had me canine-sick. The
first bout of vomiting had taken me unawares, saturating my respirator, forcing
me –as there were no spares and Mith didn’t offer his– into donning a stained
rag to cover nose and mouth to keep the dust out. The rag had a pungent, almost
vegetable odour (the source of which I chose not to ponder upon), which only
served to exasperate my nausea – I had been regularly filling the paper bags
the sentinel was copiously supplied with for the last two hours (and was
thankful now for the lack of windows).
‘We’ll reach an outcrop a couple of
hours after nightfall; then we’ll stop. You’ll have to pick the bits out of
that ‘rator, Brother – can’t waste water washing it.’
I didn’t answer, or look to see his
wicked glee. Thoroughly miserable, and trying not to curse the voices for
sending me here, I gazed out over the dune sea.
In spite of myself, I could not help
but be awed by the grandeur of the scenery around our sprinting vehicle. The
lowering sun, coupled with the thickening dust of the Cowl’s outer skirts
kilometres above, gave the otherwise azure sky a bruised cast, as if pummelled
by some unimaginably large club. This, in turn, gave the ever-shifting dunes a
purple colouring that deepened markedly on their shadowed sides. It was
haunting, quite eerie. To every false-water-imbued horizon, the dunes slowly
shifted, flanks rippled with miniature versions of themselves, plumes blowing from
each undulating crest. A Slow Sea. A Mare Desiccatus. But was beneath? What did
those dunes hide and smother on this old, old little world?
What did the voices expect me to
find at the source of the Scour?
And what did I care? I was their
abject servant. They told me what they wanted, and I gladly performed as
required – and performed well. I had never questioned them in the long past,
and was not about to start to now.
Somebody began a feline mewl,
quickly stifled.
Successfully swallowing back a warm
push of vomit, I tugged the scientist’s notebook from my small travel bag, and
idly flicked through it, praying for sunset and respite from the heat.
Cogitations
on My Life, by Tech-Arch Patre Tumnus
…Experiments with
individual grains of sand sampled from this world on the last survey have
revealed some rather amazing, and quite unsettling, characteristics.
It
was, of course, thought that the highly effective electromagnetic barrier the
dust and sand clouds in the planet’s atmosphere create, particularly in the
region known as the Cowl, was due to signals simply being bounced from one
highly-reflective grain to another, until all coherence is lost.
This
is not the case.
Electromagnetic
waves are absorbed.
The
silica matrix of each individual grain is of an impossible complexity, down to
the highest magnifications this ship’s ‘scopes are able to apply. We can see
the shadows of waveforms, for
Throne’s sake, and still the
hyper-dense matter of these crystals descends away from us. Infinite
regression! Waves are sucked in… and in… and in.
But
where do they go? Think of the energies trapped within each Emperor-damned
grain of sand on this world! Think if it could be tapped!
Are
we even the right ivision for this mission?
There
are whole deserts of this material!
This
is impossible. No natural process could produce such grains. But what race
could manufacture them? Surely not Man, even during the Dark Age
of Technology. Tau? Doubtful – a young race already so capable bodes ill indeed
for our conflict with them. Orks? A laughable premise. Obvious lack of organics
discounts Tyranids. So, only the oldest races remain – or something heretofore
unknown.
My
head hurts. I go to bed.
Hurting
head. I can relate to that.
As to the weirder properties of the sand – the
voices do not mention it, so what bearing does it have on my mission? Other
than gritting every bite of food I eat. Other than being present in every
lungful of air I breathe. Other than gathering in the intimate folds of my body
and provoking the most undignified
scratching!
While appearing to continue reading the logbook, I
watched Mith operate the various levers, toggles, and slides of the Silver Gallin’s ancient control panel.
Thankfully, little skill seems necessary to drive the sentinel.
We continue to bound through the dunes, away from
the slowly setting sun – sprinting up slipfaces, sand billowing a kilometre out
behind; rushing headlong into shadowed troughs so quickly I fear a toppling.
A thought occurred to me. ‘Would it not be
preferable to travel at night?’
Mith grunted in surprise. ‘Of course. But every cog
boy ‘n’ girl I’ve brought out here requests day travel for their experiments.
You didn’t declare a preference in your orders, so I just assumed.’ He checked
the compass lashed to the cockpit frame over our heads, then, ‘Come to think of
it, Brother, you’re not doing much experimenting. The others would have had me
stop a half-dozen times by now.’
‘The nature of my studies differs – as do my
requirements.’
He flicked the compass. The needle twitched.
‘Whatever you say, Brother. If you like, we can
rest through tomorrow and travel nights thereon in – but we’re only two days
out from the Cowl’s edge. ‘S’up to you.’
Agonised screams in the distance. ‘No, thank you.
Continue as we are. Merely a thought.’
Squeak!
Hiss Thump-thump! Squeak! Hiss! Thump-thump! The air noticeably cooled (or, rather, it grew less hot). The shadows
between dunes became sharper, lending the whole desert the appearance of a vast
interference pattern. My nausea subsided.
Two hours later, the sun set. We sprinted on,
following the white beams and flexing ellipses of the sentinel’s spotlights.
Presently, black shadows rose before us, stark in the uniformity of the dunes.
Mith slowed the walker, directing it with practiced assurance over a sandstone
apron and into a small concavity. At last we halted, and Mith shut off the
engine.
Silence.
Or nearly so. Sand whispered before a whispering
breeze.
‘Come, Brother, let’s see how good you are a
re-hydrating food while I clean the Gallin’s
filters. Then you can pick clean your
‘rator – don’t damn well do it before!’
Later, by the light of the sentinel’s spotlights,
we ate, and then I did indeed commence the distasteful task of cleaning my
respirator. Perhaps taking pity upon me, Mith shared his flask of amasec. It
was a cheap brand, all fire and no subtlety, but it was welcome.
Respirator useably clean (though still reeking), I chanced
to look up at the sky.
I expected the resplendent spray of stars I had
seen every night since my arrival, but reckoned without the effects of the
Cowl. Framed in black, rounded masses of sandstone, the sky back towards the
outpost was indeed a sheet of sparkling wonder – but, and almost directly above
us, the glory faded… No, that isn’t entirely right. Not only faded. A distortion commenced there. The stars,
impossibly, appeared to almost leak,
each blazing pinpoint of light dimming and elongating in our direction of
travel, towards Cowl and Scour. It was as if they were being sucked.
A cool breeze made me shiver slightly. A child
tittered.
‘Weird, isn’t it, Cog-boy?’ Mith, having cleared
away our meal, sat down beside me. In what he doubtless hoped I perceived as a
companionable manner, he put a heavy arm around my shoulders. ‘You know,
they’ve never been able to explain that effect. Last‘n of yours they sent out
said he’d have a whole team back next visit, to get to the bottom of things in
this Emperor-forsaken desert. I was surprised they only sent you.’
I suppressed my body’s sudden stiffening, forcing
myself to lean against him slightly to direct his mind away from such courses
of thought. ‘Really? Still, you know what the Administratum’s like – missing
dots off “I”’s here, crosses off “t”’s there. Writing “1” when they should have
written, “19,” and not realising it until centuries later.’
He laughed, as if I had said the funniest thing he
had ever heard. ‘I know exactly what you mean. Once, my wife sent in an
insurance query…’
-oOo-
They quickly came to trust my presence amongst
them.
This fact
made me smile in pride as I walked naked through their little survey ship’s
corridors, brushing the bloody stumps of their limbs along the metal walls, arranging
their glistening organs upon shelves and furniture.
Oh
how I indulged! I drank and painted with their blood until
it cooled and congealed. I strung their intestines above hatches and about the
tiny bridge. I scratched my name into paintwork and teak with the ends of their
shattered bones. I decanted their partly-digested stomach contents into crystal
goblets and supped them like rare wines.
Of
course, afterwards, the cleaning took forever. But it was quite worth it.
-oOo-
During
the course of the next day, as I gradually grew accustomed to –and at last
ceased to notice- the tainted air I sucked through my respirator, the desert
changed.
Rocky outcrops similar to that in
which we had spent the night became common. Dunes were shallower and presently disappeared
altogether – we strutted over an infinite beach without hope of ocean.
The bruised sky continued to deepen
in our direction of travel, so much so that upon the horizon before us –quite
free of heat-distortion- a black band rose, thickening as we approached. Within
it, dull yellow light flickered and pulsed, accompanied by less regular –and
only slightly brighter- jags of lightening.
Mith noticed my attention. ‘Static
discharge, Brother. Emperor’s Aura, they call it. Make your hairs stand on end
– even the really curly ones!’ And he
laughed at his own lewdness.
The sound of the Silver Gallin’s footfalls changed. A
rasping scrape now accompanied each thud!
As the sand thinned. We slowed, weaving through gigantic polyps of soft-brown
rock fantastically eroded into all manner of organic forms. Here and there
growths of black basalt peppered the brown sandstone, larger, obviously denser,
but no-less wind-carved. For all I knew, we dodged amongst the remains of
mountains.
‘Is this the Scour’s work?’ I asked.
‘Not directly. Didn’t your brother
cog-heads pass anything on to you? There are fields like this bordering both
flanks of the Cowl, all around the equator. Aeolian carvings, your friends told
me, caused by eddies and miniature weather systems.’ He grunted. ‘This is
nothing compared to the Scour’s direct
effects.’
I cursed myself for a fool – how
soon would it be before Mith realised I was no more connected to the Adeptus
Mechanicus than he?
Somebody began to cough – quietly,
but wetly.
I waited another few minutes, then,
‘Could we stop, Sergeant? I need to set up an instrument or two – verify a few
of my colleagues’ results.’
At Mith’s grunted concurrence, I was
soon making a show of employing some of the simpler-looking apparatus from the
sentinel’s container – adjusting screws here, prodding studs there, in what I
hoped seemed an assured manner. Mith, scratching beneath his turban and sipping
amasec in the shade between the sentinel’s legs, observed without real
interest. Pretending to compare results with notes in the logbook, I read:
Cogitations
on My Life, by Tech-Arch Patre Tumnus
Is there any other planet in the segmentum, let
alone the sector, that hosts such an inexplicable weather system as the Scour?
For
forty-four seconds it blows, eases for sixteen minutes and thirty-two seconds,
then recommences for exactly the same interval. This has been the case since
the planet’s first recorded discovery (sketchily dated some time during the Age
of Strife), and obviously for an unknowable prior interval. The wind sucks up
so much dust and sand from the surrounding deserts the atmosphere is
perpetually saturated to degrees only considered negligible at the poles, and
certainly equatorially untenable. Indeed, a permanent belt of geostrophically swept
dust bisects the world’s hemispheres – giving a most striking appearance from
space!
This
cannot be a natural occurrence. (Emperor’s balls, what with the infinities
contained within each grain of sand, can anything on this world be considered
so?) Of course, we have dropped probes into the Scour’s source – hardy little
things with valiant machine spirits. All were lost, even the tethered models
perilously winched down from the upper atmosphere – snatched from their
moorings by the wind’s force.
About
the only thing we have been able to establish is that the unseen source is some
type of horrifically powerful, fixed tornado. For the Scour is really two
disparate winds blowing against one-another, their tails playfully melding on
the opposite side of the planet, their heads battling beyond human imagination.
So
many questions. So much that gainsays established givens. Perhaps there are
ancient records detailing more about this phenomenon; but years of research in
the planet’s own archives, and the vaster libraries and stacks elsewhere in the
sector, have yielded nothing.
I
must urge a thorough and protracted investigation upon my masters.
I ate your pancreas, Patre Tumnus.
Sham experiments complete, we
continued on. The wind-sculpted formations suffered progressive shrinkage; the
black band on the horizon grew to take up a fifth of the aubergine sky.
Sergeant Mith commenced a string of tales relating to his headstrong wife and
stupid twin sons – which, though admittedly quite entertaining, I quickly came
to suspect were a guilty prelude to the amorous advances he planned for the
night.
Hours passed. It became slowly,
blessedly cooler. A glance at the sky revealed why: sunlight was diffusing as
we passed under the Cowl’s skirts. Indeed, the sun itself was now little more
than a lustrous smudge easily looked upon – a softly glowing wound in turgid,
livid flesh. Only the horizon behind now showed any sign of cerulean.
Mith seemingly out of stories, I
voiced a concern I had harboured for some time (and one I hoped did not flag
any surprising gaps in my disguise’s knowledge): ‘How do we find our way back
to the outpost without satellites? Especially once we’re inside?’
He grinned. ‘Simple, Brother! We
keep the Scour to our left and keep going till we can’t feel it any more. Then
it’s just the Cowl behind us until the compass starts working again.’ Mith
assumed I knew the compass would cease to function, which I didn’t (even though
Tumnus’ Cogitations hinted at such
effects). ‘Then we trust to the Emperor to see where we end up – sooner or
later we hit habitation of some sort… Well, we always have until now.’ Another
grin.
I grunted to hide my building
disquiet. Yet more uncertainties! For such a tiny world, it surely sported more
than its share. Of course, matters weren’t helped by this being one of the
more… unfocused missions I had been
charged with. The voices were never exact in their desires and directions,
true, but by now they had usually disclosed clearer intimations of my
objectives. Perhaps it would be wise to make direct contact, even though the
voices frowned upon such actions?
Feigning a doze, I closed my eyes
and opened my mind.
In the distance I heard enraged
screams.
I tried again, willing a coherent
response.
Laughter this time, but convulsive,
as if the afflicted wanted desperately to stop but was unable… fading with
increasing remoteness.
Once more… a weak snigger in
response.
Was I was being tested? But why
after so long? Had I ever previously
been found wanting? What were –
Wait. I was questioning them – itself worthy of retribution. This must cease
immediately. If the voices did not see fit to offer assistance, then so be it –
they had given their commands and I would execute them to the best of my
formidable abilities.
-oOo-
The
day slid by, cooling further as it aged. That evening, the strewn sun seemed to
pour over the horizon.
We presently stopped and made camp.
After our meal, I again studied the night sky directly above.
It was a void.
Oh, I am quite aware that ‘void’ is
how the firmament and the cosmos in general are described, but this was
different. I looked upon absence. No
stars, moons, neighbouring worlds, far distant galaxies. Not even any clouds.
Simple, featureless black.
We were beneath the Cowl’s obfuscating
edges.
As he had the previous night, Mith
sat down beside me and draped an arm about my shoulders. This time, however,
his hand began to caress my nape. He nodded towards our destination, and I
lowered my gaze to the void’s only relief – the considerably brighter, though
still somehow muted, flashes and pulses of the Emperor’s Aura. ‘Tomorrow you
feel the Scour’s graze, Cog-boy,’ his hand pressed with more insistence,
‘Tonight, however…’
-oOo-
When
we awoke to the dull morning, sand had sifted up against the tarpaulin barrier
Mith had erected along one side of our bed. It was almost a half-meter deep in
places, and I gave silent thanks to my driver’s experience in such matters.
He took longer than usual in
preparing the Silver Gallin for the
day, fiddling beneath cowlings with spanners, screwdrivers, and grease,
muttering about batteries and electrolyte levels. He also had me replace my
respirator filter with one so thick it was a struggle to breathe through.
‘Don’t complain, Brother,’ he said on seeing my annoyance, ‘Ain’t much fun in a
lungful of dust. Wipe the outer mesh regularly. And from now on, wear your
goggles.’
We finally set off. Progress was
slow as Mith carefully avoided the still-numerous rock polyps –the taller black
basalt versions only a meter or so high, the sandstone variety barely nubbins-
that threatened to trip the sentinel with every step. Occasionally, we did kick
an outcrop – tilting the Silver Gallin
alarmingly and inducing equally alarming curses from Mith as he desperately
pulled levers and flicked toggles to keep us upright.
Light dropped to dusk-like levels.
There were no more stories. In fact,
we hardly conversed at all. Mith was subdued, avoiding eye contact, and it was
easy to guess why. Spare me your
self-pitying guilt, Sergeant – I wasn’t your first extra-marital dally, and
it’s at least possible I won’t be
your last.
I grinned fleetingly to myself… and
then frowned. Such knowing comments usually elicited a response from the voices
– but there had been nothing.
At around midday, Mith grunted and
tapped the compass. The needle had begun to twitch spastically from magnetic
north. In another hour it hung slack on its pivot – polar magnetism had been
nullified by the dust’s fantastic properties.
We entered the Emperor’s Aura.
Lightening began to flash regularly about us, and I did indeed experience a
quite startling horripilation (though my inquisitorial hat allowed some
dignity… and I will not divulge the reaction of more intimate zones). I
fervently hoped the absorbing dust made our sentinel –the tallest thing in the
landscape- a considerably less tempting electrical ground than would normally
be the case!
I heard nothing from the voices – an
unprecedented absence since they had first spoken to me so very long ago. Had I
been abandoned utterly? Could I cope without their guidance?
A thought: perhaps the sucking dust affected their
transmissions? Perhaps, when beneath the Cowl, I was cut off from them? Then I
would simply have to continue as I believe they would want me to.
As if to add to my consternation,
early in the afternoon, the Silver
Gallin’s engine stuttered, coughed once, and died.
‘Well,’ said Mith, ‘That’s that –
the filters are choked.’
‘Clean them, then,’ I said, somewhat
irritated at his air of inevitability.
‘No point, Cog-boy – they’ll clog
again in minutes.’
Was he actually suggesting this was
the end of our expedition? I knew he could not be thinking that we continue on
foot, for a dozen different reasons. I began to scratch at my hat, seeking the
tiny tear that denoted the head of the hidden alloy tube that contained –
Mith flicked a switch. In relative
silence, and at a much slower rate, the sentinel lurched forwards once more.
Batteries, obviously.
‘Your head itching, Brother?’
I lowered my hand; grinned
sheepishly.
At first, the only sounds to be
heard were the rhythmic squeak-hiss-thump-thump
of the Silver Gallin’s pumping
hydraulics and heavy footsteps. That and the occasional undignified snort from
Mith. It felt fundamentally wrong somehow, and my mind –so used to the engine’s
background rumble- began to compensate for the lack with tinnitus. Gradually
the condition intensified, becoming a constant, directionless susurration –
like nothing so much as white noise from an un-tuned vox-caster. This was not
localised to my inner ears!
I drew Mith’s attention to the sound, and, to my
annoyance, he stopped the sentinel again, listening intently.
‘You know what that is, Brother?’
‘The Scour, I presume.’
‘You presume right. It’s also our
cue – I didn’t realise we were so close.’
‘Cue for what?’
‘Battening down, Cog-boy, battening
down. Give me a hand.’
I helped him lift heavy metal plates
from the sentinel’s container and bolt them securely to its cockpit framework.
None of them had any visible window.
Knowing quite well Mith awaited the
question, I resignedly asked, ‘How are we supposed to see?’
He beamed – another one up on the
cog-boy! ‘We’re not supposed to.
Don’t need to. As long as she’s blown from the right, we’re heading right!’
I wondered how often he’d used that
maxim before.
‘But what if we trip?’
‘Look about you, Brother. Trip on
what?’
The rock polyps had virtually
disappeared. Only rounded, breast-like undulations remained of the black
basalt, and nothing at all of the sandstone outcrops. As I looked, a wafting of
dust eddied and swirled, and I heard individual grains patter lightly over the
ground. The sound of the Scour had gone.
I looked up, and for the first time
noticed how near the horizon now was. We were enclosed in a dome of sandy cloud
that bulged and shifted like smoke in the after-flurries of the Scour’s
cessation, pulsing with subdued flashes of lightening and blackening directly
before us.
Mith was watching me. ‘Has it eased?
Then let’s get going. I need to set the clock.’
We clambered back into our seats
through a hatch set into the topmost plate, Mith pulling and dogging it down
after us. For a moment only a few coloured tell-tales illuminated the cockpit,
and I briefly fantasised I occupied a more voluminous space than was the
unfortunate reality. The sentinel had been cramped before, but at least we
weren’t enclosed.
Something clicked. A small
fluorescent tube flickered to weak life – the swirling white gas within it
somewhat mesmerising.
‘Tell me when it starts again,
Brother.’
From beneath his seat, Mith pulled
out a small, rather battered, chronometer. Noticing the increments it had been
set at, I nodded.
Minutes passed. Having nothing
better to do, I read another entry in the logbook, angling its pages to best
reflect the low light.
Cogitations
on My Life, by Tech-Arch Patre Tumnus
It cannot be! Gravity!
Today
we took the ship right above what we believe to be the Scour’s source and
ordered the servitor pilots to drop us to the lowest possible geosynchronous
orbit. For the next hour we recorded, observed, sacrificed yet more probes to
that ever-ravenous monster… and learned nothing. The operation was
exasperating, pointless, serving only to verify what few results we already
had.
Yet
it was as we were about to order our pilots to a more salubrious orbit when the
next Emperor-damned wonder of this sandy rock announced itself – by the pilots’
own, pre-emptive request for a higher position.
It
appeared that, at regular intervals, gravimetric warnings were being triggered.
Intrigued,
I demanded the intervals’ durations.
‘Warnings
are triggered continuously for forty-four seconds and twenty-three
milliseconds. They cease for sixteen minutes and thirty-two seconds exactly. The
cycle repeats continuously without discernable alteration.’
The
Scour has gravitational pull. I wonder if I should really be surprised.
Perhaps
it is a property of the infinities contained within the sand grains? Perhaps
A
whole page was here heavily scribbled over into illegibility. Only the last few
sentences of the entry were readable:
What’s the point? We only discover more questions.
The Scour mocks us. It never, will never, reveal its secrets.
I
wonder if Brother Tregal has any of that amasec left.
For
a few more minutes I dozed, until the static hiss suddenly resumed. I signalled
as much to Mith and he activated his chronometer. ‘Onwards, Brother. Time to
see why we never bother painting the ‘Gallin.
And keep your ‘rator on – the dust gets in even with the plates fixed.’
I found blind travel disconcerting
to say the least. The familiar, once-nauseating gait of the sentinel never
changed (disregarding its reduced speed), but for all I knew we paced
ridiculously in place. Only the gradually increasing buffeting from the Scour
suggested any actual perambulation.
At first there was only the merest
whisper of grains against the plates, barely discernable over the sentinel’s
pumping hydraulics. Soon, however (and, with Mith’s adjustments, in increasing
synchronisation with the chronometer’s shorter intervals), the Scour made its
presence felt. The whisper of sand grew to a loud hiss down the left side, and
we listed noticeably right. Mith began lowering the Silver Gallin’s centre of gravity until the tell-tales showed us
hobbling along at a severe crouch – a doubtless comical appearance were it
possible for anyone to be observing it.
When even our lower stance couldn’t
stop the alarming shaking during each forty-four second gust, Mith stopped our
advance altogether and launched a pair of rock anchors from the walker’s waist.
I heard the muffled ignition of their rockets but not their impact above what
was now the roar of dust-laden wind. I did, however, feel their double thunk!
Motorised drums must have taken up slack – our bearing quickly steadied.
‘From now on, Brother, we move only
when the Scour says we can.’
And that’s how it was for the next
few hours. Forwards progress became mad, rattling strolls punctuated by forty-four
second periods of immobility while the Scour blasted and howled. And if this
wasn’t painstaking and infuriating enough, the rock anchors –necessarily
disposable- had to be disconnected and their replacements fitted to the ends of
the guy-lines. It was –to me- a needlessly fiddly process, especially by the
dim glow of the ‘Gallin’s headlights
– further reducing travel time.
I was growing impatient. I knew matters were coming
to a head. I felt the familiar imminence of fulfilled obligation (even though
its substance yet remained unknown) – and I fervently wanted to escape this
terrible, desiccated planet.
During the fourth period of anchor-replacement I
saw that the ground had turned to glass.
Well, not glass as such, but the
black basalt had been polished so much by the Scour’s constant cycle it had
gained considerable reflectivity – we traversed a vast, black mirror. I gazed
down at my shadowy, inverted counterpart as swirls of dust offered what seemed
the only barrier to our full contact, watching a smile spread slowly over my
face. That version of me was not
composed of base flesh and bone. That
version was a being of infinity. For if grains of sand were internally
limitless, what of the rock they came from?
A pleasant notion… rudely
interrupted by Mith’s, ‘Stop fancying yourself, Cog-boy, and get that anchor
changed.’
Three stops later, the rock anchors
no longer kept us steady – the Silver
Gallin strained at its moorings as if eager to be swept off in the Scour’s
flaying embrace. The guy-lines thrummed, their reverberations passing through
the vehicle and setting my teeth on edge. I noticed Mith eyeing a corner of the
cockpit plating on his side. At the very next stop, some slight imperfection in
its flatness began to admit the correspondingly stronger wind, the thick metal
rattling in place. Spits of dust hit my cheek, stinging sharply and drawing
blood.
‘Right,’ shouted Mith over the
roaring sand, ‘End of the road. You do whatever you came to do here, then we
head back.’
‘I need to go deeper. The nature of
my experiments is –’
‘Different. Yes, you’ve said.
Doesn’t matter. ‘Anchors are at their limit – once that plate starts to rattle,
I don’t push ‘em any farther.’
‘Nevertheless, we must go deeper!’
Anger start to flush Mith’s eyes,
visible even in the dim fluorescent light. ‘Listen, Cog-boy, the Emperor didn’t
see fit to kill me during the Jeffost Debacle – I ain’t about to push his hand
in the Scour.’
I smiled, now somewhat sad. ‘I’m
sorry, Sergeant Mith, but the Emperor will have nothing to do with your
demise.’
Slow-time.
To Mith my movements became a blur;
whereas his, as his features slowly changed from anger to amazement, seemed as
if they were hindered by invisible treacle. In one motion I smoothly found the
tear in my stylish black hat and tugged the monofilament garrotte free of its
hidden alloy sheath. Deftly I wrapped the weapon’s safe, blunted ends around my
hands, admiring the play of fluorescent light along its silver length – before
looping it beneath Mith’s respirator and around his throat.
Did I have time for a last kiss? Of
course! As his hands came up far too late to fend me off, I pressed my lips to
my ill-fated driver’s dry cheek… and pulled the garrotte tight.
Blood fountained, and I admired the
play of light on that, too.
-oOo-
His
death only seemed slow, I know.
-oOo-
Panting,
I let the world catch back up with me. Speeding up my metabolism like this was
exhausting, even in such short bursts. I needed something to boost my energy
levels. What to eat, I wonder? Oh…
-oOo-
The
sentinel’s controls weren’t too difficult at all. What’s more, the guy-lines
held at the next stop and the one after. At the third, however, something
loomed out of the swirling black sand.
-oOo-
A
huge parabolic archway set into the base of an overturned pyramid of smooth
black (stone? Metal? I couldn’t tell which), the pyramid’s tip merging
seamlessly with the basalt ground. The whole structure was devoid of
ornamentation, and what little interior the sentinel’s spotlights could
illuminate revealed only a steep ramp, spiralling left and down. Though the
blasting sands seemed to have had had no effect on the pyramid, it nevertheless
possessed an almost palpable aura of age – I knew I gazed upon something built long before Man first claimed
this planet.
I checked Mith’s chronometer. Six
minutes before the Scour rammed back into life. Here was shelter, surely? And,
unless my intuition sorely misled me, here also was access to my mission’s
climax.
Working as quickly as possible, I
unbolted the cockpit’s heavy front plate, propping it laboriously between
Mith’s knees and the control console; before trotting the Silver Gallin blithely forwards. The arch would have admitted a
vehicle three times the walker’s height and five its width. Trepidation should
have made me pause at the threshold, but a feeling of wild euphoria and
excitement gripped me and so I entered as if it were a triumphant homecoming,
barely resisting the urge to call, ‘Darling, I’m home!’
There was no sand inside. The
–presently- gently drifting grains did not pass the archway – only those
falling from the ‘Gallin as I
advanced marred the ramp’s otherwise uniform blackness. A selective suppressor field,
obviously; and one presumably capable of preventing the Scour’s full force. Its
significance did not escape me. Ancient, still-operative technology? Evidence
of relatively recent activity? Both?
I directed the sentinel down and
around, expecting it to slip on what appeared to be traction-less surface – but
its footing remained sure. Minutes passed. I stopped the vehicle and quickly
replaced the front panel, bolting it tightly in place.
A low moan rapidly rose to a
constant scream of agony and fear. For a happy moment I thought the voices had
returned, but quickly knew it to be the Scour powering across the entrance
above. My hand hovered over the anchor-launch toggle, and I wondered if the
devices would be able to penetrate the mysterious material of the ramp if I
were indeed forced to use them. But the familiar pounding never began –
whatever energies kept the sand from the ramp did indeed weather the Scour’s
worst rages.
Again I removed the front plate,
then, with a shrug, did the same with the others, storing them in the
sentinel’s container. Most blessed of all, I pulled the hated respirator from
my face, breathing the warm air freely.
I resumed my descent, chewing
contentedly on Mith’s left index finger (with occasional chomps into the
well-toned muscles of his forearm).
Time, punctuated only by the Scour’s
regular –and diminishing- cry, passed. The ramp exhibited no hint of change,
dampening my high spirits. Had I not endured enough to have to put up with this
interminable black spiral? When would
I at last achieve journey’s end?
As if in answer, the sentinel’s
spotlights picked out an irregularity on the pristine floor.
I slowed the ‘Gallin’s advance, not knowing what to expect. The object resolved
itself into something roughly man-sized… something humanoid… unmoving…
Metallic and skeletal.
But
of course. In my arrogance, I almost rolled my eyes. If it wasn’t going to be lder, then it had to be you, didn’t it?
Necron.
The ageless and –I always thought-
rather elegant undead. Old beyond meaning; ultimately incomprehensible in
purpose; advanced beyond understanding; enigmatic in the extreme… they were my favourite!
All was now clear. This was why the voices had sent me
here. Here was a reason for the
infinity-caging grains of sand (and, indeed, the Scour itself), if not an
actual explanation (who would dare quantify necron rationale?).
I felt a happy grin consume my face. Such a find
was worth a lord-inquisitor’s ransom. Past exploits have made me privy to
various secrets of the Imperium, and I knew of the necron ability to fade from
existence on the rare occasions they lost engagements – taking every single
unit of their force with them, no matter its condition. Necron artefacts were
therefore vigorously sought after, and a necron corpse was the biggest prize of
all.
I clambered from the sentinel,
tutting at what had –unnoticed in the snug cockpit- become considerably cooler
air upon my yet-damp clothing. The necron appeared to be one of their soldier
caste, lying face down with its thin metal arms above its head. Flung almost to
the wall was a long halberd, the curves of its perfectly-engineered blades
glinting with withheld violence. The necron’s back and cranium were sharply and
irregularly raised, as if the metal it was constructed from had been melted and
sucked powerfully back – often to the point of rupture. Gauss weaponry – the
unfathomable energies that pulled a target apart sub-atomically, extracting it
to… where?
Was this evidence of civil war? Amongst necron? Unheard of, surely? No other
major race was as united in purpose and method – could be as united.
Whatever the truth, here was what
the voices had charged me with retrieving.
I bent to the body, gripping it beneath its
shoulder pauldrons. The weight! I could barely move it. The mysterious forces
that instilled life in the necron must also have somehow rendered buoyancy to
animate such mass. I applied myself, sacrificing all dignity – until, with a
sharp double-crack!, the pauldrons
broke, flinging me painfully back upon my haunches. Cursing, I examined the
necron armour still clutched in my hands. Along the fractures the metal looked
minutely honeycombed and crumbly. Immense age? Since when has that had bearing
on the necron? Much more likely an
effect of the gauss blast that killed it.
I returned to the body, pondering. There wasn’t
room in the container for it, and I could hardly swap the two. Lash it to the container? And if the bonds broke
under the Scour’s force…?
Ah, but perhaps it wasn’t necessary to deliver a
whole body – conceivably, the head alone might be enough. And with the fatigued
nature of that metal…
Fingers interlocked beneath its stylised jaw as if
I uselessly strangled the thing, I began to worry at the necron’s neck, flexing
it sharply from side to side. Very soon, with a gratifying snap and tiny puff
of grey dust, the metal vertebrae parted. I hefted the head – could it have
been heavier if it was solid iron?
A wicked thought struck me, and I confess I
tittered to myself. Mith’s head was
almost decapitated anyway, so sharp was my monofilament garrotte – and I had
never acquired the taste for brain…
-oOo-
I
waved at Mith and his new necron body as I clambered back into the Silver Gallin. He still wore the same
shocked expression he had when I slit his throat, and it was still fitting, really – especially as I had
positioned his head at odds with the xenos corpse. Leaving Mith squashing his
nose into the ground simply for aesthetic reasons seemed disrespectful.
It was something of a struggle
getting the necron skull onto Mith’s bloody neck-stump (and it is settling a
bit too deeply between his shoulders to be entirely acceptable), but I admit to
being quietly pleased with my sense of humour in thinking of the exchange. I
wondered what I should call my new friend.
My mission was complete – time to
deliver.
Then again…
I was elated, full of my
accomplishments. Really, what couldn’t
I achieve? I looked down the ramp. Where did it lead? What wonders existed at
its terminus? And could I really leave them unexplored?
Not in this mood, certainly.
Whistling happily, I checked the
batteries’ charge – to have my glee rudely upturned by the frighteningly low
indications on the tell-tales. Was there even enough power in them to escape
the Scour’s clutches?
‘Oh, you fool, Junt!’ I said aloud. I was
out of its clutches here. What need had I of batteries when, with a quick
scrape of a few filters, I had an engine?!
-oOo-
I
passed more bodies as I descended, each bearing the tell-tale signs of gauss
damage, and each appearing to have been fleeing up the ramp. Not all conformed
to the standard warrior type – one, its long serpent spine looping and fusing
in and out of the wall, belonged to the phase-shifting wraiths, sinister necron
surgeons, hands all scalpels, blades, and needles.
My earlier euphoria was shaken. What
had happened here? Why had these bodies simply been left, contrary to
everything known about necron ways? Was I looking at evidence of recent
actions, or infinitely old? What had caused such slaughter?
And was it still extant?
It grew steadily colder, and my
breath actually began to mist before my face. Mith’s blood had dried upon my
clothes, but I was attired for desert travel and soon shivering. I draped a
heavy, oil-stained tarpaulin about myself. Undignified, yes – but warm.
The ramp began to change its aspect,
ceasing to spiral but continuing to sharply descend. Suddenly I felt nauseous,
my inner ears certain the ‘Gallin was
toppling forwards. Just as suddenly, the feeling was gone.
The twin cones of the sentinel’s lights dimmed. At
first I assumed an electrical fault, until I realised their glow was actually
cancelled by ambient illumination. I switched them off.
At last I had reached the ramp’s
root.
-oOo-
I
exited through a parabolic arch of the same size and dimension as the one on
the surface kilometres above.
Imperial architecture tends towards
the grandiose, the gothic. Necron architecture –or what I have seen of it in
various picts and recordings- is the opposite: simple, elegant… terrifyingly
monolithic. The chamber I entered conformed absolutely to those parameters,
while simultaneously being like nothing I had even seen hinted at in necron-related media.
There were no shadows. The light was
operating-theatre bright, sourceless, and everywhere. Its eye-needling clarity
revealed the interior of a vast sphere, possibly three kilometres in diameter,
comprised of silver pyramids twice the ‘Gallin’s
height, all pointing to the chamber’s centre. They were quite uniform,
constructed of a featureless, seamless, nameless
metal – and, as I strutted the walker towards the nearest and felt the
increasing ache of winter settle in my bones, I realised it was they that
radiated what had become intense cold. They would glitter with thick frost if
the air possessed any moisture.
Extraordinary enough. But what
floated at the pyramids’ focus was far stranger – for the chamber’s centre was
occupied –if I can use that word- by a cubed kilometre of black absence.
I don’t know how else to describe
it. Light simply stopped where the… artefact?… began. Was it sucked in?
Repulsed? I only knew the blackness took the shape of a slowly spinning cube
rather than a stationary, geometrically-distorting, plastic thing after minutes
of near-hypnotised observation – so absolute was its aphoticicism.
On a huge scale, in appearance, intellectually, and
at some basic animal level, it was aberrational, unsettling, and wrong.
What was I looking at? What purpose
could all this serve? Certainly, this wasn’t simply architecture – I was within
the workings of a mechanism. An
unguessable, ineffable, damned eldritch,
machine.
And there was yet more. Necron dead
–soldiers, the occasional wraith, their servile little scarabs- impossibly
littered the narrow alleys between the silver pyramids, up beyond the equator
where the cube’s demarcation sliced my vision. They should have been heaped
about me, but instead local gravity kept them held in defiance of natural laws.
I recalled the nausea felt just
before entering the chamber, the peculiar way the ramp had ceased to spiral and
suddenly dip sharply. I abruptly realised that the necron corpses, the horror
of black geometry, indeed, all I saw, was beneath
me.
The Silver Gallin was standing upon the ceiling.
I should return to the surface –
this was all far beyond my comprehension, and I had what I came for. Yet I felt
compelled to continue. The sense of power
in this place was overwhelming, attractive. Universal mysteries were laid bare
and utilised here, bent to the cold
will of the necron. How could I leave such things unexplored? I smiled
slightly. Perhaps I owed it to Tech-Arch Tumnus.
So, fighting the belief I was about
to fall to an unknown fate upon –within?- the black cube, I snapped off one of
Mithron’s fingers (an unimaginative cognomen for my hybrid companion, I
apologise), and, sucking the digit’s stump, took to the alleys between the
silver pyramids.
I carefully kept the ramp’s exit
directly behind, and saw no change in my surroundings after ten minutes’
perambulation. Was the archway merely maintenance access and the vast chamber
otherwise sealed?
But a fleeting look down a right fork revealed a
difference. Something glittered and blinked at a pyramid’s base.
I switched off the sentinel’s engine
and disembarked. I could have walked the ‘Gallin
directly to the object, but felt it wise to leave it as marker. I did not want
to risk getting lost in this fantastic construct.
My footsteps and the sharp clicks
from the sentinel’s cooling engine were like bolter shots. Silence was a
numbing blanket about my ears and inside my head – a quiet to be measured in
epochs, perhaps the life-times of worlds. Had stars erupted into flame and
guttered to cinders during that peace?
The object was obviously some kind
of control panel – a two-by-one-metre screen slightly raised from the pyramid’s
wall and covered in a scintillating waterfall of golden necron runes. Dare I
touch it?
Oh, but of course.
I reached out, trying to still the
convulsive shivers wobbling my arm, holding my breath to dam condensation from
my vision.
Something ticked behind.
I almost smiled. I couldn’t say I
expected a guardian to come, it was simply proper one had.
Slowly, I turned.
Where before there had been the
comforting form of the Silver Gallin
standing between towering pyramids, now my vision was filled with a black slab
of machine eyes coruscating beautifully through a myriad of bright colours.
Beneath the eyes, square mandibles slithered and rasped over one-another. I
felt, rather than saw, the presence of a huge three-tined claw slowly rising
over my head.
Tick-tick.
Was that a question?
Or statement of intent?
I felt a hysterical urge to doff my
inquisitorial hat and bow flamboyantly; but instead I –
Slow-timed.
I knew what I faced: a Tomb Spyder, warden of
necron-in-stasis. Huge metal hybrids of insect and arachnid, these powerful
elevated constructs had been known to engage some of the heaviest armour the
Imperium had to field… and emerge victorious.
I ducked beneath the suddenly slow
mastication of those square jaws, darting forwards. The Spyder’s underside was
a dark, sporadically glittering tunnel the otherwise omnipresent light did not
breach; the walls of its segmented legs sluggishly moving in and out as if
blown before errant breezes. There was heat here, microwaving deep into my
body. My teeth abruptly felt loose in their sockets. There were other, less
definable, emanations, too. My brain seemed a-bubble. My vision segmented and
overlapped. Tomb Spyders had been witnessed resurrecting destroyed necron troops
in the battlefield, rearing above their broken bodies as if in paroxysms of
worship, knitting the corpses with pulses of energy. Was I was experiencing
something of those extraordinary forces? Were invasive technologies attempting
to instil illimitable undeath in my too-soft organic form?
Three strides in, and the tarpaulin
incandesced – I hurriedly shucked it to the floor. Another and the black
leather of my inquisitorial hat felt suddenly sticky, melting – with a sad
grimace I skimmed it away.
I smelled smouldering hair and
winced to the terrible sting of burning skin – but my fourth stride brought me
out from beneath the monster’s hind quarters and into blessed frigidity again.
There was the Silver Gallin. Without looking back (the Spyder would either have
me or it would not – I did not need –or wish- to witness its assault if it
proved as fast as I), I sped towards the walker.
My vision steadied, though an
intense feeling of nausea welled in my gut. I ignored it and frantically
clambered up the sentinel’s legs, dropping into whatever safety its cockpit
might offer.
At last I looked back at my foe.
The Spyder was wheeling slowly in
place, and I saw that it, too, had suffered much damage. Its huge left claw
hung limp and useless. Indeed, the whole of its left flank listed a full meter
lower than the right, exhibiting the tell-tale signs of heavy gauss damage –
raised, blistered, and ruptured metalwork (the middle leg actually lacked its
final segment). I had hazarded the notion the Spyder was somehow be the culprit
of all the other un-deaths here – but its suffering the self-same assault
suggested otherwise. Only the monster’s obvious survival was dissimilar.
The Spyder had skimmed half the
distance to the Silver Gallin. With a
couple of toggle-flicks, I dropped the heavy container from the walker’s claws
and fired up its engine. Then, the process much akin to the explosive release
of pent-up breath, I allowed my metabolic rate to decelerate – which, in turn,
allowed the approaching Spyder to rapidly accelerate
(though thankfully not to the speeds I had heard undamaged variants could
achieve).
Panting, almost snapping the
relevant levers in my haste, I jammed the walker into reverse. I managed but
three strides before the Spyder swarmed the ejected container and was upon me.
Even in its greatly damaged state,
it was all I could do to parry the rain of blows, jabs, and grabs from that
huge claw with the Gallin’s own pair.
Sparks flew with glancing contacts; the cockpit juddered under meatier blows.
The engine roared, the hydraulics wined, as the walker’s balancing systems
strove to keep us upright. With a solid thunk!,
more felt than heard, Mithron’s head rolled into the foot-well.
A lucky opening and a quick
side-swipe buffeted the Spyder into the base of a pyramid. I powered the Gallin forwards, fowl legs and feet
skittering for purchase, and fled.
So began a bizarre feline-and-rodent
chase – the sentinel ever the rodent. I never again saw the entrance archway as
I rapidly lost all bearing within the chamber, side-stepping down
intersections, sprinting along avenues, even bounding drunkenly partway up the
pyramids themselves to avoid surprise charges.
This could not continue. My
adversary knew its environs, could employ them to its advantage – while they
remained all hindrance to me. My only hope was to be quicker, but I was not yet
ready to slow-time again – I simply hadn’t the energy.
A silver streak to the left – I
brought the Gallin’ to an abrupt halt
that almost achieved what the Spyder was obviously attempting – the walker’s
toppling.
Again the metal monster careered
into a pyramid. Again I used the crash to my advantage and powered away.
Too close. And the encounters would
only get closer until…
Keeping my eyes forwards, I leant to
the side and began to guzzle on Mithron’s neck stump.
The nerve-shredding game of
hide-and-seek continued – each of the Spyder’s assaults coming that much closer
to victory as it learned my responses and methods.
Suddenly, however, there came quietus.
Where had the Spyder gone? Had I
unknowingly damaged it irreparably during one of our pugilistic episodes? Was
it at last one with its twice-dead brethren? Whatever the truth, Junt – eat!
As I bent for another sustaining mouthful,
the coldest thought struck me – to be almost instantly washed away by a
familiar –and all-too confirming- bloom of heat. I looked up.
Almost lazily, like glowing soot
from a bonfire, glittering blackness descended upon me.
Knowing I could not maintain it, I
virtually collapsed into slow-time.
I raised the Gallin’s claws, fending off the Spyder’s scrabbling legs and
jabbing pincer, raking the monster’s relatively delicate underside. But this
time it wasn’t trying to pummel or crush – the last segments of its legs
closed, hooked; its pincer latched onto the engine cowlings in a spray of hot
oil and fuel.
With a lurch, its legs still crazily
running along ground they no longer touched, the Silver Gallin was lifted into the air.
Desperately, I began to swipe at the
Spyder’s claw and legs, trying to dislodge… but its grip was secure.
I drew the Gallin’s claws back, started punching with them. Emitters and other
devices fell about me in a shower of sparks, liquids, and searing blooms of
heat.
Still we rose higher.
Enforced slowtiming on the verge of
blacking me out, I changed my tactics. I clamped the Gallin’s left claw tightly beneath the Spyder’s short neck, using
the other to grip one of its legs to postpone the inevitable release.
I set the left claw to a gradual
squeeze, praying that whatever mechanisms governed the Spyder were situated in
its beetle head, and that, by not throttling outright, I could induce a more
controlled descent.
Slowtime slammed from me.
Nothing.
-oOo-
I
was broken when I came to. My head
pounding far worse than the aches I had suffered –it seemed- millennia ago
during the first days of the desert crossing. Wherever my skin was exposed it
was burnt almost to crispness, cracked, weeping watery blood and pus. Even
internally, I somehow felt broiled.
Every joint throbbed intolerably. Waves of nausea engulfed me, convulsing my
stomach and inducing dry retches – further accentuating my overall pain.
But I was
alive.
Inconstant pulses of dizziness
fracturing my vision, I laboriously raised my head. Gradually, my situation was
revealed – I was in a casket of inter-mangled mundane and eldritch metal,
glistening red here and there with what must have been my blood. It was the
walker’s ruptured cockpit, split upon by jaws of crazily bent necron metal. My
legs dangled through a rent in the side, my backside still somehow in position
on the torn leather seat
Slowly, I lowered my head to what I
dimly knew to be Mithron’s cushioning thigh, and looked up (simultaneously
realising that the Gallin’ was on its
back – ‘up’ being through what was once ‘front’).
The cube still slowly spun, aloof,
enigmatic, and now presenting only a single face of absolute void. For a moment
it seemed as if the battered claws of the Silver
Gallin, extended to their fullest and half-buried in blackness, actually
supported it – until a feint, almost-eclipsing, outline materialised, and I
realised I was looking at the dark, superimposed underside of the Tomb Spyder.
The previously-glittering array of projectors and emitters were smashed, some
leaking peculiar fluids, others scorched and half melted – all now quite cold.
The sentinel’s right claw gripped the base of the Spyder’s left central leg,
the other crushed its stumpy neck. Fracture lines zigzagged out from both
points of contact, and I was in no doubt that, were it not for gauss-fatigue,
the claws would not have gained such crushing purchase.
Something creaked loudly.
I had to get out, but I felt too
weak and sick to move. The ill-advised –though, of course, absolutely
necessary- bout of slow-time might have been permanently damaging. Whether or
not this was the case, I needed energy if there was to be any hope at all.
Slowly, grimacing with each movement
and jaw-clench, I tore at the blood-crisped fabric of Mithron’s trousers with
hands and teeth (expecting to shed the latter with every bite), before I could
get to his flesh. Perhaps there was the slightest
taint of putridity, but nothing my desperate situation couldn’t allow me to
ignore.
-oOo-
I
slept/ blanked out frequently, always surprised to awaken. The chamber’s
intense cold very quickly began to take its own duty in my body’s ruin, and I
knew that where the Spyder’s radiations hadn’t already destroyed my flesh,
frostbite would.
I quickly learned that the Tomb
Spyder was not yet dead.
It would stir at regular intervals,
thrashing weakly in the walker’s grip and setting the powerlifter arms swaying
frighteningly. From where I lay, I could just make out a part of its beetle
head, witnessing, during each of these periods, the telescopic extension of a
thin rod from amid the eye-clusters.
This occurred every sixteen to
seventeen minutes.
All thought of my mission, all
consideration as to the voices’ desires, was gone. Survival was now everything.
I had to return to civilisation. Human
civilisation.
-oOo-
I
think I remained in the wreckage for well over a day. I still wasn’t really
well enough to move, but my nausea and pain had lessened, and I had no way of
knowing how long the Silver Gallin
could support the Spyder’s weight. Plus, I could get no more sustenance from
Mithron – he had frozen solid. I had to make the attempt sooner than later.
I recall little of my self-extrication. My first
clear memory after my entrapment was struggling to pull myself upright with the
aid of the walker’s avian foot, puking copiously, and gradually becoming aware
that change had at last come to the chamber’s homogeny.
A little further around the sphere’s
curvature three truncated pyramids fused together to form a wide dais, angled
slightly towards me. Beyond the dais the pyramids ceased altogether where a
rectangular window at least a half-kilometre wide cut into them, softly pulsing
with emerald energy.
Through the window was a disc of
desert.
It was as if a coin of sand had been
dropped by a Titan orders of magnitude larger than anything the Ad-mech had
ever dreamt of. An arena of dunes at
least five kilometres in diameter, radiating like spokes from a relatively tiny
cairn-like mound, bordered by a black curtain wall presumably forming the base
of a vast shaft. The chamber’s light did not illuminate the dunes, instead a
soft green glow spilled over them from the window and from three other,
equidistantly-spaced, strips of gently-pulsing emerald around the wall (the
overall effect suddenly making me recall –with surprising poignancy- the eerie
beauty of the desert proper, kilometres above). Visible through each of the
other strips were slowly-spinning squares of void…
It was somehow the most unsettling
thing I had yet seen on what was a veritable planet of disconcertion.
Movement upon the dais.
I squinted into the harsh glare.
Another necron stood there, its silver skeleton, coupled with the total lack of
shadows, rendering it invisible when still. Considerably larger than the norm,
its bearing upright and regal instead of hunched and menacing, it was quite
magnificent. One long-taloned hand gripped a milky white sphere, the other a
tall staff which tapered to an illimitable point a further meter above its
skull. A calf-length silver cloak hung heavily from its gleaming pauldrons.
Enough.
The besting of a Tomb Spyder had
very nearly killed me (might, yet). I was to take on a necron Lord as well?
I only state a truism when I say my
capabilities are greater than most – but this was too much.
The Lord was regarding me. Its eyes were wrong…
How must I appear? Trying to self-hug my convulsive
shivers into subsidence; burnt; bruised; splattered with my own vomit; clothes
so ragged I may as well be naked. I couldn’t run. I couldn’t fight. I tried to
say to myself, ‘Mighty Lord, you do not catch me at my best,’ but all that came
through my cracked lips was a rasping cough.
Know your
limits, Junt. Recognize you have reached them.
An insane –yet coldly-considered and calmly
accepted- resolve possessed me. I would give my life to the necron, here and
now.
I stumbled towards the dais, my gaze never leaving
its occupant. Do what you will, Lord. I
am yours now. I renounce their claim upon
me.
As I neared, I saw something protruded from the
Lord’s eyes. As it inclined the staff forwards and looked up at its tip, the
objects were profiled against the nullity of the spinning cube.
Dagger hilts. However it saw, it was not through
its eyes.
Green light unexpectedly flared where the fine tip
met a restraining field. The Lord ‘watched’ the coruscating display, before
suddenly wheeling around and striding towards the window. I was dismissed.
It was imprisoned?
Why had it stabbed itself through
the eyes?
I reached the dais, commenced a
painstaking climb up its flanks. At the summit, a subtle distortion to the air
revealed the field’s extent – there was a meter-wide lip of unaffected space
around the edge. Still coughing, and now feeling nausea once again rising in my
stomach, I all-but collapsed to my knees, watching the… my Lord.
I would await its… his pleasure in deciding my fate.
The necron raised his arms, lifting
both staff and sphere. A beautiful nimbus of silver light enveloped the latter,
answered by rings of deep burning red about the staff’s needle-tip. With a
flash that lanced my retinas in spite of their adaptation to the chamber’s
glare (momentarily, I again envied the photochromic eyes of this world’s native
humans), energy arced between the two artefacts, forming a snapping arch of
bloody lightning.
I knew I was watching the timeless
–mindless?- ritual that governed the Scour. These were actions that had been
repeated for… well, from a human viewpoint at least, I may as well say
‘eternity.’ Were the dais constructed from anything other than necron stuff,
the Lord’s forever-retraced steps would have worn the thing asunder long before
now.
My view through the huge window was
much improved – I now looked over the dunes to where the central cairn was
opening within a puff of dusty sand… and down into the pit its four retreating
leaves revealed.
My Lord arched his back, flourishing
sphere and staff. The energy between them became blinding, actually casting
jittery shadows around the dais.
A rapid, urgent series of ticks from
behind.
Like a waterfall of light in
reverse, green energy leapt up the black curtain wall, flaring over the window
before me. Instead of further obfuscating my view, it seemed to sharpen it
almost to the point where I could discern individual grains of the
infinity-binding sand.
The green energy was a scintillating
skein over the pit, too – but there it seemed weaker, duller, bowing sharply
downwards. Suddenly, there was rupture.
The dunes vanished.
In the seconds it took for the
desert kilometres above to be sucked down the vast shaft, and the further tens
of seconds it took for the Tomb Spyder’s telescopic transmitter to counter the
Lord’s commands and close the cairn, I saw the Scour’s source laid bare. Saw through the gates the necron had opened
so very long ago. Saw what had sent my Lord insane, caused him to slaughter
almost all his servants… stab daggers into his eyes.
Saw.
And was consumed.
Here
ends Junt’s account.
-oOo-
Afterword
Well, what is your opinion, son? Was
Junt’s story actually true?
I am inclined to say, ‘Yes!’ Aren’t you? (And,
surely someone of the time was, too – but my researchers found no record of
protracted investigation. Saying that, they hardly had time before… But I
precede myself.)
If
we acquiesce, then we also admit the existence of that fabulous necron
laboratory. For that is what I believe Junt’s underground explorations to have
part-uncovered – and who can guess the vastnesses stretching beyond his direct
experiences of the place? Its other wonders? What of the remarkable sand of
that world? By-product of an ancient experiment in a further chamber?
Experiment in itself? What other
binding forces of the universe had the necron tinkered with so many kilometres
beneath that desert?
Which brings us to the pit’s contents - the Scour’s
engine. The object Junt and the
necron Lord lost their minds to. Weapon? Door? Failure?
Only two races might have inkling,
now. Necron, of course… and the tyranids.
Why, yes, ‘tyranids.’ You see, my
son, before you go tear-arsing across the galaxy, your Rogue Trader head
a-whirl for necron profit, you should know this: all these events occurred
centuries past. But mere months after them, the Imperium was saddened and
chagrined to lose that sector to Hive Fleet Colossus.
Still not quelled in your desire for glory and
profit? Think you may be able to slip in amongst their organic battleships and
net-spores? Be aware:
The valiant Tomb Spyder, only
survivor of its mad Lord’s slaughtering spree, ultimately failed in said Lord’s
containment - its failure surely in no small amount due to its encounter with
Junt (putting aside what must have been a battle other races would put to song,
imagine the internal conflict that
Spyder must have undergone so unthinkably long ago, against what was probably
inherent inability to harm its master and desperation to stop the Lord
destroying everything else).
I have had my telescopes spy out that sector recently,
and compared their images to others taken post-invasion. In the earliest picts,
Junt’s desert world is readily detectable. Scant years later, however, it is
gone. Another dozen and its parent star
is gone! A demarcation zone about the whole system becomes apparent, too – the
tyranids give it a half light-year’s berth.
The recent picts I commissioned show
nothing instantly remarkable - until the comparison: the demarcation zone’s
volume has increased beyond a full
light-year.
Whatever scares the tyranids is
growing.
Much to ponder upon, eh? I trust you
will not act upon matters? Hm?
Your
mother sends her love. I wish you rich trade routes.
Your
father, Sozent, Administrator Maximus, Jarob Segmatum.
-oOo-