Magos Explorator ULR-3.14e was no stranger to the examination and deconstruction of xenotech. Every step followed guidelines laid out by ages ago by the ancients, with annotations in the margins made by countless past Magi. Small pieces would take several days work and requires at least five tech-priests. Medium-sized ones weeks to a month and employed a cohort of Magi. Large fragments took years to decades to understand, and could be the personal project of a Forge World's ruling class.
On a similar note, ULR-3.14e has participated in the dissection of xenos forms, such as Orks, Aeldari, and other strange creatures. These were no less involved than xenotech examinations, as alien biology came with alien threats unknown until casualties start to mount. There were numerous incidents of junior tech-adepts underestimating the robustness of an ork specimen' vitality, and paying for it with their lives. Every part has to be separated, scrutinized, analyzed, and then purged in quick order after their usefulness has run out. No xenos lifeforms has ever survived intact after the Adeptus Mechanicum got their hands on them, which ULR-3.14e took as a point of pride.
With these past data points as reference, the Magos then could not reconcile why it was that he was allowed to walk freely on the Desperate Luck after it was captured by the T'au. Or more precisely, by their newest allies, the Ascentrons. He himself would not have allowed a presumably valuable specimen to roam without supervision. Even now, if the Magos Explorator turned Enginseer Prime wished to, he could walk down to the sacred reactor core and initiate the Rite of Sacred Martyrdom, destroying all traces of the Desperate Luck from the universe.
And yet-
All criteria fulfilled for resistance against xenos incursion upon the sacred mechanisms. Self-termination protocols initiated with maximum blast radius in mind, but delayed due to unknown variables. Task restarted 552 times, failed to complete 552 times. Hypothesis: this unit experienced emotional response known as fear, and thus have failed to fulfill its prime directives. ULR-3.14e examined a blinking lumen and gave it the slightest of nudge with his mechadendrites to let the Motive Force flow properly. Some of them still bore weapons that tracked any errant movement their sensors detected, though most sat idle to conserve power. There were no lifeforms in the Magos' vicinity, biological or mechanical, but that was to be expected. This ancient, but still well-maintained passageway was one of the many secret paths available only to the members of the Adeptus Mechanicum, hidden behind intricate biometric scans, voltaic locks, and noospheric key-words.
The Magos' current destination was one oft-visited by his kind; the Navigator Sanctum. ULR-3.14e felt the stirrings of fear yet again, but this time the Tech-Priest thought such a response was warranted this time. There were many things that regularly wreaked havoc with the technology the Adeptus Mechanicum wielded, and the Warp was the number one offender in that regard. Whether it be a chain-reaction of Motive Force overloading the delicate innards of ancient mechanisms, or the perversion of sacred function by means illogical and nonsensical, or most egregious of all, the possession of machine-spirits by way of malicious scrap-code or sentient data-daemons, conjured from the depths of madness by hereteks playing with powers beyond their ken. Nothing good has ever come about by combining technology with the Warp, and indeed the very few instances that interface with that realm, such as the Warp Drive and the Geller Field Generators, were treated with equal parts respect and caution, to be constructed and maintained only by those whose devotion, knowledge, and experience was without question.
After a good while, ULR-3.14e found the hidden door which opens out into the hallway just before the Navigator Sanctum. Given its proximity to a valuable resource, the full suite of security measures were in force. Motive Force tens of Amperes in strength zapped the Magos, conducted throughout his body with minimal loss in power. The Noospheric-lock stood for all of one second before a flurry of practiced taps by ULR-3.14e inputted the memorized pass-key. Finally, a minute of waiting as advanced scanners almost as old as the Magos whirred to life and verified his identity cell-by-cell. With a final hiss of hydraulics pulling the secret door open, ULR-3.14e walked out into the open into a most curious sight.
Contrary to his expectations, the hallway was not deserted. There was someone shuffling forward on the other end, leaning onto his staff for support with every step taken. The surrounding lumens and candles illuminated a face worn by time and duty, casting shadows upon sockets where eyes had melted away. Some shadows lengthened, while others shortened in his wake. And even though he was designed to withstand extremes in temperature, ULR-3.14e felt an otherworldly chill precede the Choirmaster of the Desperate Luck, Suzurar Gospelmark.
"Is that you, Eular? I did not take you to be someone interested in social gatherings outside of your fellow priests." The wizened psyker chuckled, his lungs wheezing from the effort. ULR-3.14e bristled at the mangling of his name by the laity yet again, but the irritation passed. "But then again, even you would be hard-pressed to refuse an invitation by the Lord-Captain."
The Magos' mind went to the sealed scroll innocuously handed him to by a terrified envoy. "Hypothesis confirmed. The Lord Captain is functional." ULR-3.14e spoke out his mind. "Query: Has the Choirmaster unit confirmed the Lord Captain unit's mental wellbeing?" Suzurar shook his head, distaste clear on his face. The taboo of mind-reading without permission was clearly engraved onto the Astropath' soul, which ULR-3.14e was grateful for. By the grace of the Omnissiah, the Magos was never cursed with psychic abilities, but he's been on the receiving end of them in his long life. The most insidious and unpleasant ones were those that manipulated the mind, scrying thoughts as easily as one might read lines off a cogitator, and befuddling servants of the Omnissiah with lies made real through illusions.
The two servants of the Imperium fell silent as they approached the large door barring the way to the Navigator's Sanctum. Four combat servitors stood guard on either side, idle until their sensors registered the two new arrivals. Without a word, ULR-3.14e presented his identifiers and access-codes to the primitive cogitators directing the mindless meat-puppet's minds, nodding with satisfaction as the servitors returned to their vigil. A data-packet made its way into the locks of the great door, and soon the duo's path forward was no longer barred.
Inside was a short, but well-furnished hallway. Their steps were muffled by carpets made from plants harvested to extinction. Servo-skulls set into the walls sang songs of devotion and faith endlessly. There were candles everywhere, their arrangements like the hab-clusters that were the beginnings of hive-cities. ULR-3.14e and Suzurar ignored these trivial details, their minds set onto the lavish lift waiting for them at the other end.
The Magos took one side while the Astropath took the other, both bracing against the walls as the ascension mechanisms were engaged. With a jerking lurch Suzurar could feel in his gut, the metal coffin finally lifted, traveling up at speed. As was the case with most Navigators, the Navigator of the Desperate Luck, Hirolian Maissac, lived in a tower separated from the main body of the voidship. ULR-3.14e found many things about the Navigators distasteful, but their preference to be left alone with their own kind was something he could relate to. They passed through multiple levels, each marked with numerals that denoted their function. Some were ominously sealed with a mark from the Adeptus Mechanicus, proclaiming what lay within as beyond salvation.
They reached the top without incident, signaled to exit by way of a bell chime from a vox-caster. The hallway that greeted them was even more opulently furnished, with what little that wasn't colored gold instead washed with deep blue-green of plasma storms. Instead of servitors, human servants were out and about, carrying their tasks as quickly as they could without attracting the attention of their betters. Many couldn't help but gawk at the sight of ULR-3.14e, even embodied as he was in a smaller vessel, while others shivered and made the sign of the Aquila when Suzurar passed them by.
Finally, they reached one final door, made from real wood and carved with an image of the Astronomicon, while emblems of Navigator Houses knelt in supplication before the glory of the God-Emperor's Light. There were no servants here, not even a servitor, and so ULR-3.14e placed his hands against the door's handle and pulled. It opened smoothly, almost as though it didn't weigh several times the Magos' weight, balanced upon hinges perfectly calibrated and maintained through the ages. A rare feat, and the one thing ULR-3.14e approved of the Navigator Sanctum.
Inside, a scene straight out of a painting were waiting for them. It was a meeting room, comprised of several areas joined into one shared space. To the right of the entrance was where the refreshments were, graceful doll-like servitors carrying trays of fine amasec and lho-sticks along with appetizers made from Tusk Bison meat. Immediately to the left were the entertainment, where a mechanical orchestra played music on-demand, requests written on tickets fed to the conductor servitor at the head of the group. Neither areas were active as ULR-3.14e and Suzurar passed them by, their servitors retired to their storage units until further notice.
The third area was a break room where large bookcases, comfortable couches and sofas were installed alongside regicide tables, hololith projectors, recorders, and even data-slates filled with content pre-approved for distribution by the Ecclesiarchy and the Adeptus Mechanicus beforehand. It was the hub from which the fourth and last area of the meeting room could be accessed; the private spaces.
These ranged from tiny closets where only two people could get in to a room that could accommodate three to four people. The largest could fit eight people at once, and ULR-3.14e and Suzurar headed towards the only one with a closed door. The Astropath' bony fingers rapped against wood once, twice, and before the third strike landed, the door opened.
"Choirmaster Suzurar. Enginseer Prime Eular. You've arrived on-time." The stoic face of Rassilas Osmic, Seneschal of the Boltaneus Dynasty, greeted ULR-3.14e and Suzurar. The man gracefully stepped back to let his fellows in, giving slight nods to the duo as they passed him by. Inside, four other people were waiting, two of them familiar, the last a newcomer. The owner of their current domain, Navigator Hirolian Maissac, was entombed within his usual shrouded garb, the symbol of his House most prominent on the hood which covered his head. Then there was Sister Kata, member of the Sisters Dialogus and a direct link to Lord Inquisitor Nantz Palemar. The brown fatigues she wore were reminiscent of the Imperial Guard, with Carapace Armor completing the look. ULR-3.14e noted the absence of her power armor immediately, but thought better than bring attention to the fact.
To her left sat Lord Captain Gallianus van Boltaneus, putting on a brave face and failing. He looked at the two newcomers and gave them curt nods, lingering a second longer on his Choirmaster before moving on. Even without touching his mind, Suzurar could feel the Lord-Captain's fear as a palpable liquid taste. With a discreet cough, the Astropath cleared his mouth and took his seat opposite Sister Kata, while ULR-3.14e took the one facing Navigator Hirolian. Seneschal Rassilas took the seat to his master's left, nodding to the woman sitting to Suzurar's right, the only human present that wasn't part of the Desperate Luck's crew.
She stood up, smoothing the wrinkled fabric of her blue-trimmed Gue'vesa'ui tunic and making herself generally presentable before speaking. "On behalf of the T'au Empire, I would like to thank the honorable Lord Captain Gallianus van Boltaneus for agreeing to this open discussion about future cooperation efforts between our two great empires." The man of the hour shrank from the pointed gazes aimed his way, but regained his composure shortly after. "Of course, we would have to start with some basic questions to get out of the way first. Nothing too intrusive, Lord Captain."
"Are we not, ah, waiting for your… friend, first?" Gallianus said, not eager to talk to a xenos empire about his God-Emperor given life, even to a human traitor, and yet also hesitant to breathe the same air with actual xenos filth. "There will not be a second discussion, mind. It was bad enough that the Drukhari attacked us first, only to have your kind capture us in turn. Enough time has been wasted and we are desperately needed back in the Imperium." The Gue'ui nodded with a sympathetic flair, subtly checking the Rogue Trader's retinue for their reactions, and smiling when no one said a word.
"This discussion is already being recorded, so there is no fear there, Lord Captain. Rest assured, my friend will arrive here shortly. So, shall we begin?" The Gue'ui stared without fear at someone that in the past would never even know she existed. That boldness clicked something into place within Gallianus, and he soon cast aside his fear and nervousness, and stared right back at the contemptuous upstart with the well-practiced glare of an Imperial highborn.
"Ask your questions, traitor, and I may deign you with an answer." The Gui'ui nodded as though she'd expected Gallianus' behavior and moved right along.
"First question, which system did you come from?" Gallianus stiffened for all of a second before giving a short nod towards his Navigator. The mutant noble made a show of standing up from his seat, taking a few steps towards his Lord Captain, bending down to whisper a couple words before going back without sparing a single glance towards the Gue'ui.
"I believe it was the Passade System." Gallianus replied, nonplussed by Hirolian's blasé dismissal of the Gue'ui.
"Excellent. Next question, what were you doing in this Passade System?" Gallianus smirked upon hearing the question.
"Repairs. Resupply. Relaxation. The usual thing to do after a successful expedition as a Rogue Trader. And then you know what happened next." The Gue'ui raised an eyebrow at that, giving a skeptical look towards the Rogue Trader.
"You were attacked by this 'Drukhari' and forced to make an emergency Warp Jump. And they are?" Gallianus snorted, feeling a bit of amusement at having to enlighten a traitor about one of the core truths of the universe.
"Xenos. The most vile and reprehensible kind I've ever met in my life. They feed on the pain and suffering of others, literally. It's how they stay alive. Their raids are the stuff of nightmares, and the dead left behind are the lucky ones. These scum and others are why the Imperium exists, to safeguard humanity against the predators in the dark. And yet you throw in your lot with one of them." Gallianus' eyes wandered to his left, where his Seneschal sat unmoving and unresponsive save for the slight rise and fall of his chest. There were no marks on his skin, not even a scar or blemish, but the eighteen-year old shouldn't have to suffer so much that most would think he was forty. The Rogue Trader's anger rose suddenly in a white-hot burst, and he had to settle for spitting at the floor with disgust instead of lunging at the Gue'ui and throttling her until she died.
"Thank you for your candor, Lord Captain." The woman's voice spoke with a slight tremble only ULR-3.14e could hear. "For my next question, I'd like to ask someone else, if that's alright with you, Lord Captain." Gallianus gave an irreverent wave towards the rest of the table as though daring the Gue'ui to try her luck. It came as a shock then for the Rogue Trader when one mechanical hand slowly rose up from within red robes.
"This unit would be open to communication with traitor human unit in exchange for information." ULR-3.14e spoke, ignoring the burning glares coming off from the Navigator and Sister of Battle. Gallianus seemed aghast, but kept his gaze set on anywhere except for where the Enginseer Prime was, while Rassilas gave no indication he noticed or cared all the same. As for the Choirmaster, he looked outwardly placid and unmoved, but it was really because the Astropath was finding it remarkably difficult to pierce the mental guards put in place inside the Gue'ui' mind. The traitor woman was not a psyker, that much was clear, which meant the source of the resistance came from something else.
"I am very grateful for the offer, Enginseer Prime. I'll get my question out of the way, first." The Gue'ui woman cleared her throat and shifted her seat so that she could look at ULR-3.14e better. "What do you know about Chaos?"
Immediately the mood in the room turned grim, with Hirolian showing visible emotion for the first time by casting fearful looks around him though waiting for something to come out. Kata made the sign of the Aquila and immediately began praying, with Suzurar doing much the same while also trying to find the Astronomicon' comforting light. Rassilas only looked confused for a second before returning to his previous stoic countenance, but it was Gallianus that had the most profound change of all. There was a very visceral look of guilt on the Rogue Trader's face, which he hid by pretending to be caught by a fit of coughing, but the Gue'ui caught it all.
As with all members of the priesthood, ULR-3.14e rarely showed much in the way of emotional expression, but the Magos this time betrayed a widening of his ocular augmetics before being suppressed back to normal. He gripped the table until the wood started to crack, then brought them away as though he could hide his agitation. After several minutes of tense silence, the vox-emitter that replaced ULR-3.14e's mouth switched to life and said, "This information is forbidden. Retraction of previous offer until the query is changed."
The Gue'ui looked around and saw the same solidarity reflected in the faces of everyone else in the room. As she was considering her next steps, there was knock on the door. Three times in short order, and before a fourth could land, the Gue'ui was already opening the door. Every Imperial present tensed as they prepared their minds for the vile sight awaiting them, and they were not disappointed.
Three glowing red orbs peered inside the room, encased in a trapezoid that narrowed to a point on the other end. This head then sat upon a stilt-like neck, so short as to appear part of its torso, which in turn were divided into twin-halves mounted upon a spheroid core. Its two pairs of arms had three fingers with one thumb on each hand, the tips bulbous with a strange pattern on the surface. Its legs, lizard-like and placed somewhere between its sides and under it, carried it forward on a bipedal gait, balanced with the help of its thick and prehensile-looking tail.
It was at this point that all Imperials present realized that the xenos was of artificial make, and felt their fear spike one level higher. ULR-3.14e in particular felt a dread so complete as to feel suffocating, and he clutched protectively at the True Flesh that sustained his mortal life. The synthetic xenos, either unaware or uncaring at the effect its presence had on everyone present, stood to its full height and took measure of everything in sight. Its three eyes focused on different objects until one fell on the Gue'ui, who looked completely at ease and even gave a smirk in return.
"Renthaya Grondgun. My deepest apologies for my tardiness. You know how I get with archeotech, so please make sure to note that in your report when we return." It spoke in Gothic, but not just any random dialect. The xenos spoke in fluent, accented High Gothic as though it had been an Imperial highborn all its life. It then finally noticed the Imperials staring at it with mouths agog, and gave them a short wave with one of its hands.
"Greetings, humans of the Imperium. I am Korvac Davic, a Scientist of the Ascentron Circurrency. Now, which one of you is the leader?" At once, the Imperials looked at the Rogue Trader in attendance, Gallianus van Boltaneus grimacing as he thanked the God-Emperor for giving him such attentive servants. Using every bit of willpower he had, Gallianus forced himself to look at the face of evil, and it in turn scrutinized him. The two beings from different worlds stayed that way for several more minutes until Renthaya, the Gue'ui, cleared her throat and reminded everyone she still existed.
"Korvac, we are still in the middle of discussions. Please sit down and wait for your turn." The Imperials held their breath as they waited for the hammer to come down on the traitor woman, but to their continuing surprise, the Ascentron obliged her, somehow sitting down on the seat despite its size. "Now, Enginseer Prime, I would like to ask you another question, if you are still open to talk?"
"T-this-" ULR-3.14e started with a stutter, a human tic so unlike the Magos to suffer from that it threw him into a loop. He sought clarity and his hands responded, humming with a build-up of the purifying energies of the Motive Force. ULR-3.14e braced himself for the coming pain and, with one decisive move, clapped his palms upon his face. Immediately, arcs of electricity burrowed into True Flesh and feeble meat, the former standing tall against the surge while the latter pulsed with the all too familiar weakness of pain. The penance lasted for two seconds, but it was enough to reboot the Magos' faltering mind and reaffirm his faith on the Omnissiah.
"This unit is open to dialogue, but only if the Silica Animus will refrain from further communication efforts." Renthaya shared a look with Korvac, whose body language to the Gue'ui conveyed amusement, even if his current face was incapable of emoting. The Ascentron Scientist gave a curt nod, which Renthaya took as a sign to continue talking.
"He'll be on his best behavior, Enginseer Prime. Now, my question for you is, why are you afraid of Korvac?" The Magos flinched as though Renthaya struck him directly. "I understand that before the Imperium, there was a period time known as the Age of Strife that-"
"You know nothing, traitor scum!" Navigator Hirolian suddenly shouted, his face turning reddish pink as blood flowed through his pale, translucent skin. "Not of how far we've fallen, of how close mankind came to extinction by those we trusted. But the Navigators remembered, for we endured where many perished. I've seen the records with my own eyes, and it is the likes of you that betrayed us!" Two long, claw-like fingers pointed at Renthaya first, then at Korvac. "Xenophiles; the Enemy Without. The Men of Iron; the Enemy Within. Two sides of the same problem, pounding humanity into the dirt until all that was left was ash. If it weren't for the God-Emperor, humanity would have ceased to exist altogether." The other Imperials nodded in righteous zeal, their previous fear and hesitance banished like a bad dream.
"Neither of us have lived through that era." Renthaya said with her own rising conviction. "Things have changed. I saw it, felt it, touched it even. The Imperium is not the only place humanity can survive now."
"Heresy!" Kata roared, standing up from her seat and tensing as though she was going to leap across the table and tackle Renthaya to the ground. She was stopped by Korvac, who towered over the table with two arms stretched out ready to push the Sister of Battle of back while the other two pulled his Gue'ui ally closer into a protective hug. Kata recoiled from the xenos' touch, one hand grasping the spot as though she was shot while her free hand reached on instinct towards a non-existent Bolt Pistol. Hirolian stood up from his seat as well, a hand reaching towards the covering hiding his third eye, but they were all stopped by a sudden wave of calm forced onto their minds.
"I deeply apologize for this, everyone, but we are going nowhere at this rate." Suzurar spoke out, his empty eye-sockets glowing with power. "Lord Captain, I beseech you to remember your privileges, and lead us out of the darkness back into the God-Emperor's light. Lead us, as you have lead us before." The Astropath then slumped into his seat as he let the Warp go, praying for repentance with frost on his lips. All eyes then went to Gallianus, who was still agog at his Choirmaster's blatant display of disobedience, but then remembered where he was with a gentle nudge from his Seneschal.
"We will have words later, Choirmaster." The Rogue Trader spoke, which made the Astropath lower his head even more. "I will speak plainly. What do you want from us?" He directed his gaze mainly towards Renthaya, with only a glance spared towards Korvac. Feeling the pressure, the Gue'ui woman turned towards her friend, only to find the Ascentron Scientist grinning from a mouth that wasn't there before. With the flourish of a seasoned entertainer, Korvac produced a small pod on one of his hands out of thin air and put it on the table for all to see. The small device vibrated slightly before an aperture opened in its center and a hololith projection appeared in the air, showing a scene straight out of recent memory for the Imperials.
There was Inquisitor Nantz Palemar, in such high fidelity Gallianus thought he'd be able to step off the projector' edge and stare into the Rogue Trader's flawed soul and cast judgment then and there. And of course there was the Lord Captain in miniature, the future seeing the past and cringing at what he saw. The poor fool doesn't even know what's waiting for him. Gallianus thought sadly as he saw events play out just as he remembered and projection faded to nothing.
"Renthaya, can you enlighten me what it was that I saw?" The Gue'ui woman sighed at the excessive theatricality her friend was putting on, but played along anyway.
"It appears to be an Inquisitor talking to the Lord Captain about something. I can't imagine what, but it has to be important." Korvac nodded like a maniac as the Imperials, even Kata, shifted uncomfortably in their seats.
"Indeed it is important, my dear friend. Of all the citizens in the Imperium, very few can stand up to the authority of the Inquisitors, and Rogue Traders are in that elite class. And yet Gallianus van Boltaneus not only welcomed this Inquisitor aboard, he even allowed the man to have leave of his bridge without his own men around for the sake of seeming convenience. Truly, an ultimate expression of trust, or perhaps a gesture of submission meant to placate someone with leverage on one's self. Add this to the fact you seem remarkably eager to slip from our grasp, Lord Captain, means that there is a deadline of sorts you must overcome. That you had the bad luck of suffering as you did, only to end up so close to where you wanted to go." Korvac chuckled with clear amusement at Gallianus' distress at his words. "That must simply be pure torture for you, Lord Captain."
"What. Do. You. Want. From. Us. Xenos?" Gallianus repeated, grinding his teeth at Korvac's clear provocations made to draw his ire.
"Korvac, I think I'll take over here from you again." Renthaya spoke up, looking at Gallianus with an expression somewhere between pity and exasperation. "Lord Captain, we will offer you our help in completing your mission, provided you comply with our requests."
"Lord Captain, you must not-" Kata began to preach, but was stopped by the look on Gallianus' face.
"And what if I say no?" The Rogue Trader asked, looking directly at Renthaya with an appraising gaze. "Will you kill us then?"
"No. We'll just detain you and your ship for the foreseeable future." Gallianus visibly cringed at that answer, which Korvac took as his cue to chime in.
"The longer you wait, Lord Captain, the harder it'll be to explain your absence to the Lord Inquisitor. Are you in or are you out?" Once more, all eyes were on the Rogue Trader, but this time Gallianus could feel the burden of responsibility placed upon his shoulders. His words now would affect the lives of all Imperials aboard the Desperate Luck, for better or worse.
"God-Emperor, forgive me." Gallianus said before he gave his answer. "I'm in."