A/N 1: This is an almost first person telling of the Fall, so Slaanesh daemons are here in earnest, and there is A LOT of blood and gore in here. This is also a fairly depressing chapter, so might be a good idea not to read if you aren't in the mood for tragic stories.
You have been warned.
A/N 2: I've added some links to music and ambient sounds. These are just my personal opinion, so take them or leave them. One video has an image of Lilith's face from the Diablo IV trailer which is M rated, so if ratings are an issue, don't click on any of the links.
♪1Diablo 4 trailer music Unofficial Unclean
♪2D&D Ambience | Hell
♪3(Music recommendation end here)
A/N 3: Thanks again to Skyborne for taking a look at sections of this story. Your friendship is much appreciated.
Kyrazis's knees strained as they absorbed the blow from the landing. The area outside the arena was a mess. Masseuse stands were knocked over and bodies were everywhere; many charred by the heat and radiation of whatever had destroyed the Webway gate.
The slope they had come down that morning was closed off by the remains of a burning skiff. There was another explosion, and Kyrazis watched a barge fall out of the sky; crashing into one of the many towers nearby.
"We can't use Main Street." His sister said, as she unsheathed her knife.
Kyrazis only nodded as they watched another Wraithbone vehicle fall, crashing down onto one of the highways. Whatever madness had taken the planet had apparently disabled most of the automated drones and psychically controlled vehicles that flowed between the towers of the city.
More skiffs, barges, and other craft were falling out of the sky; smashing into towers, and crumbling the various bridges that connected everything together.
"Are the alleys any safer?" Kyrazis asked. They both knew it was teeming with rule-breakers and deviants before this madness.
"At least we can fight our way through whatever's there. Besides, with luck they'll have all killed each other by now."
The two nodded, and started running to one of the alleys they used as shortcuts throughout the city. Shadows cast by the buildings on either side darkened everything. Metallic scents of blood and the putrid stench of spilt bowels wafted out from the dark passageway.
"This must be recent." His sister wrinkled her nose as they dove into the alley. "The drones haven't cleaned everything up."
Bodies littered the ground, and hung from broken windows and balconies above them. The darkness hid most of the details, but he could see several stab wounds made by something thick and sharp on the corpses.
"Is there really no one left?"
His sister remained silent, jumping over another body as she ran slightly ahead of him.
There was movement in the corner of his eye, and they both stopped and turned to face it; his left arm cocked back to strike, while his sister's right hand raised the knife to point at their opponent's eye level.
"Kyrazis?" A familiar voice came from the shadows, and he heard the splash of a foot stepping in a puddle.
"Elarine?" Kyrazis lowered his left arm. "Elarine, is that you?"
"Yes it's me."
There was another splash, and the hem of a dress appeared out of the shadows as a vague silhouette appeared hazily before them.
"I'm so glad I found you." There was another splash, and her lower half became visible in the dim light.
Kyrazis took a step back.
Blood stained the dress, as if the wearer had been a bucket full of the stuff thrown over them, leaving only the very bottom hem of the clothing clean.
"What's wrong? It's rude to ignore people, Kyrazis."
Elarine stepped into full view, and Kyrazis's left arm re-cocked itself reflexively.
A sliver of Wraithbone protruded perpendicularly from her head, as if someone had stuck it in there like the stick stabbed into a candied apple.
Her entire face except her lower jaw was obscured with blood. There was no way she could be alive, but she stepped forward again.
"Hey, I'll let you do anything to me. Just let me touch you."
The thing wearing Elarine's body giggled, and even though she was much smaller and thinner than both of them, they both stepped back.
"Aww… The last one let me get close enough. I guess this must really bother people."
Elarine's hand reached up to grab the Wraithbone shard sticking out of her head, and yanked it free with a wet schlop. More blood spurted out of the hole on top of her head, running down her hair and cheeks like red rain.
The sliver of Wraithbone was thick and sharp, almost the same size as the stab wounds on several of the bodies.
Kyrazis and his sister continued to back away from the bloodied girl, edging away to the exit to the alley.
Elarine took half a step forwards, then tilted her head as if she were listening to something.
"Aww… and I just got here." The Wraithbone dropped from her hand, clattering on the ground. "You don't have to worry about me." It giggled. "You're all Hirs anyways."
The thing pointed upwards with Elarine's finger, and both of them instinctively looked in its direction.
The blue sky had gone dark, as if night had fallen in an instant. The shining stars of the milky way twinkled, then they saw something move.
A long purple worm was traveling slowly across the sky, then was joined by another, and another, and another. Hundreds of long purple tentacles were reaching out across the stars into space. Then all of them were blocked out of sight by a massive tendril crossing right over the city.
"Kyrazis! Look out!"
His sister's voice snapped him out of his stupor, just in time to block a bloody hand from scratching him across the eyes.
He kicked Elarine's body in the chest, and heard her rib cage crack with his strike.
The girl crashed into a wall, slumping downwards like a puppet with its strings cut.
"Move!"
He turned, and ran after his sister.
As they did, purple sparks of psychic energy arced on the Wraithbone structures around them and pink dust filled the air as mad high-pitched laughter echoed behind them.
"What in the blazes is going on?!" Kyrazis yelled.
"I don't know!" His sister yelled back. "Just run!"
They dashed through the alley, now lit with a purple light, casting twisted shadows down every nook and cranny; illuminated hanging corpses seemed to twitch and move as the pools of blood under them rippled on their own accord.
They burst out of the alleyway and continued running. The entire white city was now bathed in pink and purple light, as if the sun itself had been polluted by whatever those things traveling across the sky were.
"There!" His sister pointed to the entrance of another alley. "We go through there, and we should get to the harbor."
As they started to run towards the alley, a blur of motion caused them to stop and ready their weapons.
Other Aeldari were running in the street, a few were already heading to the alley before them, but thousands were moving down the 4 lane highway across from them. Kyrazis relaxed for a moment, slightly relieved that there were others who had survived and did not seem to have been driven insane.
Suddenly the ground shook, and a humongous shadow reached out from behind a tower, covering the four laned highway. A giant clawed foot stepped forwards, and the ground shook again as it cracked the street with its weight. Scaly thighs, smooth abdominal skin, and nippleless breasts emerged as the thing took another step forwards. Four arms dangled from its shapely shoulders, ending in scythes and crab claws.
♪1
All the people were running away from it, only barely able to stay in front of its giant stride. Smaller sexually sensuous silhouettes skipped in its shadow; nubile forms somersaulting and jumping like performers in a parade, twisting joints and limbs in impossible directions as they laughed and sang in echoing double-voices that sent shivers down Kyrazis's spine.
"Kyrazis! We have to move! Come on!" His sister grabbed him by the arm, half-dragging him to the alley.
Foul sounds of scratching fingers, bubbling liquids, and the snarls and growls of unseen creatures in the shadows dogged their footsteps as he panted heavily from exertion. He heard the flap of leathery wings, and the screech of some sharp claw or blade on hard surfaces.
Several others were running in front of them in the alley. People who had broken off from the main crowd escaping down the highway; away from the twisted dancers and the looming giant that herded them.
One of the other Aeldari before them fell, before being dragged up into the air by their ankle; snared by an invisible loop of string or wire that was now cutting into the skin. Smaller creatures with too many legs and too many arms crawled out from underneath balconies and out of broken windows like insects from underneath a dead log; pulling the screaming writhing victim towards them with clawed fingers and spider-like toes.
Kyrazis passed under them, doing his best to close out the screams, but the sound of breaking bones and tearing meat forced themselves into his ears as pained cries became a death yowl that no normal Aeldari could ever let out.
The sound followed them until they turned the corner, where it was drowned out by the sobs and sniffles of a hundred noses and twice as many eyes that seemed to come from above him.
He shouldn't look. He shouldn't look. He shouldn't look.
But, he couldn't stop himself tilting his head upwards.
Ragged flesh colored buntings hung above them, held together by thick twisted rope. Kyrazis's mind tried to deceive itself that that was all he saw, but purple sparks arced between the building several times before he could look down or close his eyes.
Every bunting had a distorted face. Noses and lips were stretched out and eyes drooped like melted wax; all quivering and leaking tears, mucus, and drool. The ends of the thick ropes had fingers and toes, and he realized that each one was an Aeldari whose skeleton had been liquified or extracted, leaving a fleshy mass to mold into fabric with the limbs being twisted together like twine to tie each one to the next.
And every single one of them was still alive.
"Eyes forward!" His sister shouted, and he numbly obeyed her, brain no longer properly functioning. "Stay behind me! Step where I step! We're almost there!" His body followed her instructions, replicating every movement behind her; using the same foot for each step and twisting his body the same way as she did at every turn as they ran through the darkness.
Finally, the alley opened up before them, and they burst into the plaza in front of the harbor. Kyrazis saw a voidship rise from it, before shooting up into the sky.
♪2
"We made it!" He cried, almost laughing from sheer relief.
"You did." His sister said, and for a moment he didn't understand what she said.
"What?" He turned around.
His sister who had been running ahead the whole time was now behind him.
"Go Kyrazis. There might not be enough ships if you wait too long." She took a backwards step towards the alley, back to the nightmare they'd just run from.
"What are you saying?!" He stepped forward, only stopping when she took a step back as well. "We reached the harbor! We can leave the planet!"
"You can. I'm staying."
"What…?"
"Didn't you find it odd that I could lead us all the way here?" She asked him. "After seeing the same things you did, why do you think I'm calm, and you're almost insane?"
Kyrazis's mind stopped and started and stopped again. He couldn't understand. They had both survived that nightmare. What was his sister saying?
"Haven't you noticed…" She gestured to the space around them. "that everyone else who was running in that alley isn't here; even the people who were ahead of us?"
Kyrazis took a startled look around them. In his panic, he hadn't noticed that they were the only ones there. All the others running with them or in front of them had disappeared. Only the two of them had escaped that alley.
A chill ran over his body as his eyes returned to his sister.
"We share the same soul, Kyrazis. I feel your fear, your sadness, the sheer panic going through your heart right now." His sister gave him a sad smile. "What do you feel from me?"
He obeyed her without thinking, reaching inside of himself to feel the connection that he had shared from birth with her.
His eyes widened, and he stumbled backwards from her.
"Nothing…"
He felt nothing. The connection that had been there remained, but it felt like whatever was on the other end had been cut off. The slight weight of a broken safety line was all that remained in his grasp; the person attached to the other end missing..
A chill gripped him as he continued to reach out to his sister's souls, and froze his insides, forcing him to stop; forcing him to take another step away from her.
"That's right. I don't feel anything for some reason. All this death, destruction, and torment; and I don't feel anything."
Kyrazis's eyes watered. He shouldn't feel this revulsion for his sister, this unnatural discomfort. But, even now it was growing stronger, the feeling of wrongness screaming at him to turn away from her and run.
"You're lying... You're lying!" He screamed. "Why did you bring us here then?! Why even run?!" He forced himself to take a step-forwards. That was his sister. His partner for 5000 years. The woman who had stuck with him for every reincarnation; who woke up beside him every morning, and went to sleep next to him every night.
"Because I love you, Kyrazis." She said softly. "You don't want to be on this planet anymore, so I brought you here because of that."
Kyrazis's mind froze, cutting him off from his senses; the distant screams, sounds of burning buildings, and the echo of giant footsteps all stopping as his brain stopped functioning.
It was he who had asked to leave the planet, not his sister. It hadn't bothered him at the moment, for it was as natural as any other conversation, but as his mind went over every word they shared, he realized what she said was true.
He had told her they had needed to run to the harbor.
He had told her that they needed to get off the planet.
He had asked her to help him up that first time in the arena.
And it was she who stopped him when he begged in his mind as he strangled her.
"But, now you need to go, and I should stay."
Sound returned to Kyrazis, but his emotions didn't. He felt empty, lost, unable to come up with anything to say or do.
"You'll die here." He said simply, only able to give out the most obvious fact before them.
"Maybe…" She laughed. "But as long as you're alive, that's all that matters."
The two of them remained silent, as the echoes of another explosion somewhere in the city rumbled over them.
"Every second our planet descends into this nightmare, I feel more and more at home." His sister said, turning her face to the pink and purple sun; and the horizon filled with crooked and collapsed buildings. A relaxed smile crossed her face, cheeks slightly flushed; a peaceful expression illuminated by a dying world."That's not normal. You have to admit that."
"Can't you come with me, for my sake?" A tear dripped down his cheek.
"I don't think that's a good idea." She chuckled sadly. "There's no guarantee that I'll stay this way. Maybe I'm already like that Elarine girl, something wearing your sister's body, and I just don't know it yet."
Kyrazis remained still, caught between two different fears tearing him apart; the horror of this nightmare that had taken his home, and the terror of never seeing the woman before him ever again.
Seconds passed by...
THWACK
Suddenly he was knocked off his feet, rolling across the ground with a pain in his stomach from his sister's kick. Then a familiar high-pitched bubbly voice entered his ear.
"Awww… I missed…" The thing wearing Elarine's body said with her voice, standing where he had been just before.
The girl's body was still covered in blood, but the hands no longer ended in fingers. Crab-like claws with scissor-like ends grew out of each wrist, and several porcupine-like quills jutted out of the torn flesh of her back.
"Go. I'll hold her back." His sister told him; back turned towards him, knife drawn. "I've been itching to kill something for the past while."
"You're going to play with me?" The thing giggled. "But, I really shouldn't. She already has you between her teeth."
Kyrazis crawled to his feet, unable to speak; words and thoughts jumbled together.
"If you want Kyrazis, you're going to have to beat me first."
The feeling of wrongness grew from his sister, and he shivered as the biting cold of whatever had replaced his sister's soul emanated from her like icy stormwinds in a blizzard.
"Beat you? You've already lost!" The thing guffawed, vomiting blood as it laughed. "Ever since the arena, you've been a walking corpse."
"Then come." His sister twirled her knife, before lowering her stance, preparing to lunge. "To the Victor the Spoils." She took one last look behind her.
"GO!"
Kyrazis ran, even as he heard the scuff of shoes on the ground, and the swish of blades and claws cutting through empty air came from behind him. The clink of metal on chitin, and the crack of knuckles on cheekbones came, and then he was too far away to hear the rest of the battle.
The archway of the entrance to the harbor loomed before him, and the sounds of thousands of scared and pleading voices arose from inside. But, he could no longer stop. His sister had told him to go. To run. To live.
If he didn't follow her final order, he would have nothing left of her. ♪3
—----------------------------------------
The entrance to the harbor was dark and empty, only the echoes of voices from deeper inside told him that there was anyone in the building at all. As he stepped past the entrance a hand grabbed at his leg, and he spun; pulling back his left arm to strike. An Aeldari man who had been crouched down behind the doors of the harbor was reaching for him, tears streaming down his face.
"Those things!" The man yelled. "Those… Those demons! They don't go after the stragglers! They're not like wolves! They chase the biggest group of people they can find! I saw them!"
The man grabbed at his own head, covering his ears. "There was one made up of only arms and hands and a hole where its neck should be! It grabbed them! All of them! Just threw them into that hole, and I could hear their screams! Their screams! It wouldn't stop! Just that black gaping hole with no teeth and no gullet full of screams! They screamed! They're still screaming! I can hear them! I can't… I can't stop it!" He gave a blood curdling cry, and clawed at the sides of his face; tearing his long ears.
Kyrazis backed away from the madman.
Merely looking at those things was dangerous. He too had been stunned by that giant with four arms, only his sister's voice and hands pulling him back from his stupor. Any longer, and it might have been him writhing on the ground.
But that man's mad ravings held a warning. The dancers and giant had ignored the people running away from the main group, merely herding the crowd down the highway to some unknown location. However, he could hear the voices of many people in the harbor. It wouldn't be long before the giant or whatever horror the man had seen came for them.
He ran through the gates. Automated checking drones lay dead on the floor and the various turnstiles were torn apart; broken by the weight of hundreds forcing their way through them. The lobbies were scattered with bags and other items like children's toys and half-eaten snacks, but otherwise empty. However, he could see masses of people from the window, all crowded around the various ships on the landing pads outside.
Kyrazis bit his lip. It would take too long to get on those ships, if there was even enough room for him. He looked around for the one with the shortest line and saw a smaller group of people around one of the larger ships. Two figures with Shuriken catapults were arguing with someone at the front of the group, then one of them struck the person with the butt of his weapon, knocking him back.
'That one.' Kyrazis thought to himself, and ran to the stairs that led to the landing pad.
—----------------------------------------
As he moved through the crowd, Kyrazis kept his ears open. There was some reason this ship didn't have masses of Aeldari before it like the others; even though it was bigger than most. Conflict prevented its use, and his battle instincts saw a path there.
Stray bits of conversation came from the Aeldari huddled around him, mostly younger ones; some who had yet to experience their first death if what he heard from his eavesdropping was true.
They were mostly the entourage or new auditioners of some noble. All had arrived at the harbor that morning, and although they felt the panic of the others, most of them were unaware of what was happening outside.
An Aeldari in the familiarly gaudy outfit of a spokesman stood at the forefront of the crowd, nursing a bruised cheek.
"I'm telling you, his lordship is not coming! We must get on that ship and escape!" The spokesman cried.
"Insolence!" One of the guards shouted back. "This craft belongs to his highness Lord Alarathil! It shall not leave without his personage on board!"
Kyrazis almost couldn't believe his ears. Even as the planet was dying, that guard was hanging onto his past role as if nothing had changed. He had half-expected the argument to be one of space. However, even if he couldn't believe the idiocy of his fellow Aeldari, at the very least the argument told him the ship should be mostly empty.
"But he's not coming!" The spokesman cried out again. "I saw him being taken by one of those creatures! They might come here next! We have to get away from here!"
"Then this ship remains on this planet, until the creatures that took our Lord come to me, so I can extract the vengeance that is rightfully mine!"
Even as the spokesperson seemed to sag at the ridiculous statement of the guard, Kyrazis felt himself becoming calmer.
He had seen Aeldari like this; so focussed on a single thing that they saw nothing else. Rule-breakers was what they called them, but that did not mean they were all dysfunctional pleasure seekers. Some like Elarine merely lost sight of everything but the object of their focus. This guard gave off the same feeling as Elarine. He was obsessed with being a guard, of fulfilling his role as loyal servant and honorable vassal.
There was no reasoning with one of these, at least, not for Kyrazis who had no connection to the nobility.
He observed the man carefully. If this man was obsessed with being a guard, he would have trained himself in the old arts of warfare. Kyrazis himself had learned the most surface level rules from his friendship with the older Aeldari at the Shuriken sim-battle arena.
'Trigger finger, still on the finger guard.' Kyrazis noted, and took a look at the second guard. That one also had their trigger finger on the guard; the basics of firearm safety.
It would take only a moment for that finger to move, but if this guard was focussed on only being a guard to the nobility…
Kyrazis edged through the crowd: plan forming in his mind. He turned his left wrist backwards, hiding the small bulge of the Spiked Kiss, and grabbed his left shoulder as if to staunch a bleeding wound.
"Sir!" He cried. "I bring word from Lord Thalarian!"
Thalarian was the Lord who gave his blessings to the arena. Although Kyrazis took no interest in them, he had at least remembered the name the spokesman had shouted out at each ceremony.
"What?! Come here! What is the message! Move out of the way! Let the man through!"
The crowd parted, and Kyrazis feigned a stumble, crouching down on one knee before the guard while holding his left shoulder, using the blood from the woman he had killed on the stairs of the arena to enhance the act.
"Get up! What does Lord Thalarian want!" The guard took a step forward.
"He… He said…" Kyrazis let off a brief emotion of feigned panic through the psychic net, a move he had used in the arena many times to draw in an overly eager opponent.
"What is it! Speak up! No, stand up! Deliver the words of the Lords with at least some dignity!" The guard took another step forwards, and grabbed Kyrazis by the right shoulder to force him to stand.
Kyrazis checked the second guard, made sure that his finger was off the trigger, then sprang upwards striking the guard's neck with his left palm. Blood gushed out, and the guard went limp, but before the body could even begin to fall, Kyrazis grabbed the Shuriken catapult from the corpse's loosening grip and whipped it around to the second guard; only to see the man had already dropped his weapon and had his hands above his head.
"I was only following orders!" The other guard squeaked.
"Then here are some new ones, open the ship!" Kyrazis spat.
As the guard ran to do as he had been told, Kyrazis collected the second Shuriken catapult. All the Aeldari were staring at him, dumbfounded and he could feel the pangs of fear they released.
Kyrazis grimaced internally.
Until now, these younger Aeldari hadn't even thought of defying the old order. Not for any punitive reason, but simply because that was the way they played their game in the nobility. Civility for the purpose of civility had bound them.
He had just broken the rules of that game. His own example of usurpation through violence was a dangerous precedent. If he was not careful, the crowd which had been well behaved in front of the guard could easily turn into a mob that was almost as dangerous as the creatures outside.
"You!" Kyrazis pointed at the spokesman. He seemed to know what had happened outside, and in this situation Kyrazis would need every ally he could get. "Start preparing these people to get onboard. We need to leave."
The spokesman hesitated, before nodding and started organizing the crowd into lines.
Kyrazis walked towards the ship. The second guard had finished opening the doors, and was waiting meekly beside it. He sighed internally. All entourages of the nobles' tended to be masochistic and weak willed; enjoying the freedom from choice by only obeying orders. In short, they didn't try to think for themselves. The praise they received for their service was its own reward for these creatures; no other meaning existed for them in their lives.
He could use this, however.
"Well done." He patted the guard on the shoulder as he passed, as he used to do with all the initiates in the arena, and the man immediately seemed to brighten up.
"How old are you?" Kyrazis asked, feigning interest to generate rapport with him.
"Only 500 years sir… I mean… uh… What should I call you?"
"Kyrazis."
"Oh… and what title should I use?"
Kyrazis sighed. "Just call me by name. It's faster that way."
"As you wish, Kyrazis." The guard gave a salute, and Kyrazis had to pinch the bridge of his nose to suppress the budding migraine that had begun to form there.
"Can you pilot the ship?" He asked the guard.
"Yes! I have much experience! I pride myself in being a mariner and guard both. I…"
"That's enough." Kyrazis interrupted him. "Get the ship ready as soon as possible, but don't take off until I say so."
"Yes, Kyrazis. It will be as you say."
The guard scurried off to the ship's bridge, and Kyrazis took a moment to knead his temples. Patience was important in the arena. The fighters who survived the longest in the pits were always the most patient, and this group of noble hanger-ons felt no less alien to Kyrazis than the various beasts he sometimes had to fight endlessly in the arena.
Alone, Kyrazis looked around at the insides of the ship, and groaned. Gaudy statues, and sexually obscene effigies were everywhere. Game tables, and other baubles cluttered everything.
With dread in his heart, Kyrazis looked out the window, and saw the now ordered lines of the noble's entourage were slowly growing with people who had been waiting at the ends of the other ships.
Kyrazis ran out, and put a hand on the spokesman's shoulder.
"Get me as many Bonesingers, and able bodied people you can find." He ordered, then glanced down at the corpse of the guard he had killed that had been left there. "And two people to get rid of that." He whispered.
The spokesman nodded, and began calling out for volunteers.
Kyrazis watched as the people obeyed the spokesman.
Part of him wanted to run; hold the guard in the ship at gun-point and order the man to fly them to safety. But, the sane part of him knew where that path would end. Endless sleepless nights with a hostage that could slit his throat when his back was turned.
If he wanted safety, he would need numbers. Too few, and he would be the instant outsider of the group. The only one not in the circle of the noble hanger-ons. They may follow his orders out of fear for a while, but that would not last long.
He needed to dilute whatever bond these hanger-ons shared together with other people so they would be all equally distrustful of each other enough that they would be forced to work together. However…
Kyrazis looked at the steadily growing lines.
Too few, and he would be the outsider. Too many, and there wouldn't be enough room on the ship. Not for him, but for all the others. If he left this place with a ship full of families that had to leave half or more of their number behind, the resentment and sorrow would all focus on him. Like it or not, as the one who stood at the forefront, he was the leader of this operation; with all the power and responsibility that role had.
'But, this is the only way to get off this place for certain.' Kyrazis thought to himself.
"We have the volunteers…" The spokesman called out to him, then paused. "uh… What should I call you?"
"Kyrazis. Just Kyrazis." He replied, and walked briskly towards the group of volunteers.
"Bonesingers, raise your hands." He ordered, and over half did so. "We need to clear out the ship as much as possible. Cut out anything that isn't necessary for flight, food, breathing, or whatever else we need to survive in the void. You!" He pointed at one of them who looked and felt the oldest; a woman with pearly white hair who had come from one of the other lines and was thus not of the noble's entourage. "You're in charge. We need to get as many people off the planet as possible."
The group nodded, and Kyrazis looked at the group who didn't have their hands raised.
"That ship is full of things we don't need. I want the Bonesingers to keep cutting for as long as possible. You take whatever they cut out, and throw it off the ship, but make sure you don't block an entrance or something. You're the Bonesingers helping hands, so listen to what she says." Kyrazis pointed at the Aeldari he'd made forewoman of the Bonesingers.
As the volunteers left, a man and a woman stayed behind. Kyrazis recognized their uniforms. True Guardians. A militia force left behind by the those who left on the Craftworlds a few years ago to protect the few remaining activists who had remained on the core worlds.
There was a moment of silence between them, then Kyrazis spoke first.
"So, this is what you activists tried to prevent?"
The True Guardians remained silent for a moment, then the man replied in a strained voice."We tried, and failed."
There was no accusation in that voice, only sadness. Kyrazis himself didn't feel any animosity towards the two of them. No one would have believed this was how the Aeldari would end. He himself had laughed their claims off.
Now, none of that mattered. They were all huddled here at this harbor with the same simple wish. They did not want to die.
"Help me with the body." Kyrazis gestured to the corpse, as he handed one of the Shuriken catapults to the True Guardian who had spoken. "There are a lot of young souls here. I don't want them panicking at the sight of it."
The three of them carried the body off the landing pad by its limbs, and dumped it out of sight behind a pile of abandoned baggage.
"Do either of you know how to pilot a ship?" Kyrazis asked as they walked back.
"No." The True Guardian shook his head. "All the mariners were assigned to the Craftworld. Our only role is to protect."
"You were to protect this harbor?"
The True Guardian nodded.
"We were stationed two or three streets away at one of the major crossings. It was our task to remain ready to give those who remained one final path of refuge."
'Oh, the rumored activist crossing.' Kyrazis thought to himself. The location had remained a semi-active activist location even years after the Craftworlds had left.
"What happened?"
"The first wave of madness took half of our number, either by madness itself or through the riots that followed. The other half fell when they came."
"So, you're all that's left."
"Our weapons were lost in the battle. We ran to draw away as many of the creatures as we could, but they ignored us and went for everyone who remained."
Kyrazis sighed. Two or three streets away was not far.
"How long before they come here?"
"Only the crone of fate knows what the maiden of dreams sees."
Kyrazis held his tongue, but internally he was pointedly reminded why he had disliked this group almost as much as the nobles.
"Then we better hurry." He finally said.
The True Guardians nodded at that. "We will keep a lookout on the surroundings. My partner will act as a runner should they approach."
Kyrazis raised an eyebrow at that. "You might die."
"Death is only shameful if it is purposeless." The True Guardian replied, then gestured to the Shuriken catapult Kyrazis had handed to him. "My warsong is restored. I can now die knowing I did my part."
The two Guardians turned at that, and walked back outside the harbor, leaving Kyrazis behind. In the past, he would have thought such an act was just another form of self-fulfillment, another Aeldari hyped up on their bluster and bravado. But, he didn't feel that anymore.
"What are your names?" He called out.
"Sylvaron." The man who had been talking to him the entire time replied.
"Faelndra." The woman called back.
"Kyrazis." He replied. "There should be room for two somewhere on that ship. I'm sure we could use you if we run into one of your Craftworlds."
Sylvaron smiled at that. "Then move as the storm does, so we may return with the backwind."
The two True Guardians left at that, leaving Kyrazis to scratch his head for a moment, before turning back to the landing pad.
There were more people than before, and he could see several of the other ships had already closed their doors and were preparing to take flight.
He turned to the ship he had commandeered, and there was already a pile of garbage that had been cut out from the ship off to the side, with more of the volunteers carrying more odds and ends out through the hatch.
The lines before the ship had already grown to the same size as any of the other ships'. Kyrazis grimaced, and ran the rest of the way.
—----------------------------------------
The inside of the ship was filled with the light of psychic songs, disassembling and reknitting Wraithbone to cut off the unneeded luxuries of the ship's previous owner. Kyrazis found the woman he had made the leader of the Bonesingers and put a hand on her shoulder.
"How long before we can start taking people on board?"
"We cleared the hallways, and the back parts of the ships first. You can start filling people in there. We'll continue our work inside the ship while you get people onboard, and carry out what we've cut after that. You can then start loading people into the sections we've cleared and we can take turns loading people and removing these things in turns."
Kyrazis grinned, glad that his instincts had picked the right Aeldari for the job.
"Good. I'll get the spokesman to start getting people inside. Send someone to me once the back parts are starting to get full, and have them tell me how many more we can get on." Patting the woman on the back once more, Kyrazis left the ship back to the lines. Once again, they'd grown when his back was turned. Some of the people were already yelling at the spokesperson, and he could feel the panic beginning to spread to even the younger oblivious hanger-ons that had been there first.
Kyrazis took the Shuriken catapult, pointed it at one of the windows of the up-stairs lobby, and fired. The crash stunned most of the Aeldari while a few screamed and covered their heads.
"Listen to me! We'll be getting people onboard now! We can't get you all on at once, so it'll have to be in groups!" He motioned with his head to the lead group of hanger-ons. "You first!"
The hanger-ons hurriedly scampered past him, boarding the ship. Kyrazis waited for them to pass. He would have preferred to split them up, but it would be far easier to have things on a first come first serve basis. At the very least, those at the front half of the line would stay on his side.
The hanger-ons all disappeared into the ship, and the lead Bonesinger didn't send anyone.
"Alright. Parents and children, make sure you stick together. We'll send in 15 people at a time, but if you're related to each other, we'll take you in as one group. Understood?"
Many nods returned, and Kyrazis breathed an internal sigh of relief. The immediate Aeldari family didn't usually get much bigger than four; two children and two adults. Added to the fact that Aeldari physiology did not create disabled or crippled elderly, the boarding process would be relatively smoothe. However, he could already see that there was no way to get everyone on board. Hopefully people wouldn't hate him too much if they had to leave a cousin or a pair of grandparents behind.
Groups of people entered the ship, and Kyrazis made sure to give at least a 3 or 4 minute break between each group, just in case the lead Bonesinger sent someone.
After the 10th group, one of the volunteers who had been helping the Bonesingers came out to him.
Kyrazis turned back to the lines of people. "Alright! We'll need you to wait for a moment! Listen to me, and we'll get through this!"
There were a few mumbled grievances, but no rioting broke out. Kyrazis turned back to the ship as another one of the other vessels flew off into the sky.
—----------------------------------------
The boarding process proceeded without issue until the entire ship was full. However, the lines outside still remained long, and all the other ships had closed their doors.
"How many more can this vessel carry!" Kyrazis roared as he burst onto the bridge. The Bonesingers and volunteers had done all they could, and they were now cramming people into whatever spare nook or cranny they could find. Everyone from the original crowd and those who had helped prepare the vessel remained on board, and only the spokesman was outside still ordering the remaining people into lines.
"Ten, maybe twelve more, Kyrazis." The guard, now mariner, replied. "The Wraithbone already strains."
Kyrazis grimaced, and looked outside. There were a few hundred still out there. Thankfully the True Guardians hadn't sent a runner, so the creatures outside hadn't come for them. However, things could get ugly very quickly. There were no other ships left.
As Kyrazis's mind searched for a way to broach the news, he saw Faelndra approaching the ship.
"Get ready to launch the ship." Kyrazis ordered the young mariner. "Don't leave until I give the order."
"As you will, Kyrazis."
Kyrazis ran out of the ship, meeting Faelndra on the landing pad.
"We can't leave."
The first words out of Faelndra's mouth stunned Kyrazis, but the next words came before he could form a response.
"The other ships did not leave the planet. One of the larger creatures is calling them back down."
"You saw this?" Kyrazis hissed back, quickly looking around to see whether anyone else had heard them.
"A four armed creature opened its mouth to the sky, and I watched foul songs call the voidships into its arms." Faelndra said quietly. "It stands near the crossing we were guarding this morning."
Cold fear gripped Kyrazis's shoulders as the mention of the creature's features brought back memories of the thing he'd seen herding the people down the highway.
"Then what do we do?" Kyrazis whispered back.
"We will fulfill our purpose." Faelndra answered. "My life and Sylvaron's have already been spent. We will go where we can do the most damage."
Kyrazis bit back a bitter retort. At least that explained why the harbor hadn't been attacked. There was no escape from here in the first place.
"I shall return to Sylvaron." Faelndra said as she walked back outside. "The creatures gather at the crossing. We were meant to die there, and so we shall as we always should have."
Kyrazis just stood there as Faelndra left. Part of him wanted to just give up. Go back out there into the city to find his sister, however, he knew that would be meaningless. She had ordered him to go, and would never forgive him if he disobeyed.
He had gone out to the plaza, in between the loading of people and removal of garbage. Only two severed claws and a trail of blood leading back into the alley remained. Her choice to stay here was true and final.
"Ever since the arena, you've been a walking corpse."
The words of the thing wearing Elarine's body replayed themselves in his head.
'Sister' he called out to her in his mind, and felt the connection inside him; only to be answered by silence and cold.
He was the reason for whatever it was that changed her.
In that moment in the arena, he felt death, and he now knew that it was his sister's that he had felt. She had died, but somehow came back; changed, and immune to the horrors of this world.
'No…' Kyrazis thought to himself. 'Not just immune. She enjoys this world.'
Whatever he had done had pushed his sister over the edge from the side of normalcy that he stood on over to the nightmare reality that those creatures came from.
This place was her home, and he could not live with her here.
Kyrazis shook his head. Despair was clouding his thoughts and idling his mind. He had been preventing himself from thinking about his sister with busy work, but with no method of escape it was all meaningless.
Kyrazis looked over the crowds of people, far more than were on the ship.
Something fell into place, and another plan formed in his brain.
Kyrazis walked over to the spokesman, psychic feint prepared in his mind.
"There's no more room on the ship." He told the spokesman, and he felt the despair from him and the people near him who had happened to hear him speak. He then let out a feint of hope, something to use when he wanted to put an opponent on guard; worried that Kyrazis had some unknown advantage that they were unaware of.
Here, it would serve the opposite purpose.
"However, we've found another way off the planet."
The spokesman and those nearest to him instantly brightened up at this.
"We found information on the ship of a secret Webway gate found by the nobles near the crossing where all the activists used to gather."
Kyrazis didn't know what he was saying anymore.
Why would there be a Webway gate at some random crossing where the activists gathered?
Why would the nobles know of it?
Why did the two True Guardians come here when there was a Webway gate there?
But it didn't matter. To not believe in the lie meant there was no way off this planet, for it was obvious that the ship before them was full, and there were no others available.
"There's been reports that some of the True Guardians have made a last stand there, but they might be overrun at any moment! You have to hurry before the Webway gate closes! Get as many of you can together, and run there as fast as you can! I can't promise all of you will get there, but it's your only chance! We'll stay here, and draw as many of those creatures to us so you have a chance to reach the gate!"
Kyrazis yelled the last parts out, letting out feints of urgency, desperation, and worry one after the other to convince as many people as he could.
"You know the way, don't you?" Kyrazis put a hand on the spokesman, looked directly in his eyes, and pleaded with him. "Get as many people as you can to safety. Only you can do this." Feints of anticipation and confidence went from Kyrazis to the spokesman, and Kyrazis could see the weak willed noble hanger-on who had listened to every order Kyrazis had given him perk-up; eager to please.
"Yes… Yes! I can! Everyone! Follow me! We need to hurry! Move as one!"
Kyrazis stepped back. The deed was done. The crowd now moved on its own accord, like an avalanche started by a single snowball.
The creatures didn't go for the stragglers, only the largest group of people. Those who separated from the group survived, even if it was only for a little bit longer.
There was no guarantee this would work, but if they were all damned here regardless, it didn't matter whether everyone died here or there.
—----------------------------------------
It took only minutes for the harbor to empty. All the other ships had left, only the one Kyrazis had remained.
He sat near the half-closed hatch of the ship, stomach roiling inside of him. Sweat drenched him, even though he'd done nothing but sit there for the past several minutes.
It would take maybe an hour to get from here to the crossing if they were on foot, perhaps less if the thing spotted them and gave chase.
'50 minutes…' Kyrazis thought to himself. '50 minutes, and then we take off.'
He should be on the ship next to that mariner on the bridge; counting down the seconds until they could leave, but every time he thought of entering the ship, all his muscles froze and he felt phantom winds pushing him away from the hatch.
Nobody else was around him, but Kyrazis preferred it that way. He couldn't bear the thought of having anybody beside him at the moment.
He wanted to scream, cry, and bang his head against the ground; but all he could do was sit there, Shuriken catapult in hand.
Suddenly, every hair on his body stood on end, and he looked upwards.
The four armed thing stood, towering over the harbor, looking down at him.
Its eyes were obsidian black, like bottomless holes sucking in everything they saw.
That thing knew what he had done. It knew, and it had come for him.
"Do it…" Kyrazis whispered. "Kill me. KILL ME!" he shouted, stumbling to his feet. "I've already lost everything." The Shuriken catapult clattered to the ground, and the Spiked Kiss went off harmlessly as he flailed his arms. "You may have taken my home, but I damned my own sister and all those people with my own two hands!"
The creature continued to look down at him, eyes gazing into his soul, drinking in everything he had seen or done, leaving his soul naked before it.
"I'm no better than you creatures! So take me! Do it! End me! Punish me! Just end it all!"
Kyrazis collapsed into a ball, holding his head; endlessly whispering for death. All thought was gone from his brain; the memory of the order given by his sister, and even base survival instincts had fled before the gaze of the creature.
He wanted to die. He wanted that creature to walk through the harbor walls, and step on him with its clawed foot; turning him into a wretched smear on the ground.
'GO'
Kyrazis froze at the word in his head, and slowly looked up at the creature through the gaps in his fingers.
The creature turned away; giant footsteps growing fainter as it left, leaving Kyrazis with only questions and no answers, taking its secrets and his with it.
A distant scream startled Kyrazis from his stupor, and the mad Aeldari from the entrance ran into view only to trip and fall. Two of the dancers from the four armed creatures parade sauntered after him and grabbed his legs, dragging him back to a giant white hand reaching into the harbor. The man's cries were soon joined by a chorus of thousands as the hand took him out of view.
They had begun to collect all those they had let go. Kyrazis instinctively understood this and scrambled to his feet; grabbing the Shuriken catapult off the ground, throwing the hatch open before slamming it shut behind him. No one was around the immediate area to witness what had happened, but that only bothered Kyrazis for a moment before he ran up to the bridge.
"Take off! Now!" He ordered.
"Yes, Kyrazis." The mariner replied normally, as if he hadn't seen anything.
That creature had towered over the harbor, visible to everyone on the landing pad, but there was no panic aboard the ship, and even this weak willed mariner seemed utterly unaffected.
Kyrazis slumped down against a wall, unsure if what he saw was an illusion or reality.
The ship shook as it flew upwards, and Kyrazis felt the violent vibrations ripple through the Wraithbone. Purple clouded the view ports, and flashes of lightning blinded him, until all of that was replaced by blackness and twinkling starlight.
"We made it, Kyrazis!" The mariner shouted, and Kyrazis let out a short laugh.
Moments before he had only wanted to die, but here he was, relieved that he had survived.
There was a thump, and Kyrazis turned his head back to the mariner. The young Aeldari was slumped backwards, head rolling at an unnatural angle.
'Oh…' Kyrazis thought. 'That's why it let us go…'
—----------------------------------------
Several hours had passed since the young mariner's death. There was the mad search for a second mariner, and the revelation that in their rush to open up the ship, navigational equipment had been damaged or destroyed; leaving them almost directionless. Thankfully, the replacement mariner they found was a follower of Vileth and could take them to the nearest patrol fleet navigating by only the position of stars and planets.
Kyrazis, the lead Bonesinger, whose name he'd finally learned was Celerion, and two other men were in one of the rooms of the ship; surrounding the body of the young mariner who had died the moment they left the planet.
Kyrazis was now the de-facto leader of everyone on board. Celerion was the closest thing they had to a ship-board engineer. She was still in charge of all the Bonesingers, and was responsible for making the hurriedly prepared ship a more comfortable place to live. They formed the current leadership of the refugees from the planet.
The two others were Mordraxus, the biomancer who was currently inspecting the body with his hands and small instruments, and the apprentice Seer Galaris; who had been brought here to investigate the body should Mordraxus fail to find anything.
The bridge hadn't been empty at the time, so news of the sudden death of the mariner spread throughout the ship quickly. Kyrazis could feel the panic returning to the people, and they needed an explanation quickly.
"What happened, Kyrazis?" Celerion asked.
"I do not know." Kyrazis replied tiredly. He knew it was because of those creatures that had consumed his home, but how or why was as much a mystery to him as anyone else. Regardless, openly blaming the creatures for the mariner's death would do nothing but spread uncontrollable panic and doubts of his sanity. He himself didn't know whether his mind was his own anymore; he didn't need anyone else questioning it.
Kyrazis kneaded his temples as the biomancer continued to work on the body. He needed something to keep this rag-tag group of different Aeldari somewhat coherent; something to reassure them that they would not suffer this mariner's fate. He'd come too far to just die in a riot on some half-scrapped voidship in the middle of space. Hopefully, they would be able to soothe their fears by finding a cause of death; and a means to prevent it.
"Mordraxus, have you found anything?" He asked irritably as the biomancer pulled back from the body.
Unfortunately, the biomancer shook his head. "Nothing to note. His body is as healthy as any other; besides being dead that is. Sudden cardiac arrest, if I were to give a cause of death."
Kyrazis shook his head. That explanation wouldn't do. All that meant was that whatever killed the mariner could kill any one of them.
"Seer Galaris, can you tell us anything?"
The apprentice Seer approached the body as the biomancer retreated out of the way. The young man's eyes glowed, and he stretched out his palms to place them on the dead mariner's head.
Minutes passed, and sweat began to bead at Galaris's forehead.
"Galaris?" Kyrazis took a step towards the Seer; whose hands and shoulders were now twitching erratically.
"Galaris!" Kyrazis grabbed the man by the shoulders, and dragged him away from the body. He'd seen this reaction before. His own friend who'd disappeared into the central pleasure centers of the city after seeing too much had also often twitched, shook, and broken out into sweats at odd intervals before vanishing.
The Seer was now convulsing violently, falling to his knees, then both hands grabbed onto Kyrazis's arms with vice like grips.
"I told you you were already Hirs, Kyrazis." Elarine's voice came from the male Seer's mouth, and the man's head flipped upwards to stare him in the face. Bloodshot eyes stared up at him, and red tears began to spill from the torn lacrimal glands of the Seer's face. "But you aren't ready for Hir yet."
Kyrazis struggled to break free, but the Seer's hands held him in place as the creature continued to speak to him.
"I need you to see what awaits you all, and what she has already gone through." A gentle smile crossed the face stained with bloody tears and mucus as red began to flow from both nostrils. "Enjoy this prelude to your eternal afterlife."
The Seer's face went blank for a moment, and he blinked as if just waking from a dream, then both eyes shot wide open and he screamed. Blood spattered Kyrazis in the face as the man's throat tore itself from the inside, flying out with his cries. Bite and claw marks crisscrossed across the man's skin, as if a pack of invisible beasts had started feasting on him right then and there.
Skin sloughed off, extremities fell off, but even as the Seer's internal organs fell out of his body; no longer supported by the torn muscles and connective tissue that lay in a mess around him, he continued to scream bloody cries into Kyrazis's face.
"Stay still!" Kyrazis heard Mordraxus shout, and he looked up to see the man charging forwards with a syringe. The needle went into what remained of the Seer's shoulder. There was a hiss, and foul steam erupted with a bubbling sound as the body began to melt.
"Get away! Now!" Mordarxus yelled again, and Kyrazis tore himself away from the melting bloody mess that had been the Seer. The biomancer also stepped away, but the melting corpse spun its arm backwards into his mouth, slapping him there before he could retreat.
Kyrazis felt a burning sensation on his cheek, and realized he too had been splashed by droplets of whatever was melting the corpse.
He fought back the reflex to touch his face, and instead aimed his left palm at where he thought the stuff was and cut it off with the Spiked Kiss. The burning sensation was replaced by the simple pain of a cut, and part of his cheek slapped against the wall of the room; still smoldering.
Mordraxus was huddled in a ball, spraying his face with another chemical, and Celerion had collapsed to her knees; a wet patch forming between her legs.
All that remained of Galaris were steaming bones, the meat that had already fallen off before Mordraxus's injection, and the echo of his endless screams in Kyrazis's ears.
—----------------------------------------
News somehow spread of what had happened to Galaris and the mariner. A few days had passed since their deaths, and the mood on the ship was dour, to put it lightly.
Kyrazis sat on the command throne, forcing himself to be there, if only to ensure the bridge crew continued to do their jobs. He hadn't been able to sleep for days, and his skin had begun to lose its color.
Celerion had entered into a depression, and was mostly unresponsive in her room, leaving him to keep the ship going.
Mordraxus, for some reason, was also on the bridge; now wearing a strange mask that covered his mouth that somehow replaced the function of the lips he had lost.
"That was good thinking, cutting off part of your own cheek." The biomancer said.
He often appeared here to make idle conversation. Followers of Shaimesh, which most biomancers were, tended to be talkative.
"What was in that syringe?" Kyrazis asked, wanting a distraction more than anything at the moment.
"Oh that. It's just a little something we use to macerate specimens. Leaves very well preserved skeletons for display." Mordraxus chuckled to himself. "It's usually used on deceased or heavily restrained subjects. Even with the correct counter-agent, its effect can be quite unpleasant." He gestured to the mask on his face.
"You seem rather untouched by all this." Kyrazis said, glaring at him.
"I am a biomancer. We deal with death far more than your average Aeldari." Mordraxus shrugged. "It might help that I've already seen creatures of considerable cruelty in nature."
"I find that hard to believe." Kyrazis muttered back.
"Well, I once saw an insect that injected its young into the larvae of another insect, all so their offspring can have a safe space to grow and feed. They hatch under the skin and then…"
"That was not an invitation to elaborate." Kyrazis interrupted the biomancer, now feeling slightly queasy.
"Ah, my apologies." Mordraxus bowed his head. "I tend to get carried away with explanations. My own way of dealing with problems."
"You don't have many friends, do you?"
"An astute observation." Mordaxus chortled. "But then again most biomancers are either rivals or symbiotic partners to each other. All according to the teachings of Shaimesh."
Kyrazis sighed. Fully regretting starting the conversation with the quixotic Aeldari.
It would be a few more days until they reached the patrol fleet, and hopefully someone else could take charge of things from there. He was just so very tired. So tired that he failed to pick up on the hurried steps of someone running up to the bridge until they were right next to him.
"Kyrazis." A panicked looking woman, one of the Bonesingers who had helped Kyrazis clear the ship, whispered to him. "Celerion's been murdered."
—----------------------------------------
Celerion's body was no longer recognizable. The perpetrators lay on the ground; all arms and legs broken by Kyrazis. They were all followers of Shaimesh, biomancers like Mordraxus. The Bonesinger who had come to warn Kyrazis had found them when she went to check on Celerion, and had sealed them into the room with a Wraithbone barricade before running to get him.
Mordraxus himself was rummaging around the various vials and needles the murderers had brought, in order to ensure Celerion's remains were safe to touch.
"Paralytic agents… unused. Nerve stimulants… almost empty. Hypnotic agents… also unused. Toxins… hmm nothing dangerous on dermal contact. Yes, we can clear up the remains without worry." He concluded, packing up and organizing the various items.
Kyrazis turned towards the murderers.
"What did you think to accomplish here?" He asked coldly.
"Salvation." One of the followers of Shaimesh spat. "You see what's happening to all of us. The sickness; the discoloring of the skin, the growing weakness. All unexplainable by biology or medicine."
"It is rather obvious." Mordraxus replied instead of Kyrazis. "Regardless, killing each other creates more problems than it solves."
"We found a way to fix it!" Another shouted out. "It's our souls that are affecting our bodies. As long as we can replenish our souls, our bodies too will fix themselves. Look at us! Look at our skin!"
Kyrazis looked down at them, and he did see their skin had returned to its normal color. Their eyes too were filled with a bright vivacity that no one else on the ship had.
Mordraxus sighed. "Yes, I did come to a similar conclusion when I saw what happened to Galaris and that young mariner, but did you not think of the consequences?"
"What consequences?!" Another biomancer retorted. "The woman didn't even resist! Didn't even say a word while we worked! She was a walking corpse!"
"Yes, but now you've started a dangerous precedent." Mordraxus sighed again. "If Aeldari can only save themselves by preying on other Aeldari, then what do you think will happen in this closed environment?"
The biomancers remained silent.
Kyrazis himself was already worrying about that more than anything else. He needed the others. By himself, he was a simple fighter. He knew nothing of piloting a ship, or Bonesinging. If they all started killing each other, even if he did survive the bloodbath, he would be left alone; starving to death in space.
"Well, only a second rate biomancer wastes good flesh." Mordraxus brushed himself off, and turned towards Kyrazis. "Let's throw these fools out of the airlock. Make an example of them, so others are wary to follow in their footsteps."
"And the sickness? What of that?" Kyrazis replied, even as the biomancers on the floor screeched and yelled out at them. Capital punishment may work for a while, but it didn't change the fact that they were getting weaker. If this went on any further…
"I have a couple of theories on how to alleviate it." Mordraxus looked over at Celerion's remains. "At the very least, souls do not seem to be equal in measure. The life of one woman shouldn't be enough to restore all of those here."
"I would say it was the opposite." Kyrazis retorted bitterly, stepping out of the room to get others to begin carrying the biomancers to the airlock, and lay Celerion's remains to rest.
—----------------------------------------
The sickness worsened.
Some of the children and younger Aeldari could barely move. Mordraxus too now walked with a permanent bowed back, and Kyrazis's face was now gaunt and bony, self-inflicted scar on his cheek still unhealed.
"How much longer… till we reach the patrol fleet." He said slowly.
"We've already received a hail from their ships." One of the bridge crew reported quietly. "Only a couple of minutes until contact."
"Good." Kyrazis slowly rose out of the command throne to prepare himself to greet the crew on the patrol fleet.
There were several flashes of purple, and a number of Aeldari Eclipse-class cruisers exited the immaterium before flying towards them.
Kyrazis walked towards the airlock where they would meet the crew of the patrol fleet, then noticed Mordraxus was following behind him.
"What do you want?" He asked tiredly.
"I have several theories as to how to alleviate the sickness." The biomancer replied. "They all need the assistance of the patrol fleet, so I felt it best if I came with you. Time is of the essence, after all."
"Oh, and what would these theories be?" Kyrazis muttered as they walked to the airlock.
"The price of an Aeldari soul, or more specifically…" Mordraxus replied hurriedly as Kyrazis turned on him. "Would the soul of another species satisfy the thing that drains us all."
"You want to sacrifice an alien to save us?" Kyrazis retorted, slowly lowering his left arm. He would not tolerate the thought of Aeldari cannibalizing each other to save themselves.
"Morally, it would not be much different from eating." Mordraxus shrugged. "However, the specimens I've experimented on did not yield any positive results."
"What specimens?" Kyrazis raised an eyebrow as they resumed walking to the airlock.
"Small insects and a few of my last test animals. I always keep a few small creatures under my robes in case inspiration strikes." Mordraxus patted his waist at that.
"Make sure you keep them under control." Kyrazis snorted. "I don't need a vermin problem on top of everything else."
"Do not worry. They are quite thoroughly paralyzed. I have very ticklish sides."
—----------------------------------------
The crew of the patrol fleet were not much better off than they were.
Most were weakened or injured. Whatever madness had touched the core worlds had claimed the commanding staff of the fleet; the oldest Aeldari. Those that remained had succeeded in mutinying against them, but not many survived. They were now leaderless, and heavily undercrewed.
Kyrazis now sat on the command throne of the leading Eclipse-class cruiser, clothed in the armor of the deceased previous captain.
Mordraxus had proved instrumental in him being placed there.
Desperate to find a cure to the sickness, the crew of the patrol fleet had leapt at the idea of Mordraxus's solution. It was also blind luck that there were already aliens onboard some of the patrol fleet's cruisers.
"I never thought I'd see the day I'd be thankful to the nobles for all their inefficiencies." Mordraxus tittered next to Kyrazis, back now straight as when they first met.
"A blackmarket for slaves in a society with no currency, and no laws." Kyrazis muttered back.
The patrol fleet had several pens of alien races; slaves for a hidden blackmarket for noble patronage. There were no laws, or even currency to buy or barter anything there. It was, as all things, merely for the entertainment of all those participating. Fake buyers would purchase from fake merchants with fake currencies; but the slaves themselves were very real.
"As I suspected." Mordraxus hummed to himself while he skimmed through various memos and notes he had taken. "Only sentient species have the required… weight shall we say, to replenish our souls."
"And the best candidate?" Kyrazis asked.
"Creatures with advanced capacity for emotion seem to be the most efficient, and if we are to find a steadily replenishable supply… I'd say these are the best ones to use."
Mordraxus handed a thin data pad to Kyrazis.
"Humans?"
"Yes." Mordraxus nodded. "They are quite numerous in this region of space.."
"Fine." Kyrazis huffed, and handed back the pad. "Our first objective is to find enough of them to keep everyone alive."
"And after that?"
Kyrazis looked at Mordraxus. There were no future plans for him. He only sat on this throne for one reason.
"We survive."
And so they had for several decades, endlessly raiding and killing humans to feed their souls. Feeling but ignoring the slow descent into the same depravity that doomed them in the first place, becoming just as cruel as those in the pleasure centers and alleys of the core worlds.
Until Isha's song called them.