Age: 17 Cycles
For the first time in history, an Ethereal homeworld stood without Ethereals.
And no one knew.
Not yet.
T'au'n—the heart of the Empire—still functioned under the illusion of guidance. The people obeyed, industry hummed, and Fire Caste patrols maintained the peace. The bureaucracy remained intact. The system had been too well built, too ingrained in the Tau psyche, for immediate collapse.
But the deception was delicate. One misstep, one inconsistency, and the illusion would unravel.
We could not let that happen.
I stood in the command dome, gazing at the vast holomap of the T'au Empire. Dozens of worlds flickered in shades of blue, indicating stability. A handful, like Dal'yth and Bork'an, pulsed faintly—warning signs. Questions had begun. Ethereals from other septs sought answers.
J'kaara stood beside me, his hands clasped behind his back. His usual smirk was absent, replaced by a tight frown as he read the latest transmissions.
"They're pressing harder," he murmured. "Bork'an has requested direct communication with Or'es. Dal'yth insists on a joint council to 'reaffirm the unity of the Greater Good.'"
"And if we refuse?" I asked.
"They will find ways around it," he admitted. "The Ethereals are few, but they are persistent. If Or'es remains silent too long, they will insist on sending their own to 'assist' him."
That could not happen.
Sa'cea approached, his face gaunt from days without rest. "We can sustain the illusion for now," he said, "but a direct conversation with another Ethereal is impossible. They'd see through the deception in an instant."
I already knew why.
The Ethereals were more than rulers. They were
harmonizers. Their control was woven into every part of Tau society, not just through their presence but through how they spoke. A conversation between Ethereals was not merely an exchange of words—it was a carefully structured reaffirmation of the Greater Good's doctrine. Their phrasing, their responses, even the rhythm of their speech were all calibrated to maintain absolute cohesion.
If Or'es were alive but acting independently, that harmony would break. Even a single phrase spoken out of alignment—a moment of hesitation, an unintended implication—could trigger suspicion.
We forced Or'es into obedience through artificial means, the risk was even greater.
Words had power.
If he said something that no Ethereal
should say—if he suggested that T'au'n should govern itself, or that the Greater Good did not require an Ethereal's hand to guide it—then the deception would collapse instantly.
J'kaara exhaled. "We must delay them."
"How?" Vior'los asked, arms crossed. "If we keep Or'es silent, suspicion grows. If we let him 'speak,' they will see through it. What other choice is there?"
I turned back to the holomap, staring at T'au'n.
"Our world must stand alone."
The others looked at me.
"If we can no longer rely on the wider Empire's infrastructure without risking exposure, we must become independent of it," I continued. "Resources, industry, even food production—everything must be redirected toward full self-sufficiency."
Sa'cea's expression darkened. "That's no small task. We rely on imports for advanced components, even from Vior'la and Bork'an. If we cut ourselves off, we will stagnate."
"Not if we plan carefully," I said. "We maintain the trade routes
for now, but begin covertly shifting production inward. Every system must be reworked, every reliance on external supply chains eliminated. If Dal'yth or Bork'an suspect something and attempt economic pressure, it must mean nothing to us."
J'kaara nodded slowly. "It would be difficult, but not impossible. We could divert civilian infrastructure projects toward hidden arms production. Retool automated assembly lines to focus on our needs rather than the Empire's quotas."
"And food?" Vior'los asked. "T'au'n is no agricultural world."
"There are hydroponic sectors," Sa'cea mused, rubbing his chin. "If we expand them and incorporate higher-yield cultivation methods, we
might be able to sustain the population."
I gestured toward the orbital shipyards. "And the fleet?"
Vior'los smirked. "The Dal'yth fleet expects us to construct cargo haulers. I see no reason why cargo haulers cannot also carry hidden weapons arrays."
I nodded. "Good. If we cannot outfight an invasion, we must outlast one."
J'kaara, however, still looked troubled. "This will buy us time, but eventually, the other Ethereals will demand something we cannot fake: a conversation."
I met his gaze. "Then we make them hesitate."
Silence.
"The Ethereals are not accustomed to defiance," I continued. "If Or'es proclaims that T'au'n has entered a 'period of isolation for spiritual recalibration,' it will make them wary. The Ethereals on other worlds won't
understand it, but they will hesitate to act against it."
J'kaara frowned. "And when that hesitation ends?"
"Then we must be ready."
A cold weight settled over the room.
This was not a long-term solution. It was a delay—a way to ensure we were prepared when the inevitable came.
We could not remain within the Empire forever.
But for now, the veil of the Greater Good held.
And as long as it did, we still had time.
The air in the command chamber remained heavy. A dozen holo-displays flickered, showing our planet's logistics, military readiness, and projected timelines. Every solution we proposed had one problem—
time.
We could fortify.
We could make T'au'n self-sufficient.
But eventually, we would be found.
And when that happened, there would be no diplomacy. No negotiation. Just
compliance… or annihilation.
J'kaara exhaled. "What about the
Farsight Enclaves?"
It wasn't the first time the name had been spoken, but this was the first time it carried any real weight.
The chamber went silent for a few moments. The Ethereal caste had long condemned O'Shovah's breakaway empire, branding it heresy. Yet, deep down, many warriors still held a level of respect for the renegade Commander.
"We don't even know if they would help us," Vior'los muttered. "Even if they did, do you know how
far away the Enclaves are?"
Sa'cea answered. "
Eight light-years."
That number alone was enough to kill the idea before it could gain traction.
Our
FTL drives were not true
superluminal technology. The T'au method of faster-than-light travel functioned on
gravitic warp bubbles, which allowed us to move at approximately
one light-year per year.
That meant it would take
eight years to reach the Enclaves.
Another eight to return.
Even if we sent a message drone, even if they somehow agreed to help us, by the time any reinforcements arrived, it would already be
sixteen years too late.
Sa'cea shook his head. "The Farsight Enclaves are beyond our reach. They might as well be in another galaxy."
J'kaara scowled. "Then what? We just keep fortifying until the Empire realizes something is wrong? Even if we control every industry, the moment an Ethereal arrives in person, it's over."
That was the real problem.
We were not being
actively watched… yet.
The Empire was vast, and a single world on the outer edges was not high on their immediate concerns. But
eventually, they would send an Ethereal to check on us. And when that happened, we would no longer be able to maintain the illusion.
We needed a way out.
But how could we escape the inescapable?
J'kaara scoffed. "There's no way to run. We don't have the means to travel far enough to avoid detection, and even if we did, we'd still be in
this universe. Unless you're suggesting we somehow take the entire planet and—"
He stopped.
Because
he realized what he just said.
His expression twisted in disbelief.
"You're not actually considering—"
"It's impossible," Vior'los interrupted. "Even the Imperium, with all their technology, don't
move planets. Terraform them, maybe, but
not take them outside of reality."
"Not to mention," Sa'cea added, "interdimensional travel is theoretical at best. The Imperium, the Eldar, even the most advanced species rely on the
Warp or the
Webway—but those are still bound to
this universe." He folded his arms. "Escaping the
galaxy is already impossible. Escaping the
universe itself? That's a fantasy."
I remained silent.
Listening.
Thinking.
And then, I spoke.
"…I have an idea."
They all turned to face me.
I kept my voice neutral. Calculated.
"No matter how much we discuss, no matter how much we analyze, all of our strategies rely on
playing within the Empire's rules. We're limiting ourselves to what we
think is possible."
I glanced toward the holomap of T'au'n.
"But I do not accept those limitations."
Sa'cea's brow furrowed. "And what, exactly, do you propose?"
I met his gaze.
"I propose we take
T'au'n… and leave this universe."
J'kaara let out a sharp, disbelieving laugh. "That's insane. We
just said that interdimensional travel isn't possible."
"No," I corrected, "we said it isn't
known to be possible."
Silence.
And then Vior'los frowned. "You're suggesting there's a way?"
I didn't answer.
Because at that moment—
I made my decision.
[Inspired Inventor: -2 Points Spent]
A
flash of understanding.
A
cascade of knowledge.
Equations, designs, theoretical models—all of it
flooded into my mind in an instant. The kind of breakthrough that should have taken
thousands of years of technological evolution, compressed into a single moment.
I kept my expression calm. Neutral.
But inside, I
knew.
It could be done.
"We need two things," I said, stepping toward the display. "A power source beyond anything the T'au Empire has ever utilized. And a method of breaching dimensional barriers."
Vior'los' eyes narrowed. "You're speaking as if you already have the answers."
I turned to him.
"I do."
The first key to our escape—
a ZPM.
With this, we could
detach from all external supply chains.
With this, we could power the
impossible.
And the second key—
a Dolmen Gate.
The Necrons had long since mastered breaches in reality. The Eldar Webway was
sealed to us, but the Necrons had forced their way into it with
Dolmen Gates.
But my knowledge went beyond even that.
A Dolmen Gate was
not just a gateway to the Webway.
With the right modifications, it could be
expanded—a bridge not just between dimensions, but between
universes.
J'kaara eyed me warily. "You're… serious."
I nodded.
Sa'cea exhaled. "Assuming we even build these… devices, how do we construct them without raising suspicion?"
That was the
final piece of the puzzle.
"I control
every aspect of this world," I reminded them. "The factories, the shipyards, the resource extraction—all of it. We simply build under the guise of industrial expansion. The moment we announce we are increasing military readiness, no one will question resource allocation."
It would take
years.
It would require
secrecy.
But
step by step, component by component, we would construct our escape.
J'kaara shook his head. "You are actually insane."
I smiled.
"But am I wrong?"
Silence.
No one answered.
Because
they knew I wasn't.
And so, without their knowledge, I had already taken the first step.
I had already
set the future into motion.
T'au'n had always been a world of order. A cog in the great machine of the Empire. But under my control, it was becoming something else entirely. Factories that once produced weapons of war now worked toward something far greater—
our liberation.
For years, we had lived under the watchful eyes of the Ethereals and the rigid structure of the T'au Empire. To most, the Empire was security. Purpose. Order. But I knew better. I had seen what lay ahead—the slow, inevitable doom that awaited us all. The Empire was stagnating, blind to the horrors that would one day consume it. The Imperium, Chaos, the endless tides of war…
There was only one solution:
leave this universe behind.
But the risks were enormous. This was not just an act of defiance. It was
treason on a scale never before imagined. If discovered, there would be no mercy.
The
ZPM was the first piece.
It was built deep within the industrial districts, disguised under the pretense of an experimental energy project. Even the most loyal engineers had no idea of its true purpose. To them, it was simply an ambitious attempt to achieve energy self-sufficiency for T'au'n.
But beneath its exterior was something far greater.
Supercooled lattice structures, subspace oscillators, energy field stabilizers—pieces of technology that should have been beyond the reach of the T'au. And yet, they came together seamlessly, guided by hands that knew exactly what was needed.
The
Modified Dolmen Gate was another challenge entirely.
Reverse-engineering Necron technology was dangerous, not just in a physical sense but politically. The T'au had encountered the Necrons before, and the mere suggestion of tampering with their artifacts was enough to trigger suspicion. If any of the surviving Ethereals got word of this… verification teams would arrive. Experts would be sent to question every word, every decision. The moment they found an inconsistency, the truth would unravel.
That could not be allowed to happen.
I took no chances. The Dolmen Gate's modifications were done in absolute secrecy, with only the most loyal workers permitted access. Even they did not fully understand what they were building.
What had once been a mere portal for ships was now something far greater. Instead of linking to the Webway, I had recalibrated it to target the fundamental dimensional frequencies of reality itself. It would create a tear in space—not just a passage, but a
shift, a full-scale translocation.
Instead of moving a fleet, it would move
an entire world.
One mistake, and we would doom ourselves.
We weren't just escaping the T'au Empire—we were
fleeing the horrors of this universe. If we weren't careful, we might leap from one nightmare into another.
Before the transition, I launched a series of
probes, each one designed to scan alternate universes for three key conditions:
- No dominant hostile civilizations – We could not afford to land in another war-torn galaxy.
- A habitable world – T'au'n could not sustain itself indefinitely. We needed a stable ecosystem.
- No supernatural or reality-warping threats – We had to escape Chaos. No more gods, no more daemons.
Each probe returned with data.
The first found a universe filled with superhuman warriors, dressed in red and blue, flying through the skies and reshaping reality with their mere presence.
Rejected.
The second discovered a galaxy ruled by an empire that wielded planet-destroying space stations and ancient energy swords.
Rejected.
The third located a world that seemed peaceful—until the sensors picked up evidence of magical warfare, beings with divine power waging endless conflicts over the fate of reality.
Rejected.
Then, after weeks of searching—
we found it.
A
perfect star system.
A
main-sequence star, stable and long-lived. Two
habitable planets—one nearly identical to T'au'n in atmosphere and climate, the other smaller but rich in minerals. No signs of intelligent life. No warring civilizations. No Chaos.
This was it.
Our new home.
Age: 20 Cycles
The final preparations were made in secret.
The
Dolmen Gate was primed, its modified structure charged by the incomprehensible power of the
ZPM. An entire world's energy grid was repurposed, redirected toward a single moment.
The planet itself trembled. Energy crackled through the atmosphere. Space around us distorted, folding inward as the Dolmen Gate reached into the fabric of reality and
pulled.
For a brief moment,
T'au'n ceased to exist.
Then—
Light.
The sky was different. The sun had changed. The air was the same, but the world around us had been displaced. We had moved. We had
escaped.
Sensors recalibrated. The two sister planets were exactly where they should be. The transition had been a success.
The people of T'au'n rejoiced. We were free. No more oversight. No more Ethereal commands dictating our every breath. No more Imperium, no more Orks, no more endless war.
But then—
an anomaly.
An object had been detected at the edge of the system.
A structure. A station.
I watched as the display revealed its form—two vast prongs extending outward, a glowing sphere suspended between them.
The other T'au debated what it could be. A natural phenomenon? A relic of an extinct civilization?
I
knew better.
I recognized that design.
My heart pounded—not in fear, but in realization.
We had not just left our old universe behind. We had entered another.
A universe where gods and daemons held no dominion. A universe where the greatest dangers were not eldritch horrors from the Warp, but
politics, technology, and ambition.
In this new galaxy, we could thrive.
For the first time,
T'au'n belonged to no empire but its own.
We had truly escaped.
And
our future had just begun.