Kalimos temp file

MolotovKraken

Prophet
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Apr 18, 2024
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Perhaps three hundred legionaries filled the chamber, and Lucius recognised many of them from the great battle on Isstvan V: First Captain Kaesoron, Marius Vairosean, dour Kalimos of the 17th, Apothecary Fabius, pouting Krysander of the Ninth and a score of others to whom he had applied derogatory labels. Some were old faces of the Legion. Others were those who had attracted the fickle notice of the primarch, while yet more were simply members of the Brotherhood of the Phoenix who had followed their betters.

First Captain Kaesoron had come, as had Marius Vairosean and, more importantly – if Lucius’s suspicions were confirmed – so had Apothecary Fabius. Kalimos, Daimon and Krysander were here, and Ruen of the 21st. Heliton and Abranxe came also, and several others whose names Lucius had not bothered to remember. They regarded him with mild amusement, for he had always been held in faint contempt by the order. Lucius struggled to hold his temper in check. ‘Why have you called us here?’ demanded Kalimos, his downcast face stitched with rings and toothed hooks. ‘This brotherhood has little meaning for us now.’

The rest of the brotherhood spread out around him, and even as Lucius appreciated his mortal danger, he felt wonderfully alive. Krysander ran a hooked tongue over his lips, his black eyes like those of the primarch, as he slid a red-bladed dagger from a flesh-sheath cut into the meat of his barethigh.‘I’ll have your skin, Lucius,’ said the warrior, licking stagnant blood from the blade. Kalimos unhooked a coiled whip from a beringed belt at his waist, its entire length barbed with the gleaming razor teeth of a carnodon and tipped with an Inwit pain amplifier. It writhed like a snake, pulsing with an intestinal motion as it wrapped itself around its wielder’s leg. Abranxe drew two swords from shoulder scabbards, as his blood brother, Heliton, slipped hooked cestus gauntlets over his fists. They circled him in ever-decreasing rings, elaborating on the violations they would wreak upon him for wasting their time. Each captain sought to outdo the other in the depths of horror he outlined, and Lucius forced himself to ignore the barbs. ‘Speak, Lucius,’ said Kaesoron. ‘Convince us that we have all been lied to. ’Lucius stared into Kaesoron’s eyes, meeting his dead gaze, and hoping he had an ally in the First Captain. ‘I don’t have to,’ said Lucius. ‘Do I?’ ‘You are foolish if you think I won’t kill you, swordsman,’ replied Kaesoron.‘I know you can kill me, First Captain, but that’s not what I meant.’ ‘Then what did you mean?’ growled Kalimos, cracking his whip and leaving a bloody line carved into the deck plates.

Lucius drew his sword as the ring of warriors tightened on him. Heliton slammed a spiked fist into his shoulder. Hard enough to hurt, not enough to provoke a reaction. Lucius curbed his natural instinct to take the bastard’s head. Kalimos’s whip cracked, and Lucius grimaced as it scored a red line at his shoulder, leaving a white tooth embedded in the plate. Ruen’s dagger licked the groove cut by Kalimos’s whip, and Lucius felt the nerves in his shoulder spasm as the viral toxin bathed his nerves in fire. He staggered, seeing bright colours dance before his eyes.

Apothecary Fabius stepped from the arched entrance to his subterranean kingdom, flanked by Kalimos, Daimon, Ruen and Krysander.

Kalimos cracked his lash, its toothed length wrapping around Fulgrim’s left arm. The carnodon teeth tore into his flesh, and squirts of blood sprayed from the wounds. As Kalimos hauled on his lash, Julius Kaesoron stepped in and delivered a thunderous left hook with his crackling fist. Augmented with strength enough to tear apart a battle tank, Kaesoron’s blow drove Fulgrim to his knees, but before he could strike again, Kalimos jerked on his lash as Krysander plunged his dagger between the primarch’s shoulderblades. Fulgrim closed his fist on the gnawing lash and gave what appeared to beno more than a gentle tug. Kalimos was plucked from his feet and spun around the primarch, slamming into Krysander and sending the pair of them crashing to the ends of the gallery. Kaesoron swung again, but Fulgrim was ready for him, blocking the blow with Daimon’s maul and thundering a naked fist into his face. Kaesoron dropped with a grunt, but Fulgrim made no move to finish him.

Lucius turned his gaze upon his fellow captains. None marked his stare, for they could not tear their eyes from the downed primarch. Kalimos bled from numerous cracks in his armour, and Krysander’s breastplate was dented so deeply that the bone shield of his chest must surely be in fragments.

There could be no guilt over that, not if any of the wonders they had been shown since Isstvan III were to be taken at face value. Kalimos and Abranxe had joined them, amazed to hear of what had transpired in the Apothecarion, a revelation to which they alone in the galaxy were privy.
 
KALIMOS, ‘The Whipmaster’, Captain, 17th Company

Krysander of the Blades stood immobile, his pouting expression hardened at having been summoned from his chamber of terror and flesh brutalising. His hooked tongue licked cracked lips, putting Lucius in mind of a basking lizard too far from water. The daggers thrust through the flesh sheaths of his bare chest and thighs made him look like some pre-Unity techno-barbarian warlord, an impression only enhanced by the cloak of razor thorns tearing at his back. The hooks and rings piercing the face of Kalimos were linked by taut chains that would prick and tear the flesh in new and exotic ways with each word he spoke. Idly, Lucius wondered which words would cause Kalimos the most pain, and resolved never to say anything that would give him cause to voice them. To deny Kalimos his desired pain gave Lucius a moment of pleasure, but it vanished a heartbeat later, as ephemeral and fleeting as most such petty amusements.

Soulaka heard a groaning gurgle of breath beside him and felt questing fingers weakly grasp his leg. He looked down to see a wounded warrior whose cyanotic complexion and bloodied eyes spoke of dreadful hypoxia and flash depressurisation injures. This warrior had been blown out into the vacuum of space without any means of life support, and that he had survived at all was a testament to the robustness of Space Marine physiology. The legionary was blind; his eyes had literally filled with blood until they ruptured. ‘Apothecary?’ said the warrior. ‘I’m hurt…’Soulaka knelt beside him and grimaced as he saw the rings and toothed hooks stitched into his face. The warrior gripped the barbed haft of a whip that lay coiled beside him like a sleeping snake. Soulaka blinked as he thought he saw the toothed length of the whip twitch in recognition of his scrutiny. ‘Tell me your name,’ said Soulaka .‘Kalimos,’said the warrior. ‘Ah… the pain…’Soulaka nodded and held out his arm, letting the narthecium’s auspex play over Kalimos and collect diagnostic information that would allow him to treat the warrior’s wounds. His injuries were severe: many of Kalimos’s internal organs already damaged beyond repair by oxygen starvation, and those that remained were on the verge of complete failure. He was not beyond saving, and with a full suite of medicae tools, Soulaka could restore Kalimos to the fighting ranks within a few days. ‘I can fix you,’ said Soulaka. ‘But I need to get you to the apothecarion.’

Kalimos twitched as a spasm of agony passed through him. He licked a bifurcated tongue over his cracked lips, and Soulaka saw that his canines had been replaced by implants of razor-sharp surgical steel. ‘You are not Third Legion,’ said Kalimos, twin runnels of blood flowing from the corners of his mouth. ‘You don’t know, do you?’ ‘I don’t know what?’ said Soulaka, leaning in. ‘The pain…’said Kalimos.‘I can help with that,’ said Soulaka, extending his narthecium. Kalimos slapped the surgical device away and shook his head. ‘No,’ he said. ‘The pain… It’s exquisite, you see. I never knew how good it could feel… to die…’His head slumped to one side, and Soulaka needed no warning tone from the narthecium to tell him that Kalimos was dead. Soulaka had seen many warriors die before him, but this death sat badly with him. No Space Marine should welcome death. ‘Your war is over, Legionary Kalimos,’said Soulaka, placing a hand on the dead legionary’s shoulder. ‘And I will honour your memory with the promise that your gene-seed will live on.’Soulaka carefully removed the dead warrior’s plastron to reveal a body glove wired with the electrical conductor pads from a defibrillator. An extruded scalpel blade cut through the toughened fabric, and he bared Kalimos’s wide, flattened chest, thick with the ridges of the ossified bone shield. Tattoos of writhing snakes engaged in what looked like either coitus or battle slithered across the bruised skin, and the inks glistened with strange hues that made Soulaka strangely unsettled. He tapped a memorised code into his narthecium and it altered its configuration in a series of rotating, shifting panels to emit a puff of icy air. The reductor’s drill core snapped from the upper edges of his gauntlet as a series of glass tubes slotted home behind it.

Soulaka sprayed sterilising solutions over the centre of the dead warrior’s chest and swabbed the area clear of contaminants. Resting the flesh drill against Kalimos’s chest, Soulaka engaged the penetrating spectra of his visor to locate the implanted progenoid. Soulaka could extract a dead warrior’s gene-seed under battlefield conditions in less than thirty seconds, but it took him almost that long to locate the progenoid amid the confusion of biology he saw within Kalimos. Organs and artificial trunk ways threaded his body, linked to his nervous system in ways he had never seen or imagined were possible. A panoply of hybrid organs and unknown biological hardware packed the man’s chest, most of which had no business being inside a living being. Eventually, he found what he was looking for – the small, plum-shaped organ connected to a host of mysterious fleshy tendrils as thin as hairs. ‘Now what might be going on here?’ he wondered as he engaged the energised edges of the drilland pressed down hard to break through the layered bone protecting the organs within. Laser cutters burned through flesh and bone as internal tubing siphoned the blood away, and Kalimos jerked as the laser sent pulses of electrical energy through the strange pathways of his body.

Fresh blood leaked from his ruptured eyeballs, and an exhalation of what sounded like pleasure sighed from between his blue lips. The drill clamped in place and the automated mechanisms of the reductor finished its work. Carefully, Soulaka withdrew the drill as the hollow tubes filled with blood and the squirming lump of the harvested organ. The blade self-sterilised and the reductor retracted into his gauntlet, sealing the precious gene-seed within. ‘Is that really yours to take?’ said a voice behind Soulaka, and he jumped in surprise, reaching for the bolt pistol at his hip. A hand flashed out, swift as thought, and clamped down on the butt of the weapon before his own could reach it. ‘Now, now, not so hasty,’said a warrior with a face full of scars and an arrogant, cocksure glint in his eyes. ‘We’re all friends here, are we not?’ ‘Who are you?’ asked Soulaka, slowly lifting his hand away from his holster. ‘Lucius,’ said the warrior, kneeling beside Kalimos.‘Where are your Legion’s Apothecaries?’ demanded Soulaka. ‘There are legionaries dying here. They could be saved. ’Lucius ignored the question and freed the toothed whip from the dead man’s grip. ‘You won’t be needing this then, Kalimos,’ he said, relishing the feel of the barbed grip in his barehand. ‘Don’t worry, I’ll take good care of it for you.’ ‘Did you hear what I said? ’said Soulaka. ‘I heard,’ said Lucius, standing and hanging the coiled whip from a hook on his belt. Now that he took a moment to study this Lucius, he saw a man perfectly in balance with his physique, a killer with an intimate knowledge of his body’s limitations.

Lucius wondered what Falk was seeing, filing this latest fragment of information away. Lucius knew his blade would struggle to penetrate Falk’s armour, but even with that advantage the Iron Warrior wouldn’t be fast enough to get his tearing gauntlets upon Lucius. The swordsman flexed his fingers over the whip he’d taken from dead Kalimos. The textured grip was fashioned from the outer skin of a deep sea cephalopod, and micro-hooks extruded from every square millimetre of its surface, making it wondrously intense to crack.
 
Helion

Gunships rode over the rooftops, weaving through the scaffolds. The streets below were crowded with bodies. The drukhari weapons had done their work, and now frenzied crowds of people tore at themselves and their neighbours, driven beyond the limits of madness. The air throbbed with the song of insanity, with an unending scream. A solid flood of lunatic bodies heaved in the shadow of the gunships. Some danced mindlessly, whirling to the songs of the spirits. Others hurled themselves, clawing and biting, at the riot-shields of the embattled enforcers who sought to contain them. The gunships swooped low. Assault cannons chewed the densely packed street, clearing a bloody landing strip. Civilian and enforcer alike were reduced to a spattering of redness and a fine pink mist. Missile pods spat concealing chaff, obscuring the thoroughfare from any airborne observers. Moments later, boarding ramps slammed down, and the troop compartments disgorged almost a hundred warriors in the livery of the Emperor’s Children. Savona strode down Butcher-Bird’s boarding ramp, her maul resting on her shoulder. Her armour had been freshly oiled in scented unguents and her golden helm, torn from the dying body of an aeldari autarch and repurposed to interface with her battle plate, had been polished to a mirror sheen. The screams of the mad, the injured and the dying filled the air and she sighed in pleasure. ‘This is what it’s all about, eh, Ruatha? ’The hulking renegade behind her grunted. His augmetic voice box made the sound into a mechanical growl. She glanced at him. Ruatha’s armour had been painted the colour of raw meat, and was covered in golden studs, including the helmet. Oaths of indulgence and battle-pacts hung from his pauldrons and chest plate.

One of his arms had melted into a pinkish tendril, which coiled lovingly about his bolter. He bounced an inactive frag grenade in his other hand. ‘Could do with more screaming,’ he said. ‘Never satisfied, you lot. ’He looked at her. ‘No. We’re not,’ he said flatly. ‘It was a joke. ’Ruatha was silent for a moment. Then he gave a terse, artificial laugh. She studied him. Ruatha was one of Bellephus’ adherents, and her designated bodyguard. That meant he was loyal to her, in a round about way. The loyalty of convenience was still loyalty, after all. She gestured. ‘Give the order.’Ruatha growled into the vox, and warriors moved swiftly, taking up predetermined positions. Pavise bulwarks were anchored to the street, creating reinforced emplacements. The emplacements weren’t meant to provide long-term defence so much as they were there to draw the drukhari’s attentions. Butcher-Bird shrilled, rocking slightly on its landing gear. Nearby Emperor’s Children sidled out of its arc of fire. The gunship had a notorious disregard for the lives of its passengers. Savona knew what that cry meant. Butcher-Bird’s bloodlust was getting the better of it and it wanted to get airborne again, and go hunting. She patted its hull affectionately. ‘Easy,’ she murmured. It was a cobbled-together thing, built from the corpses of several other vessels and their machine-spirits. Whatever it had once been, the gunship was now all sharp angles and armoured plating, studded with missile-pods and gun-muzzles. Normally, when not in use, it was kept chained in one of the launch bays, its ammunition hoppers empty and guards stationed nearby. The hardwired servitors who’d once served as its crew were little more than mummified husks.

Something else piloted the gunship now. The gunship shrilled again, blaring its discontent to the world. Savona smiled indulgently. ‘I understand. Go, if you like. But make sure you come back when I call you.’ She stepped back as it retracted its ramp and fired its ascent thrusters. ‘Are you sure that was wise?’ Ruatha said. ‘No. But where’s the fun in wisdom?’ Savona peered down the-thoroughfare. She could hear the unmistakable hum of anti-gravity engines. She’d made sure that the drukhari had spotted them. No point in being a distraction if no one saw you. ‘They’ll be coming soon. Have the others reported in yet?’ He nodded. ‘Helion and Vostro have both reported in. The Manflayer’s curs have reached the ground safely.’ ‘Good. Then we can be about our business.’ She swept her maul down and activated it. ‘Have you ever hunted drukhari before, Ruatha?’‘Not in several centuries.’She smiled widely and drew her bolt pistol as the first raider appeared at the opposite end of the thoroughfare .‘Then this should be most entertaining. ’Arrian inhaled deeply, drinking in the scent of war. He could hear the sounds of the embattled planetary defence forces attempting to pin down the invaders, or contain the crazed populace. The echoing thud of assault cannons and the whining bark of las weapons. And above it all, the omnipresent wasp-hum of anti-grav engines. The drukhari were adept at navigating canyons of steel and glass. Their war-barques were highly manoeuvrable – but fragile. He pointed down the line of the transit path below. ‘They’re heading north, riding the edge of the madness. Picking off the survivors.’ ‘A solid plan,’ the warrior beside him growled. Helion held his prized lascannon the way a man might cradle a woman. Extra charge-packs hung from his brightly painted armour like decorations, and kill marks blackened his shoulder-plates and greaves. His helm had been refashioned in the shape of a stylised sun with a smiling cherub’s face. ‘I’ve used it myself,’ he continued. ‘No sense risking your neck when you’ve got a weapon that’ll do most of the work for you.’ ‘You’re a credit to your Legion,’ Arrian said. Helion laughed. ‘I am more than that – I’m a damn legend.’ Arrian smiled at his bravado. Helion had once belonged to the infamous ‘Sun-Killers’, or so he claimed. Whether he had been or not, he and his cronies had some skill at long-range warfare. Helion looked around. ‘This overpass will make an adequate firing position. We’ll hit them as they advance, and reposition as they scatter.’ He turned. ‘Get those guns ready,’ he snarled. His slaves hurried to obey, dragging scavenged heavy bolters and stub-cannons into position along the overpass. Helion’s squad was only ten strong, but they had four times that number of slave gun-crews to bolster their firepower.

Enough to give the drukhari pause. Helion looked at Arrian. ‘We don’t have the numbers to do more than irritate them, if it comes to stand-down. If they regroup and advance in force – or worse, get air support – we’ll have to retreat.’ ‘If all goes well, they won’t have time for either.’ A coded burst of static interrupted him. He activated his vox. ‘Report.’ ‘We’re advancing south, along the primus conduit,’ Skalagrim said. ‘With the gunships providing air support Vostro assures me that we should be at the secondary junction in an hour, if not less. What about you?’ ‘In position,’ Arrian said. He glanced at Helion, who nodded. ‘Let me know when you’ve reached the junction. Helion thinks we can cover your advance from there, if necessary. Any word from Savona?’ ‘She’s made contact. They know we’re here now.’ ‘Good. That’s the point.’ Arrian cut the link. He blinked and a three-dimensional model of the city unfurled across his helmet’s display. Savona’s position was illuminated, as was Skalagrim’s, in relation to his own. Fabius’ strategy was simple enough – three forces of varying size, engaging the enemy up-close or at range. The gunships would provide swift transport or air support, as was required. The intent was not to defend the city so much as it was to confuse the drukhari, and draw off those forces that might otherwise assault the cache from outside. The xenos would recover quickly enough, and either regroup or retreat. ‘Those aircraft of theirs are going to be our main worry,’ Helion said. He was peering up at the sliver of sky just visible through the canopy of scaffolding above. ‘We don’t have anything capable of countering them.’‘Drukhari are scavengers,’ Arrian said. ‘The most gain for the least effort. They won’t risk valuable equipment unless they’re certain they have the advantage. Once they realise what they’re facing, I expect they’ll start a general retreat.’ ‘And if they don’t? ’Arrian didn’t reply immediately. In the distance, he could see lean forms riding the air currents. The wasp-hum was louder now. He looked at Helion. ‘Then you’ll have to work a bit harder to earn your keep, Sun-Killer. ’Helion raised his lascannon. ‘It will be my pleasure, war-hound.
 
Arrian swung the rifle up, studying it just long enough to figure out how it functioned. He tracked one of the lumbering brutes and pulled the trigger. Stung, the creature slapped at itself. As it turned, its flesh began to bubble and writhe. It gave a strangely shrill bellow as it was consumed by a rapid transformation. Arrian lowered the rifle. ‘Fascinating.’ ‘Knowledge later, retreat now,’ Helion howled over the vox. Arrian turned. Red-armoured drukhari swarmed his position. The barrel of Helion’s lascannon steamed as it slammed into a kabalite warrior’s helm, crumpling it and reducing the skull within to slurry. He wrenched the weapon free, spattering nearby mutants with gore, and fired, erasing a second drukhari from existence. ‘Fall back, or I’m leaving you behind!’ Arrian’s reply was lost in a fusillade of splinter-shots that sent both of them looking for cover. He scrambled behind a pillar and risked a quick glance, trusting in his armour’s sensors to pinpoint their attackers. Unfortunately, the sheer bedlam of his surroundings made it difficult. His targeting array saw too many potential threats. He activated his vox.‘ Helion, can you see them?’ ‘No,’ the legionary growled. ‘They’re dug in. And now we’re cut off…’‘You sound upset. ’Helion laughed as splinter fire chewed the pillar he hunched behind. ‘Why would I be upset? Our forces are in disarray and we are outnumbered. Two warriors against gods alone know how many xenos…’‘There’s more than two of us, brother.’ Arrian tapped one of his skulls. ‘We fight as many, because our cause is just.’ ‘I keep forgetting that you’re insane,’ Helion said jovially. ‘Quiet. I’m aiming.’ Arrian leaned around his pillar and sighted down the barrel of the xenos rifle. Targeting runes flickered from blue to red as they isolated a crimson-armoured kabalite warrior creeping forward, using the rubble as cover.

Arrian fired, and was rewarded by the sight of the warrior pitching backwards, body convulsing. Apparently even a glancing hit was lethal. He patted the rifle. ‘Good gun. ’More red-armoured figures appeared. The drukhari were impatient – likely eager to begin looting. Or maybe they thought the gunships had been damaged. ‘Wait – I’m getting something on the vox – listen,’ Helion said. Arrian cycled through the vox, one eye on the approaching drukhari. The message was brief – a blurt of warning, across an encrypted signal used by the 12th. Immediate withdrawal. No further information. ‘Did you hear?’ ‘Yes.’ Arrian raised his borrowed weapon to his shoulder again, wondering how many more shots he had. ‘I’ll cover you. Fall back.’ But as he spoke, he saw the drukhari scrambling back to their own vessels. ‘Wait, they’re leaving as well.’ He stepped warily out of cover, watching as the drukhari retreated. He felt the first rumbling then. As if the great scaffolds were groaning in fear. ‘Something is wrong,’ he murmured. ‘Worry about it later,’ Helion said. ‘You heard the order. Get to the gunship.’ He was already moving, his lascannon braced over his shoulder. Arrian made to follow, but paused. Something, some instinct, made him look in the direction of the cache-facility. There was a light – not a true light, but a radiance of some sort. A flicker of unease pierced his chemically induced calm as another rumble shook the street. He turned and hurried after Helion