Arvus lighter Two-Nine-Epsilon-Three-Five
Unsanctioned course deviation
The bug-like Arvus hacked through the air towards Stilat cosmodrome, some eighty kilometres shy of its original course towards Ragnarov.
Loyalist vessels were arriving in orbit - the vanguard of a shifting tide. Stilat would likely have been one of their choice landing points, which was why all non-essential flights were due to be routed away from the area. That, of course, was the upside of servitor pilots: they didn’t consider such logistical problems, as long as they were provided with the correct command input.
Steadying herself with one hand on the overhead rail, ocularis Raechel Kuscelian looked down and saw a hell of flame. Smoke was billowing up in oily clouds from the ruptured prometheum tanks, and she could taste ash on the hot wind that was whipping in through the open bay door.
The Arvus slowed to a low orbit around the burning skyshield pads, jets angled downwards so that they cut ripples through the smoke. The servitor pilot beeped an error tone. “Landing area unsuitable.”
Raechel’s eyes twitched with a baseline impulse to roll. And that was the downside of servitors; they had no initiative.
“Return to base.” she ordered, waving her hand as she transmitted a noospheric code-blurt that would see the servitor wipe her commands from its memory stack and diagnose its erroneous detour as the product of a faulty GPS, in need of immediate rebooting.
As the Arvus heeled away over the concrete taxiways, Raechel let go of the rail and pushed herself forwards off the grated rear ramp. Her dark red cloak snagged in the wind as she fell twenty metres, dropped into a smooth roll, and came up onto one hand to steady herself. She snapped her head up towards the cosmodrome and rose, setting off at a sprint towards the burning control tower.
+ + + + + +
Enki Volkner and Omikron Zahir
Objective secured: Neutralise loyalist airbase
New objective: Locate a suitable evacuation craft
Sova pinged agreement with Enki’s words across their vox link, but his body was stood frozen, hands linked in the sign of the cog as his vocabulator roared out the blessed static of a binary hymn. The dancing flames of the generatorium reflected orange in his unblinking bionic eyes.
<As you say, magos reductor.> the tech-assassin replied as the victory rite ended and he swept his arms back down to his sides. <This little sequence will pale in comparison to the program we are about to write over Tranch. But we must take this Knowledge to the sector capital immediately.>
Sova extended an arm to point towards the orbital launch sector, where one of the rocket gantries was still engulfed in flame.
<They will be alerted to the craft we arrived in by now. We should find another to reach orbit and rendezvous with our pickup at the system’s edge.>
+ + + + + +
Someone had made a real mess of the comms centre. Machine spirits were screaming all around, blurring Raechel’s aural implants with static. She brushed her bionic hand over the terminals she passed, powering them down into a blissfully painless stupor.
One of the terminals drew her attention with its shrilling vox pickup. The cracked screen was blinking the ident codes of a mechanicus vessel named
Triumphant Rationality, requesting permission to land shuttles. Raechel squinted at the lines of Tech, running them through her electrograft for tell-tale inconsistencies. Nothing indicated a false flag operation.
The headset shrilled again. Raechel shrugged, picked it up and held it to her ear. “I am sorry. All landings at Stilat have been temporarily suspended.”
There was a brief, angry blurt from the earpiece.
“Because it is currently on fire.” Raechel explained neutrally. There was a pause, and then another, more measured blurt. “Yes, I would surmise so.”
A new voice, low and very, very sure of itself. Raechel listened for a moment.
“Assistance?” the Dragon agent repeated. She looked around, analysing the weapon damage to the walls and extrapolating her odds. “Well, if you are offering...”
+ + + + + +
The three assassins hurried through the warren of fuzzed screens and black, twisted metal that remained of the cosmodrome checkpoint. Suddenly there was a loud bang, and for a brief moment Enki’s optical sensors were washed over with screeching static. From the way Sova and Zahir stumbled half a step, they had felt it too.
<Teleporter.> Sova identified the sound as he cycled his optics. He craned his neck to one side beneath his hood, and pulled his phosphor blast pistol from its holster once more. <More unenlightened sparks to be snuffed, I can only assume.>
He placed two hands on the broken security doors and sent them crashing down onto the thick concrete that separated the terminal towers from the backwash of the launching orbiters. Light flooded in, and so did the questing maser-beams of a dozen target locks. Spaced out between the terminal and the launchpad blast shields were upwards of twenty servitors, clad in sleek golden armour. Each carried a heavy weapon of the kind only gifted to skitarii alphas, gilded with silver script and stamped with binary purity seals, which fluttered in the artifical wind of the firestorm.
Standing at their head was a tall, spindly woman in a black jumpsuit and red cloak, edged with the crenelated white stripe of the Martian tech-priests. The hood of her cloak was down to reveal a round, china-pale face with wide-spaced eyes - one brown, one covered by an augmetic lens - and a small, firmly-set mouth. Her hair was a short cap of auburn red, recently regrowing, but still sparse enough to reveal the thin scars of electrograft surgery across her skull.
She stood motionless save for the fire-wind tugging at her cloak; feet spaced, thin arms folded across her chest.
“Excuse me.” She spoke Tech, but with her flesh-voice, like a priest addressing unblessed menials. “Now what the Omnissiah-loving fuck do you think you are doing, hmm?”
A derisive crackle of synthesised laughter emitted from Sova’s vox-grille. The sound died as his implants began to feed back data on what they were truly facing. It wasn’t the multiple layers of implants wired into the priestess’ brain, hands and heart. It wasn’t even the line of gilded skitarii alphas, whirring as they spun up their bewildering array of killing weaponry. It was the attack code that came lancing through the air towards him, unfolding across his ocular sensors into the emblem of a coiled dragon.
“
Run!” the tech-assassin blurted, his machine-code emitters screeching at maximum volume. It was the last sound to emanate from them as the electroactive polymers in Sova’s arm began to contract, the stimulators crawling with invasive code-commands. The hijacked limb jerked Sova’s blast pistol up to the side of his head and fired, bursting his cranium apart in a flare of burning implants and vaporised brain.
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