The Bone Orchard Masterlist
I try to post every week and will tag those that request it.
Peter Solarz

blake kathryn
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
NASA
Sade Olutola

JBB: An Artblog!

Andulka
todays bird
hello vonnie
Mike Driver

Origami Around
No title available

ellievsbear
dirt enthusiast
Keni
noise dept.
Three Goblin Art
Not today Justin

No title available
seen from Brazil
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Netherlands

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from T1
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Italy

seen from Türkiye
seen from T1

seen from Malaysia

seen from Türkiye
seen from Türkiye

seen from India
@boneapplet
The Bone Orchard Masterlist
I try to post every week and will tag those that request it.
Due to reaching the link limit, I have compartmentalized each stories section. First chapter will be listed here, along with a link leading to another post with all chapters of said story listed.
Warhammer
Primarchs
Rogal Dorn x afab!OC
From Rust and Bone: Chronicles of the Lost Primarch
pt 1 - The Fallen Son
All currently released chapters
Angron x afab!OC
A Love Born in Blood
pt 1 - The Champion’s Prize
All currently released chapters
Lorgar Aurelian x afab!oc
In the Shadow of the Divine
pt 1 - A Dance of Faith and Fate
Konrad Curze x soldier!trans!oc
Love in the Dark
Sanguinius x blind!afab!reader
Veil of Sand
pt 1 - Under Crimson Skies
All currently released chapters
Magnus the Red x assassin!afab!reader
Shrouded in Silence
pt 1 - The Dimming
All currently released chapters
Jaghatai Khan x fem!reader
Untamed Wind
pt 1 - The Storm That Walks
All currently released chapters
Leman Russ x afab!reader
The Wolf and the Ghost
pt 1 - The Ruins
All currently released chapters
Mortarion x afab!reader
Feast of Dust
pt 1 - The Guests of Perturabo
All currently released chapters
Perturabo x afab!reader
The Color of Iron
pt 1 - The Descent of Iron
All currently released chapters
Corvus Corax x Space Marine!reader
Prayers Spoken in Shadows
pt 1 - A Hand Extended, A Faith Severed
All currently released chapters
Space Marines
Blood Angels
Dante x afab!reader
Hearts of Ruin
pt 1 - A Healer Among the Ruins
All currently released chapters
OC!Blood Angel Librarian x machine!afab!reader
Servo Sanctum
pt 1 - Awakening Beneath the Ash
All currently released chapters
Iron Hands
OC!Iron Hand x techpriestess!oc
Forged in Blood and Steel
Iron Hand!OC x Emperor's Children!OC
Unbroken Cadence
Ultramarines
Demetrian Titus x serf!afab!oc
Even Space Marines Get Sick
joke images for it
pt 1 - Blessed Be the Broth
pt 2 - Small Mercies
Salamanders
OC!Salamander x OC!Salamander
Bound in Flame and Oath
Beneath the Ash, the Flame
pt 1 - Fire Finds Iron
All currently released chapters
Dark Angels
The Midnight Madness
Headcanons
Word Bearer Legion mother cooks for her big legionnaire babies
Astartes making a unique whistle with their partner
Legions and their grouping at meals
Abaddon's moonshine endeavors
Space Wolves and their Den Mothers
Specialized backpacks to carry aspirants and neophytes
World Eaters vs Vending Machines
Space Wolves Neophytes acceptance into pack procedures
Marines showing off their Neophytes
Inter legion trading system
Word Bearers took all the good ink and candles
Primarchs Food Related Headcanons
Chaos Food Items
Tzeentch Tonics
Imagines
An Imperial Family Reunion
pt 2
Homebrew Legion
Female Primarch
An old photo of the Chapter Master
Successor Chapter: Obsidian Sentinels and how they grieve
Legacy of the Fallen
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Predator Franchise
oc!Yautja brothers trio x scientist!afab!oc
Bloodline Unknown
pt 1 - The Fall and the Hunt
All currently released chapters
Prayers Spoken in Shadows pt 4
Relationship: Corvus Corax x Space Marine!reader
Warnings: reference to background character death
Word Count: 1038
Requested Tags for All Works: @beckyninja @runin64 @ilovewolvezz
Masterlist
pt 1 | pt 2 | pt 3 | pt 4
The corridor leading to hangar seven is colder than the rest of the ship. Not physically. The environmental readouts are within acceptable variance. The temperature is regulation-standard for voidside deployment zones. But he feels the difference anyway. The air here seems thinner. As though the ship itself understands the significance of what is about to happen and has chosen silence in preparation.
The strike craft rests in the docking cradle beyond the partially open bay doors, angular, predatory, built more for absence than presence. Raven Guard technology rarely announces itself. Even standing still, the vessel feels like something that might vanish if one stopped looking directly at it.
Stopping several paces from the hangar threshold. He doesn’t know whether he should enter. The thought is unfamiliar. Astartes are trained to act, not wait upon philosophical hesitation. Yet he remains where he is, hands resting loosely at his sides, breathing slow and controlled.
Behind him, the corridor is empty. The data-slate in his inner pouch feels heavier than it should. Under other circumstances he would have reported the summons immediately. The chain of command was designed precisely to remove ambiguity from situations like this. But the Raven Guard’s words echo again in his mind. Under a shadow.
Exhaling once, quietly, before stepping forward. The hangar lights are dimmed to near twilight level, illuminating only essential safety markers. Maintenance servitors move in distant silence along the far wall. The Raven Guard is already there.
The warrior stands with the stillness of someone who has learned to disappear even when visible. His armor absorbs the light around him, breaking silhouette boundaries in a way that makes the eye hesitate when attempting to focus.
The Raven Guard speaks without turning. “You came.”
“Yes,” he says.
The Raven Guard finally faces him.
“Why did you not report the summons?” questioning him.
He answers after a moment’s consideration.
“Because I do not yet understand its purpose.”
“And?”
“And because reporting it would have created procedural obligation before I knew whether such obligation was necessary.”
The Raven Guard’s expression doesn’t change, but he senses approval anyway.
“You are cautious,” the warrior says.
“I am uncertain.”
“Uncertainty is not a flaw if it is acknowledged.”
Silence settles between them. It isn’t uncomfortable, nor is it comfortable either. It is simply present, like gravity.
“You asked if I feared this meeting,” He says.
“Yes.”
“I do not.”
“Why?”
“Because you could have killed me earlier if you intended harm,” He replies.
The Raven Guard’s lips move faintly, almost amused.
“Practical reasoning.”
“Yes.”
Another pause.
Then the Raven Guard says, very quietly “You saved the child.”
A tightening sensation beginning in his chest.
“Yes, my lord.”
“You broke formation.”
“Yes.”
“Would you do it again?”
The question is asked without tone. Without pressure. Without expectation.
He answers immediately. “Yes.”
Corvus Corax speaks for the first time. The voice is deeper than he expected. Not loud. Not commanding in the traditional sense but it carries weight in the way mountains carry gravity, inevitable, unavoidable, patient.
“Do you know why I asked you here?”
“No.”
“Then listen carefully.”
He obediently does. The hangar seems to grow quieter still.
“I do not concern myself with warriors who are perfect instruments,” Corax says. “The Imperium has many such weapons.”
He takes one step closer.
“I am interested in warriors who choose.”
The word hangs in the air. Choose. Not obey. Not execute. Choose.
“You shielded civilians even though it did not advance your tactical objective.”
“Yes.”
“Why?”
He answers after a long moment.
“Because they were alive.”
Corax studies him. Not his armor. Not his gene-seed lineage. Not his battle record. Him.
“You were born among the XVII Legion,” Corax says.
He doesn’t react outwardly, but inside something tightens, the quiet recognition that Corax knows more about him than he expected.
“Yes.”
“You were taken before implantation.”
“Yes.”
“You were raised among the XIII.”
“Yes.”
Corax tilts his head slightly.
“Tell me,” the Primarch says, “do you believe you are loyal because you were trained to be, or because you chose it?”
He answers slowly. “I do not know if the two can be separated.”
Silence follows. Not judgment. Consideration.
Finally, Corax says “That is an honest answer.”
A Raven Guard stands behind the Primarch, the one who had spoken to him earlier. The warrior watches the exchange without moving. Corax continues, voice quieter now.
“You carried the marks of your past on your flesh,” he says. “Why did you not remove them?”
“Because I would have been lying,” he says. “To myself.”
Corax’s eyes narrow slightly, not in displeasure, but seemingly mulling over his answer.
“Many warriors would not admit that.”
“I am aware.”
Another silence.
“There are wars fought with bolters and wars fought with faith,” Corax says. “I do not worship the Emperor as a god. You were raised in worship.”
“Yes.”
“Do you still pray?”
The question strikes something very deep. He considers the answer for longer than any previous question.
“I speak to the silence,” he says finally.
“Do you expect response?”
“No.”
Corax nods once. “Good.”
The Primarch turns slightly, looking toward the void beyond the hangar bay.
“There are many ways to fight tyranny,” Corax says. “Some with terror. Some with order. Some with faith. And some with something more dangerous. Compassion.”
“Your Legion has come to believe compassion is weakness,” Corax continues.
“Yes,” He says.
“And your past Legion believed faith was submission.”
“Yes.”
Corax looks back at him.
“Then you stand between two lies.”
The words are not cruel. They are simply true. He doesn’t respond.
After a long moment, Corax says “I am going to give you a choice.”
The shadows seem to breathe when he says it.
“You may remain with the XIII Legion,” Corax says. “You will continue to serve under their command. Or you may serve in shadow operations under my direct observation.”
The hangar is utterly silent.
“Do not answer now,” Corax says. “Think before you choose.”
He turns away. Then adds, without looking back.
“You will report to this hangar again at the same hour in three cycles.”
The Raven Guard steps aside as he leaves. When he exits the hangar, he realizes his hands are very still.
The Color of Iron pt 5
Relationship: Perturabo x afab!reader
Word Count: 1521
Requested Tags for All Works: @beckyninja @runin64 @ilovewolvezz
Masterlist
pt 1 | pt 2 | pt 3 | pt 4 | pt 5
Fulgrim speaks first, as expected. He doesn’t read from data-slates, doesn’t consult projections. He walks the length of the dais as though it were a stage crafted for him alone.
“The Imperium,” he begins, voice warm and resonant, “does not come to diminish what is already excellent. It comes to elevate it. Your art, your mineral sciences, your atmospheric stabilizers, these aren’t curiosities. They are contributions.”
Murmurs ripple through the council tiers.
“You would retain your culture. Your governance. Your identity. The Imperium asks loyalty, tithe, and unity of purpose. In return, you gain protection, wider trade access, technological exchange beyond what this world has yet imagined.”
He turns slightly toward her, not enough to undermine her authority, just enough to include her.
“A partnership,” he says gently. “Not a conquest.”
It is beautifully done. Even she feels the pull of it. Several ministers exchange relieved glances. Shoulders loosen. The shape of compliance begins to look like an agreement rather than a surrender. Then Perturabo speaks. He doesn’t move forward, doesn’t raise his voice.
“The orbital defense grid,” he says.
The chamber stills. Fulgrim’s expression doesn’t change, but something tightens behind his eyes. Perturabo continues, gaze fixed not on his brother, but on the hololithic projection of Eidon rotating slowly above the chamber floor.
“It is integrated into your planetary power lattice. Ninety-three percent overlap. Elegant, but inefficient.”
A flick of his finger and the projection magnifies, gridlines illuminating in cold blue.
“You have designed it to deter piracy. Insurrection. Limited external threat.” His voice is neutral. Analytical. “It will not withstand a concentrated xenos incursion.”
A minister stiffens. “Our projections—”
“Are optimistic,” Perturabo says calmly. “Your power redundancies are surface based. A single targeted strike to your western sea platforms would collapse shield integrity within six minutes.”
Silence falls like a dropped blade.
Fulgrim turns slightly. “Brother—”
“You offer compliance under the assumption that Eidon can function as a stable contributor,” Perturabo continues. “It cannot. Not as it stands.”
The room shifts from relief to alarm in a breath. Ministers begin whispering urgently. Data-slates flicker to life. The mood fractures.
Fulgrim steps forward smoothly, reclaiming space. “Every world that joins the Imperium strengthens through integration. Weakness is remedied. That is the point.”
“Integration requires structural honesty,” Perturabo replies. “You cannot promise partnership while ignoring foundational flaws.”
“And you cannot begin negotiations by dismantling your host,” Fulgrim returns, voice sharpening just enough to register.
Their gazes lock. Purple against steely blue. Charm and correction. For a heartbeat, the chamber feels too small to contain them.
“My lords,” she says evenly, descending one step from her dais, not yielding, but entering the space between them.
She turns first to Perturabo.
“If what you say is accurate, then we would require Imperial reinforcement to stabilize those redundancies.”
It isn’t defensive. It’s pragmatic. His eyes flick to her.
“Yes.”
She pivots to Fulgrim.
“And if we are to enter this partnership, as you phrase it, such reinforcement would demonstrate good faith.”
Fulgrim studies her, understanding dawning.
“You suggest,” he says slowly, “that compliance include immediate infrastructural integration.”
“Mutual benefit,” she replies.
Perturabo’s jaw tightens, because she has done something subtle. She has validated his assessment without endorsing his tone. She has preserved Fulgrim’s promise without denying the flaw. Turned a criticism into leverage. The chamber begins to settle again, not relaxed, but recalibrating.
Fulgrim smiles faintly. “Very well. The Emperor’s Children would be honored to oversee cultural integration and trade expansion.”
“And the Iron Warriors,” Perturabo says evenly, “will restructure the defense lattice.”
The words are formal but beneath them runs something else.
Fulgrim glances sideways. “Provided, of course, that my brother does not decide to seize the project entirely.”
Perturabo doesn’t look at him. “I do not seize what is freely conceded.”
It’s almost a challenge. Almost. She feels it, the fragile line holding. One wrong word and the negotiation cease to be about Eidon at all. So, she delivers the final stabilizing weight.
“Then it is settled,” she declares. “Eidon accepts Imperial compliance contingent upon immediate structural collaboration.”
The chamber erupts; recorders activate. Ministers speak. Iterators finalize language. The structure stands. Barely. Across the room, Fulgrim offers her a look of impressed amusement. Perturabo offers nothing. When the hololith shifts to display revised schematics, his gaze finds hers for the briefest moment. Approval. Not of the politics. Of the architecture she just held together.
The Hall of Accord empties slowly. Fulgrim lingers. Waiting until ministers and iterators have withdrawn, until the last data-slate glow fades and the chamber belongs only to echo and cooling air. Only then does he approach her. No witnesses. How considerate.
“You were magnificent,” he says lightly.
It isn’t flattery, merely an assessment.
She regards him evenly. “I preserved the discussion.”
“You redirected it,” he corrects, smile soft but sharp at the edges. “There is a difference.”
He circles her, not predatory, but curious. Studying.
“You let him wound the room,” Fulgrim continues. “And then you handed him the tools to mend it.”
“I acknowledged reality.”
“You leveraged him,” Fulgrim replies.
There it is.
“And you did so beautifully.”
He stops in front of her.
“Tell me,” he asks gently, “did you always intend to bind the Iron Warriors to your defenses?”
She doesn’t answer immediately. That, too, is answer enough. Fulgrim’s eyes glint with appreciation.
“You are far more dangerous than you appear.”
“And you are far more perceptive than you let the room believe,” she replies.
He laughs softly at that but the warmth cools a fraction.
“You must understand something,” Fulgrim says, voice lowering. “My brother does not appreciate being maneuvered. He may not have object publicly. But he will simply… remember.”
“And you?” she asks.
“I,” Fulgrim smiles faintly, “prefer to be invited.”
The statement is velvet over steel. Then he steps back, composure fully restored.
“Do not mistake me. I admire what you did. But if you mean to balance us, sovereign, you must be prepared for the strain.”
He inclines his head and departs, radiant, unruffled. Soon she leaves the hall as well, searching for where Perturabo has gone. She finds him where she expects to. Already before a projection, adjusting grid overlays. Already solving the problem he exposed. He doesn’t look up when she enters.
“You altered the terms,” he says.
Not a question.
“You exposed a vulnerability in open council,” she replies. “I ensured it became an asset.”
A pause.
“You used my assessment as leverage,” he says.
Still calm. Still controlled.
“Yes.”
Silence stretches. Finally, he turns. His gaze while not angry, its penetrating.
“Do you understand what you did?” he asks.
“You committed your Legion publicly.”
“You committed it,” he corrects.
There is weight in that distinction.
“I gave you authority to rebuild what you identified as flawed,” she says evenly. “Would you have preferred I dismissed your analysis?”
His jaw tightens. “No.”
“Then I validated it.”
“You tied my pride to your survival,” he says.
“And will you leave it unfinished?” she asks quietly.
There. The blade slides home. His eyes sharpen.
“No.”
Of course not. She steps closer, not challenging, not retreating.
“You wanted structural honesty,” she says softly. “I gave you structural responsibility.”
For a fraction of a second, something fractures behind his composure, not anger. Something more dangerous.
“You assume much,” he says.
“I calculated,” she corrects.
That almost earns a reaction. Almost. Instead, he turns back to the projection.
“I do not appreciate being maneuvered.”
“I know.”
“And yet you did.”
“Yes.”
Another silence. This one heavier.
“Do not mistake necessity for trust,” he says at last.
“I never do.”
It is long after she has left when Fulgrim arrives. Walking into Perturabo’s planning chamber as if it were a gallery he’s decided to critique.
“Brother,” he says pleasantly, surveying the defensive overlays. “Already redesigning our hosts?”
“They are not ‘ours,’” Perturabo replies without looking up.
Fulgrim approaches the projection, studying it.
“You embarrassed them,” he says conversationally. “In my negotiation.”
“You offered partnership without inspection.”
“I offered confidence.”
“You offered assumption.”
Fulgrim’s smile thins.
“And you couldn’t allow that.”
Perturabo finally turns.
“I do not build upon assumption.”
“You do, however, seem eager to build upon her initiative.”
The air tightens.
Perturabo’s voice cools by degrees. “Clarify.”
Fulgrim steps closer, lowering his tone. “You let her bind you. She leveraged your pride in front of a planetary council and you accepted the terms.”
“I evaluated them.”
“You were maneuvered.”
Perturabo’s gaze sharpens into something lethal.
“Be precise, Fulgrim.”
“I am,” Fulgrim says softly. “You accused me of indulgence. Yet you indulge her.”
The silence that follows is no longer diplomatic. It is fraternal. Old rivalry. Old resentment.
“You mistake respect for indulgence,” Perturabo says at last.
Fulgrim studies him.
“Do I?”
A pause. Then, gently—
“Be careful, brother. You are very good at fortifying structures.”
His eyes flick toward the schematic.
“But you are not practiced at recognizing when you have become one.”
With that, Fulgrim smiles, radiant again, and departs. Perturabo stands alone with the projection. For the first time since entering the chamber… He doesn’t immediately resume calculations.
Feast of Dust pt 6
Relationship: Mortarion x serf!afab!reader
Warnings: Mortarion being unsure how to talk to people, allusions to recent warfare
Word Count: 2071
Requested Tags for All Works: @beckyninja @runin64 @ilovewolvezz
Requested Tags: @bunny-fair @celestia0473 @milktea-se
Masterlist
pt 1 | pt 2 | pt 3 | pt 4 | pt 5 | pt 6
The order doesn’t come with ceremony. It is transmitted in clipped bursts through vox-nets and data-slates:
Campaign Concluded. Commence Reclamation. Auxiliary assets revert to originating Legion.
The trenches, once choked with smoke and rot, shift into a different kind of labor. Not war, withdrawal. Iron Warriors serfs begin dismantling what they built with mechanical efficiency. Field forges are collapsed. Siege cranes disassembled and tagged. Inventory chits are stamped with cold precision. Crates are stenciled in hazard code and legion glyph. Among the movement, the borrowed ones are separated. Those marked with the iron skull are logged for return. Those marked with the pale reaper remain.
She stands in line beneath a canvas awning that smells of oil and damp ash. A slate is pressed into her hands. Her name, unspoken here, as ever, is coded beneath an Iron Warriors designation. Reassignment: Siege Provisioning Unit. Immediate extraction. Around her, others murmur in low tones.
“Back to the guns.”
“Back to the walls.”
“At least the rations will be thicker.”
Someone laughs, humorless. She says nothing.
Across the encampment, the Death Guard prepare differently. They don’t dismantle so much as purge. Flame units scour contaminated trenches. Apothecaries burn what cannot be reclaimed. The air is thick with sterilizing vapors. Mortarion stands apart from both groups. He watches. He doesn’t ask for manifests. He doesn’t require them. His memory is exacting. He knows which artillery captains were borrowed. Which medicae were temporary. Which labor cadres were Iron Warriors surplus. And he knows which cook arrived quiet and frightened, and left the same kitchen nights later smelling faintly of faint seasonings and smoke.
The line inches forward. One by one, Iron Warriors serfs are scanned and sorted. Mortarion’s respirator hisses once, slow and measured. This is correct. This is orderly. This is how Legions function. Yet the thought of the forward kitchens without her, of the way she moves through steam and flame with deliberate care, of the crisp sound of blade against board, of the absence that will follow. It settles in him like a toxin not easily purged. He doesn’t experience attachment. He experiences disruption.
Disruption, he corrects himself, is inefficiency.
A captain of the Death Guard approaches; helm tucked beneath one arm. “Extraction barges arrive within two hours, my lord. Iron Warriors reclaim their personnel before dusk rotation.”
Mortarion nods once.
“Reclaim,” he repeats softly.
The word tastes wrong. He turns his gaze back toward the processing line. She has reached the front now. A Mechanicum scribe stamps her slate. A servo-arm affixes a transit tag to her sleeve. She doesn’t look around, doesn’t look for him. Why would she?
He considers simply countermanding the order. A Primarch may requisition what he requires. Perturabo would object, but objection isn’t refusal. Yet Mortarion doesn’t move impulsively. He calculates. If he demands her outright, it becomes visible. If it becomes visible, it becomes questioned. If questioned, it becomes… weakness. No. There must be reason. Justification. He turns slightly, summoning the captain again.
“The kitchens.”
“My lord?”
“Forward deployment rations improved during the latter half of the campaign.”
A pause. “Yes, my lord.”
“Morale increased.”
“It did.”
Mortarion’s gaze remains on the line of departing serfs. “And recovery times among the wounded shortened by a fractional margin.”
The captain hesitates. “Marginally, my lord.”
“Marginal gains compound,” Mortarion says.
The captain straightens. “You intend to formalize the position.”
“I intend,” Mortarion replies, voice low and even, “to reduce inefficiency.”
He extends a gauntleted hand. “Bring me the Iron Warriors auxiliary roster.”
The slate is placed in his grasp. He scrolls once. Finds the designation. There. He studies it for a long moment. Then he begins composing a requisition. Not for a cook. For a Logistical Sustainment Specialist — Siege Adaptation Proven. Justification: Demonstrated capacity to maintain Legion nutritional standards under material scarcity. Proven adaptability in contaminated environments. Performance contributed to operational endurance. Transfer requested on grounds of strategic continuity. Signed: Mortarion, Primarch of the XIV Legion.
It is precise. Impersonal. Unassailable. When he finishes, he seals it with his gene-coded authorization and sends it directly to Perturabo’s command channel. No embellishment. No explanation. He doesn’t watch the message transmit. Instead, he looks once more toward the processing line. She has been directed toward the embarkation corridor now, slate tucked under her arm, boots leaving faint impressions in ash.
Mortarion moves. Not toward her but toward the vox-tower, to ensure the requisition is received before the Iron Warriors’ ships break atmosphere. He will not ask. He will not plead. He will not name the true reason. But he won’t relinquish efficiency lightly. And if Perturabo denies him— The air around Mortarion cools by several degrees. Then his brother will need to explain why strategic continuity is less important than pride.
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The message arrives without fanfare. It doesn’t interrupt, simply appears, slotted into the Iron Warriors’ command queue with the cold efficiency of everything else. Perturabo is reviewing extraction metrics when the sigil resolves on the edge of his display: XIV Legion authorization. Gene-coded. Direct. He pauses. Not because it is unusual. Because it is rare. He opens it. Eyes move quickly, analytically.
Logistical Sustainment Specialist, Siege Adaptation Proven. Demonstrated capacity to maintain Legion nutritional standards under material scarcity. Performance contributed to operational endurance. Transfer requested on grounds of strategic continuity. — Mortarion
Perturabo reads it twice. Then once more. No embellishment. No emotional leakage. The language is austere, almost clinical. Almost. Leaning back slightly in his command throne, metal creaking faintly under the shift of his weight. A logistical sustainment specialist. Siege adaptation proven. Strategic continuity.
His gaze drifts to the personnel roster scrolling along the side of the display. Iron Warriors serfs marked for return. Identifiers. Labor classifications. He narrows the filter. There is only one recently reclassified to kitchen duty under Death Guard authority. He finds her file. Low-ranking auxiliary. Siege provisioning background. Temporary reassignment during cross-Legion deployment. No commendations. No disciplinary marks. No strategic significance. And yet.
Studying the requisition wording again. Performance contributed to operational endurance. Perturabo’s expression shifts, not softening, not warming, but sharpening. Mortarion doesn’t request individuals. He requests toxins. Territories. Attrition vectors. He doesn’t request serfs. Which means this isn’t about a cook. This is about something else.
Perturabo taps a command rune. A projection of campaign data overlays the strategium air, Death Guard casualty curves, recovery rates, trench endurance timelines. There is, in fact, a minor statistical improvement during the latter third of the war. Fractional. But measurable. He exhales slowly.
“So,” he murmurs to the empty chamber, “you noticed.”
He remembers, distantly, a report filed by one of his quartermasters: XIV Legion rations modified beyond standard paste. Increased caloric density. Improved morale compliance. He dismissed it at the time as trivial. Apparently, his brother didn’t.
Turning the slate in his hand, considering. If he denies the request, Mortarion will accept it. He won’t argue openly. He won’t beg. But he will remember. If he approves it, he relinquishes an Iron Warriors asset, however minor, on the grounds of another Primarch’s preference. Preference. The word irritates him. And yet, he respects efficiency.
If Mortarion believes this single auxiliary materially strengthens his Legion’s operational resilience, then denying the transfer would be sentiment disguised as discipline. Perturabo doesn’t indulge sentiment. Opening a return channel. The reply is brief.
Requisition acknowledged. Asset transfer approved under conditional designation: Permanent XIV Logistical Cadre. Performance metrics to be reported quarterly. — Perturabo
He hesitates only a fraction of a second before adding one final line.
Don’t mistake utility for ownership.
He seals it. The message transmits. In the embarkation corridor below, a processing servo-skull will receive a countermand within moments. A transit tag will be removed. A slate will be rewritten. One Iron Warriors serf will be redirected. Perturabo closes the display and returns to his extraction schedules. He doesn’t dwell but somewhere beneath layers of iron logic, he understands something simple: Mortarion didn’t ask for a cook. He asked for continuity. For reasons Perturabo cannot entirely define, he allowed it.
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The embarkation corridor smells of oil, damp canvas, and the faint metallic tang of cooling engines. Iron Warriors serfs stand in ordered lines beneath strip-lumens, each waiting to be scanned and cleared for transfer. Crates thud onto grav-sleds. Servo-skulls drift overhead, their optics blinking as they tally personnel. She stands among them, slate tucked against her chest. Her transit tag itches where it has been affixed to her sleeve.
Return to Legion: IV.
The words are simple. Expected. Around her, others murmur in low, resigned tones.
“Back to siege lines.”
“Back to proper rations.”
“Back to stone.”
She keeps her eyes forward. A servo-skull drifts down before her. A thin beam of red light passes over the tag. There is a brief mechanical chirr. Then a pause. The skull emits a sharp tone, different from the others. Frowning faintly at the sound. The red beam turns amber.
Processing error, she thinks.
It happens. A mechanized arm extends from a nearby cogitator station and grips the edge of her transit tag. With a sharp, efficient motion, it peels it from her sleeve. Her breath catches. The slate in her hands flickers. Text scrolls.
Return to Legion: IV —overwritten— Reassignment: XIV Legion. Permanent Logistical Cadre.
She stares at it. It doesn’t change back.
A Tech-adept steps forward, robes whispering across the deck plating. “Designation updated,” the adept intones flatly. “You will report to Death Guard embarkation point Delta-Seven.”
“I—” The word escapes her before she can stop it.
The adept tilts their head. “Clarify.”
She swallows. “There must be a mistake.”
The adept’s mechadendrite taps the edge of her slate. “Authorization gene-sealed. Primarch level.”
Her mouth goes dry. Primarch. She doesn’t ask which one. She doesn’t have to. Around her, the Iron Warriors line shifts impatiently. Someone mutters. Someone else laughs quietly.
“Lucky,” one whispers. “Fourteenth keeps their cooks breathing longer.”
Another voice, colder: “Or rotting.”
She stands frozen as a new tag is affixed to her sleeve. Pale. Marked with the sigil of the reaper. It feels heavier.
The Tech-adept steps aside. “Proceed.”
Her boots don’t move at first. This is wrong. She was prepared for iron again. For stone corridors and artillery thunder. For being one among thousands in the shadow of siege engines. She wasn’t prepared— For this. For remaining. For the quiet, watchful presence that has stood in doorways and shadows.
A Death Guard serf approaches her, face partially obscured by a filtration mask. “Delta-Seven,” he repeats, not unkindly.
She nods once. Her legs finally obey. As she walks, she glances, just once, toward the Iron Warriors’ embarkation ramp. Toward the ships that were meant to take her back. They are already sealing. No one looks for her. No one notices her absence.
The Death Guard landing zone is quieter. Less ordered, perhaps, but heavier. The air thicker. The personnel fewer, but larger, slower in their movements. Efficient in a different way. She reaches the designated point. And he is there.
Mortarion stands near the ramp of his Legion’s transport, cloak stirring faintly in the downdraft of engines. Apothecaries move around him. Captains receive final instructions. He doesn’t turn as she approaches. Yet she has the distinct, impossible sense that he knows. She stops several paces away, uncertain if she should kneel, speak, disappear. His respirator hisses once.
“Your transfer has been approved,” he says, voice low and carrying easily through the engine noise.
She startles. “My lord…”
“You will remain with the Fourteenth,” he continues. “Your function here has proven efficient.”
Efficient. The word lands strangely in her chest.
She bows her head quickly. “Yes, my lord.”
A beat of silence stretches between them.
“You were prepared to return,” he observes.
“Yes, my lord.”
Another pause.
“That will not be necessary.” His tone doesn’t change. It doesn’t soften. But something in the space around the words feels… deliberate. Careful.
She dares, barely, to lift her eyes. The pale lenses regard her, not warmly, not coldly. Assessing. Certain.
“You will adapt,” he says.
It sounds less like instruction. More like faith. He turns then, cloak sweeping behind him as he ascends the ramp. The moment ends. She remains where she is for several seconds, heart hammering in her throat. Not sent back. Not reclaimed. Kept. The realization is not relief. It is something far more complicated. She draws a slow breath, tasting engine exhaust and sterilizing fumes. Then she follows the Death Guard aboard.
The Wolf and the Ghost pt 10
Relationship: Leman Russ x afab!reader
Warnings: reference to injuries, threats, aeldari magic
Word Count: 1619
Requested Tags for All Works: @beckyninja @runin64 @ilovewolvezz
Masterlist
pt 1 | pt 2 | pt 3 | pt 4 | pt 5 | pt 6 | pt 7 | pt 8 | pt 9 | pt 10
The chamber smells of ozone and blood. She has been carried from the circle, laid on a stone bier just beyond the runes. A medicae tends to her in her unconscious state. Russ stands by the Rune Priest, refusing to look at her now. The staff’s rune-stone has dimmed to a dull ember. Frost rims its edges. The Priest’s breathing is controlled but strained, as though he has wrestled something far larger than flesh.
“Speak, can it be removed,” Russ says.
His words are quiet. It carries more weight than a shout.
The Rune Priest straightens. “You saw it.”
“I asked if it can be removed.”
A flicker of hesitation.
Bjorn steps closer, arms folded, voice blunt as an hammer. “Answer him.”
The Priest’s jaw tightens. “It is not lodged in her like shrapnel. It is… interwoven. Anchored along neural pathways, threaded through memory and instinct. If I tear it free—”
“She dies,” Bjorn finishes.
“Yes.”
Russ’s expression doesn’t change.
“Is there a way to extract it without killing her?”
The Priest considers his words carefully. “Perhaps. But not cleanly. Not quickly. And not without risk of drawing attention.”
“Attention from what?” Bjorn growls.
The Priest’s eyes flick briefly toward the ceiling, toward the void beyond the hull. “From whatever bound it there. Souls are not easily stitched together. Something guided that ritual.”
Russ’s gaze hardens. “The Aeldari.”
“Yes. But not merely artisans.” The Priest’s voice lowers. “This felt deliberate. Measured. As if they placed a fragment of one of their own into her, not as a weapon to detonate… but as a lens. A witness.”
Bjorn bares his teeth. “A spy.”
“Perhaps,” the Priest says.
Russ steps closer, looming. “Is it controlling her?”
“No.” The answer comes without hesitation. “It is contained. Dormant unless stirred. It reacted because I pressed against it.”
“Will it wake on its own?”
Another pause.
“In the Warp,” the Priest admits. “Possibly.”
The word hangs heavy in the chamber. They are hours from translation.
Bjorn exhales sharply. “Then we should finish this before we enter the sea of souls.”
Russ turns at last, glancing toward where she lies unmoving on the stone. Her face is pale. Too pale. But her chest rises. Steady. He studies her as though weighing something only he can see.
“If we attempt removal,” he says slowly, “and fail?”
“She dies,” the Priest repeats. “Or worse. The foreign soul could anchor itself fully. Overwrite her.”
Bjorn’s voice is grim. “Then hesitation is weakness.”
Russ rounds on him, not with rage, but with iron.
“Do not mistake caution for weakness.”
The chamber falls silent again. Russ looks back to the Priest.
“If it remains,” he says, “can it be bound? Restricted? Watched?”
The Priest nods once. “Yes. Wards can be inscribed into her chamber. I can reinforce the psychic barriers. But understand this, containment isn’t cure.”
“I did not ask for a cure,” Russ’s gaze flicks again to her still form. “I asked for control.”
The Priest inclines his head. “That, I can give you. For a time.”
Bjorn studies Russ carefully. “You would risk taking her into the Warp with that thing still in her?”
Russ’s voice lowers to a dangerous calm. “I would rather face a known blade than swing blindly at my own shadow.”
He steps toward her at last. Kneeling beside her. For a long moment he says nothing, just watches the slow rise and fall of her breath.
“If it tries to take her,” he says quietly, not looking at the Priest, “you will tell me before it succeeds.”
“I will,” the Priest answers.
“And if you cannot stop it?”
The Priest’s voice is steady. “Then you must.”
Russ nods once. A pact sealed without ceremony. He rises.
“Reinforce the wards. Double the watch. We translate to the Warp on my command.”
Bjorn’s eyes narrow. “And her?”
Russ looks down at her one last time before turning toward the chamber doors.
“For now, she lives,” he says.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Gellar Field blooms like a second sunrise. Reality thins. The cruiser lurches once as it tears free of realspace and plunges into the Immaterium. Steel groans. Runes along the corridor bulkheads ignite in cold blue light. The air tastes of copper and storm-wind. Russ feels it the moment the Warp closes around them. Not fear. Pressure. Like a distant howl answering something older.
In her warded chamber, the runes flare without warning. She jerks upright on the cot, breath ripping from her lungs as though she has surfaced from deep water. The air feels wrong, too thick, too loud. The hum beneath her skin sharpens into a scream.
The wards begin to burn. Light crawls across the floor in jagged patterns, not contained by the Priest’s careful geometry but pressing against it from within. She convulses. Her back arches violently, fingers clawing at the stone as her vision fractures into shards of impossible color. The chamber is no longer a chamber, it is a horizon of screaming light, an endless sea of souls pressing against a fragile membrane. Something inside her answers. The Aeldari presence stirs like a blade drawn across silk. Not hostile. Awake. Her scream echoes through the corridor.
Alarms ignite. Russ is already moving before the first report reaches him.
“Warded chamber breach,” a vox-servitor crackles.
“Not a breach,” comes the Rune Priest’s strained correction over the channel. “A surge.”
Russ reaches the sealed bulkhead just as the runes along its frame flare white-hot.
“Open it,” he orders.
“Jarl—” Bjorn begins.
“Open. It.”
The doors grind apart. Inside, the chamber is a storm. She thrashes against nothing, eyes rolled white, blood streaking her temples. The runes pulse violently, holding, but barely. Frost creeps along the walls as the temperature plummets. Behind her, for a flicker of a second, a silhouette forms. Tall. Luminous. Angular. Not fully corporeal, not fully imagined. Its presence bends the light like heat over a blade’s edge.
The Rune Priest stands at the circle’s edge, staff planted, teeth bared in a snarl. “The Warp strengthens it!” he shouts. “It recognizes the sea!”
Russ steps into the circle despite the searing heat of the wards. The runes bite at him, warning, but he ignores them. He drops to one knee and seizes her shoulders.
“Little Wolf!” he roars.
Her body convulses again, then stills abruptly. Her eyes snap open. They aren’t silver this time. They are hers, but behind them is something vast and terrified.
“It’s loud,” she gasps. “It’s—”
Her voice fractures. The silhouette behind her shimmers violently, then folds inward like light collapsing into a blade. The runes blaze one final time and then dim. She collapses forward into Russ’s arms, limp but breathing. Silence slams into the chamber. The Warp howls beyond the hull.
The Rune Priest exhales shakily. “It didn’t attempt to seize her.”
Russ looks up sharply. “Explain.”
“It reacted. As if the Immaterium is… familiar terrain.”
Bjorn’s jaw tightens. “Meaning?”
The Priest’s gaze darkens. “Meaning the soul bound within her was not anchored in ignorance. It has walked these currents before.”
Russ’s grip tightens imperceptibly.
“Can it control her in the Warp?” he demands.
“Not yet,” the Priest says. “But the barrier between them thins here. If it chooses to push—”
“It will find me in its way,” Russ finishes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hours later, when the storm quiets and the ship steadies within the Immaterium’s tides, Russ stands alone in his strategium. A single hololithic projector hums before him. He hesitates only briefly before activating the long-range psychic relay, shielded, encrypted, routed through trusted channels. The image coalesces slowly. A tall figure robed in crimson and gold. A single blazing eye. Magnus the Red inclines his head slightly as the projection stabilizes.
“Brother,” Magnus says, voice smooth as polished glass. “You rarely call without cause. What troubles you, Leman?”
Russ doesn’t waste breath.
“I have a question,” he says. “Hypothetical.”
Magnus’s visible eye brightens with faint amusement. “Those are always the most interesting kind.”
Russ folds his arms.
“If an Aeldari soul were… bound to a human host. Interwoven. Not dominant. Not dormant. Contained.”
Magnus goes very still.
“And this hypothetical host,” Magnus replies carefully, “would you wish to save them… or study them?”
“Answer the question.”
Magnus’s gaze sharpens, folding his hands behind his back. “Such bindings are delicate. Aeldari soulcraft is… precise. Brutally so. To rip it free would kill the host. Almost certainly.”
Russ’s jaw tightens.
“Almost.”
“Yes,” Magnus says. “Almost.”
The air seems to hum.
“But,” Magnus continues, voice lowering, “there are ways to unweave what was woven. It would require careful psychic incision. Thread by thread. Conscious guidance from within the Immaterium itself.”
Russ’s eyes harden. “You.”
“There are few in the Imperium capable of that level of precision.”
Silence stretches.
“If you attempt it,” Russ says slowly, “what are the odds of survival?”
“For the host?” Magnus considers. “Better than crude extraction. Perhaps… favorable.”
“And the Aeldari fragment?”
Magnus’s gaze flickers, thoughtful. “It would resist. It might cling. It might attempt to merge rather than separate. But yes. I could attempt it.”
The word lands heavy.
Magnus steps closer to the projection field, his eye gleaming brighter.
“Understand something, brother. If this binding was deliberate, and it was, then its removal may unravel more than flesh. It may disrupt whatever design the Aeldari intended.”
“Good.”
Magnus tilts his head faintly.
“Or,” he continues, “it may remove something that is shielding her from a greater fate.”
That makes Russ still. The Warp churns beyond the viewport. Magnus watches him closely now.
“If you decide pride is less important than her survival,” Magnus says at last, voice calm as a knife edge, “call again.”
The projection dissolves into light.
From Rust and Bone pt.33
Chronicles of the Lost Primarch
Relationship: Rogal Dorn x oc/afab!reader
Warnings: Referenced near death experiences, description of a post-battle recovery, minor reference to injuries, contemplating of futures, physical display of affection
Word Count: 2437
Requested tag:@noncon-photobomb @beckyninja @blukitty40k @runin64 @ilovewolvezz @meriamarie @vithralith
Masterlist
Dorn's Masterlist | pt 30 | pt 31 | pt 32 | pt 33
Erastes finds himself lingering near the triage chamber, the chaos having thinned, reduced now to controlled urgency—measured voices, precise hands, the metallic scent of blood tempered by antiseptic steam. The worst of it is done. The settlement didn’t break. The line held. But Erastes isn’t thinking about the line. He is thinking about Dorn.
He never met the man before this planet. There are no shared crusades between them, no old campaigns to compare against only what is written in history. Dorn arrived here already fully formed, measured, spare with speech, difficult to read in the way of someone who has already decided what he is willing to be.
Erastes respects that kind of control. He has seen what happens when warriors lose it. Yet during the attack, something shifted. When the creature breached the barricade, Dorn was everywhere at once, directing, repositioning, adapting. Efficient. Exact. A commander in motion. Until Kessa fell. Erastes had seen the moment clearly. The impact. The silence afterward. The way Dorn didn’t even glance toward the wider field before moving. Not reckless but absolute. He didn’t delegate retrieval, didn’t calculate risk. He simply chose.
That choice unsettles Erastes, not because it was wrong, but because it was instinctive. Instinct is dangerous. Instinct can override discipline. Yet… it hadn’t. Dorn had carried her to safety, yes—but once he confirmed she lived, he returned to command without hesitation. Orders resumed. The creature was driven back. Civilians were secured. Erastes watches now as a medic approaches him quietly.
“We need the cot,” she says. “More incoming from the outer ridge. She’s stable enough to move.”
Erastes nods and steps inside. Dorn sits beside the pallet, one hand holding one of Kessa’s. He turns as Erastes enters.
“She can be relocated,” Erastes says simply.
Dorn studies Kessa’s face for a moment, assessing for himself. She is conscious, though fatigued, eyes half-lidded but tracking. When he bends to lift her, she makes a token protest.
“I can walk.”
“No,” he replies.
Erastes notices the way Dorn adjusts his stance to compensate for the injury in his leg. Notices the faint tightening along his jaw as the movement strains muscle already damaged. Notices that he doesn’t shift her weight once he has it settled. This isn’t battlefield adrenaline anymore, this is deliberate care. Erastes steps aside as Dorn carries her down the corridor toward his quarters. As they pass, their gazes meet briefly. There is no apology in Dorn’s expression. No defensiveness. No embarrassment at being observed. Erastes inclines his head once.
He has wondered, quietly, whether attachment would weaken Dorn’s effectiveness here. Whether caring for a civilian, anchoring himself to one life among many, would blunt the edge required to survive a world like this. Instead, he has witnessed something else entirely. Dorn fights like a man with something to return to. There is weight in that, but there is also direction. A warrior who fights only to endure will eventually hollow. A warrior who fights to protect something specific often becomes sharper. Erastes turns back toward the yard, already recalculating defensive patterns in his mind. If this is change, it isn’t deterioration.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Inside Dorn’s quarters, the air feels still after the churn of triage. The room smells faintly of oil, metal, and the herbs Kessa keeps tucked into her pockets. Dorn lowers her onto the pallet with careful precision, adjusting the rolled blanket beneath her shoulders to keep pressure off her ribs.
“You’re favoring the leg more now,” she says quietly.
“You are dizzy,” he counters.
She smiles faintly. “Deflection.”
He doesn’t deny it. When he finally sits, the movement is controlled but not painless. She sees it in the micro-tension of his shoulders.
“You’re worse than I thought,” she murmurs.
“And you are underestimating your own injuries.”
She shifts, testing the ache in her ribs, and winces despite trying not to. He is immediately closer, one hand steady at her back.
“We should talk,” she says after a moment. “Before this becomes something we’re both pretending not to understand.”
Dorn considers that carefully, as though evaluating a structural weakness.
“Yes,” he agrees.
She studies him in the dim light. There is fatigue there. And something rawer, barely concealed beneath habit.
“When you thought I was dead,” she begins, “what did you feel?”
He doesn’t answer immediately. Looking down at his hands instead, as though measuring what they are capable of holding and losing.
“I felt,” he says slowly, “that I had failed in a way I couldn’t repair.”
Her throat tightens.
“That’s not the same as grief,” she says gently.
“No.” A pause. “It was worse.”
He meets her gaze then, and she sees it, the fear he rarely allows to surface.
“I have lost many things,” he continues. “Causes. Cities. Brothers. Sons. Those losses are… absorbed. Integrated. They become part of the calculus.”
“And me?”
“You do not fit into calculus.”
The simplicity of it hits harder than poetry ever could. She reaches up, fingers brushing along his jaw, roughened by ash and stubble. He leans into the touch without realizing he’s doing it.
“I don’t want to be something you carry like a burden,” she says quietly.
“You aren’t a burden.”
“I don’t want to distract you from what you are.”
“You don’t.”
His answer is immediate, firm.
“You refine it,” he adds after a beat.
She blinks. “Refine?”
“Yes. My decisions are clearer when I account for you.”
A small, incredulous laugh escapes her. “You make that sound like a tactical upgrade.”
“It is.”
She shakes her head, smiling despite the ache in her ribs.
“And emotionally?” she presses.
He hesitates, but only briefly.
“Emotionally,” he says more quietly, “you matter to me in a way that alters my priorities.”
She shifts closer, slowly, mindful of bruises and bandages. He adjusts immediately, sliding one arm behind her shoulders, supporting without pressing against her ribs. His other hand braces against the pallet to keep weight off his injured leg.
“We take this carefully,” she murmurs.
“Yes.”
“We don’t pretend it’s nothing.”
“No.”
“And we don’t let it make us foolish.”
A faint glint touches his eyes. “Define foolish.”
She smiles softly. “Reckless.”
“I wasn’t reckless,” he says.
“You ran.”
“I calculated rapidly.”
She laughs again, quieter this time. Then she leans in. The kiss is unhurried, deliberate. No desperation now. No fear driving it. Just warmth. Careful angles. Finding comfort in the other, at the feel of the other’s lips against theirs. Her fingers curl lightly into the fabric at his shoulder; his thumb traces a slow line along the side of her neck, grounding, protective.
When they part, they remain close, foreheads resting together, breath shared. Outside, hammers ring against stone. Orders are called. The settlement rebuilds around fresh scars. Inside, Dorn allows himself to sit without standing guard for once. Not because the world is safe but because, for this moment, she is.
The conversation fades not because it is finished, but because her body decides for her. The medicine pulls at her first, slow, heavy threads drawing her eyelids lower. The adrenaline that kept her upright drains away, leaving only the ache in her ribs and the dull throb at the base of her skull. Dorn feels the shift before she says anything. Her weight settles more fully against him; her fingers, which had been tracing idle patterns against his chest, slow.
“You’re drifting,” he murmurs.
“Mm.” She doesn’t deny it. “Don’t move.”
“I won’t.”
She adjusts carefully, angling herself so her ribs are protected, her head tucked just beneath his collarbone. He shifts with deliberate precision, sliding back against the wall so he can support her without strain on his injured leg. His hand remains steady at her back. Her breathing evens out within minutes. Sleep claims her without ceremony.
Dorn remains still. He has stood watch over battlefields quieter than this, over fallen brothers, over breached gates, over cities reduced to ember and ash, but this vigil feels different. There is no perimeter to secure. No tactical readout to review. Only the slow rise and fall of her chest beneath his palm. He studies her face as though memorizing terrain.
The faint soot still smudged along her temple. The crease between her brows that lingers even in sleep, as if the land itself has etched caution into her bones. The small scar along her jaw he has never asked about. She looks younger like this. And more fragile. She nearly died. The thought presses in, uninvited.
He imagines it, the impact landing slightly differently, the stone unyielding, the breath not returning. He imagines carrying her not to triage, but to burial. The settlement smaller for it. Himself… emptier. He closes his eyes briefly. No. She lives. And because she lives, the future becomes a variable he cannot ignore.
If they leave this world. The thought feels distant and immediate at once. The vents, the fractured ridges, the creature beneath the earth, none of it is permanent. Extraction is possible. The possibility feels less abstract now. A vessel could come. A recall could possibly be issued. The Imperium is vast, but not unreachable.
If passage is secured. Would she come with him? Looking down at her again. Kessa, who belongs to a life of traveling this ever dangerous. Who reads fault lines like maps. Who trusts the wind more than distant decrees. Who has never seen a voidship rise. She has never seen the Imperium.
Never witnessed the sheer scale of humanity gathered beneath Imperial banners. She doesn’t know Terra. Doesn’t know the scale of it, the spires that pierce cloud cover, the continents paved in cathedral-stone, the endless tides of humanity moving beneath banners she has never heard named. She doesn’t know what it means to stand beneath the Imperial Palace, or to hear a thousand choirs singing the same prayer.
Would she find it magnificent? Or oppressive? The Imperium isn’t kind to those who don’t already understand its rhythms. It is rigid. Hierarchical. Bound by doctrine and tradition. Its beauty is vast, but so is its weight. Would she find it beautiful or crushing?
He tries to imagine her there. On a command deck beneath cold lumen-strips. Among his remaining brothers, scarred, disciplined, carved by war into something rigid and unyielding. How would they react? Some would say nothing. Simply observe. Measure her as they measure all things. Some would question. A partner. For him.
Dorn isn’t unaware of how he is perceived, function before feeling, duty before desire. The idea of him returning not alone but accompanied would ripple outward. Not scandal. Not exactly. But disruption.
He imagines her stepping into a fortress-monastery of the Imperial Fists, stone and ceramite, banners heavy with history, warriors carved as much from discipline as gene-seed. His gene-sons. The Imperial Fists. The Black Templars. All his successors who carry fragments of him in their blood and bone.
They already regard him as something more than a man. A standard. A foundation. A relic of unwavering duty. What would they see if he returned not only changed, but accompanied? He can almost hear the silence. The measured scrutiny of captains who wouldn’t question him openly. Some would see vulnerability. Some would see distraction.
The Black Templars, in particular, would struggle with it. Their zeal leaves little room for nuance. To them, devotion is singular, uncompromising. Would they view her as leverage? A point of weakness an enemy could exploit? Or would they see what the Astral Knights have begun to notice, that he fights sharper when he has something specific to defend. Or would they see what he now understands, that she steadies him?
He shifts slightly, careful not to wake her, and his injured leg protests. The pain grounds him. Then his thoughts drift further, turning toward someone far more personal. Helioc. Seventeen at the Siege. Younger still in memory, small hands gripping training blades too large for him, eyes already too serious for a child. Helioc, who bore Perturabo’s face more strongly with each passing year, but whose mother’s quiet intensity softened the edges. Helioc had defended him once. Publicly. Painfully. A boy forced to choose loyalties between parental blood and bond.
If Dorn returns, if he stands before his nephew again, not only alive but changed… With someone at his side. How would Helioc see it? Would he smile in that restrained way of his he used on officials? Would he analyze first, as always, before allowing emotion to surface? Would he approve?
Dorn suspects the question is wrong. Helioc understands divided love. Torn allegiance. The cost of choosing one bond without severing another. If anyone among his bloodline could comprehend this shift without condemnation, it would be him.
A soft sound draws Dorn’s attention back down. Kessa shifts in her sleep, brow tightening briefly before smoothing again as his thumb tracing a small arc along her shoulder, careful of bruises. If she came with him. If she stood beside him, would she miss this world? Would she resent him for taking her from it? He doesn’t want her to feel as though she were an exile. If she did choose to come. He would shield her from the worst of it, but even he can’t shield her from culture shock, from scrutiny, from the immensity of the Imperium’s expectations. Would she stand beneath the banners of the Imperial Fists and feel dwarfed? Or would she look up at the stone and see only another structure that can crack under pressure?
And if she chose to remain here? If she belonged here more than she ever could among voidships and citadels? Would he leave without her? Would he stay? The thought settles heavily. Silence stretches in the small room, broken only by distant hammer-strikes and her steady breathing.
For most of his life, departure has been inevitable. Worlds entered. Secured. Departed. Now he considers anchoring. Not to a planet. To a person. He lowers his head slightly, brushing his lips against her hair, careful not to wake her. He doesn’t know yet which path he will take when the moment arrives. Yet he knows this: He won’t decide for her. He won’t carry her away from this world as though she is something to relocate. If they leave, it will be because she chooses it. If they stay— he doesn’t finish the thought. Outside, hammers strike stone in steady rhythm. Repairs continue. The settlement breathes, scarred but standing. Inside the small room, Dorn keeps watch, not as a commander guarding walls, but as a man measuring a future he had never allowed himself to imagine.
Untamed Wind
It's clearly my favorite story that you go to write. On the one hand because Jaghatai Khan is my favorite primarch and because I like the atmosphere of the story.
Hey Anon! Jaghatai is such a fascinating primarch to write: fierce yet reflective, untamed yet deeply principled. I’m really glad the atmosphere resonated with you, that was exactly what I've been hoping to achieve with Untamed Wind. Knowing it’s your favorite makes all the effort worthwhile.
Shrouded in Silence pt 16
Relationship: Magnus the Red x assassin!afab!reader
Word Count: 904
Requested Tags for All Works: @beckyninja @runin64 @ilovewolvezz
Requested Tags: @creativebeansofchaos
Masterlist
pt 1 | pt 2 | pt 3 | pt 4 | pt 5 | pt 6 | pt 7 | pt 8 | pt 9 | pt 10 | pt 11 | pt 12 | pt 13 | pt 14 | pt 15 | pt 16
The verdict isn’t delivered loudly or with ceremony. It is rather discrete unlike most things on Terra. Magnus stands once more before his father, though this time the chamber feels less like a confrontation and more like a calibration. There are no accusations. No raised voices. No formal censure. Only delineation.
“You will return to Prospero,” the Emperor says.
Not permission. Instruction.
“You will suspend all unsanctioned inquiry into the immaterium. You will refrain from further extrapolations beyond the boundaries I have established.”
Each phrase is precise. Measured. Absolute.
Magnus inclines his head. “And my Legion?”
“Will be observed,” the Emperor replies. “Not distrusted. Observed.”
The distinction matters. It is also immaterial.
“You were not summoned for punishment,” the Emperor continues. “You were summoned because your brilliance approaches volatility. I would not see it squandered. Nor misapplied.”
Magnus absorbs that. Not a reprimand. Not forgiveness. A narrowing of lanes.
“You believe I erred,” he says quietly.
“I believe,” the Emperor answers, “that you believe yourself singular in your discernment. That assumption is dangerous.”
Silence settles. Not hostile. Final.
“You remain my son,” the Emperor says at last. “Do not mistake correction for rejection.”
Magnus bows deeply.
“As you command.”
When he departs this time, the Palace doesn’t feel like a cage. It feels like a boundary drawn in gold. His sons and him take leave of Terra under formal escort, not heading off to what many had thought would be exile back upon their arrival. There are no public rebukes. No shamed withdrawal. Their fleet peels away from the Throneworld with full honors, banners intact, engines burning clean. But something has shifted. The silence between Terra and Prospero now carries weight.
Within the strategium of his flagship, Magnus stands alone as the planet recedes into a distant sphere of light. The decision has been made. The path constrained. Not broken. Constrained. The doors behind him open softly. Vale doesn’t announce herself.
“You’re certain this is victory?” she asks quietly.
Magnus doesn’t turn immediately. “It is survival.”
He faces her then, and for the first time since Terra, there is no Palace listening. No Custodian shadow looming around. No psychic density pressing inward. Only distance and stars.
“They haven’t stripped you,” Vale says.
“No,” Magnus agrees. “They have narrowed me.”
She studies him carefully. “Will you obey?”
A faint, almost dangerous smile touches his mouth. “I will comply.”
Not the same thing.
Vale steps closer, the hum of the ship softer than Terra’s endless vigilance. “And what does that mean?”
“It means,” Magnus says, voice lower now, “that I will not challenge the boundaries publicly. Nor recklessly.”
He studies her face, something thoughtful in his expression.
“But knowledge does not cease because it is inconvenient.”
She exhales through her nose. “I was afraid you would say something like that.”
“You prefer surrender?”
“I prefer you alive,” she answers evenly.
That earns her a genuine laugh, quiet, brief. They stand in companionable silence for a moment, watching Terra shrink into a memory.
“There is something I did not tell you,” Vale says after a while.
Magnus glances at her. “There are many things you have not told me.”
“This one more personal.”
That draws his full attention.
“Vale,” she says slowly, “is not the name I was born to.”
He doesn’t react immediately. He waits.
“It was given to me when I entered service,” she continues. “When I ceased to belong to what I had been and began belonging to something larger.”
“A mantle,” Magnus says.
“A simplification,” she corrects. “A useful one.”
“And your true name?” he asks.
She hesitates, not from fear, but from the weight of offering it.
“I have not used it in years,” she says. “It feels… distant.”
“Distance doesn’t erase truth,” Magnus replies gently.
She studies him, measuring.
“You shared what your father implied,” she says. “It seems only fair.”
“My name was ______.”
The word hangs between them. Softer than Vale. Warmer.
Magnus repeats it quietly. Testing its shape. “______.”
Something shifts in her expression, not vulnerability, exactly, but recognition.
“That name belonged to someone who hadn’t yet learned how the Imperium reshapes those who serve it,” she says. “Vale is what remained.”
Magnus steps closer, not looming, not imposing. Simply present.
“Then I will know both,” he says. “And choose carefully which one I speak.”
She searches his face for mockery and finds none.
“Why tell me now?” he asks.
“Because Terra reminded us how easily paths close,” she answers. “If you are to know me as more than proximity and caution… then you should know who stood before you first.”
He nods once.
“Then hear mine in return,” Magnus says softly. “Not the name given to me in laboratories and prophecy. Not the title my Legion chants. The one my father spoke before the Crusade began.”
Her brow lifts slightly.
“It is simply Magnus, a son destined to be an explorer of the Great Ocean,” he says.
She huffs a quiet breath that might almost be a laugh. “That was meant to be profound?”
“It was meant to be honest.”
Their eyes meet. Terra is now a distant star. Boundaries have been drawn. Restrictions imposed. Observation promised. But here, between them, something has clarified rather than fractured.
“____,” Magnus says, deliberate now.
She lets the name rest. The stars stretch ahead. Prospero awaits. Though Terra has narrowed his path, it hasn’t extinguished the fire that walks it.
Bloodline Unknown pt 19
Relationship: Yautja!oc x human!oc/afab!reader
Warnings: minor reference to injury, very minor description of medical check up
Word Count: 2207
Requested Tags for All Works: @beckyninja @runin64 @ilovewolvezz
Requested Tags: @r4inlov3r @nona83 @dij-ology
Masterlist
pt 1 | pt 2 | pt 3 | pt 4 | pt 5 | pt 6 | pt 7 | pt 8 | pt 9 | pt 10 | pt 11 | pt 12 | pt 13 | pt 14 | pt 15 | pt 16 | pt 17 | pt 18 | pt 19
The holding bay settles into a rhythm the brothers cannot escape. Low light. Engine pulse. The faint crackle of containment fields. No sense of direction, no sense of distance, only the sense of motion. Ra’thek stands more than he sits.
Hands rest against the bars, not gripping now, just feeling the vibration through metal and field alike. He measures the cadence of the engines, counts the seconds between patrol passes, memorizes the way the light shifts when the ship adjusts power flow. But beneath all of it, beneath the discipline and the calculation, there is a fracture in him. The sound of her cry haunting him in memory. Skurr’va sits with his back against the far wall of his cage, one knee drawn up despite the lingering stiffness in his side. His gaze is fixed on nothing while his mind races.
“They are not killing her,” he says at last, quiet but deliberate. “If they intended to, they would have done so already.”
Ra’thek doesn’t turn. “Pain does not require death.”
“No,” Skurr’va agrees. “But they gain nothing from breaking her.”
Zhika shifts restlessly in his own enclosure. The cauterized line along his side, a reminder of what efficient hands can do. He flexes experimentally and hisses under his breath.
“She is alone,” he says.
That is the worst of it. Ra’thek closes his eyes briefly.
“She is not prey,” he says, as if speaking it makes it law. “She stood as a clanmate.”
Zhika’s mandibles twitch at that. Clanmate. Not human. Not other.
Skurr’va exhales slowly. “Then we endure. For her as well.”
Elsewhere in the vessel, Kaelen wakes to quietness. No restraints this time. The room is smaller than the med-bay, compact, enclosed, but not barren. The lighting is softer here, amber and low. The air is warmer than she expects, almost humid.
Pushing herself upright carefully. Immediately she is greeted by pain, but it’s muted now, dulled to a deep ache along her ribs and torso. When she looks down, the translucent sealant has hardened into a flexible sheen, faintly iridescent. It pulls when she breathes too deeply. At least she’s clothed again. Not in her own things, those likely are long gone, but in simple fabric wrappings secured around her torso and hips. Functional. Clean. Her gaze drifts outward.
The “bed” occupies the center of the chamber, and it isn’t a conventional bed at all. The floor descends in shallow steps, tiered in a circular depression. At the base lies a wide basin-like space inlaid directly into the structure of the room. It is filled with layered furs and heavy woven cloths. Some are coarse, some surprisingly soft. The materials overlap in careful arrangement, forming something that resembles a nest more than a cot. She stares at it.
“…You’ve got to be kidding me,” she murmurs.
It isn’t crude. It isn’t mocking. It’s constructed with purpose. Instinctively, she swings her legs over the edge of the basin and stands. The drop is shallow, three steps up to floor level, but the design makes sense in a strange way. The lowered space traps warmth. It shields the occupant’s back. It limits vulnerable angles of approach. It’s protective.
A recessed panel along one wall hums faintly. When she approaches it cautiously, it brightens. A compartment slides open, revealing a container of water and a sealed ration pack. At least she has the basic necessities. No restraints. No guards in sight. But the door, she tests it, doesn’t respond. Locked. Leaning her forehead briefly against the cool metal.
“They’re keeping me comfortable,” she mutters. “That’s never a good sign.”
Her stomach knots, not from hunger, but from uncertainty. Are the brothers alive? Did they hear her? Her fingers brush the edge of the nest again. The furs are thick, insulating. She sinks back down into the lowered space slowly, wincing as her ribs protest. The materials cradle her weight more comfortably than she wants to admit. Alone in the amber-lit room, Kaelen stares up at the ceiling and listens to the distant vibration of the ship. Somewhere on this vessel, three furious Yautja are caged and she can only hope they are enduring as she is.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The days, if they are days, blur. Food arrives at measured intervals. The brothers test it first with scent, then with caution. Dense protein, minimally seasoned, nutritionally complete. Water purified to sterile neutrality. No toxins. No sedatives.
When Ra’thek demands to see Kaelen, the guard doesn’t respond. When Skurr’va asks about the course of the ship, there is silence. When Zhika demands to know whether she is conscious, the guard simply locks the hatch again and walks away. It isn’t hostility, simply dismissal. Ra’thek eventually stops wasting words. The unanswered space where Kaelen should be grows heavier with each silent cycle.
Kaelen’s time moves differently. She wakes to light that brightens and dims in gradual shifts, simulating something like a day cycle. Whether it matches reality or not, she can’t tell. On the first visit, she nearly startles herself, trying to sit upright too quickly. The door slides open without warning. Two Yautja enter. Unmasked. Not aggressive. One remains near the doorway, stance neutral but blocking the exit. The other approaches the nest, scanning device already humming softly.
“Recovery stable,” the medic says after a moment, “Seal integrity intact.”
Kaelen studies him openly now. “You could knock.”
He doesn’t respond to that. Instead, he gestures toward a panel along the far wall. It slides aside, revealing a recessed space she hadn’t noticed before. It’s unmistakably a bathroom. Metal basin. Waste unit. A narrow alcove where heated water begins to cascade down a sloped surface at the medic’s activation. Steam curls upward, thick and immediate. A shower. She stares.
“For sanitation,” he says. “You will use it.”
There’s no leering. No commentary. Just expectation.
“And if I don’t?” she asks.
The other Yautja shifts slightly at the doorway, not threatening, just present.
“You will,” the medic replies simply.
The water shuts off. The panel remains open. Basic dignity, then. Control disguised as accommodation.
“Thank you,” she says after a beat.
The medic inclines his head a fraction. Whether in acknowledgment or simple mechanical motion, she can’t tell. When they leave, the door seals with the same final sound as before. She waits several seconds before moving. The bathroom is utilitarian but clean. The water, when she tests it again, runs hot enough to ease the stiffness in her ribs. The steam fills the small chamber quickly, blurring the hard lines of alien construction. For a few minutes beneath the cascade, she allows herself to breathe. It feels almost human. Almost safe.
Later visits follow a similar pattern. They scan her injuries. They adjust the sealant when needed. They replenish food and water. When she asks about the brothers:
“They are stable.”
When she asks where they are:
“They are contained.”
When she asks where the ship is going:
Silence.
The shift begins as a tremor beneath their feet. The steady, endless hum of transit alters in pitch, layers stacking over one another. Systems rerouting. Atmospheric shielding engaging. The deck vibrates differently now, not the smooth glide of vacuum travel but the subtle buffeting of resistance.
Ra’thek lifts his head slowly. Skurr’va’s eyes narrow. Zhika stills mid-breath. They feel it. Descent. The holding bay lights brighten in stages, washing the metal in a colder hue. Pressure equalization hisses through unseen vents. The air thickens by degrees.
Moments later, the doors part. Veterans enter fully armored this time, masks sealed, plasma casters mounted but inactive. Not braced for combat. Prepared for presentation. Restraint bands are secured around each brother’s wrists, dense, weighty alloy that locks with a final magnetic pulse. Not ornamental. Functional. Vek’tal is brought from his separate confinement and bound as well, heavier cuffs sealing around his forearms.
No one resists. This isn’t the place for wasted defiance. They are marched through corridors they have only heard until now. The ship feels different during descent, alive in a new way, systems adjusting constantly. The air smells faintly of ozone and moisture. Ahead, a seam of green light cuts across the far wall. The ramp lowers and the world beyond breathes in.
Heat strikes first. Not dry heat, wet, enveloping. It clings instantly to skin and armor alike. The air is thick with salt and organic decay, rich and heavy. Kaelen feels it even through the respirator; the filtration units at the mask’s edges hum more insistently as they compensate. Light here is fractured. It filters down through layered canopy in shifting patterns, gold and green interwoven.
The landing site is not a flat expanse but a lattice of enormous mangrove roots rising from brackish water. The ship has settled onto a reinforced platform grown and carved into the natural structure, a merging of engineering and ecosystem. Dark water laps sluggishly between knotted root columns. Thin fog clings low to the surface. Strange insects drift in dense swarms, their hum constant. Somewhere deeper in the marsh, something large displaces water with a slow, patient ripple.
Beyond the tree line, the sea stretches wide and slate-colored, its horizon blurred by humidity. This is a borderland. Land and water. Life and rot interwoven. The veterans step down first, feet sinking slightly into layered roots before stabilizing on reinforced stone inlays embedded between them. Their movements are unhurried, as though returning home from a routine hunt.
The brothers are guided forward next. Ra’thek’s feet meet the damp platform. He inhales deeply through his mandibles, scent mapping instinctively, salt, vegetation, various pheromones carried faintly on the humid air. Skurr’va scans the periphery, tracking elevated positions, natural chokepoints. Zhika squints against the brightness filtering through canopy, adjusting to the shift from metal corridors to living terrain. Then they see her.
Kaelen stands just beyond the ramp’s shadow. A respirator mask curves over her lower face, sleek and alien, its translucent filters pulsing softly at either side. Tubing traces back along her jawline and disappears behind her ear into a compact unit integrated at her collar. The marsh air is too dense, too saline for unassisted human lungs.
She’s wearing simple wrappings. The sealant along her ribs glints faintly where fabric shifts. While she isn’t bound but one of the veterans stands at her side, massive hand resting lightly on the back of her shoulder. Not gripping. Not pushing. Merely placed there. Authority without force.
Her eyes lift. They find them instantly. Relief flashes across her expression before discipline shutters it away. She straightens, as if aware of every watching gaze. Ra’thek exhales once, slow and measured. His hands tighten within their restraints but don’t strain. Alive. Breathing. That is enough. For now.
They are led away from the landing platform along a raised network of interwoven root bridges and carved stone paths that sit just above the marsh water. The construction is deliberate, living wood grown into arches and reinforced with dark stone veined through the natural lattice.
Water moves sluggishly beneath them. Pale shapes drift in its depths. Yautja line the pathways. Not guards. Clan members. Some stand tall and broad-shouldered; armor etched with ceremonial markings. Others are leaner, younger, their gazes sharp and curious. A few elders stand apart. Low murmurs ripple outward as the procession advances.
Eyes track the brothers. Not with the immediate hostility reserved for bad bloods. With assessment. The branding marks along their flesh aren’t subtle. Even from a distance, the scorched lineage sigils stand out stark against the darkness of their dreads.
Vek’tal walks with his spine straight despite the restraints. He doesn’t lower his gaze, even as older warriors lock eyes with him in recognition, and something more complicated than contempt.
Kaelen’s steps are careful but steady. The terrain shifts subtly beneath the woven paths, flexing with the water’s movement. Once, her footing falters on a damp stone edge. The hunter at her side steadies her instantly, grip firm but controlled. She doesn’t look at him, keeping her gaze forward.
Ahead, the forest thins as the land rises slightly. The marsh gives way to firmer ground reinforced with broad stone slabs carved with clan sigils. Structures emerge between massive tree trunks, bone, stone, and living root fused into towering forms to adorn their exteriors. Elevated platforms spiral around ancient trees. Banners hang between trunks, marked with symbols that mirror those etched into the holo-table aboard the ship.
This isn’t a settlement built for necessity. It’s a stronghold shaped by generations. A seat of lineage. At the heart of it all stands a larger structure, broad and elevated, its entrance framed by tusk-like arches carved from pale bone. The air feels different here. Heavier. Charged.
More clan members gather along the perimeter as the procession approaches. No one cheers. No one jeers. They watch. Measuring. Weighing. Judging. Kaelen feels the weight of it even through her mask. The respirator hisses softly with each breath. Sweat beads at her temples beneath the humidity.
Ra’thek keeps his gaze forward, but when they draw close enough, he allows himself one final glance toward her. Their eyes meet again. No words. No gestures. But understanding passes between them all the same. Whatever judgment waits beyond those bone-framed doors, they’d all be in it together.
I just wanted to let you know that your writings are among the primarch stories I love on tumblr! 🤗
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Is there a particular primarch story of mine that you liked? I'd love to know what stuck with you.
Untamed Wind pt 14
Relationship: Jaghatai Khan x fem!reader
Word Count: 1342
Requested Tags for All Works: @beckyninja @runin64 @ilovewolvezz
Masterlist
pt 1 | pt 2 | pt 3 | pt 4 | pt 5 | pt 6 | pt 7 | pt 8 | pt 9 | pt 10 | pt 11 | pt 12 | pt 13 | pt 14
Night settles differently in the Chancellor’s wing. Shen Qiren stands alone before the open lattice window of his private study. The city below glows in layered tiers of lantern-light, its arteries of commerce and memory alive even at this hour. This world has endured invasion attempts, famine cycles, dynastic fracture. It has survived because it bends only when it must and never without counting the cost.
The Khan complicates that equation. He doesn’t posture like a conqueror. He does not demand tribute. He doesn’t press advantage when it is offered. That, more than force, unsettles Qiren, because men who don’t rush are rarely guessing. He turns from the window and moves toward the ancestral tablets lining the far wall, names carved into dark stone, each one a Chancellor who believed they were steering history rather than being carried by it.
“Ride with the Imperium,” Jaghatai had said.
Not kneel. Ride. It’s clever phrasing. It implies choice. Partnership. Shared momentum. But momentum favors the larger force. Unless the smaller one binds itself tightly enough to influence direction. Qiren pours himself tea, this time without ceremony. He doesn’t drink it immediately. There are three levers available to him.
Diplomacy.
Delay.
Marriage.
The first buys clarity. The second buys time. The third buys permanence. He closes his eyes briefly. Marriage alliances are not new to this world. Dynasties were stabilized by them. Wars prevented. Sometimes started. His own marriage had been arranged for balance, not affection. It had grown into respect. Into something quieter. That had been enough.
But his daughter isn’t a bargaining chip. She is sharper than most ministers. Harder to predict than her brothers. Unlike many members of powerful houses, she doesn’t crave visibility. Which makes her dangerous in another way. The court already whispers. If Qiren proposes nothing, he risks losing control of the narrative. If he proposes too much, he risks losing her. He exhales slowly.
Would the Khan accept such an arrangement? Not as conquest. Not as leverage. As… alignment? He replays their exchange.
I do not use people as chains. Only as riders, if they choose the saddle.
That wasn’t the language of a man seeking acquisition. It was the language of someone who would refuse coercion. Good. That means if such an offer were ever made, it would have to be structured as choice. Mutual. Publicly framed as alliance, not appeasement. Yet Qiren’s fingers tighten slightly around the porcelain cup.
He knows his daughter. She walks paths she intends to finish. If she has begun considering the Khan not merely as variable but as possibility… then the danger is no longer political alone. It becomes personal. Personal miscalculation can undo what policy never could. A soft knock breaks his thoughts. Yìchén enters at his summons, composed as ever. He bows.
“You wished to see me, Father?”
“Yes.” Qiren studies him. “If the Imperium presses for formal alliance, what would the court expect as proof of good faith?”
Yìchén doesn’t hesitate. “Shared governance rights. Military coordination. Or marriage.”
The word lands in the room like a measured weight.
“And if such a proposal were raised?” Qiren asks.
Yìchén’s gaze sharpens, just slightly. “It would quiet opposition immediately. It would also bind us to the Imperium’s internal conflicts. And to the Khan himself.”
“Do you believe he would exploit it?”
“No,” Yìchén says after a beat. “I believe he would honor it.”
“And that troubles you?”
“It makes him more dangerous,” Yìchén replies calmly.
Silence stretches. Qiren turns back toward the city lights.
“I will not offer my daughter to secure fear,” he says quietly. “But I will consider offering alliance to secure balance.”
Yìchén inclines his head. “Then the choice may not be yours alone.”
“No,” Qiren agrees. “It may not.”
When his son leaves, the Chancellor remains standing at the window long after the tea has gone cold. He doesn’t yet decide but for the first time, he allows the possibility to exist, not as transaction, not as surrender, but as strategy. Somewhere beneath that, quieter than he will admit even to himself as hope that if his daughter must stand beside a storm, it will be one that doesn’t break her.
Shen Qiren doesn’t summon her to the council chamber, instead he asks for her in the private library. It is a smaller room than most expect the Chancellor to use, lined with old texts bound in worn leather and silk, the air carrying the scent of ink and age. No servants remain once she enters. No attendants linger. Just father and daughter.
She bows, not ceremonially, but out of habit.
“You wished to see me.”
“I did.”
He gestures for her to sit across from him at the low table. There is no tea prepared this time. That, too, is deliberate. For a moment, he studies her, as the child who once dismantled a ceremonial abacus to ‘improve its efficiency’ at eight years old.
“You have met with the Khan more than once,” he says.
“It was not hidden,” she replies evenly.
“No.”
“The court has begun calculating,” he continues. “They don’t know what he intends or on what you intend. That makes them uneasy.”
“That isn’t new,” she says.
A flicker of something almost like amusement touches his expression. “No. It isn’t.”
He folds his hands.
“If this world chooses alliance with the Imperium, it will require more than signed accords. More than mutual defense.”
She doesn’t move.
“It will require permanence,” he finishes.
“Marriage,” she says quietly.
He doesn’t look away. “It is one of the levers available.”
She considers that, gaze drifting briefly to the high lattice window where late light filters through carved stone.
“You would offer it?” she asks.
“I would consider it,” he corrects. “Not as appeasement. As alignment.”
“And me,” she says.
“Yes.”
There is no softness in the word. Only honesty.
“When you married,” she asks, “did you feel aligned?”
He exhales slowly.
“I felt responsible,” he says. “Alignment came later.”
She nods once. That tracks.
“And the Khan?” she asks.
“He won’t accept coercion,” Qiren says. “Nor would he pretend affection where there is none. That much I believe.”
“Then you don’t see him as a threat.”
“I see him as momentum,” her father replies. “The question is whether we attach ourselves in a way that lets us steer or remain independent and risk being overtaken later.”
She absorbs that without flinching.
“And what do you want?” he asks then, not as Chancellor but as a father.
That is the harder question. Looking down at her hands, resting loosely in her lap. Not clenched. Not trembling. Just still.
“He isn’t careless,” she says after a moment. “He listens before he moves. That alone sets him apart.”
“That isn’t an answer.”
“It is the only honest one,” she echoes softly, and for a heartbeat something almost mirrors the conversation Qiren had earlier.
Her gaze lifts to meet his.
“If I were asked,” she says carefully, “I wouldn’t refuse.”
“And would you accept out of sacrifice?” he presses.
A faint curve touches her mouth, not warm, not quite.
“I would accept only if it remained strategic for both of us.”
“You wouldn’t let yourself become symbol,” he says.
“No,” she agrees. “And neither would he.”
That certainty settles something in Qiren he hadn’t named.
“You understand,” he says quietly, “that such a path would bind you to a war beyond this world. To loyalties that may fracture. To a man who walks toward storms as instinct.”
“I know,” she replies.
“And still?”
Her eyes don’t waver as she says, “Still.”
“I will not promise it,” he says at last. “Nor will I forbid it.”
She inclines her head, “That is all I ask.”
As she rises to leave, he adds, almost offhand, “The court will assume this was your design.”
She pauses at the doorway.
“They already do.”
When she is gone, Shen Qiren remains seated in the quiet library, staring at the empty space across from him. He had feared hesitation or infatuation. Instead, he found calculation.
Veil of Sand pt 17
Relationship: Sanguinius x blind!afab!reader
Warnings: minor allusions to a battle
Word Count: 2204
Requested Tags for All Works: @beckyninja @runin64 @ilovewolvezz
Masterlist
pt 1 | pt 2 | pt 3 | pt 4 | pt 5 | pt 6 | pt 7 | pt 8 | pt 9 | pt 10 | pt 11 | pt 12 | pt 13 | pt 14 | pt 15 | pt 16 | pt 17
They return to the chamber the next day. The desert above is already heating, light hammering down on stone The green hush rises to meet them again, cool and damp, the air carrying the faint mineral sweetness of watered soil. She moves immediately to the terraces, kneeling with practiced ease, fingers slipping into the loam to check moisture, to thin a vine here, straighten a trellis there. The rhythm of her work settles the space, quiet and deliberate.
He stands at the center, looking up. Yesterday, the air had taken him without protest. Today, it feels different. Thicker. Less forgiving. Or perhaps it is only him. He flexes his wings slowly, carefully. Feathers whisper against one another, the sound climbing the shaft and coming back to him in soft echoes. Above, filtered light drifts across stone and leaf, steady and pale. There is no threat here. No wind shear. No sudden storm. His body knows this. That knowledge does not quiet the tension coiled under his ribs.
She hears the change in his breathing before he moves. “Easy,” she says, without looking up. “You’re holding yourself too tight.”
“I know,” he answers, though he isn’t sure he does.
He crouches and pushes. For a heartbeat, the lift comes, then falters. One wing catches wrong, the angle imperfect. The air slips away instead of rising to meet him. He clips a terrace edge with his boot and drops harder than he intends, landing in a crouch that jars up through his knees and spine. Stone knocks against stone. Leaves tremble. Somewhere above, a trellis rattles faintly. He stays where he is, breath sharp, wings half-spread and trembling.
She stills. Not frozen, listening. The scrape of his boots. The way the air shifts unevenly around him. She rises and turns in his direction. “You didn’t fall far,” she says, steady. “Tell me where it caught.”
“My left wing,” he admits, jaw tight. “I overcorrected.”
Her mouth tilts, just a little. “You tried to command it instead of letting it answer you.”
Frustration flares hot and sudden. “It answered me yesterday.”
“And today it didn’t,” she replies calmly, kneeling again, hands returning to the soil. “Bodies remember unevenly. Especially after pain.”
He exhales, sharp, then slower. His wings fold in with care, feathers brushing stone. For a moment he considers not trying again. The thought is heavier than the misstep itself.
She breaks the silence by pouring water into a narrow channel, the liquid gliding along carved grooves with a soft, persistent sound. “I lose plants,” she says lightly. “Even down here. Sometimes they grow crooked. Sometimes they refuse entirely. I don’t punish the soil for it.”
He huffs a quiet, humorless sound. “I am not soil.”
“No,” she agrees. “But you are growing.”
The words settle. He straightens, rolling his shoulders once, easing tension rather than driving against it. He moves a little higher up the shaft before trying again, choosing a shorter rise. The push is gentler this time, less demand, more question. The air lifts him just enough to clear the stone. He drifts, awkward but controlled, then sets down on a terrace without impact. Better. Not clean. But better.
Below, she resumes humming, low, tuneless, something meant more for the plants than for him. The sound threads up the shaft, breaking against stone and leaf, returning softened and strange. He circles slowly, the shaft answering him in echoes of wingbeat and breath. Each pass steadies him a fraction more.
As he climbs, his gaze keeps drifting outward, beyond the terraces, beyond the careful geometry of the space. He begins to see it differently, not just as a refuge for himself, but as volume. Shelter. A place where others could gather out of the killing sun. Where wounded could rest. Where children—he stops the thought there, abruptly.
The idea presses anyway. Wings folded. Too many bodies. Voices echoing where now there is only hush. Need layered on need. He feels the old instinct stir: to claim, to protect, to build something meant to endure beyond a single life. He says nothing.
When he lands again, breath even, wings steady at his sides, she looks up toward the sound. “You’re thinking loudly,” she observes.
He hesitates, then answers carefully. “This place… it could hold more than one pair of wings.”
Her hands pause in the soil. Not long. Just long enough. “It could,” she says. “But it doesn’t have to.”
Relief loosens something in his chest. “I wasn’t—”
“I know,” she interrupts gently. “You’re allowed to imagine. Just don’t turn imagination into burden too quickly.” She brushes dirt from her palms and stands. “Today is for you learning where the air refuses you.”
He nods, then catches himself, shifts instead. “Thank you.”
“For the space?” she asks.
“For not asking me to be more than I am yet.”
She smiles, soft and unreadable. “When the time comes,” she says, “you won’t need asking.”
He lifts once more, slow and deliberate, wings answering him with growing confidence. Below, she tends her plants, listening to the pattern of his movement change, to the echoes settle into something smoother. The chamber holds them both, the living green, the careful silence, the fragile, necessary distance between what is possible and what must wait.
By the time his wings finally tire, the light above has shifted, mellowed, the filtered glow slipping sideways along the shaft. He settles onto one of the higher terraces and remains there, breathing slow and deep, letting the ache in his shoulders ease into something honest rather than sharp. Below, she finishes tying back a vine and straightens, listening to the change in the air that tells her he is done for now.
“Enough for today,” she says, not as an order, but as recognition.
He descends carefully, step by measured step, until the stone floor meets his boots again. His wings fold without complaint this time. That alone feels like progress.
She gestures toward a side alcove carved into the wall of the shaft, half-hidden behind trellises and hanging growth. “Stay, if you want,” she says. “I need to work. The heat will make some of the compounds easier to draw.”
He follows the sound of her voice, curiosity overtaking fatigue. The alcove opens into a shallow workspace: a stone bench, shelves cut directly into the rock, bundles of dried leaves and mineral nodules set out in careful order. She sets a small burner alight and places a ceramic vessel over it, adding crushed plant matter with methodical precision. As she works, the air takes on a sharper scent, bitter, resinous, layered over the damp green of the shaft.
“What is it for?” he asks.
“Inflammation,” she answers. “And shock.” A pause. “And things that pretend they’re healed when they aren’t.”
He considers that quietly. She grinds, pours, listens. He watches her hands, the certainty in them, the way each motion knows its purpose even when the outcome isn’t guaranteed. When she is satisfied, she sets the vessel aside to cool and reaches for a strip of cloth.
“Don’t hover,” she adds mildly. “You’ll wear a groove in the stone.”
A corner of his mouth lifts. He steps back, and his gaze drifts, unmoored, to the walls of the shaft. The stone here is pale, worn smooth by time and careful carving. Unclaimed. His fingers itch with a sensation he doesn’t yet have words for. The memories that have been stirring in him, the sky burning, shadows crossing light, wings beating against impossible forces, press forward again, not as pain, but as shape. Line. Motion.
“I could mark this place,” he says slowly. Not asking. Testing the idea aloud.
Her head tilts toward him. “With what?”
“Stone,” he replies. “Char. Whatever the walls will take.” He hesitates. “Not decoration.”
She considers for a moment, then nods once. “As long as you don’t frighten the plants.”
He almost laughs at that. She returns to her work, the soft sounds of preparation resuming, while he gathers what he needs: a small pick from a shelf, its edge already sharp; a piece of charcoal salvaged from the clinic’s stove. He chooses a section of wall where the light falls clean and steady.
His hand moves as memory moves, unevenly, insistently. Lines arc and break, wings suggested rather than rendered, vast shapes pressing down from above. He carves the curve of a sky that feels too heavy, etches the suggestion of fire without flame. Shadows emerge where no creature should cast them. Not symbols he understands, not yet. Just impressions. Weight. Motion. A sense of being pursued by something that doesn’t need to touch to wound.
The sound of stone scoring stone echoes faintly, rhythmic, almost meditative. From her alcove, she listens. The cadence of his movements changes as the work takes hold of him, breath syncing with each line. When the medicine is finished and set aside, she steps closer, careful not to disturb his movements.
“These are your dreams?” she asks quietly.
“Yes,” he answers. “And no.”
She accepts that without argument. When he steps back at last, dust on his hands, the wall bears the first record of something not yet lived but already remembered. The shaft feels altered, not defiled, not claimed, but acknowledged. As if the stone itself has agreed to hold what he cannot.
She reaches out then, presses a cloth into his palm. “For your hands.”
Their fingers brush. Brief. Grounding.
“Rest,” she adds. “Tomorrow, you can tell me which of those lines hurt to make.”
He looks once more at the wall, then at the green rising around it, life growing stubbornly beside omen. “Tomorrow,” he agrees.
Above them, the filtered light continues its slow, patient drift, and the chamber holds, medicine cooling, plants drinking, visions etched into stone, everything kept, for now, within walls strong enough to listen. After the medicine is sealed and set away, she leads him back up the spiral and into the clinic, where the light is steadier and the work more ordinary. She lays out what little they have on the counter: ground grain, a jar of rendered fat, a pinch of dried root for sweetness, a small pouch of salt.
“Today,” she says, “you learn something useful.”
He inclines his head, attentive in a way that is almost solemn. “I am listening.”
She sets a bowl between them. “This isn’t the hard traveler’s cake the caravans carry. Too dense. Breaks teeth if you rush it.” A faint curl of humor touches her mouth. “This is closer to bread. Still keeps. Still travels. But it remembers being soft.”
She shows him how to measure, how the grain should slide between the fingers, how much fat until it stops clinging to the bowl. She has him add water slowly, teaching him to feel when the dough begins to answer back.
“Too wet,” she says once, tapping his wrist lightly. “It should resist you a little. Like the desert does.”
He adjusts. The dough firms beneath his palms. His hands are large, careful despite their strength, movements precise in a way that suggests he has always known how not to break what he holds. They work in companionable silence for a while, the clinic warm with the smell of grain and heat. She shows him how to knead without wasting motion, how to fold air in without tearing the structure. When the dough is ready, she portions it, flattening each round slightly.
“These will bake faster,” she explains.
He watches as she slides the first into the small oven, then the rest. “You expect travel,” he says.
“Yes.” She wipes her hands on a cloth. “In two days, maybe three. Past the ridge to the west, a band of traders should pass through. They keep to the old path when the storms thin. They always do.”
He considers that, gaze drifting briefly toward the door, toward the unseen line of the horizon. “Will you meet them?”
“I might,” she answers. “Or I might let them pass. It depends on what they carry. And what they need.” A pause. “And what we do.”
The plural settles between them, quiet and deliberate. The bread comes out golden and steaming, the crust firm but not hard. She breaks one open and hands him half. The inside is dense but yielding, warm enough to fog the air between them.
He tastes it. Slower than hunger demands. His eyes lift in faint surprise. “It’s good.”
She snorts softly. “It’s bread.”
“It remembers the hands that made it,” he says, and means more than the words.
She accepts the compliment without comment. “If the traders come, you’ll want something to offer that isn’t metal or blood. Food opens doors.” She hesitates, then adds, “And it gives you reason to stay your hand if things turn poorly.”
He nods once. “I will make more tomorrow.”
“Good,” she says. “Then if we walk to the ridge, you won’t go empty-handed.”
They eat the rest in silence, the kind that comes easily now. Outside, the wind moves over stone and sand, indifferent as ever. Inside, grain and water and heat have become something that can be carried forward, shared, broken, and given without cost.
A Love Born in Blood pt.31
Relationship: Angron x oc/afab!reader
Warnings: minor description of sickness, allusions to war.
Word Count: 1304
Requested Tags for All Works: @beckyninja @runin64 @ilovewolvezz
Masterlist
Angron's Masterlist | pt 22 | pt 23 | pt 24 | pt 25 | pt 26 | pt 27 | pt 28 | pt 29 | pt 30 | pt 31
Not once has the child cried. That is the first thing Guilliman noted. The newborn lays within a sterile cradle with soft lumen-light upon him, swaddled not in silk or heraldic cloth, but in a torn length of red fabric, threadbare and smoke stained. The shawl had been cleaned, carefully, but it bares the unmistakable signs of hurried survival rather than ritual care. Guilliman stands with his hands clasped behind his back, expression unreadable. Around him, Ultramar’s finest genetors move with deliberate caution, voices hushed, instruments precise.
“Report,” Guilliman says at last.
“He is failing to stabilize, my lord,” one of the genetors replies, eyes fixed on the scrolling data-slate. “Body temperature fluctuates beyond human neonatal norms. Cellular regeneration is… inconsistent. Aggressively adaptive in some systems, collapsing in others.”
Guilliman steps closer to the cradle. The boy is small. Too small. Weeks old at most. Dark hair clings damply to his brow. His skin is too warm beneath the field, fevered without infection.
“Not disease,” Guilliman says.
“No,” the genetor agrees, swallowing. “Mismatch.”
Guilliman’s gaze flicks to the shawl. “Begin analysis of the cloth.”
Another adept inclines their head. “Already underway. Maternal blood present. Traces of various soils.”
“She ran,” Guilliman says quietly. Not a question.
“Yes, lord.”
He looks back to the child. A mortal woman had carried this. Loved him enough to protect him and likely had failed to outrun what hunted her.
“Genetic screening,” Guilliman orders. “Full spectrum. Restricted channel. No external logging.”
There is a hesitation this time, brief, but telling.
“My lord,” the lead genetor says carefully, “the markers we are seeing… they are not baseline human.”
Guilliman doesn’t react. “Proceed.”
Data cascaded across the holo-display, strands of genetic code weaving into familiar yet impossible patterns. Guilliman recognized the architecture instantly. He had studied it for centuries, his own, his brothers’. The Emperor’s work, precise and singular. And there it was. Broken. Incomplete. But unmistakable.
The genetor’s voice drops to a whisper. “This is… partial primarch genomic alignment.”
The chamber seeming to contract around them.
“Cross-reference,” Guilliman says.
“With which archive, my lord?”
Guilliman doesn’t answer at once. His jaw tightens, just slightly.
“All of them,” he says. “One at a time.”
The matches flicker and fall away. One after another. Close, but not right. Similarities without resonance. Until the data spiked. Violently. The readouts surge, stress-response genes, trauma-adaptive expression, metabolic overdrive pathways dormant but present, as if waiting for something that hadn’t yet come. The generator goes pale.
Guilliman stares at the display. Angron. Not the Nails, those are absent, blessedly so, but the underlying response framework remains. A genome built for endurance through pain, for survival under unrelenting strain. This is a primarch’s son. Born without the Emperor’s hand to guide the process. No wonder the child is dying.
“He cannot sustain this trajectory,” the genetor says, voice tight. “His body is trying to become something it does not yet know how to be.”
Guilliman closes his eyes for a single breath. When he opens them, he begins to issue commands.
“Stabilization protocols,” he orders. “Augment metabolic regulation. Do not force growth. Support only. We keep him alive first.”
“Yes, lord.”
“And this information,” Guilliman continues, voice ironed flat, “does not leave this chamber. No record beyond my seal. No mention of lineage. Not to the Legion. Not to Terra.”
“And Lord Angron?” a genetor asks, quietly, before he can stop himself.
Guilliman’s gaze doesn’t waver from the child.
“No,” he says.
Not yet.
The infant shifts then, a faint sound escaping him, not a cry, but something closer to a labored breath. Guilliman watches the monitors steady, just slightly, as the intervention begins to take effect. Resting one massive hand against the cradle’s edge, careful not to disturb the field.
“You were not meant to exist,” he whispers softly, not unkindly. “And yet here you are.”
A liability. A secret. A life. Forcing himself to turn away, Guilliman leaves half of his guard here with the child while he returns to his office. Moving to the broad desk set beneath the high viewport, where Macragge’s sky lay clear and cold beyond armored glass. Data-slates rest in precise stacks, every surface immaculate. He doesn’t sit at once. Instead, choosing to remain standing, hands braced against the edge of the desk, head bowed slightly as if the weight of thought has become physical.
My nephew.
The word sat strangely in his mind. Not unpleasant. Just… unfamiliar. He has brothers. Too many, perhaps. But family, true family, had never extended downward. The Emperor hadn’t intended that. Primarchs were endpoints, not roots for their own blood to bloom from. And yet.
Guilliman exhales slowly and activates a single slate. The child’s file appearing, stripped of identifiers, reduced to vital signs, metabolic curves, genetic instability slowly trending toward equilibrium. Still fragile. Still sick. But no longer slipping away.
Angron’s son. Guilliman closes his eyes. He can’t picture Angron as he is now, blood-soaked, howling, lost to the Nails and the war. He remembers instead the brother before everything curdled: scarred, furious, yes, but lucid in his hatred of chains. A man who had understood, more than any of them, what it meant to have choice stolen away.
He would burn the galaxy to reclaim this child, Guilliman thinks.
The problem is that Angron won’t stop at the guilty. Guilliman straightens and moves around the desk, finally sitting. The chair accepting his weight with a muted hiss. He steeples his fingers, eyes fixed on nothing. Options unfurl before him, neat as any tactical array.
Reveal the child to Angron: Unacceptable. Angron would come, and Ultramar would bleed for it, willingly or not.
Send the child to Terra: Worse. The Emperor would see potential before person. Malcador would see necessity. The boy would become an object of study, contingency, and leverage.
Hide him: Dangerous. Secrets had a way of becoming weapons in the wrong hands.
Raise him.
The thought slipping in unbidden. Guilliman stills. Raise him how? As what? A ward? A citizen of Ultramar? A living contradiction to everything the Imperium pretended about lineage and destiny? Looking again at the slate. At the slow, stubborn persistence of the child’s heartbeat.
“He didn’t ask for this,” Guilliman murmurs to the empty room.
Nor had Angron, once.
Guilliman’s jaw tightens. This, this, is the cruel symmetry of it. A son born into the shadow of a father already half-lost. A child who will inherit strength without context, resilience without explanation, pain written into his cells before he ever learned language. Unless Guilliman intervenes.
Activating another slate, this one blank. A plan begins to take shape, not a grand strategy, but a series of quiet decisions. Physicians sworn to silence under Ultramar’s oldest laws. A childhood shaped by discipline, yes, but also by mercy. Education without indoctrination. Strength without spectacle. No Legion heraldry. No whispers of bloodlines. And when the time came, if the time came, the truth would be given carefully, honestly, without myth. Leaning back, a new kind of heaviness settling into his shoulders.
“I will not let you become a weapon,” he whispers softly, as if the child might somehow hear him through stone and distance. “Not for me. Not for your father. Not for anyone.”
Outside the viewport, the sky over Macragge remains calm. Orderly. Unaware. Guilliman knows better. War is coming. Truths will be burned away and rewritten in blood. But for now, just for now, he can choose something else. Reaching out and sealing the file under his personal sigil. For the first time since the news had reached him, Guilliman allows himself a thought that isn’t tactical, not procedural, but human:
If Angron ever comes for you…
Guilliman’s expression hardens, resolve crystallizing.
…he will have to go through me.
And that, he decides, is a line worth drawing
Hearts of Ruin pt 17
Relationship: Dante x afab!reader
Word Count: 1442
Warnings: Minor allusion to death, war, and a dad
Requested Tags for All Works: @beckyninja @runin64 @ilovewolvezz
Requested Tags: @vithralith @trackerkitsune
Masterlist
pt 1 | pt 2 | pt 3 | pt 4 | pt 5 | pt 6 | pt 7 | pt 8 | pt 9 | pt 10 | pt 11 | pt 12 | pt 13 | pt 14 | pt 15 | pt 16 | pt 17
The engines find a new rhythm, one that thrums through the deckplates and into the bones. Somewhere beyond their quarters, crew voices rise and fall, clipped and tense, but the worst of the turbulence has passed. Inside, the air feels closer. Dante is seated on the bunk, elbows resting on his knees. She stands near the small fold-down shelf, checking the seals on her satchel by habit more than need.
“You learned to do that,” he says at last.
She glances over her shoulder. “To sing?”
“To soothe,” he clarifies. “Not everyone who can touch the mind knows how to do it without leaving scars.”
A faint smile ghosts her mouth. “Experience teaches restraint. So does regret.”
That earns her his full attention.
“Regret,” he repeats. “For what?”
She considers him for a long moment, as though deciding how much truth he can carry. Then she turns, leaning back against the bulkhead.
“For believing I could save everyone,” she says simply.
The answer lands heavier than a litany of horrors ever could.
Dante exhales through his nose, slow and measured. “That belief never truly leaves us.”
“No,” she agrees. “But it does… change shape.”
He nods. After a beat, he says, “I was made for war. Even my moments of mercy were measured against strategy. Lives weighed. Sacrifices calculated.” His voice lowers. “I have commanded men into death knowing it was the correct choice.”
“And you would do it again,” she says, not accusing.
“Yes.”
“Then the regret isn’t the choice,” she says gently. “It’s that you remember them.”
That stops him. He looks at her then, at the minor lines of age that show, at the steadiness in her posture that speaks of someone who has endured far more than one lifetime should allow.
“You’ve walked battlefields,” he says. “Not as a soldier.”
“As a healer,” she replies. “And as a mother.”
The second word is quieter than the first. He doesn’t ask how she lost him. Some truths don’t need excavation.
Instead, he says, “You carry grief the way a fortress carries scars. Still standing.”
A corner of her mouth lifts. “Coming from you, that feels deliberate.”
“It is.”
Another silence, warmer now. The ship shifts again, a mild tremor, and without thinking she steadies herself with one hand against the bunk. Dante’s hand comes up instinctively, not to grab, but to brace, his palm hovering just short of her wrist. They pause. She could pull away, yet she doesn’t. Neither does he.
“I was young when I first died,” she says quietly, eyes unfocused as she recalled it. “The first time, I mean. I learned then that love doesn’t vanish with the body. It just… waits.”
He swallows. “And you still allow yourself to feel it?”
A dangerous question. An honest one.
“Yes,” she says. “Even when it hurts.”
After a long moment, he answers in kind. “I thought love was something I had outgrown. Or sacrificed. But it seems…” He searches for the word. “…persistent.”
She meets his gaze.
“Then perhaps,” she says softly, “it hasn’t abandoned either of us.”
Dante studies her with that same quiet intensity he brings to battlefields, as if the truth might reveal itself by patience alone.
“You spoke of a son,” he says at last. No preamble. No softening. Just the truth, offered carefully. “And of love that waited. I would wish to understand… what became of his father.”
Her fingers still on the satchel strap. Just for a heartbeat.
“He was… larger than the life we were given,” she says slowly. “A man shaped by purpose long before I met him. Duty claimed him the way fire claims air.”
Dante nods once. That much, he understands too well.
“He died in war?” he asks.
“No,” she says. Then, after a pause, “He survived it.”
That draws Dante’s brow down slightly. “And still he left.”
“Yes.”
The word is gentle. Unadorned. It carries no accusation.
“He believed the future required his absence,” she continues. “That the cost of staying would be greater than the cost of leaving. That it would be a necessary sacrifice.” Her gaze lifts to meet his. “He was wrong.”
Dante absorbs that in silence. He thinks of commanders who chose distance over mercy. Of fathers who became legends instead of men.
“And you?” he asks quietly. “Did you forgive him?”
She considers the question as the ship’s engines thrum around them.
“I forgave him,” she says. “But forgiveness doesn’t mend what was never meant to be broken.”
Something settles behind Dante’s eyes then, recognition, sharp and aching.
“I know that kind of wound,” he murmurs.
The moment stretches until CHIME. A sharp, metallic tone cuts through the quarters, followed by the flat voice of the ship’s system.
“Crew and passengers. Meal cycle commencing. Mess access open.”
The spell seemingly breaks between them.
She exhales softly, more amused than startled. “The Ashwing is nothing if not punctual.”
Dante straightens, rising from the bunk with a smoothness that speaks of habit, not ease. “We should go,” he says, then hesitates. “If you wish.”
“I do,” she replies, already reaching for her cloak.
As they move toward the door, she adds quietly, not looking at him, “Thank you. For asking. And for stopping when you did.”
He inclines his head. “Some truths deserve time.”
The door slides open. Corridor noise spills in. Crew voices. The scent of recycled heat and ration steam. They step out together, not touching, but closer than before. Whatever might have been said next is left to wait, patient as love itself, until the ship, and the world, allow them the space to speak it.
The mess is louder than it was the cycle before. Bowls scrape against metal tables, ration packs hiss open, and the low thrum of voices competes with the ever-present vibration of the Ashwing’s engines. The air smells of broth thickened with protein paste and corpse starch, along with something burnt enough to pass for seasoning. It isn’t pleasant, but it is warm, and for the crew that counts as luxury.
She sits with her back to a bulkhead, bowl cradled in one hand, spoon moving in unhurried circles. Dante takes the bench beside her, not looming, but impossible to miss. The crew give them space without being told. For a while, it is quiet. Then someone laughs at the far table. A sharp, easy sound.
“Oi,” a woman calls, grease-stained sleeves rolled to the elbow, eyes bright with the kind of curiosity that only comes when bellies are full. “Flame. You’re a wanderer, yeah?”
She doesn’t look up. “That’s what they tell me.”
“Means you’ve got songs,” another voice chimes in. A man with a scar pulled tight across one cheek leans back on his bench, grinning. “Every drifter does. Sing us one.”
A few heads turn. Someone thumps a cup in agreement. Dante stills beside her, watching the room with that same unreadable calm. He says nothing, but his presence shifts the balance, making it clear this isn’t a demand that can be pressed too hard. She sighs, slow and deliberate, and finally looks up.
“You sound like children asking for a toy,” she says mildly. “And I don’t hand those out just because someone gets bored.”
A ripple of laughter moves through the mess.
“C’mon,” the scarred man says. “Just one.”
She lifts a brow. “Most of the songs I know aren’t happy ones.”
That gives them pause.
“They’re for the dying,” she continues lightly, as if discussing the weather. “For long marches that don’t end. For mothers who never see their sons again. For worlds that burn and still ask to be remembered.”
The laughter falters, turning uncertain.
She dips her spoon back into her bowl. “Still want one?”
Someone coughs. Another looks suddenly very interested in their food.
The woman who started it raises both hands in surrender, chuckling. “Alright, alright. Didn’t mean to summon the void.”
“Wise choice,” she replies, dry but not unkind.
A beat passes. Then she adds, almost as an afterthought, “Besides. If I start, you won’t sleep properly for a cycle.”
That earns a few nervous laughs and the conversation shifts, drifting back toward safer ground, cargo routes, dice odds, who cheated whom last port.
Dante leans closer, voice pitched low enough that only she can hear. “You weren’t exaggerating.”
“No,” she says, eyes on her bowl. “I never do with the tales told through songs.”
His mouth curves faintly. Not quite a smile. “Perhaps one day,” he murmurs, “you’ll decide one of us is worth hearing them.”
She glances at him then, something warm and unreadable passing between them.
“Perhaps,” she says.
Prayers Spoken in Shadows pt 3
Relationship: Corvus Corax x Space Marine!reader
Warnings: reference to background character death, minor allusions to bullying
Word Count: 870
Requested Tags for All Works: @beckyninja @runin64 @ilovewolvezz
Masterlist
pt 1 | pt 2 | pt 3 | pt 4
The refectorium is already half-filled when he enters. Rows of long tables stretch beneath vaulted ceilings, banners of Ultramar hanging in perfect alignment along the walls. Servitors move between benches with efficient silence, dispensing nutrient portions measured to the gram. The air smells faintly of processed grain and recaff.
Pausing for half a second at the threshold before entering. That brief pause is enough, he feels it immediately, the slight shift in attention, the pause in conversation that ripples outward and then smooths itself over. Brothers glance up, register the change, and look away again as though nothing is amiss. His hair is cut close now. Regulation-close. Clean lines where uneven locks had once clung to his temples. It frames his face in a way that leaves nothing to hide behind.
Moving to his assigned place and sits. The ration tray is already there. He eats as he has been taught, methodically, in precise order, portions consumed evenly. The ritual is familiar, grounding. Still, he is aware of eyes on him. Across the table, one of his squad studies him openly.
“You’ve altered your appearance,” the brother says at last. Not accusation. Observation.
“Yes,” he simply replies.
A pause.
“It suits you,” the brother adds, after a moment. “More… Ultramarine.”
He inclines his head. “That was the intent.”
The conversation moves on. Kill ratios. Ammunition expenditure. Casualty projections for the next engagement. The words flow around him like water around stone. Yet something has changed. The serfs move more easily near him now. One pauses long enough to refill his cup without flinching. Another meets his eyes briefly before looking away, not in fear, but habit. It should feel like progress.
Instead, he thinks of the woman’s hand on his forearm. Of the child’s touch against ceramite. Of the veteran’s words in the Ablutionarium. You cannot cleanse yourself of who you were.
A brother to his left leans closer. “The Raven Guard operate differently,” he says, lowering his voice. “Did you see them today?”
“Yes,” he answers.
“They are… unsettling.”
He considers that. “Perhaps.”
The brother snorts softly. “Give me a proper battle line any day. Shadows make poor allies.”
Deciding not to argue with his brothers, he finishes his meal, sets his utensils in perfect alignment, and rises when the bell signals the end of the ration cycle. As he leaves, he catches his reflection in a polished section of wall, cropped hair, impassive expression, blue armor unmarked by blood or ash. He looks the part now.
The corridor beyond the refectorium is quiet, its lumen-strips dimmed to night-cycle levels. The deck plates hum faintly beneath his boots as he walks, hands folded behind his back, pace measured. He is halfway down the passage when the shadows move. Not abruptly. Not aggressively. One moment the corridor is empty; the next, a figure stands where the light does not quite reach.
Black armor. Matte, light-drinking. No heraldry save the pale sigil of the Raven picked out on one pauldron. The warrior’s helm is mag-locked at his belt, his face pale and angular, eyes reflecting just enough light to confirm he isn’t imagining him. He comes to a stop, both simply looking at the other.
“You altered your hair,” the Raven says quietly.
He inclines his head. “Yes.”
A flicker of amusement crosses the Raven’s expression. “Most Legions would consider that insignificant.”
“It was not done for appearance,” He replies.
“No,” the Raven agrees. “It rarely is.”
They stand in silence for a moment. The corridor’s hum seems louder for it.
“You were observed on the surface,” the Raven Guard continues. “Your actions were… noted.”
He meets his gaze. “By whom?”
The Raven’s eyes sharpen. “By those who value restraint and choice.”
Another pause.
“You saved a child,” the Raven says. “You did not save the woman.”
“I know.”
“You did not retreat.”
“No.”
“You did not hesitate once the decision was made.”
He says nothing. There is nothing to defend.
The Raven Guard steps closer, boots making no sound on the deck. “There are Legions who would call what you did a flaw,” he says. “There is one that calls it discernment.”
“Is that why you are here?” He asks.
The Raven tilts his head. “I am here to ask a question.”
He reaches into a pouch at his belt and produces a small, unmarked data-slate. He doesn’t offer it yet.
“If you were ordered to fight without recognition,” the Raven says, “to act without praise or record, would you still choose as you did today?”
He answers without pause. “Yes.”
The Raven Guard watches him for a long moment. Then he nods, once.
“That is sufficient.”
He sets the data-slate into his hand. Its surface is cool, unlit.
“Be at hangar seven at the sixth hour of the next cycle,” the Raven says. “Come alone.”
“Under whose authority?” He asks.
The Raven’s lips curve, just slightly.
“Under a shadow,” he replies.
Then he steps backward, not into darkness, but into absence. The corridor is empty again, the shadows unchanged. He stands alone, the data-slate heavy in his hand. For the first time since his rescue from Colchis, he feels something stir that isn’t faith, not obedience, not guilt. Anticipation.
The Color of Iron pt 4
Relationship: Perturabo x afab!reader
Word Count: 1955
Requested Tags for All Works: @beckyninja @runin64 @ilovewolvezz
Masterlist
pt 1 | pt 2 | pt 3 | pt 4 | pt 5
Evening returns the color to Eidon. By the time the Emperor’s Children fleet slips from the warp, the sky has been carefully repainted, violet clouds catching the last light of the sinking sun, gold reflected across the sea’s skin like molten metal. The city remembers how to perform. Lamps are relit along the terraces. Musicians tune instruments that had gone silent that morning. Silk banners are unfurled once more, their pigments catching the wind.
Fulgrim arrives as the world had prepared him for. His personal ship descends in a blaze of controlled brilliance, hull gleaming like polished ivory edged in gold. Escort craft peel away in graceful arcs, contrails drawn like calligraphy across the sky. Where Perturabo’s fleet had locked into orbit like a vice, Fulgrim’s dances.
She stands at the head of the welcoming terrace, posture composed, expression unreadable. Her councilors flank her, restored to their ceremonial roles, though every one of them casts wary glances toward the iron-grey silhouettes still hanging in the upper atmosphere. The Phoenician steps onto marble with a smile already in place.
“My apologies,” Fulgrim says warmly, spreading his hands as if the delay were a personal slight rather than an interstellar maneuver. “It seems I have arrived late to my own celebration.”
His eyes sweep the terrace, taking in the altered banners, the subdued colors, the presence of Iron Warriors lining the periphery like statues cut from siegeworks. Then he sees her.
“Sovereign of Eidon,” he says, bowing with effortless grace. “You honor me twice over, once with your welcome, and once with your patience.”
She inclines her head, precise and courteous. “The honor remains, Lord Fulgrim. Circumstances evolved.”
“Clearly,” Fulgrim replies lightly.
A heavier presence joins them.
Perturabo approaches without announcement, his armor dull where Fulgrim’s gleams, his shadow falling long across the marble. He doesn’t look at his brother at first. His gaze remains on her, measuring.
“Brother,” Fulgrim says, smile never wavering. “You could have sent word.”
“I did,” Perturabo replies flatly. “Through action.”
The air seeming to thin around the two brothers.
Fulgrim’s smile sharpens, becoming something more dangerous. “Intercepting my Compliance is a curious interpretation of protocol.”
“Your methods are inefficient,” Perturabo says. “This world required certainty, not indulgence.”
Fulgrim laughs softly. “You mistake restraint for indulgence. A common error.”
She steps forward before the words can escalate further.
“My lords,” she says calmly, voice carrying just enough authority to interrupt without offense, “Eidon welcomes both sons of the Emperor. We had not anticipated receiving two at once, but we will adapt.”
Fulgrim’s attention shifts to her again, appreciative. “A ruler after my own heart.”
Perturabo stiffens almost imperceptibly.
Fulgrim continues, “You have already been… educated in my brother’s approach, I see.”
“I have,” she replies evenly. “And in yours, by reputation.”
Fulgrim’s brow lifts. “Oh?”
“Yes,” she says. “Beauty that persuades. Perfection that invites loyalty. You would have asked us to join the Imperium willingly.”
“And would you have?” Fulgrim asks, genuinely curious.
She meets his gaze. “We still might.”
The silence that follows is surgical.
Perturabo’s voice cuts in, cold. “This world’s compliance is no longer theoretical.”
Fulgrim turns to him at last. The warmth drains from his expression.
“Then you should have finished it,” he says quietly. “Instead of leaving it… unresolved.”
Their gazes lock. Two philosophies of empire colliding without a single blow struck. She feels it then, the growing strain pulling the moment apart. If left unchecked, it will fracture into something violent.
“Eidon does not refuse the Imperium,” she says carefully, choosing each word like a step across thin ice. “But neither does it yield blindly. We are prepared to host discussions tonight, as was originally planned.”
Fulgrim’s smile returns, softer this time. “An evening of conversation, then. How civilized.”
Perturabo does not respond immediately. His eyes flick to her, warning, unreadable.
Then, at last, “Very well.”
The court exhales as one. As the procession reforms and the brothers move apart, one radiant, one iron, she remains between them, acutely aware of the danger of her position. She has invited Fulgrim into a city already mapped for war. She has kept Perturabo from finishing what he began. Tonight, beneath silk and stone and carefully curated light, she must ensure that neither brother decides to prove his way is better. Because if they do, Eidon won’t survive the lesson.
Fulgrim is walked through galleries where light spills deliberately across pigment-rich murals. Through arcades perfumed with ocean salts and rare oils. Artisans are presented not as laborers but as virtuosi, each introduction a soft bow toward his known tastes. He comments freely, praising a sculptor’s line, correcting a brush technique with a lover’s familiarity. The court relaxes around him, relieved. This is the Primarch they had rehearsed for.
When he is finally shown to his chambers, the doors part on a space that feels designed rather than assigned. Silk draperies in layered hues, violet fading to pearl. Mirrors angled to catch candlelight without harshness. A bathing pool already warmed to preference. And laid out upon a lacquered table, garments.
Not ceremonial robes. Not local costume. Imperial cut. Tailored to his proportions with unsettling accuracy. Fabric threaded with subtle metallic sheen, echoing Legion colors without declaring them. Even the fastenings are engraved with motifs drawn from Eidon’s architecture, curves that suggest strength without weight. Fulgrim smiles.
“Oh,” he murmurs, lifting a sleeve between two fingers. “They’ve been paying attention.”
Perturabo keeps his response to himself and make his way back to his own quarters. The Iron Warriors part for him in silence as he moves through the citadel’s inner corridors, past stone that grows plainer with each level descended. There set on the table in his room, laid out with the same deliberate care. There are two options.
The first is a set of clothing: severe, impeccably constructed, the cut unmistakably Imperial but stripped of overt ornaments. Reinforced seams. Weighted hems. The fabric chosen not for sheen but durability. Embroidered geometric design of the fabric reveals when the light hits it in a certain way. It would allow him to attend unarmored without sacrificing authority.
The second option is more telling. A velvet-lined case, opened with care. Within are modular elements designed to integrate seamlessly with his armor, polished gorget overlay. Cloak clasps magnetized to his plate without interfering with movement. A mantle weighted precisely to counterbalance the armor’s mass. Even the coloration, iron-grey deepened with trace mineral pigment, compliments his Legion without softening it.
Deciding on wearing the latter instead, he mustn’t seem soft like Fulgrim. Carefully placing these pieces on before heading to the dining hall as to get dinner out if the way before negotiations. The hall is dressed to impress without overwhelming, stone softened by fabric, light diffused through pigment-glass panels that shift hue with the hour. Music plays low, tuned to harmonics rather than melody, a background presence meant to ease rather than distract.
The dishes placed before both Primarchs are elaborate, crafted to honor Imperial presence rather than personal taste alone. Perturabo’s plate is no less intricate than Fulgrim’s, layered cuts of obdrina, a fish native to the local ocean, arranged in geometric balance, sauces reduced to mirror-sheen, pigments drawn from Eidon’s rare mineral dyes lending the dish a subtle palette of iron-red and deep blue. Steam rises in careful threads, fragrant but restrained.
For a long moment, Perturabo doesn’t touch it. He studies the plate as one might study a diagram. Not assessing flavor, assessing construction. The symmetry of the presentation. The tension between the central cut and its surrounding elements. The distribution of mass. He sees the intent immediately. The chef knows structure. Knows restraint. Knows when ornament becomes weakness.
Only once that judgment is complete does he move. His knife and fork are aligned first, precise, parallel to the edge of the table. He adjusts the plate a fraction of a degree, bringing it into exact alignment with his shoulders. Only then does he cut. The first incision is clean, exact, dividing the central portion into equal halves. He separates components methodically, not dismantling the dish, but clarifying it—sauce isolated, garnish repositioned, textures ordered by density.
He eats in sequence. Protein first. Then the structural elements meant to support it. Only then the accents. Each bite mirrored by the next, taken from opposing sides of the plate so that the reduction remains balanced. No sauce crosses the rim. No crumb strays. When he pauses, his utensils are placed back in alignment, never resting at an angle. Fulgrim notices, of course.
He watches with open curiosity, a smile tugging at his mouth as he swirls wine in his glass. “You always eat as if the plate might collapse if you don’t support it.”
Perturabo doesn’t look up. “Poor construction invites failure.”
“And yet,” Fulgrim gestures lightly at the remaining food, “you appreciate the artistry.”
A fraction of a pause. Then Perturabo answers, quiet but honest. “I would not correct it in this instance.”
Across the table, she watches this exchange without comment. This, too, had been anticipated. The dish had been designed to withstand his scrutiny. Nothing ornamental without function. Nothing indulgent without purpose. The chef had been instructed accordingly.
When Perturabo finishes, the plate is pristine. He sits back then, posture unchanged, and for the first time lifts his gaze. Their eyes meet. Something passes between them, not affection, not defiance, but recognition of a familiar discipline. Of a mind that seeks order even in moments meant for pleasure.
Fulgrim raises his glass again, amused. “I think,” he says lightly, “this may be the first table that’s ever truly hosted both of us.”
The last plates are cleared without comment. Servitors move with rehearsed grace, lifting porcelain and crystal as if removing the final traces of informality from the room. The faint scent of reduction and sea-salt lingers, but the warmth of the meal does not. What remains is space. Distance. Readiness. A chime sounds, soft, almost apologetic.
“The council is assembled,” an aide announces from the threshold.
Fulgrim rises first, smoothing the fall of his cloak with habitual elegance. The transition from guest to Primarch of the Emperor’s Children is effortless, like a mask settling into place.
He offers her a brilliant, courteous smile. “Shall we?”
She inclines her head. “They await us.”
Perturabo stands last. The motion is slower, heavier, as though gravity itself acknowledges him. Whatever had been permitted at the table is sealed away behind iron discipline. They walk together through the inner corridors, the space widening as they approach the Hall of Accord. The architecture changes subtly, ornament giving way to structure, arches thickening, columns doubling. This is where Eidon meets the Imperium not as host, but as subject.
The doors part. The chamber beyond is vast and deliberate, tiered seating carved from pale stone, its acoustics tuned for declaration rather than discussion. Planetary advisors stand in ordered rows. Data-lecterns glow with scrolling sigils. Imperial remembrancers and iterators wait, quills poised. Conversation dies the moment the Primarchs enter. Fulgrim moves to the center with practiced ease, acknowledging the assembly with a slight bow, all warmth and confidence.
“Eidon has been most gracious,” he begins, voice carrying without effort. “Let us speak of unity.”
Perturabo takes his place to the side, just behind and to the right. Not subordinate, structural. A load-bearing presence. He says nothing. His silence presses against the chamber like unseen reinforcement, making every word heavier. She ascends the dais opposite them, her expression composed, sovereign once more. Whatever had passed in candlelit halls and hololithic chambers is locked away now, inaccessible to all but memory.
“For generations,” she says, “Eidon has stood independent by design, not defiance. Today, we hear the Imperium’s terms.”
Feast of Dust pt 5
Relationship: Mortarion x serf!afab!reader
Warnings: minor description of cooking, Mortarion being unsure how to talk to people, allusions to warfare
Word Count: 2351
Requested Tags for All Works: @beckyninja @runin64 @ilovewolvezz
Requested Tags: @bunny-fair @celestia0473 @milktea-se
Masterlist
pt 1 | pt 2 | pt 3 | pt 4 | pt 5 | pt 6
Dawn creeps into the kitchens like a reluctant witness. The fog thins, pulled apart by the heat of cookfires and the grind of bodies returning from the line. She arrives before the others, as she often does, sleeves rolled, hair tied back with a strip torn from an old apron. The night still clings to her bones. There upon her station, precisely where her hands usually reach first, rests the tin. Clean.
Not merely scraped but washed. Dried. The faint sheen of oil gone, the edges wiped free of soot and mud. Even the hinge, which always sticks, moves smoothly now. It sits square on the table, aligned with the grain of the wood, not tossed or abandoned or hidden. Placed. Her breath catches so sharply it hurts.
For a moment she cannot move. The trench around her feels suddenly too open, as if the earth itself has drawn back to watch her reaction. She glances once, quick and terrified, toward the dugout mouth. There is nothing there but fog and the dim outline of sandbags. No note. No mark. No message. Only the absence of the food, and the certainty that it wasn’t discarded.
Her fingers hover over the tin, then withdraw. She presses her hands flat to the table instead, grounding herself in the rough grain, the familiar splinters. Someone else arrives behind her. Then another. Voices begin to murmur. The Master of the kitchens doesn’t shout at her for loitering. He doesn’t even look at her. He looks at the tin once, just once, and then orders everyone else to move faster.
By midmorning, the fog has burned away enough to reveal the scarred slopes beyond the trenches. The Death Guard come in ones and twos, armor fouled, movements heavy but unbroken. She ladles as she always does. Thin broth. Measured portions. Her hands know the work too well to tremble now, even though her heart still hasn’t settled back into her chest.
It is during the second wave of returns that the kitchens go quiet. A pressure creeps in, subtle and suffocating, like damp cloth pressed over the mouth. She feels it before she hears anything. Before anyone speaks. Her ladle slows. Someone is standing behind her. She doesn’t dare to look. No one orders him away. No one clears their throat. The Death Guard who pass straighten slightly, their movements tightening, becoming deliberate. One serf backs away from the fire without looking, eyes fixed on the ground, and vanishes into the trench. She knows who it is without needing to see him.
She feels his attention settle on her hands. The way she scrapes the ladle along the pot’s bottom to free the last thickened residue. The way she lets the broth settle for a breath before pouring, so the grain distributes evenly. The way she pauses, counts, then pours again. This isn’t cooking. its triage.
The sound of cooking fills the silence, pots boiling, a knife tapping wood. It feels too loud. She risks a glance, only enough to confirm what her bones already know. He is exactly as she remembers and worse for being closer. Towering, cloaked in rags that might once have been fabric, might once have been banners. His armor is dulled by grime and old corrosion, its green mottled like lichen on a grave marker. His mask reflects the firelight dully, lenses unreadable.
He steps closer. Not toward her. Toward the pot. The heat seemingly does nothing to him as he reaches out and adjusts the pot’s position by a fraction, nudging it so the thin flame licks the base more evenly. The motion is careful. Exact. He withdraws his hand without comment.
“This is sufficient,” he says at last. His voice is roughened, scraped raw by poisons and long silence.
She swallows. Her mouth is dry. “Yes, lord Mortarion,” she manages. It feels like a foolish thing to say. Too small. Too human.
A pause. His gaze lifts, briefly, to her face. Not lingering. Not unkind. Simply seeing her, as one might acknowledge a tool that has proven unexpectedly useful. Then he steps back, the slight movement eases the pressure. He turns and walks away into the fog without another word, leaving the kitchens to breathe again only after his presence has fully withdrawn.
That night, when she finally returns to her pallet, she discovers a small bump beneath the thin standard issue blanket. There beneath it laying wrapped in oilcloth, is something small and unmistakable: a single dried root, hard and dense, and a pinch of desiccated greens. Barbaran, if she had to guess. Potent. Bitter. Valuable due to its scarcity. She doesn’t bother the others with questioning its origins, keeping her assumptions to herself.
The days that follow don’t announce themselves as different. The war continues in its grinding, methodical way. Artillery pounds the ridgelines. Trenches deepen. Bodies are dragged from the mud and replaced. She works, sleeps, wakes, and works again. The kitchens breathe smoke and steam. The broth thins further as supplies tighten. No one mentions the gift beneath her blanket. She doesn’t use it. Keeping it wrapped, hidden beneath her pallet, its bitterness sharp enough to carry even through oilcloth. She tells herself it is being saved for a moment that will demand it. She doesn’t know what that moment will look like, only that it will come.
Mortarion does not return to the kitchens. Not openly. She feels him sometimes, an absence where noise should be, a hush that ripples through the trench lines, but he does not stand behind her again. The Death Guard continue to eat. Continue to fight. The routine grinds on.
On the fourth night, after the last wave of wounded has been fed and the fires banked low, she is washing out a pot when a shadow falls across her station. Not heavy. Not immense. Closer to human sized. She looks up to find a Death Guard marine standing there without his helm. His face is pale and scarred, eyes sunk deep into flesh gone waxen from chem exposure.
“You,” he says.
Her spine goes rigid.
“You will prepare food,” he continues. “Now. For the Lord.”
The words land without ceremony. Without explanation. Her mouth opens. Closes. Unsure what to say to the command.
“Use what you must,” the marine says. “It will be accounted for.”
The kitchen is empty when she begins. Fires coaxed back to life with scraps of fuel. Pots scoured thin of residue. She moves quietly, as if sound itself might summon punishment. From beneath her pallet she retrieves the oilcloth. Unwraps it with care that borders on reverence. The root is hard as bone. She shaves it down slowly, conserving every sliver. She heats the pan until it smokes, wasting no time once the flame catches. A scraping of rendered fat, no more than a thumb’s worth, hisses as it touches the metal. She adds the roots first, sliced thin enough to cook through without burning, spreads them flat, lets them seize.
Upon seeing the pot of water she set on the stove has begun to boil, she tosses in the greens. Keeping an eye on the greens as she stirs the roots in the pan. Getting cold water and transfers the greens into it, successfully blanching them. Giving them a quick pat down to get excess water off once she transfers them to the cutting board where she cuts them into matchsticks and tosses them into the pan to join the root.
She works by instinct more than thought. She stirs constantly, not for comfort but for control. Every movement is measured. Nothing is allowed to linger. She renders a trace of fat, reduces the liquid as she sprinkles in pinches of seasonings. It isn’t much. It is everything she has.
Carefully she serves it into the tin while it’s still steaming, knowing it won’t stay hot long. When she sets the lid in place, her hands are shaking. A different marine arrives to collect the tin. He doesn’t inspect it nor question it, simply takes it and leaves, footsteps already swallowed by fog before she can think to breathe again. She doesn’t sleep that night. She expects punishment. Reprimand. Reassignment to corpse detail or worse. Displeasing a Primarch let alone giving subpar work could easily mean her death. Morning comes instead. Then another day. Then another. On the third night after that, the same shadow falls across her station.
“Again,” the marine says.
No praise. No explanation. No refusal allowed. She understands then. This isn’t a favor. Not gratitude. It is habit forming within what her duties entail. And habits, once noticed, are dangerous things.
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The strategium is quiet in the way only an Iron Warriors chamber ever is, no wasted sound, no ritual trappings. Just stone, steel, and the slow ticking of chronometers counting down a war already solved. Perturabo stands over the hololith, arms folded, eyes tracking the last red marks flickering across the projection. Enemy bastions blink out one by one, reduced to static symbols and predicted rubble. He doesn’t look up when Mortarion enters.
“The southern trench line has collapsed,” Perturabo says. “Eighteen minutes ahead of projection.”
Mortarion’s boots come to a stop behind him. The air shifts, not dramatically, not theatrically, but enough to make the lumen strips dim by a fraction, as if the chamber itself is aware of the newcomer. His respirator hisses softly with each breath, the sound patient and enduring.
“They resisted longer than first expected,” Mortarion replies. His voice is rough, eroded by toxins and long campaigns. There is no pride in it. Merely observation.
“They always do,” Perturabo says. He gestures, and the hololith redraws itself, clean lines replacing chaos. Siege vectors. Pressure points. The inevitable narrowing of space. “They mistake endurance for strategy.”
Mortarion steps closer, pale eyes reflecting the tactical display. Stained gauntlets rest at his sides, relaxed. “You sent my sons into the low ground.”
“I sent them where the ground would kill slower than the enemy,” Perturabo answers immediately. No apology. No softening. “Your Legion can withstand it.”
A pause. Not anger. Not offense. Calculation.
“True,” Mortarion says at last.
Perturabo finally turns. His expression seemingly carved from the same stone as the walls, severe, intent, utterly uninterested in ceremony. “Within a day,” he says. “At most. The last fortress will fall by morning rotation. The war is decided.”
Mortarion studies him then, the lines of tension in his brother’s posture. The way victory hasn’t eased him, only sharpened him further. “You sound displeased.”
“I sound accurate,” Perturabo replies. “Victory is not an achievement. It is a temporary conclusion.”
Mortarion’s gaze drifts back to the hololith. The enemy symbols flicker weakly now, cornered, doomed. “My sons will hold the breach until the end.”
“They will not need to,” Perturabo says. “The artillery will finish it.”
“And the survivors?”
Perturabo’s mouth tightens. “There will be fewer than expected.”
A faint sound escapes Mortarion then, not quite a laugh, not quite approval. Something closer to understanding. “You reduce suffering by ending it quickly.”
“I reduce resistance,” Perturabo corrects. “Suffering is incidental.”
Silence stretches between them, heavy but not hostile. Two brothers forged for different kinds of attrition, standing at the edge of an ending neither finds satisfying.
Mortarion inclines his head a fraction. “When it is done, my Legion will require time to purge contamination.”
“You will have it,” Perturabo says. “This world will be stripped to bedrock anyway.”
Mortarion turns to leave, cloak whispering across the stone. At the threshold, he pauses, not looking back.
“You have planned this war as if it could not fail.”
Perturabo’s eyes return to the display, already moving on to the next problem, the next equation. “Because it couldn’t.”
Mortarion’s hand rests on the edge of the strategium door. He doesn’t turn, but his voice comes again, lower, almost submerged beneath the respirator’s hiss.
“When the campaign is concluded,” he says, “the auxiliary allocations will revert.”
Perturabo doesn’t look up. “Of course they will.”
“Serfs. Labor cadres. Non-essential personnel,” Mortarion continues, listing them as one might list damaged equipment. “Returned to their parent Legions.”
The hololith redraws once more, the battlefield dissolving into after-action schematics. Perturabo nods once. “The Iron Warriors do not lend what they do not reclaim.”
Silence again. Thicker now.
Mortarion remains where he is, as if the words themselves require endurance. “Your logistics officers will want inventories.”
“They already have them,” Perturabo says. “Names. Skill sets. Reassignments.”
Mortarion’s fingers curl slightly against the metal frame. A pause, long enough that it almost becomes a question.
“There is one,” he says, carefully, “who has been… repurposed.”
Perturabo finally glances toward him. Not curious. Assessing. “A cook.”
“Yes.”
“She has performed adequately?”
Mortarion’s answer is immediate. “She has kept my sons fed.”
Perturabo considers this. Not the implication, only the value. “Then she will return to my Legion when this world is pacified.”
“As ordered,” Mortarion says.
The words are correct. Proper. Unassailable. Yet he doesn’t move.
“You understand,” Perturabo adds, “that nothing assigned here is permanent. This was a campaign. Not a covenant.”
“I understand,” Mortarion replies.
Another pause. Then, quietly: “She will not be informed until the withdrawal.”
Perturabo’s jaw tightens by a fraction. “No.”
Mortarion’s head turns slightly now, just enough that one pale lens catches the lumen light. “No?”
“She will be informed when orders are issued,” Perturabo says. “Not before. Iron Warriors serfs are not coddled. Nor are they distracted.”
A beat.
“Very well,” Mortarion says.
He steps out into the corridor then, his presence ebbing from the strategium like poison mist drawn back into the earth. Perturabo remains where he is, hands braced on the edge of the table, staring at a war that no longer requires him. Within a day, the planet will fall. Within a day, the Death Guard will relinquish what was never truly theirs. Somewhere in the trenches, a woman who has begun to learn the Fourteenth Legion will be returned to iron, stone, and siege lines. Whether either Primarch considers that loss acceptable… Isn’t a question either will voice.