the most exciting thing about 2026 is that posting about men is banned for the entire year like we rly needed this and i am so glad it's happening

seen from TĂŒrkiye

seen from TĂŒrkiye
seen from Austria
seen from Yemen
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from TĂŒrkiye
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Russia
seen from Belgium

seen from Malaysia
seen from Mali

seen from TĂŒrkiye
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from South Korea
seen from Russia
the most exciting thing about 2026 is that posting about men is banned for the entire year like we rly needed this and i am so glad it's happening
I ate a bagel.
đȘđ€
KRYPTONITE FOR TOUGH GIRLSđđŠ
Thereâs no point trying to resist the ticklishness because it wonât recede or ever cease to exist but instead proceed in intensity, so you might as well embrace the insanity, because youâre forced to take it regardless how you feel, and you know itâs gonna get more sadistic when you surrender, making you go ballistic and bawl when you canât take anymore, because I can read your eyes and understand you enjoy the thrill of it all
Being tough with a terribly ticklish tummy and sides is like the worst mistake you can ever make in lifeâŠimagine being restrained and having someone digging their fingers deep into your belly, rearranging your ribs and never stopping
I was watching this bird and I started taking a video, hoping that it would open its wings and flap them to dry off as it has been doing and then this happened....
I love it when that happens!!! Weeeeeeeeeee!!! đđâ€ïž
Ash and Silence
gn!reader x Grey Knight
A/n: who's surprised I hyperfixated on this since mentioning it (*ïŸâœïŸ*) but ooooooh boy do I have some fucked up plans for the reader. Also note, I wrote this in 3rd person at first so you're named Alarice, nicknamed Al (gn!). I love a good 2 letter nickname. It's only mentioned once but idk warning lol. Enjoy!
Cw: Canon adjacent descriptions of gore, suuper slow burn (mostly just plot), tryna build some yearning/pining, maybe some vulnerability
Banner credit - support the artist!
You donât remember when the manufactorum stopped screaming.
Maybe it was after Jex vanished into the floor. Maybe it was when Merekâs bones turned inside out in front of you, or when Thessaâs hands started bleeding eyes. Doesnât matter. Thereâs quiet now.
Thatâs what counts.
You sit with your back to a slagged pillar, one leg stretched, the other drawn up. The rebreatherâs filter is half-clogged with soot, and every breath feels like swallowing warm grit. You let your lasgun rest across your thighs. You stopped aiming it at anything hours ago. Itâs a gesture now. Like a prayer. Or a superstition.
Ash clings to your armor in soft gray drifts. It coats the edges of your lashes, it fills the seams of your gloves. Even the bloodâs gone dry. Just another layer of dust. The dead donât rot hereâthey desiccate, freeze-dried in horror.
The wind occasionally shifts the air, stirring the high-hung cables that sway like broken chimes. Somewhere, a cogitator ticks faintly, its logic looped beyond meaning. Nothing else moves.
Your vox is dead. Your squad is gone. Youâre not sure why you arenât.
Maybe the Emperor forgot to cross your name off the list.
You tilt your head back and look through the broken slats in the roof, up at the red-bloated sun bleeding through the ashfall. The light turns the world to rust and bruises. You donât blink. Youâve been awake too long for blinking to be useful.
Thenâ
A pressure. Not sound. Not sight.
Weight.
It pushes into your sternum like a breath you didnât take. Subtle. But wrong.
The air tightens. As if it remembers whatâs about to happen before you do.
Your fingers twitch against your lasgunâs grip, but you donât raise it. Not yet.
Another pulse. Closer. Like the beat of a second heart.
Then the world cracks.
Not thunderânot explosion. Something deeper. Internal. Reality groans like old steel. The air in front of you folds inward, not out, collapsing into a fist of silver light. You flinch, reflexiveâhalf-expecting daemonic fire, teeth, the shriek of warp-born laughter.
Insteadâ
Stillness.
Ash stops falling midair. The wind holds its breath.
And then the thing steps out.
Eight feet of silver plate, bearing a blade that glows with script older than your understanding. The armor is covered in sacred geometry and high Gothicânames of saints youâll never know, fragments of prayers etched into ceramite like scars.
You donât breathe.
He is impossibly solid. Like someone carved a war-god from moonstone and set him walking. The air around him hums with psychic charge, like the moment before lightning strikesâbut colder.
He doesnât look at you. Not at first.
His head scans the scene, slow and deliberate. Tactical. Efficient. His gauntlet twitches. You donât know what he seesâyour dead squad, the daemon-scarred walls, the warp-tear where Thessa bled out screaming?
Probably all of it.
You try not to stare.
But you do.
Because nothing about this is normal. This isnât a Commissar or a Chaplain. This is something else. Something that shouldnât exist in the same space you do. His presence makes the inside of your skull itch, but it doesnât hurt. Itâs not daemonic. Itâs worse. Itâs clean.
He turns, finally. His helm pivots. Not fast. Not deliberate.
A glance.
And maybe it lands on you.
Maybe.
You feel itânot on your body, but somewhere under your ribs. The sensation of being seen without being understood. Like a surgical light over a wound. No judgment. No emotion. Just exposure.
You donât move.
He doesnât either.
You tell yourself itâs nothing.
Just a sweep. A battlefield check. A reflex. Heâs cataloguing the living. Not noticing you. Not really.
But even when his gaze moves on, the feeling lingers.
Like fingerprints on your skin.
Like something is different now, and you donât have the words to name it.
You donât rise when he moves.
Thereâs no ceremony in it. No reverence. He doesnât gesture. Doesnât pause to observe the fallen or make the sign of the aquila. He steps past the bodies like they arenât thereâlike you arenât there.
Because of course he does.
Youâre not part of this equation. You're the afterimage of someone who mattered, maybe. A survivor. Collateral. Youâre not his.
Your heart hammers in your throat all the same.
He moves like weight incarnate. Measured. Unhurried. As if time will pause for him, not the other way around. The ash moves around him, shifting like it knows better than to settle on his armor. Even the blood on the ground seems to recoil.
Your dead squadmates lie in pieces beside you. Names you whispered under your breath for days nowâsome you prayed for. Some you didnât. He doesn't look at them. He doesnât look at you.
And yetâŠ
When he passes, something changes.
Not in him. In you.
That presenceâthat gazeâeven if it only flicked over you for a heartbeat, it stays. Like static under your skin. Like the hum of a lascoil still cooling after discharge. You feel... watched. Touched. Branded.
No words.
No gesture.
Not even a nod.
He walks into the ruin, deeper into the dark, his blade low and humming, his psychic aura flaring like the distant memory of a star. You watch him disappear down the corridor where no one else came back. No guardsman. No tech-priest. No mortal.
Just him.
The whispering in your skull fades. The daemonhostâs voice gone.
He didnât even speak a rite.
Youâre alone again.
Only now, the silence feels⊠different.
Like the echo of something that almost noticed you.
...
You donât follow him.
Not because you arenât tempted. You are.
Thereâs something about the way he movedâweightless in all that armor, as if the world had already yielded to his presence. Something in you wanted to stay close, to be where the silence bent around him, where the warp didnât whisper anymore.
But that silence wasnât meant for you.
Youâre not part of his war.
So you pull yourself upright, muscles dragging behind your thoughts. You feel like someone elseâs body. The suitâs weight is doubled by dried blood, grit, and the smellâEmperor, the smell. Burned wiring, spoiled meat, ozone. Every breath tastes of it.
Youâre still alive.
But barely.
You shoulder your lasgun. You check the charge out of habitâitâs fine. Mostly. Then you turn down the eastern corridor, toward the secondary signal beacon. The one Tech-Adept Sero had been crawling toward before he stopped responding.
Itâs stupid.
But itâs something.
The manufactorum stretches around you in towering halls of broken servitors, collapsed data-stacks, and rusted shrines. Every wall is layered in once-glorious purity seals, now curled and blackened with warp-rot. The cogitator screens still flicker, but they speak in tonguesâlong strings of binary gibberish and broken prayers.
The further you go, the quieter it gets.
Not normal quiet.
The kind that listens.
Your boots crunch over glass. Something behind the wall shuddersâsomething deep, something alive. The metal groans like itâs breathing.
And the shadows move.
You stop cold.
Not far ahead, a lumen flickers. Then dies. The corridor beyond is a throatâdark and slick, humming faintly.
Youâve seen what comes from places like that.
Warp ghosts. Machine-possessed. Crawlers.
You reach into your belt pouch, fingers closing around the last vial of sacred oil. Still sealed. You make the sign of the aquila across your chestâsilent, fast, half-habit, half hope.
And you move forward.
Every step is louder now. The ash muffles little. Your breath hisses against the mask.
Then you hear it.
Not footsteps.
Not speech.
Just metal on metal. Long, dragging. Inhumanly slow.
You freeze again, back flattening against the wall of a servo-rail. You aim down the corridor, lasgun steady, vision dancing between red emergency lights and dark. Your heart poundsâbut youâve learned to breathe through that. Long ago.
The sound stops.
Silence.
And thenâwet clicking. A sound like teeth, or bone.
You donât call for help.
You donât pray.
You wait.
Because whateverâs down that corridor?
Itâs closer than the Grey Knight.
And it knows youâre here.
...
You move through the dark with your finger resting light on the trigger. The lumen strips overhead flicker in broken burstsâstrobing the world into fragments. Each breath rasps through your mask, each heartbeat a countdown.
Youâre two levels below where the Adeptâs last ping came from.
The corridors here are tighter. Thick with condensation and the stink of sacrilegious coolant. Cables hang like viscera from burst wall-panels. A servitor floats face-down in a coolant trough, its flesh gray, half-melted, still twitching. You donât look too long.
The signal beaconâs light grows stronger the deeper you goâan automated pulse, weak but consistent.
You round a corner and freeze.
Heâs there.
Adept Sero.
Or⊠the thing that used to be him.
Heâs hunched over the beacon, data-jack spliced directly into its core. Tubing runs from his neck into the wall. His mechadendrites twitch spasmodically, weaving through the air like snakes in oil. His back is bare, his robes torn and soaked with some black, glistening fluid that moves too slowly to be blood.
The machine around him is alive in the wrong way.
The steel breathes.
You hear the cogitator singingânot binary, not code. A low, wet hum. Like a heartbeat shaped into prayer.
The Adept lifts his head. You freeze again. Lasgun steady.
His face is smeared with ink, ritual script running from eye to jaw. His eyes donât blink. Donât focus.
And his mouth moves.
"I am Sero. Sero is inside. Inside is warm. Inside is light."
You donât speak.
The beacon pulses. The same phrase plays back in a broken voiceâlooped over and over: In Omnissiahâs name, purge complete. In Omnissiahâs name, purge complete.
But nothing here is purged.
The Adept takes a step toward you. Limbs stiff. Neck clicking as it turns. The data-jack yanks free with a wet pop. The black tubing slithers back into the wall like a retreating tongue.
He raises a hand toward you.
"Youâre cold," he rasps. "Come inside. We kept a place for you."
You shoot him in the knee.
It drops him fast.
He doesnât scream. He doesnât bleed.
He giggles.
You take three steps forward and shoot him again, this time through the chest. His torso caves inward, but the grin stays wide, eyes glowing faintly with something else.
"You donât want to be alone," he gurgles.
And the walls respond.
The beacon shuts off.
The lights die.
The hallway groans around youâflesh-rip and iron-scream.
Something behind the Adeptâs body opens. A hatch. A mouth. A door that was never there before. Inside, the dark breathes.
You back up fast, lasgun trained.
But something crawls out.
Too fast.
Too low.
Too wet.
You fire again.
And again.
And then you run.
Not because you're afraid.
Because you're not done yet.
...
You donât look back.
The moment you cross the threshold of the last lit hall, something in the walls closes. You feel it. Hear it. Like wet stone grinding shut behind your boots.
The thing that used to be Seroâwhatever came out of himâis moving. Not fast, not loud. But persistent. Confident.
It doesnât have to chase you.
It just has to wait for you to slow down.
You push yourself harder. Down one corridor, then another. The pathways twistâspiralâgrow unfamiliar. You passed this junction before, didnât you? No. No, this one has a different shrine inset in the wall. This oneâs eyes are gouged out.
You turn again.
Dead servitors line the walls, some fused into place. The ones that arenât dead twitch when you pass. One reaches out for you, vocalizer sputtering a hymn warped into static. You shoot it through the skull and keep running.
Your shoulder slams into a doorway. Pain blossoms. Doesnât matter.
You flick on your underbarrel torchâhalf expecting to catch a silhouette in the beam.
Nothing.
Only the sound of scraping. Behind you. Or in the vents. Or under the floor.
The hatch ahead is half-jammed. You slam your body into it three times before it gives. It opens into a maintenance crawlspaceâlow-ceilinged, damp, full of cable bundles like exposed nerves.
You drop to your hands and knees.
You crawl.
The air tastes like scorched plastic. Your shoulder throbs. The torch flickers.
Then, behind youâ
Tap. Tap. Tap.
Like claws. Or bone.
The tunnel breathes. You hear the wet hiss of a mouth too close.
You move faster.
Thereâs an access panel ahead. A climb. A vertical shaft with an emergency ladder. Half-rusted. Greased in black oil. But itâs up. Itâs out.
You wrench the hatch open, half expecting something to grab your ankle.
Nothing.
You climb.
You hear something laugh below you. No words. Just the sound of amusement shaped by meat.
You climb faster.
By the time you slam the top hatch shut and weld it with the last of your torchâs charge, your hands are shaking. Your arms are numb. And your mouth is full of copper.
The hallway beyond is mercifully silent.
The beaconâs signal is gone. The Adept is dead. Or something worse.
But youâre alive.
Alone.
In a place that doesnât want you.
You sit against the wall for a moment, helmet tilted back. Your breath steams. Your shoulder aches.
And beneath your skin⊠you swear you can still feel the pressure of cables. Like something watching from behind your own eyes.
So naturally, you move.
...
You hear them before you see them.
Voices.
Human.
Too human.
Not the clipped vox-speak of officers. Not the static-blurred panic of a dying comm line. These are low murmurs, pacing back and forth, like rats arguing over whose turn it is to chew.
You move quiet. Low. Gun angled. Breath tight.
Light flickers aheadânot the red of emergency strips. White. A lumen lamp, weak but steady. Itâs set behind a barricade of broken servitors and half-melted rebar. You count four figures. Maybe five. Oneâs bent over a dataslate. One clutches a lasgun that looks older than you. One is just⊠rocking.
Then someone turns.
And the world shifts under your feet.
âAlarice?â
You donât recognize her at first.
The left half of her face is metalârushed work, brutal and incomplete. Grafts like panic medicine. Still twitching. Her eye there glows cold-blue in the dark, wide and wrong.
But the voice is familiar.
And the right side of her mouth still curves into that half-smirk you remember.
âItâs you,â she says again. âEmperor, you look like hell.â
You freeze.
Lasgun steady. Heart hammering.
You donât raise it. Not yet.
âJenna?â
She nods. Casual. Like youâre back in the mess hall.
âThey pulled me out. Didnât think they could. But I was still breathing. And they said I could be⊠better.â
That last word stumblesâtoo many syllables in too little air.
You look past her. One of the others mutters binary in a human tongue. Anotherâs fingers tap the metal of their own jaw like it itches. None of them blink.
None of them breathe right.
Jenna steps closer.
âYou made it this far. That means something. Theyâll see that.â
You donât lower the gun.
âWho?â
She doesnât answer. Just keeps walking.
âCome inside. Itâs safer. Youâre shaking. Let me help.â
You should say something.
Anything.
Beg her to stop.
Ask her to come back.
But nothing comes.
Because deep down, you donât believe she ever left.
Youâd seen her dragged under a munitions hauler six days ago. She was screaming.
She shouldnât be standing.
But she is.
Mostly.
âYouâre not Jenna,â you whisper.
Her smile flickers. For a heartbeat, something tries to feel human in her eyes. Then it hardens.
âDonât be stupid, Al. I remember you. I chose to remember you.â
Thatâs worse than forgetting.
You aim.
Not because you want to.
Because this is what comes after hope dies.
âIâm sorry.â
You fire.
Once. Twice.
Her body jerks, convulses. But she doesnât scream.
She just looks⊠disappointed.
The others twitch.
One speaksânot in their voice. In hers.
âYou shouldâve come inside.â
Anotherâs mouth moves, syncing to her last words.
âYou shouldâve comeââ
You open fire.
Ash kicks up, mingled with oil and smoke and wet metallic steam. The barricade erupts with movementâhalf-lunges, aborted charges, servo-limbs scraping against stone.
You run.
And something breaks behind you.
Not a door.
Not a barricade.
Something in the air.
The pressure drops. The air goes soft.
Like something just started listening.
---
Elsewhereâ
The purge was complete.
The manufactorum tower lay in ruinsâits upper levels gutted by orbital fire, its lower corridors cleansed in flame and blade. Smoke lingered in the steel arches like a ceiling of ghosts. The red emergency strips along the walls still flickered, sputtering beneath layers of soot and congealed ash.
In the center of the chamber, where a generator shrine had once pulsed with sacred voltage, now there was only blood and silence.
Brother-Captain Rhael Uthorion stood in the stillness.
His armorâadamantium-gray, carved with a hundred sacred sigilsâwas marked with impact scoring and warp-burns. The purity seals along his greaves fluttered in the acrid wind of a vent fan still struggling to breathe. His helm remained sealed, his visor lit from within with a faint, unreadable glow.
Around him, three Grey Knights moved through the aftermath with ritual precision.
Brother Dhael, youngest of the four, knelt beside the corpse of a warp-scorched astropath, whispering the Litany of Cleansing as he drove a sanctified dagger into the base of the skull.
Brother Carvion moved among the daemonic dead, his warding incensor hissing with blessed myrrh, sprinkling each dismembered husk with sacred oil. He did not look down. He did not need to.
Thur Vox, the oldest among them, stood with bolter lowered but not holstered. He was still. Watchful. An empty threat, held in reserve.
They did not speak unless ordered.
That was the way of it.
Command is not dialogue, Rhael had once told an Inquisitor.
It is containment.
Now, he walked slowly through the center of the ruin, halberd lowered.
The weaponâs haft had scorched the stone where he had planted it minutes earlierâwhen heâd severed the final tether between the daemon and this place. Its blade still glowed faintly, faint traces of holy residue humming through the runes etched into its core.
He paused beside what remained of the warp gate.
Once, it had been a junction altarâwhere the tech-priests of this manufactorum had offered prayers before engaging the core-matter reactors. Now it was a blackened circle of fused ceramite, the walls above it warped into spindled shapes that did not belong in a real world.
Rhael stared down at the ruin.
There was nothing to read. No message. No symbol.
Just damage.
And yet his gaze lingered.
He did not kneel.
But he reached up, and slowly unsealed his helm.
The hiss of pressure loss was soft, reverent. He placed the helm beneath his arm, letting the oily air of the manufactorum touch his skin for the first time in three hours.
The silence was deeper now. Not absence. Something else.
Like the end of a breath.
âCaptain,â came Dhaelâs voice, quiet. âAll confirmed. No hostile signs remain. No bio-signatures left in the sector.â
Rhael did not turn.
âYou're certain.â
Dhael hesitated a beat.
âThe auspex reads clean. If anything survived the purge, it left before the gate collapsed.â
Rhael let his eyes drift closed.
He tasted ash and steel and warp-burn on the air. Beneath the chemical stink of corrupted machine-oil, there was another scentâ
Blood.
Familiar, human blood.
Fresh.
Something was here.
But he said nothing.
Behind him, the other Knights gathered into loose formation. Silent. Waiting.
This was the part where a lesser unit would speak. Would exhale. Would mark the kill, or allow themselves a breath of something close to relief.
But Grey Knights did not breathe like other men.
They held.
Until they were told otherwise.
Rhael opened his eyes.
âReconvene in three minutes. Prepare for meditative sanctification. No words until the rite begins.â
The others nodded and dispersed without question.
He turned once more toward the warped altar.
Watched the light flicker across the black glass.
And for the first time in hoursâ
He felt something he didnât have a name for.
It was not fear.
It was not pain.
It was something quiet.
And unwelcome.
...
The sanctum was buried forty meters below the manufactorumâs throatâbelow the ash drifts, the warp-burned shrines, the machines that still screamed in binary static.
This far down, there were no more servitors. No cables. No light that hadnât been brought by hand.
The air tasted of null-ash and sanctified oil. Every breath filtered through triple-blessed rebreathers. No psychic bleed was meant to survive down here. That was the point.
Rhael entered alone.
His armor had been removed with precision. Each plate laid on the ritual frame by servitor-handlers, then sprayed with micro-seraphim dust. His scarred skin gleamed with residue, sweatless and pale in the lumen-stripped dark.
He wore only the plain black robe of post-engagement cleansingâunmarked, unadorned. A Grey Knight is not supposed to bring anything of battle into this place.
Not memory.
Not pain.
Not pride.
Only discipline.
Only silence.
He knelt on the meditation slab. Stone. Cold.
The room was bare, circularâeight meters across, sealed with wards no living hand could draw. High above, incense smoke curled in slow, deliberate spirals from a burning censer suspended by chains.
He placed his hands on his thighs.
Closed his eyes.
And spoke the litany.
âFrom shadow I purge. From memory I cleanse. Let the mind be still. Let the echo break.â
He exhaled.
A single breath.
Then waited.
Stillness.
Nothing moved.
For twenty-one heartbeats, the ritual held.
Thenâ
It came.
Not a scream.
Not a vision.
Just⊠words.
Half-heard. Half-felt.
Not from the warp.
Not around him.
From within.
You shouldâve come inside.
The voice was soft. Not mocking. Not daemonic.
Human.
He opened his eyes.
The sanctum did not change.
But the pressure behind his eyes pulsed like heat through ice.
He rose, slowly.
His hand rested on the slabâs edge.
He was not supposed to feel this. Not here.
Not now.
âBrother-Captain.â
The voice came from the archway. Librarian Thareon, helm under one arm, stood beyond the wards. He did not enter.
âYour psi-profile wavered.â
Rhael turned to face him. His voice did not tremble.
âResidual bleed.â
âIt lasted eleven seconds.â
Rhael said nothing.
Thareon stepped closer, stopping just shy of the sanctum threshold.
âDo you want to know what it was?â
âNo.â
A pause. Then:
âYou will.â
Thareonâs tone held no emotion. But the weight behind it was real.
âDo you remember a name?â
Rhael stared at the burning censer.
Smoke twisted overhead, forming nothing.
âThere was no name.â
âBut there was something.â
The Captain didnât answer.
Not immediately.
Then:
âA sentence.â
âWhat did it say?â
Rhaelâs jaw tightened. Not visibly. But he felt it.
He looked back at the stone. The stillness. The fire.
The silence.
âYou shouldâve come inside.â
Thareon nodded.
âIâll begin the trace.â
Rhaelâs hands curled at his sides.
âItâs not daemonic.â
âI know.â
"Then it shouldnât exist.â
âI know.â
Neither moved.
Neither breathed in the way mortals do.
But the silence between them was no longer clean.
It remembered.
---
Youâve been moving for⊠minutes?
Hours?
Timeâs gone soft at the edges. It doesnât track properly anymore. There are no clocks here. Just the hiss of pressure lines and the slow throb of machine hearts beneath your boots.
Your shoulderâs bleeding again.
The bandageâstitched with one hand, sloppily wrappedâis already soaked. You press it tighter against the seam of your armor, breathing through your teeth, counting heartbeats to avoid screaming.
Youâre not thinking about Jenna.
Not right now.
Because if you do, youâll have to decide whether or not to count her corpse with the rest of your squad.
And you canât do that. Not yet.
The corridor narrows. The lightâs dimming. No lumen strips down hereâjust the pale red pulse of reserve emergency systems, casting long, pulsing shadows that move even when you donât.
You step into a wider chamber. Storage, maybe, once. Racks of disassembled drones. A broken servitor crucified across a diagnostic rigâhalf its body carved open, organs replaced with placeholder circuits that never got filled.
You brace your back against a wall and slide down slowly, breath shallow.
Too quiet.
No whispers.
No warpshade slithering in the vents.
Just⊠silence.
And heat.
The temperatureâs rising.
You donât know why. Nothingâs running down here. No generators. No core access. But the air is thickening like furnace breath, and your skin crawls with static thatâs not quite pain.
You close your eyes.
Not sleep. Just rest.
Justâ
---
[Flash / Not a Flash]
Something moves.
But not around you.
Inside.
Your arms are heavy.
But not your arms.
Gauntlets.
Ceramite gauntlets.
You can feel them.
Clumsy. Heavy. Perfectly balanced.
You try to flex your fingersâand feel metal respond.
Thereâs no pain.
Just weight.
Just war-readiness.
You open your eyes.
Youâre not where you were.
The walls are clean.
Silver. Carved with script you almost understand.
You hear chanting.
Voices. Male. Unified. Beautiful in a way that makes your throat hurt.
High Gothic.
Not the battlefield bastard dialect.
The real thing.
The kind of speech youâd need three lifetimes to pronounce.
And youâre speaking it.
You feel it in your throat.
Perfect. Cold. Conviction in every syllable.
And your voice isâ
---
No.
No, no, noâ
Youâre back.
You choke on a breath that doesnât belong to you and gag.
Your mouth tastes like iron. Like burning.
Resolve. Cold, blinding resolve. Not yours.
Then itâs gone.
You curl forward, shaking, bracing yourself on the floor of the manufactorum as your stomach turns. You donât vomit. Thereâs nothing left in you.
The gauntlets are gone.
Your hands are yours.
Your voice is quiet.
But your eyes are wet.
And you donât remember why.
---
You sit there.
Alone.
Longer than you mean to.
Eventually, the heat fades.
But it doesnât cool.
It withdraws.
Like something pulling back from your skin.
Like it touched you. And didnât like what it found.
---
You are not a psyker. You are not a seer. You are nothing.
But something inside you is opening.
And you donât know how to close it.
...
Manufactorum SectorâSubstructural Overlap 9-A
...
You shouldnât still be moving.
Your shoulderâs seizing up againânerves pulling tight around something wet and broken. Youâve run out of bandages. Youâve run out of water. Youâre running out of you.
But your legs keep going. Not out of hope.
Out of stubborn, empty habit.
The corridor ahead is splitâone shaft leading down into the coolant crawlways, the other banking toward a support spine. You take the upper path. Instinct, not strategy.
The airâs thinner up here. Dryer.
But the pressureâs rising again. Like the world is holding its breath.
You donât stop.
---
The vox ghosts are louder in this sectionâold machine-spirits echoing combat logs, static-warped prayers, the screams of men who mightâve never existed. You tune it out.
Mostly.
But when you reach the next chamber, you stop cold.
A kill zone.
Recent.
Las-scorch across the walls. Broken crawler limbs. Blood sprayed in two long arcs, like someone was cut from neck to groin and kept walking.
You step around it.
The bodies are missing.
Or they were never here.
You keep moving.
---
At the junction, you pause.
Only a moment.
Thereâs a flicker in the emergency lumen to your leftâa clean one. Not flickering red. White.
It shouldnât be on.
You blink hard.
Pain shoots across your temple. Youâre running hotâfever, probably. You donât care.
You move toward the light.
Not because itâs safe.
Because itâs different.
And nothing else down here has changed in hours.
---
The corridor narrows againâstructural reinforcements added at some point during the war, maybe. Redundant load-bearing. Dense enough to block auspex.
You pass a bank of old vox repeaters. Theyâre warm.
Active.
But saying nothing.
The wall breathes when you touch it.
You keep going.
Just beyond the last support beam, the floor drops into a wide transition ramp. Shallow incline. Signs of movementâfresh. Bootprints, scored against ash and melted sealant.
Not yours.
Too heavy.
Too clean.
---
You freeze at the edge.
Thereâs noise below.
No voices. Just weight.
Metal on metal. A slow exhale of something living in the armor.
You duck behind the edge of a broken pump housing and listen.
Three footsteps. Then stillness.
Then two more.
Measured. Unhurried.
You peek.
Itâs him.
---
The Grey Knight moves like thereâs no war. His halberd is sheathed across his back. His head is bare. His armor still sings with quiet purity, like the hymn of a cathedral lit with fire and silence.
Heâs not looking at you.
Heâs tracking something.
You can feel it in the way he shiftsânot cautiously, but with psychic calculation. He's close to something. Closer than heâs been in hours.
He steps beneath the red lumen flare and pauses.
His head turns slightly.
Toward you.
And you freeze.
Youâre not in full view. Youâre not breathing loud.
But youâre there.
And something in you knowsâ
Heâs not looking for you.
But he still found you.
------------to be continued------------
I hope you guys enjoyed :)) I have a plan, this may be my first completed story lol.
Tagged: @incrediblethirst @druidwolf21 @thisuserislilsilly @kit-williams (yall want some plot?)
*leans real close into microphone* lake michigan turned me transgender







