A few years back, prior to any Mechanicus models or codices were released, a friend of mine Lantz created a homebrew Mechanicus codex and a set of converted models. It was quite striking, and the points and abilities were well thought out. Very shortly afterwards,
there was an announcement regarding the official release of the Mechanicus and Skitarii codices. Lantz very graciously sunsetted his rules. I had written two pieces of fluff for that book. He wanted to portray brief conflicts between the Mechanicus and various factions. I was lucky enough to get Chaos and Tyranids.
What follows is my one page story about a tech-adept with just a few minutes left to live. The other story will go up later in the week.
TIME
Adept
Chronon knew that it was just a matter of time.
He could see
the trail of blood and viscera that led away from the gaping hole in his chest
to what was left of his organic heart, now lying in a black-red puddle under
his secondary cogitator in the corner of the lab. He realized that even before
his augmetic respiration and circulation mechanisms failed, his mechadendrites
and power arm would lose power and release the slathering, chomping creature
that they held in a crushing grip. He had managed to close the blast door before
the uncountable number of these swarming, relatively small xenos infiltrated
his lab, but he still had to kill 6 of these relentless monsters one at a time,
losing his organic arm, one foot, and the aforementioned heart in the process.
Under normal circumstances, he would have dispatched them easily, but this was
the fourth day since the equatorial photovoltaic collectors went offline,
choked by falling spores; Chronon, and he presumed the rest of the planet, was
surviving on dangerously low power reserves. He was sprawled on the floor with
the creature held above him like a horrible infant. He slowly lowered his head
back onto the cold marble. He calculated the power savings of not taxing his
neck and clavicle servos. With no other
variables, resting his head would allow him to maintain his grip for an
additional 10 minutes.
Chronon knew
it was just a matter of time.
He closed
his eyes and let part of himself drift into the Noosphere. He tried to make
sense of all that had happened since the beginning of this invasion – no,
invasion was inaccurate; it was a harvest. It had begun with orbit-bound
astropaths reporting a wall of nothing impeding their communications. A few weeks later, a raft of small meteors
came hurling from the shadow in the warp, followed by capital ship-sized abominations
of tendrils and flesh. As the meteors impacted the surface of the planet, they
vomited forth the stuff of madness. Some teemed with leaping, man-sized
creatures with scything claws dripping with toxins. Others released huge,
lumbering hulks that launched two-part organic munitions. Yesterday, Chronon
observed two of these living superheavy tanks take down a Warlord Titan. The
firestorm caused by the sentient projectiles was caustic and incendiary enough
to melt the titan up to the torso. Worst of all, though, were the psychic
beings. Sickly, vestigial bodies hung like butchered meat from huge levitating
crested heads, and the Skitarii that ventured too close to them instantly died,
their brains boiled in their skulls. Chronon marveled at the sheer variety and
adaptability of these invaders. He went deeper into the Noosphere, trying to
cross-reference the terrible images in his mind with any mechanicum-indexed
information. He found what he was looking for in the archives of the Magos Biologis
of the Tyran System. These same creatures had completely scoured Tyran Primus
of organic material, leaving a dead rock in its wake. His link was failing, but
he managed to ingest all of the information from the Magos along with
supplemental material from both the Adeptes Astartes and the Inquisition itself.
The terms swept by in a wash of binary code – Hive Fleet, Carnifex, Hive
Tyrant, Venomthrope…the taxonomy that Terra and Mars had applied was strangely
evocative of the nightmares of his barely remembered youth. These
“Tyranids” had either spanned the Segmentum in an unbelievably short time, or
the tendrils of their fleet were incomprehensibly vast. As his mechadendrites
began to shut down, the creature (“rippers”, they had been labeled) began to
thrash more wildly, anticipating a feeding. Chronon would have liked to have
studied this galaxy-spanning, all-consuming race. Had they left a swath of dead
worlds for eons, or did they travel in a dormant state? He uploaded his entire
memory stream blindly into the Noosphere as his power arm began to whine. The
Empire of Man would eventually meet the bulk of this unstoppable foe.
It was just a matter of time.
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