The mess hall was a cathedral of noise.
Not the clean, sharp report of boltguns, but the wet, percussive rhythm of a thousand warriors at rest. The scrape of metal trays was a constant grating chant. Laughter, deep and guttural from enhanced lungs, rolled off the plasteel walls. Above it all hung the sacred stench of recaf and the thick, savory steam of nutrient paste, a smell that promised life even as it tasted of recycled despair.
Lieutenant Ludotius Tarisius stood a titan at the threshold, his shadow a judgment upon the scene. Two of his veterans flanked him, brothers whose gene-forged bulk made the doorway seem small.
"One day," Brother Varrus grumbled, his voice a low rumble from within his helm,
"the Chapter will discover flavor."
"Blasphemy," Brother Kael countered, prodding the grey paste in his bowl.
"This is the taste of victory. It just hasn't won yet."
A ghost of a smile touched Ludotius's lips, unseen in the shadow of his helmet. Even the Scythes of the Emperor found solace in shared misery.
He was about to voice a rare jest when the universe split open.
It started not with a sound, but with a feeling. A deep, resonant
wrongness that vibrated up from the deck plating through the soles of his ceramite boots and into the very marrow of his transhuman bones. The air grew thick, heavy, tasting of ozone and static. A pressure built behind his eyes, a psychic scream that promised madness.
Then the lumens didn't just flash red. They
bled crimson, bathing the entire hall in the color of arterial spray.
A wave of invisible force, hot and foul, slammed through the chamber. It was a physical blow. Trays clattered. Men cried out, not in alarm, but in pain as the air itself became hostile.
And then the air tore.
It ripped open in the center of the mess hall with a sound like wet fabric being pulled apart by unseen hands. Reality didn't break; it peeled back, revealing a swirling vortex of impossible color and shrieking faces. The scent hit them a heartbeat later, blood, excrement, and the acrid stink of burning hair.
"CONTACT!" Ludotius's voice was a detonation, the word torn from his throat by pure, predatory instinct.
His hand was already moving, a blur of black ceramite, closing around the grip of his chainsword. He didn't draw it; he
wrenched it from its mag-lock. The machine spirit within the weapon roared to life, a snarling, hungry beast as its adamantium teeth spun into a whirring, flesh-rending blur.
"STATUS!" he barked, turning toward his brothers.
"Ready!" Varrus's bolt rifle was already at his shoulder, the weapon's calm precision a stark contrast to the chaos.
"Unharmed," Kael grunted, his own chainsword now screaming its readiness.
Inside the hall, the tear widened. Things clawed their way out. Not beasts, not soldiers, but living blasphemies. A form of shimmering, iridescent jelly resolved itself into a towering horror with too many joints, its limbs bending at angles that defied biology. A tide of gibbering, pink-skinned things with needle-like teeth poured forth, their eyes burning with the cold light of the abyss. A creature of pure shadow and talons coalesced from the warp-light, its form a hole in the world.
Ludotius stepped forward. A Primaris Astartes was a weapon, forged in the Emperor's own wrath, and this was his purpose.
"FORM ON ME!"
He charged.
The ground shook with the impact of his ceramite boots. He was a thunderbolt given flesh, a living shell aimed at the heart of the nightmare. The gibbering horde was the first to meet him.
He didn't slow. He didn't swing wide. He simply drove the chainsword forward.
The first daemon, a thing of flapping skin and too many mouths, met the spinning teeth. There was no clean cut. There was a
shredding, a wet, explosive
thump as the weapon tore through its torso. The daemon's shriek became a wet gurgle as it was split in two, its ichor spraying in a wide, hot arc that painted the nearby tables and the faces of the cowering Guardsmen.
Ludotius didn't even break stride. He ripped the blade free, bringing it up in a backhand swing that caught another leaping horror. The teeth bit deep, shearing through its neck and spine in a single, brutal stroke. The head, still gibbering, flew through the air and landed in a bowl of nutrient paste with a wet
splat.
A taloned shadow-creature lunged from his left. He didn't turn. He dropped his shoulder, letting the blow skitter off his pauldron with a shriek of tortured metal, and drove his armored elbow back. The impact was a dull
crunch of bone and vapor, the shadow-thing imploding into a puff of sulfurous smoke.
"FOR THE EMPEROR!" The war cry was a roar of pure, unadulterated fury.
He saw Varrus open up, his bolt rifle barking. The rounds were thunderclaps of righteousness. One bolt caught the towering, multi-jointed horror in the chest. The creature paused, confused, before the mass-reactive shell detonated. It didn't just explode; it
erupted from the inside out. Chunks of iridescent flesh and shards of alien bone sprayed across the room, painting the far wall in a mosaic of gore. The creature's top half separated from its bottom, its legs taking two stumbling steps before collapsing in a heap of twitching limbs.
Kael was a whirlwind of death beside him. His chainsword was a blur, carving through the pink tide. He didn't aim for kills; he aimed for
butchery. He swept his blade low, taking the legs out from under three daemons at once. They fell, screeching, and Kael's boot came down, crushing one's skull into a paste of bone and brain matter while his sword came down again, eviscerating the other two.
A daemon with a face like a starved skull and claws of obsidian glass lunged at Ludotius, faster than the others. He met it not with the sword, but with his boot. He kicked it square in the chest. The impact was a solid
thump, the sound of a door being kicked in. The daemon flew backward, crashing through a table and sending men and trays flying.
But it was already getting up.
Ludotius was on it. He brought the chainsword down in a two-handed overhead strike. The daemon raised its claws to block. The obsidian shattered. The chainsword didn't stop. It sheared through the daemon's arms, its shoulders, its chest, cleaving it down to the pelvis in a single, cataclysmic blow. The two halves of the creature fell apart, revealing a core of writhing, worm-like things that squirmed for a moment before being crushed under the lieutenant's boot.
The mess hall was a charnel house. The air was a thick soup of blood, steam, and the foul stench of the warp. The floor was slick with viscera, littered with severed limbs and twitching torsos. And still, they poured from the tear.
Ludotius stood his ground, his chest heaving, his chainsword screaming a song of endless slaughter. His red lenses glowed like coals in the hellscape he had created.
"PUSH!" he roared, his voice lost in the cacophony.
"CLEANSE THIS FILTH!"
He drove forward again, into the teeth of the storm, a son of the Emperor in his element, drenched in the blood of his enemies.
Somewhere else in the ship, the rest of his men were probably fighting the same battle he was.
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