I am back guys. This week goal is 500 power stones. Enjoy.
Six months later.
Cassian's eyes snapped open in the dark, breath steady, body still. The low hum of the ship's engines thrummed faintly through the floor. His quarters were large — far larger than what any common crewman could ever dream of. A proper bed, a steel desk, a small armory against the far wall, and enough space to move freely. He'd made sure of that.
Six months aboard the Imperator Bellum had taught him more than just the workings of the ship. Minds were easy to nudge when you knew how. A whisper of authority here, a subtle push there, and the quartermaster had become convinced that Cassian belonged in officer quarters. No one questioned it after that. They never did.
He sat up, running a hand through his hair. Fifteen now. The past year felt distant, blurred, like a different life. Even his reflection had changed. His body had grown leaner, harder, the softness of youth burned away through relentless training. His mind, though — that was where the real change had happened.
His thoughts lined up cleanly, faster than before. Ideas clicked into place with a clarity that felt almost unnatural. The memetic virus had sharpened him, his mind now a weapon honed to cut through knowledge and extract understanding. Learning had become a pleasure — not just for the sake of power, but because it felt right. Like he was meant to grasp these things.
Cassian closed his eyes and reached out.
There were minds. Distant, faint, dulled by sleep and the ship's bulkheads, but he felt them. The disciplined focus of the bridge crew stood out against the background hum of lesser minds. Cassian pushed further, expanding his awareness like a ripple across still water. The sensation was strange — not sight, not sound, but a presence.
He inhaled slowly, focusing. Then, carefully, he pushed. A whisper of thought drifted into the mind of a sleeping crewman. Nothing complex — just a nudge, a flicker of unease. He felt the ripple of discomfort, the subconscious stirring as a dream turned sour. Cassian withdrew before it became more than that.
It wasn't the first time. In the Hive, he'd used it to slip past arbites and cultists alike, planting doubt and fear in equal measure. He hadn't fully understood what he was doing then. Now he did. Every day, his grasp of telepathy grew stronger.
He stood, rolling his shoulders. His body moved differently now — smoother, more controlled. The weakness of his old life had been carved away by months of relentless effort. Training was a ritual. Physical conditioning. Combat drills. Hours spent poring over Mechanicus texts. Each day a step closer to mastery.
The Magos Biologis had given him his first glimpse into the secrets of the flesh. Cassian had devoured those lessons, learning about cellular structures, genetic markers, and biological augmentation. Each piece of knowledge added a layer of understanding to his own body — what it had been, what it could become.
But it was Magos Faron who had opened the door to the machine. Lessons were never given directly. Instead, Faron made Cassian watch, observe, and when he failed to understand, he was left to puzzle it out on his own. Cassian didn't mind. His mind worked faster now, connections forming in seconds where others might take hours. The thrill of understanding drove him forward.
Power armor maintenance had been his first test. The delicate art of calibrating servos, balancing the power feed, and ensuring the sacred machine spirits were properly appeased. The bolt gun was a lesson in itself — the of recoil and gas venting, the meditative process of stripping, cleaning, and reassembling. But the real prize had been the chainsword.
Faron had let him disassemble it once. The memory burned vividly in Cassian's mind — the scent of sacred oils, the whir of the chain drive, the glimmer of polished teeth. Every piece of the weapon was a testament to craftsmanship and perfection. Piecing it back together had been like understanding the heartbeat of a predator.
Now, as he stood in the quiet of his quarters, he reached for his telepathic senses once more. This time, he pushed further. The sensation expanded, his mind reaching out across the cold corridors. He could feel the flickers of other minds, faint and distant.
Then he tried something new. He focused on a single mind — a crewman passing through a distant hallway. Cassian pushed, not with fear or doubt, but with a command.
Stop.
The crewman stumbled. Cassian felt the moment of confusion, the sudden halt in movement. Then the man shook his head and continued on his way.
He exhaled slowly. There was still more to learn. Every day, he pushed himself further — refining his skills, testing his limits. The Warp was dangerous. He knew that. Every use of his power risked drawing the wrong kind of attention. But Cassian didn't have the luxury of fear. He needed to be ready.
Six months had passed. He wasn't the same person anymore. The boy who had scraped by in the Hive, clinging to scraps and shadows, was gone. In his place stood something sharper. Harder.
Cassian grabbed his lasgun, sliding it into its holster.
As he stepped into the corridor, the hum of the ship greeted him once more. The Imperator Bellum sailed through the void, its destination uncertain. Cassian didn't know what lay ahead. But whatever it was, he would be ready.
---
The corridors of the ship stretched on in silence, save for the distant hum of the ship's core. Cassian's boots echoed faintly against the metal deck as he made his way toward the engineering section. The air here felt different — heavier, tinged with the faint scent of machine oil and ozone. Pipes ran along the walls like veins, pulsing with unseen energy.
The Mechanicus enclave aboard the ship was a world of its own. Servo-skulls hovered silently through the corridors, their optics glowing a soft red. Tech-priests moved with purpose, their robes swaying with every precise step. Incantations drifted through the air, prayers to the Omnissiah whispered over flickering consoles.
Cassian found Magos Faren where he always did — in the heart of the ship's machine bay. The room was vast, lit by the cold glow of lumen-strips overhead. Machinery loomed in every corner, their forms half-hidden in shadow. Faren stood before a massive cogitator array, his mechadendrites weaving through the air as he worked.
The Magos was an imposing figure. His red robes fell in heavy folds around his augmented frame, the faint hiss of pistons accompanying every movement. Augmetic limbs moved with mechanical freedom, while his face — what little remained of it — was a pale mask of flesh and metal. A single crimson optic glimmered beneath his hood, flickering as it scanned a data-slate.
Cassian cleared his throat. "Magos."
Faren turned, the motion unnaturally smooth. His augmetic eye whirred softly as it focused on Cassian. "Initiate Vail," he intoned, his voice a mechanical rasp. "You are punctual."
Cassian nodded. "You wanted to see me."
"Affirmative." Faren gestured toward a workbench, where a partially disassembled servitor lay in silence. "The sacred machine requires attention. You will observe."
Cassian stepped forward, eyes narrowing as he took in the servitor's exposed mechanisms. Pistons and gears gleamed beneath the harsh light, each component carefully aligned. He watched as Faren's mechadendrites moved with practiced ease, slotting pieces into place with mechanical precision.
"Notice the alignment of the cranial interface," Faren said, his tone flat. "Deviation from optimal placement risks cognitive dissonance. The Omnissiah demands perfection."
Cassian leaned closer, studying the delicate web of circuitry beneath the servitor's skull. "Understood."
Faren adjusted a power relay with a soft click. "The cortex implant interfaces directly with the occipital lobe," he explained. "This facilitates visual data processing. A misalignment of even one micron results in corrupted sensory input." He pointed to a thin cable, its copper strands glimmering. "Reconnect."
Cassian hesitated, then carefully guided the cable into place. The servitor twitched as the connection was made, its limbs jerking once before falling still. He glanced at Faren. "Like that?"
The Magos inclined his head. "Adequate."
They worked in silence for a time, the only sounds the soft click of tools and the hum of machinery. Cassian moved with purpose, handing Faren the proper instruments as needed. He'd learned long ago that the Magos valued silence over idle chatter.
Still, there were things he wanted to know. As Faren adjusted a power relay, Cassian spoke. "Magos… I've been thinking about the nature of the machine spirit."
Faren paused, turning his gaze toward Cassian. "Elaborate."
Cassian hesitated. "In the Hive, machine spirits were… revered. Prayers, oils, rituals. But here, on this ship, the relationship feels different. More practical." He gestured to the servitor. "You don't seem to rely as heavily on the rituals."
Faren regarded him for a long moment. "The Omnissiah's wisdom is vast," he said at last. "Interpretation varies." His mechadendrites clicked softly. "In the depths of the Forge Worlds, ritual is paramount. The sanctity of the machine must be preserved. Here, aboard the Imperator Bellum, necessity breeds pragmatism."
Cassian frowned. "So… faith is secondary?"
"Incorrect." Faren's voice was sharper now, his crimson optic flashing. "Faith is the foundation. Rituals serve as conduits, ensuring proper communion. But understanding…" He gestured toward the servitor. "Understanding is the truest form of worship."
Cassian considered that. "Knowledge as faith."
"Correct." Faren turned back to his work. "To know the machine is to honor it. To wield its power without understanding is heresy."
They lapsed into silence once more, the weight of Faren's words settling over Cassian. He watched as the Magos sealed the servitor's cranial plating, the soft hiss of pneumatics filling the air.
After a moment, Cassian stepped forward. "What's next?"
Faren handed him a calibration tool. "The motor cortex relay requires adjustment. Observe the voltage differentials."
Cassian carefully aligned the tool with the implant, watching as readouts flickered across the cogitator screen. The relay hummed beneath his fingertips, warmth bleeding through the metal casing. He made minute adjustments, each twist of the tool met with a soft click.
"Good," Faren murmured. "You are doing well."
Hours slipped by unnoticed. Cassian worked with quiet focus, each task more complex than the last. He replaced worn actuators, calibrated synaptic relays, and aligned servo-motors with near-perfect accuracy. Faren offered little guidance, only stepping in when absolutely necessary.
By the time the servitor stirred, its limbs moving with mechanical grace, Cassian felt a strange sense of satisfaction. He wiped the sweat from his brow, watching as the machine came to life.
Faren regarded him silently, his crimson optic glowing softly. "You have done well."
Cassian inclined his head. "Thank you, Magos."
Faren turned back to the servitor, his mechadendrites curling in the air. "Come. There is more work to be done."
Cassian followed without hesitation. The path was long, but he would walk it. One step at a time.
---
Cassian Vail — Status Page
Age: 15
Race: Human (Imperium)
Occupation: Survivor of Hive Desoleum
Stats:
Physique: E (6/20)
Dexterity: E (5/20)
Intelligence: E (17/20)
Wisdom: E (8/20)
Affinity: E (2/20)
Perks:
Danger Sense
Precision Refinement
Insightful Awareness
Favour of machine spirits
Adaptive physiology
Skills:
Lexicon Proficiency — Level 28
Melee Weapon Proficiency — Level 42
Physical Conditioning — Level 86
Hand-to-Hand Combat — Level 62
Firearms Proficiency — Level 60
Mental Discipline — Level 15
Telepathy — Level 18
Tech Maintenance — Level 14
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