Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

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EarthScorpion
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by EarthScorpion »

Well, actually, it's sort of meant to be read without understanding, guessing what they're saying from context. Sort of like Pingu.

Wait a moment. Pingu = Pen-Pen's ancestor? Must investigate closer.

Chapter 15's at 22,005 words, by the way. It looks to be another 30,000+ word chapter, sadly (for my fingers). And I wuv the Migou. They're just so... adorable in their... well, that would be telling. But we actually get an insight at them in this chapter, and there are going to be some real surprises. Yeah, my Migou are much better than the shitty "canon" Mortal Remains ones, who don't seem to be able to tell the difference between a "solar system" and a "galaxy". :roll:
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by TabascoOne »

Sounds like fun. Sort of the same treatment as the Dagonites got, just before the reaming starts? :)
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EarthScorpion
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by EarthScorpion »

Well, yes, there's certainly reaming. But I would refer you to the title of this section; it's amusingly double-edged :) .

And in a sense, I don't need to make the Migou sympathetic in the same way. The Dagonites are very... well, human; they're mostly just people, good and bad, following an ideology which is repugnant to outsider observers. I needed to humanise them, to show that they were just people before they got Replica'ed and Evangelioned in large numbers. Even the Deep Ones are close to humanity; same planet, and they have to be related to the primates in some way, I'm personally sure. The Migou don't have the same constraints, because, simply, they're not human. They're not even from the same tree of life; they're not rogue Elder Thing constructors stuck in fixed form.

What they are is understandable, in their their objectives are sympathetic. Indeed, I will make a case, from their viewpoint, that they're the good guys in this story; the main characters are just the protagonists.

Oh yes. And they're very much not the Tyranids. :D
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by JonB »

EarthScorpion wrote:Oh yes. And they're very much not the Tyranids. :D
That seems like a Suspiciously Specific Denial.
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by EarthScorpion »

JonB wrote:
EarthScorpion wrote:Oh yes. And they're very much not the Tyranids. :D
That seems like a Suspiciously Specific Denial.
Oh, no, quite the opposite. They're really not the Tyranids; they're not a hive minded species, throwing away their resources like that, they're not biotech fiends (although some of their technology has the characteristics of being alive, it's approaching it from the other side), and they're not out to eat worlds.

If they're anyone from 40k, they're like an odd hybrid of the Imperium and the Eldar. In this metaphor, of course, Earth is a Tomb World. :D

Don't mistake an insect-like appearance for acting anything like Earth's insects.

...

Now, Special Services and Suspiciously Specific Denials, on the other hand. :angelic:
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by Highlord Laan »

Being an avid Cthulhutech fan unable to find players, I love this story with a passion. Though with the coming throwdown with the Migou, I hope we get to see some hardtech mecha proving that do indeed kick ass. Or maybe a Seraph or two slapping around Migou mecha like they do so well in the game. :P

Keep it up, I want more!
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by EarthScorpion »

Uh... well, this is Chapter 15a. 15b will be coming fairly soon, but, well... really, I had some complaints about the last chapter being too long to easily read, and it looks like the sum of 15 is going to be longer again, so I thought I'd split it into two.

So, yes, 15a might not be as action packed as you might have liked, because it's sort of crammed into 15b, as that's how the structure ended up. And, yes, the Evas are sort of under-represented... again, 15b. And once CATO is over, we'll be back to the old way of them being more central.

Assuming a lack of distracting other storylines, naturally.


______________


Chapter 15a

CATOcylsm: Termination


~'/|\'~


it hurts so much. pain is her existence, now. for a subjective eternity.
Twinkle, twinkle, little star
she floats, in darkness.
How I wonder what you are.
they reach out and touch her but they don't touch her.
Up above the world so high
they shouldn't touch her.
Like a diamond in the sky
not like that.
Twinkle, twinkle, little star
not ever.
How I wonder what you are!
she screams as it happens, water and fire and pain and death and abomination and horror and fear and terror and panic and screaming and confusion and agony and cessation all brushing against her mind, and she feels it all.
When the blazing sun is gone
that was a long time ago.
When he nothing shines upon
she screams as it happens, fire and death and pain and horror and flesh and nightmares and dead mothers and decay and tearing and tiny things that crawl inside the lungs and the eyes and eat them and she feels it all.
Then you show your little light
this is now.
Twinkle, twinkle, all the night.
she stirs.
Twinkle, twinkle, little star,
she wakes from her slumber, eternally lying dead but dreaming.
How I wonder what you are!


~'/|\'~


The sky was on fire.

Well, technically that wasn't true. But night had already fallen again, the day this far north in winter only a few short hours which had already passed, and the smoke from the Reykjavik pseudo-arcology, which the Dagonites had called Cthulhu'ybeq Ahefrel, were lit from below, to create a crimson sky. From the exterior feed from the outside of the Ranger AFV, the damage which the invasion had done was evident. No building was left untouched; even the least damaged had holes through their façade, punched through by plasma beams, railgun slugs or necklaces of bullet scars.

The camera panned to a ruined fountain, high pressure water jetting out of the ruptured mains pipes only to fall back to earth as a cold mist, freezing solid on the ground. There were the remnants of a statue at the peak, carved out of some black stone. One wing remained intact; the other, along with the head and the parts of the torso that had connected the two were gone, shattered upon the ground.

“You got that?” muttered Antonio.

“Yeah,” replied his cameraman, hands dancing over the controls as he coordinated the suite of LAI-assisted drones that flocked around the Ranger, filming the environment. “It'll make a great 'defining image' for the package. 'Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair', and all that.”

“Uh... we're coming up to an intersection. Try to see if you can get a full shot of that spire... no,” he said, highlighting a tall building backlit by the fires and the remaining Dagonite searchlights, leaning over at almost thirty degrees, the slanted outside plagued with scars, “that one.”

“On it.” Varuata said. “What do you think did that? How's it still standing?”

One of the troops escorting them leaned over; the AR projection against their contacts (only soft contacts, not the permanent hard contacts or the optical nerve jacks that were starting to enter the market) tagged him as Sergeant A. Richards. “The slanting one? Yeah. If it's one of those cabletowers, then the cables on one side got hit, and then something hit the building, too.”

“They're a real bugger,” added one of the soldiers. “They're easy to build; you anchor the rods with cables, like a tent, and then you build around the inside, but they fall apart. And the fish-fuckers love their coilsnipers.”

“And those harangy CW2 gyrojets,” added another solider. “So damn crude that they sometimes work even through the emfog. Launch from cover, then home in on the spotter's target.”

“Are... there are coilsnipers up there?” asked Antonio, concern in his voice.

Sergeant Richards shrugged. “Not on that tower. You'd have to be an idiot to stay up there. It's going to fall any minute.”

There was a pause, as the two journalists shared a look.

“I'll keep a drone on it,” said Varuata.

“Good idea.” Antonio turned to face the soldiers again. “So, how long until we get to the site?”

“Ten minutes out, assuming the area remained clear.”

There was a jolt, as the AFV pulled behind an abandoned barricade and opened fire, the snap of superheated air audible through the hull as the laser pulsed its way along the front of a ruined tenement. An explosion sounded nearby and bullets pinged off the armoured vehicle.

“Well, mostly clear,” added the sergeant, clutching his rifle closer in the somewhat cramped cabin, the mass of the empty powered armour taking up space for two men. To Antonio, the way the armour's LAI set the soldier's combat armour eyeholes to opaque removed all humanity from the already skull-like face. “What've we got?”

“Squad of tangos, hostile heavy weapon is down,” yelled back the gunner, targeting the general area of the fire and letting the LAI do the fine work before firing. “Look like militia... that's one of the CW2 one-twenty mike-mikes they give to the goons. We're just mopping up. No real threat.”

Sergeant Richards looked back to the journalists, and relaxed. “Acknowledged. Yeah,” he continued. “The armour and the Papa-Alphas have already been through, and the Echo-9s have the place covered, so... yeah,” he summarised.

“Bit pathetic, really,” added another one of the identical looking soldiers, her voice the only indicator of her gender. “The militia are just brainwashed cultists, mostly.”

“Yeah, well,” said the sergeant, “we're off to see one of the romeo-camps with the journos. Once you've seen one... the fish-fuckers don't get any sympathy from me. Wish we could use some bee-cee-nam, like we did in Santander, but that'd remove the point of rescuing the poor buggers. Hells, en-bee-cee-nam would be better, but...” He shrugged, and glanced up at Antonio, no flesh at all visible under the almost skull-like visage of the infantry combat armour. “You covered what the fish-fuckers do before?”

Varuata shook his head. “Yes. We were in Santander, too. R&R, actually, bad luck that they showed up. Closest ones to the place. You know those videos of Valkyrie coming in?”

“No way! That was you?”

“Yeah.” He raised his hands. “Wasn't even using drones for that; didn't get them until after they'd mostly been driven off. Old fashioned shoulder-cam and exosuit for that.”

“Wow,” said the female soldier who'd spoken before. “Those were awesome. And those helljumping nutters are fucking badass.”

“I interviewed a few of them afterwards,” added Antonio. “They are completely,” he raised a finger, “and I mean, completely and utterly bugshit insane, but, yes, they are awesome.”

“We've been on the Eastern Front since then,” continued Varuata.

“That's a cold fast one, isn't it? What do they call it? “Time and Tide”, isn't it?”

The Nazzadi nodded. “Yeah. Hideous jamming; you can't use drones in most places, so you have to go in on foot. Both us and them are all about the attack, counter-attack. 'Cept when a cap-ship shows up; then they completely dominate the area, until the others can pull back to static defences. It's like some weird kind of trench warfare, 'cept instead of trenches, you have stuff that can hurt cap-ships. It's almost luck if you can get footage there... more like bad luck, almost, 'cause it means the bugs are hitting the sector you're in, and they'll pull back before reinforcements arrive..”

“Four minutes out,” called the gunner from the front, over the intercom.

“But... yeah,” said the sergeant, a morose tone creeping into his voice, as he returned to the original topic, “if you haven't seen what the romeo-camps are like, you should turn around and leave now. I just hope the killing hasn't started yet.”

“What killing? By who?” asked Antonio, paling slightly.

“By the people we rescue,” said the solider, who refused to say any more.



~'/|\'



Misato took it surprisingly well, all in all.

“I see,” said the Major slowly, as she broke the link to her comms implants. “Information distribution authorised,” she told the branch of the Total Information Tactical Analysis Network LAI that was handling the Nero operations.

There was a generalised commotion from the rest of the room, as the rest of the operations room responded in a less calm manner.

“Captain Martello,” she said, turning to the NEG military liaison, “I want as much air cover as you can get me. Get Marcellus to send everything they can spare and then some. I don't care if that means that the other Task Forces have to take losses. Pull in any capital ships you can, too. We need to slow down the orbital forces enough to complete the ritual, and then take down the Herald.”

The square-jawed man stared at her, jaw slightly open. “Are you insane?” he finally managed. “The entire naval assets used in CATO are smaller than the incoming Migou forces, even before the hostile warships and the losses we took from the Dagonite nuclear weapons are included. There's no way we can win.”

“I know,” said the Major, the glimmer in her eyes belying her calm expression. “That's why I clearly remember saying that we needed to slow them down.”

He only worked his jaw a few times.

“The entire point of Operation CATO was the success of Nero,” she continued. “If this fails, then we have damaged the entire strategic position of humanity for no gain, even if we don't take any losses from the Migou. Agent Tome,” she continued, turning to the albino, “how long does the Solomon Throne need?”

“To complete the ritual?” He checked his book-shaped PCPU, making a few quick adjustments. “Assuming we accept a 50% fatality rate among the sorcerers, and... fifty-three minutes. Plus an unknown period of time for the Herald to surface.”

“Too long. Can you speed it up?”

Agent Tome stared back, impassively. “There is another way, but it will raise fatality rates further, and risk burning out the survivors, as well as possibly drawing extranormal attention. From a entity that is not Moloch. We can employ the Patrone System to its theoretical maximum.”

“Do it. Your superior told me hold important Nero is to you, so you can risk it to ensure that the mission is completed. How long would that take, then?”

He blinked, twice. “Including the necessity to get authorisation? Seventeen minutes, plus or minus six minutes. That's assuming that our estimates for the entity's current wakefulness are accurate, of course. There's a very large margin of error here; possibly several hours.”

“Can you be more precise?”

“No. We haven't exactly done this before,” the agent said, a hint of sarcasm creeping into his voice.

“Have you done something similar?” the Major snapped, aiming for the weak spot in his sentence.

Agent Tome licked his lips once, an unconscious gesture. “There exist other magma-dwelling creatures, although they were Knights, rather than Heralds, at most, and in almost all cases lesser threats than even that. However, none of the trials were anywhere near this deep. I cannot help you. It might teleport up instantly, it might swim up. We weren't exactly expecting the Migou to show up now.”

“Wait? What trials?” interjected Captain Martello.

“That's classified. You did not hear that,” said the albino, deadpan.

The Major tilted her head slightly. “Go! Get me everything, Captain. And, Agent, will your sorcerers accept those kind of losses?”

A faint smile crept over the albino's lips. “Oh, yes. They agreed to do this, understanding that they could die. They're aware of the need to do this.”

“Then go do it. And then use your Special Services pull to get me even more forces. Go drag in Director Khoury; she made it clear that this is necessary.”

The Captain saluted, the OSS agent merely nodded. “Understood.”

Misato turned, and headed down to the main workstations, hands balled into fists, internally swearing with exceptional virulence in all the languages she knew.

Migou. Why now! They want it too?

She noticed the way that the operators and technicians were staring at her; with a degree of fear and what almost looked like concern. They hadn't heard the conversion; the noise cancellers around the command point should have seen to that, but the combination of the news and the body language was more than enough to set everyone on edge.

Misato leant over to Makota. “Open a channel to the Evas.”

He continued to stare at her. “Major Katsuragi... it looks like you're keeping the Evas there. Under the biggest single fleet ever.”

She stared at him. “Yes.”

“They won't stand a chance! They're just children.”

“No. They stopped being just children the day that each of them became one of the Children.” The Major stared blankly up the main screen, tracking the projected landing area of the incoming Migou fleet. “And if we don't managed to eliminate that Herald, one way or another, we won't stand a chance either. Do you want it in the Migou's hands?” She paused. “Now, open a channel to all three Evangelion Units.”


~'/|\'~


All across the ruins of the city, where the NEG had mostly gained control, the surviving gaggles of scattered troops, both Elect and Blooded among them, moved from building to building as best they could, ducking away from the searchlights from above when they swept over head. Each group was trying to get back to Dagonite-controlled areas, or were, desperately, trying to continue the fight.

“Come on, come on,” said Sv'fuzna-obff Guh'maena, striding at the front of the group, reduced to three after they'd made the mistake of poking their heads out when an armoured column, hover-tanks and mecha alike, were passing. He was bare chested, crude bandages wrapped over the morass of cuts that covered his chest from when a close-proximity blast had crushed his armour. “We can still smash them! We're not going to cower down below in the tunnels. We have faith in Lord Dagon, and he, in turn has faith in us! We shall not disappoint him. Have faith in yourself.”

Yuh-kho'ui, anti-armour coilgun and what ammo she could carry after the death of her spotter slung over her shoulder, elbowed him. The male Blooded grunted in pain. “Keep it down, you p'erg-va,” she hissed, feeling her nascent gills, still not permitting air across them, open and close in anger. “Look up!”

The brightness of a searchlight shone through the ruins of the roof, through the holes that shrapnel had torn in it. That wasn't the most worrying bit. The heretical forces of the New Earth Government didn't rely on visible light, especially when operating at night. There could be those spy drones up there, scanning the majority of the EM spectrum, and the first thing they'd know was when a missile got lobbed in through the roof, or those wasp-like gunships did a strafing run.

She looked back. “How are you holding up, Shem'oan?” she asked the operator of the exosuit behind them. It was crudely armoured up into a power armour, but its true purpose as a tool for digging tunnels like the ones which connected the underground shelters was clear, from its bulbous front profile and ornate frontal decorations. It wasn't even a militia vehicle, and the pilot was just a construction worker.

“Not too good,” Shem'oan sniffed. “It doesn't matter. We're all going to die, anyway.”

“Don't be a fool!” said Guh'maena loudly, turning around to face the other two. Stepping back, he grabbed the mining exosuit's hand, which could have crushed him with almost no effort, and stared at the eye-sensors on the front of the construct. “Listen to me. Survival isn't winning! Winning is winning! Listen! Er-wrp'g p'bz-zba fraf'r 'gb z-nxr gur v'zcbf'f-voyr cbf'f-voyr! Vfa'g gung gur 'j-nl gung s'n-vgu e'by'yf?” He paused. “You understand what we will achieve, because we have faith in Dagon and in ourselves?”

Shem'oan nodded within the exosuit, then realised that the honoured sv'fuzna-obff could not see that. “Yes, my Sv'fuzna-obff,” he said out loud, over the speakers.

“Good!” Guh'maena paused. “So, where are we?”

Yuh-kho'ui sighed. “We're in Yr-neavat-v'fsha Primary,” she said softly, dropping down below the window, staring out past the broken glass to the darkness outside. “We just need to make our way through the rest of S'n-gny'evat-v'at, and we can get to the fallback position.”

“We shouldn't be falling back!” said Guh'maena, the sound of outraged faith in his voice. “We should be proud to give our lives in service to Dagon-anzr. One of the true faithful does not die even when they are killed!”

Slowly, the female Blooded drew her coilgun, deploying the bipod, and resting it on the broken window. “Don't say another word,” she said, barely breathing. “I thought I saw a flash of movement through there... and get low!” she added, realising that she was dealing with a Sv'fuzna-obff; the kind of religious fanatic who wouldn't know the least about duties as a markswoman. She was going to really miss this, when her blood showed fully; the deterioration in vision was not going to be pleasant. Breathing slowly, she scanned the buildings across the street, over from the playground, looking for any movement.

There was the hypersonic crack of a railgun, which was deafening even with the ear protections in the masks that the Order infantry wore, and Yuh-kho'ui felt a spray of something warm (too warm in the cold night air) spray across her back. Reflexively she span, dropping the coilgun and drawing her pistol. In the strange-slowed time that an adrenaline-filled brain produced, she saw the mining exosuit take one step back towards the window and her, the other side of the room visible through the hole blown through the domed cockpit. The fluid sprayed across from the hole was dark, the colour unknown in this darkness. There was a bulky figure standing on the other side of the room, something wrong-looking about its face.

Impossibly, the mining exo-suit pulled itself from the fall, and took step forwards, its drill spinning up. A second step.

A second crack of the railgun, which tore the right leg of the suit clean off, sprayed the rest of the room with shrapnel and concrete splinters when the hypersonic slug tore into the floor. The exosuit began to fall, as did Guh'maena, his unarmoured torso torn apart by the shrapnel, that hyperedged sword he'd been so proud of clattering to the floor undrawn.

The Blooded woman had her pistol out and levelled by now, though, and she squeezed the trigger, the nine-millimetre bullets (a product, like so much of the Order's weapons, of the Second Cold War; that pistol calibre no longer saw use in the forces of heretical humanity) impacting against the figure, which twisted and ducked back behind the cover of the wall. She couldn't see that it'd had any effect. That was something they'd found with these NEG forces; even the infantry, when they weren't using those power armours or those odd heavy armoured suits, took multiple shots to take down, even if you could get through their armour. Resin casings clacked to the ground, as she kept shooting, through the thin walls of the school.

Yuh-kho'ui felt the pistol click empty, and scrabbled on the ground, trying to pull the coilgun back around, up from its position at the window. It'd be worthy shattering her shoulder if she could take this monster down.

Lift and... up... and around.

The figure already had its rifle levelled at her even as she started turning back. A burst of three bullets danced its way up her chest; one through the sternum, one through a lung, and one shattering her right shoulder, like a trio of knives punching through the light armour issued to the marksmen of the Dagonite forces. She fell to the ground, her spasmodic trigger squeezing tearing holes in the ceiling before the coilgun fell from her hands.

Through darkening eyes, she saw Guh'maena twitch. In an odd clarity, the finger-long pieces of concrete protruding from his chest were clear, even through the fog that gathered in front of her vision. She knew what she had to do; the grenades were at her belt.

Her right shoulder was a mess of pulped meat and bone. She didn't have the strength.

One poster, drawn crudely by childish hands in paint, on the opposite wall became clear, as she gazed helplessly, unable to even move her head. The bright blue was so... pretty. Like the sky. And the mass of stars everywhere were just... right.

And then there was nothing.

Foxtrot 813 scanned the room for any other threats. A single bullet was spared for the one cultist that twitched on the floor, ensuring the elimination of the threat. When the inside of the exosuit was checked, the Replica found that the pilot had been pulped by the first shot. Evidently, the LAI control systems had merely been doing their best to keep the suit upright, and the second shot had been wasted on a threat which had been neutralised.

The fact that the movement had not matched how a LAI system would have moved was considered and noted.

The Replica shifted inside his armour. The pistol, light and obsolete though it had been, had hurt; not in the same sense as it would have hurt a human, but the existence of pain was acknowledged in the pseudo-sapience of the organism, the shard of soul behind its eyes moaning. According to the armour smart systems, two bullets had penetrated the hardplate, before being stopped by the mesh underneath. His armour integrity was severely compromised; more care would have to be taken against any hostiles engaged from now on.

The ammunition counter on his HUD was checked.

Code: Select all

ECU-IMFW-3 
20mm Railgun
Standard – 3/8, /|\ 8
EMP – 0/8 /|\ 3

9mm AR
DU – 23/40 /|\ 40
FMJ – 0/40 /|\ 0

-

ECU-SIS-2
15mm Automatic Pistol
DU – 18/18 /|\ 18

-

Grenades:
L7A2 Fragmentation – 2
UT-42 Flash – 1
FFB-1 Incendiary – 0
CW-4 NECW - 0
He was starting to get worryingly low on ammunition for the assault rifle component of the IMFW-3; less than two full magazines remained. Before that, it would be worth acquiring weapons from enemies, even if there would be a loss in efficiency due to the fact that the weapons would not be designed for integrated use with his armour system.

There was an odd crackling in his radio system. User ID only displayed UNKNOWN CONTACT. Foxtrot 813 slapped the side of his helmet; nothing happened, apart from his HUD flickering slightly.

There was an odd noise at the edge of hearing... a simple tune, chiming in the distance, from the outside of the school building. The Replica, weapon raised, made his way to the window, stepping over the corpse of the female coilsniper.

Nothing. It was coming from one of the buildings on the other side of the street, one of the few without any signs of burning; the red glow of flames could be seen from inside many of the others. There was a dead tree on the pockmarked lawn outside, what had been one of the few, non-rooftop patches of green in this densely packed city. A lone swing hung from it, limply.

Foxtrot 813 levered himself over the ledge, and headed through the outside. The music was growing stronger. He had to find the source!

Something knocked against his shin. The Replica jumped back, weapon lowered. The Dagonites had been using large numbers of mines, and rollers were not unknown. The fact that he remained intact suggested that it was not an active threat, if he'd actually touched it, but...

It was an basketball, orange even in the night's darkness to the enhanced night vision systems of the Replica. The construct froze in place, while the LAI in his helmet tagged that it could not detect any traces of explosives. Slowly, 813 squatted down, and rubbed one armoured hand over its surface. His pseudo-sapient mind could not work out why it had suddenly moved like that.

“Unrecognised unit; IFF reads positive,” came a voice over his communications system, loud, crisp and clear; the first such that he had heard since the destruction of his REV-8. “Possibly the source of the unknown transmissions.” The voice was one he was programmed to recognise, one of the Replica variants, though not the same model as he was. “Identify yourself!”

He lowered himself into the crater, squatting next to the basketball. “Eidelon Combat Unit ORPH-PN1-012 Foxtrot-813.”

“ORPH-PN1-012 Foxtrot-813,” repeated the voice. There was a pause. “That unit was recorded as MIA.”

“Correct. The assigned REV-8 Eidelon Powered Armour was mission-killed, and self-destruct protocols were carried out as usual, to deny asset to enemy forces.”

His HUD picked up a flicker of movement, tagging a friendly unit; just there for a second before it was gone again.

“Foxtrot 813, a location is transmitted to your HUD. Regroup with forces there.”

“Understood,” answered the Replica, with a feeling of relief more intense than most humans would experience. It was back in contact with friendly forces, so the success of its mission would be increased.

There were four Replicas in the wet basement, clad in greyish-white semi-powered ultraheavy combat armour. Twenty-four yellow optical sensors were turned his way.

“Eidelon Elite Combat Units ORPH-ORPH-03 Kantya-12, Kantya-13, Kantya-14, and Kantya-15,” stated one of the figures, only distinguishable by the fact that the HUD highlighted which one was communicating and their different armaments. “ ORPH-PN1-012 Foxtrot-813, your current orders are now over-written. Synchronise orders with ORPH-OPRH-03.”

Foxtrot 813 nodded. The Replica Elite had such an authority. Produced in much smaller batch sizes than the mainstream Type VIIs, they were also much more heavily enhanced. Although there were multiple genotypes among all the Replicas, even within a Type, the Elites were, without exception, based off a female template; further modified for endurance, strength, and lightning fast reflexes, and with added aggressiveness and cunning embedded into their pseudo-sapient psyches. Add that to superior armaments and armour, and the fact that they were directly under the control of Orpheus Command, and it could be seen how, if the Assassins were the knife of Project Eidelon, the Elite were the lance. The main limit was how much more difficult they were to handle, assigned to Orpheus Command exactly because only it had the spare capacity to sustain multiple Elite activations as well as keeping the rest of the forces active.

“Threat classified “Migou” has entered combat zone,” stated Kantya-12. “Unlock combat library “Migou”. Orders are to engage Migou and residual Dagonite forces which attempt to prevent evacuation of all assets in Task Force Nero. Destruction of all enemies forces is instructed as a secondary priority; they are to be eliminated. They all are to be eliminated.”

“Understood,” said Foxtrot 813.

fire
bodies

awakening



~'/|\'~


With the window to Command closed, the three pilots stared at each other.

“And now the Migou are showing up,” said Asuka, flatly. She smirked. “Well, I've killed Swarm Ships before. Just follow my lead, and you'll be fine.”

“Certainly,” said Rei. She paused. “Where is the nearest high object to jump off?”

Asuka narrowed her eyes. “You're trying to make fun of me,” she stated. “And, no, don't pretend to be innocent. You know exactly what you are saying.”

“You were not referring you your past experience with the Migou?” Rei frowned. “Oh. I see. But after the previous Herald, we were told by Dr Akagi to try to avoid ripping holes in the fabric of space to create a Zone-like environment of infinite dimensions overwriting the standard 5+n. That may pose a problem, if we are to follow your example.”

“What?” Asuka glared at Rei. “Oh, ha ha. Anyway, I'm pretty sure she was only joking. Or at least,” the girl corrected herself, “being gratuitously sarcastic. Because, obviously, we should avoid blowing up the universe. And I'd like to note that I'm the only one who's fought the Migou befo...”

“Could we try to avoid the catfi... uh, I mean, the argument,” interjected Shinji, hastily correcting himself after a piercing blue and a cold grey gaze locked onto him, “and maybe consider the fact that we're now going to be attacked by the Migou, while we're trying to protect a ship that's trying to summon a Herald, which we then need to capture, and then get away from here?” Shinji paused. “There may also be attacks from remaining fish-men forces,” he added, as the sheer ridiculousness of the situation began to get to him. “I just hope the Yellow Storm doesn't decide to show up as well.”

“Oh, it gets better,” said Asuka, an almost identical tone in her voice. Shinji may have been prone to useless passive-aggressiveness, but, much as she was loathe to admit it, he was right. In that they needed to focus, of course, not that it was a catfight or anything like that. “Unit 01 is the only one with a properly-working long-range set of sensors. Because that blast managed to damage mine, and Unit 00's just got slagged by it. And Migou standard operations is to drop in from high orbit, if they're in an area where we don't have capital-grade defences; we certainly won't have the E-9 coverage once they arrive.”

“Really?” asked Shinji, face turning a paler shade underneath the LCL.

“Yes. It's basic knowledge.” Asuka growled. “And I'm armed completely wrong for this kind of thing. And you, you're not exactly doing too well, either. That thing you have is for shredding vehicles, not going against Swarm Ships.”

“The most commonly encountered model of the class of xenotechnological vessel assigned the name “Swarm Ship” mounts, as its major armaments, one ventral plasma weapon and two nose-mounted weapons of the technological basis that have been deemed “null” weaponry. Despite the extreme inaccuracy of such a term,” Rei added.

“Huh?”

“They possess three weapons which are capable of threatening an Evangelion with a single shot,” explained Rei, tilting her head slightly. “There are thirty six of them. Moreover, the 45 “Drone Ships” mount an laser attuned to the near-mid ultraviolet of a similar, though lesser, threat level.” She paused. “By my understanding, the warships will mount such armaments as to make...”

“Please, no more, Rei,” said Shinji, weakly. “I get the picture. We'll all die if they attack us.” He shivered, suddenly aware of the slimy feel of the LCL that surrounded him. “I never ever, ever thought it would end like this,” he said, in full honesty.

“That is not necessarily true,” she said, clinically. “And what I told you before Operation Ishtar still holds true. You will not die, because I will protect you. I can be replaced.”

“Look, uh, I said you shouldn't say that kind of thing...” began Shinji, before Asuka, who had been sitting, listening to the conversation with growing rage as Rei enumerated exactly the trouble they were in, finally exploded.

“What the hell did the GIA, the OSS... just everyone think that they were doing!” she shouted. “Why didn't they foresee something like this happening! Argh! So obvious that of course the bugs were going to do something like this!”

There was silence.

“Actually, when you say 'foresee'...” said Shinji, slowly.

“No,” said Rei, her voice level.

“Uh... what exactly you mean?” he asked

“I mean, 'No'. I do not know.” She squinted, eyes darting from side to side, in what looked like worry, gazing from the cluttered cockpit of Unit 00. “Everything is strange,” she said slowly, a uncharacteristic tone of both fear and wonder in her voice.

“What are you talking about?” snapped Asuka.

“I cannot explain. You lack the context.”

Back in her plug, the red-head fumed.

The shear arrogance. Going around seeing the future and locking people into the actions that she sees, and acting like that when anyone questions her. She never explains herself. She's so damn quixotic. And she's always been like that.

She stared up at the skies, shifting her position to get her stupid broken sensors to work consistently. Stupid sensors. Stupid OSS. Stupid Rei.

In Unit 00, Rei stared at the morass of projections and displays that smeared the insides of the entry plug, many of them warning diminished functionality due to the damage from the blast.

It was not meant to be like this. I do not understand.

fire
bodies

awakening




~'/|\'~


Solomon Throne, this is Goetia Control.”

There was a pause, as the link protocols ran. Then;

“Acknowledged, Goetia Control. Uplink is secure.”

The albino sorcerer nodded, despite the fact that this was a [VOICE ONLY] connection. He made a few movements across the AR display, dragging new options together.

“Be aware, Solomon Throne, there are multiple hostile Migou capital ships, converging on your location.”

“We are aware, Goetia Control; we have access to NEG military channels.”

“Understood.” Agent Tome paused. “Task Force Nero has chosen not to abort the operation. Repeat, operation is continuing. You are hereby instructed to move to Variant Three.” He fell silent again, taking several deep breaths. Oh, sure, he might pretend to the military and the Evangelion people that such orders didn't affect him, but that was a lie, to create a public persona for the OSS. “The fatality rate of Variant Three has been deemed acceptable. Moreover, you are instructed to employ the Patrone System to its maximum capacity, in a simultaneous dump.”

“You are aware that this will add ten-to-fifteen percent to the fatality rate? And induce orgonic burnout in the survivors?”

The albino closed his eyes. “Yes,” he said. “I am aware.”

“I am afraid that you lack the authorisation to command this. We require authorisation from a Genesis-level authority.”

“Patching you through to Director Khoury,” Tome answered, making a series of complex movements in the AR array. There was silence for a minute. Then;

“Authorisation has been given, Goetia Command. After ritual is complete, we will engage stealth and evac as fast as possible, assuming success and no destructive backlash from use of Patrone.”

“Acknowledged. Goetia Command out, Solomon Throne.”

The three hundred metre ship, which stood upright in the excavated hole which the Order had dug, was now covered with a vast dome, memoform materials only enough to seal off the area and prevent undue influences from entering. The Solomon Throne had seeded the area with nanites, and sped their operations up with broadcast power, relaxing the thermodynamic problems that such free-roaming nano-and-microagents had; the same ones which made the “grey goo” nanoweapons an impossibility. The area was now a black hollow, surface like black glass, with symbols and figures carved into it by the finely controlled lasers mounted on the outside of the ship. The Evangelions had been moved outside the crater, and were being kept away from the dome, standing unmoving vigil over the target location, sensors and eyes to the sky. They should have had nothing to do until the ritual had been completed; now, of course, things had taken a notable turn for the worse, from the viewpoint of the Office of Special Services and those pieces of the New Earth Government that knew about Nero's role.

Inside, the rows and rows of Special Services sorcerers, sat in acceleration couches that bound their limbs, wires threaded into their bodies and into the ports that connected directly into their cerebral implants, twitched. They were not really there, not mentally. Their consciousnesses were in a simulation, a fake world built in the dreams and soul of a preprepared subject, their psyche parapsychically reconstructed to make it an ideal site for such a ritual. After all, by conducting it in a dream, they were in fact conducting it in a location with the same location in the three dimensions of space and one of time that humanity was familiar with. It was merely the fifth coordinate which varied. And due to the fact that it was occurring in one soul, rather than many, metaphysically the ritual resembled one cast by a single, much more powerful lifeform, rather than many weak and flawed humans. It was an ingenious merger of the arcane and the technological; an exploit in the “laws” of sorcery which the mystics of earlier generations had held to. And a work-around the fact that, individually, humanity was fairly terrible at sorcery, the hard-wired limits on understanding as well as their individually rather pathetic reserves of ruach crippling any more intuitive, less ritualistic understanding of the subject.

So very human.

The dream-selves of the sorcerers stood on a vast white plane, no walls in sight, under a void-black sky. Across the featureless plane, vast markings were placed with perfect precision, carved into the server-mind through mental sculpting. Anchored by the identical, though much smaller carvings outside, they stretched into immensity. Each mental-projection was in place somewhere on the diagram, although their eyes could not resolve the nearest compatriot in the procedure.

They were not chanting. They were not praying. Within the sculpted mind which was the ritual site, they were in turn turned inwards, silent, as the equations flowed through their minds, each one solved in turn and in the correct order, describing precisely the flow of orgone through the host-psyche and downwards, into the Earth.

Down to Moloch.

There were three major schools of sorcerous practice in the New Earth Government, with a fourth arguably deserving inclusion. The Cassandran Practices were perhaps the simplest, and closest to how they had been before their public revelation. In a sense, they were not so much a unified school, as a collection of sorcerous procedures that much more accurately required the name “rites” or “ceremonies”. Most spells which would be classified under the Practices were illegal, deemed too dangerous compared to the sterilised and tested versions of the Schools. The few which remained legal were the most basic ones, circles of Warding and Protection, or cruder, less effective (but easier to learn) versions of modern arcanotherapeutic procedures. Where they came into their own was on the summoning and binding of creatures; not through any particular innate brilliance (indeed, they were often horribly flawed, traps left by cultists and long-dead sorcerers as revenge to permit extra-normal entities access to the world), but simply because the practices of summoning and binding had been heavily restricted if not entirely illegal for all of modern times. Those who went into such fields, either through necessity (such as NEG-trained exorcists, working with the OIS and FSB), or through curiosity (a path which led so often to the consumption of the practitioner), were often forced into using the Cassandran Practices.

By far the most widely used was the Horakian School, and, arguably, the Lorenzian School. Both these systems were modern ones; devised and revised by old-school sorcerers who had gone legal, and used the desperation of pre-NEG governments to investigate this new science to secure massive grants, funding, and teams of highly trained scientists all looking for instruction. Officially, Horaki had won out over Lorenz, to a large extent because the former had the advantage of good relations with the nascent Ashcroft Foundation rather than because his version was better, but in practice the two, somewhat similar already, had syncretised in modern universities, the hybrid version taking on the traits of the school that Lorenz had devised. There still existed hard-school supporters of both, but the two were, fundamentally, similar. They were both devised from the older styles, but heavily modified by the systematic application of the scientific method to the old rites, flagging ones which failed or had unintended consequences, comparing those broken ones to ones which worked to find the elements that differed, and generally doing the same thing to sorcery that medicine had done to folk remedies.

But the final, and most esoteric of the methods, was the Salaamian School, named after Christopher Salaam, an early-twenty-first century archaeologist and linguistic theorist who had, if his story was to be believed, stumbled across the principles of sorcery from almost first principles, aided only by some clay tablets of unknown providence in the British Museum. Certainly, the Salaamian School had very little in common with any of the others; it treated sorcerous procedures as something more akin to pure information, a careful balance of mnemonics and exceedingly complex mental calculations that effectively programmed the effect into being. Although the theoretical basis was sound, and the effects that could be generated in it were typically more... elegant, in a mathematical sense, than those produced by other methods, the problem was that it was beyond the human intellect to perform anything but the most basic of procedures, which even then took far longer than any other method would have taken. Christopher Salaam had gone crazy at the end, become convinced that the entire universe was a localised bubble in a vast churning sea of infinite possibilities, and was fundamentally unstable, rebuilt afresh every time a sorcerous procedure was performed; that, literally, sorcery did not break the laws of physics, but instead shifted the practitioner into a point in phase-space where the initial conditions were such that the effects desired happen. The school was an almost purely theoretical one, due to its complexity and negative effects on practitioners' sanity. It was used to check the procedures of other schools, not actually performed.

And yet all the sorcerers upon the Solomon Throne were all trained in the Salaamian School, and, indeed, the OSS made up the majroity of its practical users. The reason for this was simple. Despite the risks and the complexity, it was the only known human-codified system for practice of sorcery which had any capacity for building new procedures without extended experimentation; the only one which allowed true workings from first principles. And, unlike all other systems, the limit was in the rate at which the exceptionally complex n-dimensional calculations and lengthy mnemonic devices (themselves only abbreviated versions of other calculations; given results, so to speak) could be performed, given a sufficient flow of orgone.

The Trintignant-Patjug-003 cyberbrains, Achtzig-made implants that wrapped around their brains, coolant pipes flowing from the ceramic skull-replacement, were woven into the unmyelinated fibres that made up the cerebral cortex, and solved the issues of computation, linked as they were into the trio of Mobad supercomputers within the centre of the ship. And, as for the supplies of ruach, well...

Out in the real-ship, down in what, in the original design, would have been the chamber for an additional D-Engine, to power the ventral laser, but in the Solomon Throne now housed a new power source, a team stood, all clad in full biohazard exosuits. They were clustered together in the middle of the hollow space, keeping far away from the Patrone capsules.

“We have authorisation for full use of the Patrone system,” said Dr Childe, over the comms system of the suits. His tone was confident, veiling any nervousness he may have had. “Ready to authorise?”

Each individual Patrone was a cylinder, whitish-grey, with cables flowing from its side, slightly wider and about a head taller than a man's torso. They were wrapped, six to a level, around a central pole, from ceiling to floor. The room was filled with these poles, . There were hundreds in this room alone; there were more spaces such as this, in whatever room could have been found. A single green light blinked on each one; of course, in Augmented Reality, flowing entopics and projections gave the full status of each Patrone at just a glance. But the green light told all; that the Patrone was ready for use.

The lights flashed blue on the inside of Dr Childe's exosuit, as the other operators across the ship acknowledged him. He reached out, servos on the outside of the void-proofed exosuit humming, and made a complex gesture in the AR display that hung before him.

The results were rather prosaic, after all this melodrama.

One by one, cascading down from the ceiling, the lights on the Patrone cylinders flashed to yellow, and then to red, the flow through the pipes into them ceasing with the red light. It was over in a few seconds.

Inside the simulated space, where an infinite black void which hung above the infinite white plane, the effects were much more dramatic. The entire world began to warp, vast flowing ripples which pulsed through the floor, avoiding the sorcerous markings. In the sky above, novae flared, burning brightness which left harsh shadows scorched behind the standing figures of the sorcerers. They left a pattern in the sky, from where they have so briefly been; the dead stars creating a ritualised marker identical to the one down below, on the whiteness.

Back on the Solomon Throne, the lifesign monitors on the sorcerers began to scream, as the cyberbrains were pushed beyond their safe-operational limits, frying the organic tissue as the waste heat produced from their operations overcame the capacity of the coolant systems.

A plume of liquid shadow erupted from the plane, as the whiteness tore, split like a discarded skin. Vast and roiling, it spread out, a cloud of impossible darkness obtenerating the sorcerers and almost obfuscating the novae, already dying out. It was only possible to see by its absence, but it seemed to be coalescing into some kind of shape above them, up in the void, some vast sphere.

“ENE breach!” warned monitoring systems, back in the real world, sirens blazing throughout the ship. “Sever-soul compromised!”

“Yank them! Get the sorcerers out of there!” yelled Dr Childe. “Ignore the AN damage!”

Too late.

There was a moment of terrible movement, as the last of the novae died and the white plain ceased to be, consumed by the growing shadow.

All at once, all the other vital signs failed, the other sorcerers snuffed out in an instance like candles dropped in the ocean. The server-soul's host began to thrash and scream blasphemies, mad words pouring from her mouth in a roaring torrent, before the LAI systems engaged and triggered the containment protocols, flooding the room with plasma. There was no-one else left to order it. Everyone else on board, within the warding circles carved into the rocks around the ship, and which had been in the sever-soul, had dropped to the floor like puppets with their strings cut, minds and souls snuffed out in an instant.

Nevertheless, they had, in those last moments, succeeded.

It was done.


~'/|\'~


[START PACKAGE]

[The camera pans over the wreckage of the Reykjavik pseudo-arcology]

Antonio de Nebrija :“The fighting still rages in Reykjavik, the cultist forces of the Order of Dagon being slowly pushed back by fierce house-to-house fighting...”

[A soldier in Centurion powered armour blows down the door to a building with a single plasma cannon shot. A grenade is thrown in, then foot soldiers, clad in the heavy combat armour of the standard infantryman, head through in pairs, rifles raised]

ADN: “... and despite minor friendly losses, victory looks to be certain.”

[The wreckage of an Esoteric Order of Dagon Leviathan-type mecha lies sprawled on the ground. The unit is blown clean in half at the waist. A Seraph Engel looms over it, bearing proud and regal. Notably, none of the organic components are showing; from this perspective, it could just be a very large conventional mecha]

ADN: “This is aided by the reports of the success in the diversionary assault to the north, which, contrary to even the most optimistic expectations, has actually succeeded in breaking through the lines...”

[A graphic displays an arrow, the green of unified humanity, punching through the blue of the Order forces over the urban area to the north as well as into the Reykjavik pseudo-arcology.]

ADN: “... no doubt aided by the fact that they have been assisted by the brand new Evangelion-class mecha, capital-grade units recently unveiled and seeing their first major deployment; one which has been exceptionally successful.”

[Still pictures of Unit 02, in the old Type-C armour, from its public unveiling in Chicago-2, shortly before the attack by the Seventh Herald, Yam. Notably, it's still in the red of its test colours, rather than the camouflage scheme that it used when actually deployed, let alone the Type-D it is currently in]

ADN: “However, it is not enough to merely win the war. We must also win the peace.”

[The camera moves to a dusk shot of a sealed camouflaged dome, made of memoform plastics; it's large, covering multiple clusters of buildings. The Atlantic oscean can be seen behind it; there are docking points, where A-Pod ships (not military troopships) hover. Large airlocks can be seen at the base, surrounded by military forces]

ADN: “Even though this is still an active war zone, the humanitarian effort to rescue the slave workers and victims in the Dagonite camps has already begun. The first, and most important thing, is to get the victims to a place of safety, and prevent their officially sanctioned killing by enemy forces, in an attempt to prevent their liberation.”

[The shot changes to one inside the dome; it's well lit, with strips of light running along the curved ceiling. Multi-story tent-like structures have been set up, packed very tight, connected together.]

ADN: “Once rescued...”

[NEG soldiers, notably not wearing the standard combat helmet, but instead a less armoured variant which covers the face with a nanofactory diamond transparent front, removing the inhumanity of the standard, skull-like appearance, can be seen, waving columns of people in cheap-looking, undyed clothing along. The hair of the rescued people has been shaved off, leaving only a stubble. The clothing is obviously far too cold to survive for long outside in the temperatures in Iceland at this time of year]

ADN: “... and the obvious Dagonite infiltrators removed...”

[More NEG soldiers, a Crusader powered armour standing next to them, HMG in hand, have hand-held metal detectors and stun batons, scanning the people at a checkpoint for weapons, before herding them into another, larger scanner. One person is pulled out of the crowd, and bundled to the ground, before being clubbed into unconsciousness with stun-batons.]

ADN: “... then the humanitarian work can begin. These poor people have been through so much.”

[The camera jumps from tear-stained face to tear-stained face]

ADN: “Those liberated from the work camps have been used as slave labour, given the bare minimum of food. Some cannot be saved; the... well, the evil, there's no other word, really, of the Order is such that it lobotomises them, making them into nothing more than fleshy automata to use as workers. Others were pumped full of combat drugs when the NEG assault was detected, and set loose into our path, mindlessly killing anything that got in their way. Only those who were in tasks which required some intelligence...”

[Images of the things described above. The blankness in the eyes of the lobotomised workers, sitting like cattle in the pens that the Order kept them in, not even moving when the powered armour claws off the locks, is more disturbing than the madman with a knife being gunned down by infantry]

ADN: “... can be saved. And as for the people in the forced breeding camps, almost exclusively women, to the trauma of their repeated rape by the bestial Deep Ones, and highly transformed Hybrids, can be added the effects of the hallucinogenic and euphoric drugs used to keep them docile. Perhaps worse is the way that the highly addictive drugs are withdrawn during any pregnancy that results, all in a too-often-successful at brainwashing and thought control.”

[Still shots of the living conditions in the rape camps. They are spartan, rather than the squalor of the work camps, with a slightly medicinal appearance to them; only slightly, because the pictures on the walls are disturbing in the extreme, to the extent that the autocensor blocks them out.]

[A woman of Asian decent, face puffy, eyes red-rimmed, a badly healed scar just under the barcode emblazoned on her forehead, appears on camera. The LAI automatically subtitles her dialogue. She begins talking in one of the Malay languages.]

SUBTITLES: “You're getting me out of here, please! I'm begging you, tell me you're getting me out of here!”

[She begins to shake]

SUBTITLES: “They... oh.... oh... they...”

[She bursts into tears.]

[The camera focusses on Antonio de Nebrija, he's standing on top of one of the multi-story prefabricated structures established in the NEG holding centre. He's wearing the light armour that is issued to journalists, the red “PRESS” emblem clearly obvious, with the same, PR-friendly helmet that the soldiers here were wearing.]

ADN: “I'm here inside one of the many rescue centres that the NEG forces have set up, as we advance across the formerly-Order controlled island. They contain top of the line medical facilities, including access to arcanotherapy, to treat injuries and malnourishment, as well as to counteract exposure to biological, chemical, nanological and micrological agents. This way, the rescued prisoners can be stabalised, before they are loaded onto ships, to get them to safe, NEG-controlled territory.”

[The camera pans sideways, to show a male Nazzadi in a white biohazard suit, anti-stab plating evident on the chest, marking him as part of one of the Army Medical Corps. From behind the clear faceplate, he looks old enough to be a first generation, who possibly even fought in the First Arcanotech War. The camera LAI tags him as “Deputy Assistant Director of Medical Services, Dr Rera]

ADN: “So, doctor. Exposure to battlefield bee-cee-nam? That sounds unpleasant.”

[The doctor nods]

Rera: “It's true, it is unpleasant. Control of the modern battlefield requires the use of emfog, a cloud of nano-and-microparticles which interfere with most kinds of communication, and, sadly, it is toxic when breathed in in large amounts. Luckily, with proper medical care and the use of counter-agents, it can be neutralised.”

ADN: “And the biological and chemical weapons?”

[The doctor shakes his head.]

Rera: “Let me be clear. It has long been a policy of the New Earth Government that we do not use biological weapons that could infect any non-Tainted member of the four recognised Homo sapiens subspecies. The risk of military grade bioweapons infecting real people would be too great. And on the subject of chemical weapons, likewise, I can guarantee that the only weapons used by the NEGA or NEGN here have been designed to be less-than-lethal to the purebred Homo sapiens subspecies. So, yes, we do have to remedy the effects of knockout gas on many of the victims here, but if it's a choice between letting the Dagonites kill them, or knocking the entire work camp out, I know which one I'd chose.”

[Antonio nods to the doctor's explanation.]

ADN: “I see. But...”

Rera: “That's not what I really want to talk about, though. The important thing is the good we're doing here. Once the Hybrid infiltrators have been weeded out... it's the matter of a simple gene check, the markers are unmistakable if you know what you're looking for, we tag each of the rescued people, ready to get them off this island. Already, we're setting up proper settlement camps back in friendly territory. Hopefully, one day we'll be able to set up proper housing here again, but for now, Iceland will be a military territory.

[He pauses]

Rera: It's probably for the best, considering how close we are to Migou territory.

ADN: “So... this entire structure... it's the size of an arcology dome...”

Rera: “Well, a slightly-smaller-than average one, to be accurate.”

ADN: “Yes, okay, true. But, still. This entire thing, you've set it up in hours, and from the flow of people...”

[The camera pans down, to show the column being herded along the temporary streets, shaven-headed figures in loose, undyed clothing, like that might which be given by a hospital, shuffling along. The NEG guards around them have their stun-batons drawn, and are carrying riot shields.]

ADN: “... it's already well under way in its task. How do you manage it so quickly?”

Rera: “That has to go down to the bravery and efficiency of the men I have the honour of serving with... the soldiers who freed these people, the engineers who set this place up, and my fellow doctors and medics who are working non-stop to get these people processed, ready for evacuation.”

[The camera pans again, so Antonio is the only one in shot.]

ADN: “So, there we have it. A sight into one of the areas of the Aeon War which we hear less about, and which many people would like to pretend doesn't exist. But we can all sleep better, and feel better about ourselves, in the knowledge that Operation CATO, with its aim to stop the Dagonites from doing things like this, has succeeded. This is Antonio de Nebrija, for WBO News.”

[END PACKAGE]
Image
See the Anargo Sector Project, an entire fan-created sector for Warhammer 40k, designed as a setting for Role-Playing Games.

Author of Aeon Natum Engel, an Evangelion/Cthulhutech setting merger fan-fiction.
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EarthScorpion
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by EarthScorpion »

Antonio stretched, straightish his arms and swinging them around. “How was it, Var?”

“Looking good.” The Nazzadi paused. “We're going to have to do a redub on some of the earlier packages, though. The fact that we got moved to a processing centre, rather than a rape camp, means that the narrative's a bit mucked up.”

“Are you done with me, though?” asked Rera, his dark face suddenly much more haggard-looking.

“Should be,” answered Antonio. “If we need a reshoot, we'll find you if you're free, or someone else if you're not.”

“Okay,” said the elder Nazzadi. “Uh... when do you think it'll be going out? The bit with me in?”

“Want to tell someone to watch it live?” said Varuta, looking up from his PCPU with a wicked grin, pupils lit up as if with firelight from the AR images up against the soft contact layered over his eye.

Rera shuddered slightly, then nodded. “Yes, actually. Wife, and, who knows? Maybe my daughter might be able to take a break from her holiday... at my expense... to see what her dad actually does. If she isn't too busy staring at pictures of mecha online, all the time, even when I try to do something with her,” he added, a sour note in his voice.

“Teenager?” asked Varuta, a sympathetic tone in his voice.

“Yes. You have one of the wonders known as teenage daughters?”

“One. Adopted. She can be like that, yeah. Nice most of the time, but sometimes she treats Pesa and me like we're only there as sources of money.” The Nazzadi smiled, slightly indulgently.

“I wouldn't mind that so much, if she'd just be nicer to my... no. I am not going to complain about her like this.” He thought about it for a moment. “I am not going to complain about her more, like this.” Rera paused. “So, uh, when is it going to be shown?”

Varuta shrugged. “Antonio?”

“Two or three days from now, but as live. They don't show this kind of thing 'live',” the man said, not looking up, and making the inverted commas with one finger, as he ran over the notes on his PCPU, “until they're sure that they've won. Remember Juneau?”

“You mean...”

“Yeah.”

Just then, an AR message, bright red against the inside of the transparent faceplate of the biohazard suit, flashed up. Rera glanced down. His face fell. “Harangy,” he muttered to himself.

“What is it? Anything important?” asked Antonio, his journalistic instincts tingling.

“Important, yes,” answered the doctor, bruskly. “Something you can cover, no.”

“Why, what do you mean?” the human asked, jogging to catch up with the Nazzadi doctor, who had already headed off down the staircase at the side of the temperature building. “We're here to get the story, get some human interest, maybe.”

“You don't want this kind of interest, human.”

“Why not? We're here for the truth.”

He almost ran into the elder man, red eyes staring through the faceplate with what seemed to be concrete hate, chisel-like teeth evident through parted lips. “Ua mandaterma ni infera,” hissed the older man. Varuta blanched slightly at those words. “You idiotic human moron... you have no idea what it's really like dealing with these people. What they go through and even once we've got them out, the withdrawal symptoms they suffer. You think there's a harangy reason we're all in full gear, and the soldiers have stun-sticks and riot shields, huh? Some of them are so broken we'll never really be able to put them back together again, and then you prattle about “liberation” and “saving them”. You have no idea what I'm going to, do you? Do you?”

Neither of the journalists said anything.

“It's a five-four-fifty-five. That means that some of the captives have had slow-release drugs that induce symptoms akin to paranoid schizophrenia injected before we got to them, and had non-metallic knives hidden on them. They're normally fully symptomatic before they find the knives, if they do at all. Sometimes they just attack the others with their bare hands and teeth.”

He glared at them.

“Do you know what it's like working in an environment where it's so common that we have a standardised code for it?”

The doctor stormed off.


~'/|\'~


High above the surface of the third planet in the ǶǡѬѮӜ-[(zero-46,656) and (thirtyone-1296) and (eleven-36) and (thirtyfive)]-[(zero-60,466,176) and (one-1,679,616) and (twentynine-46,656) and (seven-1296) and (seventeen-36) and (three)] system, the Migou Hive Ship hung, its bulk minuscule compared to the oversized moon of this world, but still enough to make it a new morning star to the inhabitants.

The term “Hive Ship” was eminently inaccurate. The correct term could not have been pronounced by an ape-descendent which lacked almost all the necessary organ systems, and could not see into the majority of the needed bands of the electromagnetic spectrum, but a much simplified version might have translated better as [Exclusion Volume] [Containment and Defence] Planetoid, or EVCDP. This basic design saw use all around the galaxy, on those occasions when it was necessary to lock down an entire solar system, to contain the things of long forgotten species and the remnants of those who had attempted to transcend their then-status that littered such places.

The Migou, to use just-plain-wrong term (the abominable snowman of Tibetan myth was an entirely different species, often encountered in the forces of the Unnameable One), were not even a single species, not any more. Yes, the local branch, the void-adapted fungiod insect-like creatures, spread over this arm of the Milky Way, were all closely related, though they had speciated and divided as the gap between star systems and the slow speed of light, when the immensity of space was considered, had imposed a barrier. But as you spread out, they got more and more different, and, moreover, there were creatures from other trees of life, all following the same goal; the containment of the sleeping and dead elder monstrosities which could wipe them all out. The Migou were no longer a species. They were a philosophy; a galaxy-wide loose alliance of those who recognised that there were things in the universe which could wipe them all out. And their knowledge diffused out, to aid in the pursuit of their eternal vigil, for the failure of one could threaten all the ones in the local area. They were not so much an empire as they were a network, watching over those spatially close to them, to ensure that they had not been corrupted, while providing aid to the unsafe systems.

And the native species, Species ᵺᶙӎшѧ... they were dangerous. The entire planet was irrevocably contaminated just by its nature; it was the reason that the highest level of Exclusion Volume had been established around it. It was the reason that asteroid belts from local stars had been mined to near worthlessness, rather than risk disturbing things in this system by taking too many resources, just to build the masses of EVCDPs that clustered around all the direct paths from other stars, searching for torch-flares or the odd rifts that the Tsab used in their discontinuous jumps, to destroy anything that tried to breach the volume.

The humans below thought that the Migou could have at most two EVCDPs, two Hive Ships. They were blind. There had been attempts, true, to move a second EVCDP to the third planet, almost exactly [(one-36ths)] of a Yuggothian cycle ago, but lased warnings about a Tsabian breakthrough close to the system had forced its recall. It had been all that could be spared, from the necessity of maintaining the [Exclusion Volume], proof against lesser species and stopping any of the quarantined lifeforms from getting out.

And the last [(ten-36ths)] of a Yuggothian cycle, their central base in this system, had been a period of first concern, then worry, then annoyance, and now terror. So fast. So unpredictable. In some ways, such as recklessness and blind-stupidity, this species put even the Tsab to shame. Communications from systems closer to the lines, the light-speed signals crawling through space like a slow fuse, indicated that that Tsab were slowly becoming more aware of the dangers, of the reason for the existence of the Migou, taking more care when they managed to break an [Exclusion Volume] or find one that the local Migou had not discovered. That was a mixed blessing, of course, as it meant that they were less likely to be consumed by the inhabitants before they could obtain the truly dangerous things, but it was better, if only marginally, that they did not wake that they should not.

And it was on the subject of things that should be not woken that this emergency meeting had been called. This EVCDP, as with all its kind, a warship, smothered in layers of ablative ice, which also served as reaction mass and camouflage, and reinforced along the line of its thrust axis, to take the almost-impossible forces generated by its engines, needed to move an object of its mass at an anywhere near passable acceleration. There simply was not the engineering tolerances to have the vast caverns or tall spires of Yuggoth, and so the planetoid was an almost sold mass of metal, Migou construction material, and other, stranger substances bought from beyond the stars. This was irrelevant, though, for only one of the individuals at this meeting was actually in the room in person, the others merely present in one of multiple [body-form/indiviudals], blank communication bodies remotely controlled. And that was not to mention the sensory feeds that ran from this room all around the EVCDP, and via the lightspeed communicators to the rest of the fleet around Three, and (for archival purposes) out to the rely stations that would lead to Yuggoth itself. The Migou did not delineate cleanly between themselves and their technology, and any one of the void-adapted fungoids within range could view this, their superior intellect allowing them to multitask in this way, even when they were operating multiple body-forms. In a sense, the six involved in this conversation were not there as individuals. They were there as representatives of positions, in the vast network of webs and connections that was how the Migou made decisions; merely as ones among the most respected of their respective positions and through their own merit.

Some humans believed that the Migou were a hive-minded species. They were wrong. But in some ways, they had built themselves one, through technology and sorcery, not through some pathetic innate parapsychic ability; a vast network of communications and debate from which emergent policies evolved.

Some might even call it a cyberdemocracy.

Their conversation could not have been understood by a human. Quite apart from the fact that the Migou language, despite the best attempts of linguists, remained untranslated, the levels of reference, the cultural context, the vibrations and colour changes that the information took; all of this was outside the ability of a human to understand, even if they had the necessary implants to understand the flow of easily accessible information that any of the participants or onlookers would have access to with but a thought, to understand the morass of precedent, previous cases, and predicted data. But the basic nature was less alien than might be thought, with the obfuscation of linguistics stripped away. That the chamber would have appeared dark and slime-covered to a human merely showed their inferiority; unable to see the frequencies which void-adapted Migou saw in, or recognise that the maintenance fluid was entirely sterile and aided in the repair and stability of the ship; likewise, everything the Migou did had a point.

There was a buzzing and vibration from the one Migou exclusively present, their [self-form] only occupying a single [body-form/individual].

<Secretary of Known Recordings> : This [meeting/assemblage] is now [full/complete]. It is [requested/ordered] that all [body-forms/networks] act as is properly becoming.

The buzzing from the rest of the room ceased to a rhythmic hum, from the unconscious twitching of limbs.

<Secretary K. R.> : This [self-form/individual] is [grateful/glad]. It is now [necessary/mandated] that the [emergency/situation] on Three be discussed. This [meeting/assemblage] calls upon the <Coordinator of Deployed Containment Forces> to provide [clarification/explanation] for why it has issued a [full/total] deployment of a full [(five-36ths)] of our strategic reserves.

<Assistant to the Void-Forces>: This [body-form/individual] wishes to [interrupt/expand].

<Secretary K. R.> : This [self-form/individual] permits such an [interruption/expansion], though with [slight/marginal] annoyance.

<Assistant V.-F.> : This [body-form/individual] is grateful for permission, and [believes/assures] that this is directly [relevant/connected] to the subject at [appendage/manipulator]. The <Coordinator of Deployed Containment Forces> has [authorised/forced] [(two)] of our [General Out-System] [Local Supremacy Craft] into the atmosphere of Three, to [join/accompany] the deployment of the . This [self-form/individual] would like to remind this [meeting/assemblage] that we only have [(twelve)] available around Three, due to the needs of the Containment of the rest of the ǶǡѬѮӜ-[(zero-46,656) and (thirtyone-1296) and (eleven-36) and (thirtyfive)]-[(zero-60,466,176) and (one-1,679,616) and (twentynine-46,656) and (seven-1296) and (seventeen-36) and (three)] system. The needs of Containment [mandate/demand] that we [quarantine/isolate] all the in-system objects Species ᵺᶙӎшѧ has tried to [inhabit/colonise], even after they have been [cleansed/purged] of Species ᵺᶙӎшѧ.

<Secretary K. R.> : This [self-form/individual] was aware of such [information/data], <Assistant to the Void-Forces>, and was proceeding in an [orderly/stable] manner.

<Assistant V.-F.> : This [body-form/individual] apologises. It is merely that it was [thought/believed] that such a detail should be [raised/informed] as fast as possible.

<Secretary K. R.> : This [self-form/individual] believes it would go faster if certain [self-forms/individuals] did not [interrupt/interject].

The Secretary twitched its wings, resettling them in what, to a human, would be akin to clearing their throat.

<Secretary K. R.> : This [self-form/individual] asks the <Coordinator of Deployed Containment Forces> to provide [explanation/clarification] for its actions.

<Coordinator of Deployed Containment Forces> : This [body-form/individual] thanks the <Secretary of Known Recordings>, and condones the [wonderful/brilliant] enthusiasm of the <Assistant to the Void-Forces> to raise its points as [rapidly/swiftly] as it could. Furthermore, this [self-form/individual] assures the [meeting/assemblage] that it retains full [grasp/embrace] of its sanity. However, to [explain/clarify], it must call upon <Student Into Things Unknown>, for it [made/gave] the orders on the [explanation/clarification] of that [self-form/individual].

<Secretary K. R.> : This [self-form/individual] would query if the <Student Into Things Unknown> provided its backing, as [detailed/described] by the <Coordinator of Deployed Containment Forces>.

One of the other communication bodies vibrated, spreading its wings wide. Even from the communications body, it could be seen, from the cybernetics that snaked into the body, that the <Student Into Things Unknown> could not bear to lack the massively enhanced interface capacities, even for a short meeting in a [body-form/individual], that it would normally possess in its laboratory environment. How typical for one who filled a role such as it.

<Student Into Things Unknown>: Indeed, this [body-form/individual] and its [self-form/individual] gave full backing to the <Coordinator of Deployed Containment Forces>, after [consulting/debating] with the <Prophet of Estimated Futures> and the <Archivist of Dangerous Pasts>.

The <Assistant to the Void-Forces> let out an annoyed buzz, a pulse of its surface rippling through the mid ultraviolet, before it regained control of itself. With such a block behind it, the <Coordinator of Deployed Containment Forces> was probably untouchable, even if it had forced the stupidity of pulling down [General Out-System] [Local Supremacy Craft] into atmosphere, where they were not really designed to go. The <Student Into Things Unknown> ignored the outburst, such as it was, and continued.

<Student I. T. U. > : Our [(three)] [self-forms/individuals] have analysed the [data/readings], executed the predicative [procedures/sorceries], and consulted with the [Sanctified/parapsychics]. It is [clear/certain]. In [retrospect/hindsight], we should have seen it earlier.

<Prophet of Estimated Futures> : This [body-form/individual] apologies most profusely for its failure to [anticipate/foresee] such an event. It was too preoccupied with the [possibility/potential-probability] of another light-speed [break/rupture] and the resulting dimensional [instability/flaw], such as happened in the [(eighth)] and [(ninth)] time increments.

<Secretary K. R.> : This [self-form/individual] would ask precisely what event its [esteemed/respected] colleagues are referring to, and [request/ask] that they get in close proximity to the point.

<Student I. T. U> : This [body-form/individual] would request that it not be [interrupted/interjected], when it is trying to explain. As the <Secretary of Known Recordings> has [noted/raised] on previous occasions.

It paused.

<Student I. T. U> : Naturally, the <Prophet of Estimated Futures> and the <Archivist of Dangerous Pasts> are welcome, to [explain/clarify] on points in their own [expertise/base].

<Archivist of Dangerous Pasts> : This [body-form/individual] would like to say that this last [(ten-36ths)] of a Yuggothian cycle has been without [precedent/predecessors] in the Containment of this Volume. It is the opinion-from-evidence of this [self-form/individual] that the upcoming {CELESTIAL CONJUNCTION} has caused a massive rise in activity of the {THREATS}.

The last of the Migou in the room spoke then. It had a much darker epidermis than the others, which almost sucked at the light.

<Handler of Xenobiological Lifeforms> : With respect to the <Archivist of Dangerous Pasts>, this [self-form/individual] does not believe-with-evidence that that can be the sole [reason/explanation]. An increase in root atavistic [traits/tendencies] of the order of [(sixteen-1,679,616)] has been noted among the [inhabitants/dwellers] of the dominant social [organisation/grouping] of Species ᵺᶙӎшѧ. This [self-form/individual] is of the opinion that Species ᵺᶙӎшѧ is [undergoing/experiencing] typical [spontaneous/unprovoked] differentiation. For this reason, this [self-form/individual] supports the <Assistant to the Void-Forces>. If Species ᵺᶙӎшѧ undergoes the full degeneration, it will be [necessary/mandatory] to have total orbital [supremacy/control], to prevent the contamination of the rest of this system.

<Archivist D. P.> : This [body-form/individual] would request that the <Handler of Xenobiological Lifeforms> not promote its [sanity-lacking/crazy] assertion-hypothesises in this [meeting/assemblage]. Species ᵺᶙӎшѧ only fulfils [(eleven)] out of the [(thirteen-36) and (nineteen)] criteria associated with [spontaneous/unprovoked] differentiation. The idea of the <Handler of Xenobiological Lifeforms> has been considered, and been found [wanting/lacking].

There was a loud, furious-sounding buzzing from the <Secretary of Known Recordings>.

<Secretary K. R.> : Not relevant! This [body-form/individual] would like to know why deployment of a full [(five-36ths)] of our strategic reserves has been [authorised/enforced]!

The <Coordinator of Deployed Containment Forces> spoke quickly.

<Coordinator D. C. F.> : The [sensor/detection] systems on board on this [Exclusion Volume] [Containment and Defence] Planetoid, confirmed by the [Long Range Sensor Vessels], detected a [massive/huge] flow of {UNTRANSLATABLE}, in Hex [(zero-1,679,616) and (nine-46,656) and (seventeen-1296) and (thirty five-36) and (zero)]. [Satellite/orbital] coverage shows that a major [offensive/attack] was launched by [New Earth Government] forces against the cultists of {HIGH PRIEST}. The [New Earth Government] has [compromised/weakened] its position against {CONTAINMENT} in order to do so.

<Secretary K. R.> : This [self-form/individual] believes-with-evidence that it is more [evidence/clues] that they are desperate. At least they [acknowledge/recognise] the threat posed by forces loyal to {HIGH PRIEST}.

<Coordinator D. C. F.> : This [body-form/individual] is sure that what they are doing is [illogical/stupid], if it is being done for [territorial/military] reasons. The military gains are not of that [value/worth]. They are up to some [plan/plot].

<Archivist D. P.> : This [body-form/individual] would like to add that the signature of {UNTRANSLATABLE} is unprecedented in over [(two-46,656) and (zero-1296) and (thirtyone-36) and (twentynine)] Yuggothian cycles. Either an exceptionally powerful {THREAT} is [awaking/living], or multiple such beings are involved. It is believed-with-evidence that it is the [former/first] is the case, and the {SLEEPER IN FIRE} is being intentionally being [summoned/roused].

The <Assistant to the Void-Forces> was silent, shocked to its core by the news. Finally, it managed to speak.

<Assistant V.-F.> : This [self-form/individu... this [body-form/individual] expresses great concern. Are the <Student Into Things Unknown> and the <Archivist of Dangerous Pasts> sure of this?

<Prophet E. F.> : This [body-form/individual] is, and once again expresses [remorse/sorrow] that it did not foresee or predict this.

<Archivist D. P.> : Likewise, this [body-form/individual] is certain, to a high [extent/level].

<Assistant V.-F.> : With such information, this [body-form/individual] withdraws all objection to the deployment.

The <Archivist of Dangerous Pasts> rippled its wings in satisfaction. The <Assistant to the Void-Forces> continued, though.

<Assistant V.-F.> : This [body-form/individual] also now believes-with-evidence that more [void/space] forces should be [committed/deployed]. This threat should never be [underestimated/ignored]. Indeed, this [body-form/individual] believes-with-evidence that the entire [hex/sector] should be [sterilised/cleansed] from orbit. It believes-with-evidence that such a [technique/method] would be the only way to be [certain/sure].

<Handler X. L.> : This [body-form/individual] expresses [shock/alarm] at such a suggestion. The {SLEEPER IN FIRE} could be woken by such a [technique/method], and there are other {THREATS} on Three.

<Coordinator D. C. P.> : This [body-form/individual] is of the opinion that, although the suggestion of the <Assistant to the Void-Forces> should not be [implemented/performed] immediately, we must be ready.

<Archivist D. P> : This [body-form/individual] agrees with the <Coordinator of Deployed Containment Forces>. It is better to risk an [uncertain/unfixed] awakening of a {THREAT} to contain another, than to [let/permit] one [certain/fixed] awakening {THREAT}.

<Prophet E. F.> : From initial calculations, this [body-form/individual] believes-with-evidence, that, should orbital [sterilisation/cleansing] be needed, the chance of another{THREAT} [awakening/living] is [(thirteen-36ths)]. Yet it will prove necessary to risk it, to prevent the {SLEEPER IN FIRE} [awakening/living] again.

<Archivist D. P> : This [body-form/individual] would remind this [meeting/assemblage] of the events last time it [awoke/lived]. It must be risked.

There was silence, as the terrible future that lay before them. Finally, the <Secretary of Known Recordings> spoke again, its buzzings and colour changes weak and muted, in a way which, in a human, would have seemed like desperate hope.

<Secretary K. R.> : At least, this [self-form/individual] reminds the [meeting/assemblage] that the [New Earth Government] will try to oppose it. They have an [unnatural/unusual] skill at such things.

The buzzing of the <Coordinator of Deployed Containment Forces> was burning cold, its mottling shifting to the far ultraviolet.

<Coordinator D. C. F.> : This [body-form/individual] would remind the [meeting/assemblage] of what happened last time [containment/cleansing] was attempted on a {THREAT}. In the [(sixth)] time increment? [(Two)] entire [fleets/wings] of [Terrestrial Planet Combat] [Local Supremacy Craft] (Non-Standard) were destroyed. [(One)] by a close-proximity [fused-hydrogen/atomic] weapon, while actively in [combat/conflict] with the {BLACK FRACTAL}, the other by an [orbital/void-born] assault while [trying/attempting] to reinforce the aim of [containment/cleansing].

<Assistant V.-F.> : This [body-form/individual] would like to correct the <Coordinator of Deployed Containment Forces>. It was [technically/precisely] launched from the [upper/higher] atmosphere, and thus was not under the [jurisdiction/control] of the [void/space] forces.

<Coordinator D. C. F.> : This [body-form/individual] would like to say that that was not the [point/message]. The [point/message] was that Species ᵺᶙӎшѧ cannot be trusted to deal with {THREATS}, even if they [possess/own] the technical capability.

<Secretary K. R.> : This [self-form/individual] would argue that, if they have the [capacity/abilities] to deal with {THREATS}, then it is possible to [protect/preserve] our strategic reserves.

The humming of the <Archivist of Dangerous Pasts> was slow, methodical, and ancient. It was the eldest of its kind here, having soaked up the lore that the species that made up the Migou had accumulated, crawling between the stars at light-speed as it was sent, for aeons. The line between the Migou and their technology was thin at best; the <Archivist of Dangerous Pasts> was far beyond it, more like a distributed mind in the networks, teleoperating body-forms than anything akin to how it had once been. And the way it broke protocol to say this showed its concern.

<Archivist D. P.> : It cannot be risked. The behaviour of the [New Earth Government] matches several other [cases/instances] where the {NATIVE SPECIES} was compromised by [cultists/worshippers] of {THREATS}. It is suspected-by-precedent that they are trying to [summon/call] the {SLEEPER IN FIRE} themselves. Such behaviour would indicate that Species ᵺᶙӎшѧ is completely [hostile/servile]. It may be necessary to [move/transition] to the [sterilisation/eradication] of Species ᵺᶙӎшѧ, should this be the [case/situation].


~'/|\'~


An explosion thudded far overhead, deep and sonorous, which shook the bones. The lights flickered, making shadows dance, the dust on the floors danced. Babies wailed like air-raid sirens and small children bawled, the frantic attempts of the outnumbered carers to keep them quiet unsuccessful. The air was already growing thick with the musk of the scared members of the Elect, and the wetter, somewhat necrotic scent of the Blooded.

Things were quieter, but even more stressful in the militia command post in this bunker. A mix of bureaucrats and factory supervisors, Blooded and Elect alike, were all that were here. There were no members of the proper armed forces of the Esoteric Order of Dagon left alive here, nor any of the true Chosen.

“Right, my fellow qr'rcbar'uloevq-uhzna, and r'yrpg-uhzna, what do we know?” said Khonatqa Smeef'ubabhe, who was technically the local Veer'thyne'yrnq-re, running a hand through her fast-thinning hair. By right of Blood, she was the highest ranking member of the militia here, and that was not comforting. Va Dagon-anzr, she was the superior supervisor of the production from the Bu-shp'x District, not a military commander. The Veer'thyne militia was only meant to be subordinate to the proper military, not to carry out operations on its own, va Dagon-anzr!

As a result, she was just going to fall back to what she knew, and get a clear overview of their assets, after they'd been forced to fall back here, collapsing the tunnels down on their way. It would take the blasphemers of the New Earth Government considerable effort to follow them down here, as the corridors had been built to be too small for powered armour, meaning that they'd have to find dig a way through the corridors on foot. Their own powered armour, manned by the last members of the proper military they'd had with them, had given their lives at the entrance, unable to retreat further, but able to buy time and dig in.

Not much time, since the NEG had simply pulled back their own powered armour, and called in those en'cvat wasp-like gunships, who'd simply cut the poor faithful to pieces with pin-point accurate laser fire and charge beam shots, their slaved LAI drones more than enough to see through any attempt at cover, but time enough.

The member of the Blooded who'd defaulted to her second-in-command, Ubeevoyr Q'b'p-gbe-ubabhe (in his normal life... or at least the life he'd had until the monsters in the NEG had come... a medical doctor who saw to the ha'snvgu'shy-uhzna), blinked his oversized, watery eyes, the pupils no-longer human, and said, “Well, um, we've still got contact with most of the other f'n-s'rgl bunkers... they're in a similar state to us. There are some members of the military in some of them, but from what I've been able to pick up, they're arguing with each other. Some want to attack, some have just broken like ul'qebcu-bovp s'vfu.” The last words were spat in the invective tone. These discussions were being conducting in the hybrid tongue spoken by the human and near-human inhabitants, rather than true Ry'lehan, simply because there were not enough present who could speak the proper language with any degree of faculty.

“I know they're a bunch of ul'qebcu-bovp s'vfu,” said Khontaqa, using a studiously neutral tone, “but we can't do anything. We collapsed the tunnels behind us.”

“Um... ubabherq Veer'thyne'yrnq-re!” called out one of the operators, sat by one of the stations that connected to the fibre-optic network in this cramped room, “we've... well, networks are dropping off the station. We've lost Q'rnqs'vfu, Er-cyvp'nc'jarqh... I can go on.”

“They've gone dark?” asked Ubeevoyr, answering for his superior.

The woman at the desk, barely sixteen and not really much more a girl, shook her head. “No. They're still broadcasting... but,” she winced, “well. Uh, listen.”

She made a few changes at her desk, the computer (a bulky desktop, seventy years behind the technology curve) humming near silently as she plugged moved cables around. Something began to play, in the strict, precise Reformed English of the New Earth Government. It was a female voice, cold and clinical, and dripping with contempt.

“We now return,
Deep Ones will learn,
New kinds of fear,
While we are here.”

There was a pause. Then the voice spoke again, in some alien language, but this time there was a wicked glee in the words.

Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.

Another pause. It began to loop, starting again.

“We now return,
Deep Ones...”

“Cut it off!” snapped Khonatqa, her voice little more intelligible than a gurgle. The operator obliged.

Va Dagon-anzr, they've got to the tunnels, then. They weren't meant to find them,” she said, managing to hold the whine out of her voice. That estimate had always, in retrospect, been too optimistic. When they were meant to be able to lob a missile through a window to hit an unauthorised radio broadcast, of course they'd find the tunnels. She wiped one clammy hand over her forehead, melanin now blending with the emergence of the various pigments that the Chosen used, and slumped down in her chair. “Right!” she snapped, sitting bolt upright. “Have the remaining Veer'thyne got everything from the military stockpile here?”

Ubeevoyr nodded. “Yes. It's meant to be saved for the army, though, not the Veer'thyne,” he said, a note of reprimand in his voice.

“Yes,” she snapped back, rolling her fish-like eyes in their still-human sockets. “Because they're being really helpful, aren't they?” She paused, as another explosion shook the ceiling and made the lights flicker. “If they want them, they can come and get them. Until then, I'm going to see that they're used.”

The man lowered his gaze. “Sarcasm,” he muttered. “Yes, that's useful, isn't it? Just when I try to note that you're not...”

“Ubeevoyr.”

“Yes?”

“Shut up, Ubeevoyr.” She drummed a pair of fingers against her teeth, drawing them back with a yelp when she nicked one against the shark-like teeth which had replaced her human ones, coming in from under the gums.

Ubeevoyr snickered, until a glance silenced him.

“Can we concentrate, please? Of the surviving members of the Veer'thyne, we have 29 ready, yes?” The question was directed at one of the human lesser members of the militia, who had been standing silently in the room. The man shook his head.

“I am afraid not, ubabherq Veer'thyne'yrnq-re,” he said, saluting sloppily. “According to the doctors... uh, we got some of the carers to help up, as they have medical training, I hope that's okay?” he asked, waiting for confirmation. When he received it, he continued. “Yes. Um, we have only twelve of the Veer'thyne who are completely uninjured; five can walk, and six are too injured to do anything. The rest have died, or didn't make it down before we collapsed the tunnels.” The man flinched slightly, then added, “Va zl bja vasre'vbev'gl, z'lfrys znl unir b'ssraqrq lbh, fhcrev'be bar,” in ritualised apology for the correction.

She waved a webbed hand at him. “Fine.” She took in a gulping breath, air dragged over her gills as well as into her lungs. “Only six p'bzongc-nve of uninjured,” she groaned. “How are the five?”

“We've doped them up on painkillers. They can walk, but they won't be aiming for hevar... uh sorry, ubabherq Veer'thyne'yrnq-re.”

Ubeevoyr stared into her eyes. “Not enough. I could see what you were planning. The blasphemers hold the waterfront. We couldn't even get that close. And it would be foolish to try. We should just stay here, and hold the entrances.”

The communications operator who'd spoken earlier interrupted, her voice shaking with both nervousness at doing this, and the terror of hearing those messages take over even more of the bunkers. “Uh, ubabherq Veer'thyne'yrnq-re, I think that's how they're getting into the tunnels. They're getting in through the evac points at the waterfront. And... well, they seem to be using,” he voice dipped, “I know it sounds impossible...”

“Just tell me, r'yrpg-uhzna,” snapped Khonatqa.

“Summoned haan'zrn-oyr'puvyqera,” the woman burst out. “Invisible monsters with glowing eyes that disembowel and kill and rape and paint the walls in blood. That sounds like the haan'zrn-oyr'puvyqera of the Unnameable One. Do you understand, Veer'thyne'yrnq-re,” she suddenly shouted, almost screeching as she left out the honorific. “I can hear it all over the network. There isn't any warning; they just start screaming, and there's this noise and a few babbled descriptions, and then the line goes silent. And then that chant starts again.” There were tears running down her cheeks, smudging the make-up that must have remained from the parties only the night before (so long ago), as she said, “Do you know what it's like listening to that over and over again?”

Khonatqa stared at the sobbing woman for several long seconds. Then, “Get to the armoury. Get yourself kitted up. You can't cope with the radio any more. Fine. Get ready to fight.” She turned to Ubeevoyr. “Get me a full list of every person of age... no,” she corrected herself, “get me a list of everyone in this bunker.”

“What are you doing?” Ubeevoyr asked, straightening up, as he realised what she was doing. “You can't just do this. They're here to be protected.” Inhuman instincts flared in both of them; he was flexing for a dominance challenge. They were both, unconsciously, heating up, faces flushing with blood as their body temperatures rose for the activity that their nascent Deep One forms foresaw.

She thwarted it by the expedient method of, in one smooth motion, drawing her pistol and placing it against his forehead. She could see, in her developing infrared vision, all the heat drain away from his face.

Va Dagon'anzr, you are not going to do anything stupid, are you?” she said, coldly. “I want you alive, but I need you to do what I say. Drop the pistol you're trying to draw if you think you can do that.”

There was a clatter. Only then did she see the shocked faces of the young Blooded, their gills not even coming through yet and the Elect around them. For some of them, this would be akin to a theological crisis; two such Blooded, almost Chosen, could not be seen to fight like this. “Listen to me, qr'rcbar'uloevq-uhzna and r'yrpg-uhzna of the Veer'thyne,” she snarled. “You are going to do what I tell you to, because I am your superior in blood. And what I'm telling you to do is to get a list of every single person in this bunker, and check the inventory for the military supplies here. Every person of twelve years or more is hereby recruited into the Veer'thyne. Get them armed. Everyone younger... if they can carry a pistol, give them it. If they can't, they're carrying extra ammo, or looking after the smallest children. We are not going to wait here to be slaughtered like everyone else. We are going to try to get to the fho'z'ne-v'arf places, and get into the water. Yes,” she paused, as the ceiling shook, “yes, I know that the blasphemers have the waterfront. They're also in the tunnels. And if they've taken one bunker, they can work out where the rest are.” She gave a grin which, to a human was ferocious, but was actually rather pathetic. “It's better to die on your feet than die on your knees, right?”

“And what if we'd rather not die?” muttered someone, in the onlookers.

“Then this way is the only way,” she replied, contempt in her voice. “Unless you want to cower here until they find you, and rape you, kill you, and paint the walls with your blood.”

She glanced back down at Ubeevoyr, still on the ground. She could see the hate in those bulbous, dark eyes.

He's a threat to your control, her thoughts went. He opposes you, and you've embarrassed him in front of a load of qr'rcbar'uloevq-uhzna and r'yrpg-uhzna inferiors. You can't trust him.

He tried to threaten you for dominance, added her growing instincts. This is your pod, and he wouldn't be a good mate, really.

They were in agreement.

She shot him in the head at point-blank range, the hiss of the needler burst almost silent in the noise of the screaming of children from outside and the thudding from up above. There was surprisingly little blood; three thin fletchettes punching through the front of the skull and ricocheting around inside the braincase. The body of her second-in-command slumped to the floor.

Plus, I never really liked him, she added, mentally.

It was less than fifteen minutes later that she was scanning down the full printed list of all the Faithful, as outside there was the noise of impromptu lessons in weapons safety from harassed Veer'thyne soliders, themselves only militiamen, not professionals.

They were probably all going to die, Khonatqa thought. The prospect was especially galling to her, as true, biological near-immortality was maybe a year away. If only the hevar New Earth Government had waited, then she could be safely down in Guh'thya-leh'yi, where her father swam even now, rather than up here in this bunker, most probably to die. And that meant that she was going to grasp at the best shot for immortality that she had right now.

She made a few notes, as she ran through the paper list. They were going have to cluster the Blooded children together. Those of weaker blood would be the vanguard and rearguard, where the casualties would be highest. It probably wasn't worth arming the rearguard at all... maybe just anything that was left over after the rest had been equipped. And, in these cases, an adult, albeit one who was part of the Elect, was more valuable than a child of weak blood, because the adult would be better at making sure that everyone else survived; they'd need a real rearguard, to actually watch for enemies behind them, and then the disposables, who could be safely sacrificed to slow down anyone who tried to follow them. Better still, they would be young enough that those with the Blood would be almost indistinguishable from those of the Elect, so there was a chance that the enemy would waste time securing them.

She had supervised the production in the s'noev-pn'gvba p'nzc-f. This kind of calculus of human life was what she was good at.

Khonatqa glanced through the door, propped slightly open. There were so few adults here, even with the carers, who would have looked after the children while their parents were in the militia, outfitted as one of the Veer'thyne. Just swarms and swarms of children, all with gas-masks round their necks, swathed in heavy winter clothing over their hazard-resistant suits. The older ones were holding secured carry-cases, for the infants, or grasping onto the shoulders of their younger siblings. There were a surprising lack of tears, but plenty of tear-stained faces. Perhaps they didn't really know what was going on. Perhaps they were already cried out; the brighter ones must have already realised what had happened in the... it had been less than a day, Khonatqa realised, less than a day since the routine had become this hell. Perhaps they were just traumatised. Either way, she had to try to save as many as possible, while also keeping herself alive.

Babies could be strapped to other children, she noted, continuing, but toddlers would be more difficult, as they would be too big to be carried like that. Leash them together, and get children in the rearguard to herd them, as they could be left behind, rather than slow the group down if it had to run. She considered the benefits and costs of splitting up groups which only shared one parent; on one hand, that way they could be placed in the place which most suited their blood-purity, but on the other hand, the trauma would make them uncooperative, and would slow the group as a whole down.

She was scoring out entire sections now, highlighting the different levels of importance. A cluster of names caught her attention, and she paused. Something jolted her mind... something she'd been told yesterday.

Ah. That was it, wasn't it. She wrote the two names out on a piece of paper, and handed it to one of the Veer'thyne by the door, telling her to find the two names on the paper. The three in the cluster were crossed out, and highlighted in the colour to be added to the rearguard.

After all, she knew where their mother had been placed, and what that almost certainly meant. And, really, now, she was the closest thing that they had to family.

At least on the land. And that was the point, wasn't it?


~'/|\'~


It was a cold night, the only clouds the man-made ones as the cities burned, and way up above them, in the clear air, a flock of comets could be seen, trails of fire streaking as a tail behind them, growing larger. With the wandering comets were two new stars, burning brighter than even the shard of moon visible.

The Migou had entered the atmosphere.

They were coming in hard and fast, relying on the atmosphere to breaking. It had permitted them to maintain their burn for a few precious [time partitions] longer, and so they could get to the necessary Containment Hex faster. The [Terrestrial Planet Combat] [Local Supremacy Craft] (Non-Standard) and the [Terrestrial Planet Combat] [Deployment Craft] (Non-Standard) were, in a sign of how the local forces had been obliged to upgrade to the new, suspect technologies employed by Species ᵺᶙӎшѧ, operating with reactionless-drives, and so the the flaming path they picked through the sky was only caused by the friction between their hulls and the surrounding air. But the [General Out-System] [Local Supremacy Craft], although they had been retrofitted with a few A-Pods, were still primarily based around their fusion torches, and so they were forced to full a hard-burn in the upper atmosphere, to ensure that the last part of the decent could be handled with the maximum-safe levels of burn permitted on such a Contained planet. Their thick layers of ablative ice were burning away, as they descended, tail first, contributing to their flaming passage. After this mission, they would need resupply, from one of the icy asteroids that the [General Out-System] [Large Supply Craft] had towed from the outer system to the orbit of Three. This would be a terrible time for a Tsabian breakthrough. Well, if there had been a breakthrough, it would have happened multiple Three-orbits ago, but that was the problem of a sidereal war where no side could violate lightspeed.

In the one of the [Terrestrial Planet Combat] [Local Supremacy Craft], the consensus-appointed leader of the [Deployed Containment Forces] component of the fleet (everything except for the [General Out-System] [Local Supremacy Craft], which remained under the auspices of the Void-Forces, even in-atmosphere), prepared his final message before they hit combat.

<Adjunct of Deployed Strategic Reserves>: This [self-form/individual] is of the opinion that all must be [aware/conscious] of what is at [stake/risk]. [Understand/comprehend] this, then, {MIGOU} and {LOYAL XENOBIOLOGICAL ASSETS} alike. When this [deployment/force] will [hunt/locate], this [deployment/force] will [kill/exterminate]. No thing is [safe/inviolate], no thing is [protected/sacred]. As it stands, this [deployment/force] is the [last/final] line of [defence/containment]. This [deployment/force] will [burn/sterilise] itself to hold the [defence/containment] line. Every [living/awake] entity can be [burned/sterilised] to [contain/restrict] the {THREATS}. Success is [mandatory/necessary]. Failure is [unthinkable/unnatural].

The <Adjunct of Deployed Strategic Reserves> broke the link through its implants. Words had been said and transmitted, translated into an appropriate format for the {LOYAL XENOBIOLOGICAL ASSETS}, both Blanked human and Loyalist Nazzadi, and now it was times for deeds. The majority of the [Terrestrial Planet Combat] [Local Supremacy Craft] would accompany the [General Out-System] [Local Supremacy Craft], their armoured forms, designed for atmospheric use and built around the A-Pods, more expendable than the somewhat more fragile war-ship, the massive ventral weapons making the spine of the ship, with the fusion drive at one end and the crew at the other.

All across the [Terrestrial Planet Combat] [Deployment Craft], Migou, Loyalist and Blank troops were ready, contained within the Inhibition Holds; the only thing which had prevented the human-baseline elements of their forces from being smeared across the walls in the rapid acceleration and deceleration from high orbit. Even then, multiple {LOYAL XENOBIOLOGICAL ASSET} elements of their forces had been incapacitated with broken limbs and squished tissues, and were being swapped out of their craft for the replacement pilots, who had had the benefit of acceleration tanks, rather than just the acceleration harnesses of their mecha or dropships.

The Migou elements had fared better, able to cope with higher accelerations than the terrestrial humans, but it had not been a pleasant experience. But now they (in their xenoarcanocybertechnolgical warmachines) were ready. The elite of the [Deployed Containment Forces] were seeing use here, and their role was containment, not occupation. The regular formations, made up of Migou as well as the {LOYAL XENOBIOLOGICAL ASSETS} would be taking the outer edges of the island, engaging the forces on the island while the elite locked down the summoning site and cut the heart out of any hardened resistance.

And the <Soldier of Necessary Actions> was certainly ready. Its [self-form/individual] was in control of six [body-form/individuals], a true [body-form/network], encased in their [Insertion] [Ultraheavy Assault Units]; what a human would have called a Mantis. Five blank bodies, implanted cybernetics synchronised with the ones in the [body-form/individual] it had occupied since its [thought centre] had arrived in its containment capsule on the hard-burn courier ship from the second nearest star-system from the [Containment Volume], following the emergency call for [Containment Forces]. It was now a distributed mind over seven bodies, thinking the same thoughts, its superior intellect handling all the thought processes. The final body was a back-up, in a null-sense environment back on the [Terrestrial Planet Combat] [Deployment Craft], taking minimal thought processes to run, but ensuring that as long as one of its [body-form/individuals] survived, it survived.

The Migou in command of this [Terrestrial Planet Combat] [Deployment Craft] opened up a mind-link to all the units ready for drop.

<Captain in Void-Dark Hull>: This [body-form/self] wishes to inform all [body-form/networks] that control over [release/initiation] has been [passed/authorised] to them.

The <Soldier of Necessary Actions> twitched its limbs, all of them, across its seven bodies. It was ready. It pulsed a single thought into the communications network.

<Soldier N. A.>: Deploy [combat-form/network].

The [Terrestrial Planet Combat] [Deployment Craft] pulsed, rails spewing out the insertion units, firing them through its own cloud of burning air as it descended, down to the surface to deploy the non-insertion units, before taking off again to give fire support. All around, from the bulbous holds of the [Deployment Craft], orbital insertion units, atmospheric fighters and smaller handing craft spewed out, a flock of smaller units around their parent craft, breaking off to hit their own objectives.

The surface of Three spread out below the <Soldier of Necessary Actions> and its [combat-form/network] tumbled through the air, each [Insertion] [Ultraheavy Assault Unit] wrapped in its own corona of re-entry flames.

Through the fires, to war.


~'/|\'~
Last edited by EarthScorpion on 2009-12-30 10:29am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by Baughn »

The Migou really are the good guys, I guess. And from their point of view, we're arcanoxenobiological abominations. This does not bode well.

Also, is there a hint here that the Tsab will gain a greater role in the future?

It's funny, though. This universe's Tsab seems similar to a better developed NGE, while the nanohaverse TSAB holds almost the exact same philosophy as the Migou.. and the TSAB also has stronger weaponry, amusingly enough. With which they nearly wiped themselves out. Over. And over. Again.

Thus the attitude.
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by Vehrec »

*orients multiple sensor nodes skywards*

Oh fuck me that's a lot of Migou. Alright HAB, look alive! We've got incoming so punch up the SALs and the SAMs and have coolent flushes and reloads on standby. Main targets for primary weapons are the [MCC-TPCLPCNS] secondaries are targets of opportunity. Designated targets uploading...now. We are not losing an Ultra-Light-Omni-Multi-Purpose-Cerebral-Assisted-Minimalistic-Biotic-Armored-Platoon on my watch!

Also, you had a few typos, and I wish I had cataloged them as I went. Mostly places where you apparently failed to copy/paste correctly. My main complaint is that you have symbols here that apparently all the language upgrades I've installed don't account for!
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by EarthScorpion »

Baughn wrote:The Migou really are the good guys, I guess. And from their point of view, we're arcanoxenobiological abominations. This does not bode well.
*shrugs*

At least from their point of view. I think you probably noted that my narration is not unbiased; I take on the viewpoint and assumptions of each side in sections which focus on those groups. The shift in vocabulary is deliberate; basically, just because something is in the third person narration doesn't mean that it's true, just that it's what the side currently being detailed believes to be true.

And, yes, the fact that, from the point of view of the Migou, Earth is irrevocably contaminated, and has to be sealed off, the entire Sol system locked down, and mining operations restricted to the outer system is rather amusing, isn't it?

I've actually been thinking about the internal narratives that each side tells themselves about the Aeon War. And the Migou, basically, think that they're Blackwatch, from Prototype. They're here to perform necessary sterilisation and containment duties, because the consequences of them not doing it will be far, far worse.

The OIS, incidentally, think that they're Section 9, from GitS. :)
Also, is there a hint here that the Tsab will gain a greater role in the future?
Well, the Migou are certainly worried that this will be the case. The Tsab actually have better transport between system than they do; spatially discontinuous engines that make them disappear, translated into higher dimensions, and their position propagating through realspace at a tiny fraction less than c. That means that they're a lot more sneaky, as if you miss the entry and exit points, they're not there for the travel.

Hypothetically, actually, they could try to break lightspeed with that. They tried it. It ended... poorly.

On multiple occasions.

Even when they then tried to use the "going poorly" as a weapon system against the Migou.

Turns out, trying to use FTL as an acausal time-travel system gets the ship eaten by things that dwell in the angles of time, and even when you don't try that, there's a tendency for the entire ship to be retroactively erased from the timeline if anything at all goes wrong, or just tear horrible Zones into the fabric of spacetime.
It's funny, though. This universe's Tsab seems similar to a better developed NGE, while the nanohaverse TSAB holds almost the exact same philosophy as the Migou.. and the TSAB also has stronger weaponry, amusingly enough. With which they nearly wiped themselves out. Over. And over. Again.

Thus the attitude.
I know, it's actually something that's deliberate. After all, I personally feel that one of the problems with the canon Nanohaverse is that the dominant civilisation (the TSAB, and from what we know of the Belkans, them too) had almost no opposition that wasn't descended from their precursor civilisations, so they tend to develop all these weapons systems (for supressing anything that threatens them), and... well, the holders of these weapon systems tend to have been recruited at a very young age (for their talent) and used as soldiers. The entire structure is basically based around stopping the high ranking mages getting bored or overly ambitious, and deciding that the upper echelons of command (which don't seem to be as powerful) would be easy to replace.

By contrast, the Tsab have the Migou going around, stopping them from taking things from the ruins of earlier civilisations... the things that their technological base is based on, so they can turn outwards, and have Nanoha and Hayate-level mages as incredible useful assets for fighting Hive Ships, which have unfortunately limited abilities for targeting a roughly man-sized target when it's moving at impressively high velocities.

Actually, from what I've established of the Tsabian history, they're a species that evolved on a planet in a lower level Containment Volume... think of it as one where an elder civilisation had once had cities, before they evacuated them, or were eaten by other things, or had any of the things that happen to civilisations in the Mythos happen to them. And so, instead of developing their own arcanotech, they had the really, really advanced magitechnology passed into their hands when they were still fairly primitive, which changed their entire developmental path.
Vehrec wrote:*orients multiple sensor nodes skywards*

Oh fuck me that's a lot of Migou. Alright HAB, look alive! We've got incoming so punch up the SALs and the SAMs and have coolent flushes and reloads on standby. Main targets for primary weapons are the [MCC-TPCLPCNS] secondaries are targets of opportunity. Designated targets uploading...now. We are not losing an Ultra-Light-Omni-Multi-Purpose-Cerebral-Assisted-Minimalistic-Biotic-Armored-Platoon on my watch!

Also, you had a few typos, and I wish I had cataloged them as I went. Mostly places where you apparently failed to copy/paste correctly. My main complaint is that you have symbols here that apparently all the language upgrades I've installed don't account for!
Heh. Rei has fun at the start of the next chapter. Turns out, omfgwtflolz sensory-based parapsychic powers, combined with your very own charge beam (she still doesn't understand why they keep calling it the "Rei gun"), means that, even though your sensors are down, incoming capital ships probably shouldn't come into range, especially while they're still trying to brake to avoid flattening themselves into the ground.

Also... yeah, turns out that Achtzig are responsible for your current state as a brain-in-a-jar, Vehrec. :angelic:
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by Baughn »

So, how "alien and unknowable" are the Tsab, really? Are we likely to get a POV chapter from them too?

Also, re: FTL travel. It's been said that you get FTL, relativity or causality; pick any two. In this universe, there's a potential workaround in wormholes, since they'd (probably) spontaneously collapse before actually going acausal.

Can I assume that if you tried that in yours, you'd get gribbly horrors instead of catastrophic virtual particle flux?
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by EarthScorpion »

Baughn wrote:So, how "alien and unknowable" are the Tsab, really? Are we likely to get a POV chapter from them too?
Not by current plans. At least at the present date.

I might cover a certain series of events in AW1 involving a certain prominent Nazzadi on the Nostalgi fa Enfeniti, an interdiction cruiser stationed in the Asteroid Belt, hunting for colonies and mining facilities, though.
Also, re: FTL travel. It's been said that you get FTL, relativity or causality; pick any two. In this universe, there's a potential workaround in wormholes, since they'd (probably) spontaneously collapse before actually going acausal.

Can I assume that if you tried that in yours, you'd get gribbly horrors instead of catastrophic virtual particle flux?
Well, technically, the one that ANE lacks is absolute causality. It's just... well, Stephen Hawking's chronology protection conjecture manifests as Hounds of Tindalos (and everything else that lives like that; the Hounds are only one very small part of a world that we know nothing about) attacking you and a high risk of you being retroactively erased from the timeline (because odd things happen when you fuck with Yog-Sothoth), Revelation Space style, as well as catastrophic virtual particle flux.

It's like an imperfect chronology cop. It catches you most of the time, but there are ways to avoid it, if you could somehow stabilise things enough and prevent the formation of a Zone. What do you think they were trying to do at the Las Vegas Zone? :twisted:
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by Vehrec »

EarthScorpion wrote:Heh. Rei has fun at the start of the next chapter. Turns out, omfgwtflolz sensory-based parapsychic powers, combined with your very own charge beam (she still doesn't understand why they keep calling it the "Rei gun"), means that, even though your sensors are down, incoming capital ships probably shouldn't come into range, especially while they're still trying to brake to avoid flattening themselves into the ground.

Also... yeah, turns out that Achtzig are responsible for your current state as a brain-in-a-jar, Vehrec. :angelic:
Well, as much as she can have fun. I've read files you know, intercepted the odd coms signal. What stops her from understanding puns anyways?

And tell me something I didn't already know-ok, ok, I suspected it. What the hell does Achtzig even mean anyways, my offline german-english dictionary says it means 'eighty' but somehow that doesn't seem to fit. 'Livid' might fit beter, but it's still meaningless.
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

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Vehrec wrote: Well, as much as she can have fun. I've read files you know, intercepted the odd coms signal. What stops her from understanding puns anyways?

And tell me something I didn't already know-ok, ok, I suspected it. What the hell does Achtzig even mean anyways, my offline german-english dictionary says it means 'eighty' but somehow that doesn't seem to fit. 'Livid' might fit beter, but it's still meaningless.
It's not so much that she doesn't understand them (at least once someone explains them in some cases), it's that they're an annoyance and a hindrance which serve to obstruct the flow of information. We haven't dived much into her mindset, but it will suffice to say that when she gets stressed or has to actually put effort, she forgets things. Like the fact that most people need to be told information, instead of just knowing things, or that most people aren't even weak pre-or-postcogs, or don't have to constantly <REDACTED>. Hence, puns are bad, because they add another layer of possible lack of understanding into conversation.

And, yes, Achtzig is Eighty. Revelation Space reference (specifically to The Eighty), especially when the head of the Achtzig Group is taken into account.

Officially, in-universe it's named after the design iteration that produced the Magi. Magi-80 (which gets called Caspar) was the first one which managed to maintain a stable interface connection between the components, followed by Magi-83 and Magi-84. Likewise, in ANE, the Engel Group is named after what Yui Ikari said just before she got into Unit 01 for that first ill-fated test run, "Ein jeder Engel ist schrecklich," quoting the Duino Elegies.

So, now you know. :wink:
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by Vehrec »

EarthScorpion wrote:
Vehrec wrote: Well, as much as she can have fun. I've read files you know, intercepted the odd coms signal. What stops her from understanding puns anyways?

And tell me something I didn't already know-ok, ok, I suspected it. What the hell does Achtzig even mean anyways, my offline german-english dictionary says it means 'eighty' but somehow that doesn't seem to fit. 'Livid' might fit beter, but it's still meaningless.
It's not so much that she doesn't understand them (at least once someone explains them in some cases), it's that they're an annoyance and a hindrance which serve to obstruct the flow of information. We haven't dived much into her mindset, but it will suffice to say that when she gets stressed or has to actually put effort, she forgets things. Like the fact that most people need to be told information, instead of just knowing things, or that most people aren't even weak pre-or-postcogs, or don't have to constantly <REDACTED>. Hence, puns are bad, because they add another layer of possible lack of understanding into conversation.
Gendo's obviously been neglecting the part of her education where manipulating lack of understanding to your advantage is added to the curriculum. Then again, he probably doesn't want her learning that.
And, yes, Achtzig is Eighty. Revelation Space reference (specifically to The Eighty), especially when the head of the Achtzig Group is taken into account.

Officially, in-universe it's named after the design iteration that produced the Magi. Magi-80 (which gets called Caspar) was the first one which managed to maintain a stable interface connection between the components, followed by Magi-83 and Magi-84. Likewise, in ANE, the Engel Group is named after what Yui Ikari said just before she got into Unit 01 for that first ill-fated test run, "Ein jeder Engel ist schrecklich," quoting the Duino Elegies.

So, now you know. :wink:
Yeah, I know that there's a bunch of meaningless references I don't care about and I'm still a fucking brain in a jar! If they had their way, I'd come with an 'off' switch! Flip me on, flip me off, just don't consider my feelings ever, oh no. Just an organ in a jar, not a person by any stretch of the imagination. Officially, I'm dead and they harvested the organs, you know that? Dead man doesn't have many rights, his brain has even fewer! Well, you tell Achtzig that [Autocensored] ON A POLE! DO YOU HEAR M-

[/Signal terminated]
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EarthScorpion
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by EarthScorpion »

Chapter 15b

CATOcylsm: Termination



~'/|\'~


“The brazen arms were working more quickly. They paused no longer. Every time that a child was placed in them the priests of Moloch spread out their hands upon him to burden him with the crimes of the people, vociferating: "They are not men but oxen!" and the multitude round about repeated: "Oxen! oxen!" The devout exclaimed: "Lord! eat!" and the priests of Proserpine, complying through terror with the needs of Carthage, muttered the Eleusinian formula: "Pour out rain! bring forth!" The victims, when scarcely at the edge of the opening, disappeared like a drop of water on a red-hot plate, and white smoke rose amid the great scarlet colour. Nevertheless, the appetite of the god was not appeased. He ever wished for more. In order to furnish him with a larger supply, the victims were piled up on his hands with a big chain above them which kept them in their place. Some devout persons had at the beginning wished to count them, to see whether their number corresponded with the days of the solar year; but others were brought, and it was impossible to distinguish them in the giddy motion of the horrible arms. This lasted for a long, indefinite time until the evening. Then the partitions inside assumed a darker glow, and burning flesh could be seen. Some even believed that they could descry hair, limbs, and whole bodies. Night fell; clouds accumulated above the Baal. The funeral-pile, which was flameless now, formed a pyramid of coals up to his knees; completely red like a giant covered with blood, he looked, with his head thrown back, as though he were staggering beneath the weight of his intoxication.”

- Gustave Flaubert, “Salammbô


~'/|\'~


The three Evangelions watched the points of light in the night sky above them. To the west and north, the fires in the major settlements lit up the sky, but here, in the middle of Iceland, it was dark, and the trails of fire left by the Migou as they braked using the atmosphere were clear.

Then, suddenly, the number of trails increased a hundred-fold.

“That'll be them dropping the smaller units,” whispered Asuka. “They'll hit first, take the ground and try to take out any capital-grade defences before they move the ships in.”

“Correct,” said Rei.

“Capital grade defences,” said Shinji, suppressing the urge to throw up. “That's us, isn't it.”

“Yes,” both the girls said at once. The stress of the moment meant that Rei only received a short glare.

A view window opened on their screens. Misato's face stared out at them, any trace of her normal levity gone.

“We're getting seismic shifts all over the island,” she said. A wave of static washed across the screen, the smart programme trying to prevent corruption of the image, and giving up, switching to a static image. “Ritsuko?”

An image of Dr Akagi appeared. Her voice was tinny and metallic, altered by the many levels of encryption applied to get it from London-2 to the Evangelions. There was a multiple second latency. “Yes. Geological tracking stations all over the globe are reporting major seismic movements. The major fault lines suffering large-scale earthquakes; San Andreas, Dead Sea, Alpine...” she said, reading off from her arglasses, “they're all slipping.” She sighed. “If those idiotic proposals to rebuild Los Angeles as a major arcology had gone ahead, we'd really be in trouble,” Ritsuko added, referring to the glassed remains of a city, flattened at the end of AW1 when one of the Loyalist Nazzadi colony ships deliberately crashed rather than accept their defeat in the Nazzadi Civil War. “As for why you haven't been experiencing it... well, I don't know, honestly. You should be getting the worst of it.”

Shinji winced.

Wonderful. Earthquakes and volcanic eruptions. I hope Yuki, Gany and the twins are all right, in T-3.

“It's estimated that the Herald will surface in less than thirty minutes; from what we can tell, it is less than two hundred kilometres below boundary between the upper and lower mantle, plus or minus forty,” she added. “It has been moving... oddly... from what we can tell, at least.”

“You just need to hold them off until then,” said Misato.

“We don't have half-an-hour,” snapped Asuka. “You know they'll be using Mantises and Spiders in large numbers, and they're superheavies, half our height. And both of them pack Behemoth-scaled null-rays. You said that you'd get us capital-grade support; where is it!” the girl demanded. “”We're linked up to Unit 01's sensors, and we can see the bugs coming in!”

“Yes, about that,” said Ritsuko, her voice hesitant. “You're going to have to shut that link off, and set the Evangelions to autistic mode. It is, as you should known, Second Lieutenant, standard policy when up against the Migou. All major systems must be physically isolated. They're better at information warfare than us. And the naval forces near Rejavik are still engaged, while if the ones up north move, the assault on the Deep One city will fail. They've already been... experienced set-backs,” Ritsuko corrected herself, and hoped that the non-Rei Children hadn't caught the slip. Because the First Child always noticed everything; even the things she shouldn't, or technically couldn't have.

She waited for the explosion from Asuka; one which would surely match anything that the Herald was causing as it rose through the Earth.

It didn't come. Instead the red-head froze, taking on a tone as cold as anything that Rei routinely used, but in a sense, it was more terrible, because there was the knowledge that this coldness had come from burning rage, rather than her default state of being. “I see,” Asuka said. “And therefore you aren't planning to get us out of here or provide any proper support for what we're facing. Despite the fact that, together, we might just about have the same level of fire power as a single battlecruiser, and there are 35-odd Swarm Ships up there.” It wasn't a question.

“I'm afraid not. There aren't the ships to spare, and they wouldn't get there in time, anyway. It's necessary to capture the Herald.” Ritsuko was almost apologetic. “And you do have the AT-Field.”

There was the sound of cracking knuckles over the link, the harmonics oddly shifted by the LCL that surrounded them. “Right. In that case, Rei, you are going to take out any ship that comes into range. Aim for the A-Pods or the main weapons; cripple them if you can't destroy them. I'll lend you my Engine for as long as possible, but when I tell you to eject the umbilical, you will do it, yes? Synch your smaller weapons to your main fire, as you have no long-range sensors. Teach the bugs fear.”

Rei nodded, an unseen smile of gratitude on her face. “Understood. I will follow your orders, Second Child.” Now, she finally knew what she would do. Reality clicked into place. The path opened before her.

fire
bodies

awakening


“Shinji, you're anti-air. Set all your smaller weapons to full LAI autonomous fire, as you're the only one who has the sensors that they can use. To do that, you open the main control window... look, someone... say, Misato, do something useful and guide him through it. Otherwise, you are going to have to kill the air-dropping mecha. Some of them will hit the ground, but try to stop as many as you can. They drop feet first,” she said, calling back to her training, “so one or two hits from that plasma weapon will melt the legs, and they'll crumple when they hit the ground. Just track across the sky, and let the aimbots do the fine control. Tear them apart.”

Shinji swallowed a mouthful of LCL, and took a shuddering breath. “Yes,” he said. “Okay.” It did feel better, he thought, to have someone actually taking control.

“That leaves me, with the shortest ranged weapon,” she continued. “Therefore, I'm going to hold them off from you two. If they get troopships down,” and she grinned viciously then, the fire reigniting, “then they're going to wish that they hadn't.” She paused. “Not for very long, of course, but perhaps if they believe in reincarnation, they're going to learn not to mess with me.” Unit 02 hefted the plasmathrower, green eyes blazing in the darkness.

Behind her, the top of a mountain exploded, magma shooting forth into the sky. The tremor pulsed through the land, as a barrage of molten rock and the top of the mountain rained down, boulders and globs of molten rock the size of houses raining down.

Ein jeder Evangelion ist schrecklich,” she whispered, as the blast-cloud of dust washed over the three figures.


~'/|\'~


Things were a little less confident in Nero Command.

Solomon Throne, report! Is there anyone left alive?” repeated Agent Tome. He had largely given up hope now, but was still trying to contact anyone. He sighed, and began to start sending the signals that would tell the command LAI to launch a hard burn (the term was still used, despite the fact that, for a A-Pod equipped vehicle, there was no reaction mass or burning) to get away from the place. He slammed his hands down in rage, as the system had already been set to autistic mode as soon as the Migou had been detected, locking all autonomous commands out. The only way to remedy that would be to physically go and remove the settings; there weren't any backdoors that could be used to avoid the fact that the communications systems could not communicate with any of the rest of the ship beyond their own hardwired interfaces. The Solomon Throne had been designed too well for that kind of potential weak-spot.

“For God's sake, there's no way we can leave them in there,” shouted Captain Martello, waving his hands in the air. “Did you even think of the consequences of us losing three sixteen-year olds, who were only there on dubiously legal grounds! Or that there may be other Herald-class entities out there, and all of Project Evangelion's assets are on the ground there right now!”

“Yes,” replied the Major, leaning towards the angry man. “I also thought of the consequences of the Migou getting their mandibles on the Herald themselves, or of it getting free, now that they've,” jerking a thumb at the Special Services agent, “summoned it. The air units we've pulled in should buy us five minutes at least; possibly more, depending on how cautious the Migou are being. Add that to the batteries of Cyclopses we've pulled forwards, and we should be able to do it. With the Evangelions there, we can trade our own mecha and aircraft for time for more than long enough. They're going to have to pull down capital ships to get there before we can engage the Herald.”

“Something they have in large numbers,” shouted back Captain Martello. “Stop trying to act like they're going to be overly conservative, when this is the biggest damn Migou force we've ever seen, and they've pulled two damn warships in-atmosphere. This is stupid! Pull them back!”

“Captain,” said the Major, softly, “stop acting like a child, or I will see you first sedated, then court-marshalled. For goodness sake, the Children are being less childish about this thing than you are.”

The man glared at her, balling his fists, but locked his jawline and shut up.

“Yes, about that,” said Agent Tome, standing directly behind her. “I'm afraid there's something else that needs to be done. The Solomon Throne is not responding; I did warn you of the risks involved. It cannot be permitted to fall into enemy hands, and it may potentially be contaminated by the extranormal given the fact that the warning systems report that there are no humans alive on board any more. It needs to be completely destroyed; nothing of it can survive.”

“You want us to scuttle the ship?” asked the Major. “I want a clear order from you before I'll authorise the destruction of a capital ship.”

Uh... apart from that one we used against Mot. But that was necessary, and it worked. And it was technically an accident. And once they replace the ventral laser, and give it new armour, and undo all those modifications we did, I'm sure that they can rebuild it.

“Yes. The Throne must be destroyed; we can't let the Migou get their claws on it.”

“Good.” She paused. “Open a channel to...”

“I heard you, Misato,” said Asuka. “I'm ready to melt the ship to the bedrock. Just say the word, and it's plasma.”

“Do it.”

The flare of white could be seen from the E-9s all over the island, harsh white light cast against the clouds. It continued for almost ten seconds, lancing forth, up and down, deep carving into the volcanic rock as it cut through the capital vessel.

“It's vapour,” Unit 02 reported. “I'm connecting my Unit up to the Prototype now, so if you want anything else melted, it's going to have to wait until we kill every last one of the bugs.”

The profile from Unit 02 on the screen changed, the mD/D-Engine turning yellow, as the back-up D-Engines choked without the use of the D-Cells, cutting the powerflow to the Evangelion to an extent that it would be barely possible for Asuka to move. Unit 00, meanwhile, gained an icon which represented the external source of power, and the values for recharge for the charge beam actually fell below those for the cooling cycle period.

“Oh, Asuka, I'm so proud of you right now,” Misato said softly, glancing over at the read-outs from Unit 02. “Give those bugs hell.”


~'/|\'~


Sirens filled the internal network at the camps, broadcast over the communications devices, rather than overtly, where the rescued prisoners could hear it.

“Kilo-Alpha-Four,” the code went. “All individuals report to evacuation stations. This is not a drill.” The same words repeated over and over again.

“'Kilo-Alpha-Four'? What's that?” asked Antonio, shaking his head. He'd had this helmet on for far too long, and his head was feeling unpleasant, sweat-soaked hair compacted up against the bands which stopped it sliding around. He wasn't expecting an answer, at least until he could find someone to ask, but the LAI in the helmet answered for him.

“Kilo-Alpha-Four is the highest grade emergency evacuation code in use in an evacuation camp such as this. Please ensure that the armour is running off a clean air supply, turn off all monitoring equipment, including free-operating drones and report immediately to the nearest evacuation point. This armour has entered autistic mode. All wireless interactions have been prevented, with the exception of radio communications, which is physically isolated from the main suit network.” The voice, a pleasant male baritone paused for a beat, then continued. “Would you like me to place a navigation marker at your nearest location, and calculate the most efficient route?”

“Please,” he said, looking around, picking up the backpack of gear and one of the back-up severs. “Var, ask it to explain what is happening.”

The other man nodded. “'kay,” he said.

“Please wait... complete,” the LAI said, almost interrupting itself. “Please follow the AR path marked in green.”

Antonio glanced at his cameraman. “You want help with the exosuit?”

“Yes, please. Just hold this, so I can strap myself in,” Varuta said, passing another identical backpack to his colleague. “Oh, yeah, damn it, check that the drones are in place on the back. I forgot. We don't want to lose them.”

“You've guessed what this is, right,” said the human, as he stepped around the figure of the exosuit, checking that the four remaining drones, of the six that they'd started with, were firmly in place on the mounts on the back of the suit, recharging off the D-Engine. “Yeah, they're secure.”

“Course I have,” Varuta responded. “Like we didn't see this kind of warning on the Eastern Front. We're under attack, and they're infowar and emfog heavy.”

“Yes,” said Antonio, “exactly. Exactly like what happens in a Migou attack, yeah?”

“Bugs? Here?”

“Not surprising, really,” he said, passing the other backpack to Varuta, who stashed it in the compartment inside the exosuit, jamming it in. “Think about it. We're pretty far north. Of course they're going to be sending scouting parties out once they noticed what we were doing.”

Varuta shook his head, the head on the exosuit now mimicking his actions. “Listen. Listen how everything's changed.” And indeed everything had. The noise inside the sealed dome was now purposeful, rather than the randomness that comes from hundreds of people doing their own ordered things. “I think they're evacuating everyone.”

“Everyone?”

“Yeah.” The Nazzadi flexed his fingers, and the articulated fingers of the exosuit flexed with him. “Okay, sealing up. Keep all hands and fingers blah blah blah.”

The front of the exosuit slid shut, folding out from the almost-wing-like structures which it formed when open. The transparent faceplate lit up with AR piloting symbols.

“Oh. My arm. It got cut off. I'm suing,” said Antonio, in a deadpan tone.

“You say that every time. It's not funny any more. Now, perhaps we should...”

The sentence was interrupted by the shattering of the memoform roof that arced over the entire sealed dome, sending shards of hardened plastic flying everywhere, which, when removed from the programmed design, softened, splattering everything below with a dirty-greyish-greenish-blue plastic. It broke in another place, then another, the area between the holes starting to sag, as the design liquefied from so much traumatic damage, before the repair systems could ooze more material into place.

That was when the shooting started. One of the projectiles revealed itself to be a Migou automated emplacement, which, in a sickeningly organic way despite its metallic manufactured appearance, unfolded itself, digging its claws deep into the ground. It was squat and rounded, covered in armour plating which could survive re-entry, and armed to the teeth. It contented itself with automatic fire from its projectile weapons, though; high velocity, smart barbs which braked just before impact, flaring out. They didn't kill. They merely paralysed and rendered unconscious, ready for Clarification.

A facility like this was an asset for the Migou. Certainly, they would restore the traumatised inhabitants to a much better state than the New Earth Government could. Some idiots believed that the Migou tortured their captives, breaking them through hideous pain, deprivation, and psychological warfare, before physically cutting open their brains and operating. It was a charming lie, which allowed some hope that a captive taken could be saved, rescued before their psyche had broken entirely.

But, really, why would a species with such a knowledge of the natural world, and a much wider definition of the word “natural”, have to use such crude methods? It was quick, and relatively painless, a purely physical process. Control the brain, and you controlled the person. An incredibly complex network of meshed fibres, at the nano-and-microscales, ran throughout their brains, a secondary neural network through which each thought ran. It edited the thoughts, the memories, tying them together in a way which used the subject's own mind to work out what should be controlled and which could be retained. It turned the mind against itself, and, worse, improved it, making the subject smarter and fast-wiring their reflexes as fine nanoscale meshes snaked their way around the nervous system.

The Blanks were left happy, content in themselves, able to understand the world to a much greater extent than they had been prior to the Migou intervening, and actually fairly well balanced. And utterly, irrevocably loyal to the Migou. There had been attempts to remove the structures, removing all altered tissue and regrowing it with arcanotherapy. The brain actually grew them back. And purely surgical attempts to excise it were impossible; even if the implanted structures did not detect the attempted intervention and simply shut down autonomous functions, they requires the removal of so much brain tissue that the person was worse than a vegetable, not even able to breathe on their own.

The fact that the other two impacts were revealed to have been from landing craft; one carrying Blanked human infantry, clad in full NEG combat gear, and the second, power armoured Loyalist Nazzadi, proudly wearing the colours of the fictional Nazzadi empire, only made the situation worse.

Harangy traitors,” Varuta muttered, the fingers of his exosuit tightly gripped, as if he were imagining it around the throat of one of the Loyalists.

“Just fucking run,” shouted Antonio, already sprinting along the green AR path. Everyone knew that the Migou just killed the Nazzadi; for the other Homo sapiens subspecies, Blanking awaited. “Follow the arrow!”


~'/|\'~


There was the terrible noise of a charge beam, a thunderous sound that went far beyond in magnitude anything that a human would call noise. It was only visible by the after-trail, a glowing green trail of ionised air which dispersed as soon as the arcanomagnetic field ceased. Far above, one of the large comets jolted, and its path became a parabola.

“Hit,” said Rei, flatly. “Main A-Pod cluster destroyed. Drone Ship now lacks the capacity to reduce its velocity to a level where impact can be prevented or made survivable. Calculated location of impact sent to NEG forces for salvage of remains. Cooling cycle in process.” The charge beam vented gas in a vast expansive cloud, which washed around the figure in Type-D armour; a cloud illuminated by the constant stream of suns coming from Unit 01. The entire area was lit up in burning white, as Shinji, tracking the LAI-given boxes on his screen rather than the actual targets, moved from cluster to cluster.

“How are you doing this?” said Asuka softly, almost sub-vocalising the words, as Unit 02 stood, almost useless, running off the smaller D-Engines which were just enough to keep major systems functional. “These shots should be impossible. I mean, you're doing them with no sensors.”

“Capacitors charged,” said Rei. “Cooling cycle still in process.” She paused. “I do not aim for the ships. I aim for where the path of the trajectory of the ship intersects with the path of the relativistic arcanomagnetically-contained protons.”

“But...” Asuka's eyes narrowed. “That's a recursive process.”

“Yes. It is. It would require some kind of knowledge of the future actions of the target before firing, and possibly even some kind of clairvoyance. Cooling cycle complete. Firing.”

Another terrible noise. A new star blossomed in the skies above, the explosion lighting up the sky, and a wave of static washed through radios across the hemisphere.

“Miss. However, the arcanomagnetic field of the charge beam destabilised the containment arcanomagnetic fields of the ventral 'null rays' mounted on the nose of one of the Swarm Ships. Sadly, that led to the release of a small amount of antimatter, which was enough to totally destroy the ship. No entity survived. Two other Swarm Ships, and a Drone Ship suffered non-negligible hull damage in the blast, although they remain operational. Cooling cycle in process.”

Asuka listened to the flat voice of the other girl, rolling off the facts. “Did you do that on purpose, to show off?” she asked. The red-head wasn't quite sure if that was exceptionally annoying, or sort of awesome. Well, it was the former, obviously.

Obviously.

“It was necessary that such a shot be made. It was the only way of affecting a target that high, due to issues of proton dispersal. Capacitors charged. Cooling cycle still in process.”

The boom of the detonation of the Swarm Ship torn apart by the detonation of its own antimatter arrived with the pressure wave, finally crawling its way down the many tens of kilometres to the source of that which had killed it. It was ignored by the Evangelions, though the thud of the Earth could be felt slightly, as it destabilised a snowfall somewhere off in the distance.

“So, was that a 'yes' or 'no'?” Asuka asked. “And do you have to narrate everything that happens?”

“Neither. It was a refusal to answer the question. And yes. It is necessary. With the lack of sensors, it is necessary to document the efficacy of my tactics and battlefield decisions, so that I may improve and perform my duties in a superlative fashion.” She paused. “Remember, I still have the lowest synchronisation ratio of the pilots,” Rei added, conversationally.

“Do you two mind?” interrupted Shinji, even though he did rather admire that which he suspected might have been an attempt to placate Asuka at the end. “Some of us here are trying to hit very small moving targets,” as the stream of plasma swept around through the sky, no longer targeting the re-entry fireballs, but now the aerial units on his sensors, “without the aid of precognition here, and you're being distracting. Um, and Rei, there's a ...”

“... cooling cycle complete.” There was the terrible noise again. “Hit. Hull not breached. However, Bremsstrahlung radiation induced by the impact of the charged particle beam has killed the central command centre on the Drone Ship, and has fused the ventral laser. Target is a reduced threat. Cooling cycle in process.”

“... yes,” Shinji tailed off. “They're starting to get to land in larger numbers; my LAI can't follow them all now that they're no longer leaving nice fiery paths, so I'm only getting some of them.”

Asuka stretched her fingers, wrapping them around the handles in the entry plug. “Right, First Child, I'm going to need my Engine back.”

“It is done.” The umbilical cord popped out of the back of Unit 00, and began to retract into the Mass Production Model. “Charge cycle is now slowed; rate of fire will correspondingly decrease.”

Power supply at 100% of expected capacity flashed up on the display of Unit 02. PP3-P is online and fully functional.

“Keep firing, you two!” Asuka shouted at the other two pilots.

“I never stopped,” muttered Shinji.

“Don't get distracted,” she continued, ignoring the boy. “I'll protect you. And kill them all.”

The first few Migou units survive the hellish drop through the overlapping laser grids of the other NEG forces, and the torrents coming from the Evangelions, got a rather nasty surprise when the forty-metre biped became visible. There was something rather primal about the way that the green fires burned in the eyes of Unit 02, as it illuminated the area with raw stellar materials.

There was also something rather terminal about it.


~'/|\'~


CATO Command were watching the feed from Nero with awe. Specifically, they were watching Unit 00. Occasionally, they remembered to close their jaws, or at least have them so they weren't quite so wide open.

Amli katu wha disnu...” whispered Admiral Tatuta. “I can see why Ashcroft came up with the Test Pilot sophistry if they wanted to deploy her.” He paused. “Not sure about the point of the boy, though,” he added, more disapprovingly. “I suppose they had to settle for the other two; no wonder they call her the First Child.”

“You know, technically, doesn't that give her one of the best kill records in the whole NEG, Army or Navy?” asked Field Marshal Kora, similarly in awe. “And she's getting them with that charge beam; it's really rather stripped down, compared to what a true capship would have, isn't it? Look at how she's getting the indirect kills, rather than proper hull breaches.”

The Admiral nodded. “I think she's now in the top twenty five still living, just from this,” he admitted. “But,” and his voice grew more serious, “they're going to be having problems with coolant soon. The internal reservoir has to be running low after the rest of CATO, and the fact that they're running it off two engines, rather than one, can't help.”

“Can we get any supplies there?”

The admiral stared at him. “Yes. Of course,” he managed. “Because we really can refill a internal liquid helium reservoir just like that, in battlefield conditions. Especially on a stripped-down one like that, which will have compromised such things,” he said, in a withering tone of voice. “What, do you army types think that the volumes you need for the operation of a capital-ship charge beam just comes in handy magazines you can just slot in, yes?”

“Well, yes,” Kora admitted. “Mecha-grade ones do. Forget I asked.”

“Fine.” The admiral sighed. “And when the Invictus-class battleships start to see operation, we can finally have proper anti-capital ship firepower. She's beating the rest of CATO's fleet for kills, for goodness sake. The Victory-class battlecruisers just aren't cutting it any more against Swarm Ships, with the recent upgrades that the bugs have done. I have no idea why we compromised the design by giving them organic mecha forces.” He paused. “I just wish there was a place we could get more like her from, though,” he added wistfully.


~'/|\'~


Down in the London-2 Geocity, the false stars in the ceiling shone down upon the wilderness that surrounded the small “city” which was the visible part of the Ashcroft-run complex. Light streamed from the tower at the centre of the main building, the windows opaque, yet glowing.

Inside, the Representative and his deputy stood in the vast, well-lit office, around a high-resolution augmented reality map. Already, areas were losing their details, as the Migou took down the aerial coverage afforded to NEG forces. Their ships, tiny in comparison to Iceland, were just visible; tiny flies above the mass of land. From this detached perspective, the damage that the Herald was doing to the geography could be seen in perspective, with the plumes of smoke over newly erupted volcanoes, and even the way that the sides of certain mountains were bulging suspiciously. The location of the Evangelions could be seen, though; the lightshow from Unit 01 was enough, even if the map wasn't tracking each individual shot from Rei as it reached out into the ceiling, high above.

“This will have an adverse affect on the biosphere.” said Fuyutsuki. He permitted himself a small smile. “I wonder how the Storm's logistical chains, insofar as they understand such a concept, will be affected by this.”

“It will not affect us,” was the answer he received. “We are not dependent upon harvests any more.”

“This is appropriate, though. Moloch rises, the mountains erupt, strange lights are seen in the sky, and the crops fail. Superstitionists would already be burning their children in supplication to this creature.”

“'The savage, like ourselves, feels the oppression of his impotence before the powers of Nature; but having in himself nothing that he respects more than Power, he is willing to prostrate himself before his gods, without inquiring whether they are worthy of his worship. Pathetic and very terrible is the long history of cruelty and torture, of degradation and human sacrifice, endured in the hope of placating the jealous gods: surely, the trembling believer thinks, when what is most precious has been freely given, their lust for blood must be appeased, and more will not be required,'” said Gendo, staring at the map which occupied the floor.

Fuyutsuki sighed. “There's no need to go quoting Russel at me. As I recall, I was the one who introduced Yui to that book, and she it to you.”

“The point remains apt, though. And particularly appropriate.”

“Well, yes. 'The religion of Moloch — as such creeds may be generically called — is in essence the cringing submission of the slave, who dare not, even in his heart, allow the thought that his master deserves no adulation,'” completed the older man. “'Since the independence of ideals is not yet acknowledged, Power may be freely worshipped, and receive an unlimited respect, despite its wanton infliction of pain.'”

“You are aware what has happened, though? If only by implication?”

Fuyutsuki paused, as he processed the change in topic. “Ikari,” he said somewhat wearily, “I have been here, with you, almost constantly since nine at night yesterday. I am aware that a lot of things have happened.”

“It was the first thing I ever said to her,” the younger man continued more softly, eyes invisible behind the image projected against his glasses. “And she did it. It is just that I know what will now be done.”

“Ah. Yes. Dagon is dead.”

Gendo turned up to stare at his former mentor, glasses clearing as they displayed only the normal entopics that hung around his office. “Define 'Dagon'.” He paused. “And for that matter, define 'dead'.”


~'/|\'~


The Migou deployment put Operation CATO to shame. CATO had been a wave, washing forwards in a manner much faster than in the past, but still in a manner that would have been recognisable one hundred years ago. The Migou were a rain shower, a fluid, expanding to fill any and every open area, washing around obstacles and isolating them, cutting them off. [Combat-form/networks] were superior to human units, there was no denying it. The coordination of purpose and the many eyes in one mind meant that they achieved an efficiency that was beyond soldiers that were forced to communicate with each other, which were separate entities. By contrast, the Loyalist and Blank units, which saw use away from the Containment Area in the centre of the Hex, were 'merely' exceptionally good, the Blanks combat networked to a level that the NEG could not achieve in such an emfog and infowar heavy environment, and the Loyalists a highly trained force specialising in mobility warfare.

A squad of eight Oyanari powered armour pounded down the street, greyish-purple armour painted in an odd cross-hatching of bright green and yellow, as fast as they could. Behind them, the Drone ship sat on the ground, heavy, its lower hull opened up like a split ribcage to produce an armoured landing zone from which Blanks, Loyalists and Migou units deployed en masse. The air was filled with the fine silvery dust of emfog nano-and-micromachines, both trying to interrupt each others communications. It was actually beautiful, Weny Komdy Hikary had always felt (and had written poetry to that effect); the way that anti-air and anti-missile lasers were made visible by the incredibly fine dust, their light reflected. Of course, it was literally blindingly bright, so the beauty was somewhat minimised, as the smart systems in the eyepieces tried to regulate the image shown on the screen on the inside of the armour.

Explosive flowers blossomed against the hull and in the air around the Deployment Craft they had come down in, as elements of an off-shore missile barrage slipped through the laser grid. The ship lurched, but stayed steady, continuing to disgorge its cargo. It retaliated with its own barrage, launched from within the ship, as barb-like missiles fired directly upwards, high into the atmosphere, splitting apart into their smaller explosive components before zeroing in on the launch-site. There was a terrible noise, like a massive charge beam, which echoed throughout the area; the centre of this cold island, beyond the horizon was lit up with some unnaturally bright light. They had seen the lights in the night sky as they came in, dodged the streams of plasma which had jetted up from there, and from what the Creators had told them, there was something terrible waking up in there.

One of the robotic voices the Migou used for communicating with their loyal creations, who had stayed true and faithful, linked into their communications network. It indicated that it was coming from a Dragonfly, one of the stealthy scout mecha which were one of the biggest banes in the NEG's side.

[Targets/foes] located, it informed them in the Nazzadi tongue. [position/location] marked.

Dy vulakrony,” she thanked the Yuggothian fungoid. Little did she know that the [self-form/individual] controlling the [body-form/individual] in the Dragonfly was actually from a smaller mining facility in the Oort cloud, but, all in all, it was largely an irrelevancy.

The targets were on the other side of the wall; the projection before her eyes labelled them as six in number, and an unrecognised model of power armour.

Ib astany va juta rati, mandatvulakausi!” she ordered, and her squadron fell in behind her, taking a sharp turn to the left, and smashing through the wall of the apartment complex, pulling to a stop in the hallway on the other side of the room through which they'd entered.

Twi ib twi, krasy-lula-kwari,” she ordered, laser cannon raised, as the squadron broke into the pairs which they used for house-cleaning; one armour supporting while the other advanced. “Mandatermakausa absi ni kasi.

Kompreha,” her second-in-command answered. “Sufiki ui oirakroni vy nazzady,” he said to the rest of the squad, reinforcing her orders, “mandatermi absi ni kasi. Terma tota vy bitka.

The house shook, the roar of superheated plasma and the terrible noise of charge beams blanking out all other sound as the audio receptors clamped down, audible even through the armour of the Oyanari. A secondary explosion rattled much closer, as the ceiling cracked, and the lights began to flicker. A wave of static washed over the communication systems.

The feed from the Dragonfly dropped out.

A wave of doubt washed over her. They could wait for another Dragonfly to get them a fresh feed, or they could move on. If they stayed here, then the hostile forces could escape. If they moved, they could end up walking into a trap.

Her mind was made up for her. “Weny Komdy Hikary,” reported one of the rear teams, “za obsera sufiki jigabaki,” using the Nazzadi word for the insect-like gunships, “ni vi atmosi.

She swore. If they didn't have total air cover (and the fact that the Dragonfly had been shot down suggested that they didn't), this whole affair would be much harder. She contented herself with the fact that it must be necessary, for the Creators to order that painful acceleration and deceleration from orbit, which had left two of her squad unsuitable for combat, their replacements not used to the tight camaraderie of the Oyanari.

Twi ib twi,” she said. “Sufiki mandatvuli ohny objimpery.” And that was that, with no objections made, even by the newcomers.

As the armoured suits made their way through the building, the terrible noise roared again from the centre of the island, accompanied by the more minor crack of the lesser charge beams and the noise of superheated air, as the Chalybions continued to pick off the Migou-allied units emerging from the Drone Ship, LAI-drones providing targeting, picking off targets through buildings, always on the move. The NEG artillery was zeroing in, too, the indirect-fire railguns lobbing smart shells onto the landing zones and filling the air with false targets that allowed the bombers and air-supremacy fighters movement even in this anti-air heavy environment.

The point at which the eight Loyalists realised that they were not alone in this building was when one pair of Oyanari failed to check in at the designated time, their signal lights remaining off. There had been no emergency calls, no warnings. If there had, they had been lost under the pulses of static that the discharge of plasma weapons and charge beams produced.

Mandatinstra dy pule vi twi nazzada kubot twi hi kontrseri!” demanded Hikary, the Weny Komdy of the force. Consultation revealed that the two had been near the top of the house.

Twi poteneplumakroni?” asked her second-in-command, the Meda Komda of the squad.

The Weny Komdy flashed her assent light red. No, it wasn't possible that they'd fallen, both at the same time, and without warning. “Contrserakausy,” she said. “Seki nazzadi persesakausi pla termakausi absul gurili.

Dy vulakrony!” responded the female members, as the remnants of the squad moved out, taking the stairs slowly, making sure that they could support their armoured mass. If there were hostiles up there, they were going to get ended, in the name of the nazzadi.

Da vulakrona,” were the words of the male ones. As they climbed the stairs, it could be seen that this was not just an ordinary apartment complex. The fact that the stairs were reinforced to take the weight of a suit of powered armour without creaking was enough to show that, a fact further accentuated by the way the walls were a thin layer of plaster over bunker-level defences

Poteneseri estel tenemeni seri sufiki gura oa Dagonvela?” asked one of the front team, his red eyes scanning the walls and all the entrances for any signs of the detestable inferior beings that actually gave themselves to worship of the {THREATS}. The Creators had shown to the nazzadi the consequences of such a path, explained what inevitably happened. Only the Creators could protect the nazzadi, and even their inferior cousin anfrazzadi, and, yes, their miscegenated offspring, the amlati and sidoci (though all the others were inferior to the true nazzadi). And the Creators needed their help, against the dangers such as this.

The assent light flashed green. Yes, this probably was a Dagonite fortification. But who was in control of it now?

The EMP grenades attached to the tripwire failed to answer the question. Neither did the pair of anti-armour charge detonating at perfect chest height for a power armoured suit, one fore and one aft. What they did manage to do was tear open the chest of the front suit, severing the pilot at the waist, and damage the D-Engine in another so badly it was forced to perform an emergency cut to prevent a Horizon event, crippling the armour, as well as tearing off the arm of the suit and the limb of the nazzady inside, along with it.. The survivor at the front began to fire wildly, laser pulses blowing head-sized chunks out of the reinforced walls in clouds of expanding vapour, before she was ordered to stop to avoid bringing the building down on them.

Soli komdi komprehi estel whiku termakrona twi nazzadi,” remarked Meda Komda Jula, while the medic tried to staunch the bleeding from the injured survivor, the front of the Oyanari opening up and the movements desynchronising to allow him to examine the patient with his bare hands. His diagnosis light flashed red. She couldn't be saved; she'd lost too much blood. The medic winced inside his under-suit, and administered a lethal dose of painkillers, to kill without pain, in peace, before he bend down, and inserted a cable from his armour to hers, to grab the data from the powered armour's black box . Once the necessary actions had been taken, he stepped back, sealing up his amour again, as another one of the nazzadi vaporised the body, releasing the spirit from its mortal shell of flesh to move on to another life.

Contrserakausy,” was their leader's answer. “Twi nazzadi... pule seri objtermi?

It was true, he had to admit. No bodies, no wreckage. And, certainly, the anti-armour charges had done enough damage to the interior of the building that there wasn't a way that they could have missed that... unless there were magic interior decorating goblins who also had replaced the LEDs that the EMP had fused.

Which implied that someone had set (or at least activated) the trap after the nazzadi had been through.

The squad, only half now remaining from the force that had dropped in only minutes earlier, continued; even more slowly, checking for tripwires and remote detonated devices as best they could. There were attempts to contact the rest of the Creator-led forces, but the thick structure of the former Dagonite reinforced position seemed to counteract it. The nazzadi were envious, in truth, of the way that the Creators seemed able to keep their squads so coordinated.

The echoes of that terrible noise from the centre of the island came again, drowning out even the closer sounds of conflict.

Weny Komdy,” reported the new pointman, “da persesa soli objtermi Oyanari. Terma oa liberatagi.

Kwer?” asked Hikary, her mouth dry. Which one was lying there, power armour ripped apart by plasma fire?

Wery,” answered the pointman, after checking what details could be seen on the remains of the armour. The front had been fried by a direct hit from a plasma weapon; the few scraps of the nazzady left inside charred flesh over burnt bone. From the fact that the armour was still there, though, the weapon couldn't have been too large. That confirmed it. There was hostile powered armour in this place; whether NEG or Dagonite, they didn't know.

The blast which tore out apart the ruined armour and ripped off his legs the second he tried to download the black box still came as a surprise. Whoever had done this had packed the insides of the armour with explosives after scooping out the remains of the pilot, leaving just enough to be seen through the hull. They had known enough about the respect that the nazzadi, the real ones, had for their dead, and of their protocols, to use it against them.

That clarified who it was in here considerably.

Harangy 'Newi Earthi Govermenti',” swore the Meda Komda. That left them with only three survivors, and one MIA. They'd all taken damage in the blast, which had turned the ruined armour into an impromptu fragmentation grenade, scything into the walls and damaging the other powered armours.

Absul mandatlevy!” snapped Hikary. They were pulling out of here, getting out into the air where they could call for the Creators to take it out with heavy units. Clearing a place like this in powered armour was going to be hell; far better for a true mecha to blow it up.

It was on the way down that the stairs were detonated, collapsing and crushing the first two that had stepped forwards, the cracks of a too-rapidly fired hypersonic railgun coinciding with the holes that were punched into their prone figures. The Weny Komdy fled, jumping down, and so survived long enough to be picked off by a shot from an EECU Klinge Type-12 Pulse Weapon which punched through a wall to hit her, tearing off one leg at the knee, and leaving her sprawled face down in this hell of a building which had consumed her entire force.

Then she saw them. They weren't truly invisible, but they were the same colour as the background, only those six yellow eyes visible. But they were far too small! They were probably shorter than she was outside of her Oyanari, certainly, they were too small to be carrying anti-armour energy weapons like that. That kind of knowledge was the preserve of the Creators, according to everything she knew!

She tried to lift herself up on her arms, raise one arm to bring the laser-cannon to bear. The figures pre-empted her with their own laser fire, a continuous beam crippling the weapon, moving to sever the control muscles in the offending limb, and, scoring a line across her fallen back, moved on to perform the same procedure on the other one.

It was at that point she realised, though the sudden clarity of the Creator-made combat stimulants that had been administered when the inner-suit had detected damage, that they wanted her alive. And from the way that they had herded her, cutting off the paths of escape, using the nazzadi doctrines for where the the squad leader would be positioned, it had been her that they'd wanted. They had been using a building in which the squad were isolated from the Creators, and had been fast enough to prevent them from leaving for backup; the genius of the plan had been almost prescient. Even the weapons they had used to take her down had been used to cauterise and contain, rather than kill, and now that they had her immobile, she could do nothing but scream as the three six-eyed figures pried open the front, hyperedged blades fitting into the thin gaps at the cockpit and puncturing the seal, knife thrust through the layer that protected it, before pulling her out. One holding down the Weny Komdy, the other efficiently stabilised her condition, sealing off the severed stump of her leg with the bluish gloop used for field containment. That was just a respite, a act which appeared charitable, before they installed a field jack to the back of her neck, sliding the blade-like device between vertebra, where it split the spinal cord between C4 and C5, the complex device tying itself to both ends of the severed cord, where it took over the maintenance of the autonomous functions. Oh, yes, they were crude compared to the TSEAP, their parent technology, but they physically isolated the brain from the rest of the body, and so could even be used to incapacitate Blanks, and they kept the prisoner alive. As long as their heart could physically beat, and their lungs breathe, they would. They had their role.

Now she was truly a prisoner in her own body, not even able to truly scream as the jack kept her breathing steady.

“Subject is secured. Isolating before Command can deploy to extract memories.”

Oh, they were good.



~'/|\'~




Asuka Langely Soryu was brilliant, even if she had to admit it herself. Which she did, often without prior provocation. Several times a day. However, in this case, as she swung the plasmathrower around, carving notable tunnels into the mountainsides of Iceland, melting the igneous rocks and the Migou forces that stood on them, it could be argued that, by all reasonable definitions, it was literally true. Certainly, she was bright enough, once again in a literal sense. Her other weapons, the smaller integral ones, now fired autonomously, the targeting LAIs once again with data now that she could rely on her short-range sensor systems. She turned her head, and the dual charge beams mounted there cored a Fireant. That seemed to be the last of that group.

A few (very large) steps, and she was across the valley, footprints dug into the rock. Down one end the NEG forces which had been moved up to support Nero, largely armoured vehicles such as the Vreta and a number of Nazzadi mecha, were holding off the Migou forces, but they were having a tough time of it. The superheavies, the Mantises and the Spiders were disproportionately common, and, frankly speaking, the tanks were outnumbered and outgunned. The Migou had landed a Drone Ship, which had got past Units 00 and 01 (and, yes, Shinji had apologised sufficiently, in her opinion; Rei most certainly had not), and it was landing its full complement of troops, quickly and efficiently spreading out from under the cover of the nine hundred metre vessel, its underside breaking open like a split ribcage, to effectively served as a fortress.

A squadron of Type-207 tanks swept their way up the valley, trying to follow her, the quad HAL-7 laser cannons spewing out near-ultraviolet (and fairly ultraviolent) death into the advancing Migou forces. The systems on Unit 02 projected the passage of their shots against the inside of the entry plug as a purple line, calculating their position from the scattering against the dust and emfog, still outside the human visible spectrum. Asuka paused for a second as she bent to leap, and still found the time to be amused that laser weapons, thanks to systems such as this which were standard in armoured vehicles, actually did leave a visible trail.

Then she was into the air again, AT-Field flaring She had yawned into her drink. They really weren't getting anywhere, doing things like this. for a brief second as she smashed through a Spinner dropship, the bulk of Unit 02 and its unnatural emanation tearing cleanly through the domed, doomed flying saucer in half without any resistance, before the earth rose to meet her. This was not, sadly, a metaphor or any other use of poetic license.

From out of sight, scout [body-form/individuals] in stealthed Dragonfly reconnaissance units provided guidance for the rest of their [body-form/network], mounted in Wasps; heavily-armed artillery units. They had been dropped before the Drone Ship had landed, and had flown in, taking up positions above the battlefield. From the NEG's perspective, one of the greatest threats about the Migou was the fact that they had their reconnaissance units integrated at the tactical level, seemingly possessing instantaneous access to the data that the Dragonflies gathered. But they didn't truly understand the way that [body-form/networks] worked, not really. They brushed around the edge of the truth, but could not understand it.

As a result, when multiple wings of Wasps, guided through the emfog and battlefield jamming through by their forwards scout-selves, opened up, all targeting Unit 02, this was a non-negligible issue.

The Wasp (another example of the terracentric nature of the New Earth Government; the Migou would rather have called it a [Terrestrial Planet Combat] [Long Range] [Individual Artillery Support Unit] [Containment/Sterilisation] variant, for the NEG naming scheme actually merged multiple similar craft) was a fat, bulbous thing, laden down with armour, and targeting and sensory equipment for the launch systems that gave it its role. It was, in fact, vaguely wasp-shaped, hence the name, but only in that it possessed vaguely insectoid legs which it used when stabilising itself in a launch, the sensors, when fully spread-out were akin to wings, and that some of the more common variants possessed a tail-mounted weapon, in the same sense that the Chalybion did. Their sole role was as missile pads, for rocketry was one area that the Migou were far ahead of the NEG. Their missiles were smart; vicious barbs of Migou construction material with disturbingly low thermal signatures and nasty manoeuvrability, that somehow managed to communicate with each other and their launch vehicle, and with the forwards scouts guiding them in, through all but the most intense emfog, and which, without exception possessed their own counter-measure systems. Worse; they learned, data from each one fed back to each other, to the launch vehicle, to the pilot's [body-form/network], and to the other forces in the area. In a sense, a Migou missile barrage was not so much a salvo of warheads as it was the release of a cluster of kamikaze pilots, who knew their goal but were permitted to find their own way to do it; the only limit their fuel capacity, as they were too small for A-Pods.

However, the problem was not the conventional missile systems. Well, the main problem was not the conventional missile systems. The big problem, from the viewpoint of Unit 02 and its pilot, was that Wasps were loaded for sterilisation and containment; to hold the line, no matter what they faced. And so, mixed in with the missile barrage, were warheads with roughly four and a half milligrams of metalic antihydrogen contained within a perfectly spherical arcanomagnetic field of uniform strength. Each one of these ones, slightly smaller than the pre-fragmentation warheads of the ones that carried submunitions, had, ignoring the energy wasted in useless neutrinos, the same yield as of roughly eighty tonnes of conventional explosives. Each Wasp carried three of these, in a heavily shielded component designed to survive a small nuclear blast, and be capable of reaching orbit on its own, where they could be safely contained. And the <Adjunct of Deployed Strategic Reserves> had authorised their use on this mission with more permissive parameters than others may have; alerted by the suspicions of the <Archivist of Dangerous Pasts> that there were more {THREATS} than the {SLEEPER IN FIRE} alone present.

The three entities which had already destroyed multiple [Terrestrial Planet Combat] [Local Supremacy Craft] and [Terrestrial Planet Combat] [Deployment Craft] were certainly threats to the mission and hazardous to the capital ships, if not {THREATS} or {HAZARDS} in their own right.

Asuka landed and stumbled, almost falling on a ground which was no longer that which she or the Evangelion had expected it to be, while her laser point-defence grid sliced through the air, swatting for missiles which were actively trying to evade, the data on the laser scattering from the watching Dragonfies interpreted by the projectiles and used to try to evade the seeking light. Despite the best efforts of the outmatched LAI systems in the defence-grid, missiles got through, shaped charges detonating against the thick plate of the Type-D and explosive submunitions bursting like rain. Inside the entry plug, the impacts muted to dull thuds, the girl growled, and sprang to the right, left arm instinctively raised as an ineffectual shield against the smart swarm of explosives. Forgoing any attempt to stay with the following tanks, the Evangelion advanced through the swarm-barrage, laser-grid sweeping through the sky trying to swat the insects wearing at the Unit.

“I'm not going to let Rei hold the record for most capships,” Asuka roared, straining forwards in her seat as the behemoth broke into a sprint, directly towards the landed Drone Ship, ignoring petty things like “terrain” and “capable of supporting the weight of an Evangelion”. The terrain just had to support her for long enough for the next step, leaping from patch of ground to patch of ground, zig-zagging to confuse the Migou missiles with rapid changes in direction that nearly slammed her into the walls of the plug.

It helped, certainly, but the sheer volume of fire that multiple wings of Wasps could throw out, assisted by the systems mounted on the Drone Ship, meant that she was slowly being whittled down, layers of ablative armour stripped away and digging into the first layer of hardened plating.

“Misato! I'm getting swamped here! Argh! There are tonnes!”

The message didn't even make it back to HQ, so dense was the emfog and the infowar around the Migou vessel; an environment so electromagnetically heavy that infantry would have started suffering ill effects. The microwaves being thrown out in direct line of sight of the Drone Ship were cooking what little vegetation existed up here, and was melting the ice in the area, newborn rivers formed from melting snow springing to life.

The four waves of missiles had just been a test, to see what the entity had, and what kind of defences it had. On the discovery that it just seemed to have a NEG naval laser-defence grid, there was only a moment of hesitation, as the Migou on the field experienced what, to a human, would be akin to perplexed shock, the feeling of stepping on a stair which was not there, before the next salvo began, a single antihydrogen warhead hidden among the swarm which was, really, nothing more than decoys for the main missile.

By purest chance, the laser-grid system of Unit 02, overwhelmed by the targets presented to it, happened to hit the first antihydrogen warhead fairly early, the continuous-beam laser slicing through the missile and destabilising the arcanomagnetic containment field.

The inevitable happened.



~'/|\'~
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See the Anargo Sector Project, an entire fan-created sector for Warhammer 40k, designed as a setting for Role-Playing Games.

Author of Aeon Natum Engel, an Evangelion/Cthulhutech setting merger fan-fiction.
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EarthScorpion
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

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~'/|\'~


Shinji swept the plasmagun over to the next set of targets prioritised by the onboard computers, the LAI part of the firecontrol minutely adjusting the arcanomagnetic sheaf around each bolt to hit precise targets within the cone of fire. There were so many of them now; the sky was filled with projected laser paths of the weapons on both NEG and Migou aircraft, as well as the gratuitous amounts of antimissile defence being thrown around by air and specialist ground units (and Unit 01 wasn't exactly negligent in adding to the lightshow). The system was even displaying who was responsible for the fire, by comparing the wavelength of the scattering with the known values of systems used by both sides.

He benightedly realised that the Migou were probably doing the same, that Unit 01 stood out like a sore thumb with the laser-grid, and that they were almost certainly using it to target him further.

He raised the point with Rei, as Units 01 and 00 advanced, moving together as the Test Model protected the already-damaged Prototype. The targets were getting scarcer for the Rei Gun, as the Migou Swarm Ships stopped their decent, and actually rose, pulling back, letting the Drone Ships take the fire. Rei had made attempts at the higher shots, but dispersion of the charged protons, as the spatially discontinuous arcanomagnetic field weakened meant that she was not getting the kills in one shot, often merely (at least according to her narration) damaging them. And, far above, bright torches in the night sky, were the two warships, fusion drives holding them high, tail pointed towards Earth. They seemed to be waiting for something.

“I thought that the MBAMCIGA-2 and 'Rei Gun' would be more of a contributing factor in making us a target,” said Rei calmly, inverted commas audibly clicking around the informal name for her charge beam. “It is possible that the laser defence grid may play a role; however, it would be preferable that mine were still functional. Capacitors charged. Cooling cycle still in process.” She paused. “The levels of coolant in the internal liquid helium reservoir have reached critically low levels. The integral D-Dump is still operational, but both yield and firing rate will suffer adversely when the weapon is depleted; in addition, the risks of catastrophic failure are greatly increased.”

A static picture of Misato appeared in the bottom corner of the viewscreen, the words [VOICE ONLY prominent under the picture. “Just a little longer,” she said. “The Herald is almost there.”

“The levels of coolant in the internal liquid helium...” repeated Rei, before the Major interrupted her.

“Yes, I know. I heard.”

“Oh.”

Shinji felt a sudden spike of pain, like a momentary touch from a too hot plate, and flinched, the aim of the plasma minigun dropping, leaving glassed craters across the mountainside. Turning, he saw a streak across the right arm of the Evangelion glowing white-hot, a gash that just looked wrong against his (no, not his, the Evangelion's, he reminded himself) body. The systems LAI tagged a box around it, warning of hostile charge beams, but the lack of training (and what there had been had been largely focussed around the necessities of engaging Herald-class entities, rather than the Migou) compared to the other pilots showed, when, rather moving quickly, he merely turned, enough for the next shot from the [body-form/network] of the <Soldier of Necessary Actions> to be aimed at the front of the shoulder-mounted missile pods, rather than their more heavily armoured sides.

The next thing Shinji knew, he was on the ground, the bulk of the Evangelion sprawled out. He blinked, heavily, shaking his head as the lights on the walls of the entry plug swam and danced in strange circle. His right eye ached, as if someone had just punched it; he was sure that he could feel it swelling already, the LCL cool against the heated flesh.

Rei's portrait appeared on screen, the mouth of the static image moving to her words, but all he could hear was a dull . The boy stared at the two images of the pale girl before his eyes, uncomprehending, waiting for the two images to re-merge before he could even think of... well, thinking the Evangelion back up.

He could feel the earth beneath the Evangelion pulse, even through the insulation of the LCL that surrounded him, and the noise through the haze that filled his ears. Misato's portrait joined Rei's. He tried to focus.

“... the beam penetrated the hull and...”
“Shinji! Get up!”
Another spike of pain, this time in his right leg.
“passed through the main D-Engine and one of the main A-Pod clusters.”
“Shinji! Damn it! Listen to me, you need to get up!”
Ritsuko's portrait appeared.
“Your synch ratio has fallen below 50%. You must focus, or...”
In the front of the entry plug, he saw, as the haze over his vision faded, Unit 00, wrapped in the clouds of the venting coolant, run out, bulky charge beam still held in both hands.
“The target will not be capable of continued flight, and its main weapon systems...”
“Listen, Shinji! You're a sitting duck there! Get to your feet, or... at least try to roll a bit...
“No! Don't roll! You'll crush the minigun!”
“... are offline. It is advised that land forces try to secure the...”
Unit 00 covered the distance in a few long strides, leaping to one foot before bringing the other around in a half-circle which sent the Mantis, twenty metres tall itself, flying, its front caved in. The Evangelion paused there for less than a second, still wrapped in the clouds of still-cold helium that enveloped it and left it glittering with ice crystals, before sprinting on. It looked like Rei, denuded of almost all her integrated weapons, her armour heavily cracked with a crystalline blackness visible underneath, and her charge beam still cooling down, was going to try to kick the Migou forces to death.
“Better a crushed weapon than dead!”
He took a deep gasp of LCL, and through the aching in his skull, concentrated deeply on the concept of getting up, of pulling himself to his feet.
“The two won't be that different if it happens!”
“...crash site, *-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-*,” Rei finished, transmission interrupted by the fractured light of the AT-Field shining around her as she tore through a pair of Spiders, the sussuration of the communications static whispering in his ear as the barrier interrupted the transmission, causing Unit 01 to lose her signal.

Unit 01 pulled itself to its feet, hunched low. Shinji spared a glance; his right shoulder (no, the Eva's, he reminded himself), was a mess, the armour plating flayed away and covered in the organism's blood, which ran down his arms and dripped to the ground. The image was... funny, all along the right side of his vision, even through the pain in his eye.

“Good, Shinji!” called out Misato. “Go, help Rei!”

“Listen to me, Shinji,” said Ritsuko, intensely. “Unit 01 took a hit directly to the the rocket pods on the right shoulder. They're meant to blow out safely, but the charge beam moves faster than the explosion, and so, when the angle and path it took is taken into account, the hole it left meant that, quite apart from the impact, you were essentially hit with a shaped charge to the head as all the rockets left cooked off at once.”

“Huh,” was about all he could manage, as he groggily swung the plasma minigun around, onto the mass of targets. “What's... up with...”

“I haven't finished,” she interrupted, the lag in the transmission enough that it led to such things. “Both the shoulder and the head have taken non-negligible damage. The Unit is blind in one eye, and the armour in both locations is severely impaired. The entry plug display isn't purely a visual subvert system, but you're going to get a noted loss in resolution and a slight image lag on the right half of the screen. Now that the Migou know about this issue, you're going to have to use all your rockets, and...” she paused, “Try not to get hit any more; use your AT-Field!”

Rockets. Missiles. Whatever. Yes. That was something he could do, he thought, as the aiming profile for the missiles came up, the yellow box in the centre of his viewscreen.

It really is like some kind of computer game, isn't it? he thought, as the second red box closed around the already-recognised hostiles. The thud of the first-stage booster, kicking the missiles out of the launch tubes in order, fired slightly upwards before arcing down to was not noticed by the boy, as Unit 01 began to sprint too. The Prototype stood alone, the crystalline radiance of fractured space-time flaring intermittently as Rei only added to the destructive nature of her kicks and stomps. The salvo began to impact, as the indicators on the left shoulder blinked red, a counterpoint to the red glows covering the shoulder and part of the head on the display

“You are functional,” said Rei calmly, as a Fireant was punted into a mountainside. “That is optimal. It was uncertain. Eliminate these forces so that I may take the next shot.”

Asuka's portrait joined Rei's; the older woman shrinking so that they took up no more space than one had. There was some kind of crackle, through which her voice could be recognised, but not understood.

“What was that?” said Shinji distractedly, trying to split his attention between the traces of her voice that got through the static, and trying to direct plasma fire into the contacts all over the wall of the entry plug.

The world was, just for a second, cast into sharp relief. Before his eyes, slowly, a fireball inched its way above the mountainside to his front. And then, seconds later, the shockwave hit, nothing to the twin behemoths.

“Antihydrogen,” said Rei, clinically. “ 4.837 miligrams of it, to four significant figures. The Migou have decided that we are hazardous to their end goal. It was used against the Second Child. Such an omnidirectional blast is such that, if it were at very close proximity, it could seriously damage, or, considering the damage that Unit 02 has already taken, potentially destroy an Evangelion.”

Something snapped inside Shinji, then, some outpouring of inner hatred and frustration.

I don't even want to be here! I don't want to be used as a weapon! I don't want to be shot at by fishmen or bugs or crazy cultists or anything! And now you bugs show up like this with so many ships and mecha and antimatter. You're not even meant to be here! And my eye and shoulder actually really hurt... as in really! Argh!

...

I am going to kill you all! All of you! So now you won't be here!


“Very enthusiastic, Third Child,” said Rei, “but it was not necessary to exclaim that at such a volume, especially with such inelegance. Firing.” The charge beam roared.

The words failed to have any calming effect, as roaring, Shinji and Unit 01 together sprinted towards the nearest concentration of forces. The harsh light cast by the plasma minigun swayed and spun as he spun from target to target, casting crazed shadows of over the terrain in burning white and night-blackness, interspersed with the fabricated unreality of the shimmers of the Guard of Yog Sothoth.

The <Soldier of Necessary Actions>, four of its [body-form/individuals] already dead (including its back-up on the ship, dead with the vessel, so it risked permanent death,) decided that such a threat demanded that there be survivors to report it. This was major; vital. A potential <THREAT>. It pulled back its surviving components of its [body-form/network] from the roaring beast, the dreadful sound most akin the scream of a drowning man, and advised other forces in the area to do the same. This was beyond them. They needed capital support to deal this this kind of target, at the very least. The Migou forces began a disciplined withdrawal, sacrificing [body-form/individuals] to ensure that as many [self-form/individuals] survived, as Unit 01 tore through their forces, roaring as the plasma weapon reaped its toll through their ranks like wheat.

Rei stared blankly at the image of the receding Unit 01 on the inside of her entry plug. Her face was lit in red by the warning signals that spoke of the massive damage she had experienced earlier, and now, and of the critical lack of coolant in the charge beam. “Hit,” she said, but there was something gone from her voice, some vital spark that others would not have thought had been there and which was only noticed by its absence. “As it was always going to be. So must it be. Always.”


~'/|\'~


The Weny Komdy, what was left of her body lifted in one arm by the figure (and they really weren't in power armour, she was sure) that had the impossibility of a hand-held laser weapon, was carried back up to the top of the house, then carried down a hidden ladder, down underground. Her attempts to kick with the one remaining leg did nothing; there was no motor control. She was nothing more than a limp ragdoll, with a head attached to the top.

There was no pain, thanks to the Creator-made stimulants automatically administered by her piloting suit, but, nevertheless, it was purest hell.

There was a room down here, at the foot of the ladder, obviously of Dagonite origin. The decorations were intact, though somewhat scorched from laser fire and riddled with bullets; the remains of the previous inhabitants had been piled in a corner. The sleek thin shape of a modern NEG computer, about the size of a credit card, lay on the desk, connected to the pre-existing computer, fan whirring, which had probably been several technological generations out of date when the nano-factory had been invented. The three that had killed her entire squad and taken her like this, lay her down in the middle of the floor; she could still move her eyes, at least to see that there was at least one more, dressed the same, and... she would have taken a sharp breath, had the field jack not controlled her breathing, keeping it steady. The last of her Oyanari was in the room, closed up and active, crude plating strapped to the front, right over where the head of the pilot would have gone.

She could already guess what they'd done. They had EMP grenades, and they had those (impossible) lasers. They'd obviously ambushed the first pair, one of the suits wrecked with the plasma weapon (and then they'd used it as an explosive trap), and the second powered armour had been more precisely fried, the outer hull cut through in a way that killed the pilot, but kept the suit intact enough for them to use, with a little repair work.

The armour spoke, over the loudspeakers, in the dominant language used by the NEG. “Foxtrot 813 status report. The salvaged power armour is capable of operating at 71% capacity. Repairs have been made to the damage inflicted, although they remain suboptimal, and a standard power armour OS has been installed over the top of the pre-existing Loyalist one. It is likely that this is a standard field unit, as it uses logical progressions from AW1 equipment, rather than the Migou-pseudohuman designs seen in operation among elite Loyalist forces.”

“Acknowledged, Foxtrot 813. Position yourself at the entrance. Ensure that no hostiles are permitted access to this location.”

“Acknowledged. Foxtrot 813 moving to new position.”

The stolen Oyanari then moved, with a certain familiarity that suggested that the pilot, whoever it was, was familiar with both nazzadi, and the derivative craft used by the traitors who had betrayed the Creators, armour.

Weny Komdy Hikary flicked her eyes back to the figures that stood around her. She had been taught a few words of englisi, back in the revolving Hamilton cylinder in the asteroid belt where she had been decanted and trained in both fast-time simulated space as well as the 1-g environment of the cylinder, before being shipped to Sol Three. All but one of the figures in their shifting armour, not true stealth, but enough that a glance might miss them, had stayed; one had followed the stolen armour. Eighteen eyes stared back at her, nothing of the nazzadi in the armoured helms.

She tried to talk to them, to explain that she wasn't going to talk, and they should just kill her... although she blanched somewhat at the idea, like this, tied up and crippled, with no control over her own body, but she couldn't. She wasn't even sure if was due to the thing they had used to steal her body from her, or just sheer terror.

Pathetically, she just hoped that the thing maintained bladder and bowel control. She had no clue if it did, and, actually, the combat suit would deal with it, but it seemed like so little to ask for.

“Orpheus Command, this is Kantaya-13. We have secured another target for extraction.”

Sufiki contrignosy! she wanted to yell. Did they think that their communications would really work here, underground, when just the building above had been enough to cut the nazzadi in their true powered armour, able to throw a D-Engine behind their transmissions?

understood

The voice came from all around, a hollow whisper that felt as if it echoed within the skull.

orpheus deploying as requested

The lights above flickered, and the radio in Hikary's combat suit flickered to life, filled with waves of sussurating static. But it shouldn't have done that. They'd crippled it... hadn't they?

A figure stepped into view from the left of the trapped nazzadi woman's vision.

It was best described as a figure. It certainly couldn't be called a person. Part of one, maybe, but certainly not a whole one.

Viscera, at roughly the height it should be, hovering in mid-air.

No lungs, but there was part of a heart, beating steadily despite its incomplete structure.

A few slivers of bone; a spinal chord without a spine. A fine, transparent network of nerves.

Slivers of flesh sketching out part of a human body, pale as a dead meat drained of its blood and prepared for slaughter, devoid of skin.

Metal, snaking into the mess, weaving through the spinal chord and into the faceless mask that the presence wore, if wore was the right word for the way that it sat, almost clamped to the terrifying figure, moving as it it were the thing's head.

These were only impressions. That was all that there could be. A true description could only be given with recourse to an anatomy textbook and a taste for the macabre.

That was what it reminded her of. Back in the facility where she had been decanted, she had seen two workers, supervised by one of the Creators, remove a child who hadn't grown properly; the skin hadn't taken. It was like that, but unutterably worse, because that at least had been still, a dead failure. The figure that stalked towards her was alive and it was moving and it should not be.

The nazzadi screamed and screamed and screamed, but all came out were the steady breaths, perhaps altered by the contortions of her vocal chords, if she could even do that. She didn't care. She screamed in her head, to drown out the whispering.

The lights flicked as the thing bought a hand that was little more than a pinkish mist wrapped around the spider thread-like nerves, in which a few tiny fragments of flesh floated, into contact with the nazzadi woman's forehead.

She deployed with her squad, charging out of the armoured cover of the Drone Ship.

She was buffeted by the horrific acceleration that the Creators imposed on them, lungs heavy, head feeling faint, colours fading to grey.

She watched as Kora was cut down by the beast, and, screaming, charged at it, hyperedged claws ripping and tearing at the engorged intestines of the monster.

She moved through the long-abandoned ruins of a city somewhere in Asia, cutting down the degenerate anfrazzadi cultists, as, above her head, the vessels of the Creators swatted the flying monsters out of the air.

She lay in Kora's arms, on board the ship as they orbited high above the earth, merely a brief transfer to another group of Creator forces, for redeployment. She tilted her head around, and kissed him in that little patch where his neck met his ribcage.


She watched helplessly, filled with terror, as a shadowy figure, visible through the abomination of flesh, only waist-high, slowly took took steps forwards. But it didn't matter. Kora would be here soon, wherever here was.

She felt her system flood with adrenaline, as the hatch open and stood on the surface of Sol Three, the world that would be theirs, for the first time, staring out over the snow-covered ground to the city-base where she would be stationed.

She paced through the dark ship, the night vision of her kind making it possible to see where she was going.

She watched behind her as the cylinder receded from view, heading for an unknown future.

She punched, she kicked, she punched,she kicked, until the routines of Hun Zuti were as second nature, in this strange virtual world the Creators had built.

She opened her eyes for the first time, lungs filled with fluid. She did not scream. That reflex had been suppressed.


She was no more.

The eyes of the sixty kilograms of flesh and bone rolled back, neurons fried, soul devoured.

memories extracted, whispered the figure. orpheus task completed.

The abomination of flesh fell apart, disintegrating into ashes which slowly fell to the ground, before disappearing.

The Replica Elite cut the throat of the hollow shell, adding a Loyalist to the pile of Dagonite corpses who had already been extracted. There would be more.


~'/|\'~


The thing had torn the woman apart. It hadn't even moved. It hadn't needed to. It had other recourses.

Of course, if it happened to the bitch,

Glimmering. Sparkling. Wrapped all around her.

she would not have mourned her.

Arrogant idiot. What was she, stupid?

The Type 1 would never have worked safely, despite her protests. And look what had happened.

An all enveloping mesh of broken diamond and strange reflection. Tighter than a mother's grasp, as if it were part of herself, or maybe she were a part of it.

A man had sat down beside her, his normally neatly-trimmed beard shaggy from not having been home in over a week, and not having slept in two days. He too had been nursing a drink. He had seen it too.

They had drunk the drinks. Then the next ones. Then the next ones, ethanol washing away the memories


There were things outside. Here, she was safe.

”You were right,” he had said. “We can't just use their principles straight off; we're dealing with a completely different mind. God, if we hadn't just rushed it, if we'd just ignored her and tested it properly.

However, they were not. They were right to be scared of her. She was going to do something that they'd never seen before. Something that no-one had ever seen before.

“And you know all about minds,” she had said, slurring her words slightly. “I just don't fucking care right now. Save it for the reports, when the slut has to justify why she pushed ahead despite our warnings.”

“Too true,” he had said. “Listen...


They thought they could kill her.

”... are you doing anything. There's something,” he raised an eyebrow suggestively, “we could do something more fun to forget, rather than just getting drunk.”

Hah.

She had subconsciously smoothed down her clothing. She had been aware that she smelt of sweat and of beer and of cleaning chemicals and... other things. But he had smelt the same. And he had been there too. He had seen it happen, too.

It was going to be the other way around. For certain. She raised the plasmathrower, and grinned a predatory grin. It was appropriate, after all. The bugs were all about to die, and nothing that they could do was going to stop her.

“Sure. Why not.”

“My go, Migou,” she said, flicking on the external speakers, the voice booming across the valley.

And there was light.


~'/|\'~


The data that the Magi, back in London-2, were receiving was sparse, necessarily limited by the available bandwidth, especially since the NEGN had clamped down on the stealth satellites, terrified that the Migou might be able to detect the slight atmospheric scattering inherent to the tightbeam lasers that permitted the link between the flotilla and the satellites, picking up what transmissions from the Evangelions which got through the emfog.

“We're only getting a max of 3.2 Mbps,” reported Maya, hands flying through the katas of control, cable snaking from the back of her exposed Direct Magi Interface to the seat behind, “they've cut us even further.” She made a disgusted noise. “I've cut all attempts at video feed, we can get that from the Evas when they're back, and we need the data more than we need pictures. Uh, if that's okay with you, doctor,” she added, hurriedly.

Ritsuko waved a hand. “Fine, fine.” She gnawed on a fingernail, removing it from her mouth and balling her hand to prevent her from doing it, when she realised that. “Now, what on earth is happening with the Evas!” she demanded of the room, packed with electronics and computers and cables and suspension couches and, in the middle of all of this, Magi operators.

“Unclear,” answered Nara, his dark face twisted with worry. “I'm getting blips from feed... yeah, uh, yes, that's an AM gamma spike.” He paused for a fraction of a second. “Seismics?”

“Unclear, with all the eruptions, but we've got a large blast... 0.07 to 0.1 kilotonnes... that is a valid ballpark for their tactical AM weapons,” answered Cela, voice dispassionate.

“Yes, it is,” added Sosily, red eyes glinting. “Link to previous uses dispatched.”

“Signals from Evangelions?”

“Maintained. Data stream cut from Oh-Two matches that of strong AT-Field... yes, that's confirmed with squirt.”

“Report on status.”

“Data sent.”

“Evangelion 02... status intact. Weapons feed indicates actively in combat; interruptions characteristic of frequent use of AT-Field.”

Ritsuko removed her arglasses, and massaged her eyes, before putting them back on. It gave her time to think. The Migou were making use of antimatter weapons now. And it was somewhat headache-inducing listening to the conversations of the Magi operators, as they responded a little too quickly to track properly, flowing datasets and internal worlds on their hard-contacts beyond that which she could keep up with. Even if she were to use her obsolete spinal ports, they wouldn't come with the level of integration that this new generation of operators (and they were a new generation; fresh-faced youngsters, mostly recruited by the Foundation straight out of their first degrees or from military data analysis roles) enjoyed. Spinal ports only subverted the nervous system. The DMI, and the newer generations of the related technology from the Achtzig Group that were starting to be in the Ashcroft Foundation and in the high echelons of the New Earth Government interfaced the mind with the machine, the self with the shell.

In fact, in these data-handling matters like this, she was almost redundant; her presence there akin to the cerebrum in cerebellal tasks.

But they still need me for my mind, she thought viciously. I'm the one who does the higher level reasoning, not them. It was a shameful thought, but it was true. That was something that the Magi couldn't do for the Foundation, despite what her mother would have liked.

One of the other Magi operators... the new one, Ritsuko recalled, the one who was replacing Oliva, popped up, her face projected against the arglasses the doctor wore, unlike the hard contacts and optical jacks so common among the technical staff of Project Magi and universal for the operators.

“Dr Akagi?” Penny asked, who, despite the fact that her name ended in a 'y', was not a Nazzadi. It wasn't as bad as that which Clara (as a male amlati) and Maya (as a human female) experienced; at least the name matched the gender. “I'm getting something... funny on Unit 02. Link provided.”

“No,” Ritsuko said, a hint of annoyance in her voice, “explain what you see. I want to see what made you think it was worth bringing to my attention, rather than relying on me to decide whether it matters. If I wanted that, I'd go get one of Sylveste's idiot machines.”

Maya snorted. Like that would be the day. The doctor had made her feelings on the Achtzig Group clear on previous occasions; they were remarkably similar to her feelings on the Engel Group.

Of course, come to think of it, she had asked for help from the Engel Group.

Maya shook her head, an odd-feeling, swaying motion as the cable trailed behind her, and got back to her task.

“Well... um, if we track the synchronisation ratio, it suddenly just skyrocketed. Just as the Second Child activated the AT-Field to defend against the AM blast.”

“Well, isn't that just the effects of the AT-Field, surely? We have tracked the fact that the AT-Field is to a certain extent self-reinforcing.”

“Yes, I did think that at first. I did a paper on the known manifestations of this... well, it was a sorcerous phenomenon when I wrote it, because this was before,” she tapped the ceramic plating that replaced part of her skull, “I joined the Project. But the shape is wrong, from what I've been shown, and from what the Children displayed during the training you had me monitor.”

Ritsuko sighed. “AT-Fields only seem to exist to screw up hypotheses. Send it over.”

She scanned the graph, expanding it to fill the projection on her glasses, and her face paled.

“Berserk!” she managed through numb feeling lips. “It went berserk... just for a few seconds... but it is identical to what Unit 01 did against Asherah!”

The reactions from the Magi Operators to this announcement were about what might be expected. Specifically, that the ones recruited from academia started throwing out hypotheses to try to explain it, splitting their attention despite the fact that their work-rate barely dipped, while the ones with military training (albeit nothing from the frontlines), such as Maya, continued to work, taking over the slight dip in productivity almost instantaneously.

“Self-preservation,” suggested Cela, confidently. “It matches all previous examples.”

“There is only one previous example,” snapped July, the somewhat unfortunately-named amlati (there was already an August, a somewhat lazy, but benevolent, and so directly opposed to her in almost every way), her eyes narrowed. “You certainly can't make that kind of statement with that kind of confidence.”

“It's true that Cela overestimated the evidence...” began Clara, the other male amlati, his purple eyes almost pleading.

“... you mean he extrapolated from almost no evidence at all,” retorted July. “It's exceptionally annoying when people try to push their hypotheses as theories.”

“No, no, no,” whispered Ritsuko, “it's not that. It may quite well be self-preservation that would trigger that...”

Cela smirked at July, who merely glared back, orange eyes promising revenge.

“... but that's not the point. The point is that the EFCS Type-2 shouldn't permit that. That's why we used it for the MP Model, and Unit 01 is the Prototype.” She slumped down, head in hands. “You know, we're going to have to run another full immersion data dive on the blackbox, just as we did for Unit 01.”

There were groans all around.

“Should we do anything, doctor?” asked Maya, gingerly. “Anything else, I mean?”

The older woman sighed. “I am going to take those monster apart when they get back. Yes,” she said, louder, “yes, actually. I want all three Units shipped back to L2 in full ACXB hazard containment. 01 and 00 are going to need it anyway, from the damage, but I don't trust 02 now. If it's going to do things like that... I don't like it. It's always been the most predictable and reliable of the three, before.”


~'/|\'~


Fire fell down from the heavens, great newborn suns bought into nascent flaring life for one purpose; their own extinction. Through a moment that was an eternity, confined by arcane fields of magnetism that limited them, constrained them, and prevented their dispersion, they fell. Some might have compared them to figurative fallen angels, but, in truth, their function was to suppress the rising ape.

Far below, the stream of lesser stars cut off, no longer licking out to consume anything it could touch. Instead, a cloud of superheated gas and excreta rose, lit from below by the hellish glow of molten rock. The Swarm Ship did not cease its fire, however, the supercoolant carrying the heat radiated by the now-extinguished star away from the mechanisms of the ventral plasma cannon, and readying it for another shot.

In these kind of circumstances, it did not pay to make foolish assumptions and believe-without-evidence that such a capital grade threat was destroyed.

And it was not the only one doing it. From the heavens, the Swarm Ships unleashed their suns, while the Drone Ships and the destruction they wrought could not be seen by human or Deep One eyes, the ultraviolet lasers scoring their way across the landscape and cutting through the emfog that drifted on the winds that blew from the west, the micromachines slagged, briefly visible as tiny fireflies before they vanished forever as vapour.

Shinji threw himself to the left again as another impact thundered against the earth, the blastwave felt twice (once against the legs of the Evangelion, and once as a shift in the LCL) in a way which was rather disconcerting. He had seen what those things could do, seen the white-hot craters chewed out of the volcanic rock glowing in the dark, while above them fungoid clouds blossomed and molten rock rained down from the heavens.

The MBAMCIGA-2 was lying in a slagged pool of rock, somewhere back there. That had been far, far too, close; he had felt the wash of heat through the LCL, seen the ceramics on the front of the Evangelion glow cherry red, felt the agony as the flesh in his shoulder and face blistered as the wounded Evangelion cooked.

At least it hadn't hurt as much as Mot had. He really hoped nothing ever would again.

The earlier rage was gone, replaced with a much more sensible (he felt) blend of terror and fear. And, yes, they may have been the same emotion, but that just showed how scary it was being shot at by proper enemy capital ships, when he was in something which might best be described as a capital grade power armour; much more able to dish out damage than take it. He was just running towards Asuka and Unit 02. He wasn't even sure where Rei was, his haphazard and instinctual evasions taking him away from...

The terrible noise of the Evangelion-scaled charge beam sounded out. There was a flash of light, which remained, expanding slightly, as it faded, far above.

Well, she's still alive, he thought. And the Rei Gun's still working. It was a warm feeling inside, really, a mixture of hope and gratitude to know that at least they could do something against the figures above them.

Unit 01 picked up pace as it sprinted across this hell-torn landscape, almost dancing through the rain of fire from the sky.

Unit 02 huddled under the wreckage of the downed Drone Ship, surrounded by the melted remnants of what had been the best part of a brigade-equivalent of elite Migou forces. Above her, the underside of the ship stretched, slightly too low for her to stand upright, reaching in both directions. It had not been exactly hard to kill, in Asuka's opinion; they used hull material to form the ribcage-like structure that protruded from the underside of the ship and so effectively shielded the newly landed troops from counter-fire.

It was somewhat less efficacious against capital-grade mecha running underneath, even if they did have to stoop, and unleashing a frigate-grade reactor's worth of hot plasma into its guts. She had taken out its main A-Pod cluster on her first attempt, boring a tunnel, ringed by white-hot remnants of Migou construction material, into the thing. The fact that it had taken twelve more tries, even with the aid of her targeting overlays, to find enough of the distributed power grid on these things to actually cripple it, was in her opinion fully acceptable.

I guess the bugs never, ever expected to come across something like Unit 02 on Earth, she thought smugly, trying to hide even from herself the desperation she felt as the blasts on the upper hull made the underside vibrate. Clouds of hot gas vented through the holes she had dug into it. There was the terrible noise of vaporised metal, as the damage, melting through the hull and only being stopped by the internal superstructure, started to tell, and the middle of the covered landing place started sagging.

As far as Asuka could see it, there were two choices here.

I could wait here, and be crushed by the ship when it gives way, and then shot to pieces by the Migou, because the Evangelion would survive that, and I'm pretty sure they're not idiots. Or I could leave, and be shot to pieces by the Migou.

There were major drawbacks to either course of action. In fact, there was the same drawback. The “shot to pieces” bit, in fact, to labour on the same point.

If she died here, she was going to kill Misato for getting her into this kind of mess and not getting the proper kind of support.

And... she didn't want to leave this ruined cover. She was probably going to die either way, so why not hang onto life a little longer? Why not stay here, where, even when the mutilated remnants of the ship she herself had killed collapsed onto her, at least would provide cover. Grasp extended life, one second at a time.

So, despite what she portrayed herself as to the world, despite what others would think that she would do, despite what she might have even been thinking after they'd used the antimatter weapon against her... she was staying here. It was suicide to go out, and if there was one instinct that lay in her heart (and indeed, she suspected, in all hearts), it was the desire not to die. She'd do anything to stop that.

She didn't want to die. It was that simple. Keep on pushing it away, one second per second.

A few hundred metres along the hull, there was an explosion as the ultraviolet laser of one of the Drone Ships above cut through the remnants of the vessel and into the rock below. The wall of the entry plug sketched the line of its passage in purple; not much wider than the lines produced by a laser grid, but much, much more intense.

Asuka took a deep, slightly shuddery breath of LCL.

Okay.

Something smashed through the opposite wall of the cover, making the entire structure sag somewhat precipitously. The girl took a second to recognise it. It was Unit 01, but the top levels of armour were just gone. And the ones underneath it. In fact, the greyish-white hardplates were visible, the ablative armour fused and melted dribbles on its armour. Only one actinic eye gazed from the mask of the beast; the horn was torn off entirely, snapped at its base.

“Come on!” Shinji yelled at her.

“Why are you here?” she shouted back. “Do you know how much stuff is being shot at this thing?”

What are you doing, idiot? It was only going to be me stuck here; now they can concentrate fire here, and you probably dragged more. Now you're endangering yourself, too!

“Yes! I had to run through it!” he retorted. “Now come on!” He gulped down a mouthful of the liquid that enveloped him. “Asuka!”

“What?”

“You remember the training thing, yes?”

“Uh huh.”

“Remember,” he paused, “uh... 120-120-3?”

“No! Why should I!”

“The two charge beam ones?”

She frowned. “Oh, right. That was 140-140-3.”

“Not the time! Remember the solution!”

Her face went blank for a second, then she grinned. “Right! Think you're up to it?”

He grinned back, the smile infectious. “I'd better be. They got the minigun... that hurt. That's about all I can do to help you two now.”

Asuka frowned. “Where is Rei, anyway?”

Shinji winced. “Somewhere. I sort of got separated from her,” he admitted. “But... well, the Rei Gun is still firing and stuff is still blowing up.”

The far end of the ship began to sag; something not helped by the fact that Shinji reached up, and tore off one of the more intact panels of underhull, holding it above his head like a shield.

“Right,” he said. “Okay.”

“On the count of three,” she countered.

“Okay. Deep breath. Stay close, I'll shield us as best I can. One.”

“Two.”

“Three,” they shouted together, as together the Test Model and the Mass Production Model darted out of the cover, unwieldy section of hull held up by Unit 01, a weak AT-Field glimmering over its surface, synchronised together in their movements. The Migou units that had moved, on the ground, to surround the ruins of the ship, which sagged and twisted, were rather surprised.

And as the plasmathrower lit up the night again, Asuka smiled.

Thank you, dummy.

Thanks for coming for me.



~'/|\'~


The guns on the Unity roared in a manner quite unlike the name of the ship, each one of the six 150mm coilguns operating independently, LAI systems controlling the precise movements of the weapon to the general instructions of the command crew, who were actually ensconced deep within the hull. The cigar-shaped ship, bombardment coilguns forming a spine along the top was surrounded by the exhaust plumes of missiles; both its own, and the Migou ones which railed down from the sky, and its laser defence grid could be seen, shining through the smoke. The lesser weapons merely added to the fire, anti-air weapons ensuring that any overly confident bug who tried to move into range of the battlegroup was soon to be departing the mortal coil. The destroyer itself was elevated from the water, A-Pods lifting its bulk in defiance of gravity, its ventral plasma cannon discharging suns, one every 1.7 seconds, though the efficacy was dubious. At this range, the sheer infowar and volumes of emfog were enough that it was hard to acquire a target, even when they were throwing plasma back at you (in a similarly inaccurate fashion; you were doing the same antignostic techniques to them, naturally).

Deep with the hull of the Unity (actually named after one of the Nazzadi captains who had tried to crash her AW1-era picket ship into the Hive Ship at the start of the second Arcanotech War; the fact that it also meant something in English was a fortunate accident), the shift in pressure from a relatively nearby impact, vast volumes water flash-boiled in an instant could be felt, as the ship shifted slightly in the air. It did not matter; the crew were either in acceleration couches or operations exosuits, and the latter were magnetically clamped to the floor, the operator inside entrusting movement to the LAI, piloting it as opposed to wearing it.

“Target destroyed. New target data provided.”

Oh yes, thought Lieutenant Yukwiny, the missile officer on the Unity. And then there was them.

The four specialists... yes, she was going to call them 'specialists'... had been moved onto the destroyer just before the operation had started. The orders were valid, and were confirmed by NEGN CATO Command, but there was a certain... a certain feel to them, in the way that they were written and the slightly stressed way in which they had been validated, that suggested that they had come from outside the normal chain of command. They certainly won't exactly orthodox.

Neither the orders nor the specialists, come to think of it.

They were clearly divided, too. Three of them were in what looked like heavy Army combat armour, the blue-brown-grey-black of urban combat, of but the helmets looked nothing like the clear faceplated ones used in operations where danger wasn't expected, nor like the skull-like ones which were used in the kind of situation that grade of armour saw use. There was just this single, wide optical sensor that reached across the entire face. And they were just the technical staff; they sat at the commandeered stations as if they belonged there, talking in the flat mechanical voice of the external speakers on their armour, making them almost impossible to tell apart.

The other one, though... the one who actually seemed to be in charge, though she and her superiors had tried and failed to get a formal rank from the... Yukwiny was pretty sure that it was a woman, from the height, but the voice and the build were entirely masked by the even-heavier armour that she wore. And there was something terribly inhuman about the six eyes on her combat armour; about the way that they were the only features on the blank mask that obscured the visage.

And she talked constantly. A babble of coordinate locations and positions, to a nearly impossible precision with the levels of emfog, already high from their own bombardment, let alone the volumes that the Migou were seeding the place with.

The ship rocked more this time. That one must have been close, even with the evasive manoeuvres that the ship was pulling. That was one of the wonderful advantages of the A-Pod, compared to conventional craft; since the thruster was reactionless, there was no need to put it on the outside of the vehicle (though they still were on things like aircraft, where the added manoeuvrability was worth the vulnerability). In this Type-31-S Destroyer, the main A-Pod was instead inside the hull, which could be armoured uniformly. And when shots were getting this close, it was worth it.

“Lieutenant.”

An AR window opened before her...the figure was staring right at her, those eyes...

Yukwiny shivered, and swallowed, unconsciously wetting her lips.

“Yes?”

“Inclination 089, azimuth 032, range 4.93 kilometres. Hostile Migou reconnaissance unit designate “Dragonfly”. Destroy.”

The window vanished, the armoured mask disappearing, and the Nazzadi woman breathed a sigh of relief. She was the missile officer, though... that wasn't actually her role.

It opened again.

“Disregard previous message. Message sent to wrong officer. Apologies,” the figure said, in that flat voice which contained no real hint of apology. “New target: landed Drone Ship, 65°38'44.13” North, 18°05'36.39”. Destroy.”

The figure was gone again. Yukwiny gritted her teeth, and selected the appropriate strike for such a target, confirming with the ranged data from the St. Petersburg that there actually was an appropriately shaped blob (damn those Drone Ships and their radar absorptive surfaces; when hugging the ground like they did when landed, they were very hard to target for a thing that was almost a kilometre long) on the ground there.

The salvo of missiles, an integrated mass of decoys, sensor-drones, anti-armour warheads, and the specialist anti-ship missiles, was vomited forth in a cloud from the ship, arcing up slightly before levelling off, the smart guidance systems aware that, in such an em-heavy environment, especially against the Migou, the best firing solution was one which bought them in low, hugging the ruins of the Dagonite city as best they could, while still retaining enough velocity to minimise acquisition by the Migou defences.

Turning in her acceleration couch, waiting for further orders, either from her proper command structure, or from the Army strangers on her ship, Yukwiny decided two things. Firstly, that she really didn't like the specialists, in their dehumanising armour (which wasn't even needed; why would they chose to wear it over a proper padded comms system? It wasn't like they were going to be boarded.).

And secondly, it had been bad enough when they weren't being briefed on what Nero was doing, there had been what looked to be teenagers in the briefing, and the Army Special Weapons Division, if they were to be believed, had apparently conjured an entire Corps from their arses, in direct contravention of their name. But this... the Dagonite nuclear weapons, the fact that they'd pressed the attack despite that, the fact that the Migou had shown up like this in a massive force, and now the fact that these strangers were getting implausibly good targeting data against the Migou, no less...

This was downright suspicious.

...

And then it got worse.


~'/|\'~
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by JonB »

Things always get worse. Why should ANE be any different?
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by LadyTevar »

What a nasty fight. And now the Angel-Herald awakens.
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by Vehrec »

Statistically speaking, things do not always get worse. Sometimes, they get better. I mean, it's an uncaring non-anthropic universe. By definition, it doesn't give a damn about us, and therefore things can in fact improve.

Now the Migo? They do care. They care a whole awful lot about us in ways that are not at all pleasant.

I'd mention a few things about experiments, Blanks and reverse engineering... but forget it. I'd probably just attract more attention from her. And the last thing I need is another sorcereous invasion of my systems.
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by TabascoOne »

True, Murphy's Law is generally the guiding principle when dealing with hostile sapients.

Lots to like in this update, and a guilty part of me is waiting for the Herald to surface so the Migo can decide to 'sterilize the site from orbit, its the only way to be sure'. And is it me, or is the Migo language long on precision at the expense of clarity?

One other thing is that I'm curious just what is going on with Rei. I want to think its something Herald related, but either way its interesting that we get so much more reaction out of her than usual. Its hard to imagine her flipping out and kicking multiple enemy mecha to death before, at least, Shinji injured or not.
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by EarthScorpion »

LadyTevar wrote:What a nasty fight. And now the Angel-Herald awakens.
Yep. And this chapter keeps on multiplying. Believe it or not, I foolishly thought, when I started it, that this would end up the same length as the Yam bit; you know, one chapter, the Herald appears, and then it's killed in the second bit. 40,000 to 50,000 words, all in all.

It... didn't turn out that way. In fact, it's been 134,453 words since the previous Herald, a full length novel, or, to put it another way, almost half the fic. :shock:
TabascoOne wrote: Lots to like in this update, and a guilty part of me is waiting for the Herald to surface so the Migo can decide to 'sterilize the site from orbit, its the only way to be sure'. And is it me, or is the Migo language long on precision at the expense of clarity?
*grins*

Well, when crudely translated into English, yes. I'm trying to represent a language which is simply... well, better at explaining concepts than human languages. It's also sort of related to the way that I think when trying to be precise; I have a tendency to mash words together into neologisms which link together concepts (hence the whole "[cleanse/sterilise]" thing; that would be deliberately contrasted to something like a simple 'cleanse', as the addition of 'sterilise' sort of shows what type of cleansing I'm talking about) , and I sort of took this to extremes with the Migou.

There's a thing which should probably be known about me. I am a linguistics nerd, despite not actually being that good at foreign languages. But I love pattern, I love structure, and I love being able to trace the origins of words, and things like the Saphir-Worf hypothesis. Hence, not only my proclivities for playing around with both forgein and made-up languages, but quite often the way I phrase things is quite deliberate, to hide playing with words under a surface reading.
One other thing is that I'm curious just what is going on with Rei. I want to think its something Herald related, but either way its interesting that we get so much more reaction out of her than usual. Its hard to imagine her flipping out and kicking multiple enemy mecha to death before, at least, Shinji injured or not.
That wasn't actually flipping out. That was simple expediency. She was actually pretty damaged by that Dagonite bomb-thing, Shinji was on the ground and so wasn't able to take them down more quickly, and the charge beam was cooling down, so couldn't be used (and would have been overkill, anyway). Hence, she killed them with the only things available to her, and it works, because even the tallest Migou mecha are only half the height of an Eva, and so can be punted.

But, yes, funny-odd stuff is going on with Rei. It's just that isn't specifically part of the funny stuff.

And it seems that my 40 metre Evas are actually a lower end estimate, from the series. They're meant to be canonically 60m, and apparently the Rebuild ones are 80m.

If you put them in a line, next to other fanfic/canon ones, they're kinda chibi versions. :D
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by EarthScorpion »

Chapter 16

CATOcylsm: Cessation



~'/|\'~


Although the motive came from within, the form taken by the cult has appeared to many to be of non-Israelite origin. Babylonia and Assyria, however, seem to be out of the question: malik, “arbiter, decider,” is there an epithet of various gods, and as an appellative means “prince” and not king; further, little evidence for the prevalence of human sacrifice has as yet been found in those lands (A. Jeremias, Das Alte Test. im Lichte d. alten Orients, 2nd ed., p. 454). Among the Canaanite branch, the king-god is more prominent, and apart from the Ammonite variant Milcom, numerous names compounded with Milk- are found on Phoenician inscriptions and among western Semites mentioned in cuneiform literature (H. Zimmern, Keilinschr. u. das Alte Test., 3rd ed. pp. 470 sqq.). It is true that child-sacrifice in connexion with fire prevailed among the Phoenicians, and, according to the Greeks, the deity honoured with these grisly rites was Kronos (identified with the Phoenician El, “God”). On the other hand, the seat of the cult appears to have been at Jerusalem, and the period during which it flourished does not favour any strong Phoenician influence. Again, the form of the word Tophet and Ahaz's association with Damascus might point to an Aramaean origin for the cult; but it would not be safe to support this view by the statements and names in 2 Kings xvii. 31. On the whole, the biblical tradition that the Molech-cult was Canaanite and indigenous (Deut. xii. 29 sqq., xviii. 9 seq.) holds the ground. There was a tendency in time of misfortune to revert to earlier rites (illustrated in some ancient mourning customs), and it may have been some old disused practice revived under the pressure of national distress.

- Encyclopædia Britannica (1911). Rumours that the first printing was halted, and the books pulped, are entirely false; likewise, there was no scandal which was hushed up by the family of the editor-in-chief.


~'/|\'~


The Herald surfaced.

This was not a simple process. For, you see, the assumption had been made that the creature would be perhaps the size of an Evangelion, as per all the previous examples of such entities. Even the longest, Yam, had been only roughly an order of magnitude longer than the Evangelions.

Shinji felt a sudden pulse, one of sheer, unadulterated terror, as the crystalline fracture of an AT-Field emerged from over the horizon to the south. For a sudden timeless moment, he froze, as his brain refused to process the scale of the object. It tore through a mountain as it rose and rose and rose, its unnatural, impossible luminescence shining brightly through the clouds of ash and rock from the volcanoes that its passage had induced, magma spewing out around, like a veil of mist. A plume of dust that swirled and embraced it, climbed past the entity high into the stratosphere, lightning and thunder boomed as static charges gathered in the environment, the blast of debris rushing over the surface of the earth, roiling and boiling and tumbling.

As for the beast itself; how to describe it? It was not altogether akin to the bloated ray-like things which dwell at the bottoms of the deepest abysses of the tumescent oceans, consuming the constant shower of carcasses which rain down upon the depths, where no light is ever seen. Nor was is purely arachnid, many eyes staring forth beyond a hardened carapace covered in hair-like protrusions. It was not the long-dead carcass of a whale, rotting around bleached bones, nor the slime-coated bulk of a gastropod mollusc, shell stripped from it by evolutionary processes, nor was it a thing with the smooth, precise curves which normally came only from design and manufacture, from technological origin. It was none of these things, for it took elements from all, and combined them into an abominable form which became, in the eye of the viewer the original; something which ray and spider and scorpion and rotting whale and slug and even manufactured good all partook of, but did not encompass, it.

And its dimensions were best measured in kilometres. The precise size could not be judged, for the lack of objects to scale it to, combined with the way that it seemed to shift and pulsate as it moved, sometimes close and large, sometimes far away and absolutely massive, meant that no clear reference could be obtained.

With one colossal mass; not quite a tentacle, not quite a wing, not quite a protruding bone, it reached out, the air screaming as air molecules were torn half by the infinitesimal edge of the AT-Field that embraced the appendage. Such finesse was not needed, though, as the shear momentum behind the suddenly-flat plane of ruptured space-time crushed a Swarm Ship like a cardboard box, the D-Engines rupturing before being subsumed by the forced nature of the jagged and decidedly not flat Minskowski space-time that the Guard of Yog-Sothoth bore with it. The impact, brief though it was, gave a slight scale of the beast.

Shinji realised he was screaming only when his lungs emptied of LCL. He took a gulp, and continued, frozen to the spot.

Misato stared up at the autocensored image on the display, multiple angles from E-9s scattered all around the island, mouth open. With a sudden, violent swirl of motion, she turned, and, eyes filled with unconstrained rage, grabbed Agent Tome by the throat, lifting the albino off the floor, as he choked and struggled.

“How the fuck were we supposed to capture that, you bastard!” she screamed at him in Japanese, spittle spraying over his face.

“It... wasn't meant... be that,” he managed in the same language, around the hand clamped around his throat. “Also... no Migou.”

With the violence born of lack of restraint, she threw him to the ground, turning her back even before he had finished tumbling, panting heavily. The man just lay on the floor, clutching at his throat and gasping.

“Right!” the Major yelled. “Someone get CATO Command and tell those Admirals and Field Marshalls I want the Herald nuked until it's deader than... a very dead thing! And if the Migou are going to a-matter my pilots, they've got no damn reason to protest about this. And since I've seen Herald survive atomics before, they'd better use the big stuff.” She paused, coughing, and sucking in much needed air. “Listen to me, you three,” she said to the Evangelion pilots, a little bit of the rage leaving her voice. “You must run away. Listen to me. You must run away. Let the Migou get killed like this. We'll come up with a new plan when we can see what it can do,” she added, her voice unsteady as doubt infiltrated it. “Asuka and Shinji, meet up with Rei at the location we're transmitting. You two are closer to it; get away.”

“But what will that do?” protested Asuka, hyperventilating lungfuls of LCL. “What can we do...”

“Do... not be worried,” stated Rei, her voice somewhat shaky.

That seemed to drag Shinji back. “You... it'll turn out all right?” he asked, desperately. “Are you... have you... are you sure?”

“You misunderstand. Worry is not useful.” She coughed twice, a spluttering of LCL. “We... we should perform our orders to the best of our capabilities, without letting others...”

Schnauze! Halt die Schnauze!” roared Asuka over the communications, before switching back to English. “Just shut up! Not helping!”

“Both of you, do as I say and just run!” ordered the Major, her voice shaking with somewhat omnidirectional anger. “Don't bicker; get away from it! Get back to the resupply point”

The twin figures of the Test Model and the Mass Production model turned, and fled from the monstrosity which had torn its way from the flesh of the Earth, as, behind them, the radiance of the AT-Field and the burning glow of the magma that spewed from the open wound fought for dominance.


~'/|\'~


The column of Faithful survivors made their way through the tunnels beneath the city (although now, perhaps, the term “ruins” was more accurate) of Dagon'uvtu Oraribyrapr, a snaking column largely composed of children in heavy coats, their filtration masks covering their features. Less than one in seven of the individuals in the line were in the armour that they had taken from the military supplies; proper modern gear, not the Cold War II era equipment of the militia. That had been handed down, to the elder children, who now displayed a disparate mismatch of whatever gear could be spared; helmets and webbing over the civilian warm clothing and filtration masks. The very earth was shaking frequently now, even after the terrible set of earthquakes had seemingly stopped. The dust on the floors danced continuously, the air filled with a haze which was disturbingly similar to NEG emfog. The squalling of small children could be heard from all around.

One of these older children, sent back as a runner to the middle of the line, arrived, panting beneath his mask.

Veer'thyne'yrnq-re,” he managed, pronouncing it correctly, “up ahead... the tunnel's collapsed. It's just rocks and stuff.”

Khonatqa muttered curses to herself in Ry'lehan, then glanced to the shorter figures of her half-sisters beside her. Well, from the way that the elder one, a handgun on a sling around her neck that had originally been designed for carbines, was covering up the younger one's ears, she at the very least already knew what they meant.

“We're going to have to go up, use one of the hidden access tunnels to get out,” she said. “Look at the walls,” she pointed at a cluster of Ry'lehan hieroglyphics, “you can read that we're below...” she squinted, “... Cra-gr'k Industrial. It'll just be a short bit across the surface, and we can get back down. Spread the message that everyone has to be sure that all their gear is sealed, that their weapons are ready, and that the small children are under control.”

The runner nodded, and left. The noise level in the tunnels rose, as everyone checked their gear, or looked at the suits of the little ones, checking that the LEDs were still blue-green. If they went red, that meant that there was a breach. They were those colours, because that way it ensured that both human and Deep One alike could read them; yellow would have been unseen to Deep Ones, just as infra-red would have been to humans.

“Yhu, I want you to cover your ears,” Ghuhulia said to her little sister, once she had done her own and checked Yhughui'ne's. “I just want to talk to the Veer'thyne'yrnq-re, and I don't want you to get scared. 'kay? I'm not going to leave you.”

The five-year old nodded, the mask that covered her entire head under the hood sliding around, slightly too large, then she clamped overly large gloves over where her ears would be.

Khonatqa stared down at the CW2 gas-mask staring up at her, and momentarily suppressed a shiver.

“A lot of people are going to die doing this, aren't they?” the little girl said softly, muffled even further by the mask.”

“Maybe,” Khonatqa admitted. “But only if we stumble into the blasphemers.”

“Mummy's already dead, isn't she.” The words were not a question. “Gulifr'kre too, though he's not really that important, as he's not my real daddy.”

A blast shook the ceiling, the lights flickering.

Khonatqa nodded. Almost certainly; it was a mild shame. Raguelle hadn't been that bad a worker, though a little lazy. “And, no, he wasn't important.”

“I dr-dr-dreamed it, and I tried to explain it to her, and she didn't l-listen and I didn't tell h-her it properly because... because I was scared that she'd get worried,” the eight-year old let out in a burble. “She just th-th-thought I was talking about the fact that she wa-wasn't one of the Blooded and was going to die like that rather than like this. B-bu-but we're go-going to die. We're all going to d-die.”

The lights flickered again, the whispering buzzing noise of the panels audible as they flicked on and off repeatedly.

The older woman took in a breath, air rushing over her gills as well as into her lungs, and let it out. “Dreams are just dreams, most of the time. Only the most favoured among the Blooded and Chosen can ever become a sh'gher fr're and receive visions of the future from Cthulhu'ybeq or ]Dagon'ybeq. You're just feeling guilty because...”

Another runner appeared. “Veer'thyne'yrnq-re,” this one, this time a teenage girl, too young for her first pregnancy, said, “we've got the hatch open. We can start getting people up the ladder, the other Veer'thyne looked up, and it seemed to be safe.”

“W-what are you going to do about the sha'tbvq-nyvra,” said Ghuhalia, keeping her face turned away her little sister, who still obediently had her gloves clamped over the side of her filtration hood, stopping the little girl from seeing her tear-filled eyes.

“Get ready to move out, then,” ordered Khonatqa. She paused, as the words of her half-sister filtered through her ears. “Wait, what?”

“They're already h-here...” whispered Ghuhalia. “And there's... s-s-some w-w-worse th-things out there. I've seen them in m-m-my dreams.” She turned up, and locked wet eyes with the half-sister who she had not know about before today. “F-f-fire sweeping over the earth. And s-s-so many bodies.”


~'/|\'~


“You are instructed to obtain a strategic missile launch. It will always be possible to blame it on the Dagonites later. It has been deemed better for you to beg forgiveness over the corpse of a Herald than ask permission.”

“We're going to have to go through GATCN. The President is there.”

There was a pause.

“The President is aware of what is happening, and retains active control?”

“They had to bring her in, after the first Dagonite nuclear weapons. It's not as if you can keep that kind of thing secret.”

“That's a problem.” There was an intake of breath. “If there had not been contact, it would have been possible that a minister or command Triumvirate could have authorised it, in such an emergency. That would have been a trivial exercise”

“Yes.”

The drumming of fingers.

“Permission for a LANCE deployment will be refused.”

“Almost certainly.”

“That is an issue. Although other paths to obtain such a thing exist, it is not desirable that those methods be revealed yet.”

A shrug.

“We can still ask.”

“It is not that. It is merely that... well, she has the potential to be inconvenient. And if there is one thing that this situation does not need, it is... inconvenience.”


~'/|\'~


The soul-blasted remains of the Weny Komdy had been joined by another Loyalist, the look of profound horror on his face locked in by impossibly rapid rigour mortis.

“New target assigned,” stated Kantya-14. “Temporary Loyalist command centre located by other Eidelon Combat Units.”

“They are laying SCU cables for high emfog comms,” continued Kantya-15, in an identical monotone, without a break. “Any high value targets are to prepared for extraction, and the communications systems eliminated.”

“Objectives update understood,” answered Foxtrot-813, ensconced within the stolen Loyalist power armour. “Data squirt received. Route determined.” He paused. “Estimated threat levels noted,” he stated. “This unit will take vanguard position.”

“Agreed, Foxtrot-813,” said Kantya-12. “Note the presence of Loyalist Elites.”

“Presence was noted. Ready to move on command.”

The four Replica Elites, their changing colour of their armour blending into the surroundings, and the stolen power armour left through the breached door to the rest of the Dagonite tunnel network through which they had arrived. There were occasional wet noises, as the Oyanari stood on the corpses, torn apart by hypervelocity railgun slugs, energy weapons, or occasionally just riddled with bullets, that they had created in their arrival.

Somewhere in the ruins of a factory, a almost unnoticeable floor tile cracked, the dust covering it puffing into the air. A second blow served to clear the opening, before the power armour emerged from the hole, like a rather technophilic and militant Venus from the depths of the ocean. Only with more climbing and dust, and less sea-foam and naked babies with wings.

With a tinkling, the lock fell out of the ruined hatch.

Looking around, it could be seen that the battle had raged through here already. The roof was entirely missing, its remnants obscuring the scorched and melted remains of murals painted on the floor. The production line was a charred mess of metal and plastics, fused solid where the plastic had not burned. At one end of the room, superior senses of the Replicas could discern discarded shell casings of AW1-era automatic weapons, and a few of the pre-booster stages of anti-tank missiles; a few of their users scattered around in the area, unmoving. High above, the booms of supersonic air units spoke of their presence in the fire-lit smoke and clouds, as Migou [combat-form/networks], now deprived of their capital-grade support, still pushed back the New Earth Government Navy aircraft.

The two footprints dug deep into the floor, the right size for a forty-metre tall arcanocyberxenobiological war machine, drawing a line between two gaps in the walls, and the fact that one entire half of the building, and everything visible through the hole, was nothing more than flat slagged glass, was also a bit of a clue.

“Clear,” reported 813, as he swiftly moved into cover, lowering the profile of the armour next to what looked like the remains of an arm. “No hostiles visible. There's widespread devastation from unknown high energy discharge... plasma, probably. It appears too widespread for a charge beam, and the distribution is wrong for a laser.”

In pairs, the Elite followed him, dispersing behind the remnants of the infrastructure, their armour fading to a dusty splotchy grey, overlain with amorphous shapes which merely broke their image up further. All five of the Eidelon Units threw repeated glances at the slagged mess, and the footprints. The glass, digging down into the hellish landscape, was still radiating heat. It was fortunate that the tunnels they had used had not passed under that mess; they would have been fused solid.

“Potential threat or hazard to the mission?” asked Kantya-15 over the network, the Replicas in close enough proximity to punch through the emfog. “Negative. Projected probability is that damage was inflicted by prototype Evangelion Titan-class capital unit.”

“Affirmed,” added Kantya-14. “Projection matches personal estimates.”

“Dissenting opinion,” retorted, insofar as such a term can be applied to a monotone, Kantya-12. “It was the Mass Production model, not the Prototype.”

“I did not say that it was the Prototype,” said Kantya-15. “I did not specify which unit it was. I agree with your projection on the Unit ID, however.”

“Yes, you did,” responded Kantya-12.

“No, I did not. I stated that the Evangelion Units are prototypes.”

The earth shook, as the clouds above lit up briefly in a white light, only to die off again.

“The Mass Production Model is not. Hence the name. Technically, neither is the Test Model. The majority are not prototypes.”

“But they are still prototypes, compared to the Engel units, which have been implemented in much greater numbers and use the same fundamental technology as the base.”

“Both of you, shut up,” stated Kantya-13, in a way which would have been described as flat, had the Replica possessed a more expanded emotional repertoire. “Your behaviour is inefficient, abnormal, and not necessary for the mission. Desist.”

“I await further instructions,” said Foxtrot-813, who had been listening to the conversation with hints of confusion. This kind of internal debate was unusual among the normal Eidelon Combat Units. The fact that he had not been able to contact Command since the initial blast just made things more problematic; it meant that he was unable to receive or request the necessary support that the tightly organised powered armour units normally received. It was probably a consequence of the additional independence that a commando unit would require, although they seemed to have no problem receiving messages. “What formation should we use to advance?”

“Satru-4,” stated Kantya-15, as the six-eyed helmet poked above the entrance. “Ghost...” the Replica Elite stiffened and fell silent. “It comes.”

“It wakes,” agreed Kantya-13. “It can be felt.”

“Emergency protocol override, orders changed,” chorused all four Elites, in unison. “Regrouping at Point Alpha-Zulu-02. Preparing for evac. Switching to pseudo-independent mode.”

“Understood,” replied Foxtrot-813. “Eidelon Combat Unit ready to follow orders. New destination set.”

And the sky to the south lit up.


~'/|\'~


As one, the Migou fleet disengaged from the New Earth Government forces, discharging all their decoys and emptying their reservoirs of emfog as they did it. The vast clouds of micro-and-nanoparticles that bloomed around them hung like liquid in the air, more akin to a veil than to a cloud. The vortices and flows of the movement of the atmosphere, thrown and tossed by the passage of the vast ships and their lesser craft, and by the thermals from the war below, were made visible for all to see. It would not aid them against this foe, and they could but hope that the uplifted apes of Species ᵺᶙӎӎшѧ would have the self-preservation to permit them to engage the real foe without distraction or sapping vital troops. Even the [Terrestrial Planet Combat] [Deployment Craft] in the process of landing troops began to shift in form, closing the spread-out ribcage on the underside of the massive ships which shielded their forces as they deployed

The <Adjunct of Deployed Strategic Reserves> was already concerned. They had taken excessive casualties even before they had landed, and there were certainly {HAZARDS} active on the island. Certainly {HAZARDS}; potentially {THREATS}, albeit lesser ones than the the {SLEEPER IN FIRE}. Some reports were even coming in that they seemed to be equipped as scaled up versions of the converted {LESSER SERVITORS} that Species ᵺᶙӎӎшѧ was known to use.

If that were true, the <Adjunct of Deployed Strategic Reserves> would be putting a motion for planetary sterilisation, and damn the consequences. The proliferation of {THREATS} was far beyond anything that could be permitted, even if it would wake other such foes. Attempting to harness the engine of their own destruction...only Species ᵺᶙӎӎшѧ could be so foolish.

Well, Species ᵺᶙӎӎшѧ and the Tsab.. And Species ǻdzǣǖȝ, though reports coming in from the far end of the spiral arm indicated that they were on the verge of being wiped out, contained after their contamination by a mere {HAZARD} resident on one of the planets in their system had enabled them to break a too-weak Exclusion Volume. And the... well, there were far too many suicidal young species that would bring entire star clusters down with them, if the Migou had not been there to ensure that the local area of space was one compatible with their own continued existence.

The <Adjunct of Deployed Strategic Reserves> dismissed these thoughts with a slight buzz of the wings of the primary [body-form/individual] ensconced within the bridge of the [Terrestrial Planet Combat] [Local Supremacy Craft], deep within its hull, and turned its collected attention to the [body-form/individual] integrated with the ships systems.

The reports were indeed dire, when the upcoming threat of the {SLEEPER IN FIRE} was taken into account. The casualties in such a hot-drop, against local capital-grade defences, were always going to be horrific, as the reduced detection signature necessary for any modern military unit to survive on the battlefield was completely incompatible with atmospheric re-entry at this kind of velocity. Especially when the [New Earth Government] appeared, from their best estimates, to have suspected that they were coming, and emplaced a specialist anti-capital charge beam at the centre of the island, which remained operational, despite their best efforts. Yes, they could certainly eliminate all the remaining [New Earth Government] and [Esoteric Order of Dagon] forces on the island; but that was not why they were there. They were there to contain the {THREAT} which had just surfaced, and the <Adjunct of Deployed Strategic Reserves> was certain that they would take horrendous casualties

<Adjunct of Deployed Strategic Reserves>: Of the initial [(one-36)] [Terrestrial Planet Combat] [Local Supremacy Craft] (non-standard);

[(five)] have been [destroyed/eliminated] by unidentified (presumed [NEG]) relativistic particle beam fire from an unidentified capital grade unit.

[(two)] have been [destroyed/eliminated] by known [NEG] local fleet actions.

[(one)] has been [destroyed/eliminated] by unknown causes.

[(one)] has been [destroyed/eliminated] by the actions of the {SLEEPER IN FIRE}.

[(seven)] have been [damaged/rendered] such that they are incapable of full [action/deed] for this operation by unidentified (presumed [NEG]) relativistic particle beam fire from an unidentified capital grade unit, although will be able to [conduct/perform] support duties.

[(five)] have been [damaged/rendered] such that they are incapable of full [action/deed] for this operation by known [NEG] local fleet actions, although will be able to [conduct/perform] support duties.

[(six)] have suffered [minor/limited] damage, and are capable of fulfilling the mission objectives.

[(nine)] remain intact and fully combat-ready.

<Adjunct of Deployed Strategic Reserves>: Of the initial [(one-36) and (nine)] [Terrestrial Planet Combat] [Deployment Craft] (non-standard);

[(six)] have been [destroyed/eliminated] by unidentified (presumed [NEG]) relativistic particle beam fire from an unidentified capital grade unit.

[(six)] have been [destroyed/eliminated] by known [NEG] local fleet actions.

[(one)] has been [destroyed/eliminated] by unknown causes while [landed/unloading].

[(two)] have landed, and suffered such [damage/injury] that they are incapable of sustained flight until [repairs/replacements] are made, but have or are deploying troops in full.

[(eight)] have been [damaged/rendered] such that they are incapable of full [action/deed] for this operation by unidentified (presumed [NEG]) relativistic particle beam fire from an unidentified capital grade unit, although will be able to [conduct/perform] support duties.

[(seven)] have been [damaged/rendered] such that they are incapable of full [action/deed] for this operation by known [NEG] local fleet actions, although will be able to [conduct/perform] support duties.

[(eleven)] have suffered [minor/limited] damage, and are capable of fulfilling the mission objectives.

[(four)] remain intact and fully combat-ready.

<Adjunct of Deployed Strategic Reserves>: Of the initial [(two)] [General Out-System] [Local Supremacy Craft];

[(two)] remain intact and fully combat-ready.

The <Adjunct of Deployed Strategic Reserves> made a buzz of irritation, at the reminder of how they had suffered in the approach. That relativistic particle beam fire had broken up their line of approach, directed at the ones that had been ordered to land close to the target zones, even before they had broken from the main formation. Even before they should have known such a thing. It was... concerning. It was known that Species ᵺᶙӎӎшѧ possessed the ability to manifest precognitive powers; of course they would. But they were normally rare in such a species at this level of development and sapience, and there had been a non-negligible rise, over the previous [(two-36th)] of a Yuggothian cycle. It was not the rise that was the alarming thing; such species often did unstable things akin to this, as they experimented with themselves and with the arcane. Indeed, Species ᵺᶙӎшѧ was somewhat unusually reluctant to engage in [body-form/self] modifications; most dangerous young species normally radically altered themselves, especially if they were {TAINTED} or {CONTAMINATED}. No, it was the ratio of certain extranormal abilities which had left the wise among the sorcerer-scientists, like the <Handler of Xenobiological Organisms> (who spoke on this manner across the networks on every opportunity, incessantly and at great length) disturbed.

The increasing use of such phenomena on the battlefield was merely another manifestation of the malaise that afflicted this planet. The <Adjunct of Deployed Strategic Reserves> would be glad when Three was properly Contained, and they could move away from this place, back to the outer system and the Oort Cloud, rather than be forced to spend time in a dense atmospheric, high gravity environment like this. It expressed a great dislike of such places; even Three-Orbital-First and Four were unpleasant in a combat body-form, as opposed to an acceleration body-form of the type used for long-distance travel or a micro-gravity body-form like those used all throughout the Oort Cloud.

The [body-form/individual] buzzed its wings, settling its mind. It was getting distracted, its mind already repelled by the thought of the {THREAT} and the fact that it, most likely, faced [self-form/death] against such a thing as this. It did not matter. It was quite willing to face cessation if it could have the consolation that it had fulfilled its role and sent the {SLEEPER IN FIRE} back to the [dreaming/death] from where it had came.

It felt a twinge in the [body-form/individual] that was plugged directly into the communications network, aiding the synchronisation of the fleet, that indicated an external contact authorised by the [Void Forces]. It acknowledged the message, from one of the two [General Out-System] [Local Supremacy Craft] that still hung, fusion drives burning, high above this planet, barely in the atmosphere.

<Commodore of Orbital Supremacy>: This [combat-form/individual] wishes to pass [information/warning] to the Deployed Strategic Reserves.

<Adjunct D. S. R>: This [body-form/individual] acknowledges the [request/message], and [authorises/grants] the <Commodore of Orbital Supremacy> access to communications.

<Commodore O. S.>: This [combat-form/individual] thanks the <Adjunct of Deployed Strategic Reserves>.

The <Commodore of Orbital Supremacy>, its body (like that of its crew) so rebuilt for the high accelerations that a warship must handle, that they were incompatible of forming a [self-form/network] network with the most common phenotype among the local Migou, vibrated. Eyes, which to Species ᵺᶙӎшѧ would have been glowing an odd reddish-green, but to the Migou had a very strong ultraviolet component, stared forth from the outside of the armoured shell in which its nervous system, held in place, existed. It didn't really matter. It wasn't really attached to this shell except in a metaphysical sense; it was a distributed intellect in the warship, able to survive accelerations that would have left its base form a thinly smeared mess against the wall, let alone what Species ᵺᶙӎшѧ or the loyal examples of Species ᵺᶙӎшѧ-[α] could have tolerated. Its senses were the ship's senses. Its body was the ship's body.

And so it opened a channel to the rest of the fleet with nothing more than a thought, because the ship's communications organs were its communications organs

<Commodore O. S.>: This [combat-form/individual] wishes to inform the [surviving/remaining] [self-form/individuals] of the Deployed Strategic Reserves that [containment/sterilisation] of the {THREAT} of the {SLEEPER IN FIRE} is about to [commence/begin]. All [self-form/individuals] should have at least one [body-form/individual] outside the projected blast radius. [Sterilisation/containment] begins in [(three-36) and (twelve)] lesser time units.

And with that said, it cut the link. Oh, the Deployed Strategic Reserves had been inept in a way that had imperilled that all! The <Commodore of Orbital Supremacy> was terrified by what it was going to do, for it bore the risk of waking more of the {THREATS}. But if it need be done, it was best that it be done quickly, for who knew what the {SLEEPER IN FIRE} would do with wakefulness?


~'/|\'~


There was a crunch, loud in the deathly silence which had just fallen, as the President slammed the PCPU she had just been handed down against the table. A tiny amount of fluid oozed out from the broken device, the synthetic odour immediately bonded to by the nanoscrubbers that filled the air.

“Would anyone care to tell me what the hell is going on in Iceland!” she yelled at the ceiling.

“Certainly, Madam President,” began one of the Field Marshalls, an haggard woman with a full head of snow-white hair said. The youthful brightness of her eyes all but stated that they were not her first pair, but were instead a vat-grown replacement. “If you will but...”

“Please, don't patronise me, Fazil,” snapped President Nyanda. “I was informed of the very existence of this massive military deployment all of... oh,” she said, putting a finger to her mouth to match her expression of mock puzzlement, “yesterday, and then only because you lot couldn't keep the fact that the fish-fucke... men had used nuclear weapons from the Cabinet. Now the damn Migou have dropped from orbit pulling accelerations which, if I recall my school days,” she said, exaggerating her youth compared to the average age of the room, “should be leaving them as red jam...”

“Ma'am, Migou ichor isn't actually red...”

“...shut up. Where was I? Oh yes. The Migou have dropped from orbit with the largest single deployment ever in a way that intelligence reports assure me means they must be desperate. They are making use of antimatter weapons in a tactical capacity. They have bought two of their six warships into the atmosphere. I'm surprised they haven't just crashing the damn Hive Ship into Iceland the way they're acting.” She pointed down at the wrecked PCPU on the table, panting in a rather deliberate way. “And now you tell me that a massive ship-sized ENE with some kind of sorcerous shield has appeared, and you want to deploy the strategic nuclear arsenal!” The last words were almost shrieked.

The government officials and military leaders around the table glanced at each other. They were actually physically here; there was no way that the bandwidth for AR-projecting would be allowed in and out of this bunker, which had (unbeknownst to almost everyone around the table) defences both mundane and sorcerous which were almost as good as those in a Vault. It was an understandable reaction from the President, although a little heavy in sarcasm. It was, unfortunately, at the moment rather unhelpful, when launch authority was needed

“Yes, Madam President,” said the Minster of War, Genevieve Aristide, finally. “I am requesting permission for the strategic arsenal to be deployed on behalf of the CATO ground forces, against the ENE. We do not intend to target the Migou, and they seem as keen to kill it as we are, so they should not retaliate... at least according to the xenopsych experts. And, actually, we don't want to just use the fusion weapons. If you hadn't... if you check further down on the list,” she said, trying to ignore the damage to the PCPU, given the way that the President's hand was twitching, “the Mixcoatl warheads were to be the 'decoy'.” She paused, trying not to push Helen Nyanda too far, before she said the next thing.

Unfortunately, the President glared at her, as if she were reading her mind. For a pretty face, who, it was widely agreed, had got the position after only after her predecessor had been embroiled in a nasty funding scandal, and the assassination of her husband (whose first name she now used as a surname) earned her sympathy, she was too sharp by far. “You want to use one of the LANCE systems?” she snapped, still panting. “Are you insane?”

“No.” Geniveve Aristide paused, tucking an errant hair back behind her ear. “By our estimates, we need to use something of that potential yield to be sure that we take down something like...”

“The LANCEs are vital for GODSPEAR,” interrupted the dark-skinned woman. “And I don't want to waste the best shot we have at killing that Hive Ship, once and for all, by letting the Migou find out about GODSPEAR because you, Genevieve, authorised a secret military operation without any reference to the Cabinet or me! Damn it, you're near the line! You may even be on the far side of it!”

The rest of the room stared at the two woman; the President and the Minister of War (one enraged, the other keeping her expression mask-like) locked together. There was a cough from the end of the table. A male Nazzadi, a single, asymmetric curving tattoo on his left cheek a contrast to the hints of white starting to creep into his hair, just at the roots, glanced over at the President.

“Madam President,” he said, not a trace of a Nazzadi accent in his flawless Reformed accent, “I have just received information which I believe that you would wish to hear, before you make your decision.”

The President blinked first, and sat down. “Certainly, Representative,” she said, unconsciously smoothing out her jacket, and favouring him with a faint, albeit slightly fixed, smile.

The Representative from the Ashcroft Foundation for North America (and, technically speaking, the first among equals of the continental Representatives, as the individual responsible for the capital of the New Earth Government) nodded. “I will be brief, as this is an emergency. I have just received information that the true aim of CATO was accomplished.” He raised his hands at the uproar. “Please,” he said, turning up the volume on his microphone to drown out the noise.

“Shut up, everyone” ordered the President, glaring at the Representative as she did so. The room fell silent; there was something disturbingly teacher-like about that tone. “What do you mean?”

“Yes. CATO was never about the reconquest of Iceland, not really. The GIA had received information that there was a high-value target, attempting some kind of summoning ritual, on the island. The rest of CATO was a distraction, to permit a team consisting of the Foundation's three capital-grade Evangelion Titan-class ACXB mecha to spearhead an assault, with the primary goal being the elimination of the target, and the prevention of the ritual. By precedent, they have had noted successes in such roles, including the destruction of the ENE which nearly breached the naval defences near Chicago-2 on the 13th last month.”

“You failed then, Jara!” interrupted Field Marshal Fazil. “Look at the ENE here!”

The Nazzadi nodded. “Sadly, we were unable to get there before the target could complete the ritual. However, the primary target was successfully killed. Madam President, Dagon is dead.”

“Dagon... you mean?” whispered the President.

“Yes,” he nodded. “Dagon, as in, 'Esoteric Order of' was successfully eliminated.”

A deathly hush fell over the room. Slowly, the cheers started, only to die out as they remembered the fact that there was a massive extra-normal entity rampaging through the area.

The Representative bowed. “That is all.”

There was a pause.

“We estimate that only one LANCE would be required to take down the target,” interjected a young-looking, bald male amlati in the uniform of a GIA analyst, trying to keep the original conversation running despite the interruption. “That would still leave us with ei...”

“No,” said Helen Nyanda, flatly, clamping down on the bubbly glee that she could feel at the news. “I am not going to endanger GODSPEAR, when it could rid us of the Hive Ship, even with this good news. That is it. No discussion. I am prepared to unlock the strategic nuclear arsenal, but I expressly refuse to unlock the orbital systems.” She raised one hand, underskin command implants already shining through her skin. “Are you aware of how long it took us to get those things into orbit?” she asked rhetorically, as she immersed her hand in the blue-gloop of the suitcase-like device an aide had placed in front of her. “Limited Release; authorised by New Earth Government President Helen Nyanda. Unlock Strategic Arsenal, up to Tonatiuh-category weapons,” she said calmly, ignoring the squirming feelings on top of, and underneath the skin, running all the way up her arm and throughout her body, as the systems they'd installed in her even before she had been inaugurated confirmed the lack of Blank-modifications or uncharacteristic mental influences. “Six hour Release.”

There was a nod from the aide beside her.

The authorisation was valid.


~'/|\'~


Unit 01 and 02 raced, side-by-side, eating up the distance almost as quickly as they tore up the surfaces below them, as directly behind them the bulk of the Herald cast its unnatural radiance over the land, the intensity akin to that of a false moon.

“I must run away,” muttered Shinji. “I must run away.”

“I think it might be... it's following us,” groaned Asuka, as she managed to squeeze a little more velocity out of the towering behemoth which now seemed very small. “This is just ridiculous! Run away faster! Although,” she added, a faint smirk on her lips which was betrayed by the worry in her voice, “at least it's bright enough to know what the real threats are.”

And, indeed, the bulk of Moloch, twisted appendages writhing and twisting so that they sometimes passed through each other in a way which was oddly repetitive despite its initially random appearance was coming closer. The burning suns of the Migou plasma cannons seemed to be doing nothing; the smears of ionised gas dispersing upon contact with the fractured light of the AT-Field.

“I'd prefer if it were more stupid in that case,” retorted Shinji, matching pace with her, and overtaking again, as Unit 01 was no longer weighed down by the main weapon. “Mot took damage from less firepower than that. And we don't have a spare arcology power grid!

“Less banter, more running,” commanded Asuka. “Misato! Misato! Can you hear us? Shinji! How far away is it?”

There was no response from command; not even a crackle. What did occur was a series of blasts against the AT-Field, as tactical antimatter-warheads began to burst against the side and top of the monstrosity, the fireballs lopsided as the violated space-time refused the annihilation passage.

“Uh...” the boy paused, looking at the wall of the entry plug. “Um. It's... I don't know! It's jumping around! The system is all confused! Anywhere from 1600 metres to 120 km!”

“Brilliant,” Asuka snarled. “Is it actually teleporting, or is it just screwing with your sensors?”

“How would I know?” he responded. “How could I tell the difference? It... it... argh!” he gasped, as Migou fightercraft opened up, the laser cannons cutting down with the snap of superheated air. The Evangelion stumbled, more from the shock than from any damage, before picking up the pace again. The laser defence grid lashed out, incepting the accompanying wave of missiles; it was fortunate that they seemed to be using all their larger munitions against the Herald.

“Ignore them, Shinji,” said Asuka. “Just keep runni... Scheiße!” The laser pulse which had prompted the exclamation, the mid-ultraviolet electromagnetic radiation scoring down her left arm before she could manifest just enough of an AT the tarmac had been cold under her feet, the shoes really not suitable for this. They had walked past row after row of abandoned car, almost all old petchems, and her mother had told her to be careful Field to get her out of the way. “Drone!”

The two Evangelions scattered. “Yeah! I know!” said Shinji, as he threw himself back, right arm of the Evangelion clutched over the damage from that charge beam, head angled as so to maximise what the one functional eye of the Evangelion could see. “Kill it!”

“It's out of range!” snapped Asuka. “Just distract it!”

“Distract it!” he retorted, the head-mounted lasers now back under manual control, but not even scratching the surface of the capital ship. “How am I meant to do that?”

“Keep firing uselessly at it,” she shouted back, breaking into a sprint that quickly turned into a dive to the side, when the laser cut a path back towards her. “Do it more!”

“They're not idiots,” he yelled, as warning signals bloomed across the projection, tracking the hostile projectiles as best they could, “... and missiles! The ships just launched a swarm! They can see that you have the big gun!”

“Damn it! Where is Rei?” snapped the girl. “Just run. We can see if we can get it in denser terrain.”

“Denser terrain? Denser terrain? We're in forty-metre giant robots! About the only dense terrain we can get is a high-rise city...”

“You know what I meant!”

“... and even then, the stuff that can hurt us just shoots straight through buildings and an entire Swarm Ship to get you!” The boy took a deep breath. “It ripped through like it was tissue paper,” he added in a softer voice, unconsciously raising a hand from his controls to rest it over his chest. Yes, the vat-cultured flash had repaired the damage that the sympathetic feedback from the hole that Mot had torn in his... in the Evangelion's body (he had merely suffered burns). But that didn't mean that it hadn't hurt, or that he couldn't remember that horrifying spike of agony that had coruscated through his mind in the tiny fraction of a second (according to Dr Akagi) that it had taken the neurons in his brain to fire and the corresponding breakdown in synchronisation to minimise the damage.

Actually, now that he though about it... that was really odd. How could he have felt it, if there hadn't been time for his brain to react? He could ask Ritsuko for more details, but, Shinji was fairly sure, even if he didn't merely get exposed to either brusque preoccupation or somewhat patronising condescension, any explanation that he did get would firstly not make much sense unless you had some kind of high level degree in arcane sciences (probably multiple ones), and secondly overuse the prefixes 'arcano-' and 'anima-'. And probably various terms in German, too. Why was it that no-one had the decency to overthrow the supremacy of the Germanic languages in the field of obfuscatory scientific jargon, anyway? He was sure that he'd do a lot better at understanding them if they used Japanese, like he was sure, deep down, that they were meant to.

Of course, there were probably times to discuss the nature of languages, and how they evolved, shifted, and, as both a carrier of memes and a memeplex in their own right, vied for supremacy. When crouched down in as low a profile as possible, in a fissure opened by the surfacing of some ancient alien thing, to avoid a spaceship crewed by a different kind of alien shooting you with a giant laser was not one of those times, and served only to distract one from more important tasks.

Sometimes Shinji hated his own mind. And it returned the favour, and suggested a few new ways that he could die in the next few minutes. With pictures.


~'/|\'~


“Can you get through to them!” asked Misato, her knuckles white as she grasped the railing in front of her. On the map of Iceland, the entire area around the Herald was shockingly low resolution, the entire area surrounded in a bright-red dome cascading warnings and odd image corruptions, though the fires and the clouds, meshing and shredding each other with each new blastwave, could be picked out. The marker for Unit 00 was the only one visible; the other two Evangelions were somewhere in that hell.

Lieutenant Aoba, looking decidedly queasy, shook his head. “No,” he called back. “We're not even getting sigcors.” He paused. “It could mean that either their comms are down, that they're not even getting them, or...”

“... or 01 and 02 have been destroyed,” said Captain Martello, flatly. “Each of those shots from the warships are in the seventy to eighty megaton range, and there's no way that the Eva could take being at ground zero of that. If they were too close to them...”

The [VOICE ONLY] connection back to London-2 symbol turned green on the mainscreen. “That's not true,” interjected Ritsuko, the multi-second latency slowing down any attempts to communicate. “An AT-Field could theoretically withstand it... no, let's rephrase it. An Eva's AT-Field could theoretically withstand it, given a high enough synch-ratio and... well, luck. We can actually see that a Herald's one can,” she added morosely. “Our own strategic weapons aren't going to do a thing, if the Migou can't kill it.” There was a pause. “Unit 00 is far too damaged to be able to face that thing,” she said, slowly. “You have to pull it out, Misato; we can't lose all three Evas.”

“Ritsuko, have you got a look at the interface yet?” the Major asked, coldly. “It's not going to matter if someone doesn't kill it. Even if the Herald doesn't kill us all, look what the Migou are doing. They're chucking megatonnes around like water, and they've never done that before. They want Moloch dead ” She smiled grimly. “They may be a bunch of alien bug bastards, but they have a certain sense of style, I can grant them that. It's what I'd do if I had orbital weapons.”

“Yes, yes you would,” remarked Ritsuko, a dry note in her voice. “I think it's for the best that you weren't serving in CW2. But that's why Unit 00, in the state that it's in, shouldn't move in. After all, if it's destroyed, and the Migou kill the Herald, we'll have no defences against any later ones.”

The static portrait of Rei joined Ritsuko's on the screen, the profile of Unit 00 beside her picture covered in red warning lights. “I remain functional,” the girl said, her voice weak. There were several deep breaths of LCL, an odd gurgling noise that echoed oddly around the control room. “I... will fulfil my assigned role. I... will... fulfil my purpose. I... I... I am I.”

“Unit 00 is moving towards the interface boundary,” reported one of the forwards technicians. “Major... she's... it's barely holding together. We've got complete ablative epidermis failure, multiple hardplate ruptures which have breached the organism itself...”

“I can see that,” the black-haired woman replied, jaw locked. “But... Ritsuko, have you seen that interface around the area? Look at it. It's like POLLEN. It's forming a ASZ.”

There was the pause, as words made their way to L2 and back again.

“I know!” Ritsuko almost shrieked. “But you know what, Misato? We can't do anything about it! The Evas can't operate in that kind of environment; not with the Migou doing that! Pull back Rei, and we can get a salvage team to stop the Eva falling apart or dying under her, while the Migou try to kill the... it! But now, right now? We can't do anything about a ASZ, or the Herald, or the Migou. About all we can do is stomp on the fucking fishmen in their stupid CW2 gear! You understand? They're too damaged!

The Major paused, tendons straining on the back of her hands and in her neck. “You! Tome!” she commanded. “Do you have anything at all on Moloch? Any secret weaknesses you OSS bastards have forgotten to mention, or any hidden superweapons?”

The albino glared back, from the seat which he was slumped into, PCPU open on his lap. “No!” he snapped back, in a hoarse voice, hand still clutched protectively over the finger-print bruises on his throat. “It... Moloch wasn't meant to be like this. There was one thing we could have used, but it need the Solomon Throne intact. And the known details, on the... on the Herald; we woke it up too fast, as you ordered, rather than in a controlled fashion as we had planned. It was meant to be smaller than an Eva, and barely aware!”

The woman sighed. “Oh.” She made a disgusted noise in the back of her throat. “Rei, you are to hold where you are, and wait for us to pull up some repair craft. You can't help the other two now, and we can't risk losing you too.”

There was no response from Unit 00.

“Pilot Ayanami!” ordered the Major. “Respond! Acknowledge the orders!”

“I... I have other instructions which overwrite those... those orders,” Rei responded, eventually. “I h-have been instructed by Representative Ikari to ensure...” she gasped in pain, “....that the integrity of Unit 01 is maintained. It is *crssssshhh*” Unit 00's location marker entered the flagged area on the map, and vanished, just as the communications ceased.

“Shut it down! Stop her going any further!”

“Won't work, Major,” said Makota, shaking his head. “The Evangelion's in autistic mode, even if we could contact it. It's specifically set up to prevent Migou-induced forced shutdown.”

Misato's grasp on the railing went slack, and her shoulders slumped. She could feel the pain coursing through her palms, banded bruises from where she had been squeezing too hard, but it was nothing compared to the mental anguish.

No. No. No. It's all going wrong. All three of the Evas are in one of those places. We can't contact them. We don't even know if Shinji and Asuka are still alive. It's happening again; I'm going to lose them too. And it's my fault again. I can't take this again. Not after China, and NKL, and before. I'm so sorry. I'm so sorry. I'm so sorry.


~'/|\'~
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See the Anargo Sector Project, an entire fan-created sector for Warhammer 40k, designed as a setting for Role-Playing Games.

Author of Aeon Natum Engel, an Evangelion/Cthulhutech setting merger fan-fiction.
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EarthScorpion
Padawan Learner
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by EarthScorpion »

~'/|\'~


The other two Evangelions spun to hear the roaring, tearing noise that the cockpit systems rendered the charge-beam shot as. It reached out, green aftertrail tracing out a path to Moloch.

Unit 00... was not in a good state. That much was certain. And considering the level of damage that it had sustained before it had been left on its own, surrounded by hostile forces that were specifically targeting it, while low on coolant for its primary weapon, that was saying something. It was barely recognisable as an Evangelion. The first layer of hardplates were, in the patches where they had not already been punched through, slagged and melted, direct hits from the ventral plasma weapons slagging even the heat resistant ceramics. The second layer and the third were in similar states; in some points, the naked flesh and machinery of the Evangelion was exposed. The head had almost been clean torn off; it lolled to the side, a charge beam shot having glanced the side. A gaping wound in the abdomen of the Unit looked like it had been dangerously close to the entry plug, clean into the sternum. The right arm looked like it was being held together purely by the blackish crystals that could be seen within the flesh, knitting it together. Almost nothing could be seen of it original colouration; it was the grey of metal, the blackish brown of slagged heat shielding, and, everywhere, coating it like poorly applied paint, the reddish-purple of the ichor of the Evangelion, oozing down the body to pool in the footprints that the monstrosity left as it walked.

Frankly, the fact that the charge beam remained operational spoke that Rei had chosen to shield it with her own body, rather than permit it to be damaged in the same way that Unit 01's weapon had been.

“Rei!” shouted Shinji. “Are you all right?”

“I... remain myself,” said Rei, weakly, hyperventilating lungfuls of LCL. “I... remain functional.” There was the sound of her swallowing. “Hit. Cooling cycle in process. The supercooled gas hurts,” she said, a shiver running through her voice. The other two Children could see the frozen patches of the ichor of the Evangelion, which cracked and fell to the floor as she limped closer to them. “Additional damage sustained to Unit 00's right arm due to recoil.” She paused. “I... am sorry. I am distracted. Hit. Shot was blocked by an AT-Field. No damage to target Moloch inflicted. I apologise for my...”

The pause was fully justified, as time seemed to slow to a crawl. On the ground before the Evangelions, the shadows of the titans were suddenly as black as pitch, solid, dark and all consuming, compared to the brilliance that filled the rest of the view. The screens on the entry plugs began to cascade with warnings, even as the walls dimmed, clamping down near instantly on the excessive brightness and normalising the image. Shinji felt an ice-hot knife stab into his right eye, and Unit 01 fell, its mass slamming into the ground (again). Something cracked, the snapping of a giant's ribcage. Unit 02 fared better, Asuka reflexively dropping down at the bright light, as training told her to minimise her profile as best she could. After all, she'd already had her fair share of Migou heavy weapons thrown at her today, and as the glimmering diamond mesh of the AT-Field together, they had trudged along the side of the road, she holding onto her mother's hand. Her daddy had already been called up, to help fight off the invaders. She had squeezed tight, because, when she looked back, she could see the mass of the landing ships hanging above the city. And a light had flared, and the city had died, because the humans had decided that the invaders could not be allowed to keep that which they had taken. enveloped her, forming a radiant wall that hopefully would cover Unit 01 too, she looked back.

If the ventral plasma weapons of the Migou Swarm Ships had been nascent stars in the night, living briefly only to extinguish themselves, then what now blossomed over the horizon was a newborn sun, the vast fireball enveloping Moloch in its entirety, consuming the Herald and blotting out even the light of its AT-Field. And visible through the darkened projection against the wall of the entry plug, even as sirens screamed their warning of dangerous levels of gamma radiation as the ionising radiation punched through the opaque atmosphere, was the oncoming blast wave. It tore apart the sparse vegetation that grew up in the interior of Iceland, instantly carbonised vegetation disintegrating like dust in the wind. The eponymous ice subliminated into plasma, only adding to the wave. It tore off layers of rock, the boulder-sized shrapnel and excreta tossed around like dice in a giant game of the gods. The spares clouds were torn asunder, whipped away like sea mist on a warm day by the newborn sun.

And the fireball rose and rose, and expanded and expanded, and from this cosmic bulb a fungous spire blossomed.

Asuka stared at the inferno that had enveloped Moloch. “That wasn't us,” she whispered, softly, awed by the immensity of the sight. “The gamma spike... that's the Migou.”

Well, at least the bugs were doing something useful, she thought, as the spire of dust and ash rose from the now-fading sun, thinning slightly to reveal the glittering within.

Wait.

...

...

Oh no.


That was, of course, when the second Migou warship opened up, and the dying sun produced by the first impact of the relativistic antihydrogen-cored projectile was joined by a new one. And another. And another.

As fireballs which measured in the kilometres bloomed against the Herald, Moloch immersed in fire, Asuka was aware of just how small the Evangelions were. Of how small she was. Over the radio, she heard Shinji start swearing, in a mixture of Japanese, English, and Nazzadi, but she remained silent. There was something almost religious about this moment, as she pulled herself up, braced against the hellish winds that threatened to sweep her off her feet.

No, forget that. There was something truly religious about this.


~'/|\'~


The diminished column of Faithful refugees made their way through the ruins of what had once been their home, before so many monstrous beings had filled the seas and the skies and the land. They were almost being ignored, it seemed; the war passing around them, as Migou and NEG aircraft fought in the skies above, and tanks, mecha and power armour clashed in the streets, firing straight through thin walls to hit targets on the other sides of buildings. No-one seemed to care enough about a cluster of infantry to target them with airstrikes, and although it had been stressful, they had managed to get to cover each time there had been land forces passing. There had been casualties, inevitably, but the strategic positioning of the slowest and weakest had minimised the losses of the useful ones.

And now they were huddled down in the ruins of a school, as the sky to the south was lit by unnaturally bright lights. They could feel the earth shake, both the pulses from the aftershocks of the massive earthquakes, and an almost regular pounding, thuds with a not-dissimilar frequency to the dust filled winds that blew up towards them, that set the Geiger counters screaming. And in the lights, they could see that the entire sky in that direction was filled with massive clouds, vast spires reaching up, intermingling and twisting, like battling sky-giants.

It felt like the world was ending.

The dust from the ruins and the winds and from the emfog that both sides had been using in such vast quantities, would have been choking if Khonatqa had not been wearing the breathing apparatus, especially since she had obtained the superior, modern-military level gear, rather than the CW2-era stuff, which hadn't been designed for this kind of thing. The people who had built the first models (and they had actually constructed it from hand, in virtuous labour; the reason for the use of such old gear was that it did not require precious nanofactory time to manufacture) had never expected for nanoweapons to see battlefield use. It had been before the First Arcanotech War, after all, that strange prototype for the later arcane wars, where all those theoretical designs that the Second Cold War powers had been stockpiling for use against each other saw use against an alien species that had turned out to not be so alien after all. And so, thanks to the inferior protective capacity of the older designs against such volumes, filtration systems and namzappers were giving out, overwhelmed by the volumes that flowed and billowed around them, a hint of silver in the concrete and brick dust. Many of the smaller children were already suffering from emfog inhalation, as well as from nastier agents that were mixed in among the nebulous clouds.

“C-c-come on, Yhu,” muttered Ghuhalia, keeping her voice lowered, as they crouched in the remnants of a school building, the bright colours barely visible under the bullet holes. “Just k-k-keep on breathing. It's okay, right? Right? I c-can-can c-carry you, Yhu.” She let out a giggle that sounded more like a sob. “Yhu'll be okay. Right? Right?”

The smaller girl didn't respond to the joke, that would have normally had her at the very least hitting her sister. She just kept on breathing, as best she could, in and out, wet gasps from under the over-large gas mask.

“We're at Yr-neavat-v'fsha Primary,” the elder girl continued, just talking, almost mindlessly. “You r-r-remember that, Yhu? You w-wanted to... go there, but then mummy... m-m-mummy,” Ghulalia began to sob muffled sobs, uselessly trying to wipe her protected eyes with a sleeve, “m-m-mummy is de... no. M-mummy g-got... that new job, and w-w-we had to m-move.”

Khonatqa looked down at the pair; her half-sisters. The younger one wasn't going to last much longer, by her reckoning. From the wet sound of the breathing, there was a lethal amount of one of the fast-acting NaM agents in her lungs, probably em-hardened, making it slightly resilient to the older models of emzapper. Once there... well, the enzyme-action was busy tearing apart cell walls. Yhughui'ne was going to drown on her own blood, and fast enough that, even if they could have gotten her to a sorcerer, the lengthy ritual would have taken time that she didn't have.

The older woman, almost one of the Chosen, let her hand fall idly to the pistol at her side. It was far too cruel to let someone go like this, she knew. There wasn't a cure, not one that they could get. And it was a very, very nasty way to die. As part of her training in the Veer'thyne, they had had all the militia commanders for their sections watch exactly what happened on an attempted rebel. It had taken the man fifteen minutes to die, and he had screamed until they had administered a paralytic compound to his vocal cords, as he was making too much noise.

But she couldn't do it. She wasn't sure if it was her human instincts, or the deeper ones that came from her emerging Chosen heritage, but, despite the fact that she intellectually knew that this was the kinder option; quick and painless, she couldn't do it. It was almost ridiculous; although they were relatives, she had only met them today, had only found out about them yesterday. And yet, because they happened to have the same father, she was going to let the younger one suffer a painful death merely because she didn't have the damn bravery to face the stare from Ghuhalia.

She hadn't hesitated to gun down that idiot Ubeevoyr, just because he was a jerk and a threat to her position. Now, why wouldn't she provide a mercy killing, and save the girl agony, just because they shared some blood?

Yhughui'ne gurgled, then coughed, a spot of blood somehow making its way to splatter against the clear plating of the eyepiece. “Ghu,” she croaked. “Ghu. Hurts... hurts!” She coughed again, hacking fluid up. “Help! Mummy! Help!”

Helplessly, her hand loosened and tightened around the handle of the gun, feeling the webbing between her fingers rub. She merely turned her back in the dying girl, trying her hardest to put it out of her mind, so she could work out how to save the rest. And herself, obviously. Behind her, she could hear Ghulalia sobbing, no longer restrained.

A gunshot.

Khonatqa twirled, weapon raised. The pistol, hanging away by its strap, and comically oversized on the eight year old, was pointed at the ground, the hole in the damaged floor smoking and evident. Ghulalia stared up, eyes red but defiant at the woman. “I c-c-couldn't do it,” she wailed. “I can't! It's hurting her, but I can't! And they told.... told us at sc-school that it was b-b-better to do it than let someone hurt like that, but I can't! I couldn't h-help Fr-fraenkis or Ulf or Kair or M-m-mummy and now they're all d-d-dead and I can't even help Yhu by making it stop h-h-hurting!”

Awkwardly, Khonatqa lowered her weapon. She felt like crying, but she couldn't; not any more. Her tear ducts had sealed themselves as part of her transformation, relying on modified eyelids to keep them wet, but she still had enough human in her for the tar-black melancholy to make demands of her body that she do so.


~'/|\'~


Another blast; another sun blossoming over the horizon, lighting up the abused night of the northern winter. Moloch remained intact; worse, it was striking back. Those loathsome tendrils lashed out, waving through the air to puncture the lesser Migou which were still maintaining a flow of steady plasma and laser fire into it. The warships were keeping it pinned, true, unable to move without lessening its AT-Field such that it could die, but they would surely only have a finite supply of antimatter warheads for their railguns. And every shot they fired increased the risk that... other things would wake from the dreaming sleep of unbeing. It was a stalemate which the Herald could only win. And so, now, the {SLEEPER IN FIRE}, Moloch, weathered the storm of annihilating particle and antiparticle, AT-Field bright.

“Don't you see it!” shouted Asuka, a sudden tone of excitement in her voice. “Yes! It's so obvious!”

“Yes... I have no idea what you're talking about,” managed Shinji.

“Shut up, and let me explain, idiot,” she said, equal parts stress and elation in her voice. She was on fire, it seemed, the stress pushing her mind towards conclusions that she never would have been able to reach had the danger of death been so severe. This was not an adrenaline rush, no, because adrenaline inhibited higher cognitive functions to allow flood flow to vital muscles; this was a sudden clarity that came from the necessity for survival, and all those things she had read slotting together when given a physical specimen. “You remember Mot, you two.” It was not a question. “Remember how it concentrated the AT-Field at specific points, in order to deal with the concentrated fire from the Migou ships first, and then your laser, Shinji?”

“That... that is what it did,” managed Rei.

“If we assume that the average AT-Field density over the surface is conserved...”

“Why sh-should we do... such a thing,” asked the pale girl.

“The Xu-Nordsstrom Principle,” was the quickfire answer. “The r-state of local space is such that the X-N tensor is necessarily limited to a finite value if the Herald doesn't want a Zone-like ASZ. As we found with the last one.”

“That is... logical.”

“I'm so glad you agree,” Asuka replied, a hint of acid in her tone. “Logically, therefore, to survive a bombardment like this, when the resilience that it is demonstrating is compared to previous such entities, it will have its AT-Field at a maximum, because it's surviving stuff that all the others wouldn't have stood a chance against. Now, Migou antimatter weapons use element-n-s with an n-value matrix which is fairly close to, if not identical to, that of conventional matter, and the r-state of local space is, again, such that the Weyl and Ricci tensors approximate to that of flat Minskowski space-time”

“Yes,” said Rei.”

“I have no idea what you are saying!” blurted out Shinji. These were just... words, strung together. In fact, he was fairly sure that Asuka was in fact just making it upon the spot. In his opinion, the fact that she wasn't bothering to think up words, and just saying things like 'element-n-s' was a dead giveaway. And the fact that Rei seemed to be playing along with it...

... no that wasn't fair. It was just that, well, in the land of the geniuses, the normally-bright one gets the low-paid menial jobs. Of course, spraying microcleanser would actually be a lot safer than piloting a giant robot-thing.

“Yes. That's because I'm the one with the degree, not you. And Rei cheats.” Asuka paused. “How to put this... ah. The big bad monster thing has a magical shield, which has a discrete and finite... which can only be so strong, and it has it mostly facing the direction that the Migou are shooting from. And space-time isn't so bendy that we can't say that straight lines are straight.”

Shinji made a disgusted noise in the back of his throat. “Okay, okay. I get it. There's no need to be offensively patronising like that.”

Asuka shrugged. “The dumbed-down explanation was, technically speaking, wrong. Anyway. Yes, there was a need, because you weren't going to understand it any other way.”

Shinji managed to bite back a retort since, technically speaking (only technically, though, he reassured himself), she was right.

“You... you suggest that w-we connect the mD/D-Engines of the Evangelions together, and... then move to a p-p-position where I can t-target the underside,” asked Rei, the pain in her voice evident.

“Yes.”

“The... the... Unit 00 has sustained c-critical damage. The charge beam will not withstand a shot of that yield.”

“Neither will it withstand the Herald, when it deals with the Migou. This is the only way we can kill that thing, when it's distracted! You will do it, First Child, because I'm telling you to!”

“I know who you are,” Rei whispered, in a soft tone. “Are you sure?”

“Yes! Yes I am! It's our only hope to survive!”

There was a moment of silence. Then;

“I will do it.”

Shinji felt it was time to make another contribution. “So, basically, we're going to run underneath it and shoot it with all of us plugged into the Rei Gun?”

“That is not its...”

“Yes,” interrupted Asuka. “Except, you know, I'll actually put some thought into it.”

“And, why, exactly, have we not already tried this?”

“Because, in case you don't remember, Third Child, there is a antimatter double-digit megatonne-yield bombardment in process. That means that getting under will be really hard.”

“We... we will not need to get directly under the a-assigned target,” corrected Rei. “A valid firing solution... can be obtained from further away.”

“Where?”

“I know where.”

Footstep after footstep, the three Children dove into the fire that surrounded Moloch, knights wrapped in shining light. One vast wall, as all three AT-Fields merged and blurred, discrete yet unified in the way that they covered each other, through the hellish opaque landscape that had painted itself upon the surface of the Earth. The scales were confusing, as if reality itself was breaking down; at one moment, the Herald was so close, and barely larger than an Eva; the next, it was a sky-leviathan on the distant horizon.

“I... think I'm going to be sick,” groaned Shinji, but he did not let up his pace, just concentrating at best he could upon the feeling of running, of the pounding, jerking motion as the LCL-filled capsule swayed to and fro with the steps of the armoured titan.

Asuka stared up at the Migou-spawned suns before her, eyes reflecting even the dimmed light which the entry-plug wall displayed. It was amazing, and it was beautiful in its cold, dispassionate way. It was the beauty of large numbers and of geometry. As the AT-Field, those shimmering, cracked fractures in reality itself, that was projected from her out-reached palm, grew brighter and brighter, she was sure that she had never felt more alive, more complete. She lived for these moments, on the edge of her seat in the entry plug, caught between one moment and the next, burning so bright. When you had seen newborn suns and killed beings that some would have called god-like, was there any wonder that the world outside the Eva was cold and grey?

And Rei? She did not think. She reacted. She performed the optimal task at each moment, as if she had drilled for years. Because, in a sense, she had. She knew what was necessary, and what was coming next; what had to happen, and what would happen. Thought was not necessary, because it was obsolete, an automaton in her own body, to escape the damage and the agony from what the Migou had done to her and Unit 00.

But all too soon, she opened her eyes, and returned to the pain of her body and of the Evangelion.

“Stop,” she said, flatly. “We are here. Please grant full access to your internal mD/D-Engine to Unit 00.”

Shinji swallowed, watching as the [limitedpower] icon emerged, the torso-strands of the image of the Evangelion on the plug wall turning red. “Okay,” he said, keenly aware of the fact that he could not run away any more; at least without tapping into the internal batteries and their pathetically limited five minutes of power. “Do it.”

“Yes,” echoed Asuka, almost identical emotions flowing through her head. It was the loss of control, she felt; the fact that you might be dependent on some external power for your Evangelion's (and thus your own) well being, that was so bad, she decided.

Rei lifted the charge beam, wincing as the mass of the weapon pulled at her heavily damaged arm. The gun was not pointed anywhere near the Herald. That was fully intentional. She could feel what it was doing to space-time What the Second Child had intellectually called the Xu-Nordsstrom tensor, Rei could feel, in the same way as others could detect a limited spectrum of electromagnetic radiation. It was tearing the worldlines of the things within its Domain apart, shredding space and time at a level far beyond the tight manipulations of the AT-Fields of the Evangelions.

And it was going to win. The fact was simple. It was fully awake before the celestial conjunction, and the Migou would not be able to kill it properly. It would reign over the Earth and the stars, as a fully awake {THREAT} (for the Migou named their foes well, Rei felt), awakened early by human and Deep One stupidity. Dagon had felt that the {SLEEPER IN FIRE} was an ally of his master. Dagon had been wrong. It was not an ally; it was a rival, an opponent.

But there was a way through the mess of timelike curves that it was spinning to save itself from anti-matter annihilation. A way to ensure that the Herald would be slain.

She raised her fingers from the control yokes, and flexed them, taking a deep, shuddering gulp of LCL.

“Hurry up, Rei,” shouted Asuka, her voice far away. “The D-Cells are starting to show signs of incipient avalanche breakdowns. We don't want a Horizon Event!”

Ignoring the other girl, Rei reached down, and made a few fine adjustments on an AR-interface before her, adjusting the aim manually; the LAIs in the software shutdown due to the impossible, as they saw it, physical conditions.

A single tear trickled into the LCL as she fired.

The stream of relativistic protons propagated outwards through space, the path from their own frame of reference perfectly straight, but from the eyes of the Evangelions an impossible sequence of tight curves that could only be seen by the green aftertrail of ionised air. It bent underneath the Herald, rising to hit its bulk (for it seemed to be massive, and far away at the moment) in the centre, punching up through the weakened underside of the AT-Field.

The Herald exploded into a vast amorphous cloud of sepulchral gas; the greens of a punctured tomb blended with purples and impossible fluorescences that should not be, and would have not been had it not been for what Moloch had been doing to the universe.

And the charge beam, damaged, out of coolant, abused and overcharged, tore itself apart; white-hot shrapnel tearing into the heavily damaged Unit 00 and through it, reddish-purple blood painting arcs in the air.


~'/|\'~


Rei Ayanami was still alive. That surprised her. She should be dead; she knew that for a fact. The shrapnel had scythed its way through the entry plug, and she had felt the shards punch through her body as they tore through both walls, as the LCL that had filled the plug flowed out through the holes. The mangled remains of her body were wedged under the control yoke, and Rei gazed up, unmoving, at the interface between the air and the fluid, her own reflection showing just how injured she was. As if she was not already fully aware of this fact.

There was no pain, and that was a bad sign, for there had been pain aplenty in the synchronicity accident with the Evangelion.

And she should be dead.

Ah. I know you are there, brother.

A mental chuckle, filled with strain.

Hah. Not brother, not really. There is no term in any human language for how we are related.

Half-brother approximates the best, though.

Yes. Yes it does.

A pause.

You should not be able to do this.

I know. I am killing the others to keep you alive.

It will not last forever.

But it can work for now. For long enough.

A bubbling cough from a punctured lung.

No. I am already dead. I know it in my past, in my present, and my future.

You cannot be. I am going to keep you alive, if it kills... oh.

Yes. This can only end one way. She is already awake, for they roused her with all that contact. And now her rage will be focussed. It... it is necessary.

I know what will happen. You know what will happen.

Yes.

It is inevitable.

It has already happened. You are just keeping her from noticing it. And she will notice the deaths of the others, eventually.

A bitter laugh.

And then she will notice you. And then she will notice me, and I will not be able to hold out. She's already won, hasn't she.

Yes. It was better than all the alternatives I could see.

A pause, a timeless moment of gulped LCL.

And now she's here.

The girl, eyes fading to blackness, felt a pair of cool arms encircle her, felt the rage and the horror and the pain and the agony and the hatred and the disgust and the sorrow and the loathing and the love through the soft lips on her cheek.

my baby

Rei Ayanami died with the faintest smile on her face.


~'/|\'~


my baby! give her back!
Zwar du erschrakst ihm das Herz; doch ältere Schrecken
she's scared of her touch
stürzten in ihn bei dem berührenden Anstoß.
she's scared. she said no.
Ruf ihn... du rufst ihn nicht ganz aus dunkelem Umgang.
she died in mind and soul when she tried to touch her
Freilich, er will, er entspringt; erleichtert gewöhnt er
to hug her
sich in dein heimliches Herz und nimmt und beginnt sich.
just like everyone else
Aber begann er sich je?
what kind of thing spawns itself?
Mutter, du machtest ihn klein, du warsts, die ihn anfing;
and so she prepared a meal for that which had carried her
dir war er neu, du beugtest über die neuen
willing or not, it makes no difference
Augen die freundliche Welt und wehrtest der fremden.
who can scare away the darkness
Wo, ach, hin sind die Jahre, da du ihm einfach
when they have not seen the light of day for forty years?
mit der schlanken Gestalt wallendes Chaos vertratst?



~'/|\'~


The vast nebulous cloud of that which had-been-and-would-be Moloch hung in the air, a stinking presence that devoured light only to spew it forth in colours and spectra not native to Earth. The sound was not indescribable, but to make such an attempt was impossible, for the minds of men could not know its ear-tearing immensity nor its sheer spectral range. The venomous seething of the radiance that was all too familiar to those who had gazed upon an AT-Field before expanded, then contracted, hints of solidity impossibly forming once again before another expansion tore them back into nothingness and left only the reality-saturated gas.

The mind within the amorphous thing, that in a sense was it, thought; in no manner akin to that of mortal man, but still it thought.
I Exist
Therefore I Exist.

I Exist
Therefore I Feel.

I Feel
Therefore I Know.

I Know
Therefore I Am Aware That There Are Those
Who Would Oppose Me

I Am Aware
Therefore I Understand Them.

I Understand Them
Therefore They Are Weak

They Are Weak
Therefore I Prevail.
But all was not right in the sepulchral cloud. It could feel the weakened shards of a rival nearby, and longed to consume and devour them. It could feel the death all around it, as things warred.

And it could feel something else. Watching. Waiting. Hungry.

one footstep. another, on no solid ground, nor within the normal set of dimensions. bloody footprints in space and time and souls.

The great beast felt another mind brush up against his. Smaller, yes, and massively weaker.

But awake. So awake, even in this time before the necessary time of rightness. It could feel itself being summoned to the deathless sleep of nothingness once again, because the conditions were not right to live again. But that mind... it was awake, and aware, and was viable under such cruel conditions.

But where was it?

The {SLEEPER IN FIRE} searched around, reaching out from beyond the protective barrier of its soul to hunt for this rival that stalked it while it was still too weak to act as it wished, still forced into a barren, cold reality with horrifically low ambient energy levels that forced it to rest in the core of this ball of rock if it wished to live-sleep, remain alive though of limited awarness.

No sign. No trace. But around it... the world was wrong. It could feel that there was the absense of the sense of certain rivals, ceratain abominable enemies it had known before, and that they were not where they should be. Dead? Perhaps. It had slept for over sixty million cycles of this ball of rock; perhaps such things had come to past.

But where was the rival?

It must think! It must drive away the fog of sleep and of this rude awakening from its mind, and function as best it can!
I Exist
There I Will Prevail.

I Will Prevail
Therefore I Will Eliminate All Foes
Regardless of Their Esteem

I Will Eliminate All Foes
Therefore I Shall Discover Where
no
a door which is open is not guarded

you deserve to die

you killed her

you are not
not anymore


And so that which-had-been-called-Moloch died, and was consumed.

A new god's in her heaven, all's right with the world.






The sky was wracked with blinding light, as the cloud dispersed, full-spectrum em radiation flooding the sensors of the Evangelions as the Herald died. There may have been whoops of joy elsewhere, but both the Second and Third Children were silent.

Suddenly, the communications systems in Unit 01 flared to life. A sibilant, whispering crackle filled them, from which no discernible words could be heard.

“Asuka! Misato?” yelped Shinji, the coppery taste of his own blood, from the bitten lip, discernible even through the already-bloodlike LCL. “Did you just see that? What... why... what just happened?” He swallowed, the LCL momentarily overpowering his own blood, before the tears came, completely unnoticeable in the fluid around him. “Well... the Herald is dead. Whatever happened. But... but... Rei. She's dead. Th-there's no way that.... that she could have survived that/ It... it... it,” he gulped, “...it went right through the entry plug. Oh... oh...”and he began to sob, uncontrollable breathless shakes that made communication impossible.

A cool hand reached out, and stroked him on the cheek. Reflexively wiping his eyes against the sleeve of the plug suit, for what little good it did, he looked up.

A naked, emaciated woman, her dark hair hanging around her head like dead seaweed in the currents of the orange fluid, hung before him. From under the veil of her hair, two hate-filled eyes glared, accusing him of unknown deeds. Behind her, the wall of the entry plug was malfunctioning, red and yellow and orange coloured warnings flowing flamelike over a blank metal wall.

Shinji screamed then, screamed even as the unnoticeable tears flowed from his eyes, and pulled back, cowering back into the seat in the entry plug to get away from the figure of horror before him. That was when the pain hit him, and the screams changed from ones of terror, to ones of agony.

The human body is an incredibly complicated structure. For one, it is not one specific thing, unlike some other xenobiological lifeforms, but in fact, a broad category of so many components, which covers the organs, muscles, skeletal structure, nervous system, viscera, fat reserves... and even these things are broad categories in their own right. It is an ensemble of any different types of cell, no longer homogeneous, as their forebears once were, and each cell type approaches the complexity of entire organisms. Just compare a bacterium to the smooth muscle cells in the heart, say, or even the ultra-specialised nature of the red blood cell, evolved to maximise its own surface area to volume ratio such that it does not even had a nucleus any more, and the wonders of emergent structure can be seen. Who would have thought that crude bacteria-like lifeforms could end up as something so incredibly complex? And that is before the amazing structure of the brain, a matrix of water and trace elements that somehow produces, through the emergent interaction of its components, the seeming of consciousness. Marvellous.

It does not survive well when it is torn apart from the inside, blood superheated and muscles torn internally by precise telekinetic movements. All that was left... that that she left were the bones, scraps of flesh clinging to the the smooth surface, bound together by the shredded remnants of the plug suit, floating in an expanding cloud of discoloured LCL. The light in Unit 01's one remaining eye evaporated, and it slumped, falling to the ground with an earth-shattering thud.

And the Evangelion suffered the same fate as its pilot, painting the landscape with the ichor of the thing.

Asuka watched the Test Model fall, and spun, firing wildly, melting the earth, trying to find whatever was doing this. She couldn't even see; the blood from Unit 01 smeared her sensors, and even the light of the star-matter that came forth from the plasmathrower was not enough to burn through; in fact, it caked the ichor of the fallen beast to her armour and over her sensors.

“Die!” she screamed, as she blindly searched for her unknown target, operating barely above an instinctual level. “Die! Die! Die! D...”

Something hammered straight into her AT-Field she had spoken withey had taken her baby from her and tore straight through, radiance nullified by an opposed field, already prodigious capacities empowered by the consumed Herald and Unit 01.

She was the second death. The second, of the human species and its subspecies.

They all deserved to die.


~'/|\'~


This was no peaceful oblivion. The poet was wrong. The world died not with a whimper (unless it was the final yelp of an abused puppy, beaten to death by callous children), but with a bang.

The mother was everywhere. In every shadow, behind every window, the newborn godling attuned to the race which had spawned her. Which had treated her like this.

The walls were painted red, bodies rent asunder across the globe, as the extermination occurred. Flesh liquefied, leaving only charred skeletal remains where they had fallen. And with each death, each consumption, she grew more than she had been, and she was great indeed.

There was no closure. No explanation. No happy endings. Only death.

And retaliation.

Soon, it was done. How soon, was a somewhat dubious question. Time was a human concept, and there were no more humans. Out of... what would it be? Boredom? Amusement? A realisation that they might pose a threat? Some residual human feelings, passed up from her own devoured children? Whatever the reason, she turned her attentions to the Deep Ones.

The seas ran red with blood.

The Migou, horrified by what had happened, tried to kill the planet, negating all attempts at subtlety in a desperate bid to contain the {THREAT}. Blank-faced, she danced inside the continent-sized blossoms of flame, as all turned to ash and dust, the bloody footprints she left behind infused into the glass of what had once been a world.

Soon, empty tombs drifted through the void, Migou flesh just as weak as human flesh.

Other things woke.

She killed and ate them too, just as she had Moloch, for they were weak and newly stirred from the sleep that was death, while she was strong. Something that could be made incorporeal by a mere physical impact when newly awakened stood no chance against her, fortified as she was by an entire biosphere and so many other, greater beings. On a dead world, of barren rock and ruined cities and endless desert and dead seas, the atmosphere once again returning to its natural, anaerobic state, she played.

Soon, she grew bored. How soon, it could not be said, because time was a human concept, and she was far, far from that now-forgotten dead species, which only existed as lased archival records stored by nearby Migou systems; a number and record, buried deep. So she moved on.

Idols were built by the things that were driven mad by her passage through their worlds. She did not care, and did not spare them for it; nor did she target them for it. They were so far beneath her comprehension now, that she did not understand such a thing. If she ever had; what kind of a being was locked in time, unable to feel the past or see the future? What kind of being could not understand the simple mechanical awareness of a matrix of dirty water, feel the universe that flowed around it and change it as it saw fit, or simply go where it wished, how it wished? And against eternity, such a being was brief, transitory, such that it was almost a rounding error. And she could make it so it was.

Soon, she grew bored. How soon, it could not be said, because against the immensity of aeons, time itself withered and died. She chose to sleep then, in the deathless sleep of unbeing that was filled with dreams.

Across the galaxy, statues would be found in the crafts of primitive, now-dead cultures, on many different worlds. And yet they all shared some characteristics. A roughly bipedal form; swathed in some crude kind of garment that many such races had painted using iron oxide; two eyes that stared forth from under a veil of hair in chiselled granite and cave painting alike, positioned on the upper appendage, above a maw which remained sealed in a blank expression which gave the poor archaeologists who found it a feeling that they were but insects.

And they grew afraid, for cults spoke of the time that this being would awake, and break down the old laws, dancing free and unconstrained, in killing and bloodshed and amoral apathy.

Soon, she awoke. How soon, it could not be said, for even the stars burned dim with aeons past. Some even tried to stop her, in crude mechanisms and with poorly understood sciences and sorceries, to valiantly hold her off for just one more day of survival, or even to steal the powers of that which they knew of only as a god.

They died too.

Nyarlathotep watched all this. And a slight frown marred his undying mask.

How boring.

~*/|\*~
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See the Anargo Sector Project, an entire fan-created sector for Warhammer 40k, designed as a setting for Role-Playing Games.

Author of Aeon Natum Engel, an Evangelion/Cthulhutech setting merger fan-fiction.
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