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 »

~'/|\'~


The rest of the trip passed without incident, if one were not to count the confiscation of Ken's camera and the wiping of all of its memory as an incident. Hence, the group that arrived in the Li Lecture Centre was somewhat desolate although individually for completely different reasons.

Therefore, when they arrived at the anteroom to the main conference centre, group cohesion disappeared very rapidly.

“Man,” Toja muttered to Shinji, as they migrated towards the snacks that were being served, “I don't know why I even agreed to come with you lot on this trip.”

“As I recall, you seemed convinced that this was some kind of date with Misato,” pointed out Shinji. “Despite my attempts to point out that it wasn't.”

“I don't remember any attempts to point it out,” the Nazzadi replied.

“That's because there weren't any,” admitted Shinji. “I found it sort of amusing.”

Toja shook his head. “You're a really bad person, you know.” He sighed. “Some day, you'll be the death of me, with your evil plans to get me to waste away while in pursuit of the fair Major Katsuragi.”

“Well, then. You know what to do,” Shinji replied, with a half-smile on his face. “You can stop chasing after my guardian. It's annoying when it doesn't succeed, and it would be creepy if it did.”

Toja made a non-committal grunt. “How are you holding up, mate?” he asked Ken, changing the subject. “They may have wiped your camera, but at least you'll have all your memories, right?”

“And uploaded a hunter-seeker to your storage account, too, don't forget that,” added Shinji, gingerly. “That is why they took the camera, to hit your upload server.”

Ken sighed. “Yeah, I guess. It's just really, really annoying. The rest won't believe what I've seen. And I promised Taly a shot of the C2 docks, too...”

There was a moment of shocked silence.

“You... and Taly,” stated Shinji.

“As in, Miss Annoying Nazzadi Idiot Bigot. Miss Humans-are-House-Apes,” added Toja.

“Miss Everything Nazzadi Is Better, Especially The Mecha... ah. I see,” continued Shinji, as something clicked. “Mecha fangirl, am I correct.”

Ken grinned, widely. “Yeah. Like you wouldn't believe it. And I just happen to be the best informed about everything military and bipedal in the whole Academy, which is quite an achievement, I can tell you that.”

Toja grabbed Ken in a head-lock. “Nice one. Even if she's a horrible person, she is hot. Really, really hot.” He sniffed, in an excessively melodramatic fashion. “I'm so proud of you.”

“Guys,” warned Shinji, “there are probably more security guards here than at school, and that's saying something. Not to mention the cameras. So let's keep the tactile affection to a form that doesn't look like you have in a head lock.”

The boys sprung apart. “Yeah,” muttered Toja. “I don't want to be tased again.”

They both shuddered.

“Anyway,” continued Shinji, “yeah, the fact that she's a subspeciesist jerk is overcome by her hotness.”

“Seriously, guys, she's not really that bad,” Ken replied, with a hint of indignation. “Yeah, she can be a bit unpleasant, but she mostly puts it on to annoy her step-mother.”

Toja nodded, understandingly. “Ah. It all makes a lot more sense now. It's kinda common for kids whose parents end up remarrying humans. Making them put on more clothes, or even some clothes, and speak in English; you're all a bunch of horrible fascist tyrants,” he added, flashing his prominent canines in a grin.

“We are not,” Shinji replied, also with a smile.

“Are too... nah, it was a joke. I love all you barely evolved tree dwelling apes... although only in a friendly way for you men.”

“Lots of collateral damage there,Toja. You're the same species as we are, just repainted and with a new set of headlamps... oops, I mean 'eyes',” Shinji pointed out, “installed.”

“Hey, I didn't say I wasn't a barely evolved ape too,” said Toja, reasonably. He grabbed a banana (a real one; few expenses were being cut for this conference) from the fruit table. “See. I love bananas. Wow, fancy,” he said, getting distracted by the genuine grapes on the table, and taking a handful. “Anyway, we're getting distracted. We were meant to be mocking Ken for being interested in Taly.”

“While feeling slightly jealous about the fact that she appears to have some interest back,” added Shinji. “You know when they say that a girl's got a wonderful personality, what that's really meant to mean? Yeah. She's the opposite of that.”

Ken shrugged. “And it isn't anything beyond friendship, yet. Sadly. She showed up at TechSoc, we got into an argument about the MV-14 Scimitar against the ASM-XI Oryladi and their role as an artillery support mecha, we both shouted down Pauleyon when he dared suggest that the M-111A2 Jaeger was cooler, and things went from there.”

Shinji shrugged, as he helped himself to an apple. “Well, I suppose it makes about as much sense as the fact that our friendship sort of started the day you punched me in the nose. I guess.”

“Hey, Shinji!” called Misato, as she walked towards the three boys, two others in tow.

“Mmmph?” he asked, mouth full.

“Sorry, introductions first. Shinji, this is Colonel Rury, of the NEGA Special Weapons Division, and Juan Carlos, a Sub-Project Manager for Project... Herkunft, wasn't it?”

“Herkunft, yes,” the man nodded.

“Juan, Rury, this is Shinji Ikari, Test Pilot of Evangelion Unit 01, the Prototype.”

The Nazzadi woman, in a strict military uniform nodded. “Yes, I've read his file. Nice to meet you, Shinji. I suspect we're going to see quite a bit more of each other over the next few months, as the Evangelion project is fully integrated into the New Earth Government military.”

“I can't help but feel a little apprehensive about that,” Shinji remarked.

Red eyes stared at him, before her face broke into a smile. “Ah, good. Apprehension is probably the most human response when a mysterious woman in a NEGA uniform tells you that she's read your file and expects to see you a lot more. And much as certain elements might be disapproved of, necessity is a harsh mistress.”

Shinji frowned.

That wasn't reassuring at all.

“Well... I suppose...”

“Anyway,” interrupted Misato, “what I came over to say was that I think it would be best if you went and tried to talk to Asuka. Perhaps, this time, without getting into a flaming row,” she added, with a strong hint of sarcasm.

“She started it,” muttered Shinji.

“Hmm,” said the Major, and it was the word, rather than a sound. “Look, if you're going to be living under my roof, compromises will have to be made,” added Misato.

Shinji sighed. “Very well.”

He scanned the crowd, looking for any sign of that shock of red hair. This quest was not aided by the fact that the ante-room was filling up; the conference was due to start fairly soon, which would at least provide a concrete end-date for the upcoming conversation. He did vaguely consider just prevaricating, then telling Misato that he hadn't been able to find Asuka before the event, but, though he was loathe to admit it, she was right. Mutual hatred was probably not the best relationship to have with a girl who would be piloting a forty metre tall war machine along side him. And by “piloting”, really, “controlling with her mind” was more accurate, bringing whole new areas for things to go wrong.

He found her in the corner of the room, slumped against a pillar, intently reading something on her PCPU. Asuka looked up as he approached.

“Oh, it's you,”she said, in a curiously impassive tone of voice quite out of sorts with how he had seen her act before. “Major Katsuragi told me that you might try to talk to me.”

“Ah,” Shinji replied. “She suggested that I come over and... well, talk to you.”

Asuka shook her head. “I'm not really surprised. Warnings about not getting into a flaming row in public?”

“Uh huh.”

“Harsh words about how compromises would have to be made if we're going to be living in the same house?”

“Yep.”

“Those words coming immediately after I pointed out that it was all your fault?” added Asuka, confidentially, in a tone of voice that wasn't really a question.

“Switch the direction of blame around,” replied Shinji, “and... yeah,” he admitted.

“So let's be at least partially civil to each other for a few moments, and then we can go back to not talking,” Asuka concluded.

“That works.”

There was an uncomfortable silence.

“So, um.”

“Yes.”

The silence continued, just as the room filled up more.

“How can people who are so smart be so petty-minded,” Asuka blurted out.

Shinji frowned. “I'm sorry?”

“All the people around us. Honestly, I try to contribute to a discussion about military tactics on the Eastern Front, and those idiot locked me out of the conversation. It's never anything overt, but I can see the way that they turn to ignore me, the way they look at me as if I'm a little girl, the way they dismiss me as not knowing enough.” She snorted. “Close-minded fools.”

“Maybe you didn't make a good first impression,” Shinji blurted out, before he could stop himself. Internally, he winced. This was going to flare things up again.

Those eyes locked onto his. “What do you mean?” she replied, in a chilly voice.

“Well,” he began, and paused. Honesty, or an attempt to defuse the situation? “You kind of started with me by slapping me, then calling me dull. Before I'd even said anything to you,” he added, a hint of sarcasm creeping in. “I hope you didn't try that with them.”

“Yes, but that was because I was defending my honour. In here, I didn't have a trio of perverts staring at me!”

The temporary truce was already breaking down.

“My heart bleeds, it really does. Honestly, haven't you spent enough time around Nazzadi to know their attitude to nudity? It shows in their fashion sense!”

Asuka looked shocked. “How dare you! And I suppose you're a master of Nazzadi culture, Mr One Of My Best Friends Is Nazzadi!”

“As a matter of fact, yes,” retorted Shinji, trying to keep his voice down. “One of my foster mothers is one.”

Asuka cocked her head slightly, and raised one hand. “Wait. Pause for a moment. I thought you lived with Misato.”

“I do now,” he replied, taking a deep breath and trying to calm down. “Since late August. When I was basically conscripted.”

Asuka's eyes narrowed momentarily, at the reminder of how little training Shinji had been through. “Sometime today I'll show you what a real Evangelion looks like; a proper, MP Model.”

Shinji blinked. “Wait, what? Where did that come from?”

A sigh escaped from the girl's mouth. “You've never seen what the finished model is mean to look like, only the incomplete Test Model and the Prototype. You'll want to see what the final design will look like; after all, they're obviously going to retrofit yours.”

“But why...”

“Because it's obvious that the MP design is better! What are you, stupid?”

You're dead!” shouted a voice from nearby, in a shocked tone. The surrounding conversation fell to a hush. “What are you doing here!”

A man, his hair snow white, was pointing at the pair of them, hand shaking as if with some palsy. He looked like he had some Caucasian blood in him, despite his predominantly Asian features, premature wrinkles etched into his forehead. A younger, Nazzadi man rushed up to him, lowering the arm, and gently tried to guide him away.

“Dr Miyakame, I think...”

“Don't 'Dr Miyakame' me,” the man snarled. He stared at the pair, Asuka in particular, and blinked twice, data rolling across the AR glasses he wore. “I'm quite all right,” he said, in a softer tone. “I just had a momentary shock.” He shrugged off the younger man, in a way that showed he was considerably more fit than his prematurely aged features would suggest, and stepped towards the perplexed pair of Shinji and Asuka, hand (still shaking) held out.

“You would logically, therefore, be Kyoko's ... daughter,” he said, carefully,as the conversation rose back to its previous level. “The spitting image. He turned to stare at Shinji, an unwrinkled hand taking the boy's chin, and moving it to various perspectives. “And you, of course... that nose, that facial shape. You're Gendo and Yui's, aren't you.”

This somewhat unorthodox method of introduction left them both momentarily speechless, before Asuka, overcoming the surprise first, answered, “Yes, sir.” She paused, smiling sweetly, in a rather rapid change from how she had been before, before continuing, “But you are?”

The old (though not as old as he looked) man frowned at her, slightly, before his face took on a slight smile. “Don't try that on me. Your mother used to try that; didn't work then, either. But to answer your question, well, I suppose neither of you would remember me. I'm Doctor Anton Miyakame, Director for Research and Development for the Engel Project. I...” he paused, eyes suddenly far away. “I worked with your parents in the development of the Evangelions.” He blinked rapidly. “I'm sorry. It's been twelve years, and I've forgotten your names. Looking at you... well, time makes a mockery of a man who's suddenly feeling very old.”

“Second Lieutenant Asuka Langley Soryu, pilot of Evangelion Unit 02,” she replied, saluting the man.

“Shinji Ikari,” Shinji added, considerably less triumphantly.

“He's the Test Pilot of Unit 01,” Asuka added, emphasising the peculiar rank that resulted as a consequence of Shinji's dubious legal position.

Dr Miyakame went pale for a second. “Oh my,” he said, quietly. “Oh my.” He blinked rapidly. “Oh my. It was just yesterday, it seems like sometimes, that you two were toddlers. And you're both piloting those... things.”

“Yes,” Asuka nodded proudly.

“Dr Miyakame,” it was the young Nazzadi man, again, “there are some people who want to talk to you...”

“Go!” the doctor barked, and it was an actual bark, a feral sounding noise from deep in the back of his throat. The assistant flinched away, half-raising his hand above his head, disappearing into the crowd. He blinked twice. “I was the leader of the team,” he continued, in the same calm tone of voice, “that worked with the noetic interface of the arcanocyberxenobiological organisms; those A10 Nerve Clips you have in your hair?” he said in a tone that mixed pride and sorrow, pointing at Asuka, “I designed them,” he said, with what almost sounded like a guilty undertone in his voice. “I remember when I showed them off, in that team meeting,” he added, his eyes going cloudy. “Your mothers had both bought you along. It was... well, towards the end of my... work with Evangelion,” he continued, slowly, choosing his words. “It was already... getting tense. There were frequent... discussions. Heated discussions. Especially between Yui and Kyoko. I'm sorry about how I acted earlier. It's just... those words, and that tone of voice,” he said to Asuka. “I suppose it's natural for you to look and sound a lot like her.”

“No, honestly, it's fine,” Asuka replied, with a broad smile.

He shook his head, a brief reflexive twitch. “Never mind. It's natural. Very natural. Exactly the same words. Anyway, we left you two with the Paragon child care.” He chuckled then, a young-sounding noise quite out of line with his appearance. “I was with your mothers when they came to collect you; someone had to work as an intermediary, because, well, they weren't talking again. They had got into a design argument about control schemes, and well, Yui had started needling Kyoko about her... never mind.” He shook his head, and blinked twice. “Apparently you two had squabbled for about five minutes, and someone had pushed the other one over. But then something had happened (which we never got the full story) and you'd ended up building a fort together.” There was a faintly indulgent smile on the man's face. “And then you'd started bombarding the other children with plasticine bombs that you'd built, cheering when you scored a hit.” The smile was replaced by sadness. “Of course, your mothers snatched you up and walked away without talking to each other. And then a few months later there were the... never mind.”

The prematurely aged man sniffed.

“We have our own debts to pay. I failed them both. I tried to pay it off with the Engels, but seeing you two has reminded me of another one I have. Tell your Doctor Akagi that she'll be hearing from me.”

And with that, the man walked off into the dense crowd, shoulders slumped.

“Uh, Dr Miyakame,” Shinji called, but the man gave no sign of having heard.

He and Asuka gave each other worried glances out of the corners of their vision.

“That's pretty bad AWS,” they both said, simultaneously.

He's pretty crazy is what they both meant. Not that it was very nice to think like that, but it was true.

They then smiled faintly at the fact that they had shared that thought, then looked away; Shinji in embarrassment, Asuka in irritation.

“What was that about?” Shinji asked.

“Look, it's pretty obvious,” Asuka replied, her normal personality reasserting over the shock that had almost given the other girl a foothold. “Obviously our mothers were colleagues...”

“He said 'parents'. Possibly my,” Shinji felt bitter inside, at admitting the relationship, but continued, “father too? I know he's Ashcroft in a big way. Yours?”

“No.” Asuka stated that absolutely. “Not a chance. Anyway, he worked with them.” She swallowed. This would take some courage. “And then there were some... accidents.”

She fell silent.

“Yes,” Shinji said, softly, staring down at his hands.

There was a silence, though through this one there was some understanding.

“Did you hear him?” Asuka asked, staring blankly into the crowd. “He worked on the Evangelion control systems. That means he blames himself for the accidents.”

The silence which followed was broken by a man in a NEG military uniform calling all guests into the main hall, for the start of the demonstration.


~'/|\'~


“The undue dominance of the bipedal weapons platform in modern military affairs has gone on long enough.”

These were indeed fighting words. In the audience, after all, were both the Director for Research and Development, and the Director of Operations of Project Evangelion, and the Director for Research and Development of Project Engel. Not to mention, of course, the presence of several senior staff from the NEGA High Command. But, then again, the Daeva Project had always been a Navy plaything, and those words were not irregular complaints from the NEGN. The Director of the New Earth Government Project, Daeva, a weapons project unrelated to the endless sequence of Ashcroft Projects, knew this, and he was sure enough that he felt he could rile the audience a little before displaying the main project.

“A bipedal, humanoid design; it is fundamentally flawed as a weapons platform. I look before me, at the audience. I know that you are all intelligent individuals. I know you're all familiar with the concept of surface area-volume ratios, pressures, centres of mass and all those other little things that make the bipedal design a sub-optimal combat design. And I know that you know that. Despite the pressures from... certain groups and committees in the Army, the Vreta, despite its “official” role as a combat support unit, despite the fact that it uses last generation battlefield protection, despite all that... the Vreta is still the practical mainstay of the majority of the army outside of urban environments. It out-ranges every single mecha in the NEG arsenal... why do you think that is? Because it is designed so that the recoil of its main cannon is absorbed through a solid system, not stuck out on the end of limbs which reduce the size of weapons that may be mounted. Because it uses A-Pods as its exclusive method of transport, giving it a combat velocity twice that of a Broadsword. Because it is cheaper to build and easier to train crew to engage in combat operations in a Vreta than the multitasking required for a Broadsword. And yet there are elements in the High Command of the Army that want to phase it out.”

The Nazzadi man, his red eyes gleaming in triumph, paused and took a sip of water.

“You might ask how this state of affairs came about. Indeed, I do so myself. The best explanation I have is that... we grew lazy.” He paused, to let his comments sink in. “We got used to the D-Engine, and the fact that we now had a dependable source of constant, finite power. We got used to the Operator Side-Effect and the intuitive skills for piloting (though not, I may note, actual combat) that arcanotechnology granted us. We got so used to the current technological paradigm that we did not think outside the narrow walls of our box. It is true, yes, that with the D-Engine, we can overcome the massive power consumption required for mechanical bipedal locomotion. It is also true that if we cut out the middleman, and simply installed A-Pods, we would obtain a more stable firing platform, which could also carry more armour, mount larger weapons and move faster. Yes, all three. That is how much better, in a purely mechanical context, an armoured roughly cuboid shape is over a humanoid.”

He inclined his head in turn towards Dr Akagi, then Dr Miyakame in turn, keeping a slight smile on his face.

“That is not, of course, to belittle the stellar work which our colleagues, and, yes, sometimes competitors in the various Ashcroft Projects have been doing. Thanks to them, we have a new element, that of the arcanobiological in military science. Their work in the fields of arcanocyberxenobiology have been instrumental in the continued survival of the human species. In the years since the deployment of the first Engel, they have proved their worth many times over. It is not surprising that twenty percent of the military bipeds larger than Powered Armour are now a product of the Engel Project. Indeed, the... unfortunate effects,” and here, his voice took on a downcast tone, “that the Engel Synthesis Interface has on those pilots which volunteer for those cybernetic implants, and the necessary mental fortitude that candidates must have, are proving to be the main limiting factors on Engel deployment, not production. Likewise, the products of its predecessor group, Project Evangelion, which went public just this week, have proved astonishing in the termination of High Threat Extra-Normal Entities, even through their size and exceedingly limited numbers will mean that they will be never more than a highly specialised Heavy Assault Unit.”

Shinji felt somewhat ambivalent about that. On one hand, it was true, and the man did make a lot of sense. On the other hand, it didn't feel right for this arrogant Nazzadi to be lecturing him on 'inefficiency' and damning them with faint praise. Around the table, though, both Ritsuko and Asuka appeared to be fairly livid at his words, while Misato was so bored that she... he squinted... she was drawing something on her napkin. Toja appeared to have gone to sleep, although that was uncertain; he had somehow propped up his head in a way that made him look like he was paying attention.

“But the point is,” the Chief Engineer on Project Daeva continued, “they were still working with flawed materials. Before now, only bipeds, or, in the case of the Ish, snake-like aquatic creatures, have been able to incorporate the wonders and marvels of ACXB into their design.” The man put both hands on the lectern, leaning forwards. “That, gentlemen and ladies, changes today.”

Naturally, Ken was soaking it in. There had been a few squeaks of near terminal levels of happiness, but the boy appeared to still be alive, though approaching catatonia from endorphin overdose. That the speaker was insulting mecha with his every word and intonation seemed to have been overcome by the fact that he was sitting in a real, really real, technical briefing.

The man snapped his fingers, loudly, the amplified click echoing throughout the hall. At that command, the wall behind him faded to transparency, the amorphous material aligning to permit the passage of light.

“Behold, the Araska. The first functional battle-ready prototype from Project Daeva.”

Behind him, beyond the metamorphic wall, was a leviathan. The first impression was one of massive, irresistible bulk. It looked almost as if it had originally been built with the harsh, square lines of human design, but all the edges had been smoothed, rounded off, while smaller bulges, ovoids protruding from the smooth, almost organic surface, covered the vehicle, giving it a look worryingly akin to pustules. Floating roughly half a metre off the ground, the blue tinge to the air below a sign of the use of A-Pods, the Araska was roughly forty metres wide, ten metres tall, and seventy metres long. The A-Pods seemed to be concentrated in larger rounded, armoured sections protruding from the hull somewhat, at each of the four corners. A single, capital grade laser gazed like a Cyclopean eye from the front, while triplets of Charge Beams were mounted over each of the A-Pod clusters. A multitude of lesser, anti personnel weapons clustered the hull.

“That's no tank,” muttered Ken, in the last stages of terminal ecstasy. “That's a land battleship.”

The Chief Engineer paused for a while, letting his audience soak in the spectacle. “The Araska is but the first, and the largest of the tanks of Project Daeva; with the experience gained from the construction of this unit, we hope to miniaturise the process to allow the Daeva-Process to be applied to tanks of the size of the modern Vreta. But I get ahead of myself. I'm sure that questions are being raised about what makes this tank so special. I'm sure that, from your perspective, all we have done is create a very light frigate. There may be some impressive miniaturisation, true, but there is nothing that seems to justify the bragging that I have been engaged in, seemingly deliberately alienating large amounts of the NEGA, along with two Ashcroft Projects.”

There were, indeed, nods from the audience.

“What if I were to tell you that almost all of that bulk is armour? That the armour is superior to conventional materials, is self-repairing at rates incomparable to that which even the Seraph is capable of, and comes with pre-existing optical sensors that can, with very little effort, be re-purposed for military goals. That the Araska, though extensive use of automation and high grade military LAIs, only requires a crew of nine?”

There was general uproar in the hall.

“No...” muttered Ritsuko, in shock. “They wouldn't dare...”

“Yes, it's true. Project Daeva has accomplished a paradigm-changing event in the field ACXB; we have developed a functional, modular form of extra-dimensional organism which functions as regenerative armour. We call it... Type-S. It is lighter, harder and tougher than conventional materials,” he continued, as the voices died away, triumph filling his voice. “Although the Daeva series of tank will be designed to maximise the advantages which the Type-S Armour provides, we believe that we will be able to design a variant which can be retrofitted onto capital ships, thus giving them a concrete military advantage over Migou ships of the same weight grade.”

Dr Miyakame, on the next table along, blinked twice. “So, they did it...” he said softly.

“Welcome to a new era of warfare,” Tokita said, staring out at the audience. “We hope it will be bought to an end very quickly.”

The light on the podium moved to a younger looking human male, in NEG naval uniform, his hair tucked neatly back, standing at the side of the room.

“Ladies and gentlemen, we will now take a short break. When we reconvene, there will be a demonstration of the Araska prototype, as well as questions from the floor.”

The buzzing sussuration of conversation filled the vacuum.

Asuka stood up, and grabbed Shinji by the collar.

“Excuse me, Major Katsuragi,” she said, smiling sweetly, “but may Shinji and I be excused? This man is just being pointlessly insulting, and I think the time would be spent more efficiently if I could show my co-worker Unit 02.”

Misato flapped her hand in their general direction. “Sure. Just don't get in trouble or try to severely injure each other.”

Asuka left, half-dragging Shinji by the arm, albeit in a way that wasn't recognisable as such unless you knew what you were looking for.

Misato smiled at Ritsuko, who had arrived just before the start of the speech, slightly out of breath. “See. I had some words with them, and they seem to be getting on better.”

The blond woman stared at her, her expression dubious. “If you say so, but that's not what I saw.” She turned in her seat to look at Toja and Ken. “That reminds me. I'm sorry, but you two don't have the security clearance to watch the next part of the demonstration, as it's quantitative, not qualitative. I'm afraid you'll have to leave the room. Just go talk to the woman waiting outside with the badge consisting of three linked squares. She'll show you to an entertainment room.” Toja sat up immediately, but noting the reluctance in Ken's eyes, she added, with a glint in her eye, “Unless, of course, you'd report your observation of classified ACXB development to the OIS?”

That was enough to evict the two.

“So, anyway, Misato...” She noticed the other woman's gaze was not directed at her, but instead was over her shoulder. She turned, and her eyes immediately narrowed at the sight of Dr Miyakame, standing not a metre behind her chair, completely silent. His eyes looked just as cold as hers.

“Yes?” she asked, in an acidic tone.

“Dr Akagi. We need to talk. In private. Now.”


~'/|\'~

It had been incredibly easy to get to the space where Unit 02 was being stored. Both Asuka, and, somewhat surprisingly Shinji, had arcology access granted at blood scanners to a number of surprisingly sensitive areas, including the series of stripped out bays in an Engel Project facility where the Evangelion was being stored.

Shinji stared up at the vast crimson shape, the red so dark as to be almost vermilion. The hangar was designed for much smaller biomechanical abominations against all human sense, and so Unit 02 knelt, hunched over in a way that almost made it look like it was giving itself in supplication to a higher power.

“Hmm,” he stated, as he stepped into the shadow of the best, looking at it with an almost clinical eye. He'd seen the other two Units close up; for Unit 01, he'd even seen it without most of its outer shell, locked down by the restraint armour that left only a thin layer of biofoam between the creature underneath and an onlooker. “Four eyes instead of two. The head is a bit differently shaped. And those things on the shoulders?” He stared at the boxes, trying to evince their function. “Some kind of rocket pod thing, I think. Looks like the front opens up, certainly. Otherwise, it's pretty much the same as mine. Bar the colour. Did you get to choose it?”

Asuka glanced back at Shinji, as she walked towards her Evangelion. “What?”

“The colour. It's different.”

She shot him a glance which spoke poorly of her view of his mental capacities. “That's only the base. The camouflage goes on top,” Asuka explained, as if to a child. “It's only this colour so that the technicians can check for cracks in the top layer of plating.”

“I know that,” Shinji retorted. “Unit 01 is usually purple and green, but it doesn't actually fight like that. You'd have to be an idiot to send a war machine out like that; some kind of ignorant feudal knight.” He thought for a moment. “Or a Nazzadi, I guess,” he added, correcting himself.

“They do have a tendency to be a bit style over substance,” Asuka stated. It was rather chilly in the hangar, actually, as the coolant that snaked in tubes wrapped around the Evangelion, not to mention the fact that the next hangar stored Seraph Engels in serried ranks, and the organisms liked the cold. So maybe the Nazzadi cut of the dress was leaving her chilly. But she would be damned if she was going to let him see that.

“The colour isn't the only difference, though,” she continued. “After all, Units 00 and 01 are prototypes. They're just test models. That's why your one synchronised with someone who hadn't had any training.”

Shinji couldn't let that one pass. “Yes, I certainly see why they'd want to cut that feature from the Mass Production Model. I mean, we wouldn't want for it to be too easy to find suitable candidates. That would take all the fun out of it. No, what we really want is a war machine that's really hard to...”

“Shut up, idiot,” Asuka replied, without turning her gaze from the sight of her Evangelion. “But Unit 02 is different.”

“You mean it's really, really hard to synchronise with?” Shinji interjected. He was having surprising amounts of fun; certainly more than he would have had, staying in London-2 and sulking about the fact that his father was a better parent to a weird creepy White who writes odd notes in her room and is quite possibly crazy, than he was to his own son. Sniping at this volatile redhead was like shooting explosive barrels with a rocket launcher; the trick was to not get caught in the resultant explosion.

He had a sudden urge to join the Academy's Debating Society.

“I said, shut up, idiot,” was the response that comment produced. “This is a true Evangelion, the first on Earth to be built for actual combat. The final model,” she proclaimed, turning to face him with her arms spread out wide, eyes catching the light from the distant ceiling.

It was, Shinji had to admit, a stirring image.


~'/|\'~


The meeting had reconvened. They were taking questions from the floor.

Ritsuko elevated her hand.

“Ah, the famous Dr Ritsuko Akagi. I'm very glad to see that you're here,” said Tokita, the Nazzadi speaker, with what was widely assumed to be insincerity despite the lack of any obvious inflections which would indicate its nature. “Please, go ahead.”

“According to your initial speech, the Araska is equipped with a capital-grade D-Engine. How have you solved the instability issues which arise when the WEYL and RICCI tensor fluctuations induced by a D-Engine reach a critical density? Moreover, how will you prevent a dimensional rupture if the core of the Black Box is ruptured before the automated shutdown can fuse the confluence?”

“That's a very good question, and was in fact the second highest hurdle we had to overcome in the project. We solved it via a combination of advanced LAI handlers which can adjust the power flow to prevent a resonance cascade, which, yes, is a known problem if the WRT fluctuations become too dense, along with a distributed power grid which, using Unita and Xu's work on metastable dimensional taps, decreases WRT density by 21.8% over a conventional mono-engine. Moreover, by embedding the cell-source structure in the tissue of the arcanocyberxenobiological organism, its natural dampening abilities mean that a rupture should, we calculate, proceed along geometrical, not exponential rates, allowing the deadswitch to fuse the rupture. Should that situation arise, of course.”

“But I would query the use of Unita and Xu's work on the grounds of safety issues,” stated Ritsuko. “mD-Engines are still a theoretical prediction, and applying their work to a standard D-Engine is far too risky, in my opinion. And to deploy such a mD/D Hybrid-Engine into a weapon designed for close range ground combat invites the possibility of a localised metastable space-time collapse. I need not raise what happened last time one of those occurred.”

“And I would protest that the comparison of the mD/D Hybrid-Engine of the Araska to the events in Las Vegas is mere scaremongering,” retorted Tokita. “If I were so inclined, I would perhaps raise that we should not be stationing a certain arcanocyberxenobiological organism so close to a city when the Evangelion Project has repeatedly refused requests from both the NEGA and the NEGN to reveal the source of the the extradimensional lifeform used as a template.”

“Which is irrelevant to the subject at hand,” shot back Ritsuko.

“Perhaps,” the representative of Project Daeva stated, quite deliberately. “Nevertheless, such arguments have been raised multiple times in the development of the Araska, and have been noted.”

“Stop it,” muttered Misato to her colleague. “You're embarrassing yourself.”

“Ah... you there, I'm sorry, I don't know your name,” continued Tokita, waving aside any other points from Ritsuko, pointing at a female xenomix sitting on the Engel table.

“Opuly Ladislao, Sub-Director of ACXB Research, Project Engel,” said the woman, who looked like she was one of the oldest xenomixes alive, in her mid twenties. “You accuse Project Evangelion of refusing to release data on the ACXB organisms used in their work, when you yourself refuse to permit other groups to examine the extra-dimensional organism used in Type-S plating. Do you not consider that hypocritical?”

“Not at all,” he replied. “You, over there, on the NEGA table. No, the one on the right. No, my right, not yours.” He sighed. “It would be lovely to have an absolute frame of reference.”

There was a notable amount of laughter from the audience.

“Lieutenant Colonel Remi Obasanjo, New Earth Government Army. Project Daeva is a New Earth Government Navy pet project. How can you justify the production of tanks within the funding auspices set for Navy Special Weapons Projects?”

The engineer grinned widely. “Under the Auspice Protocol of 2076, void-capable and submersible craft are under the jurisdiction of the Navy. The Araska is both void-capable, and submersible. In truth, yes, the Araska can function as a super-light naval vessel as well as a super-heavy tank; Project Daeva does in fact have its roots in attempts to make the smallest vessel which could mount a capital grade weapon, before the innovation of Type-S plating. Later models will be more specialised for land warfare, subject to the ratification of the Daeva Project as a New Earth Government Project. They would then come under the command of the Army for operational purposes, with maintenance remaining with Project Daeva. As per the current arrangement with the Ashcroft Project Engel.”

The woman smiled. The Army had heard what it needed to hear with that reply, which had removed their major objection to the Project. Now all that was left was to see if it would live up to all that it had promised.

“Next, please.”

A Nazzadi woman stood up, on the same table. “ Colonel Rury, of the NEGA Special Weapons Division. The Araska seems designed to challenge the eponymous products of Project Evangelion, and even if it was not, it is the only land unit within the same weight category. From observed data, how would the Araska fare against a Herald?”

The hall went silent. This was the question which everyone had been waiting for. That it had come from the NEGA SWD was not surprising, as the SWD was one of the major backers of Project Evangelion, and was, according to many members of the Navy, a hold-out of bipedalist favouritism.

“Well, firstly, I would disagree with your contention that the Araska is designed to compete with the Evangelions.” The man smiled to himself. “It's designed to replace them.”

There was a hiss of indrawn breath throughout the hall.

“Circumstances have seen us out on this, too. The most recent Herald, code-named Mot, was killed by the use of a Navy vessel and its ventral laser. True, an Evangelion may have been squeezing the trigger, so to speak, but the damage was done by brute force Direct Energy Transfer, not some special feature of the Evangelions.”

Ritsuko sprung to her feet. “So the fact that the laser, powered by the entire usable output of the L2 grid, was not able to breach the AT Field until the AT Field of Unit 00 neutralised the protective barrier somehow escaped your analysis?” she asked, as calmly as she could.

“No, it did not. However, it might have escaped yours that the entire AT-Field of the Herald was concentrated in one point to stave off destruction. Which brings us to the other advantage of the Araska. We aren't reliant upon 'special candidates' and we don't need to use teenagers,” the man spat, disgusted, “as child soldiers.”

Misato winced. “It's a really good thing those two aren't here,” she muttered to herself.

“We aren't dependent upon the unreliable human mind, which is fallible and prone to breaking, to deploy our war machines. Anyone could, with training, pilot the Araska or any of its planned successors. Since the start of your Project, you've found, what, three suitable candidates. We already have trained crew for five Araska P-Types. Just from our test pilot program. So, to return to the original point, against a Herald, we know that brute force works. And we can bring a lot more of it to bear for a fraction of the cost.”

He smiled, his grin blatantly patronising, at Ritsuko then.

“And it's inevitable that we will find a way to replicate the AT-Field. Science, whether conventional, arcane or sorcerous, will always find a way.”

He pressed a button on the desk, and the lights dimmed, the wall behind him fading to transparency once again to show the bulk of the Araska.

“And now it is time for the demonstration.” He paused. “Silence in the audience, please,” he added, over Ritsuko's attempts to answer.

He flipped out a PCPU, dialling a number in a blatant act of showmanship.

“Hello? Yes, hello, Captain Wupata.... yes, yes, I'm fine. Listen, I have a little favour to ask. Would you mind telling your charming men and women to open fire. All together, please. Yes, thanks. No, really, I owe you one. Well, see you. Ciao.

He snapped the PCPU shut.

“Captain Wuptata. Wonderful guy. Known him for quite a while. Do you know, he heads an artillery company now?”

And with that, the shells hit. A full salvo from a company of M111-A2 Jaeger Self-Propelled Howitzers, the magnetically accelerated shells following a near-perfect parabola before slamming down as one into the hull of the Daeva. From the point of view of the audience, the sight was a horrific burst of sudden violence, the transparent wall behind the speaker showing fire and smoke. Shrapnel tore into the wall, leaving in off colour and opaque in areas.

There was utter silence in the hall, as the smoke cleared. You could have heard a pin drop.

The veils thrown up by the explosions parted, to leave the Araska. Its back had been flayed, torn open by the blasts, deep wounds torn into its hull by the barrage. But even as the audience watched, a black, tar-like substance welled up through the scars, filling them. Odd blisters floated in the tar, which glowed a strange luminescent green, even from that distance. The tar kept on swelling and bulging, bloating out of the wounds, even as the rate of expansion decreased, forming what looked like cancerous bulges on the hull. Even as they grew, though, a strange flaky layer, in military green, grew over the black, coating it; and where it coated, growth ceased. Within seconds the Daeva stood before them, not identical to how it was before, because there were new growths on the top, but intact.

There were panicked yelps from the audience at the sight, and two people were nosily sick.

“Lieutenant,” Tokita called out, “are you all right in there?”

A face appeared on the wall behind him, the transparency becoming an opaque, moving image. The Hispanic man grinned.

“Bit noisy in here, but we're fine.”

There was a burst of nervous laughter from the audience.

“Anything damaged?”

“Well, charge beam FR-2 took a direct hit from a shell. It's broken 'til we can take her in for a proper repair cycle.”

“Damn,” declared Tokita. “I'd said that I'd take her back unscratched. Looks like I owe the engineering team some drinks.”

More nervous laughter.

“I'd just like to point out what just happened. The Araska took an entire company's worth of artillery shells. We timed it so that they hit as close to simultaneously as we could make it, just to put the self-repair functions of the ACXB organism to the limit. If they'd hit further apart, the damage could potentially have been repaired before the next shell hit, depending on spacing. The only permanent damage? One of the charge beams took a direct hit from an artillery shell, beyond the ability of the on-board nanofactories to repair. Now, let's run the Araska through her paces...”


~'/|\'~


The room was a vast sphere, shaped to atomic level precision. There were neither sharp angles nor shadows nor reflections anywhere in the man-made void. Such things could have disastrous consequences, for it had been found that the presence of sorcerous wards too close to this place disturbed the thing contained within.

The ABN Facility was a Grade-A facility. It was designed to hold things of such a level that their mere presence induced Aeon War Syndrome; ancient horrors spoken of in myth, entities which induced AWS in the Migou, things which would not die, would not sleep and should not exist. Those true horrors of the universe which mankind had encountered (or, in its worst moments, made) were sealed here, undying and restless. Was it any surprise that the Auburn district, on the edge of New Chicago, in which it was located, was viewed as a hell-hole slum by the NEG as a whole, a place where cultists gathered, and extra-dimensional beasts were attracted, before the near-absolute military lockdown around the place terminated them? Where the AWS score of the inhabitants was a good two to three points higher than average for the population? Where children were sometimes born with Outsider taint through no fault of their parents, and the parapsychic rate was nine times that of the ambient population?

Of course, a cynic could say that characteristic made it useful, made it worth keeping so close to a population centre.

But legally, Vault-H2 did not exist. The thing contained here exceeded what the highest grade storage facility acknowledged by the NEG was permitted to keep. If the Migou knew that humanity had it, their galactic empire would have been stirred into action, the countless masses of their hive worlds thrown against Earth to wipe it out, regardless of the consequences. If the Rapine Storm and the Death Shadows had known that the NEG had it, they would have done anything to secure its release. If the Dagonites knew that mankind had it, they would have thrown away all their lives and their search for the sunken city of their master to ensure that it was ended.

Only two members of the New Earth Government Cabinet knew of the existence of the ABN facility in any detail. No member of the New Earth Government Cabinet knew that Vault-H2 existed. The number of people 'in the know' could be counted in the low double digits, and almost all of them were servants or members of AHNUNG. The others were believed by AHNUNG to belong to it.

Ryoji Kaji stood on the platform that wrapped its way around the equator of the interior of the sphere, in a full-body glowsuit which cast no shadow. No flesh was exposed; the internal air supply was designed to only last for three and a half minutes, to limit exposure to the threat within the Vault. The air, thick and heavy from the 3 atmosphere pressure of pure helium weighed down on him almost as much as what he was about to do. As an inspector certified by the Ashcroft Foundation; in reality, AHNUNG, as the guards of this containment sphere were compromised from the very beginning, he was tasked with the inspection of the contents of Vault-H2.

He was in here alone. Mental proximity to the thing sealed within usually produced Late Onset Aeon War Syndrome within minutes. The air limit was just an artificial means of controlling exposure. But Kaji had been chosen by AHNUNG because of his observed resilience to Aeon War Syndrome; the selection for this mandatory check on Vault-H2 had come about after the Ballydehob Incident and the deployment of VREES in clean-up. Just another incident where the VREES selection criteria had produced agents for AHNUNG with extreme tenacity.

The duty was simple. A pathway would be extended half-way to the inner sphere, which would be opened. The agent would observe that the physical manifestation of the entity remained within the seal, quiescent. The agent would mark this as affirmative, the inner seal would be resealed, and the agent would be extracted, for examination of mental well being and for signs of cellular taint from proximity.

It was completely impossible for someone to release the entity. Not only would they have to pass the fifty metre gap between the end of the walkway, and the inner seal where the entity was contained, but if someone got that close, the entity would crush their mind through its presence. It was anathema to humanity, not through malevolence (though it had that, boundless reserves of vitriol which could transmute the oceans and consume the land), but simple otherness. And even then, the security watched everything that happened in this dome, each watcher vigilant for, unlike a human being, the Panoptican Limited Artificial Intelligences could view this place without breaking. They were sentient, but not sapient. And even if all that could be subverted, the wards that wrapped around the facility at a safe distance would trigger if the entity tried to escape; they would be rent asunder by its presence, true, but they would fulfil their role and raise the alarm.

Vault-H2 was impregnable.

Unless AHNUNG had been pushed into selecting this very special agent by another player in the game, without them even knowing it. Unless that agent had been chosen by the other player because they were able to resist the taint of the First. Unless the Panoptican LAIs could be subverted by an external source, backdoors opened into their sealed network at the time of the construction of the Vault, only exploitable by the three most powerful super-computers on the planet. Unless the agent had been provided with a piece of valued and arcane technology stolen from the alien and ultimately unknowable Tsab, their mastery of dimensional pockets brute forced out of a stolen device by the crude techniques of human sorcery, which would permit the entity to be concealed by a thief, hidden outside the normal five dimensions.

Unless the Soul of the Outer Gods willed all of this to happen.

a discontinuity

And Kaji was in the inner seal, already flipping open the hidden compartment in the briefcase that the man in London-2 had provided him with. Obsidian black and a yellow gemstone with angles which were wrong which glowed with a sick internal light stared out at him, seemingly the eye of some malign intellect. All around it, the interior of the compartment bore its repeating, interlocking motif, of an asymmetric, five-branched tree-like shape.

The Elder Sign.

Kaji reached out a gloved hand.

Now comes the hard part, he thought.

I think it goes “morituri nolumus mori”...


~'/|\'~


And in the unfathomable, unspeakable depths that were neither here nor there, but were instead other, something stirred.

Its lord and master called, and unlike the other faithless servants, who followed the traitor who had supplanted the true Hierophant, it was still loyal.

And so the elect called to it, and it would obey.

It wanted to.


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

Post by Vehrec »

I'm going to make a few guesses:
1. Ken gets his camera back, with heavily edited memeory and a little backdoor so the UEG can spy on him.
2. The source organism for the Evangelion project is the most horrible one imaginable-Spoiler
Homo sapiens sapiens.
They've obviously done a lot of work on it, but that's the baseline in use.
3. Poor Dr Miyakame has the last picture of Yui-and has never seen Rei. Gendo will see to it that he never does.
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by MatSci »

Vehrec wrote:I'm going to make a few guesses:
2. The source organism for the Evangelion project is the most horrible one imaginable-Homo sapiens sapiens. They've obviously done a lot of work on it, but that's the baseline in use.
I doubt it. To quote the CTech core rulebook, about Engles
"Underneath it all, they are enormous living things, cloned from the DNA of humans and god knows what else."
,so it wouldn't be anything special to use Humans as a baseline. All the other Engles already do.
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by EarthScorpion »

Well, it's done.

*shudders*

I was getting really sick of this event towards the end, you know. Together, the chapters which cover this Herald event are over 30,000 words long. I just want to be able to move on to a new chapter, you know. Not to mention the fact that what I write is never as good as the images in my head.

Although if they'd been animating ANE, the last ten episodes would have probably have been slide-shows, rather than just the last two, due to budget problems. :roll:

Anyway, this chapter hasn't been externally betaed. I apologise for that (especially to Aranfan), but I did proof read it, and, frankly, I just can't handle having to make changes. I have all these ideas for things I want to do in later chapters, and I want to get onto them. I've been watching these two episodes for the last two months or so; I want to move on.

Anyway, if you do see spelling mistakes or phrasing you think should be changed, notify me, and I'll correct them.

So, here it is.


Chapter 9

Yam Strikes!

~'/|\'~


The alarms began to scream in geological monitoring stations all across the planet. These places had an even more important role in the Aeon War; orbital bombardment would show up, just as earlier nuclear tests had, if the Migou were ever to escalate the war. They also functioned, on the instruction of the GIA, as watchtowers for any possible sign that the antediluvian Valusians might awaken. Those sapient reptilian creatures, to the dinosaurs as humanity itself is to the mammals, were thought to be long extinct. However, certain of their facilities had been found in the construction of the various geocities that now dotted the globe, in tectonically stable regions of the planet, staffed by automated systems watching over cyrogenic pods. Although no awake Valusians had ever been encountered (barring those individuals from the pods who were shipped off to labs, to be interrogated and vivisected), and although the discoveries had not been made public, the Valusians were now viewed as a potential threat. There was no desire, after all, for another side to join the Aeon War.

The reason for their alarm, though, was not so critical. They were detecting an earthquake, which, as the network which connected these facilities linked up their data and fed it through the processor Limited AIs, appeared to be shallow, and producing movement directly above the epicentre calculated to be categorised as a VII on the Modified Mercalli Scale.

Of course, the worry increased when it was noted that the epicentre was directly below Lake Michigan. And that was a concern, because there shouldn't be any tectonic activity in that location. Considering the proximity of such a site to the centre of government for the entire New Earth Government, there was a mass collective grabbing of secure telephones and hurried use of the emergency number to the local military.

The water purity facilities on Lake Michigan were having their own problems, of course. Quite apart from the fact that the sides of the lake were caving in, as the water impossibly swelled, flooding the flat land around it, the temperature of the water was rising precipitously, currents of heated water flowing up from the bottom of the lake. In the wild ideas thrown around by the local scientists and engineers trying to explain what the hell was going on, suggestions of a precision Migou strike against the mantle, creating a volcano by punching through the Earth's surface, were thrown about. These made their way back to the NEG military, where they matched a low probability prediction for how a Migou limited scale bombardment would begin.

Global threat levels were raised to Code Sigma to deal with the possibility that the Migou had begun orbital bombardment, with a resultant rise in the latitude for deployment of nuclear weapons. Across the world, forces moved to high alert. This build up was noted by the Migou, who began moving reserve forces forwards, from their fortified stationary bunkers they occupied on Earth as well as dispatching extra Swarm Ships from the Hive Ship in orbit. This fed back into the NEG, as the actions of the Migou raised the LAI estimates of this being a serious offensive.

Global threat levels were raised to Code Tau.

This activity looped into the Migou hierarchy, who noted that human military behaviour conformed to their predictions for a suicidal last stand, by their predictions of the psychology of those uplifted apes. As a result, they took activities to remedy that, making sure that victory would occur, despite the costs.

Global Threat Levels were raised to Code Upsilon.

A cascade of worry flowed through the machinery of the New Earth Government, slowing the cogs as the ruling authorities of humanity collectively turned their thoughts to the possibility that this was the way that the world would end; not, as the poet had said, with a whimper, but with a bang.

Fear and panic began to fill the air when, despite the attempts to calm the situation, only desolation and despair could be foreseen. The spy satellite tasked to study this phenomenon reported a Code Blue STE Rift. At the revelation that a Herald appeared, contrary to all previous predictions, to be launching a direct assault on the New Earth Government capital, it was feared that all the plans and contingencies that had been sown in preparation for a Migou assault since the Fall of Alaska in 2085 would now be swept away, quite literally, by whatever this new Herald was doing.

Control was reasserted. Humanity would refuse to let go. Globally the level of alert was lowed, even as all forces which could be spared in North America converged on Chicago-2

The presence of one of the Heralds of the Outer Gods was noted, too, by the Migou. The fungoid Yuggothians re-evaluated the situation. The reactions of the mammals below were re-examined in that light, and found to be consistent with previous behaviour. However, after the loss of two entire fleets by the treachery of the humans and the twice-traitor Nazzadi, it was decided that they would not be able to tolerate the losses from an assault on a location so close to the human capital, while retaining enough force to euthanise the monster that had just woken. However, they could not also permit such an entity to roam free, for it could wake the Hierophant, which would be a direct strike against their federation. Orbital bombardment was considered, and rejected, for the risks of such force against this planet were calculably high.

And so the Migou hung on the edge, unable to act, but also unable to let what would happen occur.
They hoped that the hominids would achieve the improbable again, for it was the lesser of two evils.

A decision was made by the sorcerer-scientists, the leaders of the Migou fleet. They began a notable withdrawal from their gains across North America, hoping that the uplifted apes would spare more troops for what must be done, loathe as were to give up territorial gains.

Of course, they left the extensive minefields and automated defences in place. It would be stupid to left the humans just waltz in to what they had sacrificed lives to gain.


~'/|\'~


The Herald, which the NEG naming convention so inaccurately called “Yam” paused slightly, as it tore through the wall that it had built, extending the gift of Yog-Sothoth, through the lacuna in what the limited beings that inhabited this world (with the exclusion of one native species) called reality. Hot water flooded through, rich in noxious chemicals and hydrocarbons, as it ceased its relentless assault on what kept it from its target destination, thick and dark currents swirling in the chill autumnal waters of Lake Michigan.

Its intellect was alien; it had last been upon this ball of iron and silicates before the Elder Things had lost control of their autonomous amorphous construction devices, and it had been aware all the time since. It had aeons upon aeons of experience in the seas of billions of planets much superior to this one, untainted by the annoyingly reactive gas that polluted and permeated this planet through unrestrained pollution by chemical factories.

And so it thought.
third|tertiary|inner iron|silicate|miscellaneous residence|dwelling|territory
disgust|disappointment|loathing ineptitude|lack-of-forethought|laziness starfish|inferior|xeno because|correlation|link solvent|water|fluid vile|polluted|toxic gas|reactive|eighth!
second|hierophant|traitor held|possessive|indicating-ownership residence|dwelling|home|territory
intrusion|impolite|offensive? dangerous|threat-to-life|risky?
possible|potential|mid-to-high.
necessary|needed|desire!
puppet|marionette|projection being|possessive|indicating-existence first|dead|rightful-hierophant local|present|resident-not-indicating-possessive now-time|now-space|all-dimensions!
necessary|complete|desire!
puppet|marionette|projection request|desire|need-indicating-other assistance|servitude|completion-of-oath!
self|ego|entity loyal|kin|vizier! negation|impossible|clarity traitor|rebel|fool!
servitude|oath|being necessary|mandated|desired!
Its path was clear. It tore through the barrier in full, the alien waters of where it had slept pouring through, volume upon volume, supplanting the inferior native ecology. Its lesser children had come with it, too, and they would sing their beautiful songs, a choir of seraphim for an angel upon high, chosen of the Outer Gods.

It spread the beauteous gift of That Which Defines Time And Space wide. Its children could huddle under its auspices, protected from the malign vicissitudes of an alien, hostile, inferior, locally and freakishly stable set of universal so-called-constants.

And the bulk of the Herald passed through the hole in space, that would take it from its home to where it would need to be.
self|ego|entity prediction|being|statement enjoy|pleasure|emotion state|future|soon!

~'/|\'~


Sirens began to wail throughout the Engel silo, the high-pitched scream of urgency deliberately akin to that of a crying infant, as a pleasant, hermaphroditic Limited Artificial Intelligence voice began to issue commands over the loud speakers.

“All Engel pilots cleared for deployment are to report to their attuned vehicle, ready for immediate deployment. This is a Gaghiel-level order; this is a Gaghiel-level order. A massive extra-dimensional entity is in close proximity to the Chicago Arcology. This is not a drill; this is not a drill. All Engel pilots cleared for deployment are to report...”

This cacophony was also broadcast into the converted Engel bays that held the kneeling Unit 02, and the two teenagers.

Shinji looked around. “What's going on? Are we meant to be here?”

“...this is a Gaghiel-level order. A massive extra-dimensional entity is in close proximity to the Chicago Arcology. This is...”

Asuka sighed at that comment, even as her eyes lit up. “Idiot. It's almost certainly a Herald.” She smiled to herself. “A real one...”

“Then why don't they just tell their Engel pilots that?” Shinji asked.

Her eyes locked onto his for a moment, before leaving in disgust, to rest upon her Evangelion. “Because the Heralds themselves are classified. Well, not that there are large extra-dimensional creatures, but their nature, and that they're part of a linked phenomenon. Honestly. Don't you ever watch the news?” She waved a hand at him. “No, don't answer that.”

“What should I do?” Shinji said to himself, ignoring her. He turned to the exit. “I need to get back to Misato.”

Asuka made a small noise of disgust. He was getting rather sick of that; just being around her was giving him a headache from the litres of scorn poured down upon him.

“And do what?,” she asked. “As far as I can recall, your Evangelion is both on the other side of the Atlantic and out of operations right now. So unless you're going to spontaneously manifest Grade-3 Somatic Teleportation, nothing you will do will matter.” She paused. “Are you a parapsychic, by the way? You're not wearing the marks, but that just means you don't have Dee or Eye powers.”

Shinji shook his head. “No. You?”

“No. I just like to know.”

“Well, then, what do you want to do?” he asked, sarcasm creeping into his voice despite his certain knowledge that it would only make matters worse. “I mean, after all, you're the...”

She was already striding off towards a set of lockers, near to the feet of the Evangelion.

Asuka was finding this boy rather frustrating. He was so... passive. And not even passive in the “sit there and do nothing unless prompted” way; no, he insisted on arguing with her, even when he wasn't coming up with anything helpful, and making comments that she was sure that he thought were funny, even when anyone with a functioning brain could see that they were the product of a mind that thought it has a much better sense of humour than it actually did. She was sure that he shouldn't be like that. He was causing a minor headache, and it would be nice if he'd just do what he was told to.

She put it out her mind, as she headed over to the lockers, planting her hands flat on the memoform surface, which read her hand prints then shaped itself into handles, to allow her to open it. She pulled out a sausage-shaped bag, in the same deep red as the kneeling forty-metre figure beside her.

“Wait there for a second,” she commanded, stepping behind one of the legs of Unit 02 for some privacy, as she began pulling the plug-suit out of her bag and stripping off her dress.

At least the plug suit will be a lot warmer than this thing, Asuka thought. Important lesson learnt; Nazzadi dresses are not to be worn outside of arcologies or Nazza-Duhni itself. Right, so underlayer first...” as she pulled out a thin black garment which looked most like a full length wetsuit.

The underlayer was one of the personal changes she had persuaded the Berlin team to implement in the design of the plug-suit. The original design had been fine if you were to only wear it in the entry plug, where the neutral buoyancy and the lack of movement were fine, but she had quickly found that it tended to leave skin raw at the joints if you walked around in it. It appeared that whoever had designed the plug-suit had cared far more about optimising the design so that it could generate the highest possible synchronisation ratios than about petty things like comfort. The scientists in Berlin-2 had waved aside her complaints, until she had pointed out, in a patronising tone, that she couldn't focus on moving the Evangelion as her body if her real skin was hurting from a badly designed suit.

She had been seven at the time.

There was a movement of feet from the other side of the Evangelion's leg. Obviously, the idiot was just going to ignore what she'd told him to do. Honestly, why wouldn't people just do what they were told?

“Peek, and I will beat you senseless,” she called out, not even looking up from where she was sealing the smart material up the legs.

Shinji quite believed that. He'd moved around to see what she was doing, because she hadn't deigned to tell him, and caught a glimpse of her before she'd done up the top of the black thing that she seemed to wear under her plug suit. Asuka was very fit, in both the formal and colloquial senses of the word; she was built like an athlete with (from the brief glance he had obtained) almost no superfluous fat.

Wow...

He waited.

Asuka did up the neck seal, a slight hiss echoing through the chamber as the secondary seal rotated into place, shaking out her hair and pulling it behind her. She checked that the A10 clips were properly in position, flat against the scalp.

Yes.

She stretched out, right up to her maximum height (she wondered idly if her father had been tall; her mother certainly had been), then rotated her neck in a circle, clicking her knuckles together.

“Asuka, let's go,” she said softly to herself, her voice level, calm, and filled with determination.

She reached down into the bag as she came out from behind the leg of Unit 02, noting that Shinji had his back turned, in what she judged to quite possibly be a sign of guilt.

She punched him hard, in the arm.

He yelped, and clutched at his limb, jumping away from her.

“What the hell was that for!” he yelled at her in Japanese reflexively.

“Looking,” was the answer he got, in the same language. Asuka noted the slight flush, as well as the lack of protest.

So he did peek. Thought so.

She hit him again, in the same place.

“Stop that!” he moaned. “It was an accident. You didn't tell me what you were...”

“Put this on,” she instructed him, a spare plug-suit in her arms. “You're coming with me on this.”

“What are you, crazy!” he shouted back, clutching at his arm. “You can't just hit people and make them do what you say!”

Asuka tensed momentarily, moving her arm slightly, watching him flinch and recoil away. It amused her. “You're wrong. The whole of human society is based on a mixture of that and tribe-level altruism.”

“What are you talking about!”

“Put this on.”

“It won't fit,” protested Shinji. “I'm taller than you.”

“You're not,” Asuka replied, their eyes level. Generations of good diet combined with mild sexual selection had resulted in a slight decrease in human sexual dimorphism with regards to height, which, combined with the difference in ethnicities, meant that she was in fact slightly taller than he was.

“... and... shaped differently,” he continued, making vague gestures at about chest level with his hands.

“You'll survive. It'll just be a bit loose around the chest. Just do what I say and put this on.”

“And tight somewhere else,” he said acidly.

“You'll be fine. Just do what I say and put it on.”

“Uh uh.” Shinji shook his head. “There is no way you're going to make me wear that.”



~'/|\'~




Commander Matthew Martensson, of the NES Blade of Athena, a Triumph-Class Destroyer, rushed into the bridge burrowed deep into the middle of the ship, his blond mane clearly ungroomed. The wail of sirens greeted him, as well as a clamour from his subordinate officers.

“Report!” he snapped at his First Mate, all traces of his normal good humour gone.

“We're under attack from... something,” Kagamy stated, red eyes cool and steady. “Global threat levels pinged recently up to Upsilon; they're back down to Tau, but we received coded orders for a Grade VII.”

The Commander swallowed hard, a flash of worry in his somewhat bloodshot blue eyes. “They were unsealed and the authorisation codes checked?” he asked, trying to keep his voice as level as hers.

“Yes, sir. They checked out.”

Both of them knew what a Code VII meant.

“Well, have there been any signs of a Migou strike yet? What does Comms say about troop movements?” Matthew said, while authorising his command of the ship as he took the central chair.

“Negative,” called Lieutenant Tonaka, over from the AR screen that even now flared massive amounts of sensory information. Communications Officers on a capital ship were a rare breed, required to handle massive amounts of sensory information. Most of them as a result came from AR gaming sub-cultures, to the extent that they came with pre-existing permanent hard AR contacts. They tended not to blink much. “In fact,” a new window was maximised with a series of hand movements, “they appear to be retreating... oh. Turquoise message from NEGNC C2. Beyond my clearance. Forwarding it to central desk.”

The Commander read the document that the High Command had just felt like issuing. It was short, and rather unhelpful, yet still contained a potent revelation. He blinked, heavily, then authorised the unlocking of the censored version to his senior crew.

“Short version,” he said, staring around the bridge. Everyone was in position; all posts filled. “An exceedingly dangerous extra-dimensional lifeform has appeared in close proximity, somewhere in Lake Michigan. Satellite recon cannot give us more precise details; it appears to have some kind of some kind of...” he paused, “I can't believe I'm saying this. Some kind of massive force field slash arcane shield, that makes it impossible to be more accurate. No known attributes, although it does note that the entity will probably be able to take multiple shots from capital grade weapons. We are to kill it, and prevent it from reaching Chicago-2. I don't need to tell you why.”

“Well, that was useful,” called out one of the Sensor Officers. “Nothing more, sir? Even a profile what we should be looking for.”

Commander Martensson sighed. “No.” he replied, rubbing his eyes as he reached to authorise a combat stimulant to wake him up properly. “Damn useless OCI”, he muttered to himself as an aside.

His hand never reached the button, as the consoles all around the room began to scream. The AR projection of the fleet bloomed in red, as one, then a second icon flashed to the “Destroyed” status.

“Report!”

“The Cybele is going down!” stated his First Officer, Kagamy, her voice as calm as ever. “The Mithras has not sighted the target.”

“Damn it”, Matthew swore. “Commodore Clarke was on the Cybele. What the hell is going on!”

“Vice-Admiral Xu has taken command, from C2 Fleet Command,” reported Tonaka. “Patching him through to main speakers.”

“This is Vice-Admiral Xu, of the New Earth Navy,” the message came from, the man's voice that slightly metallic buzz that came from the massive levels of encryption used on Fleet channels. “All ships, check distance between ships. Take evasive manoeuvres, and elevate yourself from the water. I want those ventral weapons pointing downwards!”

Commander Martensson nodded. “Right, Helm.” He switched to the ship-board announcement system. “This is Martensson. All hands to F-Suits and acceleration couches.”

All across the ship, there was a buckling of clasps, as the crew prepared for flight mode. Most merely strapped into their acceleration couches at their battle stations, which kept them bound whatever the alignment of the ship, while those who had to move got into their F-Suits, stripped down, void-capable powered suits, designed for use even in zero-g conditions, with magnetic boots and their own integral A-Pods, enabling them to move around the ship.

“We have a clear for preparation,” announced the officer at the Helm. “Permission to take her up?”

“Permission granted,” said the Commander. “Let's get clear of this water and get revenge for the Cybele.”



~'/|\'~




All across the lake, New Earth Government ships were breaking the water, vast volumes of water pouring off their flanks as they rose into the air. These ships were rather different in appearance to their ancestors, those ships which had been limited to the surface of the water. Modern naval ships were roughly cylindrical; vast cigars covered in protrusions in the form of missile pods, direct-fire weapons, point defence and sensor equipment. The ships with a carrier role were bulbous and curved, pregnant with offspring that they could vomit forth onto their foes, while the dedicated warships were sleek and knife-like, their front sections designed to reduce the surface area they exposed while their lethal ventral weapons were aligned with a target. The bridge was nested deep within the superstructure of the vessel, though its nerves and senses spread throughout the whole ship, so that a lucky shot or an enemy fighter on a kamikaze run could decapitate the command structure. The old balance between “weapons of war” and “weapons of terror” had been raised, and it has been decided that what made a weapon really terrifying was the ability to kill you as efficiently and as quickly as possible while taking the least possible damage.

They were more kin, in design, to submarines than surface ships, as the advent of the A-Pod opened the prospect of true three-dimensional battles at sea. Against the Migou, concealment below the waves was an advantage, because the heavy weapons on Swarm Ships, which outgunned even a Victory-Class Battlecruiser, could not be fired properly in such an environment. Against the Esoteric Order of Dagon, the opposite was true; to face them below the waves allowed them to bring the best of their assets into play, while above it they were notably deficient in things which could hit aircraft, or indeed anything which could deal with a capital-grade ship. What was being done now was a standard tactic against aquatic foes. They could only hope that the Herald would stay there.

The clouds broke above them, autumn sunlight poring through the gaps in the sky to light up the emerging behemoths. The matt paint and pseudodermal layers of absorbent memo-material, designed to minimise visibility and radio signature gave them an almost toy-like look, like some cheap plaything for infants, designed to reduce choking hazard. From above, the scene looked almost faked, like tiny scale models in some ancient science-fiction show with a poor budget and a lead actor with a toupee. That was irrelevant. Efficient design should always override aesthetics, according to the doctrine of the New Earth Navy. And with modern flesh vat-growth techniques, toupees were a thing of the past.

The Herald, of course, neither knew any of this, nor would it have cared had it deigned to tear the structure of the organic composite matrix these strange creatures, which lived in an atmosphere comprised of a deadly toxin, used to cognate (insofar as they could do that) from its protective casing, and find out how to extract the information it desired. With a flick of its tail, it drove itself through a network of mines, the charges detonating harmlessly on the surface of the AT-Field, displacing vast quantities of water which surged upwards to plume on the surface.

The Limited Artificial Intelligences installed on the New Earth Government vessels noted this pattern, and calculated the velocity and depth of the object which was causing the explosions in about as much time as the humans controlling them took to notice the blossoming explosions. These were independently verified over a tight-band combat network with the other ships, and corrections made through statistical analysis of the data points observed by each separate vessel. When they were satisfied, insofar as a non-sapient system could feel any emotion, they informed the organic beings in their chain of command of the extrapolated position of the Herald. In a show of dreadful inefficiency, it took the humans several seconds to request permission from the commanders of their ships, then give the command to fire.

A veritable shower of torpedoes descended from the elevated ships, falling as projectiles before impacting with the water and their engines activating. Explosions cascaded along all sides of the Herald's AT-Field, unable to penetrate the warped spacetime, the phase space of possible results of the explosion turned against them. However, a surprising number missed, the telemetry sent back to their ships reporting that the target was not where it had been calculated to be, and that local conditions in the water were different from what they should have been. Error reports blossomed on the feed-outs from a non-negligible percentage of the weapons, informing their operators of impossibilities, of water that did not act like water and other such things.

And the Herald itself was not passive in its effect in causing confusion. The surface of the lake bulged up, unbelievably, engulfing a low hanging frigate in a very final way. Something could be seen in that pustule of water which defied all human knowledge of fluid dynamics, a colossal, corpse-white shape which moved like some leviathan from the Permian.

Anyone who made such a comparison would be wrong, though. The Herald was considerably older than that; that era was long after this insignificant planet had become inhospitable for it and its kind after the run-away atmospheric pollution induced by the irresponsible genetic tampering of the Elder Things, and, anyway, life of terrestrial origin in the Permian had not advanced to the level where it could support such a thing. It could never support a creature of that magnitude; it never had, and never would. The laws of nature state that such a beast could never come about; the mass scales up faster than the muscle strength, even in an environment where fluid buoyancy would permit it to become larger, while the forces which its movement would subject its body to should tear it in half.

It was just as well that the favour of the Gods gave the Herald sanctity against the arbitrary declarations of this place.

The water surged again, the white shape devouring a destroyer, its path taking it towards the metal boxes which the odd creatures hid within, taking them away to be assumed for its greater glory and that of its children.

But always, inexorably, taking it closer to Chicago-2.



~'/|\'~




Shinji was grumbling to himself, even as the entry plug flooded with LCL.

“How did she make me do this? I honestly don't know why.”

He shifted, uncomfortably, trying to loosen it around his groin. His prediction that it would not fit there was proving painfully accurate.

“Stop complaining,” Asuka told him, as the fluid reached neck height. “Sit behind me, and keep your hands to yourself.”

The unpleasant moment when your lungs scream at you that they're filled with fluid, and that you're drowning, and the feeling of the viscous LCL washing over against your eyeballs passed, for both of them.

Shinji shuddered, once he had got the panic instinct under control. Asuka, he noted, didn't react to it at all. The LCL tasted... wrong; not like how it normally was. The only component he could recognise in the LCL of Unit 01 was something like, but not quite, the metallic taste of blood, but there was something else here, some indescribable yet very familiar taste that hovered right at the edge of his tongue

How long has she been doing this if she doesn't have a problem with drowning?

He made a face. “Your LCL tastes different.”

Asuka grunted, as she ran the beginnings of the start-up procedure. “Really.” It wasn't a question, and there was a notable hint that any use of that as a criticism would result in conflict.

“Where do the Evangelions store the LCL, anyway?” he wondered out loud, more as way of changing the subject than out of interest. “Is there some internal reservoir or something?”

A one-shouldered uni-shrug was all he got in response.

“What is is, anyway?” he wondered. “Why don't they just use impact gel and sealed helmets, like I've heard that the Engels...”

The red-haired girl turned to glare at him, her hair waving like seaweed in the viscous orange liquid. “Stop babbling and complaining. Unless you'd like to run the start-up procedure... which you can't, anyway, as you haven't even done independent operations yet, then you can shut up while I need to concentrate.” Shinji shut up.

The start-up procedure continued, until the screens that surrounded them, on the inside of the entry plug, degenerated into red warnings screaming that something was wrong.

“Have you tried turning it off and on again?” asked Shinji, innocently.

Another glare was his payment for them. “What are you, stupid? Are you trying to be annoying? You're making mental noise, which is disturbing the calibration. I told you not to disturb me!”

“So you don't think it might be because two people are in a war-machine only designed for one, and it's controlled by thought? That maybe two people aren't meant to be in an Evangelion entry plug?” he continued, in the same tone of voice.

“No,” replied Asuka, taking on a similarly saccharine tone, “because I already accounted for that. For one, you're not even wearing A10 Nerve Clips, which means that any motive force you provide will be minimal. No, this is a higher level function.”

“That doesn't explain anything, you know.” The conversation was getting worryingly polite.

She sighed. “Of course. What language do you think in?”

Shinji frowned. “Mostly... well, I'm not even sure about that. Sometimes in Japanese, sometimes in English.”

“Yes,” said Asuka, poking at the screen at the front, “that would explain it. Idiot. LAI, add language slash Japanese slash standard to the active dictionary.”

“Are you sure that you want to change the default language settings? Some systems may need to restart for the changes to take effect,” asked the onboard voice.

“Yes. Change language then restart.”

The lights in the entry plug dimmed, then came back up, the complicated flickering of the walls proceeding without interruption this time.

“Evangelion Unit 02; activate!”

Shinji groaned. That girl was giving him a headache.



~'/|\'~




The conference centre where they had been showing off the Daeva had been evacuated remarkably quickly, a considerable number of the people in the room taken directly to one of the command centres buried into the superstructure of the Chicago Arcology. The resident members of the OIS were already considering the possibility that the command structure had been compromised by cult influences, to arrange for so many high ranking members of the New Earth Army and Navy to be focussed in one place. They had watched the surge in global threat levels, after what was found to be a simple mistake ballooned into reports of Migou orbital bombardment, and attempts to clamp down on the scaremongering and misunderstandings had originated from this location.

Major Misato Katsuragi stood in a corner, and watched. She was significantly outranked here, and nothing yet could justify her involvement. She half suspected that she had only been escorted here by accident in the chaos. And if she could trust Asuka's PsychEvals, she was probably going to start up Unit 02 and try to help, without permission. She'd already gone off with Shinji to show him her Evangelion (that sounded dirty in her head), so she's wouldn't even need to go very far to get there. This had the potential to go very wrong.

A sussuration of whispers began to fill the room...

”A Herald?”
“A Code Blue?”
“A Herald?”
“Code Blue?”
“Seriously?”

... and at that cue, she straightened up. She really wished that Ritsuko was here, as together they would have backed up the viewpoint of Project Evangelion from both a tactical and scientific point of view, but the blond-haired woman had disappeared with Dr Miyakame immediately after he had come over to talk to her.

Yes, that was most suspicious. Ritsuko loathed him, Misato was sure; she had heard enough rants, but the way she had crumpled and acquiesced to his request for a talk was quite unlike how she normally was. It was worth looking into, certainly.

And, hey, Misato thought, if they do start sleeping together or something, we might be able to borrow some of the Engel technicians for an armour redesign, and ours are suffering from the constant damage which the Evas keep on suffering. It's an ill wind that doesn't have a silver lining, or something like that.

The Major stepped forwards.

“Project Evangelion offers its assistance, subordinate to main NEG command,” she stated to the Vice-Admiral who seemed to have taken charge.

The naval officer, a hardened-looking man in his early fifties, of Chinese ethnicity, glanced over at her. “Aren't all of your assets on the other side of the Atlantic?” he said, bluntly. An aide leaned over and whispered in his ear. “Ah. You have one here.”

The Major nodded. “It was here for a full test of its technical capacity, before it was moved over to join the others. And before you ask, sir,” she continued, seeing the glint in his eye, “Unit 02 is complete and has already seen battle on the Eastern European Front. It personally took down two Migou Swarm Ships,” she added, with a hint of pride.

“We have multiple impacts from the simultaneous torpedo barrage... nothing,” called out an officer, from the other side of the room. “Not a damn thing.”

“Vice-Admiral,” the Major pointed out, “remember that it took the Ashcroft three over-charged shots from its main plasma cannon to take down the AT-Shield of the one code-named “The Kathirat”, and even then it failed to kill the target, only crippling it. And it took all the spare capacity of L2 to power the laser that killed Mot.” She took a deep breath. “And with all due respect, sir, as long at the Herald stays under water, we can't use the ventral plasma cannons on the destroyers against it, and the ventral lasers on the frigates aren't powerful enough.”

“What are you leading up to, Major Katsuragi?” growled the Vice-Admiral.

“Permission to mobilise Unit 02, and tactical battlefield control over it. We should station it by C2, as a last line of defence.”

Elements on the AR display in the middle of the room flashed red.

“That was the Southampton,” called out an officer. “Another frigate lost.”

“The torpedo bombers are coming around for another swing,” called out another. “They're going to have to rearm after this strike.”

“WQS reports massive environmental disturbance. The water is becoming toxic; there's a current flow from where that thing appeared. Sats say that it seems to be some kind of space-time rift, and it's growing.”

Vice-Admiral Xu sighed. “Permission granted. I still don't approve of the use of child soldiers, but we need everything we can get, and the Evas have a record of killing Heralds. Use that station over there for TacCom; get it deployed in Sector 4.” He snorted. “The Araska's in Sector 3. Who'd have thought at the start of the day that we'd get to see a direct comparison?”

“I'd have preferred not to,” called the Brigadier who was trying to co-ordinate the air forces so that they'd do something. He wasn't having much luck. The weapons that a bomber mounted weren't scratching the hide of the beast, unable to even get through the AT-Field. And they weren't prepared to go nuclear in these circumstances, with already elevated tensions with the Migou and how close the entity was to the capital.



~'/|\'~




Kaji stepped outside, in a casual walk which he had been explicitly trained in. He was feeling rather light headed. Something red flashed in front of his eyes; he blinked, and it was gone.

He shook his head. He now had what was quite possibly the most valuable thing on the planet in his suitcase, folded into its own pocket dimension by the reality-breaking Bah'ri Diß artefact. If he was caught with this because he fainted after that, well, he didn't want to think about what would happen to him. Bad things, probably starting with a TSEAP and moving upwards from there. And vivisection did not appeal to him, all things considered.

He managed to make his way to the train, without showing any sign of weakness, and slumped heavily down in his seat, eyes listlessly staring out the window at nothing.

And as the train departed, something felt him go, and wailed.



~'/|\'~




Commander Martensson was not having a good day. At all. The light frigates, the only damn ships which could use their ventral weapons against the target (because some idiot designer has decided that the increased yield of a ventral plasma cannon was worth not being able to fire the goddamn main weapon underwater) were taking horrific casualties as the bloated corpse-white monstrosity seemed to take a pleasure in swallowing them whole. The larger ships were trying to batter at the bulge of water within the shimmering net it bought with it, seeing if it could be disrupted, but whenever a good few hits were landed on it, it would dive back down.

And the damn thing was constantly getting closer to Chicago. They were slowing it down, true. But they weren't killing it, and they weren't stopping it.

And it was coming for them, now.

Martensson shared a glance with Kagamy. She blinked, heavily, red eyes suddenly filled with sorrow, and nodded her head. He swallowed hard, and took a deep breath.

“Charge the ventral cannon up to full. Push it beyond the safety margins; I want everything I can get out of it. Authorisation code: Charley-Hotel-Uniform-Uniform-Tango-Romeo-India-India-Tango. Make it so that we'll get that one shot before burning out everything.”

“Sir?” one of the Weapons Officers said, with a worried look on his face.

“We can't stop it from getting us. We've seen what it did to the Jupiter. But maybe, if we can fire from inside the force-field thing it has, we can hurt it.” He swallowed again. “All non-essential hands, abandon ship.”

Sirens began to wail, a newborn cacophony screaming for the incipient death of its ship. Lifepods began to eject from all sides of the ship, even as that horrific, impossible bulge of water bore down on them like a tidal wave.

Commander Martensson turned to his First Officer. “Kagamy. It's been an honour.”

She nodded. “Likewise, Matthew.”

“If this doesn't work...I'm sorry.”

“Charging,” the Weapons Officer called out.

“Hold her steady,” the Commander replied, staring at the AR projection which gave their location.

“Charging.”

“Steady. Fire on my mark!”

The Blade of Athena never got its chance to fire. Faster than the human eye could respond, the Herald suddenly surged forwards, and as the bubble of liquid (not truly describable as “water”) encapsulated by the AT-Field surrounded them, the power throughout the ship suddenly ceased, the capacitor banks storing the charge for the ventral cannon discharging unequally, which tore the front of the ship apart in a blossom of internal explosions.

Commander Martensson had the chance to swear once, before the impossibly shard teeth of the entity they called Yam tore the ship in half, crushing the bridge in the guts of the ship as it took the front into its gullet, and reducing the crew within to mangled puppets.

The Herald continued onwards.



~'/|\'~




Within the entry plug of Unit 02, the walls flickered, a cold feeling blowing down the spines of both the Children. It was a familiar sensation, the feeling that occurred when the Third Phase was passed. It felt less than usual for Shinji; a reduced sensation, but what he did feel was odd.

He suddenly shuddered, overcome by a feeling like thousands of spiders crawling over his skin. It diminished as the chill in his spine went, but remained present. That wasn't usual; it was like his skin was in the wrong place, someone pulling it into positions it was not meant to be in.

Asuka made a noise of annoyance, the sound transmuted into a gurgle in the back of the throat by the LCL.

Shinji shivered again. “What now?”

She didn't glance back. “The roof is sealed. How am I meant to be able to stand up?” she asked rhetorically. The girl reached down to the AR panel before her, fingers dancing a brief waltz over the unreal display. “NEG Command, this is Second Lieutenant Soryu, assigned pilot of Evangelion Unit 02. Requesting the unsealing of the Evangelion Hangar.”

There was a brief pause, then Misato's face appeared on a projected panel on the front of the entry plug. She was smiling.

“Nice, Asuka!” The Major's face became serious. “I have SubTacCom for you this mission, so I'm in charge. Follow my orders; in an emergency like this, procedure is important. I'm unsealing the roof now.”

The Engel hangar, almost gutted to fit the Evangelion, had not been designed to permit something of its magnitude through the doors. Even crawling, Unit 02 would not have been able to get in. It was fortunate that the roofs were retractable. The vaulted roof split down the centre, folding and arcing down into the ground below the hangar, allowing the Evangelion to stand up.

It was a... complicated movement. From its starting position, prostrated in supplication, it almost unfolded upwards, in a way which both reminded onlookers of how a human being, scaled up to an impossible size, would do it, and gave them an impression of inestimable wrongness. Perhaps it was the way the proportions of the arms and legs were off from what they should have been; perhaps it was the way its neck hung forwards, limp and inactive without any motion throughout the whole movement. It was fortunate, perhaps, that everyone in the immediate vicinity was qualified to work on the Engel Project, and thus blasphemous hybrids of mind, machine and extra-dimensional entity were the kind of thing you saw every day.

Finally, the neck straightened, and the Evangelion gazed over the industrial district, outside the arcology proper, with four eyes that glowed a necrotic green. And while Unit 00 had screamed during the incident during start-up, and Unit 01 had roared as it tore its first Heraldic victim to shreds, Unit 02 hissed, a tumultuous escape of gas which left a smell like rotting carrion and fresh blood throughout the area, a vile stench which remained even after the creature had stepped out of the building, loping in a springy run towards the location Major Katsuragi gave them.

The Evangelion slid to a stop right behind one of the thick barrier walls that protected the arcology and surrounding areas, the contaminated waves lapping, thick with noxious, hot hydrocarbons from wherever the Herald had come from.

Shinji groaned and covered his face with his hands. “Urgh...”

Asuka glanced back at him, a look of mild contempt on her face. “What?”

He blinked heavily, the feeling of the thick LCL pushed aside by his eyelids rather unpleasant. “I...” he swallowed, “I'm just feeling a bit dizzy. It doesn't feel... it's sort of odd to have someone else moving your body... well, not my body, but that's what it feels like. And I feel like I've just been spun around.”

“Don't be silly. LCL neutralises cochlear balance, leaving you with only visual,” pointed out Asuka.

“I'll... I'll be fine. Just ignore me. I'll get used to it.”

There was a slightly pitying sigh, the harmonics changed by the fluid. “Try not to throw up inside my Evangelion. I don't know what happens if you do that, and I don't want to find out. Even in the name of science.”

The communications window appeared again. “Shinji?” asked Misato. “What are you doing in there?” The Major waved her hand. “Irrelevant. Asuka, are you able to operate at peak operational capacity with him present? If you can't I'll pull you back.”

The red haired girl smiled politely. “I believe I am able to function at full capacity, yes.”

The Major nodded. “Good. Major Katsuragi out.”

Asuka turned to Shinji, smile gone. “Screw this up for me, Third Child, and I will personally make you regret it.”

Shinji shuffled, insofar as he could, further towards the back of the entry plug.

Back in the control room, Misato could see several high ranking officers frowning at her. However, it was a civilian who spoke up.

“That is not wise,” stated Tokita, the chief engineer for Project Daeva.

“The Fist of Perseus is going down!” called out someone, from the other side of the room, igniting a babble of voices.
“We're down to three cruisers!”
“That bastard is just picking off all our heavy ships at its leisure, zigzagging back and forth, but it keeps on getting closer!”
“What does it take to kill this thing!”

Misato glared at him. “Is there a reason that civilian is here, in C2 Command?” she asked acidly.

“Yes, actually,” he replied, his tone matching hers in pH. “Project Daeva is managing the deployment of our Araska. We don't deny that it's still in the prototype stage, and so needs close watching. However,” and at this, his voice actually became more polite, albeit the politeness that freezes oceans and burns to the touch, “perhaps we won't spend fourteen years in the prototype stage. And as for why it's not wise, you are risking two-thirds of your pilot complement here. A loss here would cripple the only thing we have right now which is certain to kill a Herald. We can't pick up your slack yet.”

Misato turned her back on him, jawline locked rigid. Without Ritsuko here, to make her act as the sane one, she was succumbing to the same craziness, it seemed.

“Tokita, we've got the umbilical cable connected,” called out one of his subordinates, from behind Misato's back. “Efficiency is at 90%; we lost one set of superconductors in sub-section 3, but the crew have rerouted around it and the DCS is effecting repairs. We can boost the laser with power from the C2 grid.”

“Good, good,” he replied. “Polana,” turning his head to another one, “how does the ventral laser read?”

“It's green across the board. The coolant systems are in place and locked; power has been diverted from the cee-bees to them.”

“Sustained fire is go?”

“Yes, sir. We can maintain it for 310 seconds, plus or minus 40 seconds, before we have to do a 20 second coolant flush slash refill.”

“Damn. That's suboptimal.” He waved a hand. “Someone, make a note that we'll need to check the heat management systems. That's less than 80% of what it should be. Nevertheless, can we greenlight firing?”

Polana paused for a moment, then nodded her head. “Yes.”

“Then do it.”



~'/|\'~




From the vantage point of the Evangelion, both Asuka and Shinji could see the beam that cut out from along the shoreline, on their right. It wasn't visible from what it was, but from what it did to the atmosphere, the green-blue of a naval laser scattered into the atmosphere. It was very familiar to Shinji; two weeks ago he had fired one which made that one, potent though it was, look like one mounted on the lightest of powered armours. They may have been plugged into the Chicago power network, but the Araska had not been modified in the same way as the Academia, and it would have fried had it tried to use all the power which an arcology could generate.

What it lacked in yield, however, it compensated for with duration. The laser lanced out to kiss the bulge of water which moved around, a vast mound of water akin to a hill, which shimmered with dark threads and the iridescences of a layer of oil. The familiar shattering of the AT-Field could be seen; the blue-green scattering of the laser stopped dead by the sidereal shifting shapes which layered around the impact point. And it kept steady; the beam focussed on the white shape in the water, no matter how it moved.

And the water sang, the call of the Herald echoing and amplified by the entire lake, filled with emotion, which struck all that heard it. It would have been understandable had it been a bestial roar, some hellish yell from a leviathan that had last been on Earth before the Oxygen Catastrophe. That could be conceptualised, categorised, limited. No, the song of Yam and its annoyance was one of inestimable beauty; the harmonics perfect, the melody extending far beyond the human range of hearing. And its magnitude was such that audio detection systems in NEG vessels and units burned out, tearing apart a frigate too close to the Herald, as it changed its pitch to the resonant frequency of the vessel's hull, shattering it apart.

self|ego|entity sense|behold|perceive potential|possible|inferior target|victim|threat!
self|ego|entity future|be|certain consumption|nourishment|devour.
The Herald turned, the water around it boiling off as the AT-Field shifted the phase possibilities so that the coherent electromagnetic radiation had always been absorbed by the water, and headed straight towards the shore.

Under Asuka's control, Unit 02 twisted, sprinting to the point of closest It had been another row. approach, the feet leaving massive dents in even the reinforced surface on which the shipyards were built, the reinforced permacrete crumpling under the incredible pressure of a forty metre biped. The square-cube law was the bane of mecha designers, akin to how thermodynamics had been prior to the invention of the D-Engine. Nevertheless, the floor held, even when one leap proved necessary to bypass a The others had condemned it as immature and unprofessional, but, frankly, she hadn't cared. bunker than blocked the way, its armoured bulk too slow to go around.

A few drops of blood seeped out of Shinji's nose, vanishing in the already vital liquid that surrounded them.

And then things started going really She was right; wrong.

Back in the command centre, the SubTacCom from which the Araska was operating began screaming red, alarms crying out with an urgency normally only saved for catastrophic D-Engine problems, a so-called “Horizon Event”. The scientists and engineers monitoring the prototype began to babble almost simultaneously.

“Weapon emergency shutdown. Trying to reboot.”
“Fluctuations in the mD/D Hybrid Engine. Connections are being cut at random and reforming!”
“Allergic reaction! Allergic reaction! DCS slash SEN nanites are being rejected by the Type-S”

“Rampancy! We have... rampancy!”

Wrapping his arms around himself, Tokita glanced from screen to screen, his eyes never stationary for more than a few seconds at a time. “Renar op camapy!,” he swore. “What's going on?! What's causing this!”

“The Type-S is going rampant. It spontaneously rejected all the stabilising nanites infused through its flesh. Look!”

Indeed, the Navy project seemed to be bulging and warping, its surface twisting as the artificial shell that covered it was torn apart from within by the black, tar-like material within, its shape morphing and twisting, forming organs and organelles at random. A phosphorescent constellation of eyes gazed from the night sky of the Type-S, gazing up at the sky for the first time.

Tokita swallowed hard, running his hands up and down his forearms in a repetitive, unconscious motion. “Get them out of there!” he ordered. “Tell the crew to eject, before it breaches their capsules!”

There was a flurry of discussion between the handlers and the crew of the Araska.

“Pods G1 to G4 are away,” Polana said, blinking heavily. “Crew reports that the Type-S has blocked the tubes for the central command pods. Escape pods will not fire.”

“Damn,” Tokita said, face suddenly haggard, as if he had suddenly aged twenty years. “They were good men.” He turned to face Xu, taking a deep breath. “ Vice Admiral, I regret to inform you that,” he swallowed again, “there has been a catastrophic breakdown in the Type-S armour, which has renatured and returned to its original instincts.” He paused and then continued. “The Araska Prototype is to be considered hostile from this moment on.”


~'/|\'~
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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)

Post by EarthScorpion »

~'/|\'~


“Hey,” said Asuka, frowning. “The laser's stopped.”

Shinji winced. “Maybe it overheated, and's running a cooling cycle,” he suggested.

“Maybe,” and that was all there was to it. the red-headed girl replied, obvious doubt in her voice.

The visual display popped back into existence. It was the Major. “The idiots at Daeva have lost control of the Araska,” she said, obviously biting back an invective. “Consider it hostile. Kill the Herald, then clean up as best you can.”

Asuka swore. “I knew it was suspicious. She was right; the other woman was wrong, and that was all there was to it. We're going after the Herald personally!”

Shinji groaned. It really didn't seem like a good idea, and he was feeling really, really bad.

“Just watch me, Third Child!”

And with that said, Asuka bent and leapt, wrapping her AT-Field tight around herself and

This time, the idiot had been supporting the older design for incorporation into the new model. Honestly, what was she? Stupid? The upgrade to cranial firepower far outweighed the downside of the increased power consumption and reduced rate of fire.

“Look,” she had said, “you're not looking at the plans for what the final model will look like. You're too limited by the incomplete Test Model and the Prototype. Just look at what the final model will look like; after all, the older ones are obviously going to be refitted.”


thrust up into the air, a perfect, impossible arc that ended up with her on top of a cargo ship holding position over the coastline, out of the water to protect itself. The ship lurched hideously as the momentum of the Evangelion slammed into it, but miraculously the hull held, even as it buckled.

Blood began to flow freely from both of the boy's nostrils, the hot blood unnoticeable in the LCL, heated to body temperature. Shinji began to feel dizzy, though, and grabbed the side of the tube as best he could.

Unit 02 crouched on top of the ship, like a predatory animal, green eyes staring intently at the oncoming rush of the Herald. Asuka clenched her hands around the control sticks, and the DF Blades on the hands and feet of activated, “No,” the other woman had replied. the arcane ward blending with the superior AT-field to allow it slice through the skin of a Herald with ease.

“I wish we had more guns,” said Shinji, weakly.

“The DF-Blades should be enough,” she replied, confidently. “And I have a little surprise for the Herald, too.” And then she pounced, casting off from the dented vessel in a way that damaged it more, up into the air only to come down like the fist of an ancient god, claws aimed right for the Herald's head.

It was a good leap. All four limbs, sharpened for cutting and tearing and slicing to the limits of mundane technology and enhanced further by sorcery and the physics-raping AT-Field slammed into the Herald's field. But one was wrapped tightly around the biped, while the other was larger, holding a hill of water safe from the volatile, toxic gas that filled the atmosphere of this world, and so the Herald's protection was popped like a ripe carbuncle, jets of oily water spraying out at high pressure from the hole that the neutralising

“You're sacrificing control for something which does not optimise the mission profile. Need I remind you what would happen if control is not maintained?”

“Oh, I know it,” she had said, smiling sweetly. “Control must be maintained at all times.”


effects of Unit 02 had punched in the Field.

The Evangelion was embedded in the head of the leviathan, the forty metre walker dwarfed by the beast. The claws tore into the thick white skin, letting a creamy-white ichor seep from the wounds into the surrounding waters.

“You really like jumping off things so that you can kill other things,” said Shinji softly, breathing deep gulps of LCL. “Are you looking for a fast-track promotion to Major, or something?”

He only received a quick glance back. “Shut up, idiot. Watch this.”

And with that said, Asuka worked the Evangelion's left arm out of the thick skin, making sure to open the wound further with the exit, then, folding her fingers into a fist, punched the Herald as hard as possible in the back of what she thought corresponded to its head, triggering the PP1-P Plasmathrower, to send a rush of energetic particles deep into its body. Hopefully, it would burn out the inside of the monster, just as it had melted the first Swarm Ship she had killed.

In theory.

In practice, it went considerably worse. The sensors detected that the PP1-P was immersed in what it read to be water, and so switched to aquatic mode, taking the raw materials it would ionise from the fluid that surrounded it, turning on the suction pumps which would take in the liquid. What had not been expected was that the thick, viscous oils of wherever the Herald had come from, combined with the vile ichors which made up its blood, would jam the intake, causing it to detect a blockage and switch to internal supplies. Of course, once the pressure ceased, the fluids began to move normally, causing it to register that the error had been fixed, and switch back to external mode. This would not have been a fatal problem, except the extent to which the PP1-P had been miniaturised from its intended version, a ship-mounted weapon intended to flush out Deep One cities, meant that the tolerances had been dramatically reduced. The pumps began to heat up drastically. In addition, a build up of gas from the internal reservoir, atomised but not yet expelled, meant that, even with the magnetic containment, the weapon began to heat up.

“Then why do you insist on these changes?” had been the response she had got.

“Because it's obvious the MP design is superior!,” she had replied, angrily. “What are you, stupid?”


It only took one of the superconductors to fail for the ionised gas to spill out into the main weapon, fusing the components and causing the internal D-Engine to shut down to prevent a Horizon Event. An explosion blossomed out from the left arm of the Evangelion.

And then the hydrocarbon-saturated water, oxygenated by the hole that Unit 02 had punched though the AT-Field which had kept that loathsome, reactive gas away from the Herald, caught fire. With a whoosh which surrounded and embraced Yam, the protective layer of the waters of its homeworld combusted, thick black clouds soaring forth.
Traitor|traitor|traitor! Traitor|traitor|traitor! Traitor|traitor|traitor!
Toxic|reactive|16 burns|corrodes|hurts hurts|burns|hurts!
Scars|wounds|pain back|head|centre pain|agony|hurts kill|kill|kill traitor|heretic|usurper!
It did not sing this time. It did not make a noise. It turned to get away from the agony, from the heat from inside the Guard of Yog Sothoth for the first time in hundreds of millions of years of existence, from the scars dug deep into it by the heretic that hung on its back, from the noxious, horrific gas which the monsters which lived in this planet used for respiration. It hurt so much. It seemed like it would always end up hurting.

"Gottverdammt! Scheiße, scheiße, scheiße! Sie haben behauptet, sie hätten ihn repariert, aber der Plasmawerfer ist schon wieder kaputt. Hören Sie mich,Sie Schwachköpfe?” yelled Asuka, mind overcome with rage, as she tried to contain the damage through the phantom pain in her own arm. “Sie haben die Reparaturen versaut und jetzt ist er hochgegangen. Wenn ich hier rauskomme, werde ich euch alle zur Strecke bringen, euch zu Muß quetschen, auf euren Leichen herumspringen und dann euch selbst zum Fraß vorwerfen!" she continued as the synchronisation ratio dropped and the attempts for Unit 02 to hold onto the back of the Herald became more spasmodic and jerky.

Yes, Unit 02 had its own problems. Prime among these was the fact that it was in the middle of a burning cocktail of oil and whatever the white leviathan used for its blood. Indeed, the cream ichor which flowed forth burned in the water, reacting even with the oxygen dissolved in the water. The temperature gauge was rising alarmingly. The left arm was damaged; the torn muscles on the left arm were exposed, bright red blood flowing forth, though it remained usable. Moreover, they were being dragged

Shinji sat at the back of the entry plug and “No,” the other woman had replied. clutched his skull. His head was a solid lump of agony, the worst migraine he had ever experienced thumping behind both eye sockets, like something was trying to push out his eyeballs. Even his eyes were blurring; he was seeing red lines before them. Everything hurt so much, in a way that felt like it would never stop. His right wrist locked up, twisted into a claw that tore at his cheek, and Unit 02 mimicked the movement, tearing out of the hide of the Herald in a way that only released more of that reactive blood.

Before his red tinted vision, the communications window opened up.

“Asuka! Shinji!” shouted Misato. “What's going on?!” She blinked, eyes worried. “Report,” snapped the Major.

Asuka forced all thoughts of revenge and rage against the designer of the PP1-P out of her head. "Beruhig dich, Asuka, ruhig Blut. Konzentriere dich. Cool bleiben," she muttered to herself. She took a deep breath of LCL. It tasted of blood... more so than usual. “The Plasmathrower malfunctioned and blew up... and we seem to be on fire,” she reported.

“I know that,” said the Major, with forced calm. “You've almost lost the AT-Field. Get a grip of yourself, and get it back up. Try to keep with it and do as much damage as you can.”

Asuka focussed. Her mind was still. She was herself, and no-one else. She was the pilot of Unit 02. The AT-Field came back at full strength, spiking up as both the shield and the sword of the Evangelion.

Shinji screamed.

“I'm not the stupid one here. I don't have certain,” and there was a pause, “proclivities MINE which resulted in something which had to be covered up at notable cost. Not to mention the long term consequences.” The brunette ENEMY had smiled, triumphantly.

She hated her so much. The idiot ENEMY didn't understand at all, and she kept on bringing it up. Everyone else was inferior; she had ensured that the negative recessives would not show, while maintaining the best common features CARE. It was necessary.

There was a hum, as the door slid open. The man WEAK who entered had flinched, slightly, as he saw the two women staring at each other.

He had sucked in the air between his teeth. “I'm sorry,” heWEAK had said, “but you're needed in the main lab. I think we have progress with the neural links, with my refined design for the nerve clips.CARE

And together they had left, the man in the middle as a barrier between the two.

BODY MINE
ENEMY MINE
SELF MINE



Shinji spasmed, autonomous, uncontrolled movements replacing any thought, blood rushing forth from his eyes, ears, mouth and nose alike. His unconscious body detached from the seat, and floated, limp, in the LCL, gravity meaningless in the neutrally buoyant fluid.

The AT-Field back active, Asuka resumed her task of dismantling the Herald, even as it tried to flee. The PP1-P may have broken, but she still had her charge beams, and she still had her claws. Digging the Evangelion's feet, and its spur, into the leviathan's back, she straightened up, relativistic particle beams lancing down from the head mounts into the wounds on the back of the beast, even as she clawed down into it, slashing down with precision, over and over again.

“Die,” she muttered to herself. “Die, die,die!”

Yam twisted furiously, trying to detach the murderous being, the traitor and usurper, attached to its back. It even dared the noxious atmosphere, leaping clean out of the water, twisting through the poison that burned it, but Asuka rode the burning white behemoth, feet fastened into its body through the aerial roll. In fact, all that produced was a clean shot for the NEG ships, and they took it, nascent suns vomited forth from the surviving ships with ventral plasma weapons, which impacted against the 'wings' of the somewhat ray-like beast, burning holes which merely sped up the oxygenated fires that licked up against it.

Back in Command, a notable percentage of the higher ranked members of the NEG military watched the auto-censored image feed. Auto-censors were a particularly useful tool for individuals not stationed on the front lines, watching image feeds. The fairly smart LAIs which made up the programmes were designed to reduce the image to a form which could be dismissed as unreal by the ape-brain, thus evading some of the more blatant triggers of Aeon War Syndrome. The most common way was to render the image as if it were an animated cartoon from at least a century ago, before the advent of photorealistic computer graphics. Sadly, the loss in clarity and the image lag for each frame to be rendered made it impractical for front-line use, and there was still AWS symptoms from the higher brain functions, which realised that the images were real, even if they appeared false. To use the long-discredited psychology of Sigmund Freud, as a 'lie-to-children' to help explain the phenomenon, the auto-censor prevented AWS induced by the Id (which was responsible for the “Viewing” AWS), but left the others open to “Knowing” AWS. But it was a help.

Of course, even the conscious mind has problems accepting that you are watching a forty metre robot surf a giant white monster which is on fire, and which just leapt out of the water and did a barrel roll.

“I'd like to say that shocked me,” declared Misato, “but frankly I'm getting a bit jaded about what the Evangelions do.” She looked around. “It's just as well that Ritsuko hasn't shown up from that meeting with Dr Miyakame; she'd be going crazy over this,” she added, sotto voce. “Possibly literally.” The Major began to gnaw at a finger nail, noticing that she seemed to have ended up in a position in this room quite outside her actual military rank from the fact that the Evangelion seemed to be able to hurt the target. “Do we have any more assets at all?” she asked the room.

“All naval assets are engaged.”
“Air assets have withdrawn; they're not doing anything. We have four wings of heavy bombers headed down from the NA Frontline, from the Migou pullback, but they're not going to be here for thirty minutes.”
“This isn't a conventional mecha fight. They're all deployed by the waterfront; we don't have enough amphibious units stationed in C2 to make a difference.”
“The Engels are there too. The Herald is out of their weight class. Even a Seraph or a Chashmal couldn't get through the AT-Field, even if the presence of your Evangelion within it is weakening it. This is a fight for ships.”

A light went on in Misato's eyes. “That ship... the cargo vessel that Asu... Unit 02 jumped onto,” she said, barely breathing. “Can we use that? I know it's unarmed, but...” She turned to Tokita, the Chief Engineer for the rapidly discredited Project Daeva. “We're going to need everything you can tell us about the Type-S.”


~'/|\'~


Asuka paused for a moment. She seemed to only doing superficial damage; without the PP1-P, she couldn't flood the lacerations she opened in the creature with ionised gas. She needed to do more damage. Unit 02 bent down, AT-Field wrapped tight around itself, protected from the intense heat from the chemical reactions in the water, and stuck both claws into an open wound, bladed fingers thrust aside, as she pulled the wound open even further, causing a fresh rush of heat, and the white leviathan to twist and turn under water as a fresh wave of agony filled its mind.

The pain only increased when the crimson titan, dwarfed by the beast it rode, began firing charge beam after charge beam into the wound, the relativistic particles in the beam tearing worm-like tunnels into the softer inner flesh.

The Herald then knew that it had to get out of here. Its oaths to the First were not worth this pain, this agony. It would retreat and sleep beneath the waves of a planet not like this one, one with a proper atmosphere and proper, truly sapient life. And it would not even be able to return and destroy this pitiful ball of iron and silicates, for this was the traitor and usurper's planet, and such action would result in its death. If only it could get rid of the thing on its back...

It was at this moment that Asuka felt a hand brush against her breast, as she fought to retain the hold of the Herald, as it tried to spin to get her off.

“Pervert!” she yelled, pulling a hand away from the controls to slap the boy in the face. “Do something useful, damn it!”

The blow, softened by its passage from the LCL, collided with Shinji's right cheek. The body, knocked by the impact, floated gently towards the back of the plug. His unseeing eyes, pupils dilated and rolled back in their sockets, gazed at nothingness.

Asuka drew in a deep gulp of liquid. “Misato,” she called, “there's a problem with the Third Child. He's unconscious or something.”

There was a pause. “His vitals are stable, but weak,” the older woman reported, an odd note in her voice. “What the hell happened?”

“I don't know,” she yelled back, as the Herald bucked from side to side, trying to build up a resonant frequency which would throw her off. “He... argh... he wasn't sounding well a bit... maybe some reaction to fact 02's calibrated differently.”

A pinch of guilt ran through Asuka's mind. This is my fault. I shouldn't have taken him in here. After all, he isn't prepared for a MP Evangelion; Unit 01 is probably different enough that there are problems with synchronisation.

No! she thought immediately. Unit 02 is mine, and I care for it. He's weak if he can't synchronise properly and faints at a time like this. It shows that you can't rely on anyone but yourself.

But still, he did look rather pathetic floating there, in the plug suit that didn't fit properly and the darker cloud of LCL around him. It was just as well, she thought, that from what they'd told her, LCL could be used as a substitute for human blood. From the change in the colour of the fluid, he'd lost a lot.

No. Focus. It can wait until after we've killed this thing.

“Right,” ordered the Major, “keep it in as much pain as possible. Hurt it. And be prepared to get away from the Herald when necessary.”

“Okay.” The clawing and mutilation of the ancient being resumed.

Back in the control room, Misato took a deep breath. “Damn. Damn. Damn. Poor Shinji.” The Major shook her head. “Doesn't matter; he's still alive. I want a full medical team to be prepared for when we recover the Evangelion. How is the clean-up of the lakeside going?”

“We have the rest of the rampant Type-S contained. The Engels have it trapped within a perimeter, and they're systematically cleansing it.”

“Good.”

Most of the room was watching the AR map projected onto the central table, as a blue icon, marked “High Priority”, pursued the Herald icon. The fires were spreading across the lake surface, the inferno of the Herald igniting the oily scum which had followed it through the hole in space, forming thick black clouds.

“One question, Major.” It was the Vice Admiral.

“Yes?”

“How did you come up with an idea like that? It's almost the epitome of 'so stupid it might just work'?”

“When it was coming in, I noticed that it would devour anything that got in its way. It was the death of the Blade of Athena that really gave me the idea. I was going to suggest that we feed it Unit 02, and have it cut its way out from inside,” she glanced at her audience, who were staring at her. “Don't worry. We've done something similar before.” They didn't stop staring. “But then there was something else to feed it. Let's see if it gives the bastard stomach ache.”


~'/|\'~


A cargo ship, with a notable dent in its side, flew over the top of the Herald, its A-Pods burning a bright blue. A fight of Auphans, the fastest of the Engels, flocked around it, firing their Plasma cannons at the surface of its hull. The miniature suns that they birthed slammed into the black, tar-like secretions which covered the ship, emerging from within the breached cargo hull through burst open hatches. More Engels stood on the surface, hand-held flamethrowers cutting a white-hot swath through the extra-dimensional entity, casting their balls of fire at the darkness.

Suddenly, they all peeled off, their own A-Pods glowing as they jumped from the carrier ship, letting the blackness well up, thick and oozing, the implicit viscera forming eyes to gaze from this new place.

The escape pod fired, expelling the last humans from the ship. The crew within the hull of the crippled Araska, as much of the ship and its Type-S armour scraped and contained within the damaged cargo ship,had been long since digested by the entity which had been intended to protect them. The ship took a tight dive downwards, into the water.

Right into the path of the Herald.

It swallowed the vessel reflexively. Why should it not? It would need nutrients to help rebuild the horrific damage which had been inflicted on it.

There was a moment, as the oozing blackness hit the back of its gullet, when it realised what the abominations which lived on this monstrous planet had done.

Just a moment, before the night-like tar-beast burst outwards, the programmed imperatives of the long-dead Elder Things still present for this particular foe.

Yam came to a stop almost immediately, as the Type-S, resplendent with its sidereal eyes, spread through the white body like a cancer, digesting and tearing apart the ancient entity from within. It now knew true pain. The agony, from the noxious gas and the burning and the high-energy particle beams; it was nothing to being digested from inside out. It could not even use the gift of Yog Sothoth, because the presence of the traitor on its back weakened it enough that the faculties which the entity had been engineered for, the ability to negative the shifting phase spaces, could allow it free reign.

The Herald did the only thing it could do in those circumstances. Shifting its somewhat protean biology (though it was nothing compared to the black cancer, which was sprouting teeth coated in enzymes designed to tear apart its flesh in the most painful way possible), it pushed the core of its soul, the glowing red orb, upwards through its body, away from the Type-S and towards the usurper that clung to its back.
Preferable|desirable|better die|cease|stop by|caused|induced specified|selected|chosen method|way|cease,
it thought, mind overcome with pain.

Asuka saw a glint of red, in the wounds she was opening, having resorted to using the Unit's teeth as well as the claws to sped up the destruction, swallowing the meat without chewing. Flexing the muscles of the Evangelion, even the damaged left arm, she tore a vast swath of hide off, pulling milky white flesh (now shot through with tiny black tubules) away. A red sphere, remarkably similar in colour to Unit 02 lay there.

And now to finish off, she thought, as she wrapped both hands about the globe and pulled it out, all the time pounding charge beam after charge beam into its surface, cutting out small chips as its surface rang like some unearthly bell. Prying it free, with a fresh current of reactive creamy blood, she lifted it up in both hands, noticing the black protrusions which grew from it, their vital vicissitudes quite unlike the geometrical perfection of the sphere. Pulling back, she slammed the forehead of the Evangelion into it.

At least, that was what she intended to do.

She wasn't quite sure what had actually happened; her jaws suddenly ached, like they had been very quickly dislocated and relocated. Moreover, her body felt wrong, as if she were subtly the wrong shape. Nevertheless, the orb had gone dim, turning grey before her eyes, flaking apart and shattering, as if something vital had been taken from it.

Then it exploded.

The explosion cast the Evangelion out of the water, hurling it through the air. It landed again, head first,in a slick of burning oils, and vanished below the surface.

It came up again, floating face down, unmoving.


~'/|\'~


Dr Akagi and Major Katsuragi sat by the window, staring out over the lake far below. Before them, vehicles scuttled over the surface of the water, trying to contain the situation. The consequences of the release of what the Araska had been using in the Type-S armour lay before them; while the entire surface of Lake Michigan was on fire, the thick black smoke roiling and burning as the polluted waters burned, a core of differently coloured flames indicating the presence of the transition metals in the water. It was like some scene out of a medieval book of the end of the world. There was a burning lake of fire beside the city, that many primitivist superstitionist groups comprised of those that dwelt outside the arcologies, called Babylon, ruled over by the Anti-Christ, leader of the New Earth Government.

Most of those groups were under investigation for Code-El cults.

Misato shuddered. The Evangelion had just devoured the black tar-like things and the Herald alike. And this wasn't the first time. That first time, Unit 01 had latched those tentacles it had vomited forth onto the red orb on the front of Asherah, and had consumed its way through the Kathirat.

They're volatile monsters, she thought. If we didn't have control of them, they'd be worse than those things from the Fall of New Kuala Lumpur. Poor Quien and the others...

She shook her head, sadly, slumped back in her soft seat.

Ritsuko glanced at her. “You did it again.”

“I was stupid. This was a strategic disaster. The lake is ecologically dead, and we've released whatever the Type-S was into the wild. I saw how fast it split and grew. And on top of that, wherever the Herald came from, it was rich in oil; the entire lake is burning.”

“You know, a hundred years ago, we'd have been preparing to invade.” She caught Misato's glare. “Yes, I know. Inappropriate. But you were thinking it too. Even you know that before the invention of the D-Engine, everybody invaded everyone else to get oil.”

“The whole thing was a farce,” she continued, ignoring the doctor. “The plasmathrower malfunctioned, the C2 fleet took massive casualties, the Araska prototype went rampant. And we should have been prepared for an attack from a Herald.”

The blond woman cocked her head, adjusting the AR sunglasses she was wearing. “Why? They haven't attacked anywhere else before.”

“Yes, but of course,” she layered on the sarcasm, “of course the first time we take time away from L2, we're attacked here. How the hell did it come here? What was it looking for?”

Ritsuko looked her steadily in the eye. “We have no idea. All we have is hypotheses and wild ideas.”

“What draws all the Heralds?” continued Misato, ignoring her. “Is it the Evangelions? Are there cultists that summon them to try to sabotage the war effort? What does it all mean!”

The scientist poured out a second pair of drinks. Neither of them were alcoholic; they had far, far too much paper-work (and in the case of Misato, explanations to superiors) to be inebriated, and so ethanol was switched for caffeine.

Misato sighed. “Thanks, Rits. I'm not going to be sleeping tonight after all this... not that I'd want to, from what I've seen, even from the auto-censored TacCom data,” she added darkly.

“It's fine. I'm sorry I wasn't there for everything; Dr Miyakame were in the safe null-bunker for the entire length of the incident.” She coughed. “And it's not the Evangelions,” she added, “since, after all, Unit 02's been active in Germany longer than either of the other two, and hasn't attracted any Heralds.”

“Forgot about that. Yeah.”

There was silence, as the two women looked out over the water.

Then, suddenly, Misato balled up a fist and punched it into her other hand. “Damn it! I'm really pissed off!”

Ritsuko leant back, a puzzled expression on her face. “Where did that come from?” she asked.

“I saw both the teenagers off to studied confinement. Shinji was on a stretcher; he was bleeding from everywhere on his head; eyes, nose, mouth, ears, everywhere. What the hell went on in that thing?! And what the hell did Asuka think she was doing by taking him in it!”

“Calm down,” said Ritsuko, quietly, taking a look around. “You're drawing attention. And, in all honesty, we had no clue that would happen. Seriously. In retrospect, it's kind of obvious that you can't just put someone in a improperly configured war machine, but no-one really thought about it in design. We've got plenty of things that mean that only the proper user could start it up, but we never thought that the pilot would take another person into the entry plug, especially not one who was already trained to operate them and thus sensitised.”

Misato made a noise of disgust. “But Asuka is meant to be a genius; she has a better degree than me, for goodness sake. And she's half my age.

“And none of us noticed it, either.” There was a bitter laugh. “Really bright people can break foolproof systems in ways that fools can only dream.”

“And the bastards in the Daeva team!” continued Misato. She really felt like breaking something right now, but she restrained herself. “Snide jerks who went wrong a lot more catastrophically than we ever have. Why the hell did the Araska go rampant like that, at the worst possible moment! And what the hell were they using in that thing?”

“I have no idea what happened,” stated Ritsuko, her face perfectly blank. Oh, some people might have suspicions about why the event happened just as the Evangelion moved towards it, but they would only ever remain suspicions. The Daeva team certainly wouldn't have known that the biological programming encoded by the Elder Things would lead the 'Type-S' to attack what it perceived to be two of its old enemies, and she certainly wasn't about to tell them. “But for what they were using; well, I have my suspicions, and, frankly, it's a sign that you can go too far with ACXB research.”

She didn't know whether to laugh or cry after saying that. She repressed both urges.

Misato sighed. “Yeah, I guess you're right.” She snapped her fingers, pulling out her dark green PCPU (the secure one), logging on, and tossed it over to Ritsuko. “There's some pretty important data in there; the entire contents of Unit 02's black box. Copy and back it up, then give me back my PCPU.”

The doctor started the data transfer, and began to flick through it while she waited.

Misato made an inquisitive noise.

“This is important,” Ritsuko said softly, even breathing with care. “Very important indeed.”

“Did they break any synch-ratio records?” asked the black haired woman, taking a sip of her drink.

“Asuka did, but that's just a normal procedure. There's a seven second period where her ratio spikes up to 99%, probably because of the danger. But look at Shinji's data,” she added, eyes narrowed. “Most of the time he's tracking as normal, a good 20 to 30 points below Asuka; probably due to the lack of A10 clips and the fact that some of the things in Asuka's LCL cocktail would be bad for the concentration of anyone with a Y chromosome...”

“Wha...?” asked Misato, sitting up.

“LCL has a cocktail of various drugs designed to maintain mental stability in solution,” explained Ritsuko, in a distracted tone of voice. “The male and female brains work differently. LCL-f, for example, has, well, a very large number of compounds, but examples include pherohydamulate, assorted hormone modulators, tetrapentaline benzoate, hexadasophospate rezol-3-4,4-ulate...” She paused. “You're not understanding any of this, are you?” At Misato's negative noise, she continued, “Well, all of the standard compounds given to soldiers, then a number only issued to special forces, the GIA, and certain branches of the OIS. You know, as a commissioned officer in a high AWS-risk assignment, you're on some of them, too, you just don't know their names.” She shook her head. “But we're getting distracted. Look at these regions, before he drops to zero from the loss of consciousness.”

A number of graphs displayed on screen were pushed towards Misato, who indicated that, yes, they were visible to her.

“Look at those points. If I run a mod function over them, they appear to be fine, and even increased over those regions, but they drop down to almost zero on the graph.” She shuddered. “That's impossible. It shouldn't be doing things like that. You ... it's impossible.”

“That word,” began Misato, “I don't think it means...”

Ritsuko smiled excessively sweetly. “Not another word from you, thank you very much. Yes,” she declared, thumping her hand down on the table, making the drinks rattle, “this is important. And impossible, yes. We have yet another anomaly with synchronisation ratios. As if that incident with Rei and Unit 00 wasn't already bad enough. And it's completely different from that.”

She tapped her fingers on the table.

“This may need some further study...”


~'/|\'~


“Hmm.”

“And what is that supposed to mean?”, the female Nazzadi with the insignia of a NEGN Colonel asked, with a pronounced hint of irritation in her voice.

“Nothing,” the blond woman replied, still staring at the computer screen. “Well, that's not strictly true.”

The black-skinned woman sighed. She hated her assignment with the Special Weapons Division at times like this, she really did. The projects and developments were often brilliant, revolutionary, and had potential for paradigm shifts in warfare. This one was a particularly good example; it could massively reduce the number of recruits that the NEGA needed, by an ingenuous Command-and-Control system that would, through extensive automation and specially trained commanders, replace many of the basic infantry and power armoured troopers. But the scientists who came up with these things... well, a colleague had described them as a bunch of opera divas prancing along a catastrophe curve, and frankly, right now she was inclined to agree with him.

They always seemed to prevaricate, and took a perverse pleasure in being obtuse in ways that meant that you looked ignorant for asking them. And bloody stupid word games in coming up with names for their projects, who could forget that? It was a plague infecting the scientific community, and even the damn engineers!

Nevertheless, she bit. “Please, explain.”

“The EMSS scores for these two candidates are point three zero four over what they should be. Both of them. To as precisely as we can measure it.”

“So?”

“It's a common trait for that entire test group. But only that one. B2, P2, C2, T3; all of those ones have been within half a standard deviation of the expected results. But all of this group are consistently higher than they should be.”

The Nazzadi Colonel stared into the other woman's eyes. “Is that a concern? What's causing it?”

The blond woman sucked in air through her teeth. “For the first question; no. There does seem to be a corresponding increase in LAAM score; three point nine one on average, but that's still safely below the safety threshold. We've screened out all the high LAAM candidates; an 83, for example, would be horribly risky. The retroviral modifications would leave them very prone to synchronisation; they'd probably lose control of the part of their brain that would permit them to distinguish between reality and psychically induced hallucinations.”

“And yet I've heard it mentioned that you've tolerated the existence of single candidate with an LAAM of 100?” the Nazzadi asked, acidly.

“It is true that the Second Infant has that score. He is a one-off; the test bed, so to speak, for the technologies. At no point has he suffered a synchronisity incident, however. It was a necessary part of producing the gene templates and mapping the different nature of these parapsychic powers.

“Why then do you permit the continued existence of the subject then?” she continued, in the same tone of voice.

“He is a stable Perseus commander; you have access to his VREES records. I can assure you that we have no other subjects with an LAAM of over 50 involved in Project Perseus, and the mode is 21.41.”

“And the other part of my question?”

“No, there is no theory that could explain this.”

The blond woman hoped that her choice of words would go unnoticed. The ignorance so prevalent in society about the difference between a hypothesis and a theory could even be useful sometimes, annoying though it was.

“It may be an diet factor outside our control, or even something to do with arcology air quality,” she continued. “All newer Batch-Types are being raised in proper control groups, but these ones are in a normal environment, and so we can't account for all the variables,” she added. “The Batch-Types are promising, but the eldest candidate in that group was only born six years ago, and none of them have the mental fortitude nor the established personalities to be able to synchronise with the adult, albeit blank minds of the Type-Numerals, without, as we have found, catastrophic damage to their immature minds.

The black-skinned woman nodded. “But what we at the SWD are really interested in is whether you will be able deploy sufficient Paragon candidates as Perseus commanders for Operation CATO.”

The blond woman nodded. “That is already under way. Arrangements have been made for all the batches that we're deploying, and the cover stories are in place. C2, L2 and T3 are to be put in command of the new Type VII models. Each candidate should be able to command a force about the size of two companies; this is their first major operation, and they are not properly trained. We can only justify yearly immersion sessions, beyond their normal check-ups.”

“Despite the given consent?”

“Yes; it was only limited, and there are the cross-contamination effects from the other Project. Both of us need the retroviral alterations to make them suitable candidates, although we're looking for different functions in the expressed qualities. It's fortunate that the Second and the Third are what they are, which allows us to share resources.”

She cleared her throat.

“Anyway, they're only serving as motive force and command, through; we wouldn't actually make them marionette the Type VII. Only the Second has displayed such abilities and survived; we lost several candidates in the old training regime. In addition, the candidate groups for B2 and P2 were viewed as too weak for the Type VII, but they will be deployed in command of the obsolete Type VI, in company sized formations. Moreover, the Second Infant, the Prototype, will be deployed with VREES, commanding a brigade level formation, as usual.”

The Colonel nodded. “Excellent. The B2 and P2 groups are a bonus. I'm glad my predecessor maintained funding to keep the Type VI models in storage. And PR?”

“Cover stories are in place. By preventing new memory formation, they'll be easier subjects for trained Grade Three MMW implantation. They won't remember a thing.” The blond woman's voice was tinged with regret.

The Nazzadi woman's face took on a sympathetic look. “I understand that from an outsider's viewpoint, what we're doing is horrific. But so would the casualties in CATO if we didn't do this, or the long term strategic implications if we let the Dagonites maintain control.”

She sighed.

“It's all about the strategic implications. Some people would ask if we have the right to make a thousand people suffer so that one million can live. And I would argue that we don't have a right not to. Necessity is a harsh mistress. It's what distinguishes real life from fiction. If this was a story, we'd be able to wish upon a star, believe in ourselves, rescue the prince and save the world. But the world doesn't work that way. Honourable warriors are wiped out by those who use all the assets they have, and if you're hot-blooded, you can't go beyond the impossible and defy probability and break the heavens.”

She turned to leave.

“What you can do is get yourself and people who rely upon you killed. I've seen it far too much.”


~'/|\'~


Kaji looked away from the window, a slight grin on his face.

“Well, that was an eventful day,” he said, staring over at Gendo Ikari, who stood, impassively, at his desk, his eyes concealed by the way that the artificial life in the geodome reflected off his AR glasses. The case lay on the desk, sealed, the internal wards still up.

Kaji tilted his head slightly. “It was because of that, wasn't it,” he said, trying to get a response.

There was silence, as the two men stared at each other across Gendo's vast office. Slowly, Kaji walked over to the table, keeping his eyes locked on the Representative.

“It's but a fragment of the whole... but I think a fragment is enough. It's alive, I'm sure of it, even though it's encased in diamond and trapped within the Bah'ri Diß. I could feel it.” He moved his gaze to the case. “It's the key to the Human Iteracy Project, isn't it?”

Gendo then flipped open the case, revealing the black and yellow of the artefact, with its Tsabian occult symbols lit on the surface as the active binding held. Within the central crystal, a figure could be seen, vaguely foetal, sealed within.

Gendo then spoke. “Yes. This is the High Priest of the Outer Gods.”

They stared down at the object, as the thing sealed within squirmed.

“I shall not say his name so close to him, but you know to whom I refer.”


~'/|\'~


It was Tuesday, and they had finally released Shinji from the Ashcroft Clinic, after they had failed to detect any major consequences from... well, from whatever had happened. Shinji wasn't quite sure what had happened (but how it had hurt!), and Dr Akagi, when she had come to visit him, had been remarkably incoherent about the specifics, mutterings about impossibilities.

“... and then she told me that,” Shinji put on a voice, “well, of course we never put two pilots in the same entry plug. I mean, it's only a highly sensitive war machine controlled by a direct noetic interface specifically calibrated to a single pilot, so of course it will be fine when you put someone calibrated for a different system in the same machine as the intended pilot. No, of course, we just have those pilot profiles there for fun!” Shinji looked around the classroom, then sighed, turning back to Toja and Ken. “It went on like that for a while, using rather excessive amounts of sarcasm. Long story short; they're never doing that again, we're never to do that again, and what the hell were we thinking.”

Ken gave a suppressed groan. “Oh man, I can't believe I missed everything. I mean, now I'm never going to get to go in an Eva entry plug. I feel like I've been cheated my look around, you know. And I missed that battle and everything!”

There was a snort from Toja. “Knowing you, you'd have been busy mourning the loss of all those ships and stuff. You'd probably have been on the floor, sobbing, one arm held in the air filming. Of course, with the other hand, you'd have been busy...” He noticed Shinji's glare, and tailed off.

“Did you even pay attention to what I was saying? What are you, stupid? You're lucky not to have to do this. It hurts. It always ends up hurting. And they ended up bringing me all the classwork I needed to catch up on in the Clinic, so I didn't even get to have a rest.”

Ken's face screwed up. “But they're so awesome...”

“Then you're an idiot.”

Toja patted the other boy on the head patronisingly. “Don't get upset. It normally takes him a few days to get back to his old self after this kind of thing. A bit more snappy than usual, though.”

“If I'm being snappy, it's because I'm surrounded by idiots who think it would be fun to be put through a skull splitting migraine then locked up in a mental ward for a few days while they run checks for mental contamination,” snapped Shinji. He held up a hand. “I'm sorry.”

Toja shook his head. “You shouldn't be. Ignore him. He's just being an insensitive jerk.”

“No, I'm just being irritable.” He pinched the bridge of his nose, trying to change the subject. “So, what did you two end up doing while everything was going on?”

Ken shrugged. “Not much. They basically took us to a sort of games room. We played some DoEA III...”

“... which I totally crushed you at,” pointed out Toja. “You were very cocky right up until I got that flank attack.”

Ken crossed his arms and looked away. “I still don't get how the hell you managed that. I had your landing zones locked down. How did you managed to slaughter my main comms centre?”

Toja deliberately flashed his incisors. “Assassins, you forgot about assassins. You only had basic troopers staffing the facility, and you were too busy stopping me landing more Replicas that you didn't notice that I'd noticed the gap in your sensor grid. Stealthed right in, then hacked your sensors, which allowed me to turn off your AA radar in a narrow arc and land all those troops I'd cued up.”

“No, that's not right. I had an AWACS up in the air, too. I know that you took my radar down, because that was obvious when the Comms Centre didn't let me select it, but the AWACS didn't spot it.”

Toja only smirked at that.

“No, seriously, tell me that.”

“I don't think so. Tell you want, we'll have another game...” he paused, “can't do it tonight, I've got the homework I didn't do yesterday... well, we'll see if I can do it, then get online.” He cocked his head at Shinji. “Hey, Shinji, do you play DoEA III? Want to see if you can slap some sense into Ken, because he's an idiot. Despite being a military freak, he's actually rather bad at RTSes.”

“Am not.”

“Are too. Remember the last LAN game? You got slaughtered, even though we let you have extra resources at the start.”

“That's because RPGs are better, anyway,” retorted Ken. “Better graphics, better immersion, a proper MMO system.”

Shinji coughed. “Let's back up a bit. DoEA III?”

“Doctrine of Eternal Aeons 3. It's a Real Time Strategy game for the PC. Basically, you're controlling an army. There are three factions, the humans, the not-Migou-honestly, and the orcs-in-space; pretty standard RTS fare, all in all. The AI is awesome; they've got the individual AI for your units down really well; they take cover properly.”

Shinji shrugged. “Meh. I'm more a Syzergy 2 player.”

Ken moaned. “Hurgh. Consoles are worse. The graphics are worse and nothing quite controls like a proper, desk-mounted AR scheme.”

“Well, then, sometime you can let Misato kick your arse at... wait a moment. I'm trying not to let you anywhere near her. Ignore that. So that was it? You got to sit around playing video games while I got a splitting headache and bleeding from my eyes, mouth and ears. Pfft.” He sighed. “Life just isn't fair.”

“Well, someone else wanted to use the PCs after a few games, so we ended up watching a documentary on Iceland.”

“Iceland?” said Shinji, in a disbelieving tone of voice, one eyebrow raised.

Ken shuddered. “Don't do that. It makes you look creepy. It was pretty interesting, not your normal InBroad rubbish. All about the Dagonite conquest from the Migou and the defences and stuff.”

Toja nodded. “Yeah, all about the Dagonite conquest from the Migou and the defences. I thought it was going to be boring and rubbish, but it was pretty interesting.”

Shinji grunted. “As I said, not fair.”

Toja grinned wide. “I can tell you something else that's unfair. You're going to have to see more of that girl. She may have been hot, but you could use her personality to, like, cut metal. Like some kind of acid or... help me out here Ken, what's the name of that stuff you use to, like shape, metal.”

Ken cocked his head to one side. “A nanofactory?”

“No, when you've got the thing out, and want to polish it.”

“You recycle it, then make a new one. The 'notes you get for the recycling mean that you're only paying for the energy, and that's pretty cheap.”

“No, idiot. Damn it. This is going to annoy me all day if I can't remember the word.”

“What word?” called out Hikary, from the other side if the room, eyes on Toja.

“What's the stuff you use to polish and grind stuff down?” Toja replied.

She sighed, “Do you mean sandpaper?”

He snapped his fingers. “That's the word!” He saw that Hikary was still staring at him. “What?”

“It means that I know that you haven't done your Historical Literature homework, Toja”, she snapped back. “If you'd been paying attention, you'd picked it up from reading.”

The Nazzadi flapped his hand in the direction of the amlati. “I just didn't have much time this weekend, you know.” He turned back to the other boys. “Anyway, you're going to have to spend tonnes of time with someone with a personality like sandpaper, grinding away at your nerves.”

Shinji frowned. “What are you talking about? Who said she wasn't coming here?”

It was, of course at that exact moment that Asuka Langley Soryu confidently strode through the door, thus once again proving that reality was a bit of a dick, and excessively fond of irony.

Ken and Toja groaned simultaneously, bringing their hands into contact with their faces with a notable slap.


~'/|\'~


White spoke.

“It proceeds. Another Herald slain, and the chain of inheritance is pulled closer.”

Blue spoke.

“Indeed.”

Red spoke, a hint of agitation in her voice.

“But the way it proceeds is not liked.”

White spoke.

“Explain.”

Red spoke.

“How was it that it was not known what the Navy was using in that military project? That should not have been possible.”

Green spoke.

“The involvement of a higher power is suspected?”

Red spoke.

“The involvement of Gendo Ikari is suspected.”

Yellow spoke.

“Excessive paranoia is being displayed. Fact: we do not control everything. Fact: we must rely upon agents, who are fallible and cannot be guaranteed to be loyal to us exclusively. Fact: the security on projects, whether Naval or otherwise is immense. The plan must remain flexible.”

Green spoke.

“That is true. Excessive rigidity will only lead to breakage. A failure, and that which shall be broken shall be humanity.”

Red spoke.

“Then how did Project Daeva get its collective hands upon the extra-dimensional entities known as Shoggoths? Consider this; in the Necronomicon, Abdul Alhazred denied most feverishly...”

Green spoke.

“... that they could exist on this planet. Yes. It is known. Alhazred was wrong. Empirical evidence exists that they were present in Antarctica; both the Dyer Papers and the Danforth Notes confirm this, and let the First Innsmouth Incident not be forgotten.”

White spoke.

“Yet it would not be wise to dismiss Alhazred so quickly. Remember the name appears in the ancient histories of the unknowable Tsab. Policy must be to note correlations whenever they occur. A precipice is being walked here; a fall, and all shall fall.”

Blue spoke.

“Agreed. And this is what is worrying. It should not need reminding that Antarctica is solidly under Migou control,and has been since the start of the Second Arcanotech War. The New Earth Government Navy would not be able to extract arcanoxenobiological samples from there.”

Red spoke.

“There is a ninety-seven point zero one three percent probability that the Migou have cleansed the site in its entirety. That is why the subject was raised.”

Yellow spoke.

“Nevertheless, the paranoia displayed is excessive. There are no known links links to Gendo Ikari, when there are so many players in this game; albeit so many unaware of their participation.”

White spoke.

“Absolute control is impossible. Absolute precision is required. Absolute knowledge is required. Absolute knowledge is impossible. These facts must be faced, and overcome them as best as can be achieved, by eliminating as many variables as possible. Control must be maintained”

There was silence.

Green spoke.

“Do the Nine Daughters of Ægir still slumber? Does control still remain?”

White spoke.

“Control remains. The Nine Daughters of Ægir must be concealed until they are deployed, so that the Texts are fulfilled. Remember this; the Texts are not our prophecy. We seek to corrupt them from their original meaning, and for our control over the Celestial Concordance to come about, the initial conditions must proceed as prophesied. Hence, the Nine must wake before the One, and if we have replaced the Nine with our own, who fulfil the criteria, then the One cannot wake.”

Green spoke.

“Agreed.”

Blue spoke.

“Agreed.”

Yellow spoke.

“Remember; CATO is soon. Only one more.”

Red spoke.

“And then Xue'Vehulu'Ia'Ia shall be made whole, and under control.”

Green spoke.

“Not to mention the peripheral benefits. CATO shall remove one major threat to the plan.”

Yellow spoke.

“Indeed. It need not be reminded that the consequences should anyone else control Apotheosis be dire.”

White spoke.

“Everything we do. Everything we have given. It is all for the species as a whole.


~'/|\'~
Last edited by EarthScorpion on 2009-05-14 06:23pm, edited 1 time in total.
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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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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by Vehrec »

It should be immediately obvious that those Shoggoth samples were recovered from Soviet stockpiles prior to the Migo invasion of Russia. I don't know why they haven't realized that it's all leftover weapons from the 'colder war' :P .

As for the feedback in the Eva, I'm withholding my theories for now on the grounds of 'too much speculation, too little evidence.' Although I would love to see the psychologist's notes on whatever Shinji admits to seeing in there.

Also, as a side note, current evidence suggests that there was no single sudden oxygen catastrophe, but instead a series of pulses that increased levels from about a millionth modern concentrations at the creation of the earth to 9% modern levels to almost twice what we have today during the Carboniferous period, when Oxygen was about 35% of the atmosphere. Yam would not have liked that particular time period at all.
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by EarthScorpion »

Item 1: The Fane Relief

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Discovered in 1929 by the moderately famous Welsh scholar and archaeologist, Edward Fane, the so-called "Fane Relief" was found in a dig in the north of Mesopotamian, and appears to be an example of pre-Sumerian writing. It is estimated to date back to approximately 8500 BCE.

Although the language has been observed to share some characteristics with Linear A, a paucity of samples means that it has never been translated. The item itself appears to have been some kind of veneer with stone, so to speak; a thin layer of a greyish clay was layered upon a metamorphic rock {A}, and the clay scraped away and fired to produce a permanent record. This is a fascinating technique,which appears to pre-date similar attempts in the rest of the world by at least a millennia, although precise dating has proven difficult.

The Relief was bought almost immediately by an American eccentric, resident in Providence, and remained out of the public domain until his death, whereupon it was donated to Miskatonic University. It was one of the items rescued during the Nazzadi assault in the First Arcanotech War, and currently resided in the New Miskatonic Museum of History in Chicago-2, until its removal from display, early in 2087.

The contents of the Relief have generated considerable amounts of speculation, due to the fact that the language remains, as yet, untranslated. The culture appears possibly related to the proto-Indo-European of the time, although even that is debated, with claims that it is more akin to proto-Semetic also flying about. This speculation has only been enhanced by the images that accompany the text:

- Top Left: There are two figures. Unfortunately, only one of them remains intact; the one to the right has lost most of its head. The one on the left, designated [1] appears, to the modern eye, to conform to a female body shape, but we cannot apply modern gender stereotypes, and so it might as well be one of the "Long Haired Kings" of proto-Indo-European mythology as the "Mother Goddess" figure so often theorised by the untrained {B}. The proportions are akin to that of a child, but the artistic skills of this culture are underdeveloped, and modern recreations have shown that this layered clay is hard to work with. There is an arrow pointing towards [1], which may suggest that the text is linked with it, but this is not known.

Figure [2], the damaged one, is a classic "stick figure". There may have once been more detail on the head, but this is not known. One of its arms appear massively malformed, twisted out of shape in a manner not dissimilar to a claw. [2] is also accompanied by a circle, and a circle with a dot in it. This may be a method of counting, although the mathematics base used by these people is unknown, and moreover it may have been an honorific or a name, given the warrior-like pose of the figure.

Top Right -There are three figures along the top of the tablet, designated [3], [4] and [5]. Both [3] and [5] appear worn away to nothing, nothing more than roughly diamond shapes, but [4] is more intact. Superficially, it resembles a humanoid figure,but its hands are drawn claw-like, in a manner quite unlike any of the other figures, and there appear to be extra appendages extruded from the back. From the way that the three are grouped together, with the words below them, this may be an early form of what might be viewed as classic Trinity worship, which is a recurring memetic theme in human societies. {B}

Figure [5], by contrast, below the text in the top right, is considerably more simple. It appears to be a human figure, gender indeterminate, standing beside what it obviously a lake of some kind. This may show that these people relied upon fishing for their survival, or some other kind of link to the water.

Right: There are two figures on the right, [6] and [7]. They both are drawn in a similar fashion, and appear to be intact versions of [2]. [6], on the left, appears to be a warrior; it carries a spear. Notable about [6] and [7] are the unusually thin waists, perhaps a sign that they were a militaristic culture that despised the fat. [6] has two circles beside it, both with two dots in each of them. The meaning remains unknown. There are also two protrusions from the figures shoulders; what these are meant to represent are unknown.

[7] is drawn in a fashion very similar to [6], with only minor differences. The circles beside it have one and three dots in them, indicating that they are unique individuals. Moreover, [7] has a vertical protuberance from its head, which, from its asymmetric nature, appears somewhat like a ponytail,or perhaps a Mohawk. The figure does not carry a spear; instead, in the same hand (the right hand), it carries what appears to be a shield. This is interesting, and might be a sign that this is a dual pair of gods; the spear-bearer the hunter and the shield-bearer the protector. In classic Indo-European mythology, therefore, [6] would represent the male aspects of the tribe and [7] the female. If so, the way that [2] is isolated from [6] and [7] might indicated that the clawed one is somehow opposed to the shield and spear. {C}

Bottom left - The object, [8], has generated perhaps the most speculation, and the least is known about it. There is text in proximity to it, with an arrow connecting the two. The vaguely building-like shape has lead many to suggest that the creators had permanent settlements, and thus a somewhat agrarian lifestyle, a hypothesis backed by the bread-like shapes in the top section. If that is the case, then the bottom might represent a well; the vertical line is classical for depictions of water.

In conclusion, the Fane Relief is a fascinating example of early writing, but we remain crippled by our lack of knowledge of what it actually means. The hope still exists that more samples can be found, as the Middle East remains under NEG control, but that must wait for a dedicated expedition.


{A} An Examination of Primitive Clay-Working, Clarkson, 1978, Elisabeth Hastamet

{B} The Unknown Gods, SFP, 2042, Aramdeep Faziz

{C} Mythologies and Memes, Chyrsalis Publishing, 2071, Paliny Wise-Fingers
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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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Academia Nut
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by Academia Nut »

Oh you.

While a lot of your stuff is fairly easy to interpret, I just have to ask, was the impression of Shroedinger's Wave Equation in the lower right corner just something of my mind due to the first symbol looking like psi and the repetition of other symbols, especially the ))'s, creating the idea of a form of a differentiation notation, or am I just crazy?

Okay, scratch that, we all know from past history that I am indeed crazy, but hey, whatever. Also, I know you'll never tell us, but its still fun to examine the tidbits given so far.
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by Aranfan »

My gut says the little girl is Alma. Also, on SB it was pointed out that the warrior people are the Eva units, with the top dots being the child # and the bottom dots being the unit #.


Also, Bah'ri Diß, Bardiche, how did it get separated from Feito-Chan?
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by EarthScorpion »

Chapter 10

What Must be Done to Win?




~'/|\'~


Tokita, the disgraced Chief Engineer of the similarly disgraced Project Daeva sat slumped in his chair, fingers tapping against his front teeth.

Of course, this wasn't going to be his office for much longer. When the mighty fell, they fell hard. Project Daeva was being vivisected before his eyes. The Engel Project had already leapt for most of his best arcanotechnicians, and other groups were going for the rest. He had just had to fill in the transfer form for his best arcanobiologist to Project Amunet, that bunch of fucking necromancers who dressed their actions up as arcane applied physics, and he had had just about enough. They were going to be moving him out tomorrow, to “house custody”, while the Registered Technology Enforcement division of the Federal Security Bureau asked him very pointed questions and tried to find out as much as they could about the Type-S

Yes, he hadn't registered with the FSB for the use of the extradimensional organism. That was sort of the point of a secret weapons project. He had received permission from his superiors from the Nay; permission which had vanished all too quickly after the Chicago-2 fiasco. So what? Project Evangelion hadn't registered whatever the hell those things were, and the Engel Project,he knew, normally only went after permission after the first field tests.

But they were Ashcroft groups.

The Ashcroft Foundation. That mass which switched between cancer and symbiote at its own will. It had the thrice-damned monopoly on the D-Engine and the A-Pod, which mean it controlled all modern power generation. The last nuclear fission plants had been shut down in between the First and Second Arcanotech Wars, hanging on slightly longer than the coal plants, which even now mouldered outside of the arcologies, often home to small communities of Rainers, those barely registered, barely supervised transients who dwelt outside of the safety of proper habitation. The Foundation had drained the countries in the New United Nations dry, the Nazzadi engineer had heard, and forced the issue of the Second Cold War by wrecking the economies of the gas-and-oil-dependent states with the D-Engine, then the old manufacturing economies of the East with the nanofactory. From what Tokita had learnt of pre-AW1 history, the recession which had resulted from the mass unemployment and government defaults had been localised to the countries who hadn't accepted in the Foundation, bartering their wealth for massive infrastructure projects and the insidious influence of the Ashcroft Advisers.

Because, after all, everyone knew that the best people to “advise” (and by advise, it was more like “issue ultimatums to”) a government were the appointed, unelected representatives of a massive transnational corporation that didn't even issue shares and was the sixth largest economy in the world in 2050. Sure.

And so it came to the modern day, where the NEG Global Debt to the Ashcroft Foundation was greater than Global GDP. But they were kind creditors, weren't they. They didn't call in the debts, and they charged a negative rate of interest. All they asked for was near total autonomy from the practical rule of law, entire areas of major arcologies under their control where they enforced control, not the NEG (Tokita thought of the London-2 Geodome, of its near identical twin, the Tokyo-3 Geofront, and of the C2 Headquarters, which was practically an arcology in its own right), and nearly unlimited influence over government figures.

It was enough to make you vomit.

And so their Projects, with excellent salaries, the best medical care, both mental and physical, in the world, had come and poached almost all of the staff he had so carefully built up. Oddly enough, none of them had gone to Project Evangelion. No, those bastards had just swooped in and taken the plans for the mD/D Hybrid Engine from the Navy, in return for some unspecified aid in the future. The mD/D Hybrid Engine; superior even to the innovation of the Type-S. It improved on the standard D-Engine, still basically the same device which Czeny had designed using the theory calculated by Ashcroft and Yi, notably, allowing a distributed grid without the whole issue of space-time rips, which usually occurred when too many D-Rifts were bought into close proximity. And now it was going to vanish into Project Evangelion, into the Project which had destroyed the people who had actually invented it.

Oh yes.

Tokita was quite sure that everything that had happened was all the fault of Project Evangelion. It wasn't a coincidence, after all, that their Mass Production Evangelion, the only such model they had built in all the time that they'd had, was present for the unveiling of the Araska. It wasn't a coincidence that a Herald had attacked just in time for them to show off in front of all of the top brass that they were the superior model, in a way that left them almost completely undamaged while the C2 Fleet was wrecked.

And it certainly wasn't a coincidence that the Type-S went rampant exactly as the Evangelion approached it.

It was probably their Director of Research and Development, the disgraced engineer pondered. She had tried to sabotage them via the medium of opinion, in the demonstration where she kept on claiming, without proof, that the Araska was unsafe. And, surprise surprise, it went wrong just as she had predicted. Suspiciously like she had predicted. She had probably taken out the nanites infused into the flesh of the Type-S, the ones that kept the organism under control, probably by introducing a flaw into the computer code that managed the distributed network, given the way that the runaway growth had proceeded. The Evangelion Director of Operations probably wasn't involved, though, he thought; too stupid and rash for such subtlety. It was sensible to keep track of the staff of your rivals, and her records clearly showed why Evangelion wanted someone like her. She was practically made for the job.

Tokita suddenly knew that there was someone else in the room, from the way that the acoustics of his breathing shifted.

He looked up.

A women stared back at him, eyes boring deep into him. She tilted her head slightly, and spoke;

“I believe, Tokita, that you would like both a talk and a new job.”

He stared at the woman blankly, hand groping under his desk for the panic button.

“Who are you? What are you doing here?”

The woman's expression did not change. “You are bitter about the loss of your Project, your humiliation by Project Evangelion and the shame of having released Shoggoths into the wild. Funding will be provided in return for your sole allegiance and your servitude to the maintenance of control.”

He found the button and pressed it.

Nothing happened.

Red smiled broadly, and took a step towards the terrified engineer.


~'/|\'~


“You know, I would have said a while ago that you're going a bit far,” said Toja, idly.

Ken shrugged. “What changed?”

“Now I know you are. Way too far.”

“Why?”

Toja sighed. “Use your brain, Ken. I know you have one. She's an Evangelion pilot. You're taking pictures of her and selling them off. At some point, someone is going to catch you with your camera, and if you're very lucky, it will just be her. If you're not... well, do you want to have another chat with the Foundation, or worse with the FSB or OIS. Or Hikary, if she finds out about those pictures you got in the changing rooms.”

“It's fine. I locked the files for no-sharing. They won't even be able to transfer them from their PCPUs without effort.”

“Listen. You're being really stupid. Do you want to be expelled or something, or worse? Give it up.”

“Oh, don't worry,” said Ken, airily. “I'm not taking pictures any more. I'm just using stills from,” he dropped his voice, “the security cameras around school. You know, the low sec ones that're really old; not the newer ones. They won't be able to trace me.”

The Nazzadi's jaw dropped. “You're a moron. I want nothing more to do with this. I know nothing of this. Right, maybe before the punching incident I'd have helped you, but after the OIS thing... I never want to go near them again. I still have nightmares from being in the room, with them asking all those questions.” His voice dropped. “Almost as bad as the red glow from that thing. No fucking way ever again.”

Ken's eyes darted around. “Oh, shit. Damn, I didn't realise that. Yes, I'm stopping it right now.” He paused. “Oh god.”

There was a brief silence.

“Out of curiosity, how much have you made?” asked Toja, his voice purposefully innocent.

Ken pulled up a document on his wrist PCPU, datafiles streaming across his glasses as he scrolled down. “Almost one hundred T-notes. Yeah, it was good.” There was a moment of breathless silence. “Toja.”

“Yes?”

“The objection would surely only be to pictures of her, you know, like real pictures...”

The boy narrowed his red eyes. “Maybe. What are you getting at?”

“There wouldn't be any objections if we just used the pre-existing images, took some pictures around the school, and then edited in the shots of her, adjusting for lighting and stuff, would there?”

The silence extended.

“Yes.” Toja rolled his eyes. “Yes, there would be. Just give it up.”

Ken made a frustrated noise. “Fine.”

~'/|\'~


Timana, the head engineer of the team assigned to Unit 01, looked up at the knock on his door.

“Come in,” he called out, without looking up from the model of the Evangelion that floated before his eyes. He pulled his fingers apart, magnifying the join where the RA-09 plate meshed with RA-10, seeing if the issue with the carapace-dermal interface had been fixed.

There was a cough from in front of him. He looked up.

“Oh, it's you, Lieutenant Ibuki.” He flapped a hand over the desk. “Please, have a seat. I'll just be a few minutes.”

And... yes, it's bonded properly this time. The issue with the stresses from the missile packs shouldn't arise.

He shrunk the projection back down, down to a 28mm figurine on his desk, then took off the AR glasses, massaging the bridge of his nose.

“Sorry to leave you waiting,” he told the young woman. “I was just checking that we'd resolved the problem with the new Type-C armour.”

“And have you?” asked Maya.

The man nodded. “Yes. It wasn't vital, but if the problem hadn't been fixed, then there was an outside chance that firing those new missile packs that the Type-C added might cause slippage between the dermal layer of the ACXB organism and the the ceramic plates.”

“Well, that is good news,” she replied, then hesitated. “What do the engineering teams think of the Type-C?” Maya asked.

“In all honesty, it's a slight improvement for us. The Type-B is very close to the Type-C anyway; the Zero Zero team are much more thrilled with us, as they'd been operating with a hybrid Type-A/Type-B before this refit. Really the only changes are slightly better modularity, those M-Packs on the shoulders, and thicker chest armour.”

She cocked her head. “Really? They didn't replace the integral weapons with those installed on the MP Eva?”

“No, Lieutenant.” The man sighed. “Don't get me started on Unit 02. The Berlin-2 team have transferred over here fine, and they're... well sort of professionally annoyed at what happened. They've removed the Plasmathrower prototype completely and installed one of the Lightning Cannons that Unit 01 uses. It's malfunctioned twice in battlefield conditions, despite good performance in the lab. Miniaturisation issues, they say. They had to refit the entire arm, including reducing the local immunosuppressants to allow tissue regrowth, to repair the damage from the exploding prototype.” The Nazzadi shuddered. “And they've had to replace several armour plates due to XB contamination. Is there something about the presence of the Third Child which gets the Units contaminated by extra-dimensional entities?” he asked, in an aggrieved tone.

Maya blushed slightly. “I don't think it's his fault,” she protested. “It's just that the Heralds are biological nightmares.” She shook her head. “How many spares do we have for each of the Units, anyway?”

Timana made a frustrated noise. “It's not as bad as it was just after Mot,” he began, “but we only have one full set of spares for each Evangelion. Both Zero Zero and Zero One are right on the edge; we have the Type-C plus one full set, and that's all. The Type-B was pretty much too contaminated to use again, even though it's cross-compatible. Did I mention that one set of Zero One's armour was undergoing abiogenesis!” he added, in an exasperated tone.

“Yes, you did, Timana,” Maya answered. “At the last meeting. But only one full set? That's not good.”

“Quite. The Heralds are attacking faster than we can built fresh replacements. We're suffering from a lack of economies of scale, basically. We have to get them made in Navy Capital-Grade nanofactories, and we're only scheduled so much time. If we had our own plant, we could handle it, but there's no way,” the man with a voice of authority, “that we could get a dedicated plant. They're needed for the Navy; they can lay a frigate backbone down in the time it takes for us to make a new breastplate.” He shook his head. “From what I've heard, the Zero Two team are better off; they have at least three breastplate sections, which we could... that's Zero Zero and us 'we', by the way... can use, now that Zero Zero and Zero One have been upgraded to use the Type-C armour. But even they're suffering from a lack of left-arm sections, due to the fact that they've had to scrap the PP1-P, which had been integrated”

Maya nodded. “Thank you,” she said. “I'll let you get back to what you were doing; I just was asked to get a personal evaluation of the states of the Units,” she added, as she left.

The Evangelion Project had been chronically underfunded since before she had been transferred here by the Foundation, the young woman thought as she walked back through the hallways. A sudden new flood of funding had come after they had killed that first Herald, but money could not buy time. That was the problem they kept up running up against, and the young woman knew that Dr Akagi had been keeping back something about the armour since coming back from Chicago-2. The Director of Research and Development had been the one who had personally told her to get a first hand account from the Chief Engineer of the Zero One team, even when she had all his reports in front of her, accessible with the wave of a hand.

She shrugged, as she entered the changing room adjacent to the sterile area which the detailed Magi work was done. Oh, sure, the supercomputers could be operated from conventional AR panels and even antique keyboards, but that wasn't optimal for the really high-level analysis work.

She began to unfasten her uniform, the loose slacks the Magi technicians wore on days they knew they would have to do a dive.

The interface between the human brain and the horrifically complicated unison of the organic, the arcane and the machine that was the Magi could not be properly utilised if there was another barrier between them. Inside the Magi, the foibles of the human mind, its inability to comprehend higher dimensional objects, its tendency to get confused by a mere hypercube; all those were washed away by the Magi. The mind-machine interface which the Magi used was another spin-off from the Evangelion Project, a parallel evolution to the Engel Synthesis Interface implanted into the central nervous system of every single Engel pilot on the planet. With it, the brain was no longer restricted to its component neurons; tasks could be instead be performed by the Magi.

Maya removed the grafted synthflesh from her scalp, exposing the sub-dermal interface layer below. With great care, the synthflesh and the hair that grew from the engineered organism was placed in her storage facility. She winced slightly as she ran her hands over the ceramic composite that was bonded directly to her skull, warmed to body temperature yet so alien in feel to flesh. Underneath the hard outer layer, where the top of her skull should have been, lay layers of microelectronics, cortical jacks hanging down into her brain tissue like silver icicles.

In the initial trials, the brain had even delegated autonomous functions to the more efficient Magi. Dr Akagi's mother had almost died in the first trials; other technicians had. The Etemennigur defence system maintained a necessary level of separation between the technician and the Magi, but the alien view of reality (or, perhaps, the more accurate view) when connected to the supercomputer trio took its toll. Extracted its price. Claimed its victims.

Magi technicians burned out fast, at a rate comparable to that of front-line Engel pilots.

Maya winced as she stepped into the cleanser, grabbing the handles at the sides. She really hated this part, she really did. All her hair stood on end, as a static charge built. She kept her eyes closed, even though the permanent contacts protected them, and waited, as the machine stripped away her top layer of skin. The sudden blast of cold air on the newly revealed epidermis told her that it was complete, even as the faint scent of ozone filled her nostrils.

The woman groped in front of her for the immersion suit (really a glorified name for a short wetsuit), not opening her eyes until she had found it. The donning of this garment was nothing more than ritual by now. Without prompting, she went into the newly opened clean room, and lay down in the coffin-like vat of clear fluid, thick and viscous.

Oxygen mask... check. Test function... and there's the hiss, good.

“Breather is fine from this end,” she announced into the mask.

“Oxygen supply reads green from this end,” Makota announced from the monitoring facility, on the other side of the black glass which filled one side of the room, a discontinuity in this place of sterile whiteness. “Releasing the Demon.”

The Demon was technically the DMIN, the Direct Magi Interface Node. But as Makota watched Maya fasten the helmet, the thick cable snaking out from the back; one end into the Magi, the other splitting into the tendrils which fed into her brain, he really felt that the nickname was more apt. The Nazzadi was not qualified to operate the Magi in this way, and he preferred to keep it like this. Part of it was that he would really rather not undergo surgery which removed notable amounts of the skull, leaving a hole in it like a newborn infant's, covering the hole with ceramics, and sticking two-way probes into his brain. But he also guessed that it was something cultural. Humans, homo sapiens sapiens would do things to themselves that people like him, homo sapiens nazzadi would not consider.

It probably came from not having been created as a weapon of war by alien fungoid insectoids to wipe out your base genetic material.

And so he watched the neural feed, looking for anything that would mean that he would have to pull the plug. Meanwhile, below, the woman's limbs twitched as Maya began swimming through the true virtual reality which the Magi generated, trying to fit together the data gathered on Yam into the models based on the observations of the previous Heralds.

Lal had told him something, he remembered, suddenly, with a pang of guilt. He hadn't thought of Lal in a while, ever since the man's nervous breakdown. Gurpreet had mentioned that he was out of the Clinic, now, away from the Magi. Now, what had he said?

Oh yes.

“I think,” he had said, explaining what the Magi felt like, “and my thoughts cross the barrier into the synapses of the machine, just as the good doctor,” and that had been said with heavy sarcasm and an ironic twist of the neck, Makota thought, “intended. But what I cannot shake, and what hints at things to come, is that thoughts cross back. In my dreams, the sensibility of the machine invades the periphery of my consciousness: dark, rigid, cold, alien. Evolution is at work here, but just what is evolving remains to be seen.”

No, Makota did not trust the Magi at all. They were a tool, but a tool which was potentially dangerous to its users must be watched. But then again, so much of what the Evangelion Project did was like that. He hadn't expected to encounter this when he had accepted the promotion, recruited from among the arcanotechnicians of the New Earth Army to the Ashcroft Foundation. Something inside him screamed that some sacrifices were too great, that you shouldn't play around with peoples' brains, that it would be better to let the Migou win and wipe out the collective human subspecies than lose everything that made us different from them.

The Migou made their mecha from an unholy hybrid of machine and organism, transplanted brains from organism to organism, made decisions based purely upon their alien logic rather than based on any care for their men. They were alien monstrosities, utterly inhuman, but intelligent; more intelligent than mankind, in many ways. Cold, methodical and precise.

What became difficult at times was distinguishing any single thing that they did which the New Earth Government would not go.

Such thoughts Makota kept to himself. If he expressed them out loud, when employed by such a sensitive project, he'd probably be disappeared by the OIS or the Ashcroft Foundation. If anything reappeared; well, it certainly wouldn't be unmodified, possessing all the same memories and beliefs.

And the fact that he could think those thoughts was the only proof he had that something akin to that had not already happened him already. And technically all it meant that the hypothetical people building his memories were smart.


~'/|\'~


Second Lieutenant Asuka Langley Soryu, designated pilot of Evangelion Unit 02, Slayer of a Herald was being bored to the point of insanity by the inanity of the babble of teenagers.

Gods, they're just so stupid.

And, in a related and somewhat more direct fashion, she was also being annoyed to the point of violence by the gratuitous amount of junk letters and messages to her PCPU that they were sending her. Not only was she having to run a tight spam filter on the hand-held device, the idiots were resorting to meatspace spam, clogging up her assigned locker with paper jammed into every corner. An additional aggravation was that they weren't even bothering to hand-write the letters; they'd just chosen a personalised “Hand-Written” font and printed them out. There was such a thing as effort after all.

And, on top of all that, she was being forced to sit through basic ASCIET classes; not even undergraduate stuff. The stupidity of most of the human population amazed her, sometimes. Well, a lot of the time. Pretty much always, come to think about it.

Some people might call her intolerant of others, and perhaps suggest that she might consider lowering her standards. She would immediately dismiss them as willing to settle for less, and suspect that they had anti-intellectualist tendencies.

Of course, she was not about to let that show. If they were going to make sure that she sat her ASCIETs, even if she already had a better qualification, so that she would mingle with others and undergo the mandatory continually assessed socialisation testing, then she was going to do the best that she could.

Because if she didn't, they would probably be sarcastic at her and suggest that she failed at normal human interaction.

And she wouldn't have that. Couldn't have that.

She had been placed in the same class as the other two Children. The presence of the Third Child, Shinji, was annoying her, especially since she was forced to live under the same roof as him. She didn't particularly like him, and she was fairly sure that the feeling was mutual. Her queries to why she was staying with Misato and him had been brushed aside when they told her that any Children not resident in London-2 would be staying there, due to 'security reasons'. Nevertheless, at least he understood somewhat life as an Evangelion pilot was like, despite his inexperience, unlike the rest of the masses at the Academy.

Which bought her neatly onto the subject of the First Child, Rei Ayanami.

You can see just from looking at her that she is not a brand new pilot.

Of course, the fact that she's the First Child, while I'm only the Second, might also indicate that she has been doing it longer.


Asuka mentally rolled her eyes at that comment, and tuned back into the conversation.

“... and, yeah, it really stunk!” said a blond (rather plump, if the athletic Asuka would say so) girl, a thin pair of AR glasses perched on her nose.

“I know exactly what you mean!” replied another one, who would have been described as 'mousy' were it not for her coal black skin and red eyes.

“But you got the results, yes?”

“I'm sorry,” interjected Asuka, politely despite the boredom she was suffering, “but do you know where the First Child... that is, Rei, is?”

She received shrugs all around.

“No-one really... knows what she does or where she is,” the blond one said, picking her words carefully. “She's... odd.”

“Even for a White. There's something about her that sets your teeth on edge,” added another girl, with streaks of blue in her hair. “Like she's watching you. Really really watching you.”

“There's this way that she can give you her full attention,” muttered the Nazzadi.

Asuka frowned at that last comment.

“Normally, you see, when someone's talking to you, they're also thinking of what they're going to do next, whether there's any good food for lunch, whether they'll be able to get some games in this evening. You know, thinking stuff,” the girl continued, softly. “She doesn't. She looks at you, and she's thinking of you. It's like...” she wrung her hands together, “help me out here.”

“Like when your father caught you doing something where you were really small, and he would glare at you even before he'd entered the room where you'd broken something because he'd heard the smash, only you didn't know that because you were like five or something,” the blue-haired girl whispered, body instinctively curling up in the memory.

“My dad never did that,” said the plump blond one. “That was always my mum's role.”

There was a subtle change in the air.

“... but the principle remains the same,” she continued, hurriedly. “It's a feeling of shame and guilt, as if she disapproves of you interrupting her time and you should go and find something better to go do. It's the same sort of feeling that...”

“What are you lot talking about?” asked Hikary from over their shoulders, a subtle tone of menace in her voice.

“... uh, nothing, Hikary,” she continued almost seamlessly, with only the implication that the individual who she had about to mention had somehow appeared (with near perfect comic timing) behind her. “Asuka here was just asking if we knew where Rei Ayanami was.”

“And you were going to tell her, were you?” the amlati continued, in the same tone of voice.

“No, because we don't know where she is,” answered the Nazzadi, muscled tensed. Asuka found this somewhat perplexing; the class representatives on TV seemed to be studious, slightly mocked teachers pets, not the figure of fear that the slight xenomix with her pigtails seemed to be.

“And you weren't 'spreading rumours about a fellow classmate', were you?” continued the grey-skinned girl.

“Of course not,” the other girls chorused.

Hikary smiled wide. “Good. Just as well, really. Come on, Asuka. I'll show you where she is most lunchtimes.”

As the German got up to leave, “Have fun with the Tyrant,” was whispered by one of the other girls, in a tone so soft that Asuka couldn't recognise which one it was.

They walked down the corridors for a while, in silence.

“I have to say,” Asuka said, a smile creeping up her face, “I was rather impressed by that.”

“People just need to be reminded that there are certain standards to be followed,” Hikary replied. She sighed. “Look, whatever they told you about Rei, it's not really true. She's just not a people person.”

“You know her?” Asuka queried. If the amlati girl was friends with the sidoci, it would both be an easy pre-existing friends network, and useful.

“No. No-one really does, but you pick things up when you've been class representative for seven years.”

“Seven years.” Asuka was surprised by that. The other girls hadn't seemed to like Hikary, but she had to be popular to keep on being re-elected. “That's pretty impressive.”

The other girl shrugged. “I get good grades and I can organise things, unlike most of the class.” She smiled faintly. “And I'm the class champion of DoEA III, although that's not really the right criterion to be selecting people for a position of authority.”

“DoEA III?” The red-haired girl frowned. “Oh yes, that PC game.”

“The design team graduated from this Academy. They use us as beta testers and balance for patches, and they made it an interclass tournament. We've held the record ever since III came out, and we held it for II, as well.” Hikary cocked her head. “You play?”

“Nah,” she shrugged. “I'm a console gamer; Syzygy 2. Fighting games are just better.”

“You're wrong, you know,” the other girl responded, “but we'll just have to let it slip.” She paused. “What were we talking about before?”

“You were telling me things about Rei Ayanami.”

“Oh yes.” The grey-skinned girl sighed. “Yes, it's not her fault. Some of us xenomixes are just born as sidoci; about 1%, as I recall. They're always a bit strange. Well, she's a bit stranger than most,” she admitted. “She's been here all through, but we really don't know anything about her. The L2 Representative is the one who visits her guardian-teacher conferences, and we haven;t seen any other family,” and then she gave a somewhat bitter laugh, rather unlike her normal demeanour, “although, since this is an Ashcroft Academy, it's not as if people who've lost parents are uncommon.”

Asuka's eyes widened. Two questions were due to be asked, and she asked the one she thought was more important. “Wait? She's related to Shinji?”

Hikary frowned. “I've been trying to work that out myself. There's something about the jawline that's common to both of them, but if you look closely, past the fact that she's a sidoci, and you can see that she's doesn't have exclusively Asian features. There's something about the eyes. But, logically, if they're related, they'd have different mothers. A Nazzadi built from European genestock, probably, or maybe a second generation mix between European and Asian genestock.”

The Migou had not build the Nazzadi fleet from scratch; the black-skinned, red-eyed constructs had been based on samples of human genetic material. What was fascinating for Nazzadi genealogists was the fact that the fungi from Yuggoth had even maintained a high degree of continuity between gene sources, to keep their mass produced army realistically diverse. There were genetic testing services which tracked the area where the sample biological material had come from. There had even been cases where the people taken had proven to be recent, and there were living homo sapiens sapiens relatives; where the truth of what had happened to Great Uncle Jim-Bob, who disappeared from his car late one night, finally came out. It was still infrequent enough that it made the local news, but it had a small-but-noticeable effect on human-Nazzadi relations, as a sharp reminder that the two branches of humanity were so very close.

“But I've seen pictures of the Representative,” pointed out Asuka, “and he doesn't really look much like either of them.”

“Shinji has his eyes,” stated Hikary. “You see it sometimes, if he raises an eyebrow. It completely shifts his face.”

That in turn caused one of Asuka's eyebrows to raise. “You've been “seeing” that idiot's eyes,” she stated, somewhat in disdain of the other girl's bad taste.

Hikary shook her head. “No. He's nice enough, when he's not having time absent... I hope you don't intend to get beaten up in those things...”

“I'm better than he is,” the red-haired girl stated.

“... but he's not that attractive. For one, he's built like a stick, no muscle anywhere. I bet he forgets to feed himself; he looks like the sort.”

There was an odd look in Hikary's eyes as she said that.

“How far is this place anyway?” declared Asuka. “Does she really trek all the way over here in all her free time?”

“Just two more slights of stairs. She goes up to the roof and reads, as far as I can tell.”

“Why did you find this out, actually,” she asked curiously.

The other girl shrugged. “My father always says that knowledge is power, and that knowledge is useful. Mind you, he's the Ashcroft Representative on the AEB, so he says things like that a lot.”

“AEB?”

“Arcology Education Board.”

The eyebrow returned to its elevated position. “And you wonder why you keep on being made class representative,” Asuka smirked.

“It's not like that at all,” Hikary protested, as they emerged into the fake sunlight of the arcology dome, only about thirty metres above them at this point. The reinforced spires that supported the mass of buildings above them, strengthening the roof, could be seen to surround them. The Academy was in the middle of this level, at the centre of the dome.

Rei Ayanami sat in on one of the benches on this roof, beneath a fake sun, a fake wind blowing through her hair. It was scheduled that there would be a slight shower of water from the ceiling at precisely 13:45 today, lasting for 15 minutes, before stopping. She had noted this down, and was aware of the risk of getting wet should she prove to be outside at that point in time.

But for now, she was reading.

Sol shrugged in the darkness, the words on the page said. This was a real book, too, manufactured in a nanofactory, but the words printed rather than just displayed on a screen. 'I really know nothing about politics... or the Core's accuracy in predicting things. I'm a minor scholar from a small college on a backwater world. But I have a feeling that something terrible is in store for us... that some rough beast is slouching towards Bethlehem waiting to be born.'

Duré smiled. 'Yeats', he said. The smile faded. 'I suspect this place is going to be the new Bethlehem.' He looked down the valley, towards the glowing Tombs. 'I spent a lifetime teaching about St Teilhard's theories of evolution towards the Omega Point. Instead of that, we have this. Human folly in the skies, and a terrible Antichrist waiting to inherit the rest.'


A shadow fell over her book. She moved it away from the obstruction. The darkness returned.

“Hello,” a voice declared in a tone that burned with arrogance to her ears. “You're Rei Ayanami, pilot of the prototype.”

She lives in her name, Superbia, Rei thought, ignoring the annoyance.

“I'm Asuka. Second Lieutenant Asuka Langley Soryu, pilot of Evangelion Unit 02.”

Rei closed her book, keeping a finger in between the pages to maintain her place, and gazed up at the other girl, pupils the only point of darkness on her face. Behind Asuka, Hikary flinched back slightly, then straightened up again, forcing herself to meet that gaze.

“Let's be friends!”

“Friends?” Rei echoed. She really wished the other girl would go away and leave her in peace. “For what reason?”

“Why? Because it's convenient.”

Rei opened her book again. “Convenience is a sufficient reason. However, other directives stand before the preservation of the friendship which now exists between us,” she replied, turning that terrible gaze from Asuka, who seemed entirely unaffected by it.”

Asuka paused, stance deflating. “You... do understand what friendship is, right?”

“A mutual bond entailing benefits and obligations for both parties,” Rei stated in her monotone, all attention seemingly on the book. “It is a legacy of the social pack-pursuit origins of humanity.”

The German's face took on the appearance that most people's did, when they had an extended conversation with Rei. “You're strange.”

“Asuka!” gasped Hikary, in the background. “That's not right.”

“And you're charming,” said Rei softly.

Asuka turned to leave, as this wasn't getting anywhere.

“Oh, hah hah,” she added over her shoulder.

“Thank you,” Rei replied, in the same monotone.


~'/|\'~


Shinji was slumped in front of the television, flicking through channels. He knew that he really should be doing his homework, as the combination of training and a PsychEval tomorrow would mean that he wouldn't have any time, but at the moment, he didn't really care. He just wanted to sit in a wonderful state of apathy.

Frowning, he picked up several beer cans left on the table, and transferred them to the recyclic. Honestly, there was no excuse not to just put the cans, made out of a hardened resin (which was much easier for a nanofactory to make from base materials, rather than tapping its metal reserves), in the recycler as soon as they were finished. He hoped that Asuka would be less avowedly indolent than Misato.

Not that that was difficult. There were pre-recylic landfill sites (now mostly salvaged and used as raw materials for the voracious nanofactories of the arcologies) with a better sense of cleanliness than Misato.

//Flick//

A studio audience was chanting a name.

“Sindry! Sindry! Sindry!”

Of course, they almost certainly weren't real. In this age of easy computer modelling, the production company had in all likelihood merely bought a standard “Low Brow” package, with each individual specimen given a randomised behaviour set to provide a suitably heterogeneous audience. All in all, though, they were probably less sophisticated than the AI opponents in a computer game.

A rather maternal looking Nazzadi, her black hair shot through with grey in a way that made her look almost grandmotherly, walked on stage, her clothes stylish while remaining understated, and smiled in the direction of the cameras, letting the applause from the audience wash over her.

She raised a hand. “Thank you, thank you,” she said, in a voice that, despite her origins as a vat-born, showed no trace of the Nazzadi accent, instead elongating her sibilants in a way that had made her memorable among the perfect elocution that pervaded television . “Thank you. I'd like to say hello to all of you, and to all of the viewers watching from home. Welcome to the Sindry Show; I'm your host, Sindry.” She cupped her hand, and turned to another camera. “That's me, in case you hadn't guessed,” she said in a stage whisper, as an aside.

The audience laughed precisely on cue.

“Thank you, thank you,” she said, blushing slightly. “And ladies and gentlemen, have we got a show for you.”

“Have you?” called back the audience, all those who had an Enthusiasm quotient of over 0.43 joining in.

“Oh yes I have,” she replied. “In the back room, we've got Bayl waiting with a girl born from an act of egocest.”

There was a mixture of jeers, hisses and indrawn breath from the audience.

“Yes, I know,” she replied. “Her mother, perfectly legally, went through the arcanotherapeutic sorcery which flips your gender, turning men into women and women into men. They call it 'Beckon the Unexpressed',” Sindry said, making the inverted commas with her fingers. “But what was not expected when it was developed by arcane researchers was that some people would use it to get themselves pregnant.”

She turned to the other camera again. “You know, I don't think that those scientists and sorcerers were all that bright,” she added, in another stage whisper. “I mean, haven't those eggheads ever been on the metanet? Once anything to do with human sexuality is invented, it's guaranteed that it will be used.”

There was a mixture of boos and cheers from the audience.

“Before we can begin, we've got another one of Dr Eliphas' Explanations, for the weird and strange things that biology does. Over to you, Eliphas.”

“Egocest can only be performed with the aid of the arcanotheraputic sorcery known variously as Beckon the Unexpressed, Aphrodite's Touch, or, more colloquially, Gender Bender,” began a man's voice, speaking in refined, somewhat archaic Received Pronunciation over animated images. “After this rite is performed, over three days the subject's body painlessly shifts to what it would have been like had they been born as a member of the opposite sex. This is not a genetic shift; a man keeps his XY chromosomes when he becomes a woman, and a woman keeps her XX chromosomes when she becomes a man. However, apart from that fact in genetic testing, it is impossible to tell that it has occurred. This was originally developed as a method of gender reassignment far better than the crude surgeries of the twentieth century, allowing people to live out their lives happily as members of the gender they feel that they should have been born as. Of course, it did not take long before it saw wider use, by people who wanted to see how it was like for the other gender, and, inevitably once it had been found that it could make mixtures which did not occur in nature, in pornography.

The image focussed in on a strand of DNA, showing the classical double helix. “It was found that the individuals who underwent this process remained fully able to produce children if they had been fertile before hand. This immediately saw its uptake by same-sex couples who wished to conceive a child which was naturally theirs. This is where a few of the oddities with the procedure were found. You see, an individual born as a man has XY chromosomes, and these remain, even if their body becomes that of a woman. That means that one quarter of all pregnancies began by an individual born with male genetics miscarry immediately, as a foetus with the YY pairing of sex chromosomes cannot survive. Meanwhile, all babies conceived by individuals with a female genetic code are all female, as there is no genetic male to provide the Y chromosome. This has raised questions about whether men are now fully redundant,” there was jeering from the male members of the audience, “as for the first time ever, an all female population could now perpetuate itself. However, such a unlikely prospect has been overshadowed by the tragic cases of egocestuous children which have emerged.”

“Egocest can be performed by either gender, although it is easier for women, due to the issues of genetic men with their Y chromosomes bearing children. The individual obtains sperm while male, then switches, whether to or back to, female, and inseminates themselves. The infant conceived thus has their mother and father as the same individual.”

The camera cut back to Sindry. “So, they're clones,” she said. “Haven't scientists failed to make successfully cloned individuals, even before pressure from us made it illegal?” added the Nazzadi.

The camera cut back to Dr Eliphas. “No, they're not clones. That's what makes it so bad,” he replied. “You see, normally, half your chromosomes come from one parent, and half from the other. That's 23 from each. But each egg, and each sperm doesn't carry the same 23; that's why brothers and sisters aren't identical. It's why there's even such a thing as brothers and sisters. And in the case of egocest, the children don't inherit the same mix as their parent had. Some genes which their parent had different copies of, so-called “heterogeneous” genes, they inherit two copies of the same one. And in many cases, that means that the child ends up with multiple recessive inherited diseases, even if their parent was only a carrier for them. The consequences for the children is the reason it is illegal, and classified as zeroth-degree incest.”

“Thanks for explaining the facts, Dr Eliphas,” replied Sindry, when the camera cut back to her. “He's such a bore, but we love him anyway,” she added as an aside, to laughter from the audience. “Well, now that the good doctor has said his thing, let's bring out the guest!”

There were cheers from the audience which turned to gasps, as they saw that the somewhat brutish looking man, Bayl, was pushing a wheelchair. In it was a woman, looking to be in her early twenties, but from the way she shook, a constant tremor in her hands, and the slight twist in her facial features, it was clear that she was not well. The wheelchair was positioned opposite to Sindry, who sat down.

“And what's your name?” she asked.

“H-h-han-n-n-ah-h,” the girl stuttered heavily, her voice thick as if she couldn't move her tongue properly. “I-i-i a-mm tw-tw-tw-e-n-n-n-ty w-w-on.”

Shinji shuddered. These kinds of show were sick. They'd grab dysfunctional families and people from wherever they could find them, especially the poor from outside the arcologies; no, worse than that, because people actually volunteered to show this kind of thing on television. It was inevitable that they would bring out the egocestuous parent at some point too, subjecting that poor girl to even worse humiliation on television. Where they got those dysfunctional people, screwed up in all those novel and interesting ways, was a mystery to him. Was there some kind of agency that found them all and recruited them, for their own purposes?

Nah. No-one would employ anyone who was as dysfunctional as the people on these shows.

He actually thought less of either Misato or Asuka for watching that show, given that it had been left on that channel.

//Flick//

“Save Humanity! Join the New Earth Government Arm...”

//Flick//

“and after all, it's better!” stated out a rather enthusiastic female voiceover.

The screen was filled with a horde of butterflies, a multicoloured chaotic mess of brightly coloured insects, flapping in random patterns which coalesced into a drink can.

“Gulmoth! A better drink for a better person!”

The drink cans split into their component butterflies, one last time filling the screen before the advert faded to black.

Shinji shuddered. The targeted advertising had picked up Misato's taste in goods, and so the unskippable adverts had homed in on her demographic with unerring accuracy, showing her exactly what she wanted to buy. It would take the LAIs a while to overcome the inertia of choices, and realise that there were more people resident in the house.

A solemn violin replaced the previous pop track.

“In 1999, humanity stood alone, unaware of the greater cosmos,” a deep voiced man stated, over the sad music. “Bush the Younger had inherited the throne of the United States from his father. The violence of the Cold War had died down with the conquest of the Middle East by the United Nations. But secessionists who deny their authority are everywhere, and in the background, religious cults lurk.”

A silhouette of a man stands before an open doorway, clad in a long black trenchcoat.

“And one man knows all about them.”

The man pulls two machine guns from his belt.

“Parapsychic.”

Two swords are unsheathed from the scabbards on his back, levitating free in the air. Around him.

“Spy.”

The man's sunglasses glint in the dark.

“Saviour.”

The man speaks, in a deep, gravelly voice, with a notable Nazzadi accent under his obviously affected South African accent.

“Let's see how your cult does against my Colt.”

A guitar chord strikes.

“Piyumana is,” states the voiceover.

“SNAKE!

FIST!”

The theme music strikes up.

The boy sighed. The Snake Fist series. He'd forgotten that a new one was coming out. Critically panned; really, really commercially successful. People were idiots.

//Flick//

“But have you found the murderer yet?” asked a pale faced man, notable streaks of white in his hair, despite his youth, as the camera focussed on his face. “We are paying you a lot, detective.”

The Nazzadi woman, hair dyed purple, and dressed in a suit just a little tighter than might be expected, smiled faintly. “I'm afraid I can't do that, David,” she replied.

“And why not,” the man demanded, angrily. “We heard you were the best, T.”

“And I am,” she answered calmly. “The Tangency Detective Agency is the best around; we can find information from anyone on almost any subject, no matter how obscure.”

“Then why can't you find the person who killed my wife!” he shouted at her, moving towards the woman.

T was completely unruffled by that; despite the immanent threat of violence, she merely adjusted her hair, and wondered over to look at the plants on the desk. “Bodies... they're such a peculiar thing, you know, David. Flesh, blood, skin; they're just a machine. You can take a human apart piece by piece and replace every single bit. You can even systematically replace the entire brain, through vivisection and systematically applied arcanotherapy, although they will lose all the memories in those removed parts. Nevertheless, autonomous functions remain, and the new brain tissue has the learning ability of a newborn. There are even people who cut out and regrow their own language centres, so that they can learn new languages at the same rate as an infant.”

“What are you getting at!” snapped David.

“And yet,” she continued unabashed, “kill someone, and there's almost no way to bring them back. Oh, sure, there are myths and tales, but the only way really known is sorcerous, and doesn't bring them back as much as lock an extra-dimensional entity into the shell, which believes, at least for a short while, it is them. Even when we could replace all the broken parts, making them as good as new, something vital leaves the body around the point of death.”

The man gave a cry of frustration, turning his eyes to the ceiling. “Just... leave! You aren't helping find her killer, and I'm paying by the hou...” He was silenced, as an arm wrapped around his neck from behind, and he felt the pressure of a gun barrel against his ear.

“That wasn't your wife's body,” hissed T into the same ear, as she held a UT-9 needle pistol up against the skin. From the shock on the man's face, he had no idea how she had moved so fast. “The skin was too soft, too fresh. I considered briefly that she was a New Flesher, with an obsession with regular skin graphs to keep her seeming young, but the inside of her mouth was wrong, too. That was a vat grown replica, unliving but genetically her, so that someone could fake her death. And you are an illegal sorcerer.”

“Oh, come on,” began the man, before T tightened the arm around his neck.

“The plant on your desk is not Dactylorhiza sambucina, as you would have people believe, but instead is Dactylorhiza licinii, a close relative under strict control by the OIS due to its use in summoning rituals. Now,” she said, sweetly, grinding the pistol against his ear, “why don't you tell me where exactly your wife is?”

The audience can see a flicker of panic in David's eyes. “They'll kill me!” he stuttered, eyes wide.

“The OIS won't kill you if they have proof that you're human,” T replied.

“Not the OIS!” he shouted, eyes dilated wide. “Never the OIS! I won't be me that long! It's already started! Kill me now!” He swallowed, a trickle of blood running from his tear ducts. “Look for the goddamnned Soul and Seal!” His body wracked in agony. “Oh, gods! Kill me! God's in her heaven...” he screamed, his voice degenerating into babbling, as the blood flow increased.

T squeezed the trigger. The needler didn't make a noise, the thin shard of metal accelerated silently to subsonic velocities straight into David's brain.

He slumped to the ground.

T squeezed the trigger a few more times, standing impassively over the body, making sure to destroy the brain and heart. Seven shots, in total.

“The Soul and Seal?”

The screen faded to the credits, with an anachronistic Tudor piece of music playing in the background.

Shinji made a noise of annoyance. He'd forgotten that the new series of T for Tangency was on. He'd have to watch the episode properly some time later; he wasn't in the mood for kind of convoluted plotting in a T episode, not to mention the fact that Season 1 had shown how much they loved foreshadowing. This time he wasn't going to fall for it; he was going to keep a notebook and watch for any catchphrases or hints of theme arcs. Yes, T for Tangency, with its pronounced tendency to get diverted into things that the script writers felt were interesting at the time, was a hard show to watch when you didn't want to have to think. No one even knew what the entire running theme of cats was in the first series was about, although that wasn't to say that the metanet hadn't guessed. Some people had speculated on the connections to the old Bast myths of ancient Egypt, some that the fact that there had been cats at all of the important scenes of the Castellan arc meant that the cats were secretly controlling everything, and some just that the writers felt that cats (especially kittens) were cute, and liked putting them in surreal or humorous situations.

He checked the menu. The news on EBC wouldn't be on for a while.

I wonder if Unit 02 will be in any pictures?
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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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//Flick//

“We hold life to be sacred, but we also know the foundation of life consists in a stream of codes not so different from the successive frames of a watchvid,” said the Chinese man on the panel. “Why then cannot we cut one code short here, and start another there? Is life so fragile that it can withstand no tampering? Does the sacred brook no improvement?”

There was a round of polite applause from the audience; a real one, as these kind of topical debate programmes needed a sapient audience to pose their questions, even if anyone who wanted to attend had to be vetted.

The host inclined his head. “Well, I can see that Miriam is positively dying to respond to that answer. So, Miriam, what is your opinion on that question from the audience, about whether the genetics laws should be loosened to allow for prenatal repair of embryonic defects?”

The red-haired woman nodded her head vigorously. “Thank you, Pravin,” she said, in an American accent. “I am fully opposed to such a violation of sacred human dignity, and I believe that all right-minded people would oppose such a potentially slippery slope. After all, if we begin to tamper with the human genetic code, where will we stop? The next generation may be similar, but the one after that? And after that? What monsters will be spawn from our genetic material; beasts akin to the horrific cannibals they call ghouls? Will we next create false gods to rule over us? How proud we have become, and how blind!”

“I object strongly to such a blatant slippery slope argument,” interjected the Ashcroft scientist on the panel, as he adjusted his AR eyepiece. “Who really believes that just because we repair the faulty genes that would produce a congenital defect that would kill the child by the age of 30, that we would lose all sanity and become inhuman monsters. Rational discourse should be what decides these laws, not an appeal to the authority of a Bronze Age text written by people who would have been driven mad to see humanity in the Steel Age, let alone now. Man's unfailing capacity to believe what he prefers to be true rather than what the evidence shows to be likely and possible has always astounded me.” The Russian sighed in a rather patronising way. “We long for a caring Universe which will save us from our childish mistakes, and in the face of mountains of evidence to the contrary we will pin all our hopes on the slimmest of doubts. God has not been proven not to exist, therefore he must exist.”

There was loud, but unevenly distributed clapping from the audience. Several of the faces that the camera panned over looked offended, as did the red-haired woman on the panel.

The host cocked his head slightly. “Although this is a provocative topic, I'm afraid I'm going to have to end it here, so that we can cover the other questions before the end of the show.” He flicked down on the desk. “The next question is from Warata, from the Loughton District of L2.”

The camera focussed on a middle aged Nazzadi who stood near the front of the audience, his hair dyed a dark brown.

“Does the panel feel that use of a Migou bioweapon against Chicago-2, which was successfully contained, was due to the recent string of triumphs across the North American front, where our forces rolled back the Bugs all across a wide front? And does that mean that the Migou are feeling under pressure, if they resorted to the use of such a weapon?”

The host nodded. “Yes, that has been one of the major news stories in the last few days. Sweeping triumphs all across the Canadian province, combined with the Migou use of a large extra-dimensional entity as an attempted decapitation blow against the New Earth Government capital. I'd like to reassure everyone that the entity was stopped, although Lake Michigan remains sealed due to biological contamination.” He paused. “Over to you first, Colonel Santiago.”

“Well, firstly I'd like to congratulate our forces for the wide-scale triumphs against the fungi from Yuggoth,” she began, and paused while mass applause erupted from the audience.

“Okay, quieten down, so that she can continue,” said Pravin, after about a quarter of a minute.

“Thank you. That we could push the forces back was a sign that the increase of funding in the last few budgets is paying off, as the Engels enter into full use. In fact, I think we can put a large amount of credit for these victories down to those high-tech additions to the NEA, which have allowed us to push the biomechanical creations of the Migou back through superior firepower and armour. And yes, I do have to say that the use of biological weapons in this way was very alarming, but we've known for a long time that...”

Shinji snorted. That would probably have had Dr Akagi ranting and raving over the credit that the Engels were getting. That certainly seemed to be the official story they were putting out; there was no official connection between any of the Heralds; that first one had been “an advanced Dagonite mecha”, while Mot had been some kind of unidentified spacecraft.

He yawned and stretched out. The bickering on Query Hour was relaxing in its own way, and he really couldn't be bothered to move right now.

And then the doorbell rang.

He groaned when he realised that Misato wasn't home yet, and so he would have to do it. A somewhat unlikely saviour showed her face, though, as Asuka went to do it. Over by the door, there was an exclamation of “Finally”.

And then the boxes started flowing in. Shinji could only watch in horror as crate after crate began flowing through the door, an endless succession of delivery men gushing forth and spreading out like a liquid, maintaining their volume but filling all available floorspace with the boxes.

He managed to hold his tongue, as Asuka directed the stream of crates to wherever she felt they were more convenient, until after the deliverers had left.

Shinji took a breath.

“What the hell are all these? What are you doing!” he said, in a somewhat panicked voice.

“That's not very nice,” Asuka replied without looking at him, having already peeled open one of the boxes. “This is my stuff.”

“All of this?”

“... yes.”

Allof this?”

“Uh... yes.”

“This stuff... it is all yours?”

“Look, if you're going to stand there, slack jawed like some imbecile, then you can help me unpack.”

Shinji waved his hands in front of himself, still not quite fully comprehending the situation. “You had all of this stuff shipped over from Germany, so that it could sit around and obstruct my bedroom door.”

“Well, that wasn't the end goal,” Asuka replied, as she sorted through clothes, “but the fact that you'll have to unpack that one...”

“Those ones,” interjected Shinji, acidly. “Plural.”

“Whatever. The fact that you'll have to help me unpack those ones to get into your room so you can lock yourself away is, from my point of view, a benefit, yes?”

“But... but... but,” Shinji spread his hands wide, voice filled with confusion. “Why would you even have this lot shipped over? Why didn't you just recyclic them, then fab some new ones?”

“It's not the same!” exclaimed Asuka, a hand pressed against her temple.

“Why not? A standard licence lets you have one physical copy at any one time, and if you recycliced the old ones, you'd only be paying for the energy costs.”

“Because the things wouldn't be the same, obviously,” replied the girl, speaking slowly, as if explaining to a child. “They'd just be copies. A copy of a thing is not the same thing, even if it started off the same at the molecular level.”

“Yes, it really is. They'd be identical to the ones you had before, and more importantly you wouldn't be cluttering up the entire house with boxes.”

“No, they're not,” she replied, voice slightly raised. “Just because they began with the same initial state doesn't mean that a newly fabbed copy is the same thing. Things change and grow.”

Shinji raised an eyebrow. “Your clothes change and grow.”

A frown was sent back in his direction. “Don't be an idiot. It was a metaphor; I'm sure that even your minuscule brain can understand such things. But, yes, actually, the clothes are a lot more comfortable when they've been worn a few times. And it means I have all my things accessible right away, instead of waiting for the fabber to make a new one.”

Shinji threw up his hands in frustration, suppressing a nagging headache. “Whatever. I don't really care any more. Just get this stuff packed away somewhere. I'm not helping.”

Asuka made an annoyed noise, turning away to unseal another package. “Just typical. You're not even needed here any more, you know,” she added, after a slight pause. “You complain about practically being a conscript; well, now you can go. Back to wherever you came from.”

“Toyko-3,” muttered Shinji.

“Whatever. The point is, I'm a professional. I have to say that you've done a nice job filling in before I was moved here from the Eastern Front...”

“... just wait a moment,” replied Shinji, jumping up, something inside snapping. “From what I saw of the reports Misato showed me, you've only actually been deployed twice in real life, and I was there for one of them. I actually have more physical experience than you.

“Irrelevant,” she snapped back. “You have, what, less than six months training. I've been a candidate since I was four. Some natural talent at Evangelion synchronisation doesn't mean that you're suddenly actually able to fight. From what I've seen of your combat, you rely on either just pulling a button... oh yes, incidentally, anyone could have used that cut up ship to fire that laser; I don't see why they needed a giant robot to pull the trigger...”

“... there wasn't a physical trigger, like there aren't for any of the Eva-scale weapons,” Shinji retorted. “Direct link to the main Eva control...”

“It doesn't matter! I know that! Stop interrupting! The point is, the Kathirat was the only kill which was really yours, so really, we're even. Look; it would be better that way. You can go back to before, as you obviously don't want to pilot an Eva, and I don't have to put up with your constant unhelpfulness and annoying comments.”

“I don't see how you can call me annoying,” Shinji muttered. “Given how you're always angry, all the time, I don't think you can really tell the difference.”

“I'm always angry?” she shouted back. “I have to put up with your constant passive-aggressive attitude. No wonder I've got a headache.”

Whatever Shinji said in response was drowned out by alarmed squawking coming from the kitchen. He took a sudden breath, and got up, heading towards the source of the noise.

“Oh, right. Pen-Pen. Yes.”

Asuka frowned. “Pen... Pen? Some pet?” she asked, in a less confrontational voice.

“... sort of,” was the response. Shinji manoeuvred his was around the boxes that filled the kitchen, finally finding the bird trapped in a jail cell of crates. “He's... well, he's a penguin.”

“A penguin,” Asuka said, flatly.

“Yes.”

“A penguin.”

“Yes.”

“You have a penguin living in the house.”

“In the fridge, actually,” said Shinji, massaging the back of his neck. Come to think of it, it sounded a lot more ridiculous than it really was. “In a custom compartment.” He stooped down, and begin shifting the boxes that trapped the bird inside.

“Wark! Wark-wark! Wark!”

The girl took a deep breath. “Okay. I can accept that.” She watched, fascinated as the penguin waddled over to the other fridge, and pulled out a can of beer. “How long did it take to train him to do that... wait a moment. He's using his hands like wings! I mean, his wings like hands! Penguins don't do that,” she said, lowering her voice as the tiny, beady eyes of the pale bird gazed towards her.

“Wark!” Pen-Pen said, in a tone of voice which was decidedly warning.

“... He. Has. Teeth,” muttered Asuka to Shinji, the previous animosity gone. “Birds. Do. Not. Have. Teeth.”

“This. One. Does,” he whispered back.

“Why. Does. This. Bird. Have. Teeth?”

“... okay, we can stop doing that,” said Shinji, as the penguin continued to gaze at the two of them. “He can hear us, after all. Misato said that he has very good hearing.”

“But he's a bird,” Asuka almost sobbed. “Why is there a bird... a penguin living with Misato? Why can he open things? Why does he have teeth? How can he understand English? He's a penguin! Penguins are not sapient!”

There was a hiss, as Pen-Pen opened the can; a surprisingly sinister noise. “Wark,” he said, coldly.

“This whole thing makes no sense,” added Asuka, switching to Japanese. “Have you even asked Misato what she's doing with that freak of nature!”

The tiny beady eyes of the penguin narrowed further. “Wark,” it said again.

“Yeah, he understand that too,” said Shinji, wincing. “And he can do the crossword.”

Asuka threw up her hands. “That's it. I give up. I'm not going to question the sheer irrationality of having a sapient penguin living with us. I'm not going to question what produced him. I am going to accept it, as long as it keeps its hands... its wings... its whatever off my stuff.”


~'/|\'~


Dr Ritsuko Akagi was running through the details of what little of the Fifth Herald's corpse that had not been consumed by the Shoggoth. Masses of data filled her vision, a matrix of possibilities in Augmented Reality. Possibilities were shaped, plotted on three dimension colour coded graphs, and then discarded. If people from an earlier age had seen what she was doing, they would have called it more akin to magic, as obscure symbols (the scientific discoveries from arcane theory had left the Greek alphabet suffering from massive degeneracy, and thus science had pillaged alphabets from all over the world to get symbols to represent concepts which were undreamed of before) were moved around, changing colours used to plot data just as classical Cartesian co-ordinates were.

And it still didn't make any sense. Silently, she cursed the new drugs that she was on, even as she understood their purpose. Every time they switched mental stabilisers, or added a new one to the cocktail, her performance at the cutting edge of arcane theory took a hit, taking several months to climb back up. She knew why they were needed; they kept her sane (by the rather lax standards of arcane scientists), but it was a balancing act. Too many of some metal stabilisers would effectively lobotomise her, and an overdose would actually do so, requiring extended arcanotherapy to remedy the neurological damage. Too few, and she would break, her mind shattering into a million shards; each one brilliant, astonishing, useful, but fundamentally dangerous and broken.

She took a sip of coffee, and grimaced as she realised that she'd let it go cold, before a man's arms encircled her from behind.

“You've lost weight,” said Kaji softly into her ear.

“Oh, really?” she asked, a hint of sarcasm creeping into her voice.

“You're wasting away,” he continued, hugging her closer, “doomed to eternal unhappiness.”

“And why would that be?” Ritsuko replied, in an arch tone, amused by the sheer patheticness of the approach. Honestly, she had much better reasons to waste away than self-centred unhappiness.

“Because a woman who has a mole in the path of her...” Kaji paused, in the process of stroking her cheek. “You had it removed, didn't you?”

“Yes,” she replied, pulling his hands away. “Quite a while ago, in a routine physical. There was no reason to keep it.”

“But that was, well, at least ten percent of your charm,” said Kaji, in a decidedly melancholy tone of voice. “Is it some man, responsible for such a change? Or some woman, come to take my fair princess away to another castle? Tell me where I may find them, so that I may slay them and thus take your hand in marriage.”

Ritsuko sniffed. “Do you smell ham?” She shook her head, smiling gently. She sort of missed the casual flirting of university; in retrospect, she hadn't made enough of the opportunity. On the other hand, she had left with a first-class degree, which had proven essential for her career plans, while Misato had only obtained the bare minimum to be accepted for her officer training, which said something. “Never mind. But I do believe, Mr Kaji, that you are trying to seduce me.”

“And what if I am?” he answered with a blatantly seductive grin.

“Then the green-eyed, very, very scary lady over there, the one carrying the Enforcer, will shoot you,” continued Ritsuko in the same tone of voice, gazing at Misato, who was pressed up against the glass glaring at the two of them, flared nostrils leaving twin patches of fog on the transparent wall. “And blood will get everywhere, because a fifteen millimetre hole in your cranium is not a viable path for sustained survival. And even you would have problems dodging that, if you didn't know that she was there.” She gave an exaggerated sigh of annoyance. “And then I'd have to fill in even more paperwork, and the blood would get into some of the sensitive electronic here, and even worse I'd get blood in my coffee.”

Kaji let go. “You do know that the coffee is cold, yes?” he pointed out.

“I found out just before you arrived.” She made a small, non-committal noise, as Misato pried her face from the window, and actually came into the room. “Long time, no see, Kaji.”

The blue-shirted man sighed. “Well, it's been a long time. For all of us.”

“You're not as discreet as you used to be, now that you're single again,” Ritsuko said with a smile in her voice. “Although you still appear to be quite discrete.”

Misato frowned, and Kaji stared blankly at that comment.

“Discreet? Discrete?” She waved a hand. “It would have looked better written down. What I said what that, although he remains slightly separated from other people, behind that attitude, he is less subtle.” She paused for a moment. “Actually, it might work the other way, too. He might have become more sympathetic and thus better at subtlety through understanding of others.”

“I'm perfectly sympathetic,” protested Kaji, smiling.

“No,” Ritsuko replied. “You've always been very empathetic. That isn't the same thing at all.”

“He's an idiot, I know that,” interjected Misato. “Always has been, always will be.” She stopped by Ritsuko's desk, glaring at the man. “Now why don't you go back home and sit at your desk analysing intelligence, like you told me you do. I'm not sure how you'd recognise it, of course...”

Kaji clutched a hand to his heart. “You wound me,” he said, in a light-hearted tone. “But I was just notified of my transfer to London-2 this morning...”

“Wait a moment,” Misato exclaimed. “What are you even doing here in the first place? What are you doing in an Ashcroft facility? Last time I saw you, you were getting off the C2 Transit System. You don't have a valid reason to be here in L2.”

The man just broadly smiled with his habitual grin and shrugged. “It'll be fun. We can hang about together, like we used to.”

Misato whirled to face him, face contorted and hands twisted into claws. “You? You! Who in the hell would willingly spend time around...”

In what might be viewed as an act of cosmic censorship, before Misato's tirade against useless men who she would prefer to never see again, let alone spend time around, who spend all their time smirking and not enough time actually being useful, and n-plex other reasons, the sirens began to sound around the base, screaming out their warning with such frequency that those prone to infantile anthropomorphism would wonder why they were not losing their voices.

Glancing at the type code on the alarm displayed on the walls, Misato could only stare up at the ceiling and give an inarticulate yell of rage that ended in the words “Not again!”.


~'/|\'~




“The defences around London-2 remain somewhat depleted from the casualties inflicted by the previous Heralds. The stationary defences were especially badly hit; we only have 26% functionality along the projected line of assault. Replacement parts for the Evangelions remain critically low. However, we now have all the Units available to us,” stated the Major, a hint of triumph in her voice. “We will defeat the Herald before it comes into range of any high value targets, right as it emerges from the North Sea. Units 01 and 02 will engage the target simultaneously, while Unit 00 is positioned in reserve in case it pulls another surprise out from nowhere. This should be a close range battle; we've found that the easiest way to win is to neutralise the enemy's AT-Field as fast as possible. Moreover, this is the first proper night battle against the Heralds, as Mot was an ambush, so... be careful,” Misato added.

Three titanic delta-shaped aeroplanes, super-heavy bombers who now carried a different (although some would say equally dangerous) cargo, cut their way through the dark sky, above the clouds, towards near where the ruins of NEG Norfolk, destroyed by Mot. The three Evangelions, dwarfed by these fliers, were slung underneath like toys.

Misato felt that they were actually looking like a proper military operation, as she gazed on the viewscreen back in London-2. For once, all the Evangelions were in the same colour scheme, the blueish grey-white of urban camouflage and were all using the Type-C armour. The only way to tell them apart was by their heads, where the legacy genetics of the underlying organism had produced a different number of eyes.

She hoped that this would go well.

“Are you sure that we should have deployed all three Units at once?” Ritsuko asked her, paralleling her own doubts. Yet, paradoxically, this had the net effect of calcifying her own certainty that this was the right thing to do.

“Yes,” she nodded. “ We have access to all three Evangelions; we should be trying to guarantee that the Herald is killed with the minimum risk to any of them individually.” The Major paused. “And we're getting far less Army or Navy support for this mission,” she added in a darker tone of voice. “The previous targets have been eliminated with considerably more support. Against a Herald, I'd prefer overkill than defeat.”

Her friend nodded. “Good. You should be able to justify this to the Representative when he gets back.” She paused. “Assuming things don't go really wrong, that is.”

Misato shuddered. “Don't say things like that. You'll jinx the operation.” She licked her lips nervously. “And I did get authorisation from Deputy Representative.”

“Just so you remember,” Ritsuko warned.

Meanwhile, back in the Evangelion entry plugs, Asuka was feeling a little bit annoyed.

“This is my combat début in L2,” she complained, “and I'm not allowed to fight alone? This sucks,” she added, in a sullen voice. “What possible reason could there be to bring those two along, in their obsolete Units?”

That comment was inevitably going to draw a response, and on cue a window appeared in the front of the entry plug.

Surprisingly enough, it was Rei. “Your statement is incorrect,” she informed the other girl, her cold eyes, only a frosting of pale grey around the pupil serving as an iris, somehow gazing through the redhead. “After the recent refit, all three Units are using Type-C armour. The tactical difference between the Evangelions in a technical capacity is negligible.”

“Did I ask your opinion?” snapped Asuka back.

“Your statement was factually incorrect. It needed to be remedied,” was the response.

Shinji's head appeared on the wall too. He was actually rather surprised. That was the most words he had ever heard from Rei in one go, and more than he had heard from her on most days.

He vaguely wondered what kind of image adjustment they had to do to the picture to remove the LCL tint.

“Look, we're just going to follow the plan,” he said, trying to defuse any tensions. And possible diffuse them, too. He wasn't quite sure what quite was the difference between the two words.

Stupid English and its homonyms... is that the right word? Stupid language and all the words that sound alike, he thought.

Shinji shook his head, bring his attention back to entry plug. It was funny how the mind wandered. He found Asuka staring at him, and realised she'd been talking while he was not paying attention.

“So you don't agree, Third Child?” she said, leaning forwards towards the camera, voice hostile.

Shinji!” he corrected.

“Answer the question!”

“Ego is irrelevant,” interjected Rei.

Asuka spluttered, an odd noise with the harmonics shifted by the LCL filling her lungs. “What? It is not ego! It's just that I should be the one to...”

“Ego is detrimental to the cause,” the white girl replied in a tone which would have been described as icy had anyone but her used it. “The salvation of the world requires that the ego is subsumed to the greater good of humanity.”

“What? What are you talking about?” Asuka was getting increasingly annoyed by the girl. The First Child always seemed to be like this; annoyingly cryptic, a discrete voice which spoke alone. She could see that Shinji was just as perplexed, although... was that a hint of fear in his eyes as he listened to her words. No, not quite fear, but something akin to it. Apprehension, perhaps.

She would have to find out more about those two.

“The Heralds are beings of pure ego. Their inability to co-operate is what has doomed them,” the pale girl continued.

The command team was getting worried, too.

“How's the First Child's synchronisation ratio?” asked Ritsuko.

“Holding steady at sixty-one, plus-or-minus three percent,” reported Maya calmly.

The blond woman started biting at a thumbnail, before realising that she was doing that, and tucking both hands into the pockets of her lab coat. She was the only one here who really knew the potential danger of the First Child, but she was so orthogonal to normal ways of thought (which would logically mean that she would actually be tangential, the scientist thought) that it was very hard to distinguish between her normal behaviour and possible mental contamination.

“Immediately force an ejection if we get a repeat of the Start-Up Incident,” she ordered the technical staff, turning to the Director of Operations. “Misato, I recommend that we keep the First Child in reserve.”

The black-haired woman turned her head and looked at Dr Akagi in a peculiar manner. “I'm already doing that,” she said. “I do know her synchronisation ratio is notably worse than the other two's, and she has had the worst loss of control,” a patronising hint leaking into her voice. “Now, if you'll excuse me, they should be deploying soon.”

Ritsuko sighed inside. Thank goodness she thought I was merely worried about the low synchronisation ratio and the inferior control...

She made a note on her PCPU, though;

HERALDS: BEINGS OF PURE EGO? UNABLE TO CO-OPERATE?


~'/|\'~


Unit 00 was detached first, the blue-grey cyclops falling through the dark sky. Inside the fluid-filled entry plug, the First Child was calm. It was not as if this utter weightlessness, immersed in the almost-blood taste of the LCL, was an unfamiliar sensation to her.

She's been in there for ten years. Floating in darkness.

The A-Pod harness kicked in, reactionless thrusters producing an action which lacked an equal and opposite reaction, or so it was believed. That was not true. It was merely that, when the fabric of space-time was being used in such a manner, the opposing force could be spread out across the entire system.

She landed as gently as could be hoped by the standards of a forty metre biped, feet leaving massive dents in the hardened road as she sunk to one knee. There was a moment of stillness, as Rei held that position, motionless.

Then the single red eye of Unit 00 turned, its gaze scanning the landscape. In the darkness, it cast the land in a bloody red light. Once, the skies above them would have been polluted by light. Now, however, with the retreat of the populace into arcologies, the night was returned to a more primal state, stars fully visible through the holes in the cloud layer.

She found what she was looking for, the weapons drop, and loped over to it, leaving scars in the landscape where she stepped. Cradling the Charge Beam she had been assigned, she then returned to a waiting position, both body and Evangelion motionless, waiting for further orders.

The other two Children were dropped close to the coast, on the decaying ruins of what had once been a commuter village.

“Oh,” Asuka said with a sudden glint of happiness in her eyes, as she examined the weapons crate marked “02”.

“I thought you'd like the Deef Spear,” commented Misato, a similar hint in her voice.

“I know I'd trained with them, but I thought they were stuck on the drawing board. Too many issues with the superconducting fibres and keeping the staff strong enough to be used by an Evangelion,” the girl replied, as she reverently lifted the polearm, a good ten metres longer than the Unit was tall, from its case.

“There were,” interjected Dr Akagi. “There were beyond modern materials technology, and required far too much fine control over the AT-Field to be truly useful in a combat situation.”

Asuka paused as she swung the spear around, getting a grip on the balance. “What changed?”

Ritsuko grinned, a smile with a disproportionate amount of malice. “The Heralds changed.”

Dimensionally Fielded weapons, she explained, were an innovation of the Evangelion Project. They were commonly in use; the integrated bladed weapons on the Units were all subject to a D-Field. The sorcerous ritual that produced the D-Field had been known about by occultists (and cultists) since before the discovery of Arcane Theory, but before had only been used as personal protection. The D-Field functioned as a catalyst, to promote the formation of an AT-Field around the weapon, and locally boost the strength, giving a concrete advantage against other AT-Fields. But there were problems with scaling; the two warped spaces were similar (but fortunately not the same, because if two D-Fields overlapped, anything in the intersection was torn apart at a sub-atomic level), and reacted in funny ways. Even the massive computing powers of full immersion Magi dives had not been able to find anything more than an empirical formula for how they interacted.

“And so we found that the remains of Mot, the fractal black crystalline structure, had an exceptionally high Arcane Field permissibility,” explained Dr Akagi. “A solid core of that runs down the centre of the D-Field Spear, meaning that for the purposes of AT-Field generation, the spear is part of the Evangelion.”

Most of the explanation had been meaningless to Shinji, as he hefted the weapon provided out of his own equipment crate. A small autonomous series of cables snaked out of his wrists as he (no, he reminded himself, as Unit 01) picked up the multi-barrelled contraption.

Ah, yes. The one that they insist that I not call the plasma minigun, but I can't remember the real name for.

As the targeting reticle appeared in screen, the name “Multi-Barrelled Automatic Magnetically Confined Ionised Gas Accelerator Prototype” appeared. It was another product of the fact that Evangelions stood at an uncomfortable level in the NEG armoury. They were three times the height of the next tallest bipeds, the Seraph and Chamshal Engels, but were too small for the naval-sized D-Engines which could enable them to chuck out capital grade firepower. The MBAMCIGAP was a workaround for that problem.

The design process had obviously passed through certain mental steps. It had started with complaints about not being able to use capital grade weapons, then moved onto asking for suggestions for how they might be able to compensate for that. The thought train got vaguer at that point, but at some point someone had obviously pointed out that often weight of fire could compensate. And then the phrase “What if we strapped eight plasma cannons, each with an independent smaller D-Engine, together, and made them spin to promote cooling?” had been uttered. Some back of the envelope calculations had been thrown together on someone's PCPU, and it had been found that, despite the blood alcohol level of the person who had come up with the idea, it actually had the potential to work.

Misato's face appeared before him. “Is everything operation, Shinji?”

“Yes, it looks fine from here.”

The woman smiled. “I told them that the plasma minigun would be a good idea, but they didn't believe me until they actually did the calculations.”

Ritsuko sighed. “One of your drunken ideas was good. The rest were bad. As I recall, you wanted to attach rocket boosters to the Deef Spear.” There was chuckling from around the command room, releasing the tension.

“Shush,” ordered the Major. “Pilots; contact with the Herald is ETA six minutes.”

They sat in silence.

Far off, something broke the surface of the water. It would not have been visible in the darkness with the human eye (though it would with the Nazzadi eye), but the visual enhancements built into the Evangelions (as with all modern military gear) detected the water pouring off the titan that strode in from the sea, a figure of solidity in the protean waters.

“Right, this is it!” announced Asuka, with a predatory grin on her face. “I'll take it down, while you cover me.”

“You could wait for me to weaken the AT-Fields first,” countered Shinji. “At least wait to see if it can't shoot back before charging in!”

“Both of you, hold back,” ordered the Major. “We've got an airstrike incoming.”

Misato hated having to keep that from them, but orders from her superiors in the New Earth Government Army had necessitated it. After the attack on Chicago-2 just as Unit 02 was there, suspicion existed that it was the Evangelions which drew the Heralds. Certainly, the fact that so far the Heralds had conveniently only attacked places where there were Evangelions was screaming on the “Not-A-Coincidence” alarms of counter-intelligence units. Either the Evangelions attracted the Heralds, or there was someone who was arranging it so that the Units would be there. If so, that would be indicative of some greater conspiracy, that someone in the NEG had the ability to predict when the Heralds would attack. Such information would be very useful, as it would allow proper deployment of troops, rather than this slow seep of forces away from the front lines to protect the most important arcologies from such a potential threat.

And thus the higher-ups (the orders had come from the European Field Marshals themselves) had ordered her to see if the Evangelions could be used as bait, to place them slightly off the direct path of the Heralds, to see if the monster would adjust its course to make sure that it engaged them.

And it had. The behemoth now striding from the waters had notably turned, to engage the three Children in the three Evangelions.

That was not a good sign. Both in the short term, in that they were about to be attacked by a Herald, and in the long run this called the survival of the Evangelion Project into doubt.

It was then that the first wave of bombs hit, as the skies echoed to the crack of supersonic aircraft. Vast amounts of water were thrown up by the blasts, as well as the rippling explosions which broke against the coruscating mesh of the AT-Field. The behemoth did not fall, though, but instead broke into a run towards land, running through the fire and mist, AT-Field shaped like an arrow before it, parting the waters and running clear on the seabed.

A light on the display flipped. “You are cleared to engage,” ordered the Major to the two pilots.

“Cover me!” called out Asuka, as she sprinted towards the fast-encroaching Herald, deef spear held in both hands as a lance.

“You're getting in my way!” shouted Shinji into the comms, as he was forced to cut off the plasma minigun, the stream of eight new suns no longer burning away the night and casting weird shadows on the ceiling above. Making a noise of frustration, he checked the lock of the MPACK 4s on his shoulders, one of the new things that the Type-C armour gave, then triggered with a thought a salvo of 8 rockets. The tiny computer brains within them recognised the presence of a friendly unit before them, and took evasive action, cutting upwards into the air before curving down onto the target, the explosions (which would have wrecked a Locust) doing nothing but producing more of a lightshow.

I hate AT-Fields! Shinji thought in a matter most intense.

The red-haired girl in the blue-grey Unit 02 saw the rippling explosions before her, as missiles cut over her head, and twisted her gait slightly, to allow her to mimic Shinji's actions, a second salvo of missiles flying flat and straight at the oncoming, round-shouldered target.

“Cover me!” she screamed over the comms.

“You're in my way!” Shinji shouted back, staring at the scene before him, as he triggered a second set of missiles.

Asuka lived for moments like this, she really did. Adrenaline flooded her system, overcoming the limiters in the LCL-f, designed to keep the fine muscle control and the clear head needed for optimal Evangelion operation. Each foot was placed perfectly, time slowing to a crawl to permit her to leap from area of solid ground to solid ground. She was the blademaster, and the Unit was her blade. A perfect harmony of war.

She reached the coast even as the Herald closed in closer, pushing hard against the ground and leaping up. Reaching out, she extended the cosmic, enveloping AT-Field out, down along this marvellous new spear and

Are you sure it will work, she had asked.

Oh, don't worry, the doctor had replied. By doing it this way, the usual risks are completely negated. As long as you are willing to put up with the ... wastage from the inferior specimens.

If I cared about inferior specimens, I wouldn't be here, she snapped back. Who do you think I am, some sort of superstitionist?

The doctor had smiled. Good to know that, he had said.


thrust it straight down, into the heart of the Herald, the blade going straight through the body. With a flourish, she pulled the weapon free, tearing upwards through the beasts flesh. With the AT-Field wrapped around and through it, the spear was more akin to a guardless long blade than a mere spear.

The round shouldered beast, covered in oddly compelling geometrical patterns that seemed to twist and turn from out of the corner of your eye, fell apart, split from mid-section to right shoulder.

Shinji gazed, eyes wide at the scene before him. That was shockingly fast and easy.

“... good job,” he finally managed to stutter out.

Asuka cocked her head, eyes aflame and the demonic grin of a central nervous system flooded with adrenaline plastered across her face. “Now, how about that, Ikari,” she declared proudly, voice filled with pride. “Battle should always be elegant and without waste. I just guess my design is better than yours, then.”

Rei's head appeared. “The target has not been eliminated,” she stated.

Asuka's eyes wided, and she blinked twice. “What?” she asked, screwing up her face.

“What?” queried Shinji, eyes widening ever further.

“What!” shouted Misato back in the control room.

The torn apart Herald, body oozing ichor into the water, began to twitch, the water around it sublimating straight from liquid to plasma as the coruscating AT-Field tore electrons from their orbits. In a beautiful mutilation of topography, the mass turned inside out into two duplicates of itself, the black and white patterns shifted into the red for one and the blue for others.

Twitching, these newborn (or were they really?) beings pulled themselves to their feet by flowing so that they were standing up.

Or at least tried to. The four eyes of Unit 02 burned white as Asuka whipped the spear around, shattering the hastily erected AT-Field and lopping the left arm off the red one. The spear continued through, before bouncing off a second AT-Field, the two areas of distorted spacetime irradiating the area as high energy protons and neutrons flew off in all directions, in a blast as the fundamental forces briefly, and just along the Planck length edge of the Evangelion's AT-Field, reunited into a GUT superforce.

As they collapsed back into the separate forces, the area of space where it had happened underwent rapid expansion, as in the first few moments of the universe. In the impossibly high energy densities, brief life evolved and died out as the universe suddenly became cold and dead to them, the magnetic monopoles and exotic particles that made up their body dissipating. They lived and died in subjective eternities, a brief blossoming of life unheard of since the early stages of the universe, and indeed never to be heard of by any of the unknowing gods, vast beings that survived in this cold dead cosmos where the least actions took untold aeons, and who never knew of the brief ecosystem that they had created.

No, more of a worry to the horrific beings which had birthed that stillborn cycle of life was the expansion of space-time they had unknowingly caused. Some of the participants, snug within their own realities which they called an AT-Field, could weather this sudden flux in universal constants, as reality tore itself apart, the distance between proton and neutron suddenly much greater than what the strong force could support.

A sphere of matter roughly one and a half kilometres in radius ceased to exist. Under most circumstances, this would have released vast amounts of energy, but the energy densities had crushed some matter to under its Schwartzchild radius. And a number of nascent, short-lived black holes were exactly what the abused fabric of spacetime did not need.

To explain what had just happened with the classic metaphor of heavy weights and a rubber sheet, the presence of the blackholes were akin to a heavy weight on the sheet, stretching it down and attracting things to them. Meanwhile, the spacetime expansion was the rubber sheet being stretched, each point getting further away from each other, while keeping the same amount of material between them.

To expand the metaphor, the AT-Fields had an effect on space and time roughly similar to taking a knife to the rubber sheet and slashing at it in a methodical pattern of cross hatching, leaving only enough material for it to just hold together, allowing it to be shaped to the will of the user. With all the opposing stresses, was it really a wonder that a rubber sheet, weakened by the knife, would fall apart?

Now, convert the rubber sheet into the five known dimensions and n higher dimensions, where n is not even necessarily a natural number, and the effects of what had just happened could be appreciated.

To cut things short, spacetime gave way under the strain.

And all these events had taken a period of time to which the firing of a single neuron would look like an aeon.


~'/|\'~


Misato stared up at the viewscreen, hoping for anything. Contact with all three of the Evangelions had been lost, along with a large number of NEG aircraft in the same airspace.

“Oh Gods, oh God, oh God,” someone was muttering. Misato wanted to join in.

But I won't pray any more. Not after the Fall of New Kuala Lumpur. Not after the First Strike.

“Massive thermal bloom!” called out Liutenent Aoba. “The Reality Engines,” he used, in the stress of the moment, the technicians term for the scanners which detected ripples in the fabric of reality, “they're screaming. Something happened there, and it's completely unheard of.”

“Not again,” said Ritsuko weakly, as she clutched at her forehead.

“No, no it's not!” yelled Aoba, as more data flowed in, breaking through his usually laconic outer shell. He swallowed hard, and licked his lips nervously. “ We.... I found a... a match. It... it matches the Zone.”

A silence fell over the room; a dreadful, terribly loud silence that drowned out the panic that hummed in the air. The noiselessness held; quiescent and horrible, for what had been said could not be unsaid.

The Zone had consumed the city of Las Vegas right at the start of the Second Arcanotech War, amid dark whisperings of illicit research into teleportation technology. A swirling void of darkness, reality given way to the random shifting of an infinite number of dimensions, one hundred and thirty kilometres in radius. Things came from the darkness, vile protean shapes which had to be contained, and slowly and surely the Zone was growing, consuming the lands of mankind. Even those who were not sucked into that Well of Oblivion were affected, because the Zone produced the rogue parapsychics known as Zoners, normal individuals driven mad by the powers which they had thrust upon themselves. Normal parapsychics were theorised to be a natural progression of humanity; they possessed innate powers which were determined by their genetics.

Zoners were not natural. They were insane by human standards, even the most stable of them, and many could crush an APC full of soldiers into a ball.

And they had quite possibly created a new one.

The Major was the first to break the silence.

“Shinji! Rei! Asuka! Report!”

The pale face of the First Child appeared on screen. She appeared completely unruffled by the hideous tear in reality, her face as emotionless and impassive as ever.

“I am alive,” she informed the Major. “I was outside the rift.”

“Any sign of Shinji or Asuka?” the woman asked, frantically.

“There is no sign of them as of yet,” Rei replied, as if she was merely reporting that they were late for a meeting. “However, as long as they retain the ability to generate an AT-Field, they will survive. If they do not, they will be killed instantly. And painlessly,” she added, a hint of unrecognisable emotion flashing across her face.

Misato turned to Ritsuko. “What do you know about that thing? How do we get them out of it?”

“... I really don't know,” replied the blond woman, hands clutched at her temples. She groped around inside the pockets of her labcoat, pulling out a small cylinder, which was screwed into an injector. She relaxed as the device clicked, removing her other hand from her forehead. “Okay.” She took a deep breath.

“Do not worry,” Rei continued. “Aleph-one-dimensional local space is not stable in conjunction with forced 5-plus-n-dimensional space. Only three contingencies are stable.”

“But... how do you know this?”

Rei managed to, while keeping her expression completely motionless, convey a similar feeling to what you get when you ask an adult why basic addition works like it does.

“And what can we do?” she continued, somewhat breathless at the ... well, the only really applicable term was alien intelligence before her.

“There is no need for concern, as nothing that can be done to change the inevitable results,” the First Child replied, in a way that Misato guessed was meant to be reassuring.

“The Zone... it's shrinking,” reported Makota.

“Five-plus-n-dimensional space is calcifying around the AT-Fields,” clarified Rei.

“That doesn't clarify anything,” blurted out Misato. “Ritsuko, what is she talking about?”

“Uh...” the blond woman paused, “Yes, that makes sense. I think. Basically, although we'd need to run it through the Magi, I think it's a distinct possibility that the stable AT-Fields are closing it. That is to say, what the First Child has said is one of the possibilities of an Arcane Field interacting with a shattered dimensional space. On the other hand, there are more than 9 times 10 to the power of 3 configurations predicted, and the theory hasn't been worked out properly yet. How she would know what would happen in such a complex A-Theory problem is... a puzzle.”

Rei continued to stare from up on the screen, white hair floating around her in the LCL.

“Go do whatever you can to help,” ordered the Major.

The girl nodded. “Understood.” The window on the viewscreen blinked off.

A subtle tension left the control room, for everyone apart from Fuyutsuki.

She should not be able to do that yet.


~'/|\'~
The decay in the radius of this nascent Zone proved to be exponential, the perfect sphere of shredded space vanishing into nothingness as the mundane “reality” reasserted itself. As it shrunk, water flooded down into the crater, pooling under the new pit in the surface of the earth, the continental crust scarred by the new wound carved into it.

Unit 01 was the first to emerge back into the mundane, appearing at what had been the land level.

Shinji screamed, a noise more of surprise and shock than horror, as suddenly Unit 01 fell a hundred metres, landing heavily on one arm. There was a second scream, but that was from the sympathetic pain from the damage to the arm of the Evangelion. His eyes darted around the entry plug, trying to work out what had just happened.

The last thing... what the hell? Rei had just said that it wasn't dead... and then... something happened.

He looked around, pulling himself up with his (no, he reminded himself once again, the Evangelion's) good arm. He was at the edge of a vast, hemispherical crater, geometrically perfect. Gales were blowing into it, sucked towards the centre. But such an anomaly was nothing compared to the swirling blackness at the centre, opaque wisps of blackness (and colours within the blackness, colours only describable with phrases like “a sort of yellowish greenish purple”).

He screamed and clapped his hands over his eyes. The Evangelion mimicked him, but it did no good, as the external cameras across the Unit still gave images to the interior of the plug walls, the blackness and the strange light shining through the hands before his eyes.

“Cut his viewscreens!” ordered the Deputy Representative, back in London-2. The order was rapidly implemented, and Shinji relaxed as the walls went back to their normal, solid appearance.

The proto-Zone continued to close, right to the epicentre, where it sealed itself with a rippling bulge that seemed to produce a shockwave in the universe itself. Two figures exploded away from one another, momentum conserved from the impact arcing down, to the waters now rushing into the bottom of the crater over a kilometre below. Asuka overcame her confusion to what had exactly happened, and tucked her AT-Field tight around herself, bringing her uncontrolled spin into a tight ball, spreading her limbs eagle wide.

And the Herald screamed, a cry of infinite agony and infinite loss.
It<[--]>gone
Half <[--]> soul <[----]> half <[--]> mind <[--------]> by <[---]> Daemon <[------]> himself <[-]> cannot <[----]> like <[----]> and <[--]> I <[----]> die <[---]> live <[--]> this <[------]> death <[-]> hate
It was half-dead already. The blow from that cursed weapon, hewn from the corpus of the Herald of Nyarlothtep, who had dedicated the totality of its existence to the promotion of entropy in emulation of that which it had worshipped, had torn apart reality, opening it up to the Ultimate Reality.

And half of it had not been warded by the Guard of Yog-Sothoth.

Now it was half-lobotomised, half its soul and half its flesh consumed by something far greater than itself. Life like this was impossible. Even before its ascension, it had always been twinned. And now it was alone, truly alone. It had always had another mind, to the extent that they had been two, and now it could do nothing but stare at the horrors of a cold cosmos where one was isolated, cut off from the minds of others.
I <[--]> not <[----]> if <[-]> die <[-]> am <[-------]> dead.
Kill <[--]>
It saw another loping figure approach the edge of the crater, now flooding with water. A single red eye stared at it, and it suddenly knew how it could make things right.

A half-life was no life at all. Cessation was better than this existence.
Kill <[--]> now!

<[---]> did <[---]> do <[----]> to <[--]> I <[--------]> your <[----]> call!
The Herald thrust its AT-Field down into the waters, sending it flying up into the air, towards the figure of Unit 00, which stood in the darkness, the clouds above the crater shredded by the release of the cosmic energies, letting the stars of the Strange Aeon shine in.

Rei aimed the charge beam she was carrying. The target was moving in a conventional parabolic trajectory, not even attempting to adjust its flight path.

She fired.

No AT-Field manifested to prevent the beam of relativistic particles punching through the centre of mass, tearing through the red, eye-like core.

Briefly, the landscape was lit up by another explosion, the waterfalls into the 1.5 kilometre crater cast in a harsh light.

“Target eliminated,” reported Rei.

“Make a note,” snapped the Major. “We are going to have to work on their training. We don't want to 'win' like this again.”

And even as she sighed in relief, inside, Misato's mind was whirring.

If this incident involving two AT-Fields caused a Zone, what does that mean about what happened in Las Vegas?

~'/|\'~

Outside Space He waits. Outside Time He waits. He is neither Space nor Time, because an Other is those. No, He is the hanging frame upon which Space is suspended. He is the One who provides the Sands for the Hourglass of Time. The Flutes must play and the Bells must ring, and the Mysteries of the Earth must be Mapped out so that we may go where we wish, rather than descend into that Primal Chaos. All Things come from Him; all Things will return to Him. And if He wakes, that Day shall Come.

And Time and Space Shall be Warped, and all that is Felt shall be Looped. He will Play, when the Music stops and He wakes, and Mankind will not survive that. The Days of Sun shall end when the Gift of Yog-Sothoth, the Mantle of the Gate and the Key, does connect with Growth and matter and the rays of the Sun shall become One and the Same. That shall be a sign of the End Times.

I Feel for the Generation who sees the two Holes into the Body of the Daemon-Sultan. It shall be a Sign that They are all not Long to Live. Man Shall be wiped from the Earth, in a Wave of Darkness, and all the Constructs which We build for Ourselves shall prove to be no more permanent than a Hand of Sand in a wind.

The End is Nigh!



~ The Necronomicon, attributed to the infamous Arab author, Abdul Alhazred
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by Jonen C »

As I said on the other board, this chapter is heavy on the Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri references.

Makes you wanna Shout out Loud.

God's in her heaven...
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by Vehrec »

Here's hoping that the good doctor tells this Red person where she can put her offer.

... So wait. Azathoth is the grand unified field theory? And Rei's a quantum computer? One thing about her I don't get is why more people don't see that she's a White, listen to the things she says, and then come to the realization that she's precognitive. Or maybe that's just because she's never said enough for people to make the connection. Still, if more people don't figure it out, I'll be disappointed in the deductive skills of humans in this timeline.

A thought occurs. We now have a possible way to collapse a Zone-if we can definitively solve that one equation that Ritsuko was talking about. Wonder what the Migo will make of things when between one rotation of the planet beneath their sensors and it's next appearance, the Zone disappears? Will it be a source of wonder? A source of terror?

Hey is Doctor Who still on in the 2080s? Friendly alien with time machine saves the world from Migo invasions in between taking 20 somethings to strange and wonderful places. If Jerry Springer's spiritual descendants are out there, I want to see the Sci-fi. It's pure escapism at this point in all likelihood, but still interesting.
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by Xon »

Vehrec wrote:I'll be disappointed in the deductive skills of humans in this timeline.
It is CthulhuTech (a D20-like RPG), humans get nerfed fairly hard. Not being able to look at 99% of all the things you are actually fighting without going insane due to what amount to RPG-like ruleset really is a big nerf stick.

And honestly, it is making the story quite boring because ultimately it is bland and predictable in how characters are going to react.
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by EarthScorpion »

Vehrec wrote:Here's hoping that the good doctor tells this Red person where she can put her offer.
But looking at his mental state, do you really think that's likely. Really, AHNUNG are making the best of a bad situation;the end of Chapter 9 showed that they have no clue how the Navy got their hands on Shoggoths, and it scares them that such a thing is possible.

Also, they need good engineers loyal to them for certain... projects.
... So wait. Azathoth is the grand unified field theory? And Rei's a quantum computer? One thing about her I don't get is why more people don't see that she's a White, listen to the things she says, and then come to the realization that she's precognitive. Or maybe that's just because she's never said enough for people to make the connection. Still, if more people don't figure it out, I'll be disappointed in the deductive skills of humans in this timeline.
Well, Azathoth was written by Lovecraft himself as a replacement for the Judeo-Christian concept of God in a universe where the mechanistic precision of Newton, of a perfect ordered cosmos, has been supplanted by the random indeterminate chaos of quantum mechanics. He is a god that does not care for you, but simply is, a random chaos that dwells at the heart of the universe and drives men mad merely to conceptualise.

And on the subject of Rei; well, the people who need to know obviously know exactly what she can (or to be more accurate, what she should, at this current stage of her development, be able to) do. Everyone else; well, they look at her, see a White, and know that she's a parapsychic of some kind. But since she's not wearing the Dangerous or Invasive insignia, it's sort of brushed aside. In the class, for example, they're pretty sure that she's Clairvoyant (from the way she sometimes seems to know things), but it's not like she talks to anyone or abuses it or lords it over people like some other parapsychics. If you're not wearing the D or I badges, you're basically accepted by society; it's the people who can throw fireballs or read your mind who get the most suspicion.

And it's not really as if she's a quantum computer. It's just that her sense of physical intuition covers things like arcane theory and relativity. For her, it is as obvious that relativistic effects occur as it is that a thrown ball will fall downwards. Which in itself is rather disturbing.
A thought occurs. We now have a possible way to collapse a Zone-if we can definitively solve that one equation that Ritsuko was talking about. Wonder what the Migo will make of things when between one rotation of the planet beneath their sensors and it's next appearance, the Zone disappears? Will it be a source of wonder? A source of terror?
There's a lot of an issue of scale. This Zone was less than 2 km in radius. The Las Vegas Zone is 80 miles in radius. But yes, it will suddenly appear on strategic plans, in the long term, after the whole "get rid of the invading bugs, rampaging Rapine Storm, and the fishmen in the seas".

Also, it might be instructive to consider what happened to Las Vegas in the canonEva timeline.
Hey is Doctor Who still on in the 2080s? Friendly alien with time machine saves the world from Migo invasions in between taking 20 somethings to strange and wonderful places. If Jerry Springer's spiritual descendants are out there, I want to see the Sci-fi. It's pure escapism at this point in all likelihood, but still interesting.
Yeah, this is one of the things that I've spent some time considering. Fundamentally, in most cases, sci-fi is in many ways a projection of the current fears of a society onto a blank canvas. One of the things I can see is that every single sci-fi universe will have some equivalent version of the D-Engine, because for younger generations, it would be hard to consider a society that doesn't have some kind of access to an infinite energy source. It'll be "sci-fised" by making it more efficient than real D-Engines, of course, and not make people insane.

I'd suspect that Doctor Who would fall under a certain amount of scrutiny, though. It won't be directly accused, but people will be looking for similarities between the Doctor and the Crawling Chaos.
Xon wrote: It is CthulhuTech (a D20-like RPG), humans get nerfed fairly hard. Not being able to look at 99% of all the things you are actually fighting without going insane due to what amount to RPG-like ruleset really is a big nerf stick.

And honestly, it is making the story quite boring because ultimately it is bland and predictable in how characters are going to react.
Why, thank you for that pointless interjection. :roll:

You're wrong about the insanity-causingness in the CTech setting, though; it's quite a lot easier to stay sane than say, Call of Cthulhu; on average you'll pass your fear and insanity checks against things like Deep Ones and Migou, and it can be kept under contol. Moreover, it's not that similar to D20; it uses D10s and has a lot more in common with Attribute-Skill systems like Storytelling. Although I suspect you're the type of gamer who loathes any kind of personality mechanics.

And, seriously? You find it boring that people are going to go crazy in an Evangelion fan fic? :shock:
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by Xon »

EarthScorpion wrote:Why, thank you for that pointless interjection :roll:
Humanity as presented in CthulhuTech literally do not think as real-life humans do, and pointing that out is a perfectly valid point for why they may behave differently.
You're wrong about the insanity-causingness in the CTech setting, though; it's quite a lot easier to stay sane than say, Call of Cthulhu; on average you'll pass your fear and insanity checks against things like Deep Ones and Migou, and it can be kept under contol.
As I understand it, that is a per-encounter thing. And you have the characters encountering bloody well every posible thing which can make them go insane.
Moreover, it's not that similar to D20; it uses D10s and has a lot more in common with Attribute-Skill systems like Storytelling.
It is a dice roll system where you are statistical going to fail, and it only requires 1 failure for things to go to pot.
Although I suspect you're the type of gamer who loathes any kind of personality mechanics.
Honestly it is the Cthulhu fanboys/wankers I've run onto other forums(and real-life) which are more of the issue which have largely soured Cthulhu Mythos like settings for me.

It doesn't help that most personality mechanics really suck, especially since I've never really been involved in pen&paper RPGs(don't have the time nowdays). Dealling with the computer versions really suck. Baddly.
And, seriously? You find it boring that people are going to go crazy in an Evangelion fan fic? :shock:
It is more the predictability. We get to see a lot of people starting to go insane, a few randoms which are no longer human running around, but remarkably little of the 'recovery' phase or shown how much they have actually lost, it has been aluded to but not really shown. But, the major characters are with in the rought ballpark along the road to crazy.

You do a great job describing what is happening, and are a easily a good writer. There is a lot of research and physics knowledge demonstrated which makes for a simply awesome change.

EarthScorpion wrote:I'd suspect that Doctor Who would fall under a certain amount of scrutiny, though. It won't be directly accused, but people will be looking for similarities between the Doctor and the Crawling Chaos.
My major issue with that is simply taking a Fan's out of universe knowledge and casting it as literial truth with no incorrect atributation of what caused events and no confusion of the events themselves. From a in-universe perspective, telling the Master from the Doctor would be almost imposible. And that there maybe a planet with billions of them debating which "I Win" button to use to resolve some mess is something the rest of the universe should not even know.
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by Baughn »

Wait, hang on, how did Nanoha and Fate end up in 8,500 BCE? ;_;

And here I was hoping they might show up in the story, too. Oh well, it does explain how the TSAB has gotten so powerful, if they've avoided self-destructing like so many of their predecessors, but.. why aren't they helping?
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by EarthScorpion »

Wait... what?

...

I'm sorry, but what?

What exactly gave you the impression that the Tsab mini-plot-arc/series-of-shout-outs-which-are-there-because-they-amuse-me-to-interpret-the-TSAB-in-a-Lovecraftian-way had anything to do with the Fane relief? I'm genuinely curious to what could have given that impression.

More generally, and as a general note, the Tsab are not the TSAB. The Tsab are an amoral group of space travellers, who, while possessing much higher levels of magic/technology (they're sort of the same thing in ANE), do nothing to help the worlds they "watch over". They lay claim to any highly advanced technology on the planet, sending in their agents to steal it from the natives, claiming that it's "too unsafe" to permit them to have it, despite the fact that their own civilsation is built on the looted carcasses of its predecessors. They use gratuitously overkilly weapons; the most powerful of the elite, pseudo-matriarchal sorcerer-warriors can best be compared to a tactical nuclear artillery piece. Those that they subjugate, they mind control into subservience, forcing them to join them and aid them. Their legions are comprised of the elite of their domains, aided by cybernetically enhanced cloned killing machines and lethal, often shape-shifting sorcerous constructs. They send even their young into battle, only caring about how much raw power their spawn can throw out, and because they are a Mythos race and thus largely immune to Aeon War Syndrome, they do not use any psychiatrists, so sure are they that their battleships-yield warriors will do what they say. Only the fact that entities such as Cthulhu himself sleep on the Earth, and that the Migou claim this system as a mining domain, has spared Earth from the ravages of the unknowable Tsab.

I can't see what they have in common with the TSAB at all. :roll: :twisted:

More seriously, the Tsab are not the TSAB. They're the TSAB, seen from the outside and fed through a hideously genre-savvy and cynical lens (me, in fact), perhaps, but they're not the TSAB.

Although I do notice that no-one has yet speculated on how Gendo got his hands on the Bah'ri Diß and the other Tsab artefact that I mentioned he has in his desk... :wink:
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by Baughn »

Whee. Pretty much the exact opposite of the TSAB, then; I was hoping it was considered "strange and alien" for being, well, nice - which would've been plenty strange in this universe. It's a nifty shout-out, either way.

As for the relief, I was primed, but consider this:

- Top left. Apparent young girl with two pigtails. Nanoha. Just below her is figured a divine buster or some such, pointing to her as the source. Really, it was this one that did it for me.
- Bottom left. Obviously a starship.
- Bottom right. Schrodinger wave equation, or at least something similar. I don't really get that one, but we're told that Nanoha had to learn this sort of thing to create the starlight breaker..
- Far right. Tia?
- Not so far right. Hmm. Could be Fate, or perhaps a grownup Eriol.
- Top right. Um. I'm really not sure. Robots? They do tend to fight those a lot..
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by Battlehymn Republic »

Delta Green is a damned good Mythos setting.
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by EarthScorpion »

Baughn wrote:Whee. Pretty much the exact opposite of the TSAB, then;
Yes... and then again, no. Is there a single thing that I described the Tsab doing that the TSAB does not do, at least from some viewpoint? They are built off previous societies (like Belka), while keeping other "administered worlds" ignorant. They do use child soldiers. The people they defeat do have a remarkable proclivity for turning up in the TSAB's employ, later. The government has funded the production of cloned cybernetically enhanced soldiers and more unenhanced (although still very powerful) mages. Familiars, which are sorcerous constructs built to perform a purpose (which seems often to be things like throwing hideous yields at a target), are rather common. Damn, the TSAB even seems to subscribe to the NERV school of scientific research, which is to get a bunch of unethical scientists in a room and throw funding at them while covering up the incidents they cause.
Baughn wrote:I was hoping it was considered "strange and alien" for being, well, nice - which would've been plenty strange in this universe. It's a nifty shout-out, either way.
Why should you care about aliens, especially inferior aliens who are barely sentient?

I'm a bit of a Lovecraft purist; I reject much of Derleth and the others out of hand. That means that the Mythos is cold, uncaring (and occasionally actively malevolent, when Nyarlathotep is nearby), and cosmicly horrific. There aren't nice species or benevolent Elder Gods that watch over you and protect you from the Great Old Ones; any protection from Old Ones is purely a side effect of the fact that the other species doesn't want to be eaten either.

Stephen Baxter is a major inspiration for how I see the Mythos, basically.
Baughn wrote:As for the relief, I was primed, but consider this:

- Top left. Apparent young girl with two pigtails. Nanoha. Just below her is figured a divine buster or some such, pointing to her as the source. Really, it was this one that did it for me.
- Bottom left. Obviously a starship.
- Bottom right. Schrodinger wave equation, or at least something similar. I don't really get that one, but we're told that Nanoha had to learn this sort of thing to create the starlight breaker..
- Far right. Tia?
- Not so far right. Hmm. Could be Fate, or perhaps a grownup Eriol.
- Top right. Um. I'm really not sure. Robots? They do tend to fight those a lot..
Pretty much no.

This is a much more accurate set of guesses which, if not exactly right on all counts, is at least in the right ballpark.

For one, the pigtailed girl is not Nanoha. She's another rather powerful long-haired little girl, namely Alma.

Although, come to think of it, Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha's OriginS would a) be really, really awesome, and b) actually work. Projects Origin, Icarus, Perseus, Paragon, Harbinger, and so on are totally the sort of thing the TSAB would do in an effort to get more mages, the Pointman could be a new character moved to the team (honestly, a genetically engineered attempt to produce an artificial hyperfast mage/controller whatever wouldn't stick out or be anything unusual among the clones of dead people, warrior programs, combat cyborgs and the other unethical experiments in RF6), Paxton Fettel would be the creepy person you think is the main villan, and it would end with Alma being befriended (and Aristide introduced to beam spam) and also joining the team, so that they'd now have a creepy little girl ghost-mage. :mrgreen:

... damn it. I do not need to start planning out that as a new fic; I already have too many idea in my head and not enough time to write them all. :(
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by Xon »

EarthScorpion wrote:I'm a bit of a Lovecraft purist; I reject much of Derleth and the others out of hand.
Amen. A lot of the expansions by the other authors make an utter hash some of the concepts of the Mythos. Lovecraft Mythos is a collection of myths and legends with out of this world encounters with a helping of horror.
Stephen Baxter is a major inspiration for how I see the Mythos, basically.
Quite a few of Baxter's works features caring Aliens. It is just humanity is often an Lovecraftian horror in it's own right. The plot for Transcendence is practically horror with a large large helping of hardish sci-fi.
This is a much more accurate set of guesses which, if not exactly right on all counts, is at least in the right ballpark.
Nevermind, the whole site appears to be down now.
... damn it. I do not need to start planning out that as a new fic; I already have too many idea in my head and not enough time to write them all. :(
More Nanoha's fic's are always good. There are too few of them around which are any good.
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Baughn
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by Baughn »

At the very least, we have no reason to think they keep administered worlds in the dark. Earth is a non-administered world in that setting.

You've made them look rather dark. On the flip side:

- The TSAB explicitly teaches its members to follow their own conscience over orders. That's the direct cause of many of their problems, but also of many of their solutions, and it's hard to view as a "dark" element.
- Their civilization is built on the ruins of older ones. Yes, because the older ones all eventually destroyed themselves. They're trying desperately not to go the same way.
- Defeated people turning up in their employ is suspicious when taken out of context, but is usually a result of the way in which they were defeated. (Eg. gently)
- They created cyborgs, yes. They then cancelled the program rather quickly, and saw no problem with letting them live normal lives. At the technology levels they are at, there seems to be no actual downside to being a cyborg; I'd sign up.

OTOH, Jail is.. hard to defend. My main argument there would be that it was done by individuals, not really the TSAB as an institution. Oh well. It's a positively fascinating setting, no matter what spin you put on it.
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Jonen C
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by Jonen C »

Baughn wrote:You've made them look rather dark. On the flip side:
Flip of the flip...
- The TSAB explicitly teaches its members to follow their own conscience over orders. That's the direct cause of many of their problems, but also of many of their solutions, and it's hard to view as a "dark" element.
Lack of discipline, lack of accountability - there's a reason the rules (and lawful orders) are meant to be followed.
- Their civilization is built on the ruins of older ones. Yes, because the older ones all eventually destroyed themselves. They're trying desperately not to go the same way.
Just how desperately?
- Defeated people turning up in their employ is suspicious when taken out of context, but is usually a result of the way in which they were defeated. (Eg. gently)
Or so they claim.

Yes, yes, I know - but we are trying to look at it through Jade colored glasses here.
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EarthScorpion
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Re: Aeon Natum Engel (NGE cross-over)

Post by EarthScorpion »

Jonen C wrote:
Yes, yes, I know - but we are trying to look at it through Jade colored glasses here.

Okay.

Just for that turn of phrase, you're getting a cameo/ minor role of your choice. :shock:

"Jade-coloured glasses". Genius. Just genius.

And, no, I don't care if someone else came up with it first. You're the one who introduced it to me, and it's such a fundamentally useful term that you deserve a prize.

The character will be wearing green tinted shades, though. :wink:
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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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