I will return the weapon to him! It's just that I spent more than an hour or two doing this damn body of his. And there are details that distinguish it from the paper version. For example, there is symmetry. I guess... đż
Readiness No.2 : 0.5/3
Recently I heard an amazing song (and just discovered a cool group in general) and instantly wanted to make at least an animatic with Orikan to it. Unfortunately I'm too weak to complete it so here's unfinished version :Ń Though I really love how terrified necrontyr Orikan and the Deceiver look here. Here's their frames also cus I love them
I wonder what happens when I write a story, a little story, and show it???
Hmm...
I'm probably going to go crazy while translating this. :D
But I think there is such a small incomprehensible fragment here. It's possible?
-----
..Probably, it was not worth trying to find in her the sympathy that any living being should have felt. Especially when it refers to one's own creation. But there was nothing in her empty eyes. At all. It seems that's why he can't answer her at all. Even when she's actually looking into her eyes...
In the meantime, keep the little creatures... They have a strange design... Maybe I'll make them full-fledged characters, or maybe this is just an approach to something more interesting. Have you ever seen Necrons have ears?!
Based on the results of the following series of polls
A shadow blitz through the streets of a city. A multicolored blur bouncing from hab block corner to back alley without so much of a stumble or stop for breath. For the odd ganger or beggar on the quiet streets during the dead of this smoggy night, all they witness is a sudden breeze that at most catches them off guard for the nanosecond it blows past their ears. All unaware of the hand of death that just barely graced their pale skin.
The masked figure stifled a cough. He wasnât used to the dank land that the monkeigh called âHive Naraka-Beta.â Only such barbaric people would willingly settle a world inhabitable to their very being, and only such a stupid race would call the megacities of the world A, B, C, and so on.
âAlmost there, Caerdor.â The assassin whispered to himself, the curved blade of his shrieker cannon cleaning cut a knick into a metal wall as he passed another alley.
A flash of blonde appeared in front of the leaping shadow. The target. With one crack and a quiet chuckle, a womanâs body collapsed to the ground, her head vanishing with a black and pink blur.
Caerdor landed on a nearby rooftop with a grace only an aeldari harlequin could perform. âYou Chaos fools always make this simple enoughâ He sighed, his grinning face hidden by his Agaith false-face.
Gripping the severed head by her hair, he raised the target's dead, red eyes to his maskâs visor. The left side of his mask held the image of a fleshy-pink skull.
After a few seconds of a silent staring contest, Caerdor tossed the head over the edge of the building. âBloody body doubles.â
High above the crime filled city, two women overlooked a gang shoot out from an air-locked balcony. Both pale, one a brunette, the other blonde.
âI feel so much restraint being forced to watch the violence of my city from here.â The brunette sighed as she twirled a knife between her fingers. Her white dress was bare and boring for someone of her standing, the only decoration being a few dull red stains scattered around the dress.
âWell, Lady Idris Brele, if you help my organization, you can be the one down there.â
âYour little club sounds too good to be true, Vera.â
Vera chuckled. âNo salesman would tell a potential buyer the cons of their products out the gate. But Iâm not a salesman. Iâll tell you everything you need to know about my organization and our current plans, both the good and the bad. If you donât like it, I will leave and we can both pretend this meeting never happened. If you are interested, we can continue our discussion at my place. Sounds like a deal?â She stuck out her hand.
Idris took a second to think about it shortly before taking Veraâs hand. âDeal.â
On a rooftop over, a green glint focused on the blond target. âJust one more second.â
âKhiladi.â A familiar voice interrupted the sniperâs work as a gun barrel was placed against her copper skull.
âCaerdor.â She laughed. âHowâs my favorite clown doing?â
The titular clown responded by slamming his boot into the back of Khiladiâs head, her still, copper face smashing into the concrete roof with a crack. âWhy are you here, deathmark?â
âSame reason youâre here, death jester.â The necron groaned. âKilling a chaos champion.â
Caerdor glanced in the direction Khiladi was aiming her rifle at. âWhy didnât you shoot her then?â
âI was checking to see if she was a body double or not, leaf lover boy. Something you werenât doing.â
âSo what, theyâre all chaos followers. And Iâm no longer an exodite.â
âIt doesnât matter if you trade out the dragon cloak for a clown mask, your old uniform made your ass look perfect.â Khiladi laughed.
Caerdor's mask hid his blushing.
âAs for holding my shot,â she continued, âyour mindless slaughtering has only alerted the cult that someone wants the boss dead.â
âWho cares? Only weak cowards use body doubles, I doubt whatever warriors they have will stop me.â
âUnlike you,â Khiladi sat up, âIâve been paying attention to what these cultists are doing. Weâre dealing with the Disciples of the First Prince, mortals and neverborn of all four marks fighting side-by-side in unison. And the target isnât using body doubles because sheâs scared of death. The one they call Bloodfly is everywhere, pulling hundreds of strings all at once. Sure, if you kill enough pale blondes, youâll get her. But theyâve adapted with every head lost. If anything, thigh highs, the only thing you managed to do is make my job harder!â
âGood!â
âAt least youâre hot.â
âBy Cegorach, why do I have the only necron with a sex drive following me around?â
âYou know you love it.â Khiladiâs still face produced a giggle-like sound.
Caerdor sighed, silently thanking the gods that he was wearing a mask.
âNow, unless you want to have fun right now, please get off me so I can get back to work.â The necronâs one green eye focused on a red glint that sparked on a rooftop behind the clown.
âFirst tell me how youâre telling these monkeigh apart.â
Khiladi shoved Caerdor off of her. âIn a minute!â She shouted before vanishing.
As Caerdor collapsed to the ground, cursing the deathmarkâs name, he watched a solid red beam fly pass him.. The beam barely missed, breaking a clean hole through the lip of the buildingâs roof. He caught his footing, sprinting behind the roof access for cover. Khiladi reappeared right next to him.
âTold you were making a mess of things!â
âBy Khaine what was that?â
âIt was a human weapon called a lascannon! I knew you were going to attract assassins, but a bloody anti-tank weapon?â
Caerdor poked his head around the wall, before ducking back as another red streak flew past.
Three eyes followed the red blast, the beam streaking past the skyscraper that the body double was in. Khiladi got a ding in her mind, a confirmation that the so-called double wasnât a double. Her vision zoomed in, right onto the womanâs grinning face.
âI have an idea.â
âWhat is it?â
âDistract them!â
âWait what?â Caerdor tried to stop Khiladi, but she was already gone, and he was instead greeted by a third lascannon shot.
A lone astartes adjusted his aim. The large cannon, heavy even by space marine standards, sat awkwardly on his teal shoulder pauldron, the wiring connecting directly into his shadow-black helmet replacing any need for a scope. A husky voice relays through his vox, confirming that the target is still behind the entrance to the building, but that his accomplice has vanished. One eye focused on the auspex, confirming that he was the only one on the rooftop of the tower he stood on. The second adjusted the aim of his lascannon.
The marine silently questioned why he was ordered to use a lascannon specifically. It was a powerful weapon, certainly able to kill an eldar in a single shot, but itâs not an appropriate weapon. The xeno race was fast, never seemingly able to hold still for a second. A single-shot, low fire rate weapon was not a good weapon to take out such a quick bugger.
He caught a glimpse of the clownâs mask as he poked his head around the corner, before ducking back. The xeno was testing, measuring shots to figure out his location. Clever. All he had to do was hold his shot until he could hundred percent confirm a hit. Slaanesh will feed well tonight.
The auspex flashed a dot on the scanner. There was a second being on the roof with the space marine. He turned, and was met with the glowing green of a synaptic disintegrator.
Caerdor jumped as Khiladi reappeared next to him, heaving an ash covered shoulder-mounted cannon.
âGood distraction.â
âWhat are you doing?â
âKilling our target.â
The coils of the cannon glowed red, before sending a beam of red light straight towards the grinning target, the cannon itself flying out of Khiladiâs hands.
The beam hit on target, the resulting blast sending red hot glass shards and rebar falling to the city below, likely landing on some unlucky plebs.
As the dust settled, the two xeno assassins were able to make out the woman, now missing the right side of her torso and arm, collapse to the floor.
âMission accomplished.â Khiladi giggled.
âBut I didnât kill her.â Caerdor pouted.
âDead is dead. You got the kill last time.â
âWhy do we always get the same target?â
âMaybe someone above us finds this funny, clown boy toy.â
Caerdor was about to shoot back at the necron, but was interrupted by the sound of cracking and buzzing.
The target was slowly approaching the death jester and deathmark, a pair of crimson insect wings letting her fly over the gap between the skyscrapers. Moss and vines curled over her wounds, slowly stitching her body back together.
âGrandfather Nurgle finds your plight hilarious.â She laughed. âThough Prince Be'lakor finds you two annoying.â
Both assassins opened fire on the flying chaos lord. Shrieker cannon rounds and synaptic disintegrator blasts filled the air of where she was, but for a diseased corpse with wings she was fast.
With a heavy thud, the winged woman landed directly on top of Khiladi. With a clawed talon wrapping around her throat, her head was slammed into the roof, a crack forming in both the concrete and the metal skull.
Caerdor swung the bladed end of his cannon, the lord catching the blade in her hand.
âThank you for aiding my plans.â She growled, ripping the cannon out of Caerdorâs hand. âThereâs a supernatural serial killer in Naraka-Beta, and more and more people are looking for someone to protect them.â
âHow many body doubles have you killed?â Khiladi asked.
Caerdor threw a punch, which was caught in the beastâs other talon.
âSince landing on Naraka three days ago, your pointy-eared friend has killed fifty two of my non-mutated kin.â The beast grinned. âThirty six were female and only seventeen even resembled by disguise.â
Caerdor felt the green orb Khiladi called an eye glare at him. âTheyâre Chaos cultists.â
âOnly twenty-five are tied to my cult.â
âItâs good that youâre hot.â Khiladi groaned, her voice muffled by the clawed foot covering her mouth.
âOh, so now you care about monkeigh?â
âI just know how to be subtle, and everyone I killed is tied to the cult.âÂ
The necron was silenced by the talon gripping her skull and slamming it into the concrete roof again. Following suit was the aeldari being thrown down next to her, the lordâs free talon quickly wrapping around his throat.Â
Two pairs of arms tried to fight off the dark wood talons with little success. Caerdor struggled to breath in the iron grip while Khiladi was blinded from the talon pushing into her ocular unit.
âAs much as I want to KILL you two right now, and I want to kill you soooo badly~ That! Fucking! Hurt!â She slammed Khiladiâs skull with each word. âBuuuut I have some ideas~ Some lovely, torturous, ideas.â
Caerdor struggled to breath. His sore, oxygen deprived arm collapsed from numbness as vision faded, bumping into the now-still body of the assassin heâs cursed to somehow always run into. Somehow, ever since he was an exodite and into his joining of the Masque of the Reaperâs Mirth, this flirty, Ogdobekh deathmark has followed him, fate always putting them into a position where killing each other is the dumb move. Thousands of orks, space marines, daemons, and tryanids have fallen to their hands in the past centuries, and he would be lying if he said heâs happy to see this member of his raceâs eternal rival die.
As his vision faded to black, a memory flooded his mind. A shirtless Caerdor sat hunched over, the corpses of orks surrounding him.
âOw! Watch it!â
âI lost my skin before your species touched the stars.â Khiladi sighed, her skeletal fingers carefully using a needle to stitch a wound on Caerdorâs back. âIâm doing the best I can.â
âI know.â
The two sat in silence, the only sound between the two being the whirling of Khiladiâs servos and the dripping of Caerdorâs blood.
âNecron.â Caerdor broke the silence.
âThigh-highs.â Khiladi answered.
âWhy did you do this?â
âWhat? Safing your life or fixing your wounds?â
âBoth. You couldâve left me for dead or finished me off, but you helped me.â
Khiladi was silent.
âYou donât know why, do you?â
âMy overlord hasnât ordered your death, so I have no reason to kill you.â
âWeâve been running into each other for centuries, and weâve always been put into situations where we are fighting the same enemy. Today is the first time where you could easily walk away and just leave me bleeding out with a knife in my back.â
âI wouldnât call the hunk of metal that was sticking out of your spine a knife.â
âIâm serious!â
âI donât know. Maybe I just like you.â
âIt canât be that simple!â Caerdor turned to face Khiladi, who just finished stitching the wound.
âIt could be!â She defended. âYou know how hard it is to have friends as a necron assassin! The only person in my entire species I can talk to is my Overlord! Itâs like if the only other eldar you can have a conversation with is that damned clown you call a god!â
âIs that why you helped me? You consider me to be a f-friend?â
Khiladi produced a sighing noise and laid down in the grass. âMy flesh, blood, and soul was taken to fight a war that only worsened the galaxy and everyone involved. My sole purpose is to be the unquestioning assassin for a noble whoâs sanity is barely holding on by a thread and rules a nation of mindless automata. If having a conversation every once in a while with a thin waist flesh bag like you is the only thing keeping me sane, then I donât care.â
âSo⌠What would happen if your overlord ordered my death?â
âThey're unlikely to put out a hit for a sole death jester, butâŚâ
âThereâs nothing you can do?â
Khiladi was quiet. Caerdor knew she would be crying if she physically could.
He laid down next to her. âLetâs make a promise. The only way for one of us to die is by the otherâs hand.â
âHow is that supposed to make me feel better?â
âIf either of us are in danger, the other has to save them. The only way for either of us to die a true death is from the other.â
Khiladi giggled. âOk. Caerdor of the Masque of the Reaperâs Mirth, by the Nightbringer I will be the one to kill you.â
Caerdor grinned. âKhiladi of the Ogdobekh Dynasty, I swear to Cegorach and Isha that I will be the one to kill you.â
His eyes snapped open, his mind returning to the present. The clawed talons of the winged chaos lord were slowly tearing into his throat. With the last of strength, his fingertips felt something. A rifle. Khiladiâs disintegrator.
Blinded from a lack of oxygen, he grabbed the rifle and fired.
The talon released his throat, the chaos beast collapsing with a screech of pain. Caerdor had shot the leg that gripped Khiladiâs head, the plant limb slowly crumbling to ash, struggling to regrow from the burnt stump.
Lightheaded, Caerdor struggled to his feet. With each heavy step, he fired another synaptic blasting into the mutant, its flesh melting into a pile of ash. With each shot, the creature roared with deafening screeches, pleading to dark powers to save her. A shot to the mouth silenced her, blasting the headless corpse over the edge of the building, only to rain ash on whatever's down there.
âNi-ce s-shot.â Khiladi stuttered, her necrodermis slowly repairing her damaged skull.
âThanks.â Caerdor huffed, collapsing to the floor.
âWhat do you think of my prototype, Lord Iska?â A chitinous creature hissed as she perched on a nearby spire top, a pair of crimson wings buzzing with each word.
âA fine specimen, Mara.â A second creature with crimson wings hissed back, this one wearing a suit of black armor with silver trim, though his shoulder pads bore a teal that matched the color of his partnerâs chitin. The glowing green eyes of the tusked helm met with the glowing green of his partnerâs horned mask. âThough I am not a fan of her zealotry to Nurglith.â
âItâs difficult to create daemonkin who arenât zealots. It doesnât help that we had to stuff a rot fly to where her soul used to be to get functioning wings.â
âItâs a prototype, itâll take time to perfect it.â
âMay I suggest a base creature other than human?â
âLike eldar?â
âThereâs one right there.â
âNot yet. I suggest we lie in wait, make the xenoâs thing youâre dead. Once enough time has passed, we strike a loan patrol or maiden world, or barter with the drukari.â
âPrince Beâlakor wonât be happy that we have to leave.â
âInvasion can still happen with or without us, and I think our Master can convince him to look the other way.â
Iâd bleed for your affections
If you want me to beg, then Iâll beg for you.
The world doesnât revolve around you, but my love does.
I know you better than you know yourself.
Iâm blinded by your love, and its blindness Iâd never want to cure.
You can run away but I will always find you.
You were beautiful on the photos I took, but youâre absolutely perfect in my arms.
Youâve gotten good at this, so itâs time to try something new.
I will never let you leave me.
Jealousy is cute, donât you think?
You canât deny me.
Iâm only this desperate for you.
You love me the most, right?
Iâm yours, use me in any way that you want.
Submit yourself wholly and only to me.
I will protect you from everything.
You can always count on me, my love.
If I killed myself, would that make you happy?
Your happiness, your tears, your love, your hate â all of it belongs to me.
You are the reason I live.
You donât realize how powerful you are with me by your side.
If Iâm the one you love, then why do you look at them like that?
Stop acting so pathetic.
You would look so gorgeous painted in their blood.
You shouldnât have tested my limits.
I can make all of your pain go away. You just have to say the words.
Keep that up and Iâll start treating you like the bitch youâre being.
You have no idea how much I have been holding myself back for you.
Say you love me.
You donât know how much I love you.
Horsemen x Crowfather's Heir! GN Reader âł a request submitted by @screechinginthevoid I'm (currently) working on. Unsure when to say this one will be coming out, it's gonna be quite long I imagine considering that I want to implement a lot of lore and history into this one, even from the book. Hopefully you enjoy this teaser though Jer! and know that I am working on this piece bit by bit!
As your first introduction with the four, it had been accidental at best. Honest. You never meant to intrude on your dear father or his business with the Nephilim soldiers and their commander.Â
You entered their lives like a breath of fresh air. One they could finally swallow without fearing it would poison their lungs on the next gulp, that it didnât taste of bitter ash and desolation.Â
True and raw beauty incarnate, a mold of flawed perfection, so fragile and regal with a frightful innocence they cannot help but become allured by.Â
Though utterly blindsighted to the improper enthrallment of their attention on you, the Crowfather sternly clears the ragged chimney of his old throat, beckoning the glowing orchestra of eyes to him again. And in turn, it brings you out from your own stupor, cheeks warmed to a degree you didnât know was possible.Â
âI finished inscribing those tomes for you.â Your voice is a euphoric and blended splendor of everything Heaven denied them.Â
How could they have been warded off by the Keeper of Secrets from something so undeniably divine?Â
âGood. You have done well, my child,â croaks the Crowfather. For the first time since they dared to step foot in his domain and obtain his audience, they saw the Old Oneâs lips fold into a tender smile.Â
With a small bow of your head you then turn your eyes, shyly allowing your gaze to take in the four standing at the bottom of the darkened steps.Â
âDad,â you whisper lowly, sinking down to level yourself to where he sat on his throne. âWho are they?âÂ
âThey areâŚâ He hesitates a moment, eyes shrivelled into a narrowed vision as they flitter back and forth. The last thing heâd wish for is to scare you despite the terrible need of such an emotion. It will grant you a better understanding of the worlds and universe around you when you eventually take your place on the Veiled Throne of Secrets.Â
âI shall explain later, child. Now off you go.â His long and jagged nail points forth in a direction that urges you with firm banishment. You knew that tone better than any living creature. His dismissal came in a coldly played act, a ploy meant to deceive any perception of your close relation to the Keeper; to protect you.Â
âY-yes, Crowfather.âÂ
You make good on his command and hastily walk towards the chamberâs archway, doing your best to hide your face from the Nephilim as you pass by them. You have to ignore the heated trance of their eyes following you as you do, failing when you let your eyes drift aside and make contact; an intimate fusion between which grants you a peeking view into the depths of their souls.
A mere stolen glance turned into a keen and flustered fascination. Forbidden and yet so desirably wanted all within one moment. One observant and not so secret study. So much for being the inheritor of the very one who upholds that principle.Â
Your footfall fades into the distance and eventually the darkened trail of your robe reminiscent of the Keeperâs himself disappears out of sight.Â
âI wasnât aware that the Keeper of Secrets harboured a ward under his care.â Death says this with a lowered drawl that strums the deepened cords of his voice like a rustic purr. The Crowfather sneers, hearing the belittling snicker in the commanderâs tone.Â
Strife adds with a velveted chuckle, his body arched forward with a laced pounce, âAnd a rather fine looking one at that.â
Your fatherâs nails ring with a scraping claw against the stone arms of his throne, long and square teeth bared by his ferocious temper to restrain himself. The nerve of these insufferable creaturesâŚ
The four began to run errands for your father. Their presence came and went through the Veil and fortress. Attending jobs that required their expertise and skills, their other objectives that you suspect were related to their kin became abandoned, instead favoured by these visits. Whether to actually get into the good graces of your father or to have some excuse to run into you, you didnât have a clue.Â
Because of these visitations, it was expected that you would have your run-ins with the four, almost chased around as you meant to go about your business. Furthermore when affections began to rise it was also very futile for the Crowfather to intervene. Somehow your young heart was set as was the four Nephilim that pursued you.
( /â¨^â¨) /
Loss will affect you, whether you realise it or not. It can make you angry. It can make you bitter. Words are traded when wounds are prodded, and they'll come back to haunt you when it's most inconvenient.
There are billions of grains of ash blanketing the Gilded Arena, layer heaped upon layer of dead cells, deep enough for you to drown in, if the particles werenât condensed so solidly, interlocking like sand on a beach to keep your weight distributed. To have accumulated this much, the place must be ancient, far older than humanity, far older than Earth even. So old that it might have existed for as long as the Universe has known the concept of death.
Thousands of grains â history in each and every one - hiss through the gaps between your spread fingers as you teeter forwards, hands rising from the ash to catch yourself on the colossal skull in front of you when you start sinking down to your knees.
Itâs hard not to think about how youâre surrounded by the remnants of people right now, that you have been since you first entered the realm.
And now hereâs another one, another death to add to an unending multitude.
One of your palms has landed on the lustreless crystal jammed inside Gnashorâs cranium, while the fingers of your other hand curl with an unexpected fervour into the edge of an empty eye socket, as dark as it is deep. So deep that you could fit your entire fist inside the cavity, though the prospect causes your stomach to fill with bile.
You know itâs utterly illogical to try and search for any traces of those vivid, green lights that had, mere seconds ago, been burning down at you with inscrutable intent.
For Godâs sake, the skull has been completely severed. It lays a few feet from the top of Gnashorâs spine where the rest of its titanic body has fallen, already breaking apart at the joints and allowing the smallest of those borrowed bones to sink back into the ground, where they too will one day become ash.
âGnashor?â you croak at the skull anyway, wincing when the name stings at your throat and reminds you of the aching lines that have been crushed intermittently into the skin around your neck.
Jesus, youâll be feeling those for a whileâŚ
You donât know exactly why you call its name. Perhaps itâs the uncertainty of how this realm operates that leaves you wondering if thereâs a part of the creature that might yet live and hear you. How do you know the dead here truly die, after all? Does decapitation work the same as it would on any living thing when Gnashor had already borrowed most of its other bones from the skeletons around it?
Then again, perhaps youâre just feeling guilty, and saying the name aloud is all you can think to do in the moment.
Because you could have done something.
⌠Couldnât you?
Because the Champion, for reasons you canât yet begin to fathom, just saved your life.
Whatever the case, you suppose you get an answer to your unspoken question when Gnashor remains perfectly still and wholly silent, a husk in the ash. Dead as any other corpse scattered inside this wretched arena.
ItâsâŚ. sad.
Youâre sad, and you canât immediately pinpoint why.
Somewhere nearby, there's the muted thud of boots hitting the ground.
âYou killed him,â comes your tepid voice, curling your hand into a fist over Gnashorâs crystal.
Silent footsteps trace around the skull and slip close to your side, a dark shadow falling across your face and blotting out some of the morning light.
âWell,â Deathâs throaty timbre sounds too far away in your ears, as if he isnât standing right next to you, looming like a spectre at its favourite haunt, âThat was the goal of our being here.â
A âshinkâ of metal draws your bloodshot eyes to the Horseman, and you observe bleakly whilst he throws his scythes back into their straps on each hip.
â⌠He didnât attack me,â you draw out in a daze, your eyebrows crawling together as you stare at Deathâs curving blades.
âYes, I endeavoured to make sure that was the case,â he quips bluntly, bending down to slip a hand underneath your arm, âRegardless, it seemed very inclined to attack me.â
His callused fingers feel even colder than usual as his grip tightens and he hauls you up off your knees too quickly, too roughly. The sudden movement jars your dizzy head and betrays the Horsemanâs agitation, not to mention his urgency.
If it werenât for the hand still keeping your bicep trapped in its iron grip, your legs might buckle and send you toppling straight down onto your backside again.
Ash hisses into the indents left by your weight.
Death has his forefinger tucked beneath your chin before your brain has a chance to stop teetering.
âMmf,â you grunt softly as he pushes your head up, giving him a good view of your neck. Squeezing your eyes shut to try and alleviate the headache building at the base of your skull, you start to speak even with the Horseman silently twisting your head from side to side. âI think it was because of your scythes,â you tell him, âOstegoth warned me not to raise a weapon against Gnashor. A-and Karnâs sword is still up there, in the stands.â
Death doesnât speak for several beats, and when he finally does â voice pitched so low you can feel it in your teeth â he growls, âWhen I get my hands on that wretched nothus-!â Hesitating, he flicks his eyes up to meet your gaze and gruffly amends, âDo not repeat that word.â
Frowning back up at him, you wrench your head from his fingertips and huff, âAre you even listening to me?â
His arm remains suspended in the air for a moment, poised as if to reach out and gather your chin in his palm once more, but then the Horsemanâs eyes harden behind his mask and a muscle jumps in his jaw â what little you can see of it. With a dull thwack, he lets his hand flop back down to his side. The other, still wrapped around your bicep, gradually slides away and joins its twin on Deathâs opposite flank.
âWhat?â he sighs out. His gaze has already returned to your throat.
Itâs the impatience in his tone that strikes a nerve, and suddenly, it isnât sad.
Itâs funny.
âHow stupid,â you think, âto assume I could have stopped Death from killing.â
Why, itâs so funny you want to rip your hair out and laugh until you stop breathing altogether.
But that would hurt too much.
So you donât.
âIâm telling you; Gnashor didnât want to fight,â you declare, raising a hand and jabbing your forefinger at the Horsemanâs mask whilst the other digits carve crescent moons into your palms, âHe didnât attack until you pulled a weapon on him!â
Itâs curt and accusatory, and it gets Death bristling.
âIf youâre trying to make a point, then make it,â he sneers, eyes flashing like an amber warning sign, âBecause if I hadnât pulled a weapon on it, you might have been killed!â
âGnashor didnât have to die.â
There. Thatâs your point.
A crack in your vocal chords disrupts you on the final word, a break in your own aching throat as you squeeze it out. It hurts, youâre reminded quite unfairly.
Quieter this time, but still with fierce conviction, you glower up at the Horseman and bite out, âI donât think he wanted to fight. But he probably didnât think he had a choice.â
Deathâs chest lurches with a ludicrous scoff. âEven if your theory holds any merit, what would you have had me do instead? Hm?â Throwing an arm up to indicate the arena as a whole, he barks, âWe came here to collect its skull. Or did you forget that thatâs the only way to get an audience with the Dead King?â
At that, your brows manage to beetle together into such a deep, solid line, youâd swear you could make them touch.
There have been many instances where youâve let his condescending tone roll off your shoulders.
This isnât one of them.
âNo, I didnât forget,â you snap, irritated by the way each word squeezes painfully past your gullet, like youâve swallowed something too large, and itâs wedged itself in the middle of your neck.
Thereâs a tiny voice at the back of your head asking why you give so much of a damn about this that youâre willing to stand here and argue with Death while your temples throb excruciatingly with every heartbeat and the ghosts of powerful fingers are still curled around your neck.
Another part of you even suggests that your reasons are borderline shallow. That if Gnashor hadnât pulled you out from underneath that falling pillar, you probably wouldnât be making this much of a fuss. But whatever the case may be, the fact remains that the Champion had, in the span of a few seconds, gone from a mere obstacle to a sapient creature who recognised you werenât a threat and made an active choice to save you.
It was easier when you thought Death was only putting down a feral, bloodthirsty beast.
Now, after what Gnashor did, you canât pretend thatâs still the case.
Worse still, it was a death that could have been avoided. Just like-
A flash of white beard, strands stained scarlet as the deluge of a storm cascades across the vale, a mighty chest growing quiet and still beneath your handsâŚ
Exhaling sharply, you give your head a shake to dislodge Eideardâs wizened face from your mindâs eye. And although it feels like the ultimate disservice to banish his memory so brusquely, you canât think of him now, not here, not when the body laying in the ash nearby is so nearly the same size as a makerâs.
Wetting your lips, you try to take a breath, in through the nose, out through a tight jaw. âI just mean, couldnât we have⌠- Shit, I donât know - found another way?â
Sometimes you feel as though you sound more and more like a child with values still drenched in idealism, trying to appeal to the most real, unavoidable truth of the Universe.
âAnd wasted even more time trying to find the Well of Souls?â the Horseman retorts, taking a single step away and cocking his head back, peering at you down the hollow ridge of his maskâs nose.
You canât ignore the guilty twinge your guts give at his question. It rankles you, fuels the aggravation where pain is already fanning sparks into open flames. The urge to claw at your hair returns.
âIf the Wellâs as old as I think it is, itâs not going anywhere,â you argue tightly, âWhy are you suddenly so concerned about wasting time?â
Unnoticed by you, Deathâs hands spring into closed fists as he snaps his head down again to level you with a blistering glare thatâs one part offence and three parts disbelief.
Have you forgotten why he wants to find the Well in the first place? Have you forgotten whoâs name heâs trying to clear? Has your foolish and misguided compassion for an undead monster blinded you to the bigger picture?!
Or did Brumox knock some sense out of you after he dropped you into the Gilded arena?
Grinding his teeth, Death finds himself further taken aback by the unexpected squirm of disappointment that rears its head.
Its presence is unwelcome. âBecause,â he realises with a pang in his dried up guts, âit means her opinion - her verdict â matters.â
It matters to him, more than he realised it did. More than it should. He wouldnât be disappointed if it didnât.
The revelation is⌠foreboding, to say the least.
When did it start to matter?
âMaybe,â he bridles, defensive in the face of his own realisation, âI wouldnât be so concerned about time if I hadnât already lost so much of it watching somebody elseâs back.â
He doesnât notice that heâs drawn himself up, a towering, prickling spectre that looms over you, all burning eyes and bitter acid rising into his gorge.
He doesnât noticeâŚ. until your expression bursts open as if his words had just struck you across the cheek.
Pinched brows spring apart, and your eyes widen exponentially, then blink. Your mouth falls open â whether to gasp or retaliate, Death doesnât find out, because before he can even register that heâs just planted his boot right over an invisible line, the sudden slap of footsteps on ancient stone begins to echo through the arena, drawing his gaze from yours and turning it to the railings overhead.
A figure, tall and decaying and entirely too familiar, all but slams into the barrier at full speed, careening to a halt only when his hands catch the bars.
Wild green eyes blaze vividly from inside the darkness of the newcomerâs hood. Frantic, they dart across the pit as he leans over the railings, his shoulders heaving beneath a tattered cloak and the weight of several broken swords.
âLady Y/n!â he pants raggedly, finding you within seconds and locking you in his sights.
Momentarily startled by his unexpected arrival, you do a double-take, letting your jaw fall open for a second before you manage to sputter out, âDraven?â
âOh, oh thank God,â the undead rasps, his rigid hands going slack on the bars when he sees you looking back at him, âThank God⌠Stay right there! Iâm coming down!â
Then, as briskly as heâd arrived, heâs gone, shoving himself off the railings and whirling around, disappearing from view.
Brows raised, you return your focus to Death, only to find the Horseman is already staring back at you with an unreadable expression. Upon meeting his gaze, your eyebrows instantly snap into a scowl, and you grace him with a heated glare for another moment before turning sharply away from him, crossing your arms over your chest and hoping he hadnât been looking too closely at the wetness teetering perilously close to the edge of your lashes.
Itâs⌠never an easy thing to have an ugly truth ripped up from the grave you buried it in and held in front of your face, forcing you to look at it for the first time.
Several years ago, you ignored a warning light on your car for three months before the vehicle sputtered to a halt five miles from home. You knew the problem was there⌠it was just easier to pretend it wasnât. Until you couldnât⌠Until something else broke on the back of it.
You know you rely too heavily on his protection, even if â until now â the fact had remained largely unspoken. You know that if it werenât for you, Death would be miles ahead of where he is. You know it, but it still hurts to hear it aloud from the Horsemanâs mouth.
And it hurts because you believe it.
You believe him.
You care about what he thinks of you.
The sudden clanking of heavy chains snaps you from your ruminations, tearing your gaze from the Horseman and turning it to the side of the arena, where a narrow portcullis is built into the wall not far from where Gnashor had fallen.
Beyond the dark, iron bars, you spot the familiar Blademaster, furiously hauling at a winch with all his might.
His hood has drooped down to conceal much of his face, but you can still make out the sinewy strands of his jaw tightening and falling slack again as he grits his exposed teeth around arduous grunts of effort, raising the portcullis up off the ground.
He barely gets it halfway open before he evidently decides that heâs raised it far enough.
Jamming a lever into the winch to lock the chains in place, he ducks beneath the jutting spokes with a flourish of his cloak, shaking his hood back so he can peer underneath the lip of it as he strides towards you, his viridescent eyes riveted doggedly in your direction.
âThere you are,â he gushes out, suggesting a breathlessness that shouldnât be biologically possible.
âDraven-â you begin, only to have the wind knocked out of you when the undead reaches you and, without warning, throws his hands out to grasp you by the arms, anchoring you in place as his eyes scour you from head to toe â presumably hunting for injuries.
âI came to find you at my quarters,â he says stiffly, âWhen I saw you gone, I⌠I admit I feared the worst.â
A chilly presence brushes close to your back. You donât have to look to know whoâs standing there, couldnât even if you wanted to. Draven is dominating your focus, drawing one of his bony hands up to catch your chin and tilt it back in much the same way Death had, inspecting the bruises around your neck.
A rough hiss slips between his bared teeth.
â⌠The merchant told me you were challenging Gnashor for an audience with the King,â he utters in a dangerous lilt, tearing his eyes off your throat to toss a glare at Death over the top of your head, âWhat were you thinking? Bringing her to the battle!?â
âIâm afraid itâs a little more complicated than-,â you begin, only to choke on the words when an ice-cold hand snatches the back of your shirt and youâre unceremoniously ripped out of Dravenâs grasp and flung backwards behind Death, who immediately surges forth to take the spot youâd just been standing in.
Staggering to an unsteady halt in the ash, you press your fingertips tenderly to your neck and aim a grumble at the back of his head, tugging your shirt back into its proper place. The damn thing is sure to wrinkle if he keeps that up.
Towering at least a foot over the incensed undead, he jabs a finger in Dravenâs rotting face, shoulders all quivering and ruffled as he barks, âPerhaps, Blademaster, if you spent less time fretting over her, and more time focusing on your recruits, she wouldnât be down here in the first place!â
âThe Hellâre you on about?â Draven snarls back, irritably smacking Deathâs hand away from his face, âWhat have my recruits to do with your follies?â
But you see it there, in his eyes â that tiny narrowing of the flaky lids, the way the pale lights flick to the left, as if something brief and sudden has just occurred to him.
As if he knows somethingâŚ
âMy follies!?â Deathâs outrage comes through palpably, thickening the air with the necrotic stench of rot, âOne of your men followed us here and saw fit to toss the girl straight over those bars-!â Flinging an arm out, he gestures wildly at the iron spokes ringing the arena overhead. âNo doubt-â he continues, spitting vehemently, â- in the hopes that Gnashor would finish us both off! That-! is what your recruits have to do with my follies.â
Dravenâs lips curl downwards at the admonishment, but when he peers around Deathâs shoulder to catch your eye, the hard line of his jaw eases, and he grows rather urgent, brushing past the Horseman to reclaim his position in front of you once again.
âFair Lady, I trust your word in all of this-â
â-But not my own?â Death barks incredulously from the rear.
Ignoring his indignation, Draven reaches down and scoops up your hand, clasping it firmly but ever so carefully between his enormous palms. Bewildered, you blink up into the shadows of his hood as he peers back down at you, the ridges of his brow furrowed to leave a crevice in the paper-thin flesh between his sunken eye sockets.
âWas it Brumox?â he whispers hoarsely, leaning closer to your face, âWas it he who laid his hands on you?â
âBrumox?â you echo, eyes narrowing. You never said his name.
Subconsciously, you give your hand a tug, feeling his grip tighten in response. âDraven⌠Did you know heâd do this?â
âNo,â he declares so firmly that you jump, his voice like unwavering steel. Then, heaving a sigh, he lowers his gaze to your hands grasped between his own, and winces at the bone gleaming through tears in his flesh. âNoâŚâ he continues, a note quieter, âBelieve me, If I had known what he was planning, IâdâveâŚâ
Gruffly clearing his throat, he finally lets you go, taking a step back and glaring hard at the ash around his boots. âOf all my recruitsâŚ.â he begins to explain, âBrumox has been the most opposed to your being here, my lady.â
âYou knew this,â Death spits, âAnd yet you allowed him to remain a threat to my-âŚ! To her!?â
âI knew he had no love for the living,â Draven argues, twisting his head towards a shoulder and addressing the Horseman, âI knew his feathers were ruffled by her arrival in the Eternal Throne. I did not, however, think that even he could be capable of this treachery.â
Throwing an arm out in your direction, Death continues on his tirade. âAnd because of your oversight, she was almost killed - would have been, had I not saved her life.â
âUh, Gnashor saved my life,â you interject petulantly, irked to be spoken about you as if you arenât even here.
âGnashor?â Dravenâs skeletal face goes slack as he shoots several glances between you and the skull laying nearby. All it takes is one more look at the branded fingers sweeping around your neck before he presses his teeth together and lets a sigh slip between the miniscule gaps. âAh, perhaps you can regale me with the story later,â he amends, âYou need rest, and those bruises must be tended to.â
Before you can open your mouth to argue that youâll be all right, that youâve been through worse, Death cuts in. âAnd Brumox? What do you intend to do about him? Because believe you me, Blademaster, when I get my hands on ââ
â-You leave Brumox to me,â Draven interrupts darkly, âHis transgression was done by a man under my watch. Iâll be the one to deal with it.â
And with that said, the Blademaster moves to stand beside you and raises a long, sinewy arm, letting it hover mere millimetres from your back.
You know when youâre being steered, and youâre not averse to it here. Draven doesnât push or pull or use his strength to move you where he wants you to go. He simply waits, content to let you take the first step.
Offering the undead a tired smile, you begin to trudge slowly towards the portcullis, wiping a hand down the length of your face and feeling coarse grains of ash scrape gently over your cheeks. Draven easily keeps in step with you, taking a single stride for every two of your own.
The pair of you breeze past Death, paying the Horseman no mind even as he twists to follow you with his eyes, glaring caustically at the arm Draven has snuck around the back of your shoulders.
Gnashing his teeth together hard, his jaw springs open again and he snaps testily after your retreating forms, âAnd I suppose Iâm to lug this skull back by myself, am I?â
Your stride doesnât even falter, though Dravenâs hood turns slightly towards you, as if heâs prepared and ready to receive an instruction at the drop of a hat, so long as it comes from you.
Striking a sharp look over your shoulder, you lock eyes with the Horseman and primly retort, âYou killed him, you carry him.â
You donât give yourself time to see the expression shift underneath that pale, mask of bone. Youâre too sore from the insecurity heâd just pried open with those cold, calloused fingers, laying it bare for you to acknowledge properly for the first time. So, you turn away without another word, leaning heavily against the undead at your side, weary enough to let yourself rely on his sturdiness to keep you moving forwards.
Draven, in his most private opinion, is only too pleased to be used as a makeshift crutch. The warmth of a flesh-and-blood woman under his arm seeps through his flaking skin and fills him with a vigour he hasnât known since those bygone days, when he was a young man himself, alive and striking, with a lover on his arm and a burst of affection in his chest. He can almost remember it so clearly in the hollow cavity that used to house his heart. Itâs intoxicating to be allowed to feel it again, and he finds his appreciation for your presence in the Dead Plains is beginning to grow tenfold.
He is, however, less than pleased to see the injuries youâve sustained, and thereâs a rage rapidly building in his long-decayed guts that insists upon finding retribution for the crimes committed against you here today.
What Brumox did was nothing less than an egregious betrayal. And Draven wonât abide by traitors under his command, even if it isnât directly himself that theyâve betrayed.
Thereâs a sudden, phantom twinge in the middle of his back, between the notches of his spine that reminds him of his own fate. The face of a coward rises from the depths of his memory, and he has to clamp his jaw shut to conceal the growl that almost slips out.
It wonât do to frighten the object of his sudden yearning. Right now, thereâs only one order of business, and thatâs to return you to the relative safety of the Eternal Throne.
He distracts himself from thoughts of bloody, searing vengeance by braving the last few iotas of space between your skin and his, pressing his forearm across the breadth of your shoulder blades and trying not to shudder at the warmth spreading through his limb.
Itâs like feeling the first touch of sunlight after an eternity spent embraced by a cold, dark grave...
----------
Ancient, wooden doors fly open with a resounding âwhamâ that sends a jolt of momentary alarm through the undead milling about the Eternal Throneâs courtyard.
Dozens of heads whip towards the source of the sound â the courtyardâs main entrance â and every eye in the place grows wide upon spotting the Blademaster himself prowling out into the sunlight, an unfamiliar yet easily recognisable figure sheltered underneath the weight of one of his outstretched arms.
Draven ignores the stares. His eyes are on the hunt, flicking from left to right as he glares poisonously at each undead in search of one particular face.
His arm - the one without an array of rusted blades sprouting from his mouldering flesh â is loosely slung around your shoulders, keeping you close against his side, though he hopes not so close that youâre able to pick up on the faint stench of rot that perpetually clings to his remains.
He hasnât said a word since he pulled you from the Gilded Arena and left Death in the proverbial dust, mindful that with his thoughts circling Brumox like a bird of prey, nothing that leaves his lips would be suited for a ladyâs ears.
Not that youâre in any particular mood to converse either, too preoccupied by the very plausible worry of running into Brumox again. Youâve been chewing a fresh ulcer into the inside of your cheek for the last five minutes, fretting over how heâll react when he sees you alive. Will he deny ever being in the Arena? Itâs your word â and Deathâs â against his. Are you about to find yourself caught up in the Dead Plainâs judicial system?
Is there a judicial system here?
The unanswered questions cause your stomach to roll miserably like a ball of lead has dropped down inside it, and you curl an arm across your abdomen, grimacing at nothing in particular as your other hand idly squeezes the grip of Karnâs sword.
Itâs an unbelievable relief to have the weapon back in your grasp where it belongs. The scabbard, however, hadnât fared so well. Its leather was snapped just in front the buckle when it was torn so unceremoniously from your hip, leaving you with no way to secure it around you anymore.
Your crestfallen expression was enough to send Draven scrambling to offer reassurance. âWe got plenty of those back at the Barracks,â heâd told you as you took the broken leather in hand and gazed down at it with a quivering lip, âIâll take you there myself after your business with the Kingâs in order.â
It was kind and thoughtful, and you told him as much, earning yourself several sputtered sentences and stilted chuckles in response. Still, you donât know to explain to him, without sounding like a fool, that it just wonât be the same. This is Karnâs scabbard. It, and the sword he forged, are the only parts of the young maker that could follow you into this strange, new world, and to be without even one of them feelsâŚ
âBastardâs not âere,â Draven grumbles to himself, pulling your gaze off the toes of your boots as you shuffle along next to him. Casting him a sideways glance, youâre just in time to catch the wince that warps his expression before he spares you a sheepish look. âEr, Brumox isnât here, I mean.â
Thereâs a tiny shift of the leaden weight in your guts.
âOh, good,â you sigh, returning your eyes to the courtyard and sweeping them towards the stairs.
All at once, you perk up significantly when you see the large, woollen figure standing near the undercroft, a spiralling trail of soft, purple smoke drifting lazily from the pipe between his lips.
Heâs in the midst of waving off a wiry undead and feeding several glinting coins into one of the pouches on his side when he glances up, his movements coming to an abrupt halt once he catches sight of you halfway across the courtyard.
Beside you, Draven has lifted his gaze to the rickety ramparts above, a snarl pulling the skin around his mouth even further from his crooked teeth. âDonât worry,â he tells you in a low growl, âIâll track âim down⌠He wonât get away with what he didâŚâ
The decisive nature of his remark prompts you to put a voice to one of your fears. â⌠What if he doesnât admit to it?â
âOh, heâll get a chance to say his piece,â Draven amends, albeit darkly, âBut those bruises donât lie. Gnashor ainât the stranglinâ type. And Iâll bet the Horsemanâd rather cut his own legs off than put a mark on you.â
He says it so matter-of-factly that your concern is knocked slightly askew, and you wonder what in the world had given him that impression. He barely knows Death.
âWhatever the outcome though,â he continues, hesitating for just a moment before he plucks up the courage to give your shoulders a consoling squeeze, âI donât intend to let this happen again.â
Before you can ask him what exactly heâs planning to do to, Draven roves his head up once more and tosses his chin forwards, calling out across the courtyard. âOstegoth, âve got a favour to ask.â
The Capracus has already taken several steps towards your unlikely duo, meeting you both right in front of the staircase, ripping the pipe from his mouth.Â
Concern, painfully genuine, has been etched deeply into the lines between his brows.
âLamb,â he squeezes out, nostrils puffing quietly at the air. His strange, yellow eyes dart back and forth between the bruises on your neck and your solemn expression. âWhat happened to-?â
â-Gnashor,â you cut him off, shaking your head, âYou were right.â
Blinking back visible bewilderment, he lifts one of his lengthy arms up to take you by the elbow, pulling you gently away from Draven, who lets you go with a soft pat to your back.
âStay with the Old one,â the undead tells you, earning a harrumph from Ostegoth, but Draven has already tugged the lip of his cowl forwards to cover his eyes and turned on a heel, letting his cloak swish regally behind him as he stalks his way across the courtyard on a dead-set path towards the recruits still training diligently in their circle.
âWhere are you going?â you call after him, straining through discomfort to raise your voice enough to be heard.
Without turning back, Draven raises an arm and jabs his thumb at you over his shoulder, loudly declaring, âTo find the bastard who gave you those.â
You can only assume he means the bruises.
A large, spindly appendage lands on your shoulder and draws your attention back to Ostegoth, who is gazing down at you through wide, searching eyes. You donât miss how they flick to your neck and back again.
âOh,â he croaks hoarsely, âGnashor⌠did he doâŚ?â
âHe didnât hurt me,â youâre quick to reassure him, giving him a probing squint of your own, âHe⌠actually, he saved me, Ostegoth.â
The Capracusâs hand slackens by a fraction, and his expression, once taut with concern, loses some of its rigidity. âYou did not raise your sword against himâŚ.â he breathes, gazing down at you in astonishment.
Pressing your lips together, you hesitate for a moment, scuffing the toe of your boot against the ground.  âWell... I didnât,â you stress at last, twisting to shoot a glance over your shoulder, directing Ostegothâs gaze to the doors at the far end of the courtyard. âButâŚâ
As if on cue, thereâs an almighty ruckus as the doors are battered open, cracking off the stone foundations surrounding them.
From the darkness of the corridor, twin flashes of burning, golden fire precede the rest of the Horseman as he prowls into the pale light, his knees stooped to bear the awkward weight of Gnashorâs skull upon his back.
The whole courtyard seems to stop and hold its breath. Undead milling about the outskirts pause to stare, and even you find yourself freezing, goosebumps raising along your arms when you feel that luminous glare sweep over you.
 At your back, Ostegoth shifts, and his hand slides slowly from your arm. âAh,â he utters, the relief gone from his voice, âI see.â
âIâm sorry,â you immediately turn back to him, âI tried-â
But he merely raises a hand to stop you, his horned head bowed, understanding.
 âWhatâs done is done,â he says, ears flicking back, âTo secure your audience with the Lord of Bones, a sacrifice must be made."
'Sacrifice?' you blink, silently wondering at the term.
"It isâŚâ Trailing off, the merchant hums to himself, then heaves a sigh that causes his entire frame to sag, like all the wind has been taken from his sails. âHe will be all right.â
You donât know how anyone could be âall rightâ after decapitation, but before you can try to gently broach the topic, the percolating chill that rolls of Death finally reaches you, raising the hairs on the nape of your neck.
A glance to your left reveals the Horseman in profile, paused at the foot of the wooden staircase that leads up to the upper balcony and the adjoining throne room. His mask has tilted towards you, an impassive stare catching yours and holding it for the breadth of a second.
You exhale softly.
While you're still sore about his comment in the Arena, it would be a lie to say that your frustration with him hasnât already started to wane, leaving a kernel of guilt to lodge itself between your ribs. You open your mouth, prepared to extend the proverbial olive branch and offer a stilted and awkward apology for leaving him to carry Gnashorâs skull all the way here, but just then, he speaks, cutting you off.
âWill you be joining me now?â
And okay, perhaps that was deserved, but you let it roll of your shoulders. Heâs said more hurtful things before, and if he was truly angry, youâd wager he wouldnât be inviting you back to his side.
Perhaps you're not the only one with designs on making peace.
Bolstered by this revelation, you find it in you to offer him a sheepish grin and a nod. âYeah,â you say, timidly adding, âIf thatâs okay.â
And Death, for as adept as he is at maintaining an air of emotional vacancy, allows himself a blink, the hard creases around his eyes smoothing over as his face relaxes beneath the mask.
âOf course,â he returns, appraising you as you give Ostegoth a murmured farewell.
Eyeing the Horseman through a narrow gaze, the Capracus waits until youâve sidled away from him before he suddenly pipes up, âShall I tell the Blademaster where youâve gone?â
Death has already begun his ascent, but you hold back just long enough to knock two fingers off your forehead in a quick salute. âPlease, and thanks, Ostegoth.â
He grumbles something as he waves you off, flapping a wrist at you until you turn and fall into step behind the Horseman, traipsing along in his shadow.
At the top of the stairs, the pair of guards posted outside the throne room promptly snap to attention, crossing their weapons over one another to bar any attempt at entry. Death, however, readily ignores them. Theyâre not his quarry. Not quite yet, anyway.
Instead, he makes a beeline for the Chancellor, who reels away from the balcony and squawks out in shock when he sees the two of you coming, his jaw is hanging so far from the roof of his mouth that it looks as if it might pop off and tumble to the ground at any second. The undead starts to sputter something, and you canât help but take some childish glee in his floundering as you lean around the Horseman and catch a glimpse of those pale, green eyes bulging with unmitigated alarm.
Then, with all the collected poise of a diplomat but none of the gentility, Death hoists Gnashorâs skull over his shoulder and drops it discourteously to the ground.
It lands just in front of the Chancellorâs robes with a âcrackâ that has you cringing sympathetically, and the undead stumbling back until his spine hits the railings behind him.
âYour Champion,â Death drawls, pleased to see him squirm, âAs requested.â
The Chancellorâs mouth flaps open and closed before he eventually locks his jaw, gaze darting down to you, as if you might offer him an explanation more concise than Death abruptly dumping a skull at his feet. Â
Instead, all he gets from you is a nonchalant shrug.
At that, his eyes fly back to Death, and he manages to squeeze out a tight, âImpossible!â
You wonder what heâd been expecting. And then you start to wonder how many people heâs sent to Gnashor who hadnât returned. Enough to apparently warrant such shock.
Your lip curls disdainfully.
âI believe your King will see us now,â Death continues with a cock of his hips, draping one hand over his belt.
Once again, the Chancellor looks to you, apparently still hoping that you can talk some sense into the Horseman. Several terse seconds pass, one of which he even seems to spend noticing the marks around your neck, but whatever he thinks, he neglects to mention them at all.
At long last, his lip starts to twist into a nasty frown as he senses that heâs only delaying the inevitable.
You brace yourself, ready to for him to refuse you entry yet again or come up with some other bad excuse as to why you canât see his Lord.
But then, to his creditâŚ
âI⌠cannot deny you,â he realises softly, and gestures with a slow wave of his arm towards the guards at the door.
You and Death turn to them, and itâs almost comical to see how readily the two, hulking undead stand to attention and uncross their weapons. One of them reaches back and raps his knuckles soundly four times against the petrified wood, and with a shudder and a groan of their hinges, the doors start to swing inwards, letting a gust of stale air rush out through the gap and waft across your face.
"Watch your tongue around my Lord," the Chancellor hisses at the back of your heads, "You'll find he is not so forgiving as I..."Â
Swallowing thickly, you take a single step forward, only to find a hand pulling you up short. Glancing at the pale appendage curled around your shoulder, you follow the arm up to Deathâs mask, and his narrowed eyes floating in the dark sockets. Heâs peering ahead, straight through the open doors and into the throne room.
You catch his drift without needing to hear a word.
Heâll be going first then.
âAfter you,â you concede, leaning onto your back foot and letting him move ahead.
Straightening his shoulders, the Horseman moves purposefully through the open doors whilst you follow along in his wake, whispering a quiet âthanks,â to the undead who tips his helmet at you as you pass.
Just as you set your first foot inside, something dark and feathery shoots over your head without warning, zooming into the room ahead of you and Death.
âDust!â you exclaim, startled yet pleased to see the crow, âWhere the Hell have you been!?â
âHe has a habit of turning up when the hard work is finished,â Death remarks coolly, watching with a bored expression as the bird flaps his way towards the tall throne at the far end of the room, perching daintily on top of it and cocking his head down to beadily eye the figure slouched in the seat below him.
âAw, I missed him.â
âSpeak for yourself.â
"Alright, hardman."Â
Trailing over the threshold properly, Dustâs emergence is soon forgotten. You canât keep your eyes from drinking in the sombre architecture all around you.
There are two more guards posted up inside the entrance, and another pair standing at the top of some stone steps on the other side of the room, both clasping their respective halberds as they glower you and the Horseman down.
The air is stale in here despite the high, curved ceilings and gaping holes in the walls that let daylight spill inside. It reeks of old stone, like the cold, sepulchral church youâd sought refuge in all those days ago⌠But beneath the must and stagnant dust, thereâs another smell, something earthy like compost. It reminds you of Draven, though itâs far stronger in here than it is on him.
And then, as Death moves forwards and slows his pace, allowing you a glimpse of whatâs ahead, you spot the likely source of the smell.
Instinct keeps you holding onto your words whilst you slip into place behind the Horseman, edging out to peek around him at the corpse slumped over in the throne ahead of you. A reverent breath slides past your lips as you take it in.
Thereâs no life inside it. Not even the bastardisation of life the rest of the undead youâve met seem animated by. It... No... He sits as stiffly as a long-dead carcass in the throne, shadowed by the high backrest thatâs been inlaid with skulls in a gruesome depiction of power. Even in his elevated position on the dais, he looks tall. Taller than Death, perhaps in the same league as Ostegoth, but nowhere near as soft and approachable.
Youâre not expecting it at all when, all of a sudden, the cadaver moves.
A sharp yelp jumps out of you before you can catch it as a pair of blank, green eyes spring open, lighting up the sunken sockets of a drawn, skeletal face. Lips as dry as ash crackle and flake at their edges, turned down into a grimace, and without warning, the head jerks up with a visceral âsnap.'
Raising a hand to cover your mouth, you realise with a dawning sense of horror that youâre watching rigor mortis in motion.
Ancient bones that probably havenât moved for a long, long time start to wake up. They creak like tree limbs as he wrenches his shoulders back.
âSnap!â
And tugs at the limbs draped over the arms of his throne.
âCrack!â
Every little movement looks painful and stilted, and even the crown of bones perched on top of his skull seems too heavy as he pushes his body forwards in the seat, hands spasming into fists when his terrible gaze takes in his new visitors.
When he speaks however, youâre taken aback by the rich, if gravelly voice that thrums from his half-decomposed throat, hidden partially by thin strands of a wispy, white beard which has somehow managed to cling to what little scraps of leathery flesh still remain along his jawline.
âHorseman,â the Lord of Bones sneers, and you canât help but stare at the puff of dust that flies out from between his crooked teeth, âYou stink of the livingâŚ.â
With an accusing glance down over his shoulder at you, Death lets out a soft little âhmph.â
Offended, you furrow your brows right back at him and mouth, âdick.â Â
Thereâs no way youâve made him smell like youâŚ. If anything, youâre probably the one who smells like him.
Your little stare-down is cut short when thereâs another crack of bones from the figurehead before you.
In a far more violent motion, the King surges forwards as far as his spine will allow, curls of fetid, green smoke rising from his shoulders like a miasma. Eyes ablaze, he locks the Horseman in his sights, peels blackened lips back over his teeth and snarls, âYou are not welcome here.â
âPity,â Death remarks, casual as can be, âI was starting to enjoy the atmosphere.â
The Lord of Bones sneers derisively, leaning back and sitting tall with another crack of his spine, leering down the length of his nasal ridge at Death. âThen you have not been here long.â
Youâre growing bolder, inching further from the Horsemanâs side to stare unabashedly up at the King on his throne.
He could have been human once, you marvel, old as the Earthâs core, a giant among men, now wizened and haggard but no less an imposing figure with his regalia made from bone and a face so sunken and cruel, it makes your palms sweat just to look at it.
But itâs as you find yourself taking that first step out into the open, mouth slightly ajar and eyes on stalks, the King finally takes note of your presence.
You know precisely when he meets your gaze because youâre suddenly frozen solid. A bolt of ice lances up your spine, anchoring you in place like a beetle pinned to a corkboard.
It occurs to you then, that accompanying Death in here might have been a terrible idea. Officially, youâve met exactly three undead. One had welcomed you warmly into the realm. Another met you with scorn and derision. And the third had tried to kill you.
So, how will you be received here by the Lord of this realm?
You suppress a shudder, averting your gaze at once.
âSo⌠the whispers were true,â the old undead finally rasps, breaking the suffocating hush that had drifted into the room.
You hear him lean forwards, flinching when sharp, splintered fingernails curl over the throneâs armrests and scrape audibly against the bone as they tighten their grip.
âOne survived after all.â
Recently I finished working on 20th scene of my "War in the Museum" animation and here it is! English subtitles included. I also made a Boosty page so you can support making of this animation if you want! -> https://boosty.to/alxmst <-
I'm sorry, of course, you've probably been asked similar questions more than once, but... Could you tell the height (even approximate based on the facts) of many famous Necrons? Yes, I have already found a similar post, but with two specific ones, from you, but I'm afraid I won't be able to find it right away... I hope it won't bother you.. ;^;
Alright let's go! I have apparently become an expert on one thing and that is apparently the relative heights of fictional robots from space.
First, some notes on methodology. I am going mostly based off of models, which means I cannot give precise answers about characters who don't have updated models as the old resin ones aren't in the correct scale. Also some characters don't have models so...vibes I guess.
I have also included a Standard Reference Marine (SRM) for scale. Primaris marines are about 8 ft tall give or take (they can apparently get up to 10 ft but my guess is that's mostly named characters not my generic lil dude here).
A few rules of thumb
Necrons are taller than humans, including marines
Crypteks are taller than lords, although this is variable as crypteks are usually adept at manipulating living metal which lets them adjust their forms
Vibes reign supreme
So with all that in mind here is my line up
In order from shortest to tallest we have:
Standard Reference Marine
Overlord
Plasmancer
Chronomancer
Orikan
Imotekh
Szeras
Yes I beefed up Imotekh's base, but that puts him about on the same level as Orikan with his floating. It evens out.
A closer image of the SRM and the crypteks:
Look at this little guy.
SRM next to Imotekh:
And because I am devoted, here is the Silent King himself (not on a base sorry)
As you can see, Szarekh is taller than Imotekh, so put him between Imotekh and Szeras in the lineup.
Now with these references we can roughly estimate the heights of the named necrons if we assume that Trazyn, Anrakyr, Oltyx, and Zahndrekh are all around the height of an overlord (probably taller as they have Named Character Privilege). Yenekh is specifically described by Oltyx as Tall so he's probably taller. Same with Zultanekh. Obyron should be based on a lychguard but no he's a big lad because I say so, vibes reign supreme.
Drum roll please!!
Zahndrekh- 9 ft (he's a short king to me)
Anrakyr and Oltyx- 10 ft
Trazyn and Yenekh- 10.5 ft (Trazyn gets an extra half foot for the hood)
Orikan and Obyron - 11 ft
Imotekh and Zultanekh- 11.5 ft
Szarekh- 12 ft. (13 with the crown)
Szeras- big. He's just big okay
There we go! Hope this helps â¤ď¸
P.S. While we have clearly determined Szarekh is taller than Imotekh, I can confirm without a shadow of a doubt that Imotekh has bigger tits. I checked. It wasn't close.
...diseases rage, darkness is contagious...
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Akriss, new "Avatar of Corruption" and "Copycat", has returned in a new, full-fledged form. Not exactly a phoenix from the ashes, but something like that.
She's glowing! It's glowing! It wasn't part of the plan at all, but I like it anyway. Especially how the hair and eyes turned out, the effect and all that.
It's beautiful...
Small screenshots of the process and comparison :
P.S. : Program says that the work was done in 9:46... Beldam almost caught up with her at 10:04. Kira was done for 4 hours and a half... :'âş