Chapters are going to be released as previously. My health is fine now. Thanks guys for your well wishes. Now on with the chapter.
The room wasn't a room in a conventional sense.
Not in the human sense either.
Cassian stood still beneath the arch of living wraithbone, watching the structure shift in microscopic gradients. Not visibly. But there was a subtle twitch to the lines, like the walls could breathe or listen.
It smelled clean. Sterile, as a whole.
He dropped the pack off his shoulder handmade, stitched from recycled flak-jacket straps and reinforced synthleather. It landed softly. The floor swallowed impact like a sponge.
Cassian sat on the inclined slab the Eldar had indicated as a resting platform. It wasn't a bed. It reacted to him not unpleasantly but it adapted, reshaping subtly under his weight. Warm.
He leaned back.
The silence pushed in.
A different kind of silence than a voidship's hull. No hum of reactors. No static crackle of data-tethers. No background radiation or filtered machine chants.
He could feel them watching.
Not directly. No blinking lenses. But something in the walls maybe in the circuits under the surface was aware. Alert.
He closed his eyes. And let his body rest.
—
Later, he moved through the corridor alone.
The Craftworld's halls were long and fluid, carved from wraithbone and psychic memory. They bent gently at the edges, lit from no visible source. Every line of architecture curved with elegance that looked effortless, but was anything but.
He counted twelve indirect observation points in the last fifty meters. Psychic residues. Veiled minds.
Cassian didn't bristle. He understood. He would've done the same. They had allowed a heavily augmented human Imperial born into the sacred gut of a dying species. You don't trust that. You monitor it.
Still. It made him tired.
A group passed him in the next corridor three Eldar warriors, light armor, fluid blades slung across their backs. One female. Two males. None young. None old. Their expressions blank.
Their eyes lingered on his body. His unnatural poise. One of them flared his nostrils with a silent snort of disdain.
Cassian didn't mind them.
Nor, Did he smile.
They passed without words.
But not everyone was so closed.
A child—barely past her equivalent of adolescence watched him from a staircase arch. She didn't look afraid. Curious, maybe. Her head tilted like she was trying to hear something beneath his breath. She whispered something to her guardian, then ducked behind the pillar as they moved away.
Cassian exhaled slowly. Not quite a laugh.
They didn't know what to make of him. And it made the situation even more funny to him.
—-
Faevelith stood before the wraithbone aperture.
The door unsealed with a soft exhale. It breathed like something that had once been alive, and maybe still was. She stepped through into the inner chamber of the Dome of Thought.
Silence awaited her.
Nine Seers sat in a loose circle. The tenth Elaruith, who bore no ornamentation save for the halo of translucent circuit-runes around her skull stood near the center. She gestured without warmth.
Faevelith entered.
She did not bow. She inclined her head, once.
"You brought a variable," said Seer Melleth-Tir. His voice was flat and clean,"A blind spot in fate."
Faevelith took her place at the margin of the circle. She wore no helm. No mask. Only the neural mantle coiled at her neck, dormant. Her face was composed and Neutral.
"If we fear every thread that knots against the grain, we might as well bind ourselves in silk and wait for extinction."
"A clever line," Elaruith murmured. "But this is not theater."
"He was necessary," Faevelith said. "And remains so."
There was a pause with that.
"You were gone for two hundred years," Melleth-Tir said. "Your companion has aged twenty. That alone suggests—"
"Webway dilation. Unstable currents. The path collapsed behind us. We walked forward, because backward was death."
Another pause. You could hear the thoughts racing through everyone's mind with that news.
One of the younger Seers, Aralluin, folded her hands. Her expression was skeptical, but not hostile. "The Mon-Keigh. Cassian. He speaks little. Watches more. He has the look of one who knows what we fear before we name it. I have seen that look, same as those genocidal maniacs from that corpse empire."
Faevelith didn't look at her.
"He understands implication," she said. "He's lived in a world where implication kills."
"He is dangerous." Melleth-Tir again. Louder, and harder. "He is not only altered, but self-altered. There are patterns of augmentation in him that I have never seen. Some Mechanicus, yes. But others xeno in origin. Quietly done. Discreet. And stabilized."
"He built himself to survive," Faevelith replied.
"That's not survival," another voice said. "That's intention. Purpose. He has retooled his body for combat on a scale that exceeds the superhuman baseline. What does he intend to do with it?"
Faevelith finally met their eyes.
"All of you presume he's a vector. A shatterpoint. Perhaps. But no fate is without them. You want the path to unfold clean and straight. It won't. We're too far gone for that. He could be one of our plans."
The oldest of them an ancient with skin like polished driftwood and a gaze that had buried ten thousand years finally spoke.
"Do you trust him?"
A pause. Longer than it should've been.
Faevelith tilted her head slightly.
"No, But I understand him."
That was not the same thing. But it was honest.
There were no interruptions. The circle understood what that meant.
—
She left through the lower corridor, trailing her hand along the wall as she walked.
The Craftworld pulsed beneath her fingers, gentle and ancient. It had no words, but it remembered. The dead, the dying, the ones who came before her. Their ghosts lived in the circuit. Their sorrow hummed through the structure.
Faevelith didn't weep for them. There was no point.
When she reached the outer dome, she paused.
Cassian was there standing at the edge of the observation tier, silent, arms folded. He didn't turn when she approached. He had heard her five seconds before she arrived.
His body knew.
She moved beside him and looked down. The dome overlooked the inner gardens.alien and prismatic, wraithbone spirals and refractive flora shimmering in the ambient light. Two Eldar children chased a flickering mote through the paths below.
He didn't say anything.
She watched him from the side. He'd changed. Not in the way humans usually did not in decay or bloating. He was leaner. Sharper. Calmer. The stillness in him now wasn't the stillness of a killer. It was the stillness of someone who had become what they needed to be, and had no more questions about it. She had noticed it when she was living with him for twenty years but it still fascinated her
She found herself speaking before she meant to.
"They don't trust you."
"I wouldn't either," Cassian said.
She didn't smile. But something in her chest tugged.
She leaned on the railing beside him, keeping a respectful space but not too much. "They think you're a disruption. A tear in the pattern."
Cassian exhaled slowly. His voice was soft.
"Maybe I am."
Faevelith looked away.
She remembered watching him train. Watching him rebuild. Watching him bleed and rebuild again. There had been nothing clean about his journey. No sudden epiphany. Just pressure, failure, adjustment. Again and again.
She had seen humans break after a week of deprivation. He had endured twenty years. With her. And Farron. In the dark. Alone.
And now he stood there like none of it touched him.
But it had.
She wondered how deep the damage went.
She wondered why she cared.
"Don't give them a reason to exile you," she said.
Cassian looked at her, finally. His gaze was steady. Not warm. Not cold.
Just real.
"Don't give them a reason to exile you," he said.
There it was.
Something raw. Something unpleasant and unsaid.
A recognition of mutual exposure.
They both turned back toward the dome.
Neither of them said anything more. But neither left.
They just stood there, side by side, in the alien light, while the Craftworld breathed quietly around them.
—-
The wraithbone corridor did not echo. That in itself irritated him.
Farron's footsteps landed with force steel against organic composite but the sound dissolved before it traveled. This structure absorbed noise, like it absorbed light, and temperature, and data. As if it resented sharing anything. As if it decided what was worth acknowledging.
It offended him.
He paused at an intersection, four branching limbs of curved architecture spiraling out in graceful asymmetry. No symmetry. No standardization. No command logic. The walls pulsed with a faint low-frequency thrum, tuned just outside audible resonance. He couldn't map it. Couldn't decipher it.
Couldn't trust it.
The thought festered. Not fear. Disgust.
He withdrew a thin brass probe from his sleeve non-invasive, passive-sensor array, masked from the Craftworld's central awareness cluster. At least, he believed it was masked. He had iterated the design fourteen times since arrival. Each version smaller. Quieter. Less alive.
He inserted the probe into a fissure between wall-ridges, adjusted calibration, and waited.
A tremor passed through the structure. Barely perceptible. A hum of resistance.
Farron's jaw tightened.
It knew.
Not in the way a machine-spirit knew.reflexive, bound by protocol chains but in a way that was harder to quantify. Like the structure felt the intrusion. Like it understood. Like it judged him.
He withdrew the probe.
Fine. Not yet.
---
He returned to his assigned chamber, which had no corners. Just overlapping curves, recursive geometry, impossible junctions that looped into themselves if you traced them too long. There were no data-ports. No hard interfaces. The floor felt soft beneath his boots. The walls breathed.
He hated it.
His fingers twitched with repressed impulse.
All his life had been clean systems. Cogitator grates. Measurable feedback. His world operated in voltage and code. No ambiguity. No mood. You ordered the machine to function, and it obeyed—or it broke.
But here?
Here, the structure felt. It chose.
There was no logic in that.
He sat on the floor and opened his forearm. Thin mechadendrites uncoiled and deployed data-threads, signal feelers, logic wands. He interfaced with his internal memory stack and began the process of slow parsing. Not direct hacking. That would trigger the defenses.
No. This was… tasting.
He accessed the passive scans he had performed since arrival. The electromagnetic latticework in the air. The way certain walls shimmered in response to movement. The scent-based transmission channels. The psychic pressure gradients.
It was a system. It had rules. He knew it did.
But the rules weren't mechanical.
They were biological. Spiritual. Metaphysical.
He muttered aloud, unconsciously.
"Blasphemous elegance."
---
He hadn't spoken to Cassian since arrival.
The man had disappeared into the architecture without hesitation. Like he wasn't alien to it. Like he fit.
Farron had expected confusion. Instead, he'd seen Cassian walk the halls like a ghost in familiar territory cautious, yes, but not uncertain. He adapted. Quickly. Too quickly.
And that irritated him more than the Craftworld.
Twenty years ago, Cassian had still been rough-edged. Brilliant, yes. Focused. Enduring. But human. Still open in places. Still in progress.
Now?
Now he was… finalized.
Farron didn't trust that.
He had accepted none of the dogmas. He had tolerated the rituals only when necessary. He had built his own protocols. Perfected them in private.
And it worked.
That was what Farron couldn't forgive.
He respected Cassian. He would even say he admired him.
But deep in his cortical stack, layered beneath the cultivated logic-nodes, was something less logical. Something stubborn. Primitive.
Resentment.
Because Cassian had done what Farron never could.
Freed himself.
---
He shut down the data-feelers. Pulled his mind back into the room.
The walls seemed closer now. Breathing deeper.
He stood.
This place was not made for him. It tolerated him, barely. Not with hatred. But with… indifference. Like a forest watching a steel blade rust into the soil.
He would not rust.
He would learn it. He would map it. One strand at a time.
Let the Seers watch him. Let the walls bristle at his touch.
He was Magos Farron. He had walked into a dead Necron tomb and come out with knowledge. He had seen the fusion of human flesh and forbidden code and not turned away. He had followed Cassian through the web of madness and survived. (He had his own adventures before meeting cassian).
He would not stop here.
---
He left his chamber in silence.
No direction..
As he walked, a slit opened in the wall ahead without him requesting it.
He hesitated.
Then stepped through.
And the Craftworld hummed again different this time.
Almost... amused.
—-
Word Count: 2218
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