158 – Blissful Ignorance

158 – Blissful Ignorance

I woke up with the dim light playing across my face and with a deeply satisfied smile on my lips. The bed was divine, and the naked form of Selene curled up around my own bare body was even more so.

A warm breeze blew through the window and with a thought I cooled it into a refreshingly chill gust that ruffled my hair and made Selene snuggle in even closer under the blanket.

Adorable. I thought, barely restraining myself from squeezing her with a squeal like some overly cute kitten.

The girl needed some rest after tiring us both out so thoroughly. I let the marks of yesterday linger on my body even as I shifted my body back to my Psyker Form without rousing my lover.

Today was a good day.

Vallia itself was ... a curious beast. I couldn’t really put a finger on it as I’d expected I would, but that just made it all the more interesting.

I had thought wrestling control of the malicious mind commanding Vallia would be child’s play, after all, it was just a budget hive-mind made of regular beasts’ intelligence, but while it couldn’t hold a candle to the Tyranid Hive Mind, this one was tenacious if nothing else.

Also quite sneaky, like a thin mist as compared to the all-pervasive darkness that the Shadow of the Hive Mind is.

Not that any of those things stopped me from finding it and poking at it in fascination. It was strange, alien in a way I’d never seen before and it was honestly making me want to study it.

Its most interesting property thus far had been how I could prod and poke, even blast bits of it to shred with psychic attacks, only for it to bounce right back to perfect health.

I had thought that destroying the mist around me would have had the surrounding flora back in realspace connected to it wither in moments, but that didn’t happen. My current standing hypothesis was that the Mist — as I was going to call Vallia’s malicious hive mind — came from the flora and fauna and not the other way around.

Attacking the mist was like trying to kill someone by stabbing their reflection in a mirror. Taking control of it would be more difficult than just cracking open the mental defences and injecting some control constructs like Val had taught me to do with regular humans.

No, I suspected if I wanted to make any permanent changes to this Mist and its workings, I had to modify the entire ecosystem spread over Vallia to do so down to the genetic level.

I had to find what exactly made plants and animals here different, what made it so they were all linked up in this psychic web.

Alas, that would have to wait for later. The gravitational sensors back on my moon — which I really should find a better name for than the Imperial Vallia Primus — just notified me that a slew of voidships have breached the outer asteroid belt of the Star System.

“That should be beyond easy,” Val said haughtily. “The few Sorcerers on board are pathetic weaklings. The only way they could prove to be a nuisance or cause you trouble, Mistress, would be if they took to attacking not your physical well-being, but your mental one with some daemonic ritual. I know they are capable of more than one that transmits the dread, horror and torturous agony of a sacrificial victim into the minds of all who’s near.”

“Why?” I asked, frowning as I didn’t know whether to be curious or worried. That would be the exact kind of ritual that’d take advantage of my inability to completely shut down my passive Empathy. I’ve been getting much better lately, being able to ignore the constant stream of Orkish WAAAGH! Energy and glee practically dripping from the air around Vallia Primus, but I wasn’t sure I could just as easily ignore the kinds of emotions Val was speaking of. Selene’s suggestion of crushing them quick and fast was making more and more sense by the second. I still had one hangup though. “What use is a ritual like that? Doesn’t it affect their own troops too?”

“It does,” Val said with a scowl towards the ships. “But the debased degenerates only draw power from the suffering, especially if they are minions of She Who Thirsts. For them, the otherwise debilitating emotions only serve as a source of supernatural and nearly unending power.”

“I see,” I mused, thinking. “Well. Fuck that, let’s just throw some bio-ships at them. I wouldn’t want to dig around in the deranged minds of those lunatics anyway.”

“It would be prudent to learn why exactly they chose this system though,” Val said. “Is this just an advance force, or the whole warband? We might learn something useful from just listening in.”

“Alright,” I said, glancing at Selene who just gave a shrug of agreement. I turned my gaze back to the ships and started working on a makeshift prototype for what I’d need. “Let’s throw some Lictors at them then. Once we know enough, I’ll let a few bioships loose. Three or four should be enough to handle this ramshackle force.”

“You could try out your new Tau weaponry,” Selene suggested, but I was already shaking my head.

“It’d be a waste,” I said. “I have limited ammunition for those and these few ships are really not worth spending them.”

“Fair enough,” Selene muttered, shrugging as she kept a watchful eye on the ships like she was half expecting a Greater Daemon to come tearing its way out of one at any moment to turn our insides into outsides.

“Well then!” I clapped happily, the quickly thought-up blueprint materialising into a template in my mind as my palms spat out small spheres of writhing eldritch flesh one after the other. “Let’s begin!”

*****

“A hull breach?” Jed mouthed sourly, sending a scowl towards his idiotic ‘commander’.

“Get going already!” the commander said, his voice a near screech as he glanced over at Jed and his ‘squad’. “I have things to do! Fuck off already.”

“Yes commander,” Jed said with non-existent enthusiasm, sending a lingering glance towards the nude slave tied to the commander’s table with half its arm flayed clean of skin. A euphoric shudder ran through Jed at the delicious agony still flickering in the man’s glazed-over eyes. Maybe I’ll get a slave if we get this ‘job’ done quickly.

“Boss?” Marv asked from behind, tugging at Jed’s shirt roughly with his wiry hand.

“Yes, yes,” Jed said, turning quickly to tear his gaze away from the half-dead slave only kept alive and somewhat conscious by the thick mixture of drugs pumped into its veins. His mood bolstered by the hope of getting some fun of his own, Jed strolled off, breaking through the mob of his underlings with a spring in his steps. “Come. We have a hull breach to check.”