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Competition Get your Wasteland #1 keys here! Short Story Competition

Night Goat

The Immovable Autism
Patron
No Fun Allowed
Joined
May 6, 2013
Messages
1,865,455
Location
[redacted]
Codex 2013 Codex 2014
Crispy: The Modern Brometheus
It was a day like any other at Crispy’s repair shop, until she walked in.

Crispy had been dozing at his desk, and at first he thought he was still dreaming. A girl, in his shop? He’d never had a female customer…except SMA, whose prodigious member nearly touched the floor.

The new customer smiled. “Hi, my name is Violet Shadow.” She had an unusual appearance; monochromatic, with unnaturally high contrast, like a photograph hastily altered to hide blemishes.

It was all Crispy could do to stare, for a long awkward moment. Crispy knew that he had to say something, but what?

“Violet do you find me attractive?”

“Yes Crispy incredibly”, she said, her voice dripping with sarcasm.

The sarcasm was lost on Crispy. “Wanna go to a Renaissance with me for your first date, Violet? Fair, I mean.”

Violet was not amused. “No wonder there don't seem to be many other women around here.”

Crispy didn’t get the message. “I would wine you then dine you”, he said, suave as always. “Then I'd porcupine you.”

Crispy was on a roll, and he couldn’t stop now. The Holy Spirit had come over him. “What are your views on rape, Violet? Is there such thing as ‘tasteful rape’?”

Violet had had enough. “Baka!”, she cried, pulling the mace from her purse. This was a surprise to Crispy; how had she fit a medieval weapon in there?

The mace came crashing down, and everything went black.


When Crispy regained his cognizance, night had fallen. His head ached, but the pain in his heart was far worse.

He opened his desk drawer, and took out a picture of the one woman who could ever understand him, though they had never met.
vzcmm1yh.jpg

“What have I become”, said Crispy softly, “my sweetest friend? Everyone I know…goes away…in the end…”

The tears came, then, colder than the fjords of Trollhättan.


Suddenly, Crispy was taken by a Strange Mood. He loosed a roaring laughter, fell and terrible, and began his Great Work.

Crispy gathered dozens of machines, searching for the perfect components. Strangely, some screamed and bled when he opened their cases. He neglected all other aspects of his life; his body became withered and emaciated, and his arms were always covered in blood...no! No, it was only coolant!

Finally, his magnum opus was complete. His hand on the switch, his moment of triumph was at hand! “Emma Botson, I give you life!” Dramatically he pulled the switch, but his creation did naught but utter a single word: “derp.”

The realization crushed Crispy. In his madness, he had neglected to give his creation a mind.


Crispy had come too far to give up now. Desperately, he reached out to every contact he had. He scoured the darkest corners of the internet. And he began to hear rumors.

Rumors of the greatest golemancer who ever lived…he had many names, but most often he was known only as Prosper. It was whispered that he had created the holy grail of technology: an artificial intelligence. And Crispy learned where he dwelt: deep below the earth, in a forgotten sewer from whence none had returned.

Crispy knew what he must do. He would steal the divine fire that would make his Work complete. He donned his ceremonial circuit board armor and his lucky fedora, and ventured into the Great Below.

With his trusty toner probe, Crispy traced Prosper’s signal into the labyrinthine depths. Finally, the tunnels opened into a cavernous den of iniquity. Crispy could only see a few feet ahead of him; carefully, he stepped around mouldering pizzas, feasted upon by tribes of bloated roaches.

Then Crispy sensed something larger moving before him. A thing of nightmares loped about in the darkness. A lumpy simulacrum, a mockery of the human form. Crispy became perfectly still, not even daring to breath. Soon, the thing turned and continued its patrol.

Swiftly but silently, Crispy moved further into the abyss. Soon, he found what he needed, a buzzing terminal with a USB port. He inserted his flash drive, and it automagically ran his program, designed to seek and steal the AI’s code.

The program ran to completion, but did not go unnoticed. Suddenly, a number of bare lightbulbs flickered to life, and Crispy knew that he was not alone. Prosper was all around him.

It was like nothing Man has seen before, a grotesque congeries of flesh and metal, suspended from the ceiling by wires and ropy tendrils of bloody meat. Mouths opened upon its organic portions, and the thing spoke in a hundred voices: “A gone dooken.”

Crispy took his flash drive and ran from the wretched creature. “A best hoo lander”, it bellowed. “An amazing goon plex.”

Madly he flew from that place, but eventually Crispy found his way to the surface. With trembling hands, he uploaded the mind into the body he had wrought. He gave his creation life once more, and found it to his liking.

And then, Crispy raped Prosper’s AI.
 

MetalCraze

Arcane
Joined
Jul 3, 2007
Messages
21,104
Location
Urkanistan
DarkUnderlord opened his eyes. It was a morning, just like any other morning of his life. Welfare has stopped coming weeks ago and the only money left were embezzled from kickstarter donations gathered through the website he didn't really own.

DarkUnderlord made his way into the bathroom. Looking at his unshaved face with baggy eyes he pulled out his dick. It was so small DarkUnderlord had to use only two fingers as he began to jerk off. However bad thoughts still refused to leave his mind.
Who do those assholes think they are? Just because Bruticis got a great job, Menckenstein was switching wifes like gloves and Cow's riches allowed him to buy thousands of games doesn't mean they were better than him. Him! The admin of the Codex no less. A site generally filled with trannies and people too dumb to breathe without assistance.
DarkUnderlord bursted into tears. He was jerking off and crying.

And then there was Crooked Bee. A self-proclaimed genetic female member of the Codex whom he made an admin in hopes that he will finally get his chance to tap one. Before he realized Austria and Australia are not the same country.

Now DarkUnderlord was raging. How was it possible that he, a MENSA genius, will only be known as an admin of a community that talks about nothing but dudes nailing their balls to the asphalt and writing lameass fanfics about him?
It's at this very moment he realized he must make a statement. He must fuck life, not the other way around. He must leave a legacy.

Grabbing the remaining stolen kickstarter money he was on his way to the airport. This is it. This is the day his life will change forever. Plane tickets.

Making sure the destination says Austria with no more than 7 letters he headed to a plane. He was on his way to his dream.

...

DarkUnderlord rang a bell. The door opened and he saw Crooked Bee standing there.

"I'm not buying anyth-", she said.
"It's me DarkUnderlord. DarkUnderlord!", DarkUnderlord could barely hold back his excitement
"How the hell did you find out where I live?!" - the voice of Crooked Bee started to tremble.
"Does it matter? I've finally made it. We can be together forever!", DarkUnderlord was glowing with happiness.
"Listen DU I don't know where the hell you got that idea since we had only a couple of PMs saying hello to each other and then I suddenly got all these privile-"
"Are you saying you DON'T LOVE ME?!", DarkUnderlord raised his tone as it was harder and harder for him to breathe
"Of course I'm not in love with you, why would you even-"

Crooked Bee couldn't finish the sentence. DarkUnderlord's fist hit her face like a train. As she was falling to the floor she could see DarkUnderlord's eyes become red.
DarkUnderlord grabbed her pants and started pulling them down. Crooked Bee screamed and cried. She begged DarkUnderlord to stop as she was trying to escape and failing.

Just as DarkUnderlord managed to finally find his dick and insert it into Crooked Bee she hit his balls with her leg with all the strength she could muster.

"YOU STUPID FUCKING BITCH!!" - DarkUnderlord screamed in pain. Crooked Bee quickly crawled to a door but DarkUnderlord caught up to her.
However he slipped and pushed Crooked Bee into the wall with all his weight crushing her skull.

Crooked Bee's eye fell out of her socket and brains were leaking out of the cracks but that couldn't stop DarkUnderlord. Nothing in the world could stop DarkUnderlord now.
He was raping Bee's dead body while daubing his face with the mix of her blood and brains, before finally coming into her empty eye socket.

...

DarkUnderlord sat in the armchair, Crooked Bee's dead body at his feet. He could clearly hear police sirens now.
"Was it worth it?", he thought to himself.

"Totally".

DarkUnderlord lit up a cigar.
 

Zep Zepo

Titties and Beer
Dumbfuck Repressed Homosexual
Joined
Mar 23, 2013
Messages
5,233
I would suggest a change...

He was tastefully raping Bee's dead body while....

Zep--
 

zwanzig_zwoelf

Guest
Die Infinitron Geburt.
Infinitron sees a picture that was taken when he was born. There was...
Jaesun, holding the hand of some jewish guy who looks like Crispy, LundB, feeding a little boy with his long titty, flowers and a kitten.
The end.
 

CappenVarra

phase-based phantasmist
Patron
Joined
Mar 14, 2011
Messages
2,912
Location
Ardamai
For an opportunity to legitimately play a slightly more user-friendly version of a freely available game from 1988 called Wasteland, codexers expose the radioactive wasteland of their souls. Ask not for whom the geiger counter ticks?
 

Metro

Arcane
Beg Auditor
Joined
Aug 27, 2009
Messages
27,792
Short-story? I'll just beg like Begfinitron Bot 2000 does -- gimme Wasteland 1 Steam key, pl0x.
 

sser

Arcane
Developer
Joined
Mar 10, 2011
Messages
1,866,880
Whipped up a feel-good story here to lift the spirits and warm the hearts.


The tatterdemalion shuffled along the cobbled streets, newspaper pulp for clothes, a lumbermill for teeth. He begged with fingers too rotted to hold change, but begged nonetheless. Leprosy had adorned him a swamp’s greenery and a cratered face. Children were warned that the devil lived inside his hideous, seeping pores. But the illness had also earned him a bell, a courtesy of the local parish. And when the disease ravaged him further, the townsfolk fashioned him a whole carillon, adjusting it atop his head like a crown – hoisted there by a long stick which was immediately burned thereafter, of course – and as he moped about the streets there accompanied him a lovely tune. It went something like heavy bell first, followed by slight tinkling of the littler bells, and then the heavy bell again on its backswing. So it went with every step, a birdly morning his companion no matter the time of day nor his mood. All he had to do was walk.

But walking was all he did. The leper grew tired of the bells, for all things tend to wane in the present when there is too much past, and soon so too did the bells wear thin the public goodwill. Rocks were thrown at him, navigating his footfalls and terrible ringing elsewhere. And rocks were also thrown at him because, in part, the sound of stone against skull had a sickeningly pleasurable tune. But nobody would admit that. And no rock was thrown twice, for a leper’s flesh poisons all things, all things including earthen tears.

Thankfully, the constant rain of that spring muted the bells and it wasn’t but a week before they were too chipped and faded to carry even the faintest suggestion of a ding. Everyone was happy again. The leper now carried with him a crown of rust.

In the summer, the leper coughed in the general direction of the town well. There was a great furor over the incident which was thereafter known as “the cough.” Talks were held. Opinions meted out with the ease that opinions are typically meted. A startling large number of people wished to see the leper dead. Originally, it had been that they wished to see him merely leave town, but then a small boy raised the point that their town was a hundred miles from nowhere. The geographical circumstances would be the end of the leper one way or another. Their killing him would be for mercy. Besides, if they did it themselves they could take care of his body. A dead leper out in the wilds would decompose, his filthy dust could blow into any direction and, as it so happened, the town was in any direction.

The matter was settled.

They hunted the leper that summer and tracked him into fall. It surprised everyone at how adept the man was at avoiding his pursuers. Who knew a gangly figure such as that green fella could elude mercy killers like the one-eyed farmer from the north, or the old lady that lived in the rafters of the red barn (not the green one, not a thing lived there), or even the wild dogs and pigs. It wasn’t long until, like all curiosities, the issue became a game. The leper was a plaything, a ball of gooey yarn, and the town a pawing, but ultimately disinterested cat.

Winter came and its snowy-self white washed the bloodthirst of the villagers. They became bored – and also quite cold and tired, for that winter was particularly vicious. An assumption was made that the leper would be taken by the frost, all they had to do was keep a lookout for his corpse.

Most winters were occupied by festivities and merry-making. But not this one. Of course not this one. Invaders arrived midway through the solstice. They were Watchers, hideous, foul things with fowl things – nightmarish looking falcons. Hefted over their shoulders were axes and spears, and dangling from their belts were the heads of their fallen foes, and across their chests were crisscrossing belts made of ears like fleshy bandoliers. They made a very simple demand.

“We have come for the one named Trash.”

It was at that moment that the parish bell rang out. Everyone looked up in expectation of some accident. Nobody had manned the parish bells in… well, never. But a silhouette of a man tugged the bell ropes, his shadowy and near shapeless form arcing wildly in the steeple as he sounded his warcry. It was obvious who it was. The townsfolk murmured about how they totally knew that’s where he was the whole time, to which the Watchers were mightily confused. But none could quite take their eyes off the spectacle.

Trash gave the bell rope a final tug, and then he stepped away, the instrument clanging behind him. The wind was sharp – crisp in soft sharpness, even, and for the first time in years, he felt something. A pang in his chest that said it was time. Below him lay a nest of targets: the invaders spread about ready to be poisoned by his body. The leper could finally be a hero, forged out of forgiveness, and remembered for his resilience. He spread his arms wide, his world his witness, his martyrdom his purpose.

And then the leper leapt.

It was with certainty, compassion, resoluteness. But there was error, too. The bell rope had become tied about his ankle, and as he distanced himself from the steeple in his downward descent, the rope snapped taut and finagled his trajectory altogether. A foot broke off – he wasn’t sure which – and he suddenly found himself skittering down the face of the parish. A sonorous wheeze and staccato thuds followed him as he plummeted. Limbs starfished, his body spiraling. In the silence of the town – all the spectators clutching themselves in anxiety – the disaster filled the air like a very depressed drumbeat.

The vestibule broke his fall, but the architecture only aided further calamity. You see, the roof was without shingles and, being winter, was quite icy. Moaning pathetically, Trash slid down the slanted structure and was soon dumped over the eave. His next fall was but a short trip to the groundlevel, but did not end there, nor was the darkness that suddenly accompanied him that of death. The leper had fallen into the town well, the screams of everyone above echoing down to meet him. There was much pain and suffering to be had in their crying, the squalls of horror unending. Even the Watchers understood that their fates had been sealed, that they should have never come to this place.

Trash hit the icy film atop the well water and his body disintegrated on impact. Shards of broken ice knifed into the chilly waters, and through their spiky sieves his flesh was torn asunder, minced into giblets of green and streams of wrinkly red. A fountain of himself splashed upward, the violated viscosity shaped ruinously about him. And Trash could but smile, his mind the last thing to fade. The crown of bells slipped before his eyes, kingly and magnificent, and sank to the bottom of the well. And – if you were to listen very, very closely – you could hear those rusted bells clang one last time.
 

Night Goat

The Immovable Autism
Patron
No Fun Allowed
Joined
May 6, 2013
Messages
1,865,455
Location
[redacted]
Codex 2013 Codex 2014
Whipped up a feel-good story here to lift the spirits and warm the hearts.


The tatterdemalion shuffled along the cobbled streets, newspaper pulp for clothes, a lumbermill for teeth. He begged with fingers too rotted to hold change, but begged nonetheless. Leprosy had adorned him a swamp’s greenery and a cratered face. Children were warned that the devil lived inside his hideous, seeping pores. But the illness had also earned him a bell, a courtesy of the local parish. And when the disease ravaged him further, the townsfolk fashioned him a whole carillon, adjusting it atop his head like a crown – hoisted there by a long stick which was immediately burned thereafter, of course – and as he moped about the streets there accompanied him a lovely tune. It went something like heavy bell first, followed by slight tinkling of the littler bells, and then the heavy bell again on its backswing. So it went with every step, a birdly morning his companion no matter the time of day nor his mood. All he had to do was walk.

But walking was all he did. The leper grew tired of the bells, for all things tend to wane in the present when there is too much past, and soon so too did the bells wear thin the public goodwill. Rocks were thrown at him, navigating his footfalls and terrible ringing elsewhere. And rocks were also thrown at him because, in part, the sound of stone against skull had a sickeningly pleasurable tune. But nobody would admit that. And no rock was thrown twice, for a leper’s flesh poisons all things, all things including earthen tears.

Thankfully, the constant rain of that spring muted the bells and it wasn’t but a week before they were too chipped and faded to carry even the faintest suggestion of a ding. Everyone was happy again. The leper now carried with him a crown of rust.

In the summer, the leper coughed in the general direction of the town well. There was a great furor over the incident which was thereafter known as “the cough.” Talks were held. Opinions meted out with the ease that opinions are typically meted. A startling large number of people wished to see the leper dead. Originally, it had been that they wished to see him merely leave town, but then a small boy raised the point that their town was a hundred miles from nowhere. The geographical circumstances would be the end of the leper one way or another. Their killing him would be for mercy. Besides, if they did it themselves they could take care of his body. A dead leper out in the wilds would decompose, his filthy dust could blow into any direction and, as it so happened, the town was in any direction.

The matter was settled.

They hunted the leper that summer and tracked him into fall. It surprised everyone at how adept the man was at avoiding his pursuers. Who knew a gangly figure such as that green fella could elude mercy killers like the one-eyed farmer from the north, or the old lady that lived in the rafters of the red barn (not the green one, not a thing lived there), or even the wild dogs and pigs. It wasn’t long until, like all curiosities, the issue became a game. The leper was a plaything, a ball of gooey yarn, and the town a pawing, but ultimately disinterested cat.

Winter came and its snowy-self white washed the bloodthirst of the villagers. They became bored – and also quite cold and tired, for that winter was particularly vicious. An assumption was made that the leper would be taken by the frost, all they had to do was keep a lookout for his corpse.

Most winters were occupied by festivities and merry-making. But not this one. Of course not this one. Invaders arrived midway through the solstice. They were Watchers, hideous, foul things with fowl things – nightmarish looking falcons. Hefted over their shoulders were axes and spears, and dangling from their belts were the heads of their fallen foes, and across their chests were crisscrossing belts made of ears like fleshy bandoliers. They made a very simple demand.

“We have come for the one named Trash.”

It was at that moment that the parish bell rang out. Everyone looked up in expectation of some accident. Nobody had manned the parish bells in… well, never. But a silhouette of a man tugged the bell ropes, his shadowy and near shapeless form arcing wildly in the steeple as he sounded his warcry. It was obvious who it was. The townsfolk murmured about how they totally knew that’s where he was the whole time, to which the Watchers were mightily confused. But none could quite take their eyes off the spectacle.

Trash gave the bell rope a final tug, and then he stepped away, the instrument clanging behind him. The wind was sharp – crisp in soft sharpness, even, and for the first time in years, he felt something. A pang in his chest that said it was time. Below him lay a nest of targets: the invaders spread about ready to be poisoned by his body. The leper could finally be a hero, forged out of forgiveness, and remembered for his resilience. He spread his arms wide, his world his witness, his martyrdom his purpose.

And then the leper leapt.

It was with certainty, compassion, resoluteness. But there was error, too. The bell rope had become tied about his ankle, and as he distanced himself from the steeple in his downward descent, the rope snapped taut and finagled his trajectory altogether. A foot broke off – he wasn’t sure which – and he suddenly found himself skittering down the face of the parish. A sonorous wheeze and staccato thuds followed him as he plummeted. Limbs starfished, his body spiraling. In the silence of the town – all the spectators clutching themselves in anxiety – the disaster filled the air like a very depressed drumbeat.

The vestibule broke his fall, but the architecture only aided further calamity. You see, the roof was without shingles and, being winter, was quite icy. Moaning pathetically, Trash slid down the slanted structure and was soon dumped over the eave. His next fall was but a short trip to the groundlevel, but did not end there, nor was the darkness that suddenly accompanied him that of death. The leper had fallen into the town well, the screams of everyone above echoing down to meet him. There was much pain and suffering to be had in their crying, the squalls of horror unending. Even the Watchers understood that their fates had been sealed, that they should have never come to this place.

Trash hit the icy film atop the well water and his body disintegrated on impact. Shards of broken ice knifed into the chilly waters, and through their spiky sieves his flesh was torn asunder, minced into giblets of green and streams of wrinkly red. A fountain of himself splashed upward, the violated viscosity shaped ruinously about him. And Trash could but smile, his mind the last thing to fade. The crown of bells slipped before his eyes, kingly and magnificent, and sank to the bottom of the well. And – if you were to listen very, very closely – you could hear those rusted bells clang one last time.

:5/5:
That's some damn good writing. I really need to read your book sometime.
 

DarkUnderlord

Professional Throne Sitter
Staff Member
Joined
Jun 18, 2002
Messages
28,544
UPDATE: InXile really want to give this thing away, so all #176 people who donated are eligible for a W1 key. Let me know whether you want GOG or Steam. And hey, if you don't want it, why not take a key anyway and give it to a friend¹?


¹Because I'd rather not be left holding dozens of keys at the end of this.
 

Gregz

Arcane
Joined
Jul 31, 2011
Messages
8,962
Location
The Desert Wasteland
UPDATE: InXile really want to give this thing away, so all #176 people who donated are eligible for a W1 key. Let me know whether you want GOG or Steam. And hey, if you don't want it, why not take a key anyway and give it to a friend¹?


¹Because I'd rather not be left holding dozens of keys at the end of this.

My muse has yet to entice me, thus the writer's block.

<beg>
I could really use one of those keys though...Wasteland being my favorite cRPG evar and all.
</beg>
 

Berekän

A life wasted
Patron
Joined
Sep 2, 2009
Messages
3,112
¹Because I'd rather not be left holding dozens of keys at the end of this.

Well, if it's going to be so much trouble for you just give me one.
You didn't donate and I don't see any short story from you. We can't just go and ignore the rules all willy-nilly you know.

Was just trying to be nice and get them off your hands. But since you want a short story here it is:

A Day in the life of DarkUnderlord.

One day, DU logged into RPGCodex and gave a key to Berekän because he felt like doing something nice*.

THE END



*That's how you know it's fiction.

I don't really want a key that badly tbh, was kind of just trying to do a joke.
 

Monty

Arcane
Joined
Mar 24, 2012
Messages
1,582
Location
Grognardia
Thought I'd try to write something without rape or sodomy as a change of tone in the thread. It was surprisingly difficult, as Codexian characters seem to have a life of their own in that regard. Anyway:


A NEW HOPE - The Birth of Infinitron

The Galaxy rotated before Admiral Blaine's eyes as he zoomed in on one of the spiral arms where it joined the brilliant core. Most of the stars were depicted in blue in the hologram, but a reddish intrusion was visible on the spinward edge of the arm - an intrusion which grew by the day.

He sighed and leaned back in his command seat, rubbing his weary eyes. His biological systems were in need of a recharge, time to head to his quarters and plug into the sleep enhancer.

"Dispatch the 3rd fleet to the Clevian sector" he ordered the AI, "I don't know what the fuck's going on in there but I don't like it. And order more interceptor cover for the 7th"

"Right away Admiral" the emotionless voice replied. Blaine was the last officer in the fleet who still issued voice commands to the AIs, but he was happy to be called a throwback or old-school or whatever else the others called him behind his back. He'd never allow a machine to interface directly with his cortex - not after the Shoulder of Orion incident in his youth.

"Are you sure that's wise, Admiral?", the priestess at his side asked, "We need the 3rd at Osmoedus, it's clear The Watch are aiming to seize that system before the birth...."

"You may be here by tradition Priestess Chanbe" he snapped, "And the men like having you around, but I don't have time for this crap. Shut the fuck up about that prophecy, the birth, your prayers to your precious Dark Underlord. I have a war to win, just keep the men motivated and feed them more supposed messages from your imaginary friend"

She gazed at him steadily, her eyes barely visible over the robe covering her lower face and body. Priestesses were never seen without their ceremonial robes, and the tales of what went beneath were legion. Some even speculated she had once been a man.

"The Dark Underlord is merciful Admiral, even to blasphemers" she replied. "But his patience is not boundless, so do not tempt his wrath. It is his will that we protect the Osmoedus system as the chosen one will be born there soon, the one who will save us from the terrors of The Watch. The signs in the heavens are clear. And if the advance of the enemy is not slowed they will soon be within a jump of that system"

He glared at the unyielding witch, sorely tempted once again to just throw her out of an airlock. But then he'd have half the fleet up in arms about the wrath of the Underlord, or some similar nonsense. And they both knew that.

"Very well" he said at last. "You'll get half the 3rd for Osmoedus until you find your 'chosen one'. I'll even give you Commander Hiver to run the show, as he's too unstable for frontline duty. Now get the hell off my bridge before I change my mind"

Her eyes creased slightly as she glided off to the lifts, just enough to make him wonder whether it was a frown or a smile.

****

The task force had barely completed defensive deployment in the Osmoedus system when the first enemy probes tested the frontier, clearly The Watch had advanced more swiftly than expected. But Commander Hiver was not a man for calm calculation or playing the percentages.

"KILL THE SHITS" he roared across the bridge, as the first red blips appeared on the tactical display, "FUCKING DISINTEGRATE THEM"

"Yes Sir" Captain Gragt muttered, with a world-weary shrug of the shoulders, "But I must mention that these are just probes, and we shouldn't reveal our full defensive..."

"No backchat Gragt" retorted Hiver, his voice suddenly soft and deadly. "Our ground troops are down there with those retarded religious nuts, we take out The Watch up here until we've recovered our boys. Would you rather be at home fucking your cousin?"

"Yes Sir, I mean no Sir" replied Gragt as he slumped in resignation. "Forward pickets to engage and destroy"

****

The platoon were no longer clad in gleaming black armour, it was monsoon season on Osmoedus IV and the mud had caked them from head to toe, crusting around their grimy visors. But somehow Priestess Chanbe avoided most of the filth, a beacon of clean serenity at the centre of the heavily armed troops. They took it as a sign from the Underlord, perhaps he was favouring their mission and the chosen one would indeed be found.

Which would have to be soon, thought Sergeant Zed as he checked his comm channels. The battle above had begun.

"We need to get moving Priestess, The Watch are here and it's not looking pretty up there. If we don't find him by 1600 we'll have to evac while we still can"

"Have some faith Sergeant" she replied,"Just look up there".

He followed her shapely finger and there, across a valley of stunted trees and stone outcrops he saw a cottage, the first sign of life they'd seen in miles.

"Follow me, men" she cried, a note of rare eagerness in her voice. "For surely we have found the last house of the circumcisors and the birthplace of the Chosen One!"

At that, she dashed ahead and the heavily laden men had to strain to catch up. And above the sky was lit by fire and fury as Hiver began his last stand, his outnumbered ships retreating to form a ring around the planet.

The door was already opening as Chanbe reached the cottage, and a woman with long dark hair stepped out.

"You've come" she said, revealing the baby swaddled in her arms. "I dreamed of this"

And as Hiver's ship began a suicide run against the nearest of his foes, those on the ground were bathed in absolute calm as baby Infinitron raised his fist to each of them in turn.

A shadow slipped over them and they looked up, to see tentacles of darkness enveloping the surviving ships, ships which soon ceased to exist. The darkness spread, and Chanbe fell to her knees in a religious fervour.

"It is the Underlord, he has come to lead us to victory over evil!"

The Earth rumbled as a great sound erupted, a sound which began as thunder and ended as demonic laughter.

"Yes Chanbe, it is I, the Dark Underlord", the voice boomed, seeming to chill their very bones. "But you know little of my true nature. For I am not the God of hope and prosperity, I am the God of filth and depravity, and this is my ancient fiefdom where the most depraved and evil men shall come to face endless suffering. The birth of the chosen one has reawakened the land to its former power and you shall all tend these shattered souls in this world known across the planes as.... Codexia"

And they gazed upon the terrible visage of the Underlord and felt their hopes and dreams wither and perish.
 

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