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Imported post - written by adornedinwrath
(Lagrandstadt map sector: 43,23)
With the advent of the Zralovradian Revolutionary Sector's meteoric rise to power as the primary interplanetary power within the Talhula Sector, the tenuous balance of power once held by the two mighty empires it spawned from had been shattered beyond recognition. The towering glories of the Arkradian Dominion, millennia old and once having ruled the region, fell apart like tatters of flesh shredded by predatory claws as bloodlines and kingdoms once propped up by ageless might fell before the ravenous, vengeful hunger of starved worlds desiring their just deserts. Its own periphery and those that otherwise neared the edges of its rule had become cankerous and infected as rampant strains of anti-monarchial, pan-collectivist movements galvanized multiple generations of dissent whether ideological, ethnic, religious, or territorial. A carcass not aware of its sorrystate, the domain suffered not one blow but thousands feasting on its own decadent misrule. Yet one could hardly think its rivals had fared any better.
The other regional superpower of the Unified Celestial League had fared no better. Once slated too be the dominant force in the region, their doctrines of humanitarian and compassionate interventionism had always been little more than ploys for further containing the Dominion and feeding its constant need for growth. An economic and militaristic superpower, it had emerged confident and virile in the last grand war of self defence or territorial aggression against the Dominion with many of its older rival's territories wrested into its large spheres of influence. Yet tossing the populace of these worlds from beneath the heels of blood-royalty to those of corporate oligarchy had only further tested the growing desperation of an uncertain, agitated populace. For all the innovations in sapient rights and conditions of living they had purported to bring, the same rot of dissatisfcation and social stratification had been rendered clear and open to the galaxy at large. From those barely treated wounds emerged the same violent series of insurrections, open wars, and outright collapses in the wake of a myriad of upheavals, shattering the veil of media blackouts and selective newscasting as the ugly festering underbelly finally burst.
It is from this morass of interstellar incursions by lesser non-recognized states, month to month coups from reinvigorated insurgent groups, and the failure of both organizations to suppress the external and internal threats that a great exodus emerged. From the bowels of faded empires reeling from gaping wounds, pierced from within or torn into from without, a grand exodus of refugees, business groups, breakaway militaries, and anyone else fearing for their safety began a great voyage towards the Vandal Sector. There had been talks of fertile worlds barely touched by the great powers of known space but little solid information to go on; solely a dream of possibilities beyond the shattered, shameful carcasses of worlds some still longed for yet knew were on their last legs.
As they passed through the Summer Gate, a break in the shroud of nebulous solar energies and obscuring fog in the Hadal Chasm's eastward arm, it would appear their hopes had been pinned onto a genuine bounty. At the fringes of the great solar tendril lay words obscured to the long range scanning technology of the Dominion and the League. They were untouched worlds that while fraught with unknown dangers and still draped in the equipment-interfering shrouds of the Chasm's unearthly power, nonetheless were the new start they were looking for.
As these fresh planets were gradually sprinkled with colonial outposts, civilian settlements, resource extraction facilities, and starports the watching eyes of their escort fleets began to pick up concerning readings past the Summer Gate and within the great Hadal arm. Vague silhouettes that crept and crawled within the obscuring fog-passage at first were like the silhouettes of a fearful subconscious peering into the dimly lit blackness of deep space. Soon they became more familiar shapes from the nightmares of years long since passed; constructs and creatures crafted of architecturally arranged yet shiftingly jointed chitin, the splotchy fester-rot of reinforced fungal meat, and sleek blade-like shapes drifting like enormous predatory fish waiting to pounce. All kinds of horror obscene and predatory lurked at the edges of what should have been safety and those who had ran from the chaos of empires in decline steeled themselves for whatever cruel karma they had earned.
Today, the enormous eel like creatures the size of capital ships were paid far less heed as they swam past asteroid mining operations around Lagrandstadt's exospace. The enormous jointed limbs once mistaken as debris within the Hadal arm were now all but ignored on security scans. Even the spore-clouds drifting near many satellites were treated as minor annoyances at best; a small price to pay for the protection and assistance from the enormous bulbous battlestations that helped protect the colony world of Lagrandstadt. Once the Zralovradian Revolutionary Sector would have been viewed as vengeful barbarians; a conquering horde that had erupted out from the geopolitical conflict between the Dominion and the League then turned into something far more monstrous than either.
Yet that was the tune that orators, lords, executives, and presidents alike made sure was beaten out by media apparatus and propaganda outlet alike. In the years since their initially ominous appearance, it became clear that the Sector was not keen to repeat old mistakes. They had seeked to take these worlds before, that much was true, but they had a respect for the self-determination of those who were fleeing the power games of the old worlds. It could not be said they would truly be free of such with the rich resources and strategic positoning of this stretch of the stars but as independent worlds, they still had business to run and futures that could not be built on sheer determination alone. The same could be said to their unusual allies that for all their might, still needed to be able to both project it whether militarily, economically, or culturally and keep a watch on areas of interest throughout the cosmos.
Lagrandstadt was one of a growing number of independent colonies that had taken up the offer of aid years ago and it bore the results of their assistance. A robust infrastructure network connected the majority of its growing civilian population centres. The veil of ethereal interference that made interplanetary communication difficult had been done away with thanks to the arcane knowledge of the Sector. While much of the wilderness was difficult to explore and scan due to a more concentrated sort of unearthly obscuration against technology and even ethereal powers, multiple observation posts had been established within the forested heart of its central continental landmass as additional territories were assessed for settlement, construction, and resource extraction. A large deal of the support from the ZRS did come with certain restrictions of an environmental nature which provided no shortage of complaints from various elements of the upper class but it was understood growth had a cost and so did an allegiance.
While it could hardly be said that the Independent Colonial Territories had been absorbed into the ZRS, Lagrandstadt was setting a precedent for further cooperation and Sector power expansion into the Vandal Subsector. Other worlds were following in its wake as frequent visits by Zralovradian envoys made the nightly news. Progress wasn't as fast as any supporter would have liked; many of the colonies still held emnity towards the Sector given how its birth correlated to the downfall of their homelands. Others however felt that maybe the great revolts were simply the price they payed for years of power games and letting their own societies hollow themselves out under the rules of magnates and lords.
Unfortunately for the Sector, all of this had come to a crashing halt.
Over the last three weeks, a mysterious threat had emerged from the shrouded woods of Lagrandstadt and ravaged any sign of civilization it could encounter. It mattered little if it was a military outpost in the middle of the woods, a heavily populated agricultural facility, or a mountainside starport. If it was near enough to the forest, it would be rendered devastated with few if any survivors. Video footage and first hand testimony told the same story; blackened and shadowy shapes emerging from the dead of night cloaked in murk and full of wrath. Lengthy and serpentine, digitigrade and looming, bestial all the same and possessing a level of violent power the Colonial Militia could not hope to match.
Whatever footage could be recovered was as indistinct and blurred as the recollections of the scant handful of survivors; vague shapes at least the size of small combat mecha, indefinite in form but vivid in their violence. Were they casting great beams of scything, electrifying power or was that the trick of frantic minds and malfunctioning recording software? Was that metallic creaking the combat robots they were crushing underfoot or evidence of some sort of mechanical construction? Was it flesh that sloughed off and burned away mere seconds after being scourted off their body by gunfire or was it merely the burning fragments of the habitations they scattered through their brutal raids?
The specifics did not matter as much in the greater picture. Suggestions that it could potentially be terror attacks by one of the Sector's various enemies were drowned in the wake of a new prevailing narrative. For the skeptics of the growing relationship between these refugee colonies and the ones some would blame for their state, this was a sign that they were unable to protect their desired colonies. The skepticism was growing and spreading from skeptics even to their supporters; something had to be done so why wasn't it happening?
Behind the viral video feeds of angry media critics and company executives condemning the bureaucratic inefficiency of the exotic alien warlords, the underlying issues were of a more delicate nature. The Sector did not have an official military presence on the planet and technically did not even have any embassies yet. As part of its respect for the self-determination of Lagrandstadt and any other colonies, it kept to their space providing various forms of logistical and technological suppor, otherwise feeding them supplies and money. The idea of both officially allowing then deploying the Sector's full might on the ground and moving the colonial government closer to them, even with a large part of the populace in favour of closer relations, was considered a bridge too far and something that could galvanize both sides beyond what was manageable.
It wasn't long before a solution was found, one that satisfied all parties. An element of it was currently wakling through the woods themselves.
A squad of ten soldiers could be seen moving to the edge of a creek, pausing to watch around themselves not for signs of their yet unidentified predators but rather, any allies. The tree cover while thick, wasn't so much that sunlight could not break in shining beams yet it only juxtaposed against the murky, suffocating blackness looming further ahead. This was about as far as they could go into the woods while still being within sensor range of the Lagranstadt Self-Defence Militias and the Sector ships in the atmosphere. Beyond that point, the veil of interference that shrouded the woods for reasons still unknown ensured that they would all but be on their own.
The two largest members of the squadron were vrexul; monstrously large arthropods with one being ten feet in height and another a single foot shorter. This was still considered within the average size variation but it wasn't all that made them appear so menacing. One of them crept along the ground and the other walked on dense, powerful legs. All four of them initially appeared to have a standard bipedal body plan but a closer look revealed features of something more primitive in its complexity. At least three or four additional pairs of limbs emerged primarily from between their waist and larger primary arms, ending in simpler pointed claws as opposed to the complex series of surgery tool digits of their main arms. They appeared to possess no elytra but dense, shaped bulkheads of chitinous armour of which it was impossible to tell if it was integrated or grown out of their bodies. Their heads lacked the smoothness of a human's in shape, one more flattened and the other like a quarter of a sphere, both noted by their multiple sets of dome-like sections hiding multiple smaller visual organs, the absence of soft tissue, and rows of intricate masticating, mutilating mouthparts hidden behind some sort of facial covering; like a shroud of exoskeletal material where there should be equivalent of gnashing teeth
It was no wonder they were the species most often associated with the Sector. Not only were they the most physically imposing but they were the most heavily armed. Across one's back and in another's arm, an enormous chunk of rectangular metal with staphylnid beetle esque mass molded onto its frame - the aptly named hellhammer canon-rifle, a fusion of chitinous and artificial materials. It was at least the size of a heavy machine gun; the sort that typically required at least two people to man but in against their forms it looked as compact as any service rifle. Yet that was the only visible weapon but looking at their chitinous bodies and it wasn't hard to guess what else was hidden within. Metal mesh connected the various plates of chitin, some of which appeared coated with a protective layer of camo-patterned metallic composite, and it was clear with a careful eye that some of their carapace was far from natural. Whether it was from integrated cybernetic components, ridged with sharper edges and starker geometry, or some sort of grafted biomass attached like flat bodied parasites against their hulking bodies was hard to tell. One could be the other and vice versa.
Flanking the sides and bringing up the rear were a trio of aliens at once more elegant but no less foreboding. They stood on long digitigrade legs attached to bodies tall and stalking obscured with a sleek, edgeless armour that added considerable power and mass to their hunting gait. Hunched forth just slightly, their smoothly curving armour partially concealed by capes that seemed to shift and mimic the vegetation and debris around them, the lengthy hyper-accelerator rifles in their arms, they looked as much as they would be stalking dangerous beasts as high tech nomadic hunters as they would be fighting imperial armies across the stars. Their features couldn't be seen through the helmets but they could be hinted at; eel-like, elongated heads, and mouths full of gnarled teeth. The large visors upon them, giving them a wide field of view, looked more like lighter metal at first until closer inspection, lightly tinted with shades of the green, brown, and black of their environment but subtly transparent at spots. They were three to four feet shorter than the tallest of the vrexul, their hands having four lengthy fingers and two clawed thumbs, and their build while powerful built more for agility than brutality.
Five more comprised the rest of the squad and while they were by far the smallest, they weren't any less grotesque. They were the closest to a human in their bodily shape, bipedal and four-limbed, but the similarities took a turn towards the decomposed past that point. The texture of their flesh was somewhere between detritus-eating fungi and rotten flesh, a faded and sickly sallow-yellow with gore-splotch and diseased discolouration. This degraded form belied their powerful bodies, larger than those of a human by around a foot and one could almost call muscular if not for the festering appearance that seemed to contradict their strength. They lacked eyes with only an area of pale and curving nothingness lined with transulcent skin beneath which worm-like veins pulsed lightly before contracting into some sort of condensed, taut black tubes. Beneath that were maws best described as caverns of jutting stalagmites and stalactites, covered a grrisly reddish and sealed behind semi-transparent lips, made of a sort of fleshy jellyfish-like flesh as drab as their bodies. Covering their forms was armour by stark contrast to their comrades appeared much lighter. Much of it resembled a thicker version of the ballistic padding vests used by humans but a closer look revealed harder, oddly organic plating camo-patterned materials. The knotted, gnarled textures had been partially smoothed out and knotted into the bumpier shapes of conventional bulletproof vests, shifting as living and breathing materials and in the process hinting at dull, non-reflective armoured plating woven into the flesh of this living material.
Combat harnesses worn overtop were held down by roots and branches but the actual armour itself appeared to be bolted at parts into their bodies, just like the exoskeletal arm and leg joints. They appeared at first to be old technology; the kind of hefty portions of a larger powered exoskeleton made to enhance arm and leg strength. There was no greater skeleton for them to attach to; the arm and leg parts were drilled into the corresponding flesh and it was clear it was to let them keep up with their allies. Their weaponry, while still for organisms larger than humans, did not rival the other species in size but it looked no less gnarly. It was closer to the rougher, semi-industrial appearance of certain human weaponry but the same repulsive biomass of their bodies and armour was inserted like a grotesque puzzle, contrasting the rigidity of the simple shapes of rifles with the anarchic, infesting chaos of a fungoid infection across a series of interlinked bones. Long tubes emerged from some of them, plugging back into their bodies, and others had tendrils wrapped around the barrels with series of eye-like mycelial nodes poking out, some of which emerged from tubular mouths in groups of three tubes, like some sort of perverse flower buds. What was lesser in terms of sheer calibre was compensated with by vicious rate of fire and volume of munitions.
The group remained waiting for their allies. It wasn't a word they wanted to use with the Sector being alone in the cosmos mostly; their ideologies were varied but anathema to most civilizaitons, including those they had emerged from. Yet it was the government of Lagrandstadt's sovereign right to choose their help and they would respect that. Far and wide had the word of their strange situation gone and deep had been the promises. A cut of their bountiful resources, new lands to settle, and political inroads in with the rest of the Independent Colonial Territories. They were not picky enough to decide on just the cream of the crop; anyone who heard the call and provided they passed very light criteria could be a part of this mission.
As the nature of the enemy was not fully known, this was at once a trial by fire and an investigation. Rough coordinates of presumed hideouts, acquired by a few elite teams of scouts a day prior, were to be investigated to find out where they were hiding. Yet they also had orders to observe and if able to find an advantageous position, engage the threat to truly measure their capabilities and if possible, to eliminate them and acquire samples. The colonial militias were trained and equipped well but they were only militia. The revolutionary soldiers did not like the thought of putting down even nominal allies but it was clear to them their mysterious threat had butchered mostly inexperienced soldiers; the exodus fleets had military personnel but many of them were from periphery worlds who felt abandoned or truly were by their higher ups. If these beasts thought that they would be meeting more victims, this mixed squadron of soldiers drawn from all acros the Sector would prove them wrong.
Would they be able to say the same of their allies? They had yet to meet them but were told this rendez-vous point would be where they would get to see who else lurked amongst the stars. Would they be future enemies? Formidable ones that the mission would teach them to watch with caution in years to come? It was the will of the colony they obeyed, even if the dominion they hailed from could crush it to dust if they wished. Yet the same right to govern their own futures was what they were obliged to respect as well, even if it put them in proximity with those they might otherwise have little compassion for.
The squad laid low and awaited