---
Cassian trudged through the corridors of the Arbites precinct, exhaustion sinking into his bones like a dead weight. The air was thick with the scent of disinfectant, blood, and burnt ozone from overworked power units. His knee throbbed with every step, the dull ache pulsing up his leg, but he gritted his teeth and kept moving.
Through narrow windows lining the halls, the outside world looked wrong. The sky had darkened to a deep, bruised crimson, as if some great wound had torn through reality itself. The hive's spires stood like jagged black fangs against the swirling clouds, and in the distance, faint streaks of lightning flickered without sound. Shadows stretched too far, buildings loomed at odd angles, and something in the air—some barely perceptible wrongness—made the skin on his arms prickle.
Cassian exhaled sharply.
He noticed. He understood what it meant.
But he wasn't about to dwell on it.
One thing at a time. First, the wounds. Then, the report.
The infirmary door hissed open, revealing a cramped, sterile space filled with the low hum of medical machinery. Medicae officers moved between cots, tending to injured Arbites with practiced efficiency. Some wounds were minor—burns, cuts, bruises. Others were catastrophic. A man lay nearby, chest wrapped in thick bandages, his breath ragged as he stared blankly at the ceiling.
Cassian ignored the sight and sat on the nearest empty cot. A medicae approached him—a woman in her late thirties, her uniform crisp but stained with dried blood. She had the kind of weary, sharp-eyed look that only came from patching up men who rarely lived long enough to thank her.
She took one glance at him and snorted. "You look like you lost a fight with a servitor."
Cassian huffed, his lips curling slightly. "It was worse."
She crouched beside him, fingers pressing against the swollen tissue around his knee. A spike of pain shot up his leg, but he barely flinched.
"Deep bruising," she muttered. "No fracture. You're lucky."
"Feels like shit."
She grabbed an injector from her belt and pressed it against his thigh. A cold numbness spread through the joint almost immediately. "This'll keep you moving. Stimulant, too." She handed him a second dose. "Take it when you feel yourself slowing down."
Cassian rolled the vial between his fingers. "Side effects?"
She gave him a flat look. "It's a combat stim. You'll feel like your heart's about to explode, and you'll crash like a dying star in a few hours. But if you're still alive by then, I doubt you'll complain."
He nodded, slipping it into his pocket.
She continued tending to his smaller wounds—cleaning, sealing, wrapping where needed. The routine nature of it, the familiarity of being stitched together and sent back into the fray, almost felt normal. But nothing about this situation was normal.
The sky outside was red.
The air was thick with something unseen, something clawing at the edges of perception.
The hive was changing.
Cassian flexed his hands, pushing the thought aside. Not his problem. Not yet.
"You should rest," the medicae muttered, standing. "But you won't, will you?"
He exhaled, shaking his head. "No."
She snorted. "Didn't think so."
Without another word, he stood and walked out.
---
Vail's office was dimly lit, the glow of a single lumen casting shadows against the walls. The precinct's power grid was overworked—lights flickered, dataslates buzzed with static before stabilizing. Through the narrow window, the red sky loomed, staining the room in its eerie glow.
Cassian stepped inside, shutting the door behind him. Vail sat at his desk, his expression unreadable as he skimmed through a dataslate. He barely looked up.
"You're late."
Cassian dropped into the chair opposite him, his body aching as he settled into the seat. "I'm injured."
Vail finally met his gaze, sharp eyes scanning him. "How bad?"
"I'll live."
Vail nodded, setting the slate aside. "Report."
Cassian exhaled, rubbing his temple before speaking. "The aid is alive. They're keeping him for a ritual—some kind of mass blood sacrifice. He's a key component."
Vail's jaw tightened. "Their timeline?"
Cassian shook his head. "Soon. Sooner than expected. The cult is moving fast. They think the stars are aligning, or some other bullshit." His tone was flat, but the weight of it settled between them like lead.
Vail leaned back, his fingers steepling. Outside, the sky pulsed, shifting unnaturally, as if the air itself had become liquid. Cassian noticed the brief flicker of tension in Vail's expression—the way his gaze flicked to the window before returning to the matter at hand.
Neither of them acknowledged it.
There was no point.
Instead, Vail's voice came low, firm. "Then we act now."
Cassian nodded.
The world was falling apart. But he had a plan.
And that was all that mattered.
---
The Arbites advanced with grim precision, boots crunching against the stained streets. Their formation was tight, shields locked in place, shotguns primed. Cassian moved among them, his grip firm on his weapon, his mind already dissecting the battlefield.
The sky overhead burned crimson, shifting unnaturally as if the heavens themselves recoiled from what lay ahead. The manufactorum loomed before them, its towering rusted walls defiled with crude symbols of blood and filth. The air was thick with rot, the scent of slaughter clinging to the damp hive air.
It had been too quiet.
Then the warhorn sounded.
The cultists came as a tide—bursting from cover, screaming their devotion, autoguns flashing in the dark. Muzzle flashes lit their twisted forms, bodies covered in crude armor, faces marked with scars and ritual carvings. They weren't rabble. They fought with a brutal efficiency that spoke of training, of purpose.
Cassian dropped to a crouch, leveling his shotgun as the Arbites countered. Shields slammed forward, forming an unbreakable wall of ceramite. The Arbites fired in disciplined bursts, their combat drills flawless.
The first wave of cultists collapsed in a heap of torn flesh and shattered bone.
Cassian tracked a movement to his right—three figures flanking, weaving through the debris. He turned and fired, the shotgun's recoil slamming against his shoulder. The first man's chest erupted in gore. The second staggered but kept moving.
Cassian ducked as a blade swung past his neck. He felt the air split as it carved inches from his throat. He pivoted, ramming the butt of his shotgun into the attacker's gut before slamming his knife upward into their ribs. A wet gasp. Blood sprayed against his uniform.
Another movement—his body reacted before his mind caught up.
A club came down—Cassian rolled, barely avoiding his skull being split open. The cultist bellowed, raising the weapon again—Cassian surged forward, jamming the barrel of his shotgun against the man's sternum. He fired.
The cultist folded inward, dead before he hit the ground.
Cassian exhaled sharply, scanning the battlefield. The Arbites were holding, but only barely. The cultists fought with maddened intensity, throwing themselves into the shields, uncaring of their own lives.
And then Cassian felt it.
A sniper.
His mind screamed before the shot rang out.
He moved—not consciously, but instinctually. The round zipped past his head, close enough that he felt the heat. If he had reacted a fraction of a second later, it would have taken his skull off.
He turned sharply. There—a rooftop, four levels up. The sniper was already adjusting, preparing for another shot.
Cassian's grip on his weapon tightened. He had no clear shot. He could call it out, but the Arbites were too engaged in the melee.
He made a choice.
And he paid for it instantly.
The moment he reached out with his mind, it was like shoving his skull into a furnace. Pain tore through his nerves, white-hot agony lancing down his spine. His vision blurred, his body shaking violently.
But he reached the sniper.
Cassian didn't need to control him. He didn't need to read his thoughts.
He just needed to twist them.
For a split second, the sniper's perception fractured. His mind snapped sideways, unable to recognize left from right, up from down.
The cultist twitched. His fingers slipped. His rifle discharged—wild, uncontrolled.
Cassian collapsed to one knee, gasping, his breath ragged. Blood dripped from his nose, his body convulsing from the sheer strain.
That was it. He couldn't do that again.
Ever.
But it had worked.
The sniper was vulnerable now. An Arbite spotted him—one precise bolter shot, and the cultist's head was gone.
Cassian forced himself upright. His muscles screamed, but he didn't stop. The battle wasn't over.
---
They breached the inner sanctum with brutal efficiency.
A Repressor transport roared forward, its dozer blade slamming into the manufactorum doors, sending them crumbling inward. Grenades followed—smoke and frags, the concussive blasts rolling through the chamber. The Arbites surged in, their movements coordinated, executing the cultists with practiced ruthlessness.
Cassian moved through the chaos, keeping his steps precise, methodical. The interior of the manufactorum was worse than he expected. Blood pooled in the corners, flesh hung from rusted hooks. Ritual markings stained the walls, pulsating as though alive.
In the center of the room, bound to a rusted chair, was the aid.
The man was ruined. His face was gaunt, eyes wide and trembling. His body twitched violently, as if something unseen still clung to his skin.
Cassian stepped forward. The moment the aid saw him, he started laughing.
A wet, broken sound.
"They see me," he whispered.
Cassian remained still. "Who?"
The aid grinned, his teeth stained red. "They see me. They whisper. They promise. The Red Coronation."
Cassian's stomach tightened. That meant something.
He didn't press, didn't force the man to explain. He listened.
The aid's grin stretched wider. His voice dropped to a whisper.
"The Blood King is coming."
Cassian exhaled. His pulse was steady, but the weight of those words settled over him like a noose.
Vail stepped in, bolter raised. "We purge this place. Now."
Cassian barely heard him. His gaze flickered to the altar behind the aid.
Carved symbols, deep into metal—fresh, glistening, unfinished.
Not a simple sacrifice.
A summoning.
Cassian inhaled.
Things just got more complicated.
---
(Word Count: ~1700)
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