The marrowship ambled above the Egyptian desert. It was a hot, dry-aired day. The atmosphere smelled of sand and sulphur from the artilleries the arcanists had set up. This place was a mess.
The dunes had been blown apart, leaving blackened craters stained with blood and chunks of ether-laden metal. The golemancers tried. Oh, they tried their hardest, but iron wouldn't cut it. What a shame that the easiest metal to get would be the weakest to shells and blasters. Tourism was going to plummet even after the war ended.
Whenever that would be.
Felix watched the endless swathes of desert go by. After about an hour the desert turned to dusty roads, and eventually the ship passed a large sign.
Welcome to Luxor
"Twinned with the seventh circle of hell," Felix muttered. He was always one for a bit of violence, but even he had a limit. He had gotten shot once in his life, and he'd rather not do it again.
The soldiers behind Felix were always ready for battle. Of course they were, it was all they knew. They were engineered for fighting. Under their glowing claret visors, Haemometallic golems knew nothing but war. They didn't complain. They didn't know how. The cognitive circuit in their blood reservoir was programmed to fight strategically and relay messages back to the headquarters. A sad existence, sure, but it was what it was.
Felix tapped the convex above him, inside which the marrowship's brain was stored.
"Hey!" He said to it, "land us over to the left. On top of that old carpark."
The marrowship slowed down and descended. It touched down on an old abandoned carpark. Felix had noticed a light red fog emanating from it. "A building with red fog," he'd been told, "That's what we're looking for."
The soldiers jumped out almost immediately after touchdown. They ran down to the next level, and Felix put on the radio a friend gave him years ago, waiting for them to return.
An hour later, he was still waiting.
His telecom went off suddenly.
"Felix? Felix, you there?""
Felix sighed, and replied, "Yeah, I'm here."
"Have you heard anything from the HMs?" It was the man who handled communications with the Haemometallics.
"No..." Felix answered, realising how long it had been since he landed, "how about you?"
"Static. Nothing but static."
"What was the last thing they saw, do you know?"
"I'll check... Oh, Jesus!"
"What?!" Felix sat bolt upright. "Send me the image, right away!"
A minute later, he received it on his phone. The image was blurry and pixelated to the point where he could just barely make out a pair of empty eye sockets and a metallic set of canines like steak knives. Whatever it was, it was lunging toward the soldier, steely mouth agape.
"What about the others?" Felix asked frantically.
"Static. Couldn't make anything out!"
"Have you tried image enhancing? Are there any security cameras worth hacking into?"
"Goddamnit, Felix, I tried it all! Static! Static! Nothing but bright red static!"
"Shit!"
"Don't go down there. If an HM can't make it out alive, what chance do you have?"
"Shit!"
"Huh? ...Sure, I'll tell him. Felix? We have recruits coming your way. You know Elissa Dunley, Aaron Brookes, Jason Nair, Chris Malform, right? Those guys? Sure you do. Stay in the ship. Keep your eyes open. Just stay where you are."
The dunes had been blown apart, leaving blackened craters stained with blood and chunks of ether-laden metal. The golemancers tried. Oh, they tried their hardest, but iron wouldn't cut it. What a shame that the easiest metal to get would be the weakest to shells and blasters. Tourism was going to plummet even after the war ended.
Whenever that would be.
Felix watched the endless swathes of desert go by. After about an hour the desert turned to dusty roads, and eventually the ship passed a large sign.
Welcome to Luxor
"Twinned with the seventh circle of hell," Felix muttered. He was always one for a bit of violence, but even he had a limit. He had gotten shot once in his life, and he'd rather not do it again.
The soldiers behind Felix were always ready for battle. Of course they were, it was all they knew. They were engineered for fighting. Under their glowing claret visors, Haemometallic golems knew nothing but war. They didn't complain. They didn't know how. The cognitive circuit in their blood reservoir was programmed to fight strategically and relay messages back to the headquarters. A sad existence, sure, but it was what it was.
Felix tapped the convex above him, inside which the marrowship's brain was stored.
"Hey!" He said to it, "land us over to the left. On top of that old carpark."
The marrowship slowed down and descended. It touched down on an old abandoned carpark. Felix had noticed a light red fog emanating from it. "A building with red fog," he'd been told, "That's what we're looking for."
The soldiers jumped out almost immediately after touchdown. They ran down to the next level, and Felix put on the radio a friend gave him years ago, waiting for them to return.
An hour later, he was still waiting.
His telecom went off suddenly.
"Felix? Felix, you there?""
Felix sighed, and replied, "Yeah, I'm here."
"Have you heard anything from the HMs?" It was the man who handled communications with the Haemometallics.
"No..." Felix answered, realising how long it had been since he landed, "how about you?"
"Static. Nothing but static."
"What was the last thing they saw, do you know?"
"I'll check... Oh, Jesus!"
"What?!" Felix sat bolt upright. "Send me the image, right away!"
A minute later, he received it on his phone. The image was blurry and pixelated to the point where he could just barely make out a pair of empty eye sockets and a metallic set of canines like steak knives. Whatever it was, it was lunging toward the soldier, steely mouth agape.
"What about the others?" Felix asked frantically.
"Static. Couldn't make anything out!"
"Have you tried image enhancing? Are there any security cameras worth hacking into?"
"Goddamnit, Felix, I tried it all! Static! Static! Nothing but bright red static!"
"Shit!"
"Don't go down there. If an HM can't make it out alive, what chance do you have?"
"Shit!"
"Huh? ...Sure, I'll tell him. Felix? We have recruits coming your way. You know Elissa Dunley, Aaron Brookes, Jason Nair, Chris Malform, right? Those guys? Sure you do. Stay in the ship. Keep your eyes open. Just stay where you are."