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TO REPEL THE VOID

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Fleeperpriest

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A man walks into the Grub-Bucket, and orders the shrimp fried rice, sits down at one of the booths and gets brought his Shrimp Fried Rice, he looks the Grub-Club employee in the eye and says: "Your telling me a Shrimp fried this rice?"

 

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"i cant wait to fight"

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Devil pursed her lips upon hearing word of the coming march. The Oussana set down the paper she had been staring at. Her prosthetic eyes looking across to the horizon. She turned to head back inside, picking up her quill and setting out a piece of parchment. "Father..."

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*A elder mali sits in a rather poor situation far from his own lands. A atronch drone on its last legs in power falls before him clutching the missive as he reads it he lets out a deep sigh.* "no date of an attack no warning for civilians when to expect this battle." *recharging the small atronch it got its orders.* "warn the civlians."

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The Thrice-Bathed in the Void stirred with his unsanctioned creation.

 

An arcanium blade was pulled from the tear, crackling with energy.

 

"Perhaps I ought to help defend."

vOCqnDg.png

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Rhak'Dom, Targoth of the Khan of Khans, offers his solidarity with the Canonists before marching with them. The voidal abominations shall not scare him. After all, his own forefather Krug was scarred by the Void.

 

The duty as an Orc is to pay the price to save the flock. That is why once upon a time Krug wielded the Aengul Malchaediel as the Golden Axe.

 

May death despoil those who summon the forces of Iblees into the mortal world, or so thought Rhak'Dom.

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Spoiler

 

 

A bird flew into Salvo with the news. An old ranger on the back of a stallion looks out onto the marsh. Tristan, now almost seventy, squints into the horizon. The sun cast long shadows across the plains to the east—lands that once meant neighbours, now branded as heretics. The crusade's call rings in his ears.

 

"A man's got to make his choice someday," He mutters, voice gravelly and dry. He glances down at the hilt of his blade, then out towards the prismarine city beyond. It felt especially heavy in this moment.

 

"Guess I'll found out what kind of man I am when steel meets the bone." He grunts, spitting into the dirt. "For faith," he growls, his decision made, "And let the Lord judge the rest." His resolve was the iron, his faith the anvil. He turns his horse towards the coming storm.

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St. Raguel, the Aengul of Justice, leered at the unsightly walls of Lurin from above the clouds. It needed a cleansing.

 

“This is justice,” he reminded nobody in particular, recalling his purview under the Lord GOD as His esteemed messenger and angel. 

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11 hours ago, xo31 said:

The Thrice-Bathed in the Void stirred with his unsanctioned creation.

 

An arcanium blade was pulled from the tear, crackling with energy.

 

"Perhaps I ought to help defend."

vOCqnDg.png

Spoiler

the_Thrice_Born.jpg?ex=670598b8&is=67044738&hm=68d38ec694da6b8caaa6201b976a33bba89d9cebfed8894354166a080b807bf9&

 

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“Blessed be.” Lumia murmured, a soft smirk upon her lips. She would enjoy these coming battles. Her repudiated son only sealed the fate of Lurin. As the younglings said, it was cooked.

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Elsewhere, in Lurin, a particular Silver Lubba would have perhaps bene flattered by the assumptions in this missive that made it seem like he knew the first thing about theology.

 

Unfortunately, the druid was too busy trying not to throw up, and attempting to figure out what the hell was happening in his city.

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"IA," Aramor lamented, far away below the sands, swinging his head low from side-to-side and gazing up at some foul vampyr, as a thing of meat and flesh and wooden bone, hung and left to bleed out deep beneath the earth, where things surpassing all description lived, and prowled, and watched. "You are not real, fair angel," and the accusation cut deep, Aramor protesting his reality, touching his fingers with his other fingers, callous and worn nails drifting over his own skin, and he could feel himself, and so he retorted: "But I am. As are you," and the vampyr would have none of it, shaking his head and whimpering that this could not be happening to him, and then Aramor understood it for what it was: not profundity, but instead the wild flailings of a devil. "Hush, now," he bid, and he acknowledged that the way of the transgressor was hard, and taught him many things, of the bones of the earth, and of N---------p, and of the dead father, who had euchered the son of malin out of their patrimonial right: "To live forever and unsullied," he explained, but the vampyr seemed to think that he would die soon. He was right about that, but, Aramor explained, "I will not, because I have retained the gift that you no longer have."; the vampyr asked how, and Aramor said that he had already told him, and then, he withdrew away, leaving monstrous beings to pick at their flesh like carrion birds. "IA," he lamented, hearing their wails, but as he reached the surface and felt the desert-sun on his face, and heard the news of a new Crusade, he felt joyful, for this was the way it should be; "For," he bid the desert-reeds, "the void-agenda must be stopped at all costs." And, surely, blood had to be spilled to halt that agenda. The blood of Arthur Burke, the blood of Yera. The blood of Valindra, the blood of the dead-Lanre, and perhaps his son, too, though that was not agiven. All these would die, but he would do none of it: the children of Horen would. And that made it a blessed thing.

 

"For the children of Horen can do no wrong," he taught to the fading faux-sun, and then to the rising moon. In the distance, he spied a sandstorm. 

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Wrotek read the war calling with a wary heart as he scratched his beard. The old man closed the hatch of the furnace, letting the embers of the forge fade into the night. 

"Too old for war, I am" he muttered, taking off his gloves as he made the final preparations to leave the forge.

 

The veteran soldier had been a warrior since he was a young lad. 70 years of fighting left their toll on a man, but he had done it with pride, earning blood, honor and coin for his family, comrades and himself. He had done his part, and now he mostly trained the future warriors and made their equipment. His family was well off thanks to him, and he needn't fight any longer. He locked the door to his forge, and went upstairs to his home where he fell into dreamless sleep.

 

So Wrotek was content to stand by, until the missive came the following morning. His eldest grandson and granddaughter were off age, and they were marching to war. The old Bear grimaced, then looked over to the trunk by his bed.

 

"Hmm, perhaps a few more years then." he clicked his tongue. The fires of the forge burned brightly the rest of the day.

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