Chapter Thirty-Nine
- Pronouns
- She/They
Three-quarters of the mission had survived this far. They were exhausted, ammunition low, nursing bruises and sprains, not to mention facing the psychological degradation of constant exposure to chaos. Before them was the heart of all horror. For but a moment, they were unseen; for but a moment, the Celestians could prepare for what lay ahead.
Canoness Jesmaria tore her gaze away from the panoply of evil and surveyed her troops. "Celestians," she pronounced.
Innogen startled, awoken from a trance. Many of the other Sororitas around her did the same. One by one, all eyes turned to face the Canoness.
"Second squad, flank down the right. Third squad, flank down the left. First squad, I'll take you down the middle. Flamers in the front, bolters at the back. Concentrate your fire on any nexus of sorcerous power you sense, or on those most heavily mutated otherwise, as doing enough damage that way may disrupt the ritual regardless of…" The Canoness's will broke a moment, her voice choking. "…combat outcomes. I know that the Empress will smile upon me for my life of service, and I believe that the same is true for all of you. May She grant us bravery in life and succor in death."
Jesmaria fell silent, and with a nod, dismissed the Sororitas to their fates. Celestian-Superior Innogen led her team off to the left side of the hall, a plan already beginning to form. With the first squad—and Pella with them, though she tried not to think about that—acting as a distraction, it was possible that third squad could punch right through the enemy formation and reach the far side of the plaza.
If Innogen had had the time, she might have asked the other commanders if they had the same intuition as she did, that the two figures flanking the guest of honor were, indeed, the ones in charge. But she did not. If she had guessed wrong, there would be plenty of time for her to prostrate herself and beg for forgiveness when her soul found its way to the Empress's throne room.
The three squads pulled apart, moving as quietly as they could. It was the overhang, Innogen realized, a curving outgrowth of the spire above, that shadowed the door through which they'd entered, shielding them from sight. Every step forward was a step closer to being seen; Innogen raised her combi-flamer to her shoulder, but was unwilling to use it just yet. At her flank, blades and pistols were being drawn as first squad accelerated towards their destruction like blood down a sluice. One of the cultists, a twisted feminine thing with too-long arms and breasts larger than tires, spun around, her dress flaring, and bared her fangs.
"For the Empress!"
Canoness Jesmaria started the cry as she raised her condemnor, firing a burst of bolts into that first cultist. First squad echoed her, seven voices together as one, the group stretching out into a wedge formation while they broke into a run. Innogen had not the time to watch. Silently, she gestured for third squad to follow as she began to circle the edge of the accursed ballroom.
The sound of bolters firing, the hiss of flamers and charring meat, the triumphant roars of the attacking Sororitas, the orgasmic howls of the corrupted, all these sounds and more reverberated against Innogen's helmet. Then the band seemed finally to notice that their ballroom had descended into chaos and, instead of fleeing for their lives, they switched songs. Heavy, thumping bass underscored the thumping of bolters, the strings screamed along with the dying and the dead. Though her will was strong and the blessings of the Empress fresh on her mind, the music was simply too loud, too rhythmically flawless; as third squad struck resistance and Innogen was forced to make use of her power sword, she found herself fighting along to the same tune.
Many of her foes were doing the same. Dancers changed at once from svelte figures into parodies of flesh and fabric, pulling endless quantities of knives from their elaborate outfits or from pockets sewn into skin and hurling them with infinite accuracy. How did they know where to aim, to slip a paper-thin glass blade in between the ceramite plates of Innogen's armor? The only times any of them got the chance to attempt were when she was sidetracked, when the pumping music and swirl of multicolored outfits reached a point of sensory overload so great that she forgot how to fight. The rest burned, chaos mutation and occult power no match against yellow-hot burning prometheum.
That mental overload, the possibility that sheer weight of numbers and mental exhaustion would overwhelm Innogen's sense, was the greatest threat. The trickle of revelers who turned their attention away from the maelstrom that was the first squad was hardly enough to break through the line of fire, but a single slip-up could have meant death. It was only the skill of the Celestians, her soldiers, who carried Innogen forwards. They knew the technique, how to pass through one another as they advanced, granting brief moments of respite to their sisters. Pella was forgotten, Canoness Jesmaria forgotten, all that mattered was the goal, to split the forces of chaos in two. That focus nearly cost Innogen her life.
One of the wait-staff, twice the height of a human and thick with androgynous muscle and fat, veered away from the melee to bring down its might upon third squad. Steel plates gauntleted its hands, which swung faster than speeding jetbikes, strong enough to knock those they struck up into the air. Innogen backed away, heart hardened against the death of her sister, and prepared to fire her flamer. But no flames emerged; she was entirely out of fuel.
Innogen dashed back, a ferocious kick missing her by centimeters as her panic-shaken hands fumbled at the switch from flamer to boltgun. Another sister caught the mutant's attention, hurling a krak grenade into its flank, but with a single fluid moment the creature batted the grenade aside and lunged for her. Innogen's boltgun roared, shells blasting chunks out of the mutant's back, but pain had no meaning for a creature so twisted; it picked up Celestian Ingenia and tore her in half to drink the gore from her severed midsection. It wasn't until a few seconds after the creature finally collapsed under the weight of dozens of bolt wounds that Innogen realized she had been pressing the trigger on an empty chamber; her combi-flamer was completely out.
She dropped the combi-flamer, drawing her pistol and sword in its place. Then, for just a moment, Celestian-Superior Innogen had a moment with which to survey her surroundings. Only three members of her squad survived, and of them, two were down to pistol and sword. First squad was nearly invisible, so heavily surrounded was it by the morass of cultists rushing inward, while second had assaulted the musician's platform and was in the midst of converting it into a firing platform.
There was a simple choice: rush into the fray and save those few who remained, or continue forward and strike at the heart.
"The leaders of this whole ritual are at the head of the table," Innogen said. "I can't back it up for you, but I feel it deep down. I won't order any of you to follow me up that way."
Innogen turned. The tables were long, and there were more cultists yet who still stood between her and the guest of honor at the end. But when she let out a cry of "For the Empress!" and rushed ahead, three other Celestians followed.
…
"This tribunal has no need of a precise account of every combat engagement which took place that day," said Canoness-Preceptor Selina, her eyes shutting for a moment.
Innogen blinked. She'd hardly even realized how long she'd been talking for. "My apologies. A soldier gets caught in such recollections."
"You mentioned two beings who you believed to be the… leaders, of the cult?"
"Or at least the leaders of this particular ritual, yes."
"Describe them in greater detail, if you would."
Innogen nodded, collecting her thoughts. It was strange, having to turn the flashbulb memories of the two figures into coherent descriptions. She did not remember them as beings, as objects in the physical plane, but as mere impressions of terror.
"One was human. The other was not. The human, she was… about my height, stocky build… couldn't see much of her face, everything below the eyes was covered up by a golden mask. Used a staff as her weapon. Her neck was heavy with charms, had all these bottles hanging around her hips, too, bottles and boxes and other such things. Looked almost like a scavenger, though it was all too well-crafted to really be scavenged goods. I don't really remember what she was wearing besides that, I just remember a black shape, all shrouded in cloth. One of the few people in that entire ballroom not showing skin."
Innogen fell silent again.
"The other one, you said it was not human. A mutant?"
Innogen shook her head. "I believe the inquisitor called it a host. I'd never seen something so foul. It looked like… It looked like if a man had something grow inside of him, grow and grow until that thing burst out of him, fused into his flesh. It was naked, with…"
Innogen gestured across her own body, from one knee to the opposite hip, then indicated everything below that with a dismissive wave.
"Part of it was still human. And a bit of one arm, a chunk of stomach. The rest was this horrible color, like rainbow promethium layered over a bruise. It was so soft, deceptively soft for something so strong, with the beauty of temptation even with a frame as bent and twisted. There were… three arms, two on one side one on the other, and horns like dead saplings, lips as beautiful as the Empress's around a slack mouth full of mismatched teeth."
She glared up at Selina, whose expression commingled disgust and intrigue.
"Do I have to describe any further?"
"No, the Tribunal understands your point. Now, after you and the three surviving members of your squad fought your way through to the leaders, tell us what happened next?"
"Two survivors. One didn't make it that far."
…
One of the ritual leaders, the human, wheeled about to face the new arrivals. Her companion was distracted, leaning low over the guest of honor as though engaged in private conversation. The Celestians were not there to talk; but even as their bolt pistols roared, the cultist was unbowed, and every shot went wide.
"How shall we get rid of you," she hissed, flipping her staff from one hand to the other.
Celestian-Superior Innogen aimed the tip of her power sword at the woman and cautiously advanced, the other two guarding her flanks. "I have no words for you. Surrender, accept your death, and the Empress may show you a droplet of mercy."
"How like the Imperium, to receive more mercy in death than one was ever given in life." The high priestess reached for something hanging around her neck, and for a moment her eyes were off Innogen. She took that as an opportunity, rushing forward headlong, readying her blade for a decapitation strike; but it was already too late.
The high priestess found a small, tubular device of brownish bone and placed it to her lips. The note which it produced was like a grasping hand between Innogen's legs, a bolt of physical stimulation delivered through the medium of sound waves. Only a single note sounded, and the reason why became obvious as the high priestess let the whistle go, her movements suddenly drunken and staggering.
But she recovered a moment before Innogen did, and made good use of that moment to retrieve another object from her panoply. This one was obviously mechanical, a strange humming half-shell which she clamped onto her staff. She lowered the weapon into a combat grip, extended like a Sacrosanct's halberd.
Innogen shook off the effects of the whistle, focusing her thoughts half on the pain and exhaustion wracking her flesh and half on the hated Enemy before her; she rushed in, raising her sword high to cut through the high priestess's staff in a single well-aimed blow. It was not to be. Somehow, despite her obvious lack of martial skill, the high priestess could move like steam flickering across the surface of a bath. The staff, in particular, possessed a sort of un-inertia, coiling around the far side of Innogen's blow with contemptuous ease, then thrusting forward to strike her helmet with the tip.
The blow landed, but did nothing against the heavy ceramite plate. That quickly set the tone for their duel. Innogen had always much preferred the bolter to the blade, but she was a dutiful servant of the Order with thousands of hours of practice. But the high priestess, empowered by chaotic energies, was simply swifter. Every attack was swatted aside, and every blow was delivered at a pace the eye could hardly follow. In seconds, Innogen's armor was dented, her flesh bruised, and although she was occasionally able to pierce the high priestess's defenses through the application of feints and complex techniques, the shallow cuts inflicted seemed only to spur her on.
And then Innogen realized: she had rushed forward with the last two members of her squad at her flanks. Where were they? In a moment of weakness, her focus on the duel torn away by concern, Innogen looked to either side. Cultists. Somehow, despite the dozens of fiends they had cut through on the way, the calling of the whistle had summoned yet more knife-wielding fanatics. With the last of their bolter shells and with blood-soaked blades, her sisters were fighting on. And losing.
If Innogen had been even an instant later in returning to her senses, the blow could have broken her neck. The staff, empowered by chaos, tore through the air with a horrible whistle that signaled death. Panicked, the only move Innogen could think to make was to throw up her right arm into the arcing path of the blow. There was a horrific crack and a surge of pain like Innogen had had an autogun bullet tear through her. She screamed and fell.
The high priestess took good advantage. The power which had so accelerated her staff was running low, meaning that when she slammed its heel down on Innogen's chest it did so with only significant force, not extreme. Aching bruises blossomed across her chest, across her legs. The rush of battle fled from her, the adrenaline and energy that had driven her onward through death and blood and damnation; Innogen's body and soul were those of a woman face to face with her own death. And somehow, that brought clarity.
With her still-working left hand, Innogen reached across her hip and drew her bolt pistol. The one shot she fired missed, but the high priestess was forced to back away, giving Innogen just enough space to rise to her feet, clip her bolt pistol back to her hip, and pick up her blade where it had fallen.
The high priestess had become slow, but as Innogen was barely even able to stand, let alone swing her sword, the advantage went to Chaos. But Innogen did not need to be fast. She did not need to guard. She was a soldier of the Empress, and encased in holy ceramite and plasteel that would allow her to weather a thousand blows and yet live. The woman at the other end of her sword was clad only in robes: Innogen only needed one good hit.
She muttered a prayer under her breath, sections from Concorporatio Terra, and with her one functioning arm and all the strength that had not bled from her body she beat her sword against the high priestess's guard. The high priestess's first attempt at a guard was blown aside, her staff bending and nearly breaking as she was forced to stumble out of measure. Innogen followed her, pushing the both of them closer to the guest of honor and her throne, step by painful step. The high priestess attacked twice for Innogen's each cut or thrust, but it did not matter: the crimson armor, though abused beyond any expectation, held firm.
The high priestess panicked, guard suddenly nervous and unsteady. The blue halo of Innogen's power sword came within millimeters of hewing through her flesh, and even through the cloth shrouding her features there was visible just the hint of terror. Finally, she retreated an extra step and turned about.
"Mistress! Help me!"
The daemon-creature, whose attention had been entirely diverted in the direction of the guest of honor, suddenly rose. It sneered, baring horrible fangs in one corner of its mouth, and began to advance. Innogen wasn't going to let it forward.
She had one final tool, one weapon of last resort which she had been saving for the perfect opportunity. Every other weapon had been expended, she was down to enough pistol bolts they could be counted on one hand, even her armor's supply of auto-narcotics had been depleted. But magnetized to her hip was a single fragmentation grenade. She pressed the activation switch, setting it to an impact fuse, then gave it a swift underhanded toss.
The high priestess screamed. Innogen stumbled backwards as quickly as she could. The last thing she saw before her vision was overwhelmed was the face of the daemon. It was glaring right at her, no fear in its heart.
Canoness Jesmaria tore her gaze away from the panoply of evil and surveyed her troops. "Celestians," she pronounced.
Innogen startled, awoken from a trance. Many of the other Sororitas around her did the same. One by one, all eyes turned to face the Canoness.
"Second squad, flank down the right. Third squad, flank down the left. First squad, I'll take you down the middle. Flamers in the front, bolters at the back. Concentrate your fire on any nexus of sorcerous power you sense, or on those most heavily mutated otherwise, as doing enough damage that way may disrupt the ritual regardless of…" The Canoness's will broke a moment, her voice choking. "…combat outcomes. I know that the Empress will smile upon me for my life of service, and I believe that the same is true for all of you. May She grant us bravery in life and succor in death."
Jesmaria fell silent, and with a nod, dismissed the Sororitas to their fates. Celestian-Superior Innogen led her team off to the left side of the hall, a plan already beginning to form. With the first squad—and Pella with them, though she tried not to think about that—acting as a distraction, it was possible that third squad could punch right through the enemy formation and reach the far side of the plaza.
If Innogen had had the time, she might have asked the other commanders if they had the same intuition as she did, that the two figures flanking the guest of honor were, indeed, the ones in charge. But she did not. If she had guessed wrong, there would be plenty of time for her to prostrate herself and beg for forgiveness when her soul found its way to the Empress's throne room.
The three squads pulled apart, moving as quietly as they could. It was the overhang, Innogen realized, a curving outgrowth of the spire above, that shadowed the door through which they'd entered, shielding them from sight. Every step forward was a step closer to being seen; Innogen raised her combi-flamer to her shoulder, but was unwilling to use it just yet. At her flank, blades and pistols were being drawn as first squad accelerated towards their destruction like blood down a sluice. One of the cultists, a twisted feminine thing with too-long arms and breasts larger than tires, spun around, her dress flaring, and bared her fangs.
"For the Empress!"
Canoness Jesmaria started the cry as she raised her condemnor, firing a burst of bolts into that first cultist. First squad echoed her, seven voices together as one, the group stretching out into a wedge formation while they broke into a run. Innogen had not the time to watch. Silently, she gestured for third squad to follow as she began to circle the edge of the accursed ballroom.
The sound of bolters firing, the hiss of flamers and charring meat, the triumphant roars of the attacking Sororitas, the orgasmic howls of the corrupted, all these sounds and more reverberated against Innogen's helmet. Then the band seemed finally to notice that their ballroom had descended into chaos and, instead of fleeing for their lives, they switched songs. Heavy, thumping bass underscored the thumping of bolters, the strings screamed along with the dying and the dead. Though her will was strong and the blessings of the Empress fresh on her mind, the music was simply too loud, too rhythmically flawless; as third squad struck resistance and Innogen was forced to make use of her power sword, she found herself fighting along to the same tune.
Many of her foes were doing the same. Dancers changed at once from svelte figures into parodies of flesh and fabric, pulling endless quantities of knives from their elaborate outfits or from pockets sewn into skin and hurling them with infinite accuracy. How did they know where to aim, to slip a paper-thin glass blade in between the ceramite plates of Innogen's armor? The only times any of them got the chance to attempt were when she was sidetracked, when the pumping music and swirl of multicolored outfits reached a point of sensory overload so great that she forgot how to fight. The rest burned, chaos mutation and occult power no match against yellow-hot burning prometheum.
That mental overload, the possibility that sheer weight of numbers and mental exhaustion would overwhelm Innogen's sense, was the greatest threat. The trickle of revelers who turned their attention away from the maelstrom that was the first squad was hardly enough to break through the line of fire, but a single slip-up could have meant death. It was only the skill of the Celestians, her soldiers, who carried Innogen forwards. They knew the technique, how to pass through one another as they advanced, granting brief moments of respite to their sisters. Pella was forgotten, Canoness Jesmaria forgotten, all that mattered was the goal, to split the forces of chaos in two. That focus nearly cost Innogen her life.
One of the wait-staff, twice the height of a human and thick with androgynous muscle and fat, veered away from the melee to bring down its might upon third squad. Steel plates gauntleted its hands, which swung faster than speeding jetbikes, strong enough to knock those they struck up into the air. Innogen backed away, heart hardened against the death of her sister, and prepared to fire her flamer. But no flames emerged; she was entirely out of fuel.
Innogen dashed back, a ferocious kick missing her by centimeters as her panic-shaken hands fumbled at the switch from flamer to boltgun. Another sister caught the mutant's attention, hurling a krak grenade into its flank, but with a single fluid moment the creature batted the grenade aside and lunged for her. Innogen's boltgun roared, shells blasting chunks out of the mutant's back, but pain had no meaning for a creature so twisted; it picked up Celestian Ingenia and tore her in half to drink the gore from her severed midsection. It wasn't until a few seconds after the creature finally collapsed under the weight of dozens of bolt wounds that Innogen realized she had been pressing the trigger on an empty chamber; her combi-flamer was completely out.
She dropped the combi-flamer, drawing her pistol and sword in its place. Then, for just a moment, Celestian-Superior Innogen had a moment with which to survey her surroundings. Only three members of her squad survived, and of them, two were down to pistol and sword. First squad was nearly invisible, so heavily surrounded was it by the morass of cultists rushing inward, while second had assaulted the musician's platform and was in the midst of converting it into a firing platform.
There was a simple choice: rush into the fray and save those few who remained, or continue forward and strike at the heart.
"The leaders of this whole ritual are at the head of the table," Innogen said. "I can't back it up for you, but I feel it deep down. I won't order any of you to follow me up that way."
Innogen turned. The tables were long, and there were more cultists yet who still stood between her and the guest of honor at the end. But when she let out a cry of "For the Empress!" and rushed ahead, three other Celestians followed.
…
"This tribunal has no need of a precise account of every combat engagement which took place that day," said Canoness-Preceptor Selina, her eyes shutting for a moment.
Innogen blinked. She'd hardly even realized how long she'd been talking for. "My apologies. A soldier gets caught in such recollections."
"You mentioned two beings who you believed to be the… leaders, of the cult?"
"Or at least the leaders of this particular ritual, yes."
"Describe them in greater detail, if you would."
Innogen nodded, collecting her thoughts. It was strange, having to turn the flashbulb memories of the two figures into coherent descriptions. She did not remember them as beings, as objects in the physical plane, but as mere impressions of terror.
"One was human. The other was not. The human, she was… about my height, stocky build… couldn't see much of her face, everything below the eyes was covered up by a golden mask. Used a staff as her weapon. Her neck was heavy with charms, had all these bottles hanging around her hips, too, bottles and boxes and other such things. Looked almost like a scavenger, though it was all too well-crafted to really be scavenged goods. I don't really remember what she was wearing besides that, I just remember a black shape, all shrouded in cloth. One of the few people in that entire ballroom not showing skin."
Innogen fell silent again.
"The other one, you said it was not human. A mutant?"
Innogen shook her head. "I believe the inquisitor called it a host. I'd never seen something so foul. It looked like… It looked like if a man had something grow inside of him, grow and grow until that thing burst out of him, fused into his flesh. It was naked, with…"
Innogen gestured across her own body, from one knee to the opposite hip, then indicated everything below that with a dismissive wave.
"Part of it was still human. And a bit of one arm, a chunk of stomach. The rest was this horrible color, like rainbow promethium layered over a bruise. It was so soft, deceptively soft for something so strong, with the beauty of temptation even with a frame as bent and twisted. There were… three arms, two on one side one on the other, and horns like dead saplings, lips as beautiful as the Empress's around a slack mouth full of mismatched teeth."
She glared up at Selina, whose expression commingled disgust and intrigue.
"Do I have to describe any further?"
"No, the Tribunal understands your point. Now, after you and the three surviving members of your squad fought your way through to the leaders, tell us what happened next?"
"Two survivors. One didn't make it that far."
…
One of the ritual leaders, the human, wheeled about to face the new arrivals. Her companion was distracted, leaning low over the guest of honor as though engaged in private conversation. The Celestians were not there to talk; but even as their bolt pistols roared, the cultist was unbowed, and every shot went wide.
"How shall we get rid of you," she hissed, flipping her staff from one hand to the other.
Celestian-Superior Innogen aimed the tip of her power sword at the woman and cautiously advanced, the other two guarding her flanks. "I have no words for you. Surrender, accept your death, and the Empress may show you a droplet of mercy."
"How like the Imperium, to receive more mercy in death than one was ever given in life." The high priestess reached for something hanging around her neck, and for a moment her eyes were off Innogen. She took that as an opportunity, rushing forward headlong, readying her blade for a decapitation strike; but it was already too late.
The high priestess found a small, tubular device of brownish bone and placed it to her lips. The note which it produced was like a grasping hand between Innogen's legs, a bolt of physical stimulation delivered through the medium of sound waves. Only a single note sounded, and the reason why became obvious as the high priestess let the whistle go, her movements suddenly drunken and staggering.
But she recovered a moment before Innogen did, and made good use of that moment to retrieve another object from her panoply. This one was obviously mechanical, a strange humming half-shell which she clamped onto her staff. She lowered the weapon into a combat grip, extended like a Sacrosanct's halberd.
Innogen shook off the effects of the whistle, focusing her thoughts half on the pain and exhaustion wracking her flesh and half on the hated Enemy before her; she rushed in, raising her sword high to cut through the high priestess's staff in a single well-aimed blow. It was not to be. Somehow, despite her obvious lack of martial skill, the high priestess could move like steam flickering across the surface of a bath. The staff, in particular, possessed a sort of un-inertia, coiling around the far side of Innogen's blow with contemptuous ease, then thrusting forward to strike her helmet with the tip.
The blow landed, but did nothing against the heavy ceramite plate. That quickly set the tone for their duel. Innogen had always much preferred the bolter to the blade, but she was a dutiful servant of the Order with thousands of hours of practice. But the high priestess, empowered by chaotic energies, was simply swifter. Every attack was swatted aside, and every blow was delivered at a pace the eye could hardly follow. In seconds, Innogen's armor was dented, her flesh bruised, and although she was occasionally able to pierce the high priestess's defenses through the application of feints and complex techniques, the shallow cuts inflicted seemed only to spur her on.
And then Innogen realized: she had rushed forward with the last two members of her squad at her flanks. Where were they? In a moment of weakness, her focus on the duel torn away by concern, Innogen looked to either side. Cultists. Somehow, despite the dozens of fiends they had cut through on the way, the calling of the whistle had summoned yet more knife-wielding fanatics. With the last of their bolter shells and with blood-soaked blades, her sisters were fighting on. And losing.
If Innogen had been even an instant later in returning to her senses, the blow could have broken her neck. The staff, empowered by chaos, tore through the air with a horrible whistle that signaled death. Panicked, the only move Innogen could think to make was to throw up her right arm into the arcing path of the blow. There was a horrific crack and a surge of pain like Innogen had had an autogun bullet tear through her. She screamed and fell.
The high priestess took good advantage. The power which had so accelerated her staff was running low, meaning that when she slammed its heel down on Innogen's chest it did so with only significant force, not extreme. Aching bruises blossomed across her chest, across her legs. The rush of battle fled from her, the adrenaline and energy that had driven her onward through death and blood and damnation; Innogen's body and soul were those of a woman face to face with her own death. And somehow, that brought clarity.
With her still-working left hand, Innogen reached across her hip and drew her bolt pistol. The one shot she fired missed, but the high priestess was forced to back away, giving Innogen just enough space to rise to her feet, clip her bolt pistol back to her hip, and pick up her blade where it had fallen.
The high priestess had become slow, but as Innogen was barely even able to stand, let alone swing her sword, the advantage went to Chaos. But Innogen did not need to be fast. She did not need to guard. She was a soldier of the Empress, and encased in holy ceramite and plasteel that would allow her to weather a thousand blows and yet live. The woman at the other end of her sword was clad only in robes: Innogen only needed one good hit.
She muttered a prayer under her breath, sections from Concorporatio Terra, and with her one functioning arm and all the strength that had not bled from her body she beat her sword against the high priestess's guard. The high priestess's first attempt at a guard was blown aside, her staff bending and nearly breaking as she was forced to stumble out of measure. Innogen followed her, pushing the both of them closer to the guest of honor and her throne, step by painful step. The high priestess attacked twice for Innogen's each cut or thrust, but it did not matter: the crimson armor, though abused beyond any expectation, held firm.
The high priestess panicked, guard suddenly nervous and unsteady. The blue halo of Innogen's power sword came within millimeters of hewing through her flesh, and even through the cloth shrouding her features there was visible just the hint of terror. Finally, she retreated an extra step and turned about.
"Mistress! Help me!"
The daemon-creature, whose attention had been entirely diverted in the direction of the guest of honor, suddenly rose. It sneered, baring horrible fangs in one corner of its mouth, and began to advance. Innogen wasn't going to let it forward.
She had one final tool, one weapon of last resort which she had been saving for the perfect opportunity. Every other weapon had been expended, she was down to enough pistol bolts they could be counted on one hand, even her armor's supply of auto-narcotics had been depleted. But magnetized to her hip was a single fragmentation grenade. She pressed the activation switch, setting it to an impact fuse, then gave it a swift underhanded toss.
The high priestess screamed. Innogen stumbled backwards as quickly as she could. The last thing she saw before her vision was overwhelmed was the face of the daemon. It was glaring right at her, no fear in its heart.