Chapter 101: The Game of Kings
Sanguinius moved with the grace that had earned him comparison to the ancient angels of Terran mythology, his pristine wings catching the deck's illumination as he approached Mortarion.
The Death Lord's pale features brightened with genuine interest as the Angel began explaining the peculiarities of their avian companion.
How the Raven possessed knowledge that spanned not merely worlds but entire realities, how his casual demeanour masked wisdom that had guided the Imperium through challenges beyond mortal comprehension.
The sight of this easy camaraderie struck Perturabo like a physical blow.
They had arrived together, he and Mortarion, two lost sons returning to their gene-father's embrace on the same day.
Yet already the invisible currents of brotherhood flowed around the Death Lord while leaving Perturabo isolated in their wake.
The pattern was achingly familiar; Olympia's courts had taught him to recognise the subtle hierarchies of favour and exclusion.
Why did they gravitate toward Mortarion with such apparent ease?
The Death Lord possessed competence, certainly, but Perturabo's achievements on Olympia had been objectively superior.
His engineering marvels had transformed not merely a world but an entire stellar system.
His strategic innovations had revolutionized warfare itself. He was, by any rational measure, the more accomplished of the two.
"You seem very unhappy." The Raven's voice carried no judgment as the creature alighted upon Perturabo's shoulder, its claws finding purchase on the ceramite without leaving so much as a scratch.
"I'm not unhappy, I just feel like all of this is meaningless," Perturabo replied, his tone carefully modulated to convey indifference.
The lie came smoothly; years of hiding disappointment behind masks of stoic competence had made deception as natural as breathing.
"If that's the case, why not play a game of Gwent?" The Raven's suggestion carried an oddly casual quality that seemed to mock the grandeur of their surroundings.
"As long as you win, you can become the Imperial Warmaster, or Regent, or something."
Perturabo turned to study the creature more closely, his enhanced senses detecting no trace of deception in its manner.
Yet the proposition seemed absurd beyond measure. "Are you joking?"
"I never joke. This is a challenge opportunity every Primarch has. As long as you win a game of Gwent, you can get what you want." The Raven's dark eyes held depths that seemed almost hypnotic.
"Of course, this game is just a suggestion. If you're afraid of failure, you can choose to refuse."
The casual dismissal ignited something volatile within Perturabo's transhuman psyche.
Here was validation at last, recognition that he possessed capabilities worth testing, ambitions worth rewarding. The very mention of failure only sharpened his determination.
"You mean my brothers all accepted the challenge?" Perturabo's gaze swept across the assembled Primarchs, searching their expressions for confirmation.
The Raven nodded with what seemed like satisfaction. "Yes, they all accepted the challenge. Unfortunately, they all lost. No one could win that game of Gwent."
"Failure?" Perturabo's confidence blazed forth in a smile that could have cut through battle-steel.
"I have never known what failure is."
The words hung in the air like a challenge to fate itself. Across the deck, Dorn, Sanguinius, Curze, and Guilliman exchanged glances heavy with shared experience.
Their expressions carried the weight of hard-learned lessons, the particular humility that came from having one's certainties shattered by forces beyond comprehension.
Each had stood where Perturabo now stood, radiating the same unshakeable confidence in their superiority.
Each had discovered that the galaxy contained mysteries that even Primarch intellects could not easily unravel.
Mortarion's keen senses caught the subtle shift in his brothers' demeanor. "Is there something wrong with this challenge? Will Mr. Raven cheat?"
The question pierced straight to the heart of Perturabo's suspicions. He maintained his facade of aloof indifference while straining to catch every nuance of the response.
Guilliman shook his head slowly, his expression carefully neutral. "It's not cheating. Mr. Raven just has the right to choose."
The words carried implications that danced just beyond comprehension. Mortarion's pallid features creased with confusion as he pressed for clarification.
"Could you explain in more detail?"
"Cough, cough, Thirteenth Brother." The Raven's head tilted toward Guilliman with unmistakable warning. "I heard the Dark Eldar exiled to the ice planet need an overseer."
The threat was delivered with such casual menace that even a Primarch took notice.
Guilliman raised his hands in immediate surrender, taking a prudent step backward. "Alright, I don't know anything. I want to state one thing: I have no interest in being an overseer."
One by one, the Raven's gaze swept across the other Primarchs, each offering their variations of strategic silence.
Sanguinius smiled and retreated. Dorn turned away entirely. Even Curze, whose predilection for psychological warfare was legendary, chose discretion over revelation.
The display of unified caution from some of the Imperium's greatest warriors should have given Perturabo pause.
Instead, it only fueled his conviction that they had lacked his particular combination of analytical brilliance and strategic insight.
"You can now choose your opponent," the Raven announced, returning its attention to Perturabo.
"Choose my opponent? Aren't you going to play against me?" The question emerged before Perturabo could fully consider its implications.
"Of course not. For fairness, you can choose anyone here as your opponent." The Raven's explanation carried the weight of established protocol. "I will explain the rules of Gwent to you, and then you can play. One game decides the winner."
Perturabo's smile took on the quality of worked iron, hard, cold, and supremely confident. "Randomly picking an opponent, such a game is meaningless. I will definitely win."
The other Primarchs turned as one toward Curze, whose midnight-clad form seemed to absorb the deck's illumination.
A dark line appeared across the Night Haunter's pale forehead as recognition dawned.
These were familiar words, spoken with identical arrogance by a voice that had been his own.
"Don't worry, as long as you win, I will fulfill my promise," the Raven continued with solemn assurance. "In the name of the Empire's supreme ruler, you will get everything you want."
The oath carried weight beyond mere words.
This creature claimed a partnership with the Emperor Himself, speaking with authority that even the Primarchs respected.
If it offered Imperial Warmaster status as a prize for a simple game, then perhaps the opportunity was genuine.
Perturabo's analytical mind began cataloging potential opponents with mechanical precision. His enhanced senses swept the deck, categorizing each individual by their apparent capabilities and likely strategic approaches.
In the shadow of a magnificent cogitator array, his attention settled upon a figure whose posture suggested distraction rather than focused attention.
The Adeptus Mechanicus stood beneath the machine's baroque architecture, crimson robes concealing the extensive mechanical augmentations that marked his service to the Omnissiah.
What flesh remained visible had been replaced by surgical implants and insectoid optical arrays.
Several servo-skulls connected to his spine via neural cables drifted in lazy orbits, their hollow sockets glowing with electronic luminescence.
Yet for all his technological integration, the tech-priest was clearly engaged in recreational rather than productive activity.
Perturabo's enhanced vision could perceive the subtle cues, the slight delays in responses that indicated divided attention, and the micro-movements that suggested interaction with hidden interfaces.
The man was, in crude terms, slacking off.
"Him then." Perturabo's gesture carried the finality of imperial decree.
Guilliman and the others followed his indication with expressions of surprised recognition. The pattern was becoming clear: this same tech-priest, this exact moment of distraction, this same confident selection by a supremely self-assured Primarch.
Without the need for spoken communication, the brothers shared a moment of perfect understanding.
The Raven's abilities extended far beyond simple prescience.
It possessed the capacity to orchestrate events across multiple timelines, ensuring outcomes that favored its mysterious agenda while maintaining the illusion of fair play.
The designated Adeptus Mechanicus smoothly transitioned his consciousness from recreational pursuits to immediate concerns.
Recent augmentation had blessed him with enhanced multitasking capabilities, a necessity when monitoring both critical Imperial systems and the simple pleasures that made eternal service bearable.
His designation was a string of binary code whose final digits were 9527, though few bothered with such precision.
To his colleagues, he was simply another cog in the vast machinery of Imperial bureaucracy, distinguished only by his tendency toward unauthorized recreational activities.
When Perturabo's gesture marked him as the chosen opponent, 9527's enhanced cognitive processes immediately began calculating probabilities.
The last time he had been selected for such a challenge, the aftermath had required extensive hardware upgrades to process the resulting data overflow.
"Alright, stop slacking off. Get ready to play Gwent," the Raven commanded as it settled upon the tech-priest's shoulder with familiar ease.
9527's augmented features managed to convey surprise despite their mechanical nature.
Not again.
(T/N: Bro is suffering from success LOL.)
The memory files from his previous card game remained fresh in his data banks, the exponential increase in processing demands, the critical system overloads, and the expensive hardware replacements that had consumed months of accumulated requisition credits.
"Respected Raven, I obey your command." The response emerged in properly modulated binaric cant, humility wrapped in the formal protocols of Mechanicus hierarchy.
He had considered refusing, but the discovery of his recreational activities during duty hours would result in disciplinary measures far worse than any card game.
Better to face whatever computational challenges lie ahead than explain his unauthorized Tetris session to a Magos Dominus.
"What's your name?" Perturabo demanded as the tech-priest arranged himself in the designated seating.
"Everyone who is my opponent should have a name. I don't like nobodies."
"I don't have a name. Colleagues usually call me 9527. These are the last four digits of my binary code." The admission carried no shame; identity within the Mechanicus hierarchy was often defined by function rather than individual designation.
"Then I'll call you 9527. That will be your name, 9527. Go all out. Don't let me be so bored." Perturabo's tone suggested the casual dismissal of a superior addressing an underling.
'You won't be bored, you'll just be furious',
9527's logic core observed with grim mechanical humor.
The advantage of extensive facial augmentation was emotional opacity; even Primarch senses could extract little information from cold steel and electronic components.
"I will try my best," 9527 replied in carefully modulated tones that revealed nothing of his inner calculations.
The Raven proceeded to explain Gwent's deceptively simple rules with the patience of an experienced instructor.
Cards representing various factions and abilities, weather effects that could alter entire battlefield conditions, and strategies that rewarded both tactical brilliance and adaptive thinking.
On the surface, it seemed precisely the sort of intellectual exercise that should favor a Primarch's transhuman cognitive advantages.
Perturabo absorbed the information with predatory focus, his enhanced mind already beginning to construct optimal strategies and counter-strategies.
This was merely pattern recognition on a more complex scale, the same analytical processes that had allowed him to revolutionize Olympian warfare applied to a more abstract battlefield.
The game began with Perturabo radiating confidence that bordered on arrogance.
His opening moves displayed the mechanical precision expected from a being whose intellect could process battlefield variables with superhuman speed.
Yet as the rounds progressed, his expression underwent a gradual transformation.
Confidence gave way to concentration. Concentration deepened into serious focus.
A serious focus hardened into grim determination as 9527's responses consistently exceeded expectations, revealing layers of strategic depth that challenged even the Primarch's analytical capabilities.
The tech-priest had positioned one mechanical leg for rapid escape, a precaution born of previous experience with disappointed Primarchs.
Though such preparation would prove useless against truly enraged transhuman wrath, it provided essential psychological comfort.
When the final cards were played and victory tallied, Perturabo stared at the table in disbelief.
The impossible had occurred; he had lost to a slacking tech-priest in what should have been a simple exercise in strategic thinking.
"I refuse to accept this." The words emerged through clenched teeth, his eyes taking on the bloodshot quality that preceded volcanic rage.
Every instinct screamed that this outcome was impossible, that some fundamental error in calculation or execution had corrupted the result.
"Then you can play another game," the Raven offered with apparent generosity. "Winning and losing are common in war."
"I will win." Perturabo's declaration carried the weight of a sacred oath, each syllable delivered with the force of absolute conviction.
The second game proceeded with even greater intensity as Perturabo applied every fragment of strategic knowledge accumulated across decades of conquest.
He analyzed 9527's playing patterns, identified apparent weaknesses in the tech-priest's approach, and constructed elaborate tactical sequences designed to exploit those perceived flaws.
Yet when the final tally emerged, the result remained unchanged. Defeat, absolute and undeniable, stared back at him from the cards' inexorable mathematics.
Perturabo slumped in his seat as though the weight of defeat had exceeded even his transhuman endurance.
The sensation was alien, wrong, a fundamental contradiction of everything he understood about his capabilities.
How could perfected strategic thinking fail against an opponent whose primary qualification was unauthorized recreational gaming?
"It seems I've done my best," 9527 announced in the same cold, mechanical tone he had maintained throughout both contests.
"I hope you are satisfied, Lord Perturabo."
The words struck like physical blows against Perturabo's pride.
Satisfaction?
How could there be satisfaction in such comprehensive failure?
The tech-priest's polite indifference only intensified the humiliation, transforming defeat into something approaching personal insult.
Pain lanced through Perturabo's chest, not physical injury, but something more profound and more troubling.
His transhuman physiology had no framework for processing this particular variety of anguish, the crushing weight of expectations shattered against immutable reality.
For one terrible moment, violent impulses surged through his consciousness.
How easy it would be to seize the tech-priest's augmented form, to demonstrate the vast gulf between Primarch strength and baseline human durability.
The satisfying crack of breaking components, the brief release from this intolerable sense of inadequacy.
But such action would solve nothing while revealing everything about his character that he preferred to keep hidden.
Instead, Perturabo forced himself to remain seated, to accept defeat with whatever dignity remained available to him.
Around the deck, his brothers maintained respectful silence, each remembering their moment of humbling recognition.
The galaxy was vast and strange, filled with challenges that could not be overcome through strength or intellect alone.
Sometimes the greatest victories came not from winning, but from learning to lose with grace.
The lesson was bitter, but perhaps necessary. Even demigods had room to grow.
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