Sorry about the amount of time it took me to get this update written; I just started college, and my schedule has been pretty full for the last month. Then, of course, there's
Halo 3, which has been eating up a lot of my free time. Still, here it is. Happy belated Halo day to you all.

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Chapter Sixty Five
There was no clamor from the assembled councilors. No one expressed shock at seeing the warrior who had just been placed among the ranks of the dead. No one even recoiled at the presence of heretics in one of the holiest places of the Covenant, or the weapons they brandished so unashamedly. They simply watched, transfixed. No councilor, Sangheili and Prophet alike, dared to step between the Hierarchs and their nemesis.
Teno ‘Falanamee advanced another step, and then raised his free hand, a sign for his escorts. They obediently withdrew from the doorway back into the great hall’s antechamber, but they did not seal the door, or slacken the grip on their weapons. Satisfied, the Supreme Commander continued on slowly, his eyes fixed squarely upon Truth, who sat motionless at the end of the Council chamber.
The pair of Honor Guards flanking the breached entryway took a moment to react to the new arrival, but when they finally moved they did so swiftly, rushing past the intruder and blocking his path with their pikes and towering stature. The fine points of each weapon angled directly at ‘Falanamee’s long neck, but he did not flinch or fall back. Instead, he let his gaze meet each of theirs in turn. All three stood quite still, the thoughts and emotions of each warring silently.
“So, you’ve escaped judgment once again.” Truth’s voice echoed in the breathless space, cold but calm. “I failed to see your loss of favor with the gods when you were nearly slain at Reach. Rest assured, you will not escape your just fate again.”
“Nor shall you, Prophet,” ‘Falanamee replied, his voice measured in spite of the blades fixed less than a meter from his flesh. “The gods do not look kindly upon betrayers, and your treachery is greater than any this Covenant has ever known.”
“Treachery!” Regret stammered from behind Truth. “You have assaulted this holy city! You have incited rebellion with your lies! Even now, you stand in this hallowed chamber with a sword drawn in anger! And you accuse us of treachery?”
Truth held up a bony hand to silence him. “The magnitude of your heresy is self-evident, ‘Falanamee. Your claims have no foundation in fact, and your mind has been tainted by some poison of doubt or vainglory. It is a testament to the restraint of my brothers and I that you still live. Do not think, though, that we will continue to show this mercy if you trespass further.”
“Do not further defile this hall with your guile, Prophet,” ‘Falanamee said. “It is clear to all of us that you and you alone are the master of your machinations. Do not hide behind these others or any of your kind; they are slaves, subservient to your will. If you wish to challenge my words, at least find the courage to do so frankly.”
Regret and Mercy’s jaws fell open and they began to fidget upon their elevated seats, but neither seemed willing or able to respond to the charge. Murmurs shot through both council galleries. There had long been rumors that triumvirate had fallen under the domination of one of their number, in opposition to the ancient customs of the Covenant, but no one had ever voiced them before in a High Prophet’s presence, much less all three.
Truth’s face was a mask, but he spoke quickly and loudly to silence the whispered discussion. “Enough! There will be no more slurs spoken in this chamber by you, Teno ‘Falanamee! You are hereby stripped of your rank and all your rights as a warrior of this Covenant. Your actions have shown that you are nothing more than a heretic, and you shall meet a heretic’s end! Guards, take him from this place!”
‘Falanamee’s eyes returned to the two Honor Guards. Neither had moved to comply with Truth’s command. From beneath their great helms, they stared intently at the proclaimed heretic, as though trying to peer into his mind. He did not blink or falter under their combined stares, instead swelling to his full height and slackened his grip on the hilt of his energy sword. Its dual points flickered and vanished.
“Do what you will, brothers,” ‘Falanamee said. “This blade is not for either of you.”
Slowly, the guardians withdrew their pikes and stepped from the former Supreme Commander’s path. Truth’s thin lips quivered with fury, and the other Honor Guard at attention around the chamber shifted slightly, their minds cast into doubt by the actions of their comrades. Before the High Prophet could shout another order and test their resolve, however, weapons fire echoed from the antechamber.
One of the Sangheili standing outside the inner door barked an order to ‘Falanamee’s other escorts and they moved hurriedly from sight. The hiss and belch of plasma weaponry resounded again, followed by several muffled roars and indistinct shouts. There was a scuffling noise closer to the door, and then the colossal frame of Xytan ‘Jar Wattinree stooped through the opening, his gold and silver armor splattered with purple blood.
The Imperial Admiral clutched his own energy sword in one hand, and dragged a red-armored Sangheili major by the neck with the other. When the titan caught sight of ‘Falanamee, he cast the warrior in his grasp violently to one side, sending him into a protruding, sculpted support with a crunch of distressed metal.
“I gave you a chance to die with dignity, ‘Falanamee!” he rasped, stalking forward with powerful strides. “I gave you the chance to escape a dishonorable death, despite your heresy! Instead, you spit upon me and defile my generosity! You steal my soldiers, set brother against brother, and bring doom down upon us all!”
‘Falanamee did not retreat before the enraged Sangheili, but neither did he reply.
“Do not think I do not know what you have done!” Wattinree bellowed. “You realized what the Prophets of Radiant Sanctum knew, and yet you let the humans seize them! You lead the blade-ships here, to this holy place, and destroy all hopes opposition by turning our people against one another!”
“There are blade-ships here, in this system?” a Sangheili councilor demanded. “Why were we not informed of this, Hierarchs? What else has been kept from us?”
Wattinree ignored the speaker. He only had eyes for ‘Falanamee.
“I have done what I must to save our people, Admiral,” the former Supreme Commander said, quietly, but clearly. “The crimes of the Prophets must be addressed, and their power broken. This is the only way.”
“You are mad, heretic!” Wattinree boomed, stopping within arm’s length of the resolute warrior. “By your actions you have betrayed our people and this Covenant! Sangheili die uselessly outside these walls because of your treason! You no longer deserve even the air which you breathe, and I shall ensure that you take no more of it!”
With a mighty roar, he raised his glistening sword high into the air and brought it crashing down onto where ‘Falanamee stood. For all the speed and agility honed by decades of unending drills and merciless combat, it was all that the shamed officer could do to avoid the ferocious blow. The polished floor plates before Wattinree were rent into smoking fragments as the blade gouged them, and when the admiral wrenched his weapon back, the wrecked surface bled a fountain of sparks from a severed conduit beneath.
The Honor Guards backed swiftly out of Wattinree’s path, and ‘Falanamee had no place to move but back, up the Council chamber’s long nave. His sword burst to life only just in time to deflect a brutal chop that Wattinree aimed at him from the left, charging forward as he struck. ‘Falanamee regained his footing and managed to parry another swift blow, but found that the other Sangheili was again too close and fully before him. Nearly half-again as tall as his prey, Wattinree’s size and strength were almost unmatched by any save the greatest Lekgolo, and he knew it well. The giant brought his blade down upon his foe once more, placing all his incomparable might behind it.
‘Falanamee knew that he could not stop the blow, and could do nothing but jump back again, his energy sword raised and at the ready. Wattinree regained his balance quickly despite his massive bulk and pressed forward again, each of his slashes a killing blow. Against the blistering edge of the energy blade and the might of its wielder, ‘Falanamee’s energy shield and thin armor plating would be useless.
Knowing that he could not stay on the defensive forever and hope to survive, ‘Falanamee ducked under the next blow, and rather than fall back, he charged directly at his attacker, leveling his blade at the armored midriff. Wattinree side-stepped the lunge, and with the same surprising speed he had exploited before, seized hold ‘Falanamee’s forearm as the sword it held sailed past. The shield of the smaller fighter’s armor flared and crackled, its glassy surface strained under the imperial admiral’s iron grip. ‘Falanamee felt his feet slip along the floor as the massive hand interrupted his momentum and began to drag him into the air.
‘Falanamee knew that he was completely vulnerable to attack, and saw out of the corner of his eye the brilliant fangs of Wattinree’s blade, poised to impale his exposed flank. His left foot fell upon the raised heel of one of Wattinree’s boots, and he kicked off from it as hard as he could, simultaneously twisting his sword arm. The shield burst into a shower of sparks and Wattinree’s four fingers dug shallow gouges in the metal vambrace, but the giant lost his grip and ‘Falanamee tumbled free just as the sword probed the air where he had been momentarily suspended.
Wattinree wasted no time, and fell upon ‘Falanamee again even as he struggled to rise from the ground. As the admiral’s blade slashed down at his chest, he could do nothing but meet it full with his own sword. The two clashed violently, and ‘Falanamee’s arm began to buckle as Wattinree bent his full musculature into the blow. The defending duelist felt the bones in his arm creak under the strain. Wattinree sensed that his prey was weakening and leaned in further until he filled ‘Falanamee’s vision. The added weight was simply too much for the sword arm to withstand, and with a blinding pulse of pain he felt the bone in his forearm snap. As it did, however, he rolled out from under Wattinree, taking advantage of the fact that the admiral had sacrificed his own balance in his eagerness to slay the heretic.
As Wattinree recovered, ‘Falanamee rose to his feet, passing his sword from the shattered arm to the intact one as he did. He pressed the wounded limb to his chest, and the pain abated slightly, enough to allow him to think clearly once more. ‘Falanamee could now see how Wattinree had achieved his high rank, and why he had never been defeated in personal combat. His enormous size and strength were factors, but he was also oddly swift and agile, and his skill with the energy blade was painfully evident. Even if the two had been of the same build, ‘Falanamee was not certain he would be able to best the Imperial Admiral under normal circumstances.
But as the combatant turned towards him once again, ‘Falanamee could see that his broad chest was heaving beneath its ornate covering. They had been fighting for barely a minute, he had the clearly had the upper hand, and was completely uninjured, and yet Wattinree’s breaths were harsh and deep. One look at the eyes within his high helm told ‘Falanamee why. His foe was so consumed with fury, so intent upon destroying the heretic who had defied him that he was attacking recklessly, without thought of pacing himself. That made the glowering titan even more dangerous, certainly, but it also gave ‘Falanamee a faint glimmer of hope, absent since the Admiral had appeared in the Council chamber’s doorway.
Wattinree’s onslaught began again as fierce as it had been before, and ‘Falanamee was forced back into retreat. He could wield a blade nearly as well with his left hand as his right, but the loss of the latter had affected his balance, and parrying Wattinree’s was becoming swiftly more difficult and laborious. He attempted to turn the melee back up the admiral several times, scoring several glancing blows against his energy shield, but none were powerful enough to breach the barrier, and Wattinree responded to each attempt with three blows of his own.
Suddenly, ‘Falanamee felt his back run up against a ridged surface, one of the large holographic projection terminals that flanked the nave’s central walkway. Seeing his prey pinned, Wattinree drove his weapon straight at the other’s chest. ‘Falanamee spun from the column, his sword clattering against the attacker’s in a useless attempt to turn it away. As he tried to keep himself from falling to the floor, the Sangheili felt what was left of his armor’s shield shatter and in an instant a swath of flesh from his right shoulder all the way down his back burned with pain, its protective plate unable to repel Wattinree’s slash.
Grunting and biting against the growing agony of the wound, ‘Falanamee stumbled onto his hands and knees and crawled away from the terminal. With bleary eyes, he could see the Hierarchs and their court. In an instant, he took in ‘Mefasee’s prone form, Reginald Barclay’s terrified face. He saw Truth’s smirk, Tartarus’ sneer, and Ship Master ‘Nefaaleme’s face, oddly devoid of satisfaction at the downfall of his old adversary. He saw, too, as the pair of Honor Guards near the head of the chamber, close at hand now, stepped quickly back.
He rolled to the left, barely hearing Wattinree’s blade as it bit deeply into the polished plate where he had been an instant before. ‘Falanamee struggled to rise, but a swift kick sent him sprawling again. He tumbled hard into another of the raised terminals, and he felt his sword slip from his hand. He thrust his arm out feverishly, searching for it, but found nothing. A moment later, he felt a great weight slam into his sprawled left leg. ‘Falanamee groaned as the bone strained and cracked, and looked up to see Wattinree standing over him, two energy swords now in his hands.
“It is over, heretic,” he heaved, angling both blades at the trapped form of his enemy. “Know that the sons of the Sangheili will remember your name with nothing but distain, for you deserve nothing more.”
“And you…” ‘Falanamee gasped through the pain sweeping over him. “Know that you will be remembered as a great and proud warrior. A fool, but a great warrior nonetheless.”
Wattinree snarled savagely, and leaned low over the heretic, eyes wild and shot with blood. He drew his arms back, and then plunged each of the swords at ‘Falanamee’s heart.
The Sangheili watched the four glowing spikes fall for a split second, and then twisted his torso violently to the left, so that he slipped from the column against which he had been propped. The blades plunged deep into his right shoulder, boiling away golden armor and black bodysuit and settling into a mangled mess of flesh, blood, and bone. As one of the prongs burst from ‘Falanamee’s back, the two pairs of searing points crossed and momentarily locked together. Though blinded and breathless from the agony of the blow, ‘Falanamee threw his left arm up and caught hold of Wattinree’s wrist. His fingers locked tightly around the sheen of his energy shield, and he pulled with all his strength.
Expecting the dual stab to be a killing blow, Wattinree had allowed himself to overextend his center of gravity, and he was unable to resist the sudden pull on his left arm. With a startled rumble, he toppled over onto his side, nearly crushing ‘Falanamee under his enormous bulk. The two blades tore free from the smaller soldier’s shoulder and their prongs slid further into one another, locking them more fully. His hand still clasped tightly around Wattinree’s wrist, ‘Falanamee pushed towards the imperial admiral’s chest, and the swords moved back towards their wielder.
Supine and disoriented by the sudden fall, Wattinree didn’t notice that his arm was being pushed until he caught sight of the twin swords raised above his face. He tugged the right blade away, and it complied, but with it came the shimmering barbs of the left, now angled down before his split chin. Their tips slashed the surface of his shielding, and the barrier sputtered with a shower of arcing light.
His eyes flashed from the deadly points to his wrist to ‘Falanamee’s face, now spare centimeters from his own. The former Supreme Commander saw understanding dawn in them, and something else as well, but he could not wait to comprehend it. His grip tightened, and he threw his weight against Wattinree’s left arm.
Only one barb of crystalline light penetrated the Imperial Admiral’s shield and what lay beneath, but it was enough. Xytan ‘Jar Wattinree spluttered as the sword slid slowly into his long neck, thrashed slightly as simmering blood spat from the small gash, and then lay still.
Reluctantly, ‘Falanamee’s fingers released Wattinree’s limp wrist and let it fall onto the dead Sangheili’s chest. He stared at the body for a long, silent moment, and then slowly, laborious, pushed himself onto one knee, wincing as he pulled his fractured left leg across the ground. Pausing first to draw a deep draft of air through his open jaws, ‘Falanamee looked towards the Prophet’s dais.
The look on Truth’s face had transformed from satisfaction to rage, and perhaps, the Sangheili squinted through heavy eyes, fear. He seemed oblivious to the awed whispering that was slowly rising from those around him. Squaring his back and raising his bulbous head as high as he could, the High Prophet directed his throne to hover forward, away from the Hierarch’s isolated ring.
“Tartarus.”
The Jiralhanae chieftain, whose face had also lost its savage mirth, stepped forward to join his master, hefting his gravity hammer in both hands. ‘Falanamee was motionless as the two approached, still heaving from the gravity of his wounds.
The assembled councilors were still locked in breathless silence, but Truth would not have heard them even if they were shouting in unison. The full breadth of his intellect was fixed upon the wounded Sangheili, and his intent was clear.
“Your skill in combat has survived your heresy, I see,” he said slowly, halting several paces before ‘Falanamee. “But this victory will not save you. All you have done is rob this Covenant of another champion in its hour of need. For that alone you should die a sinner’s death, if you had not so fully earned such judgment by your other crimes.”
“Wattinree will not be the last to die this day, nor the most deserving,” ‘Falanamee managed through trembling jaws.
“Indeed.”
Truth nodded shortly to Tartarus, and the hulking albino stepped from his side, moving to face the kneeling Sangheili. The Jiralhanae towered above his prey, filling ‘Falanamee’s vision with a solid mass of white fur, rough hide, and the polished metal of the chieftain’s favored weapon. At the top of this mountain of flesh and mane, two crimson eyes glinted down at him.
Tartarus took his weapon into both hands and slowly aimed its massive head at the motionless ‘Falanamee. The Jiralhanae’s lips were drawn back in a jagged grimace, but he moved with obvious relish.
“You need that to kill me, Jiralhanae?” ‘Falanamee asked, his eyes not locked onto the weapon but the eyes of its wielder.
Tartarus snorted. “I would not sully my hands with the blood of a heretic like you.”
The hammerhead leveled at ‘Falanamee’s helmed forehead, now less than half a meter away. Tartarus’ toothy expression widened as he fingered the activation stud on his weapon’s haft. He had tested the hammer’s most powerful setting on the injured and vulnerable before, and it never failed to please him.
The Jiralhanae’s eyes wandered down to his weapon briefly, reveling in its blunt and murderous form, and then moved back to meet ‘Falanamee’s stare once more. Perhaps Tartarus had hoped that his glee would corrode the Sangheili’s resolve before his end, and his lips opened marginally in preparation for a final taunt. However, the words did not come.
Instead of hopelessness or terror, the look Tartarus saw upon the face of his prey was one of pure defiance. It conveyed a strength that belied ‘Falanamee’s battered condition, and indeed exceeded any that the Jiralhanae had ever seen in him. The being that stared at him was not merely a proud and charismatic warrior, a fighter and leader of soldiers. The brute looked instead upon a creature that had endured physical strain and mental torment that would have broken almost any other; a being that had been robbed of everything, and yet still fought and suffered for its fellows and its kind. Tartarus saw the heart of the Sangheili people, the avatar of their will, their honor, and their pride.
He looked into the eyes of the Arbiter.
“Do it!” Truth hissed at Tartarus’ back.
The chieftain had frozen, unable to break free from the crushing stare. His lips closed around his pointed teeth, and he fumbled for the hammer’s firing stud, but before he could find it, Teno ‘Falanamee’s left arm shot up and he laid hold on the weapon’s haft. As Tartarus looked on mutely, he jerked the hammerhead away from his face, and then slowly pulled himself up, using the hammer and the Jiralhanae’s own quivering brawn for support. His eye’s never left Tartarus’, and the latter was held fast by the power of his gaze.
“Were you not going to crush, Tartarus?” ‘Falanamee asked clearly in the silence. “Don’t you have the will to take me alone? Don’t you have the will to challenge the Sangheili? That is what you wanted, isn’t it? To take our place with your bare hands?”
‘Falanamee pushed himself laboriously to his full height and Tartarus fell back a step. Above, a Sangheili councilor murmured something, and then others joined him, their voices resonant and harsh in the still air. The red beads of Tartarus’ eyes sped towards them and traced erratically from face to face, their vision blurred by the turmoil in the Jiralhanae’s mind. He took another step back, and ‘Falanamee moved with him.
The Sangheili craned his neck closer, and moved his mandibles in a whisper.
“Fear suits you, animal.”
Tartarus’ savage face contorted violently with rage at the insult, but nameless terror still weighed upon him heavily. His crimson pupils twitched within their bonds, thrashing from ‘Falanamee to specters that no one else could see. Then, in a burst of motion, Tartarus attempted to tear his weapon from the Sangheili’s grasp. The violent exertion made ‘Falanamee stagger forward a few pained steps and his arm buckled visibly, but his hold did not break. Before Tartarus could try again, he leaned toward the weapon and then kicked off from one of the Jiralhanae’s trunk-like legs. The sudden movement propelled the hammer out of Tartarus’ clutches and swung it around ‘Falanamee’s back. Its head slammed into the floor and screeched against the smooth surface as haft swung, but the Sangheili warrior kept it under his control. Crouching, he turned the weapon away from himself and leveraged the hammerhead into the air, fixing its shaft under the armpit of his limp arm and guiding it with the other.
The chieftain found himself less than a meter from the head of his own prized maul. He stared at the weapon, his jaw quivering, half open, and then looked again at ‘Falanamee’s resolute visage. The sight consumed him; he did not see that the Sangheili’s legs were buckling, or that blood was flowing freely from the wounds on his back, or that the fingers of his left hand could not move towards the hammer’s firing stub, so occupied were they with the simple task of keeping the massive weapon aloft. In Tartarus’ eyes, his foe was indomitable.
The Jiralhanae took a halting step back, and then his contorted lips fell open as he unleashed a great roar.
As the terrible sound reverberated from the Council chamber’s high roof, Truth’s bulbous eyes bulged wide in horror, and his voice cracked.
“No! Tartarus, you fool!”
In unison, more than a dozen of the sealed doorways that lined every level of the chamber sprang open and a swarm of Jiralhanae shock troopers poured into the sacred space. Prophet and Sangheili councilors alike sprang to their feet in confusion and protest. Soldiers were a common sight within the Council chamber, but they were usually Sangheili, and few save the Honor Guard were normally permitted to bear non-ceremonial weaponry, firearms and explosive which jangled from troopers’ bandoliers and bulged from their fists. The Jiralhanae swiftly filed into the central nave and spread into the ranks of the councilors, aiming their armaments at any Sangheili nearby.
Below, the leader of the force that Tartarus’ signal had summoned paused, confused by the scene that was frozen before him. The officer had been informed that he would be called for only after the High Prophets and their kin had left, but they were still present, with several Sangheili soldiers close at hand. Jiralhanae made effective soldiers, but they were often reckless and indiscriminate in combat; the added variable of the Prophets could only slow them down. So the Jiralhanae lieutenant paused, unwilling to act with his masters so close, and his indecision crept easily through the ranks of his subordinates.
The few Honor Guards within the chamber came to their senses quickly and moved to rebuff the unannounced arrivals, but they were vastly outnumbered, and each one was swiftly surrounded by half a squad of the brutes. Before either could make the first move, however, one of the councilors, the Sangheili named ‘Tadasee, leapt onto his seat, his hands thrust into the air.
“’Falanamee was right!” he bellowed over the rising din. “The Prophets and the Jiralhanae have betrayed us! Defend yourselves, brothers! Do not allow yourselves to be taken as we have been deceived!”
The reaction was immediate. In the face of such an overt and unexpected threat, even those councilors who had opposed ‘Falanamee’s sedition could do nothing but unite in outrage. They all knew that Truth’s minion had summoned the Jiralhanae mob, and each could see the blackened barrels and glowing firing nodes of the weapons aimed squarely at them. What the Prophet’s intent was, whether the soldiers meant to kill or merely subdue, did not matter. The insult was inexcusably brazen, and the councilors were the proudest of their people. They rose up as one furious tide, and fell upon their would-be suppressors with fists and feet, undaunted by the firearms of the soldiers.
Truth watched as the Sangheili councilors unleashed themselves upon his soldiers. He had hoped fleetingly that he would retain control of the situation in spite of Tartarus’ premature summons of his troopers, but that hoped dissolved as a pair of heavily-armed Jiralhanae collapsed under a ferocious barrage of hammer blows without firing a single shot. They were caught off-guard, and the councilors were as skillful as they were proud. The crack of Jiralhanae sidearms began to rend the air, but Truth was already moving into the nearest cluster of unengaged soldiers.
“Deal with this,” he snarled at Tartarus as he angled towards the closest exit. “Don’t let any of them escape.”
The chieftain was still transfixed by ‘Falanamee, but he managed a slow nod. The Sangheili still held the hammer at Tartarus’ face, but the head had begun to dip, and his entire body was now trembling. As the Jiralhanae in the nave surrounded him, looking cautiously from their leader to the battered warrior, his strength finally gave out and he fell to his knees, Tartarus’ hammer dropping uselessly before him. The clatter of the weapon seemed to break ‘Falanamee’s hold over its master, and he straightened up, his toothy leer returning, if weaker than it was before.
Tartarus stooped to reclaim his weapon, and then regarded ‘Falanamee carefully. The former Supreme Commander kneeled with his right arm sprawled on one leg and his other flat on the floor for support. His breathing was loud and pained, and his golden armor was cracked and stained with dark blood. And yet he stared at Tartarus unblinkingly, still challenging even as he struggled with every breath.
The chieftain snorted nervously, shook himself, and then stepped back. He gestured to one of his lieutenants, and then turned away, fixing his attention on the melee above them. The indicated officer stepped up eagerly followed by two especially formidable creatures, each of them brandishing the bladed end of their grenade launchers. They drank in the sight of their bloodied victim and stalked forward ravenously, each eager to be the first to hew at ‘Falanamee’s flesh.
The lead soldier was an arm’s length from the Sangheili when something propelled him into the air and splattered his sinewy form across the nearest wall. In his place, the blue-armored bulk of one of Ship Master ‘Nefaaleme’s Lekgolo rooted itself to the floor, shadowing ‘Falanamee with its spiny, rolling form and beckoning to the startled Jiralhanae surrounding them with its outstretched shield arm, now splotched with gore. The giant’s brother was close behind and thundered into another pack of simian troopers with a sonorous bellow, flailing with armored limbs and barbed carapace as it trampled a luckless lieutenant under its massive feet.
Tartarus’ nostrils flared at the smell of the blood of his own kin, and he barked orders over the din of combat, his attention focused now upon the twin Lekgolo, one of which was barely a few strides from him. His soldiers complied quickly and drew back from the titans, priming grenades and shouldering their own projectile launchers. The Lekgolo did not pursue them, opting instead to shield the stationary ‘Falanamee, but they still cast out wildly with their arms at any Jiralhanae that was slow in withdrawing. The pair dared not use the powerful energy weapons imbedded into their right forearms at such close range, but the Jiralhanae within the nave no longer had a charge to protect, and eagerly prepared to bombard the former Supreme Commander and his guardians.
As Tartarus’ squads were still scrabbling into safe firing range, however, a smattering of plasma fire lit their outer flank, and several Jiralhanae fell to the floor, howling masses of burning flesh and hair. The rest of ‘Nefaaleme’s vanguard had joined the fight, and although most were occupied with the brutes that had moved to defend the High prophet’s dais, a handful of Sangheili had managed to turn their beam rifles on the elder chieftain’s massed force. The head of the chamber was a confused display of crisscrossing fire and rushing bodies, but even from where he kneeled, ‘Falanamee could see Regret and Mercy, both panic-stricken, drop from sight as their circular platform plummeted into the floor. Blast doors sealed the escape route almost immediately, but not before ‘Nefaaleme’s two personal guards could cast themselves into the breach with energy blades closed in their fists. A strangled noise echoed from the shaft, but it was fleeting and swiftly consumed by the continued roars and cracks closer by.
Dead councilors littered the Sangheili side of the upper tiers, but Jiralhanae lay slain around them in even greater numbers, and the surviving elite were finishing off the interlopers with brutal efficiency. Some had produced energy swords secreted in armor and under seats, and the rest bore weapons torn from Jiralhanae hands.
The Honor Guard on the opposite side of the hall had been slain within moments of ‘Tadasee’s call to arms, and the shock troopers there were now guiding frantic Prophet councilors through the upper exits. Seeing that their comrades on the other balcony had fared far worse, several Jiralhanae lobbed explosive rounds into the ranks of the surviving Sangheili councilors, shattering the energy shields and vulnerable bodies of a few and sending the rest scattering for cover. Most made for the unsealed exits behind them or the overhangs of the chamber’s towering support beams, but few of the warriors leapt down from the viewing platform, straight into the thick the other firefight. The sniping Jiralhanae turned their attention away from the enflamed councilors, figuring them dead, and were thus wholly unprepared when several scaled the curving wall below them moments later. Energy blades flashing and weaving, the vengeful elites tore through the troopers and leapt upon the remaining Prophets.
Millennia of pent-up bitterness and distrust exploded from the Sangheili, and their frail prey crumpled before them like leaves in a maelstrom.
Several squads of Jiralhanae reinforcements poured into the fray from a shadowed entryway only to be met immediately by a force of Sangheili from the chamber’s atrium. It was a ragtag group, composed of soldiers with perforated armor and unstaunched wounds, but they set into the Jiralhanae with fanatical eagerness. The unit was led by a red-armored major who had accompanied ‘Falanamee from the Sacrosanct and a towering Honor Guard who had lost helm but charged into the loyalist ranks undaunted, his bladed staff blazing in the haze of combat. Just minutes before, the two had directed troops against one another, but they fought now as brother and comrade, sectarian strife forgotten. Word of the Prophet’s betrayal had spread quickly.
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Reginald Barclay had endured weeks of constant uncertainty, pain, and mortal terror with a degree of mental fortitude that had surprised even him. Back aboard the Enterprise, he had been the one that the other members of the engineering crew generally expected to fall apart in the face of every crisis, despite his substantial technical skill. Had he been asked a month before if he could have suffered through near-constant firefights, captivity, torture, and deprivation with his sanity intact, Barclay would have evaded the question with a nervous laugh. And yet he had done it, managing even to avoid an excessive amount of self-pity in the effort.
Even so, as the engineer watched a Jiralhanae soldier swing the blackened muzzle of its grenade launcher in his direction, he felt a pang of regret at the fact that he had not indulged a bit more in hopeless weeping while in his confinement cell.
A blow to the legs knocked Barclay off of his feet, and he felt himself roll a meter away from the lower dais where he and his fellow captive Flitch had been forgotten with Teno ‘Falanamee’s arrival. A moment later, a booming noise and concussion swept over him, and he felt the back of his tattered uniform crackle and singe. The explosive projectile had impacted a far wall, but he was still badly shaken by the blast.
Disoriented, Barclay lay on his back for a few seconds, but the burning radiance of plasma bolts registered in his blurry vision an arm’s length above him, and he forced himself into action. His head still swimming, the engineer rose onto his hands and knees and made for the closest cover he could perceive, one of the raised terminals that lined the sides of the chamber’s nave. He crawled towards it unsteadily, trying unsuccessfully to block out the boom of nearby explosions and the screams of the wounded.
Something rubbed against one of his legs, and Barclay looked back to see an Unggoy in scuffed orange armor crawling along behind him. Another in identical garb was struggling to support the naked, half-conscious Sangheili that the Jiralhanae had deposited alongside Barclay and Flitch. Seeing the Covenant aliens following him sent a fresh spike of fear through the human, but he noticed that none of them were aiming weapons in his direction, or seemed to be armed at all. Barclay’s eyes met with those of the closer Unggoy, and he suddenly realized that the creature must have been the thing that had just knocked him off of his feet.
The alien punched him in the leg with one of its bony fists and Barclay gulped, remembering that they were still out in the open. He started towards the relative safety of the terminal again, and soon was between it and the chamber’s lower wall. The two Unggoy and the Sangheili tumbled after him, barely shielded from the spray of blue and red fire that washed against the other side of the obstruction in sporadic volleys. The Unggoy laid the larger being on the ground near Barclay’s feet, and then looked nervously from the Sangheili to Barclay to each other. One barked something tentatively, and the pair moved to crouch at either side of the terminal, flinching at each near-miss.
Momentarily safe, Barclay forced himself to ignore the constant noise and movement all around them and thought back to the display of which he had been a part. His keepers aboard the carrier had never bothered to remove the small metal disk clipped inside the waist of his uniform, and although the universal translator occasionally flickered on and off from over-use and damage, it still worked well enough to give him an idea what the Prophets had been saying. The Sangheili was Deau ‘Mefasee, who Barclay realized must have commanded the transport that he and the Arbiter had commandeered.
The Sangheili stirred and slowly turned its head towards him. She appraised Barclay carefully, her eyes keen even through the bruises that covered its long face. She attempted to sit up, but stopped immediately, grunted something pained, and fell back to the ground. One of the Unggoy looked over at its larger charge uneasily, but was drawn back to the battle by a roar and a new series of weapon’s discharges.
“Are… are you all right?” Barclay stammered, holding the concealed translator as though willing it to work.
“I will live, human,” ‘Mefasee replied, and Barclay noticed that her tone lacked the derision and distain that most other of her species used when addressing him.
“Are these… um…” he continued, gesturing uncertainly towards the two Unggoy. “Do they serve you?”
“Better than I expected,” she muttered, wincing as she placed a large hand over a small gash on her abdomen.
“Why did they…”
A shout sounded from just beyond the terminal, cutting Barclay off. There was a noise like boiling water and bending metal, and a Sangheili in blue armor fell within sight of their hiding place, its chest as mass of twisted plating and pulverized flesh. As life drained from the soldier, a heaving bellow rent the air and resounding footfalls pounded away from them.
“We must get to better cover,” ‘Mefasee panted, forcing herself onto one knee. “There. That recess in the wall.” She nodded towards the large, darkened niche to the left of the High Prophet’s dais. It was less than a dozen meters away and appeared to be vacant, but the path there was completely open, populated only by the occasional corpse or scattering of shrapnel.
“Cross that?” One of the Unggoy stared at her in disbelief. “We’d be splattered. Migaw and I couldn’t make it on our own, and you and this thing are choicer targets. We don’t even have any weapons!”
‘Mefasee glared at him, and then leaned towards the fallen Sangheili. She wrenched a plasma rifle from his frozen grip and plucked a rounded, bluish orb from his belt. ‘Mefasee placed the sidearm in her right hand and tossed the orb to Cakap.
“You know how to use a grenade?”
“Ah… of course!” The Unggoy fingered the device gingerly, obviously terrified even behind his breath mask.
Seemingly oblivious to her own injuries and exposure, ‘Mefasee loped from cover first, crouched to keep her profile as small as possible and training her weapon in the direction of the heaviest fighting. Cajoled by the Sangheili’s force of will and the heightening peril of their position, the other three leapt after her almost simultaneously. Barclay’s longer legs made it easier for him to keep pace with ‘Mefasee, but the Unggoy waddled along so furiously that they more than compensated for their squat statures.
The focus of the fighting seemed to have shifted more towards the center of the chamber, and the group of escapees crossed most of it without being noticed. ‘Mefasee vanished into the shadowed haven first, and the Unggoy were quick to follow, each of them determinedly ignoring the bodies strewn across their path and the firefights close at hand. Barclay, however, was unable to completely block out the battle, and could not help but glance over his shoulder at a sudden uptick in the volume of the melee behind him. In the same moment his foot caught on the sprawled leg of a Jiralhanae shock trooper and he stumbled, only meters from the relative safety of the niche.
Barclay managed to prevent himself from falling flat on his face, but only just, and found himself on his side, lolled out near the Jiralhanae’s limp weapon’s arm. Overcome for a moment by the frantic beating of his heart, the human could do nothing but stare incredulously at the exposed crystalline spines of a Covenant needler rifle that lay discarded centimeters from his face. After a painfully long spell of helplessness, Barclay collected himself enough to push away from the ground.
Someone screamed nearby. The engineer recognized the sound immediately, even if the intonation of the voice was not entirely familiar to him. It was a human cry.
Barclay’s eyes fell on Flitch, who lay upon his back not a dozen meters away, flush against the curving slope of the Prophet’s dais. He appeared to have survived the on-going battle without any fresh injuries; Barclay guessed he must have found cover similar to their own in the confusion of the conflict’s first blows. Something must have forced him from that hiding place, and a snarl made the cause of his flight was quite plain. A Jiralhanae of relatively small stature but impressive musculature was stalking towards the human, its eyes wide and crazed. Its pelt was covered in a patchwork of deep gashes and muddy blood, and it had lost its sidearms, but the beast and its kin were brutally strong, as the rent and broken bodies of Sangheili strewn across the chamber showed. An unarmored human would be effortless prey for the creature, especially in its pain-maddened state.
An image flashed into Barclay’s head. A white hallway of the Alliance flagship. Dead stormtroopers crumpled around him. The Arbiter, wounded but triumphant. A single Imperial soldier, his blaster raised.
Barclay thrust his hand at the needler and wrapped his hand around its grip. It was of truly alien design, two metallic paddles covered in pinkish spines, centered on a rectangular muzzle, but its firing stud was positioned intuitively enough. He leveled the weapon at the approaching Jiralhanae, and then hesitated.
More images came. Flitch leading him at the point of a gun towards the Republica’s hangar. The Arbiter’s face, scarred by the man’s blaster bolt.
Barclay depressed the stud.
The weapon shuddered violently in his hands as it disgorged a stream of translucent, crystalline shards. Barclay’s aim was poor, and a dozen of the projectiles spattered off the floor behind the charging Jiralhanae, splintering into colorful puffs of smoke. A credit to the weapon’s designer, the rest of the shards compensated for their imprecise targeting, and zeroed in on the bulky simian. Guided by fundamental forces harnessed in a way that even Covenant engineers barely understood, the remaining barbs dug into the soldier’s exposed flesh, shredding its hide from waist to neck. The creature stumbled, howling but still quite alive. It turned its head towards Barclay, its mouth slack in a gaping snarl, but before it could move further, the weapon’s second unique function revealed itself. As one, the imbedded needler rounds glowed brightly and then exploded in bursts of plasmatic energy. The Jiralhanae was hurled backwards onto the floor, and was still.
Barclay stared at the dead soldier for a moment, remembering how the Imperial soldier had fallen the last time he had fired a weapon. He was numb, as he had been before, but feeling returned to him more quickly, and with it something else. Exhilaration. He had imposed his will upon another, destroyed a destroyer.
Or, perhaps, he had done the only thing he could, killed to save a life that might not even been worth saving. Barclay looked at the smoldering Jiralhanae corpse again, and the exhilaration evaporated. He allowed the spent needler to slip from his grasp.
Powerful hands closed about his shoulders and dragged him down. A moment later, a quartet of red plasma bolts lashed through the air above him.
“Move!”
With ‘Mefasee’s hiss came another sharp tug, and Barclay began to stumble backwards with her towards the dark recess. She let go, allowing Barclay to turn and run towards safety unimpeded. He peripherally noted the two Unggoy lifting Flitch to his feet and urging him onward, but he was too distracted to see the agent’s right hand subtly brush over Cakap’s hip as he was helped up. Even Cakap failed to notice that hand came away full.
The alcove was vacant and provided ample cover from errant gunfire. ‘Mefasee lagged at the edge, making sure that the humans made it into cover, but the Unggoy immediately made for the closest access hatch, a narrow doorway imbedded in the curving base of the wall.
“It’s locked!” Migaw groaned, pounding on door when it failed to open at his approach.
“Of course it’s locked,” Cakap replied. “It doesn’t look like the Jiralhanae want any of us to get out of here alive. Now, shove over.” He pushed past Migaw and started to inspect the frame. “Help me find the override circuit.”
Barclay and Flitch slid down against the wall next to one another, taking advantage of the opportunity to catch their breaths. The engineer glanced at his fellow escapee, unsure of what he should say to the man he whose life he had just saved, the same man who had kidnapped him and pushed him close to death, and who he had shared interminable days of confinement with in uneasy silence. Sensing his gaze, Flitch looked towards the engineer. His mouth twitched, but he turned his head away again swiftly, still silent.
‘Mefasee was still at the lip of the obscuring wall, peering outward. Barclay picked himself up and moved to join her. He only noticed as the field of battle came into view that the din of the conflict has died down. A few soldiers were still exchanging volleys from behind the seats and pillars of the upper balconies and the sounds of battle echoed unabated from beyond the gaping entryway, but the chamber’s main floor was all but empty. Amidst the mangled forms of the dead and wounded, only two figures remained standing. Tartarus was the first, his now-bloodied hammer discarded on the floor nearby, locked in single combat with the other, one of the Lekgolo who had rushed to ‘Falanamee’s aid. His brother lay lifeless in a pool of orange ichor at the very center of the hall, armor riddled with hundreds of plasma burns and impact marks.
The remaining Lekgolo reared up before Tartarus, shadowing even the massive albino. It unleashed a thunderous boom from deep within its armored shell, and then brought both its arms down upon the Jiralhanae’s head. Tartarus twisted sideways, avoiding the beast’s shield arm. The other slammed down on his shoulder, but the Jiralhanae had already braced himself for it. He grabbed to the limb and its mounted gun, ablating its impact and confusing the rampant Lekgolo. The armored being could tear through combat vehicles like they were nothing, but Tartarus still managed to keep hold of its arm. He trembled as he began to push against the trunk-like limb, but a smile was obvious on his face between choked grunts.
Unable to crush its target one-armed, the Lekgolo leveled its shield at Tartarus again and jabbed it at him, intent on sheering through the Jiralhanae’s tufted neck. Tartarus released his grip on his adversary’s gun arm with one hand, using it to grab onto the underside of the shield and guide it away, but he kept his hold on the first arm with the other. The Lekgolo found the barrel of its fuel rod cannon aimed at its own broad chest, and its other arm pushed uselessly out behind the Jiralhanae.
It’s armored-capped, eyeless head swiveled towards Tartarus’ face, now just half a meter away. It regarded him for a moment, and then pulled its shield inwards, hoping to crush the Jiralhanae. The chieftain blew out a contemptuous breath in response, and shoved his fingers into the exposed fire controls of the Lekgolo’s weapon.
A radiant jet of emerald fire burst from the cannon and washed over the titan’s left shoulder. Thick plating bubbled and melted away under the onslaught, and orange filaments of sinuous flesh beneath evaporated into the conflagration. The initial force of the blast had blown Tartarus clear of the Lekgolo, and he watched as it collapsed backwards, the base of its left arm and much of its chest missing. For his part, the Jiralhanae’s gleaming hair was badly singed, but he was otherwise intact, snarling grin and all.
Picking himself up, Tartarus turned his attention to a gold-armored figure propped against the far wall of the nave. Barclay realized immediately that it was the Arbiter, quite still, surrounded by the bodies of those who had died trying to protect him. A thrill of relief washed over the engineer when he saw the Sangheili raise his head slightly, but it vanished just as quickly. The Jiralhanae chieftain was approaching him slowly, cautiously, but his intent obvious.
“I overestimated you,” he growled. “You humiliated me in the face of the Prophets. You shamed me when you barely had the strength left to stand!”
One of the soldiers fallen at ‘Falanamee’s feet, the major who had lead reinforcements into the chamber, stirred and attempted to rise, blocking Tartarus’ path. The Jiralhanae kicked him aside contemptuously and continued towards his prey.
“But I see you as you really are once more. You are weak! An arrogant worm, just like the rest of your kind. Look about you, ‘Falanamee. Look upon the faces of the creatures that died to save you. They died for nothing. They will not be remembered long by you, and if any of your people survive the Prophet’s edict, these creatures will be known to them only as heretics and cowards. Disgrace and death is all that the Sangheili will know from this day!”
Tartarus stooped and lifted ‘Falanamee off of the floor by his cracked chest plate. He hung limply as the Jiralhanae pulled his face close to the former Supreme Commander’s own.
“And now it ends, heretic,” the chieftain said with cool relish. “Your death is the will of the gods, and I am their instrument!”
‘Falanamee’s eyes flickered away for a moment.
“Tools should not talk so much.”
With a yell, ‘Mefasee charged from her hiding place. She aimed her plasma rifle at the brute as she ran and opened fire. Tartarus’ eyes went wild for a moment, but he recovered from the surprise quickly. He turned to face the charging Sangheili and raised ‘Falanamee’s body in front of his own. She stopped shooting immediately, and her stride faltered. Tartarus barked a sharp laugh, and then flung ‘Falanamee’s immobile form at the female, lobbing him as easily as a sack of grain. The Sangheili hit one another hard, and both tumbled to the floor in a heap.
“Do you still think that I can be taken so easily?” Tartarus boomed. “I am Jiralhanae! I am greater than any of you! No warrior can match me! What force of arms could hope to bring me to my knees?”
There was a flash and a hiss at his feet. He looked down to see the major who he had kicked aside without a second thought. A lit plasma sword was now clutched in his hand.
Before the Jiralhanae could even utter a word, the blade scythed through his right leg just below the knee. Roaring with pain and rage, Tartarus fell to the floor on his other leg. He lashed out blindly, flattening the major once more and sending his weapon spinning away. Then the chieftain stared down at his right left, the end of which was now a smoking, bloody stump. He clutched at it howling, all else forgotten.
Tartarus barely noticed the lone, unarmored Sangheili limp forward, and place the muzzle of her rifle in his face. When he at last perceived the curved shape his voice failed him, and he looked up at the weapon’s bearer. There was no pity there, no uncertainty. Nothing to exploit or bully. For the second time that day, Tartarus was completely powerless.
A dozen blue flashes came in quick succession, and then another dozen. ‘Mefasee fired until her weapon began to glow hot and vent steam, and then let it fall from her blistered hand.
The clatter of metal on metal rose away into the steepled roof, and the chamber fell silent at last. On the seating platforms, councilors looked from their places of cover to see Jiralhanae slipping through newly unsealed doorways, their battle cries muted. The hatch that Cakap and Migaw had been probing unsuccessfully slid open of its own accord, but the two Unggoy had abandoned it, distracted by ‘Mefasee’s desperate charge. As the pair waddled cautiously from the recess, Barclay straightened up to follow, but before he could move more than a step, an arm wrapped tightly around his neck.
Barclay gagged against the hold and began to struggle, but another hand was thrust in front of his face, the blue orb of Cakap’s grenade grasped firmly in its fingers.
“Quietly, now,” Flitch whispered in his ear. “I hate to do this to you again, but I’d really rather not get reacquainted with your alien friends. Now, back towards that door. Not a sound. Let’s just hope this goes better than the last time, for your sake and mine.”
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