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MillionNovel > Getting Warhammered [WH 40k Fanfic] > 164 – Horrid Tea

164 – Horrid Tea

    164 – Horrid Tea


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Understand the world around you, the people under yourmand and your enemies. If you do, you will have the fundamental information needed to form viable ns as a leader.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">It sounded simple, reasonable and made perfect sense. Which was why I couldn’t even refute it. Selene was right, and I knew it.


    <span style="font-weight:400">The part that bothered me still was where she said I never epted this 42nd millennium Milky Way for how it is …. Because who would want to ept this shithole for how it is? It’s terrible in every conceivable way with only silver linings that barely manage to take the edges off of its atrocious state.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Evil Gods, man-eating aliens who want to consume everything, pompous assholes who see humans as ants, psychotic ancient robots who can snuff out stars for shits and giggles, and the list goes on without me having even mentioned the pile of garbage that became of humanity.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I knew that this ce was <i><span style="font-weight:400">made </i><span style="font-weight:400">to be grimdark. It was written like that. It was never supposed to be real, and I was never supposed to be forced to live in it.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Did epting how horrible it was, mean giving up on ever actually turning things around? If I became just another alien warlord, blessed with supernatural powers, would I just be another bullet point on that previous list?


    <span style="font-weight:400">I could be an alien warlord unlike any other. I was confident that, if I ignored all of my worries and reservations, I could be a force to be reckoned with all by myself. Stars syphoned for an endless source of energy to power my limitless armies of mindless drones that were built based on temtes taken from the most powerful beings in this gxy.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Logistics would be my greatest opponent, transporting my drones to where they needed to be.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I was confident in that … but which alien warlord wasn’t? And what happened to them? What remained of them?


    <span style="font-weight:400">Nothing, but trophies on a wall and droll records in some Administratum libraries. Even the Cacodominus, a powerful psychic creature that mind-controlled the entire poption of 1300 star systems at once, is nothing but a memory with its skull paraded around by the ck Temrs.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I was powerful, sure, but not anywhere close to powerful enough to even think about replicating that feat.


    <span style="font-weight:400">What killed it? A bunch of regr Space Marines. Their weapons? Being absolutely deranged lunatics and fanatical zealotry.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Despite my confidence, I couldn’t help but fear that by some weird twist of fate, the same would be enough to kill me.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Which was why I’d been trying to stay low and be careful. I didn’t have primarch plot armour, and not even just a regr one. Any random guardsman might just pull some bullshit McGuffey out of their ass that’s just perfectly primed to kill me.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Can I get you something, honey?”


    <span style="font-weight:400">I looked up at the sudden sounding from above, propping myself up from the wooden table and ncing at the matronly woman smiling down at me. After my talk with Selene, I’d Blinked downside and decided the best ce to think and chew over my thoughts on it was in a rustic cafe.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Yeah,” I answered slowly, ncing down at the menu she’d ced in front of me and a vaguely familiar entry caught my eye. “Can I get one cup of this … tanna tea?”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“You sure honey?” The woman asked, looking at my face, then down at the menu. “It has a … peculiar taste. A little too bitter for most of the more delicate customers around here.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Huh, why’s it on the menu if it’s so bad you have to warn me about it?” I asked her, blinking away the lingering daze my previous brooding had left me in.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“The owner loves the thing.” The woman shrugged. “There was this one veteran who came here toin every day he couldn’t drink his favourite drink this far from home, so we put it on the menu for him.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“I’ll give it a try,” I said with a smile, shrugging lightly as I leaned back. “Plus whatever you think will be a good pte cleanser afterwards. Might as well try it once.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Sure!” The woman smiled, snatching up the menu. “I’ll be right back.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">I watched her go, then let my gaze pan around the faint little cafe. This city was on the other side of the, far from where Val had his battle with the Daemon Prince. Meaning, it was still calm.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I watched people. The cafe was small, with just a few tables and had even fewer customers sitting in. A man in a dishevelled suit-like thing chugged his drink and shoved the food in his face hole like every second spent eating was a waste of his time.


    <span style="font-weight:400">At another table sat a young couple of what would have been high-schoolers if this was Earth. They were fully absorbed in their own little world and I could feel so much innocent love and lust radiating off of them it was almost … refreshing. Their emotions were so much less tainted by life experiences that they were just more raw than adult emotions.


    <span style="font-weight:400">The fourth person other than me was a middle-aged man greying at the temples,nguidly flipping through a newspaper while taking a sip of some steaming concoction on his table every so often.


    <span style="font-weight:400">They were all so familiar to me, with just a few tiny changes to the decor and clothes, I could imagine this cafe being just down the road from my apartment back on 21st century Earth.


    <span style="font-weight:400">And yet, it’d take me growing elongated ears and all these familiar humans would transform into something utterly alien to me. The humans I knew would haveplimented my cosy. These humans?


    <span style="font-weight:400">I looked at the balding man, my enhanced eyes locking onto a bullet wound on his forearm and noting the straight-spined pose he sat in. He looked like he had amppost shoved up his ass, but somehow, he made it look like he wasfortable sitting like that.


    <span style="font-weight:400">No, these humans would jump to attention and either scream in fear or attack me with spoons and forks. There was so much hate and fear cooked into them over the millennia, they would loathe me just for a slight difference.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I … knew that, but Selene said I didn’t truly believe it. That I had never internalised it, and that it made my reasoning somewhat deluded.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I briefly considered testing it, just changing into some alien form to see how they would react. Something non-threatening, maybe even cute. Would they really try to lynch me, if I did?


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Here is your tea, honey.” The waitress came back, ced the warm mug down before me and then put arger ss filled with a vibrant pink drink and ice to the side. “Fingleberry lemonade, it’ll get even the persistent aftertaste of tenna tea out of your mouth with a few gulps.”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“Thanks,” I said, putting on a smile as I nced up appreciatively. Would she have screamed, or would she be one of the people lynching me? The answer would be a single thought away. She was a mere human so my telepathy would have little trouble browsing her mind.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“You’re wee.” She nodded, then slid over to the teenage couple who were waving her over.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I eyed the steaming liquid suspiciously, knowing I could wipe the taste from my tongue even if the thing had acid mixed in. I shrugged and took a small sip. A grimace pulled at my face the very moment it touched my tongue. Not only was it steaming hot, but it also tasted like battery acid mixed in with the worst homemade beer in existence.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I coughed, but swallowed the small sip anyway as my grimace deepened. I could have turned off my taste buds, but I felt it would be worth it to experience the true taste of the abominable drink at least once in my life. If I didn’t fuck up something, I was set to live until thest stars died out and thest organic beings died out, depriving me of the bio-energy I’d need to continue on. Experiencing as much of the gxy as it was now might be the only way some of these things would be remembered in the eons toe.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Taking another sip, despite my better judgement, I decided there were some things that might deserve to be forgotten.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Putting the cup down, I grabbed the cold lemonade made of whatever a fingleberry was and took a deep gulp. It had a tangy fruity vour like elderberries, but maybe a touch sweeter.


    <span style="font-weight:400">As I enjoyed the sourness being purged from my mouth by the fruity goodness, a strange thought urred to me. If this tenna tea thingy was from another, and a veteran kept requesting it, that meant he too would have to have been from some far-off.


    <span style="font-weight:400">But this was ruled by a damned Daemon Prince, so how in the nine hells did a veteran from who knew where end up here? This part of the Jericho Reach was supposed to bergely isted from Imperial influence for thest few millennia.


    <span style="font-weight:400">It just didn’t make sense.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Or was I wrong? Had this been conquered by that crusade they had going on in the near past?


    <i><span style="font-weight:400">Nah. They take worshipping this totally-not-aneh goddess of theirs far too seriously. I didn’t even catch a single word being spoken of the Emperor since I came down here. They have to have been separated from the Imperium long ago … which makes this tea thing all the more weird. I’m like, 99% sure it wasn’t originally from this.</i>


    <span style="font-weight:400">I nced up and saw the older man with the newspaper looking over at me with a slight grin. On instinct, I caught his surface thoughts. He looked military-esque enough to be a veteran, but would he be <i><span style="font-weight:400">the </i><span style="font-weight:400">veteran whom asked for this atrocious drink to be served here?


    <span style="font-weight:400">Despite his outwardly calm demeanour, when I poked my telepathic nose inside his head I found a tightly wound ball of anxiety and fear. I could barely parse his regr thoughts as visions of his own gruesome deaths yed out before his mind’s eye one after the other.


    <span style="font-weight:400">The interesting thing was, he saw himself being torn apart by daemons more often than not, or lynched by a mob in some others.


    <span style="font-weight:400">He shuddered and snapped his gaze over at me, a smile on his lips and a frown on his eyebrows. I tilted my head, not bothering to hide my staring and gave him a beatific smile.


    <span style="font-weight:400">His chaotic mess of a mind cleared up for a brief moment, and I finally found myself a name. Only my quick reflexes stopped me from dropping my ss as my eyes widened.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Caiphas Cain.


    <span style="font-weight:400">That was his name, and I was shocked to find it so familiar. Of the few warhammer series I had read more than one book of, his memoirs were one of them. I nced down at the atrocious tea on my table and finally made the connection as to why its name sounded so familiar; the man loved this damned thing.


    <span style="font-weight:400">But what would a retired Commissar of the Imperial Guard be doing on this at the ass end of the Milky Way?


    <i><span style="font-weight:400">Something to do with the Daemon Prince ruling it, I’d wager.</i>


    <span style="font-weight:400">As I watched him, he watched me and I quickly disengaged from his mind before it jumped to ces I’d rather not see.


    <span style="font-weight:400">Still, this had my curiosity peaked, and I was aching for a distraction either way. I’d have to somehow mollify Val and bring his dampened morale back up after the undue verbal beating I had given him.


    <span style="font-weight:400">I still felt like he had been an asshole, but I agreed with Selene’s stance on him being wired that way. I couldn’t expect him to just think like me without even exining to him my thought process … that is, if my thought process were even the right ones to have.


    <span style="font-weight:400">A few hundred deaths would have made the headlines back on Earth.


    <span style="font-weight:400">‘Strange alienes down from the sky, kills the President and massacres hundreds of civilians as it causes havoc in the surroundings.’


    <span style="font-weight:400">I could almost see it on the news, and hear the horrified voices of the newscasters. However, this wasn’t that Earth. Not anymore, and maybe it never had been.


    <span style="font-weight:400">stering a flirty smile on my face, I stood up with my two drinks in hand and sashayed over to the undercover Commissar.


    <span style="font-weight:400">“May I?” I asked, motioning for the seat, into which I slid into the moment he gave a gracious nod. “Thank you. I suspect you’re the one who cursed this menu with this atrocious drink?”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“It is an acquired taste,” he said with a charming smile that hid his underlying suspicions almost perfectly. I caught a wandering thought from him thinking I was some aneshi enchantress trying to eat his soul. That was either the most ttering worry to be had when meeting me, or the rudest. I wasn’t quite sure yet. “How may I help you?”


    <span style="font-weight:400">“I am in need of a distraction,” I confessed, a smile still on my lips. “Thought you might be able to help me?”
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