---
Cassian's eyes opened, he immediately recognised he was in a dream.
The room had vanished. No walls. No ceiling. Just a vast emptiness stretching in every direction. Gray fog underfoot, like he was walking on a dead sea.
And ahead something shimmered.
A figure stepped forward, slow and silent. Armor dulled by age. Gold dulled by ash. A cloak like a sun-bleached banner trailing behind him. His face was human, but only barely. Too still. Too cold. Like it had forgotten how to move.
Cassian didn't speak.
Didn't need to.
He knew.
"You," he said quietly.
The Emperor of Mankind stood before him.
"You're not real," Cassian said. "This is a dream."
"Yes," the Emperor replied. "And no."
Cassian's hands curled into fists. "Why am I here?"
"Your soul, it was tainted with that daemon," the Emperor said. "I just helped you out."
"Why?"
"Because you do not belong here."
Cassian's blood ran cold.
The Emperor stepped closer, and the world bent slightly around him, like reality was unsure whether to stay whole or unravel.
"You are not born of this timeline. Not of this world. You are something else. Something foreign to the great game. I do not understand you. That makes you valuable."
Cassian's voice shook. "You're the most powerful human being who ever lived. I am nothing compared to that."
The Emperor's lips twitched in what might've once been a smile.
"I was. Once."
Silence settled.
"You're trying to save the Imperium," Cassian said. "Still."
"Yes."
"But it's dying."
"It was born dying," the Emperor said. "We built it from bones and fire and lies. I dreamed of unity. I created war. I tried to make a future. I broke the present."
He looked out at the gray void.
"I have buried more hope than most civilizations ever knew."
Cassian felt something shift inside him. The Emperor wasn't angry. He wasn't godlike. He was grieving.
"So what do you want from me?"
"Nothing," the Emperor said. "I want to see what you'll do. Chaos has everything already. It loses nothing by gaining you. The Imperium is cracked down to its soul. One more shard doesn't matter."
"Then why save me?"
"Because you are a fragment from beyond the story. You are not one of mine. Not truly. You are not bound by the rules I broke the galaxy to write."
Cassian stared.
"You expect me to pick a side?"
"I expect you to choose," the Emperor said. "Not for me. Not for the Imperium. Not even for humanity. Simply to choose."
A flicker of something passed behind those ancient eyes. Memory. Regret.
"I never had that luxury," he said. "Not really."
Cassian swallowed. "And if I pick wrong?"
"There is no wrong. Only consequence."
The gray sea below began to crumble. The dream frayed at the edges.
The Emperor turned to go.
"Wait," Cassian said, heart pounding. "Do you even believe the Imperium can be saved?"
The Emperor didn't answer immediately.
Finally, he said: "I want it to be. But belief is for men with time left."
Then the world shattered like glass.
—
Cassian's eyes snapped open, the dream's weight still clung to his chest like a boulder cold, unforgiving, impossible to ignore. The gray void, the Emperor's hollow eyes, the slow crumbling of the world around him. That wasn't a dream. It was more like a warning. A goddamn existential kick in the teeth.
His throat felt dry, like he'd swallowed dust and fire. He blinked into the harsh, sterile light of the room the hum of the psychic wards buzzing faintly, the faint steady rhythm of Faevelith's breathing nearby.
That was something.
He slowly inhaled and exhaled. Going back to his familiar practice of meditation to get a semblance of calm back, that was stolen from him.
His mind was a battlefield of fractured thoughts and emotions anger, dread, guilt, and beneath it all, a simmering, dangerous determination.
He was tired of being the guy who just survives.
Survival was the default. The baseline. The goddamn minimum. For years, Cassian had danced around the edges of annihilation, stepping back from the void just in time, bleeding out and healing, pushing forward and hiding.
But with that dream after the Emperor's words something inside him shifted. Not a grand revelation. Not some heroic lightbulb moment. Just a quiet, stubborn refusal.
He was done waiting for fate to decide. He is done being a pawn.
His eyes settled on Faevelith's still form. Pale. Fragile. Hollowed out by the price she paid for him. That was his anchor.
She had risked everything. And for what? His hunger to survive. His need for control. His fear, twisted and cracked open by a daemon that knew exactly where to dig.
She bore the cost of his weakness.
That wouldn't happen again.
No more.
---
Cassian sat against the cold wall of the small room, the stale recycled air doing little to clear the haze clouding his mind. Farron stood by the window, arms crossed, watching the endless cityscape of Kaelor stretch beneath them a sprawl of glittering towers and harsh shadows that never seemed to sleep. Outside, the night was alive with distant hums and flickers of light, but inside the room, everything felt drained, brittle.
"So," Farron began, voice low, almost hesitant. "You ever think about the smell of rain on dirt?" His tone was odd almost like trying to distract himself. Not know how to express himself.
Cassian glanced at him, a faint curve pulling at the corner of his mouth. "Rain on dirt? That's a new one."
"Old world thing," Farron said, eyes still fixed on the city. "Used to mean something. Renewal. Cleansing. Now it just means mud and broken streets."
Cassian chuckled dryly. "Guess nothing's changed much."
They sat in silence for a beat, the weight of unsaid things pressing in around them.
Farron finally turned, eyes on Cassian. "We're running out of time, Cassian. The Craftworld's patience with us is gone. The Aeldari? They've stopped pretending we matter. Faevelith is the only thing that is stopping them from outright expulsion."
Cassian's jaw tightened. "How long before they pull the plug?"
"Not long. Charity's a luxury they can't afford anymore. Especially for outsiders like us."
Cassian looked away, focusing on the dull hum of the machines keeping Faevelith alive. She was still breathing still fighting. The thought of losing her was a knife twisting in his gut.
"I'm not leaving her," Cassian said quietly, like a vow he had to remind himself of.
Farron nodded slowly, the hardness in his eyes softening just a little. "Very well Cassian. I will try to delay it as much as possible."
---
Weeks Later
Inside a room bathed in harsh white light, Faevelith hovered on the edge of a chasm a place where consciousness and oblivion tangled.
Her mind was a battlefield. Pain sliced through her skull like shattered glass, but beneath it all was the static, faint whispers, broken memories slipping like sand through her fingers.
She tried to breathe, to push against the fog that tried to swallow her whole. Her limbs were heavy, unresponsive, as if wrapped in chains she couldn't see.
The world was distant, a fractured mirror reflecting shards of light and shadow.
Slowly, agonizingly, her eyes fluttered open. The ceiling above was sterile and pale, but the real presence was something warmer, something familiar.
Cassian.
His face was drawn and tired, but there, watching her with a mix of hope and exhaustion.
She breathed again, shallow and trembling.
"You look, not exactly well Cassian." she said, voice raw, dry as dust.
He gave a tired smile, one that didn't quite reach his eyes. "Been a long week."
Their eyes locked hers questioning, his relieved.
"How long?" she whispered.
"Too long for me."
She tried to sit up but weakness pinned her down. He reached out, steadying her gently.
"You're awake," he said softly. "We thought… we thought we lost you."
Her eyes filled with a flicker of something fierce.
"Don't do that."
Cassian exhaled, the tension leaking from his shoulders.
She took a moment, then asked quietly, "Tell me everything. No lies."
---
And so he did.
He told her about the whole process, the slow corruption the daemon prince had on him, preying upon his strengths as weakness
He spoke of his fears, his guilt. Pouring his heart out.
Faevelith listened, silent but not still, her mind racing to piece together what was lost and what still remained.
When he finished, there was a long pause the kind that feels heavier than words.
Then, Cassian leaned in slowly, searching her eyes for permission.
His lips met hers in a kiss that was tentative and real not the grand gesture of romance, but a grounding tether, a promise that he was still there.
"I'm sorry," he murmured against her skin.
She pulled back just enough to meet his gaze, voice sharp but not unkind.
"Next time your pride gets in the way, I will break your jaw as a reminder."
Cassian smiled, a bit of the old fire flickering back.
"It's a deal."
They sat together, tangled and raw just two people talking, whispering and just being with each other.
And that was enough.
—-
The air was sterile and humming faintly with power. The balcony overlooked the spires and domes of Kaelor Craftworld an endless expanse of crafted grace and alien geometry. Cold wind clawed at their cloaks, the stars above silent witnesses to everything left unsaid.
Farron shifted, the faintest tension in his posture. "We've been here long enough. It's time we move on now. The Craftworld has already given an expulsion order. There patience has run out."
Cassian's gaze never left the horizon. "Patience was never theirs to give. They tolerated us, but that tolerance is gone now."
Faevelith's voice was low, clipped, sharp as a shard of obsidian. "They don't trust us. Even I can't do much about this. And I don't blame them. Especially after the stunt we pulled with Daemon prince."
Farron's eyes flicked to Cassian. "Still, we have to decide. Stay here, and we risk becoming liabilities. Leave, and it's unknowns ahead."
Cassian's jaw tightened. "We're leaving. Its time we move on."
Faevelith raised a brow. "Where then? The humans cling to their machine gods and hollow promises. Imperial worlds are traps."
"We're going to the Gothic Sector," Cassian said quietly, as if speaking the name aloud might draw eyes or worse.
A silence stretched, brittle and taut.
Farron's voice was cautious. "Gothic Sector… That's still quiet. Why there out of all places, Is there something special about that place?"
Cassian didn't answer immediately. He looked between them, weighing his words.
"Because it's where our opportunity lay for us," he said at last. "Where we can carve a place for us in this galaxy."
Faevelith's gaze darkened. "You never tell us everything. What is it you're hiding?"
Cassian shook his head, a bitter smile twisting his lips. "I don't hide out of mistrust. I hide because some knowledge is a curse. If I told you what I know, what's coming you'd see only the storm, not the path through it."
Farron's augment fingers curled into fists. "You carry burdens alone, Cassian, but we're the ones who face the consequences."
Cassian's expression looked tired, but his eyes looked determined. "Farron, I'm done surviving on scraps. This universe doesn't give second chances. If we want to live, not just survive but thrive, we need to take the initiative."
Faevelith's tone was sharp, laced with doubt. "And what of the daemon prince still bound in that vat-grown shell? That thing is a poison ready to rot from inside."
Cassian's voice dropped, steady and cold. "I will take the responsibility for that thing. The daemon possesed me, but it did not consume me. I'm... changed. More resistant to chaos. Immune to possession now."
Farron stared, incredulous. "You're sure that won't fail? That it won't turn on us?"
Cassian's laugh was harsh. "Nothing is certain. But it's not something we can discard at whim. It's one of the most powerful beings on the galaxy not a toy. And having a nuclear option for a bad day is always a win in my book."
Faevelith's eyes narrowed, the weight of unspoken fears hanging heavy between them. "Then we walk a knife's edge, with death always a breath away."
Cassian's hand brushed against the sealed container as if seeking reassurance. "Better to control the blade than be cut by it."
Farron nodded slowly. "Then we go forward. Together, for better or worse."
—-
Volume 2 Ends
Word Count: 2087
Author's Note: The Emperor is a fucking enigmatic guy, even I as the author do not know if he is pulling some reverse psychology on Cassian or he is being genuine about it. The emperor sections, I am just winging it as we go on.
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