Xerxes did his best to look intimidated as he disembarked, though it would be a hard task to spot him and his black armour in the darkness. The cloaked man closed on the group, glaring at each of them suspiciously. He seemed to consider for a time and then, in one fluid motion, bowed deeply and said "Welcome, Servants of the Emperor, you are free to enter."
---
They rode their flatbed through the gates and down what looked to be Stern Hope's main street. A harsh wind blew through the settlement, carrying dust and the musty scent of human living with it. Low illumination swept through the curtained doorways of the dwellings and from the night fires burning in old promethium drums dotted about, the smell of smoke and cooking blending with the night air. It had the feel of a refugee camp, composed from scores of haphazardly erected tents, lean-tos, shacks and the occasional flint-block building ranging from small, one man affairs to larger family sized dwellings. All these were arranged in a rough circle around a bare, rocky hill on which the outline of a great domed building was visible.
A few of the locals had left their homes to gawp and stare at the newcomers and appeared to be composed of a startling number of different ethnicities, the void born among the acolytes having no doubt a great many of them were not born on Iocanthos. Signs of the Imperial faith dotted each and every one of them; aquila necklaces, ritual markings on cheeks or bare chests and other signs of devotion were all plentiful, their practical clothing almost seeming odd when contrasted with these effects. Even a few poor quality tapestries hung from the more sturdy dwellings. Some of the bolder adults moved close to the truck and bowed, making the sign of the aquila with both hands as nervous children stared wide-eyed from behind them, one or two even begging for blessings from Him On Terra with hushed and reverent tones.
A strong voice hailed them from one side of the path, jolting the acolytes from whatever thoughts they were having. A smiling, heavy-set man in the dark robes of a monk approached with a shuttered lamp in hand. He took a pointed look at the numerous weapons they'd brought with them before grinning at them and winking with a bright blue eye, the other being bionic and incapable of such an act.
"Greetings, pilgrims. Such faith and preparation is admirable to see. You are the help the abbot has sent for, yes? Truly we are not forgotten. I am Brother Lamark, one of the churchmen of this mission. Welcome to Stern Hope! The abbot awaits your pleasure at the priory in the morning after you are rested. Unfortunately his currently occupied, though he sends his apologies for not greeting you himself."
Lamark appeared to be in his fifties and quite solidly built, the smile on his face seemingly ever present. The lasgun he wore on one shoulder also suggested he was a far cry from the cloistered clergy of the Tarsus chantries back on Scintilla.
Mithras: