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The Trial Begins

The Council of Phaenon was drawing to an opening. The following weeks would see a myriad of unique characters joining in their individual pursuits in a rare moment of convergence. The fate of the sector would fall on the words of the men and women who arrived daily, their judgments casting shadows across the multitude of worlds that were quickly falling into disarray. But before the council would start properly, the trial of Mengsk would be the toll that called forth the beginnings of this momentous event. Upon arrival he had been seized with his retainers, placed under Inquisitorial scrutiny. For three days Mengsk sat in an opulent cell. Furniture made the room luxurious, and the fine art that graced its walls would be fitting for a noble's quarters. Yet a prison still, despite the tapestries and fineries provided to one of their own. Cezaurus II hung over his thoughts like a shadow of guilt and condemnation. His peers had come to visit from time to time, to pass their own words of support or judgment. An Imperial world, no matter how tainted, was still an asset to the Imperium as a whole, and his actions held great consequences beyond his own lifetime. To convince the council of the virtue of his decision, it would take a great many words of passion and conviction. He lacked one, but not the other, and Yvonne paced trying to frame the words in his mind. There was a grinding of gear as the secured door chimed to life and a solitary figure entered, motioning for the Imperial Stormtroopers guarding his room to depart. An older face, worn by the passage of time, regret, victory and defeat. Graying hair, neatly trimmed, with the reminiscence of a beard. The man was wearing high collared Inquisitorial robes bedecked with the sigils of office and badges of authority seldom worn openly elsewhere. "Lord Mengala," Mengsk said with a differential standing bow. "You grace me with your presence." "You may call me by my first name, Yvonne," Mengala said with a droll seriousness. "You have earned that privilege as my peer and friend." "Pious," Yvonne said with a half-crooked smile. "You do more harm to your reputation than it is worth associating with me at this hour." Pious ignored his council, instead choosing to withdraw a flask from the folds of his robes and popping the container open. He took two crystalline glasses from the cell's foray and poured both of them a drink. Handing one to Mengsk, he took the other and slipped into the comfort of the visitors bench. "There is more afoot than you know," Pious said with an attempt at a laugh. Had they been around more socialite-minded members of the Inquisition, his attempt at etiquette and charm would have been laughable. "What is it?" Yvonne asked, raising a brow above his patch. Pious sighed deeply. "Your Acolytes have been declared Excommunicate Traitoris." Yvonne was stone-faced, taken back but showing now hint of it other than a nod. "How did...it happen?" "Zadiom," Pious answered after a moment of silence. "Zadiom used his dying breath to broadcast a message across the entirety of the sector, and perhaps even more. He fueled his powers with his own soul, Yvonne. That boy you spared, the one that my former Acolyte died acquiring, killed him," Pious said with a drink of his glass. "Silas?" Yvonne said. "Yes," Pious continued. "My own Astropath screamed for an entire night from the intensity of the memory that overwhelmed her." Yvonne gulped his drink then, almost shattering the glass when he lurched it down to the table. "What of the others?" He asked. "Alive, and wanted dead," Pious said with a sigh. "Zadiom is...was, a voice of reason among our small community. His death-cry has rallied many against you that would have otherwise sided with your decision. They are calling for your head." Yvonne looked at his friend for a moment, before at last he smiled. "I lived long enough to become the villain. It was bound to happen." Pious nodded an agreement. "The true Inquisition still believes in your mission Yvonne. We have made...preparations." "There is no need. I will face my condemners," Yvonne said flatly. "If I am to be judged as a destroyer, then so be it. The Imperium's will shall be done." "But Yvonne..." "But nothing Pious," Yvonne interrupted. "My life is but a single moment, given to the Emperor's Will as he sees fit. They can do with me as they wish." He stood, offering his hand to his friend. "But do me one favor." Pious rose and met the man face to face. "What is it? It shall be done." "Protect my Acolytes. Send word to them. Warn them. The true enemy has not revealed his hand yet, and the true Ordo needs them - all of them, if we are to avert the coming storm. Protect them, before they unleash The Asset." Pious simply nodded, before he left Mengsk alone, who returned to his seat and finished his colleagues drink.
Shackles clanked heavily, keeping Mengsk's hands behind his back. Despite their presence, his back was stiff and straight, walking with the air of pride, dignity and military professionalism he was known for, never breaking his composure. The black carapaced guards that escorted him with hellguns at the ready betrayed the fear of the council of his own modest abilities, gracing him with the comfort that they truly held him in high regard as a danger. Yvonne smirked at that as he was brought into the chamber of judgment, a modest room considering the opulent and Goliath architecture of the rest of the sanctum. Raised on a dais in the center of the room, he stood below an elongated podium which sat his peers who would preside over his trial. Behind him, to his left and to his right, others of rank and authority would bear witness to this trial. It was a rare event - and many had made it into the pews eagerly simply to attend such a thing. Acolytes, throne-agents, Inquisitors and officials of the Adeptus trusted to attend. "Inquisitor-Ordinary Yvonne Mengsk," Yvonne heard, his awareness bringing him back from his own dark thoughts, realizing at last the trial had begun in earnest. His eye saw only the elder mouth, wrinkled and mottled beneath a hood that masked the rest of visage speak. The Lord-Mandragora himself. "You have served long in the Ordo Malleus, as brother to each of us in the Inquisition, held in high esteem for your actions in your dutiful service. You are here to be held in trial of contempt by your peers, charged of woefully casting the world of Cezaerus II to the remit of Exterminatus unnecessarily. Your accusers claim incompetence of the worst caliber, and your own cognizance questioned due to the consequences that held effect upon the Holy Angevin Crusade." Yvonne remained calm, listening to the shuffling of whispers behind him. "Your service to the Inquisition has not gone without notice, and for that, you are here to attest to your actions before the Conclave Mandragora. Against these charges, the sentence of Absolution via Death is belayed until either the council deems it necessary, or you are proven innocent. How do you plead against these charges, Inquisitor-Ordinary Yvonne Mengsk?" With a half-crooked smile, Yvonne at last responded. "I plead....guilty, Lord Mandragora" Their was a small amount of silence, the words he used unexpected perhaps. To admit guilt in this chamber was to sign one's own death. "Yvonne..." He heard Pious voice plead in the crowd behind him, drowned by whispered condemnations. The Lord-Mandragora rose his hand, a simple gesture but enough to silence thunder itself. "...do you care to explain then, for the archives the reasoning of your guilt?" "I am guilty," Yvonne repeated himself, his own rage spilling ever more as he spit his own venom at the council. "Guilty of the murder of ,432,032,372 citizens of the Imperium. I am guilty of the death of Cezaerus II. It was by my order every man, woman and child were put to the fiery blade of the Inquisition itself. I am guilty of these things and more; I am guilty of an incompetence to find a better solution, for failing to save Cezaerus II from it's own festering corruption, a corruption that has been spreading across this very sector for far too long unchecked. I am guilty of the very things that the authority of my office entitles to me to do, expects me to perform, and I regret my actions for it is a necessary evil to ensure the survival of Man over men." The assemblage of Inquisitors and their agents began to protest audibly, a din of displeasure and vile contempt for Yvonne. The scowl of the Lord Mandragora showed like a vipers grin. "Are you insinuating the work of the Inquisition to be evil, Inquisitor?" The High Lord sneered openly in disgust at him once the room settled. Yvonne rose his chin. "I do not insinuate anything. I stand here to accuse all within this room corrupt beyond redemption! I stand in defiance of this very Inquisition, whose remit is to save the Imperium of Man. I am surrounded instead by vipers that turn upon their own, men and women who - had they been true to the God-Emperor of Man, this very sector would not be in the peril it stands in today. Under the shadow of the Imperium i stand in defiance, and I declare this council traitors to the Imperium of Man!"
The thunderous roar of accusations and demands for Yvonne's head were incredibly loud - enough that Yvonne thought idly in his mind that the very foundations of the building might come apart and the stum-jammers that sealed the chambers from leaking noise would fail to contain the sound. The Lord Mandragora had grown pallid, his sneer clear to see beneath the shadow of his hood. Yet, the imposing Lord of Inquisitors remained composed until the roar died down. "Yvonne Mengsk," The Lord Mandragora said at last. "You stand here in defiance of the Holy Ordos, making false claims against your own brothers and sisters in arms. You...have the audacity to act as our betters, when it is your own trial to ascertain your own guilt and misguided hand. Your acolytes have been branded Excommunicate Traitoris, and it is clear now that their seditious ways have been born by their master's heretical mind." The Lord Mandragora paused, swallowing, slowly coming to his next words. The air was hot and musty, silence now surrounding Mengsk. "There need not be a trial any longer. Your admission of guilt is found acceptable by the conclave. You have forfeited your rights to defense, and you may not refute the sentence that shall be decided upon by the council. By your own admission, Yvonne Mengsk, you have claimed a world of the Imperium and brought it's utter destruction unnecessarily - and by doing so, have caused direct harm and peril to the servants of the Imperium engaged in the most Holy of His most sacred orders to bring the luminous light of the Imperium to the farthest reaches of the galaxy. By these very acts, you have proven yourself to be that which you once vowed to stand against - you are the enemy within, the cankor that gnaws at the very foundation of our order that seeks to weaken our resolve against the enemies of Man. You shall not succeed, nor shall your reach extend beyond this day!" A roar of cheers and approval from the greater assembly erupted, drowning out Mengsk' solemn response. "You are wrong." The words did not go unnoticed by the Lord Mandragora. "You have something to say? More admissions of your guilt?" The Lord Mandragora's voice was almost curt - mocking. Yvonne Mengsk crooked a half-smile - an act of defiance between himself and his soon to be executioner. "You are wrong. My reach is beyond your grasp, my legacy ensured." To this, the Lord Mandragora and those that sat beside him leaned in. "Explain" he demanded.
Yvonne Mengsk began to speak in earnest, the words perhaps the last time he could speak freely. He chose his words carefully. "Becoming an Inquisitor is not easy, is it? As my master once taught me, as his taught him before him, and his before him, there is no price too great to be pain in service to the Emperor. We remember these words when times are darkest. It means Inquisitors must be prepared to think calmly even in intense situations. We should temper our intuition with wisdom. There is no ignorance amongst our order, there is only knowledge. We are it's guardians, and we have protected it so long we have forgotten why we do so." Yvonne paused, seeing the uneasy expressions facing him. He didn't have much time left. "We of the Holy Ordos shall wipe the foul blight of Arch-Enemy from the galaxy and restore order wherever they would sow chaos. We must destroy the forces of the ruinous powers, and never allow them to have power over us. We are Inquisitors of the Holy Ordos, and you may wish to consider what that means. Courting the artifacts of Chaos shall only see your own ruination. Seeking to turn the weapons of the arch-enemy against our foes is a malicious dream born of willful ignorance, and the path those within these halls are treading leads only to damnation. My legacy is that of the true Inquisition, and whether I live or die this day, I have carried my duties in the name of the Emperor. I stand here in defiance of the edicts of Phaenon Prime; I have set my successors upon a course to wage the true war against the enemies of man, and in them my true intentions shall be revealed!" "Filth," The Lord Mandragora muttered as the demands for his execution grew again. "Get this traitor out of my sight! He has nothing else worthy to say." Yvonne felt the chains pull heavily as his escorts began to take him away. He felt something hard hit his face - a dataslate thrown at him by an angered spectator. A small trail of blood escaped from a fresh cut above his eye-patch. As he stumbled forward and out of the chamber, he could hear the din of the crowd demanding his blood, labeling his coward, traitor, heretic and worse. It wouldn't take long. It would only be a matter of an hour or less while the conclave convened on his ultimate fate. Death was certain - but the final punishments would certainly entail no small measure of pain and humiliation. Yvonne couldn't help but smile in spite of the situation. He muttered something under his breath. One of the stormtroopers demanded his repeated himself louder. "...Innocence proves nothing..."
The prison door opened. A figure garbed in red entered the chambers. Yvonne didn't recognize the woman at first, but when the las-bars de-activated and she stepped forward, he sighed in resignation. "Are you to be the one who brings my doom?" The woman didn't react physically, her face stone-cold and firm. "Mengsk, you already know your fate." "Then why are you here Carramond? Has your master sent you here to gloat in his absence?" "No, Konstandin Garibaldi does not gloat," Elucidator Valen Carramond answered simply. "I have come to deliver a message from him." Yvonne gave a small nod. He knew where this was going to go. "My master wishes for you to know he has sworn to personally to seek down and destroy every last one of your associates," Valen continued. "He will flush out your acquaintances, contacts, and your allies and burn them to the last. He will destroy all that have come to know the name of Mengsk as a friend and ally." Yvonne laughed then. "As if he needs to. I am certain the conclave will order it so." Valen then gave him a malicious, rictus-grin - as if she enjoyed too much what she was about to say. "My master will carry forth an Edict of Obliteration on your name. You shall be stricken down from the annuals of history - not even in passing as a warning will your memory remain. Your Acolyte will be flayed alive, their graves an unmarked ditch on some backwater world. You're pitiful attempt at staining the Ordo's purpose will be forgotten within a mere decade." "Enough already with the dramatics Valen," Mengsk said with a tone of sarcasm. "This the judgement I expect from the Lord Mandragora. Does he wish to send you to poke me with a stick until I show discomfort like some prattling Schola-spawned brute?" Valen's composure broke slightly at the jibe at her master with a scowl. "No, he wants you to confess the location of your Sigil." Yvonne smirked at that. "Having some difficulty finding it?" Carramond moved deftly then, stabbing Yvonne in his shoulder with the sharp end of pain-needle. He gasped, falling to a knee. "No," She breathed out. "My master simply wished to see if some dignity were left in you. Have it your way, we'll find it one way or another. One way or another, we'll find your sigil, and with it the location of Hildenmund's research and destroy all of it." With that kicked the end of the pain-needle deeper into his flesh before turning to leave. As the las-bars re-ignited, she laughed abruptly then. "Your legacy...was quite impressive." She chided before leaving.
<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Gam8ogWBLk&list=R" rel="nofollow">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Gam8ogWBLk&list=R</a>... It all ends in darkness, doesn't it? Yvonne Mengsk found himself in a courtyard, dragged in escort by Inquisitorial Stormtroopers. Surrounding him were throngs of his former peers, the Lords of the Inquisition, and a standing Inquisitorial Sigil at the center of the courtyard standing an imposing 8 meters in height. Chains were affixed from it's outer protrusions ending in inner-spiked manacles. Yvonne swallowed back a bit. "Yvonne Mengsk," A loud-hauler cherubim announced. "Prepare for your sentencing." The Lord Mandragora pulled back his hood, revealing his face fully. White, short-cropped hair, and a weathered face watched from above. As he spoke, the Cherubim boomed his commandments. "Yvonne Mengsk," The verdict began. "You have been found guilty of the needless death and destruction of Cazaerus II, a perpetrator of seditious ideologies and an agent of anarchy. You are hereby relieved of your rank and titles, branded forever more as a heretic and enemy of the state." "Not so bad so far, right?" Yvonne teased the emotionless drones that escorted him. Neither reacted and he rolled his eye. His last attempt at some form of sardonic humor had been wasted on these men. "Fitting for your crimes, you shall receive the brand of the heretic, to bear forth to your last breath." He could feel his clothes being ripped from him then. He had not noticed the servants and savants that now clenched to relieve him of his clothes and assorted accoutrement. Purity seals, esoteric parchments, his empty holster; all were taken, leaving him wearing nothing but his pants and boots. The air was crisp against his chest - pleasant almost before he was struck down to his knees. A man in deep red robes resembling the color of dried blood was approaching him with a white hot branding rod. This is going to be...enjoyable, Yvonne managed to think moments before the brand hissed against his flesh, sending him screaming in agony as he flesh melted. "You shall endure the pain of an entire world," The cherub said dimly in the distance. His vision was growing blurry as he gasped for breath. "A lash, for every Imperial citizen slain on the world of Cazaerus II in memorance of their anguish and their lives shortened before their time." The clasps were closing against his wrists. The metallic spikes ripped into the flesh, tendons and muscle of his wrists. Yvonne screamed again - his calm demeanor shattered by the pain. There was to be no grace in this, at least, not for him. When his jailers were finished with him, his body went limp, held up only by his chained wrists. Blood was trailing down his arms and across his shoulders as he slumped down. "Let this be a lesson to those who would bring false charges against the righteous of the Imperium. Let your life be an example of those who falter from their duties, and the consequences of arrogance beyond their wisdom." That damnable cherub bellowed, but the words were lost on Yvonne. He could taste blood on his lips now. He was horribly drained. The first lash would come soon. He hoped the pain would be enough to force him to black out. Then he felt something damp on his cheek. "It'll be ok," He heard the voice of Pious say, wetting Yvonne's face with a rag. "Pious?" he croaked in a low voice. "You didn't have to do this. You didn't have to go down this route," He answered, cleaning his face. "Why did you have to be so stupid....so stubborn?" Yvonne breathed out. At the very least, he had this moment with a friend. "...my acolytes...they need more time." "You did this for them?" Pious said, his voice filled with remorse. "Lighthouses don't wander all over an island looking for boats to save..." Yvonne groaned, struggling to speak. "They stand firm...a beacon in the darkness. I could not..." Yvonne groaned again, losing his strength, "I could not..." he paused, taking a deep breath. "My acolytes...they will have a chance now...the Inquisition will not be as subtle...as they think they are. They will be warned. They will survive." Pious put his hand on Yvonne's cheek, placing the rag between his teeth. "Bite this. It'll help..." Pious backed away then. It was time. "I will remember you. As the man who stood against the darkness." Yvonne spat the rag out as Pious began to walk away. "No..." Pious stopped.. "Remember me...as the man who acted too late," Yvonne moaned. Pious could not say another word before the first electro-flail struck Yvonne across the back, his screams drowned out by the crowds blood-thirsty cheers. His death sentence had begun...
Fun fact, I did the math on this just for shits and giggles. Mengsk is to be given one lash for every person on the planet he blew up. Considering 432,032,372 lashes, and estimating 1.5 seconds to deliver 1 lash (This is a rather fast value, as oppoesed to a much more realistic 3 seconds per lash, but we are allso assuming that this is a servitor delivering them, so I sped it up a little.) we come out with a total duration of: 648,048,558 Seconds 10,800,809.3 Minutes 180,013.5 Hours 7,400.5 days or simply 20 Years 3 months 1 week and 4 days. Adjusting for time taken to replace the whip, repair and maintain the servitor etc I came out with figures closing in on 30+ years of whipping. Considering that the record for for number of lashes a human has endured is 52 before death, and that this is an electro flayer, not a normal whip, I figure Mengsk is dead around the 25-lash mark (accounting for previous injuries, stress, and Mengsk's Badass-Factor), by 50 his back is completely mush. at 100-150 his shoulders give way and the arms seperate from the body. so before the end of day one, there is no longer enough of him left to bury, and the servitor is doomed to just keep whipping the liquid sludge left on the floor for 3 decades. Food for thought.=D