Jon-Frederic Aristide: Difference between revisions

From 2d4chan
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 145: Line 145:


==Brotherwar==
==Brotherwar==
<div class="toccolours mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width:1000px">
'''''Fratricide'''''
<div class="mw-collapsible-content">
The air was ash-choked and sullen, the smell of burning fuel and metal poisoned the wind, the smoke buried the twin suns of New Hope, the snow of debris and ash turned the vibrant desert into a bleak tundra. Malcador’s crashed flagship, the Barchamos, had turned the planet into a pallid grave. They couldn’t even retrieve his corpse, but the remnants of the ship’s vid and pict recordings would have told the tale. The Sigilite was dead, and nothing could ever be the same. The burgeoning Imperium had died in its adolescence. The legions that had gathered to refocus the Crusade and bring peace from division now gathered in tense silence for the coming war. Frederíc knew what would happen next. The final piece of the eroding foundation had crumbled, his only hope for peace died in that wreck. Malcador called the Warmasters to New Hope to inspire, to unite, to no doubt scold. Now they’ll argue over his body like vultures. The Sentinels were the first to arrive to the cataclysmic scene, and they were reluctant to share what they found, as somber silence met requests for information. That told Frederíc everything he needed to know. This was no accident, no tragic result of a perilous warp jump. If it were, it would have been announced, and the mourning would bind them, if only for a moment, as one. This was no assassination by Xenos forces, or enemy malcontents. If it were, they would have taken to stars already in vengeance. No, Malcador was murdered, and the list of suspects was terrifyingly small. To best the Sigillite in his own ship...the thought left a chill in Frederíc’s bones.
The air was ash-choked and sullen, the smell of burning fuel and metal poisoned the wind, the smoke buried the twin suns of New Hope, the snow of debris and ash turned the vibrant desert into a bleak tundra. Malcador’s crashed flagship, the Barchamos, had turned the planet into a pallid grave. They couldn’t even retrieve his corpse, but the remnants of the ship’s vid and pict recordings would have told the tale. The Sigilite was dead, and nothing could ever be the same. The burgeoning Imperium had died in its adolescence. The legions that had gathered to refocus the Crusade and bring peace from division now gathered in tense silence for the coming war. Frederíc knew what would happen next. The final piece of the eroding foundation had crumbled, his only hope for peace died in that wreck. Malcador called the Warmasters to New Hope to inspire, to unite, to no doubt scold. Now they’ll argue over his body like vultures. The Sentinels were the first to arrive to the cataclysmic scene, and they were reluctant to share what they found, as somber silence met requests for information. That told Frederíc everything he needed to know. This was no accident, no tragic result of a perilous warp jump. If it were, it would have been announced, and the mourning would bind them, if only for a moment, as one. This was no assassination by Xenos forces, or enemy malcontents. If it were, they would have taken to stars already in vengeance. No, Malcador was murdered, and the list of suspects was terrifyingly small. To best the Sigillite in his own ship...the thought left a chill in Frederíc’s bones.


Line 267: Line 270:


In a flash he was smashed on the side of his head again, forcing him to backstep and fire his pistol into the open air. Marduk was suddenly beside Je’She, gripping him the the throat in a crushing vise, then swept a leg under Je’She, sending the Sentinel to his knees. Aristide seized the opening and fired at Marduk, the blast hitting squarely in the face of Marduk’s helm, exposing his bloodied and bruised face. The subsequent detonation did little to stop Marduk, as he raised his cleaver in lethal swiftness and sent it into the scrambling Je’She. The blade swung through the gap between the cuirass and the right pauldron, sinking into the soft connective armour, tunneling deep through the shoulder joint. Je’She howled, and his left hand shot to the blade to prevent a total maim. His right was dreadfully still. Equally as motionless was Marduk’s face, a placid plane of predatory consideration, his right eye flooded by blood, his lip split, his face marked by dozens of embedded shrapnel shards and deep lacerations. Frederíc roared and charged at Marduk, firing at him in a sustained burst. The barrage knocked the Leviathan away from the maimed Je’She, and Aristide leapt over the Sentinel in a spinning slash, the blade running through Marduk’s increasingly wounded torso. Frederíc landed on the tip of his sabaton, then pirouetted, landing another strike. On the turn he saw Marduk coming to with his cleaver brandished, so in the completion of the flourish he lashed out at Marduk’s hands, forcing his brother to sweep away his blade in a parry, exposing his side to Frederíc. Aristide fired another salvo into his brother’s ribs, swiping at the back of the cleaver to prevent his brother from returning a strike. The detonation created a crack in the contoured obliques of the muscled facade, and Aristide pulled the trigger again to rupture the plate. He was met with an unsatisfactory, terrifying, click. His shattered helm had long since stopped offering him diagnostics, and the head trauma he suffered still allowed him to ignore that. He did not cease his assault and simply stepped into Marduk, and pistol whipped him in his face
In a flash he was smashed on the side of his head again, forcing him to backstep and fire his pistol into the open air. Marduk was suddenly beside Je’She, gripping him the the throat in a crushing vise, then swept a leg under Je’She, sending the Sentinel to his knees. Aristide seized the opening and fired at Marduk, the blast hitting squarely in the face of Marduk’s helm, exposing his bloodied and bruised face. The subsequent detonation did little to stop Marduk, as he raised his cleaver in lethal swiftness and sent it into the scrambling Je’She. The blade swung through the gap between the cuirass and the right pauldron, sinking into the soft connective armour, tunneling deep through the shoulder joint. Je’She howled, and his left hand shot to the blade to prevent a total maim. His right was dreadfully still. Equally as motionless was Marduk’s face, a placid plane of predatory consideration, his right eye flooded by blood, his lip split, his face marked by dozens of embedded shrapnel shards and deep lacerations. Frederíc roared and charged at Marduk, firing at him in a sustained burst. The barrage knocked the Leviathan away from the maimed Je’She, and Aristide leapt over the Sentinel in a spinning slash, the blade running through Marduk’s increasingly wounded torso. Frederíc landed on the tip of his sabaton, then pirouetted, landing another strike. On the turn he saw Marduk coming to with his cleaver brandished, so in the completion of the flourish he lashed out at Marduk’s hands, forcing his brother to sweep away his blade in a parry, exposing his side to Frederíc. Aristide fired another salvo into his brother’s ribs, swiping at the back of the cleaver to prevent his brother from returning a strike. The detonation created a crack in the contoured obliques of the muscled facade, and Aristide pulled the trigger again to rupture the plate. He was met with an unsatisfactory, terrifying, click. His shattered helm had long since stopped offering him diagnostics, and the head trauma he suffered still allowed him to ignore that. He did not cease his assault and simply stepped into Marduk, and pistol whipped him in his face
</div>
</div>


=Fate & Legacy=
=Fate & Legacy=

Revision as of 20:17, 22 January 2020

Jon-Frederic Aristide
Title/Honours

Stallion of the Imperium, L'enfant Stellaire, Warmaster

Discovered (world)

Thiepval Prime

Discovered (period)

805.M30

Legion

Emperor's Dragoons

Great Crusade Command

Primarch, 45th Expeditionary fleet

Heraldry/Sigil

WIP

Unique Weapon

WIP

Distinguishing Traits

WIP

Flaws

WIP

Brotherwar role

Separatist

Fate

Unknown

Dominion

WIP

This page is part of the Warmasters Triumvirate, a fan re-working of the Warhammer 40,000 Universe. See the Warmasters Triumvirate page for more information on the Alternate Universe.

Text here

History

Primarch Origin

After conquering the warring tribes of Terra during the Unification Wars, the Emperor of Mankind set out to reconnect all the lost colonies of mankind, which had been lost during the Age of Strife. To this end, the Emperor began work on the Primarch project; 21 gene-sons that would serve as his generals in the Great Crusade. Before he could finish the project however, his sons would be snatched away by the Dark Gods of Chaos and scattered across the stars. The Primarch of the XIVth legion, who would come to be known as Frederíc Aristide, landed upon the world of Thiepval Primaris.

Thiepval Primaris was situated in a small but prosperous system, Rhedon 42, on the eastern fringe of Segmentum Solar, amongst first colonized by humanity during the Golden Age of Expansion. Thiepval Primaris’s climate was perfect for humanity; similar to Terra, but unkempt, lush and a thing of primal beauty. The crown jewel of the Rhedon system, Thiepval Primaris was the economic, governmental, and cultural center, trading with nearby worlds to sustain itself. Unlike Terra however, Thiepval was not nearly as dependant on trade for food and resources. As humanity crumbled about itself during the Age of Strife, the system, though cut off, remained relatively unscathed, though not completely. STC libraries were lost wholesale, and the means to produce, maintain, and repair ancient technology withered and died.

Because of this, after several centuries, society on Thiepval had managed to stabilize and recover from much of the damage dealt to it by the Age of Strife. A lot of technological prowess would remain lost, however. As centuries turned to millennia, Thiepval became divided across countless nation states.

The infant sixteenth Primarch crash landed on Thiepval Primaris in its darkest era, the once prosperous world stricken with poverty, war, and harsh class divides the world over. The nobility and governments of the planet played wars of fancy with each other, expending lives for games of court and diplomacy. Thiepval's premier empire, and general instigator of the near constant conflict, was the Rayeux Sovereignty, a massive and brutal monarchy that retained a great deal of ancient technology, lobotomizing the Royal Guard and arming them with advanced arms and armour to keep their lands tame, while the rest of their military and subjects suffered by on bolt action rifles and petroleum based vehicles. The babe’s loose gestation pod crash-landed in a field in the large principality of Bordeois, where he was found by failed farmers, and disgraced nobility, Jeanine and Grigón Aristide. These exiled nobles, cast from court and exiled to the very lands they used to own, decided that their child, borne from heaven, was an omen. So they abandoned their failing farmhold and moved to the city of Saileux. His mother worked as a seamstress, a courtly diversion serving as a valuable skill. His father was denied many chances of employment, the commoners seeing a chance to strike back at the upper class, even if that was the case no longer. The most bitter irony being that his claims to land and noble titles were seized by the throne for his demands for better treatment of the rural peasantry that fed their war machine. Resigned, his father became a street sweeper. Their boy, the Star Child, grew more and more everyday, his mother overjoyed at the boys miraculous nature. His father, betrayed by court and the commoners he sought to protect, became embittered and jealous, and was often given to drink and would become abusive. It was when the babe was the size of a young man, his mother tried to defend the quiet youth from his father's ravings, wherein she was struck by her husband for the first and last time. Frederíc broke his father's legs with his bare hands. His father crippled, albeit accidentally, by his adopted son, Frederíc was forced to abandon the safety of his home and seek real work to feed the family. His mother's homeschooling and the boy's work as a clerk in a local bakery gave the boy a keen mind, and his reputation as a hyper intelligent giant eventually made the crueler commoners give his family a wide, but respectful birth. Frederíc was not some silent golem, how ever, and would often spend nights transcribing books to pass to illiterate commoners in a bid to increase literacy. He would gather the neighborhood to clean and repair the city streets, broken gas lamps, and over crowded apartments. Here he worked a variety of menial professions, with a greater proficiency than his fellows allowing him to work at a breakneck pace and thus take more paying work. Fellow labourers first began to loathe the giant young man, but the sheer myriad of work he adopted saw that most crews did not see him long enough to feel outclassed, felt his absence long enough to miss his impact, and enjoyed his return to their labours. Frederíc made few friends during his time supporting his family, keeping to himself and his family. His chair ridden father at the mercy of his son and improving in sobriety and disposition, his mother so proud of her miracle son. It was merely existence for young Aristide, nearly six years of monotonous work simply keeping his parents fed.

The Great Crusade

Deserter

Brotherwar

Fratricide

Fate & Legacy

Rules