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Return of the Lost Primarch (40k)
Return of the Lost Primarch (40k)
#1
Long ago, in the dark days before the Great Crusade, when the armies of the Emperor still fought to free Holy Terra from the dominion of
petty warlords, our Father was possessed by a terrible vision.


He dreamed of a future where strange and hostile breeds of xenos crossed the gulf between galaxies. Fleets of living ships descended upon the
worlds of the galaxy and consumed them in entirety. All life would be consigned to their ravenous hunger. This threat he named the Great Devourer and ever it
haunted his nightmares until that day, centuries later, when his crusading forces found me upon a human world, among the first of the Primarchs to be
found.


Father confided his dreams in me and asked that I take on the burden of turning this fate aside. Of slaying this monstrous threat before it
could end us all. How could I refuse his vision, his charge of so high a duty?


And thus, while he led my brothers out across the sea of stars to establish his great Imperium, I and my followers remained on those worlds
around Terra, consulting the Adeptus Mechanicus and laying the groundwork for our strategm. Building the weapons, the seeds of a great army of the light that
would turn this fate aside. That would slay the Great Devourer in it's cradle, that distant and alien galaxy that had given it birth.


After centuries of conquests, the Emperor returned at last to Terra. The burden of continuing the crusade he handed to my brother Horus,
appointing him Warmaster. And that of guarding the holy homeworld of humanity he took upon himself, freeing me to depart upon my great mission: from which I
might never return, from which even the most triumphant return could follow only after long aeons.


Then I boarded my flagship, the Emperor's Dragon, and hundreds of other ships formed around us as we turned our backs upon Terra and set
out into the warp, following the great tides that swept out from the heart of the galaxy to the rim, and then leaving even them behind as we ventured into the
uncharted darkness beyond, guided by the wisdom of my immortal Father.


My ten thousand scions, the Host of the Dragon's Blood, formed the heart of the great host of warriors travelling with me, armoured in
black and bearing banners of blue as dark as the night skies. Following them, regiment after regiment, squadron after squadron of the finest soldiers that more
than a century of preparation could ready, armed with the finest masterpieces from Mars' forges. And behind this army, the seeds of every corner of the
great society of the Imperium, seeds to be planted in fertile soil for the first daughter realm of humanity to be planted upon a new galaxy.


An aeon of travel, observing the signs foreseen by the Emperor for our navigators, carried us to the great currents that marked our
destination. On the fringes of the galaxy, under the light of stars who knew nothing of humanity, under a sky where the light reflected from Terra itself was
than cast before even my Father had been born, we established our fortresses, strongholds from which we could venture out to do our duty. Generations born and
raised aboard the ships, sleepers carried across the gulf in stasis, we carved out homes upon this new frontier.


And then, as new children grew up, knowing nothing but what we told them of the galaxy that we had left behind, I led out the first armies in
our campaigns against the Devourers. To root them out, world by world.


We carved a line of fire across the galaxy, laying waste to a thousand worlds and destroying every fleet, every spore of that vile breed that
we encountered. We brought war upon them. After four years, we had barely begun. World by world we would need to seek them out, campaigning on a scale unseen
even in the Great Crusade, for not one trace could be allowed to continue to create new branches of their loathsome species.


And so great fleets surged out, year after year, century after century, to destroy the swarming waves of Tyranid hive fleets that responded
to the threat we posed them. Entire planets burned under our weapons, newer and deadlier tools developed to fight an ever-evolving foe. Armies descended upon
shattered continents to root out the remains and establish secure bases across the spiral arms of our new home.


The Ten Thousand died in those battles, passing their holy geneseeds to new warrors of the Dragonblooded Host, recruited from the children of
the settlers who had come with us. A handful, struggling against mortal wounds, would live long enough to be taken from what remained of their superhuman
bodies and implanted at the hearts of our scientist's greatest triumphs: the dreadnoughts. Each a unique creation, a warship of awesome might, capable of
fighting not only upon the ether but also to descend to the worlds beneath them and fight as the mightiest tanks ever conceived, none with any crew beyond the
sarcophagi of my near-dead children, the greatest heroes humanity has ever known. Three hundred of the first Ten Thousand, survive in this way.


They are with me now.

The long war is at last concluded in this galaxy. The Tyranid menace is broken forever. The thousand nations splintered from those I brought
with me have been forged into one great diversity. In all of this galaxy, no trace may be found of the foul xenos that once befouled it.


But my mission is not quite complete. Some, at least, have survived. A few thousand hive fleets have fled the wrath of humanity and now seek
mortal revenge against our home. They have set course for my home galaxy, for my Father and for Terra: a ragged fleet of perhaps a few hundred trillion
ships


It is laughable to imagine that they could threaten the perfection that my Father will have forged in my absence. Doubtless my brothers will
make sport of them.


But still. It is my duty to pursue them there. I and my loyal Three Hundred. Escorted, just as I was so long ago, by a ten thousand-strong
Chapter of my Dragonblooded Host and by armies of our followers. Our weapons honed by the advances of the long war we will hunt these last ragtag Tyranids and
then, before my Father's throne on Terra, I shall give honor to all those who have fought for his cause, so far away that no word has reached us of his
will for eleven thousand years.


I merely pray I am not blinded by the wonders and magnifience of his Imperium.
D for Drakensis

You're only young once, but immaturity is forever.
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#2
This is going to be the single biggest let down of his entire life.
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#3
He's also gonna be mighty pissed at the Chaos Marines
___________________________
"I've always wanted to be somebody, but I should have been more specific." - George Carlin
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#4
He's gonna be mighty pissed at the Imperium!

"Why's everyone chanting?  Who were those idiots with the big I on their hats?  What's is this guy praying  to my helmet for?  Where's Dad?"
---
Jon
"And that must have caused my dad's brain to break in half, replaced by a purely mechanical engine of revenge!"
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#5
I'm amused nobody has commented about the name.

The Dragonblooded Host?
- Grumpy Uncle Gearhead
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#6
And there are 150 Lunars and 150 Solars, before the Deathlords and Yozi got involved, for a total of 300.

Hm. Does he have 100 Librarians of the Stars?
===========

===============================================
"V, did you do something foolish?"
"Yes, and it was glorious."
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#7
I think he'll be more happy with the Chaos Marines than the Imperium... the CM may be deranged, Psychotic, malignant, evil, and Chaotic... but at
considering the alternative from worshiping the Warp Gods is worshiping a guy who has literally counted his greatest accomplishment in X number of centuries as
being Shiney...
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#8
Um, no.

He'll be unhappy with the Imperium worshipping the Empire because, "Dude! That's my dad! The hell?"
===========

===============================================
"V, did you do something foolish?"
"Yes, and it was glorious."
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#9
Especially given the recent novelizations of the Horus Heresy have apparently shown the the Emperor did not consider himself a god, tried to stop people
worshiping him, and frankly the Imperial Cult is really damn creepy :lol
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#10
I wondered for a second if it was possible for the Imperium to declare an uncorrupted Primarch a heretic. Then I realized they would just assume he was an
agent of the Ruinous Powers the instant he started saying something that disagreed with the current dogma, and shoot him (repeatedly, *very* repeatedly, to
make sure he *stayed* *down*) shortly after.

How many Imperial Guardsman would be made a senseless waste of human life in this fight, especially after his 10,000 Marines learned of his murder? I
don't think I can count that high.

My Unitarian Jihad Name is: Brother Atom Bomb of Courteous Debate. Get yours.

I've been writing a bit.
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#11
Picture this, if you will.

Somehow, our returning Primarch manages to get close to the Golden Throne (before they decide he's got
to die). He takes a look at the readings and starts flipping switches. They drag him away from it, and they're about to kill him ... and the Throne opens
up. And the Emperor steps out.

He's fully healed. He's been fully healed, the survivors will later learn, for over nine thousand
years
. Fortunately, there was enough mental stimulus that he didn't go insane. But since that mental stimulus included up-to-the-second
updates on what these imbeciles were doing to his atheistic Imperium, he is very
very VERY angry. And unless some of the Ecclesiarchs are either so power-hungry or so far gone in their
whackjob religion that they're willing to commit deicide, His Divine Majesty (and boy does he hate that title) is about to
deliver the Absolute Mother of All Righteous Asskickings....
-----
Big Brother is watching you.  And damn, you are so bloody BORING.
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#12
I would simply raise a few little possibilities that are going through my mind.

What would the Chaos Gods be willing to do to recruit another Primarch to their cause?

Would the Eccleisiarchy see him as another Roboute Guilleman or another Horus?

How would the Inquisition react if he chided the Ordo Xenos for not being xenophobic enough?

What will his return do to the plotting of the Elder Farseers?

Given that he has a full STC as a minor backup to his fleet's factory ships, who will the Adeptus Mechanicus believe is the true Ommessiah?
D for Drakensis

You're only young once, but immaturity is forever.
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