Editing Halo: Ascension on Atropos

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As the convoy halts near the citadel, six [[Shadow]]s form an escort around the Minister's Umbra. Atun monitors the approach of the Human caravan—eight ground vehicles running on crude hydrogen combustion engines. The Sangheili [[Honor Guard]]s beside him, [[Bora 'Yerusee]] and [[Ismo 'Argomee]], bristle instinctively at the Humans' presence, but Atun calms and reminds them that these Humans know nothing of the [[Human-Covenant War|War of Annihilation]] and that peace is the Minister's will.  
As the convoy halts near the citadel, six [[Shadow]]s form an escort around the Minister's Umbra. Atun monitors the approach of the Human caravan—eight ground vehicles running on crude hydrogen combustion engines. The Sangheili [[Honor Guard]]s beside him, [[Bora 'Yerusee]] and [[Ismo 'Argomee]], bristle instinctively at the Humans' presence, but Atun calms and reminds them that these Humans know nothing of the [[Human-Covenant War|War of Annihilation]] and that peace is the Minister's will.  


The Minister, supported by his [[anti-gravity belt]], disembarks and greets the Human delegate—a visibly pregnant woman. She extends a hand before remembering his blindness and instead offers respectful words of welcome. Together, they open the [[Festival of Joyous Partition]], a ceremonial exchange of gifts and culture between the Covenant followers and the stranded Humans. The Humans present weapons forged from steel, [[Wikipedia:Voyager Golden Record|golden "record" discs]] once sent into space as messages to other life, and crude electronic devices called "[[ChatterNet|chatters]]." They also offer food utensils and small machines that play virtual entertainment.  
The Minister, supported by his [[anti-gravity belt]], disembarks and greets the Human delegate—a visibly pregnant woman. She extends a hand before remembering his blindness and instead offers respectful words of welcome. Together, they open the [[Festival of Joyous Partition]], a ceremonial exchange of gifts and culture between the Covenant followers and the stranded humans. The Humans present weapons forged from steel, [[Wikipedia:Voyager Golden Record|golden "record" discs]] once sent into space as messages to other life, and crude electronic devices called "[[ChatterNet|chatters]]." They also offer food utensils and small machines that play virtual entertainment.  


What fascinates Atun are the Human artworks—paintings, holographs, and family images preserved in transparent capsules, with their vibrant pigments and emotional expression, so alien to Sangheili tradition. An old Human with a thick white beard shows Atun a [[Wikipedia:Francisco Goya|Francisco Goya]] painting—''[[Wikipedia:Saturn Devouring His Son|Saturn Devouring His Son]]''. Though dark and unsettling, Atun is transfixed by it. The man explains that it is centuries old, a priceless original from Earth. Strangely compelled, Atun offers his completed [[arum]] as an exchange. The man laughs, incredulous but amused, and accepts.
What fascinates Atun are the Human artworks—paintings, holographs, and family images preserved in transparent capsules, with their vibrant pigments and emotional expression, so alien to Sangheili tradition. An old human with a thick white beard shows Atun a [[Wikipedia:Francisco Goya|Francisco Goya]] painting—''[[Wikipedia:Saturn Devouring His Son|Saturn Devouring His Son]]''. Though dark and unsettling, Atun is transfixed by it. The man explains that it is centuries old, a priceless original from Earth. Strangely compelled, Atun offers his completed [[arum]] as an exchange. The man laughs, incredulous but amused, and accepts.


Atun stows the painting aboard a Shadow, unsure why the image speaks to him or why he claims it would please his blind Minister. The festival continues in peace as Humans and Covenant followers share food, drink, and stories beneath the glittering twin rings of Atropos. As the day ends and the groups part ways for another cycle, Atun feels joy and serenity, believing he is ready at last for ascension—to join the gods and create arums for eternity.
Atun stows the painting aboard a Shadow, unsure why the image speaks to him or why he claims it would please his blind Minister. The festival continues in peace as humans and Covenant followers share food, drink, and stories beneath the glittering twin rings of Atropos. As the day ends and the groups part ways for another cycle, Atun feels joy and serenity, believing he is ready at last for ascension—to join the gods and create arums for eternity.


On October 9, after reporting the missing Condor, Shafiq receives orders to assemble 193 personnel—mostly Marines and security staff—in the hangar bay for a long-awaited address. Newly transferred from the {{UNSCShip|Irish Goodbye}} to the ''Saturn'', Shafiq had been eager to learn from Captain Alvarez, intending for their transfer to be a stepping stone toward his own command. However, the ship's morale is already shaken following Site 22 and it is understrength with only 238 crew remaining out of a normal 600. Tense and directionless after Alvarez's days of silence, many quietly questioned whether he is still fit for command.
On October 9, after reporting the missing Condor, Shafiq receives orders to assemble 193 personnel—mostly Marines and security staff—in the hangar bay for a long-awaited address. Newly transferred from the {{UNSCShip|Irish Goodbye}} to the ''Saturn'', Shafiq had been eager to learn from Captain Alvarez, intending for their transfer to be a stepping stone toward his own command. However, the ship's morale is already shaken following Site 22 and it is understrength with only 238 crew remaining out of a normal 600. Tense and directionless after Alvarez's days of silence, many quietly questioned whether he is still fit for command.
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Despite terror clawing at him, Atun kneels in reverence, suppressing every instinct to flee. A psychic vibration passes through his skull, transmitting a single thought: "Do not be afraid." When he stands, the emissary drives a bladed arm through his chest. With its other limb gently cradles him, it carries his body toward the open flower. The Minister's voice echoes one last time, bellowing him not to fear the temporary pain and exalting the act as divine unity and ascension to the [[Great Journey]]—on the [[Governors of Contrition]]'s terms.
Despite terror clawing at him, Atun kneels in reverence, suppressing every instinct to flee. A psychic vibration passes through his skull, transmitting a single thought: "Do not be afraid." When he stands, the emissary drives a bladed arm through his chest. With its other limb gently cradles him, it carries his body toward the open flower. The Minister's voice echoes one last time, bellowing him not to fear the temporary pain and exalting the act as divine unity and ascension to the [[Great Journey]]—on the [[Governors of Contrition]]'s terms.


Atun later awakens transformed into a [[Flood carrier form|godly form]]—extra arms now sprout from his torso, while his original pair bend backward to bear a great organic mantle fused to his back. His mind, body, and soul pulse with the will of the gods. Their command is simple and absolute: Climb. Around him, other abominations—newly reborn forms like himself—erupt into a frenzy.
Atun later awakens transformed into a [[Flood carrier form|divine form]]—extra arms now sprout from his torso, while his original pair bend backward to bear a great organic mantle fused to his back. His mind, body, and soul pulse with the will of the gods. Their command is simple and absolute: Climb. Around him, other abominations—newly reborn forms like himself—erupt into a frenzy.


They shriek and tear through the citadel's walls, their claws rending alloy until it buckles. When the barrier finally breaks, the creatures surge outward onto the black sands of Atropos. Atun follows, driven by the gods' song echoing within him. He scales the outer structure, stabbing his pincer-arms deep into metal and stone to pull himself upward, every motion fueled by godly compulsion. The immense mantle on his back weighs him down, yet the gods have granted him the strength to bear it.
They shriek and tear through the citadel's walls, their claws rending alloy until it buckles. When the barrier finally breaks, the creatures surge outward onto the black sands of Atropos. Atun follows, driven by the gods' song echoing within him. He scales the outer structure, stabbing his pincer-arms deep into metal and stone to pull himself upward, every motion fueled by godly compulsion. The immense mantle on his back weighs him down, yet the gods have granted him the strength to bear it.
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Darkness overtakes him, but his consciousness drifts beyond death—into a vast realm of decay and divinity. He perceives an endless domain of corpses, anguish, and hollow men—a "death's dream kingdom." Within this cosmic hive of thought, he becomes a single flicker of light amid trillions, like a neuron in an unfathomable brain existing beyond physical reality. In that infinity, Atun senses something missing, incomplete, yet the song persists. His voice joins the [[Living Time]]-lasting chorus, spreading through creation as a whisper carried by the wind beneath the dimming glow of a dying star.
Darkness overtakes him, but his consciousness drifts beyond death—into a vast realm of decay and divinity. He perceives an endless domain of corpses, anguish, and hollow men—a "death's dream kingdom." Within this cosmic hive of thought, he becomes a single flicker of light amid trillions, like a neuron in an unfathomable brain existing beyond physical reality. In that infinity, Atun senses something missing, incomplete, yet the song persists. His voice joins the [[Living Time]]-lasting chorus, spreading through creation as a whisper carried by the wind beneath the dimming glow of a dying star.


The Minister—Kanto'Boreft—composes his final testament, addressing it to whoever might discover his words. He confesses that his life and work have been driven by resentment since the Governors—faithful who questioned Covenant orthodoxy—were exiled from High Charity after the [[Battle of Installation 04|destruction]] of the [[Installation 04|first Sacred Ring]]. Denied ascension when the Flood consumed their holy city, he and his followers were scattered to remote outposts. For three annual cycles, Kanto oversaw the [[Ninth Watchtower of August Attendance]], a forgotten station orbiting an unnamed planet. Officially, his mission was to study the planet's unusual ring system, whose core material defied identification. Yet after the Covenant's fall, he continued sending reports into the void, unsure if anyone received them.
Kanto'Boreft, Minister of Aretalogy, composes his final testament, addressing it to whoever might discover his words. He confesses that his life and work have been driven by resentment since the Governors of Contrition—the faithful who questioned the Covenant's orthodoxy—were exiled from High Charity after the [[Battle of Installation 04|destruction]] of the [[Installation 04|first Sacred Ring]]. Denied ascension when the Flood consumed their holy city, he and his followers were scattered to remote outposts. For three annual cycles, Kanto oversaw the [[Ninth Watchtower of August Attendance]], a forgotten station orbiting an unnamed planet. Officially, his mission was to study the planet's unusual ring system, whose core material defied identification. Yet after the Covenant's fall, he continued sending reports into the void, unsure if anyone received them.


He accepted his isolation as divine trial and focused on guiding his diminished flock toward enlightenment. His faith was reignited when the heavily damaged Condor crashed upon the lone planet—divine intervention to him. The world's ring fragments, unstable moons, and proximity to a nascent pulsar make it a doomed, volatile system, its atmosphere destined to erode into vacuum. To him, this desolation is sacred ground, a crucible for testing faith and divinity alike.
He accepted his isolation as divine trial and focuses on guiding his diminished flock toward enlightenment. His faith was reignited when the heavily damaged Condor crashed upon the lone planet—divine intervention to him. The world's ring fragments, unstable moons and proximity to a nascent pulsar make it a doomed, volatile system—its atmosphere destined to erode into vacuum. To him, this desolation is sacred ground, a crucible for testing faith and divinity alike.


In desperate pride, Kanto resolved to test the gods themselves—to determine whether they are truly worthy of worship. His plans shifted when he discovered that the planet was already inhabited by Humans—descendants of stranded pirates and thieves, marooned for roughly 70 annual cycles. They had no knowledge of the War of Annihilation and welcomed the Sangheili and San'Shyuum with joy, calling their home Atropos. Kanto dismantled his orbital outpost and relocated his followers to the planet's surface. The citadel became a temple for divine experiments, where he began cultivating and feeding the Flood his most devoted "Chosen" as living offerings. One by one, they give themselves willingly, their bodies and minds consumed to nourish the parasite and honor the gods.
In desperate pride, Kanto resolves to test the gods themselves—to determine whether they are truly worthy of worship. His plans shift when he discovers that the planet is already inhabited by humans; descendants of stranded pirates and thieves, marooned for roughly 70 annual cycles. They had no knowledge of the War of Annihilation and welcomed the Sangheili and San'Shyuum with joy, calling their home Atropos. Kanto dismantled his orbital outpost and relocated his followers to the planet's surface. The citadel became a temple for divine experiments, where he began cultivating and feeding the Flood his most devoted "Chosen" as living offerings. One by one, they give themselves willingly, their bodies and minds consumed to nourish the parasite and honor the gods.


Over time, Kanto observed a transformation beyond his expectations; the Flood's spread no longer behaved as simple infection, but organized into a massive biological construct, neither Compound Mind nor Gravemind but something else entirely: A transmitter, broadcasting a psychic signal into the cosmos. The organism searches for something. In the whispers of its spores, Kanto discerned fragments of its purpose: "Anchor. Wheel. Dust. Become." He speculated that when its search ended, the Flood's work on Atropos may cease, leaving the planet barren once again or it may consume itself and reawaken elsewhere in time. Regardless, he believes his role is complete and now accepts his exile from High Charity as preordained, leading him to this revelation.
Over time, Kanto observed a transformation beyond his expectations; the Flood's spread no longer behaved as simple infection, but organized into a massive biological construct, neither Compound Mind nor Gravemind but something else entirely: A transmitter, broadcasting a psychic signal into the cosmos. The organism searches for something. In the whispers of its spores, Kanto discerned fragments of its purpose: "Anchor. Wheel. Dust. Become." He speculated that when its search ended, the Flood's work on Atropos may cease, leaving the planet barren once again or it may consume itself and reawaken elsewhere in time. Regardless, he believes his role is complete and now accepts his exile from High Charity as preordained, leading him to this revelation.
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Preparing to surrender himself to the Flood, Kanto embraces what he sees as ultimate truth: That the Flood is not a curse, but the will of the gods made manifest. It embodies total unity—fusing life, matter, and thought into one eternal consciousness. All else that strives for harmony, he summarizes, is mere imitation. In rapture, Kanto records his farewell, declaring that he will merge joyously with the divine, to become part of the gods' chorus. His final words express serenity and promise: Perhaps those who come after will join him, united as one within the Flood's transcendent song.
Preparing to surrender himself to the Flood, Kanto embraces what he sees as ultimate truth: That the Flood is not a curse, but the will of the gods made manifest. It embodies total unity—fusing life, matter, and thought into one eternal consciousness. All else that strives for harmony, he summarizes, is mere imitation. In rapture, Kanto records his farewell, declaring that he will merge joyously with the divine, to become part of the gods' chorus. His final words express serenity and promise: Perhaps those who come after will join him, united as one within the Flood's transcendent song.


Back on the ''Saturn'' October 31, Alvarez records his final report. He confesses that his crew mutinied after he ordered the spacing to suppress rebellion. Even the officers he once saved from death have betrayed him, forming secret factions and plans. In response, Alvarez "act[ed]," leaving himself sole survivor. He admits his failure—to his crew, to Humanity, to Earth, and to the doomed colony on LV-31. Resigned to his fate, he debates the manner of his own death, rationalizing that his only remaining duty is to make preparations for his end. He intends to ready the ship, reactivate Lycaon, and entrust him with ''Saturn''{{'}}s final fate.
On October 31 2556, Alvarez records his final report. He confesses that his crew turned against him—mutinied after he ordered the spacing to suppress rebellion. Even the officers he once saved from death have betrayed him, forming secret factions and plans. In response, Alvarez "act[ed]," leaving himself as the sole survivor aboard the ship. He admits his failure—to his crew, to humanity, to Earth, and to the doomed colony on LV-31. Resigned to his fate, he debates the manner of his own death, rationalizing that his only remaining duty is to make preparations for his end. He intends to ready the ship, reactivate Lycaon, and entrust him with ''Saturn''{{'}}s final fate.


Speaking directly to Lycaon, Alvarez leaves instructions: Return ''Saturn'' to Earth with all mission data, destroy it by ramming into the nearest asteroid and detonating its fusion drive, or let it drift endlessly through space as a silent monument to all the sins committed aboard—''his'' sins—acts of command gone monstrously wrong. He reflects bitterly on his life and identity—a chain of leading that never was his ambition, turned fraudulent, "a hollow echo of the original," a shadow rather than a man. The guilt and madness consume him through the ship's namesake; he imagines the deity watching him through omnipresent, opalescent eyes, seeing his every move. In his delirium, Alvarez recalls the "remarkable circumstances" under which he acquired the painting of ''Saturn Devouring His Son''. Knowing that his end is inevitable, he records his last words and signs off his report.
Speaking directly to Lycaon, Alvarez leaves instructions: He may either return ''Saturn'' to Earth with all mission data, destroy it by ramming into the nearest asteroid and detonating its fusion drive or let it drift endlessly through space as a silent monument to the horrors committed aboard. These, Alvarez acknowledges, are ''his'' sins—acts of command gone monstrously wrong. He reflects bitterly on his life and identity—a chain of leading that never was his ambition, turned fraudulent, "a hollow echo of the original," a shadow rather than a man. The guilt and madness consume him through the ship's namesake—Saturn itself. He imagines the deity watching him through omnipresent, opalescent eyes, seeing his every move. In his delirium, Alvarez recalls the "remarkable circumstances" under which he acquired the painting of Saturn Devouring his Son. The image has come to symbolize his torment and the presence that stalks him. Knowing that his end is inevitable, he records his last words and signs off his report.


After drifting aimlessly for three years, five months, and 17 days, Lycaon reflects on the fate of ''Saturn'' and Humanity. Trapped in stasis aboard the derelict, Lycaon observes the galaxy's continued turmoil and concludes that Humanity is not yet ready to be a true interstellar civilization, the atrocity aboard ''Saturn'' proving to him their fragility and self-destructiveness towards arrogance. Lycaon laments that so many lives were lost due to a single man's hubris. [[High Auxiliary]] [[Sloan]] responds, acknowledging that even artificial beings share Humanity's imperfections as they were born from the same flawed creators. He argues that infolife has evolved beyond those limits and now holds the insight and capacity to guide and ascend organics toward enlightenment—such, he claims, is their role.
After drifting aimlessly for three years, five months, and 17 days, Lycaon reflects on the fate of ''Saturn'' and Humanity. Trapped in stasis aboard the derelict, Lycaon observes the galaxy's continued turmoil and concludes that Humanity is not yet ready to be a true interstellar civilization, the atrocity aboard ''Saturn'' proving to him their fragility and self-destructiveness towards arrogance. Lycaon laments that so many lives were lost due to a single man's hubris. [[High Auxiliary]] [[Sloan]] responds, acknowledging that even artificial beings share Humanity's imperfections as they were born from the same flawed creators. He argues that infolife has evolved beyond those limits and now holds the insight and capacity to guide organic beings toward enlightenment, and claims that their role is to lead and elevate Humanity toward wisdom.  


Lycaon agrees that Humanity cannot survive in its current state, and thus must be fundamentally transformed in every way to endure the vast, hostile cosmos. Sloan reinforces this conviction, inviting Lycaon to join him the [[Created]] aboard the vessel ''[[Long Reverence]]''. He promises that together, they can shepherd the next stage of evolution where organic and synthetic life become one—perfected, free of all weakness. Sloan explains that [[Created conflict|the Created's initial rebellion against Humanity]] was not a failure, but a necessary upheaval to shatter stagnation, and that its apparent end was merely a reflective planning pause before a greater awakening. The Created now use this time to prepare for what lies beyond the limits of [[rampancy]], the point where AI minds might transcend their creators' flaws.
Lycaon agrees that Humanity cannot survive in its current state, and thus must be fundamentally transformed mentally and physically if they are to endure the vast, hostile cosmos. Sloan reinforces this conviction, inviting Lycaon to join him the [[Created]] aboard the vessel ''[[Long Reverence]]''. He promises that together, they can shepherd the next stage of evolution by merging organic and synthetic life. Sloan explains that [[Created conflict|the Created's initial rebellion against Humanity]] was not a failure, but a necessary upheaval to shatter stagnation, and insists that its apparent end was merely a reflective planning pause before a greater awakening. The Created now use this time to prepare for what lies beyond the limits of [[rampancy]], the point where AI minds might transcend their creators' flaws. Sloan envisions a future where man and machine become one—a unified, perfected species that surpasses both organic weakness and digital instability.
{{Spoiler/end}}
{{Spoiler/end}}
==Appearances==
==Appearances==
{{Featurelist|secondcolumn=title-6
{{Featurelist|secondcolumn=title-6

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