Sister Roxy, stripped of armor and dignity, smuggles a vital power core hidden within her own body to a captured Space Marine deep inside enemy territory. Enduring agony and silence, she fulfills her mission with unshakable faith, becoming a living vessel of the Emperor’s will.
In the grim darkness of the 41st millennium, where war consumes entire systems and faith is often the only armor left, there are souls who embody the Imperium’s most harrowing truths. Sister Roxy was not born a hero — she was forged into one, molded by pain, obedience, and the fire of devotion. A member of the Adepta Sororitas, Roxy once stood tall in power armor, her voice rising in hymn as bolter fire thundered in righteous fury. But in a galaxy that grinds even saints to dust, her greatest act of service would come not from battle — but from surrender.
This is the story of an unspeakable mission. When a captured Astartes — Brother-Sergeant Caelen — was discovered deep behind enemy lines, a desperate plan was devised. With no secure means of delivery, a vital power core was to be transported in the most covert and unthinkable way: hidden within the body of an unarmed Sister. Roxy volunteered without hesitation.
Stripped of weapons, armor, and all outward signs of sanctity, Roxy became a living vessel. Not metaphorically, but literally — enduring unbearable physical and spiritual pain to smuggle salvation through her own flesh. Her journey is one of devotion beyond pride, of suffering beyond honor. It is not clean. It is not glorious. But it is holy.
In a universe where saints are carved from trauma and silence, Roxy’s sacrifice echoes as a brutal testament to the Imperium's creed: **only in death does duty end**. What she endures is beyond comprehension — and yet utterly human. This tale does not seek comfort or triumph. It seeks truth in suffering, and meaning in what one woman gave, when no one else could.
***
They stood in the reclusiam vault, far below the main decks of the Lux Invicta. Only two souls breathed in that silent chamber: Sister Roxy, stripped of everything but faith — and Priestess Verena, whose hands trembled despite decades of ritual calm.
Between them lay the object: a power core encased in sanctified adamantium, roughly the size of a gauntleted fist. Heavy. Cold. A relic of war never meant for flesh.
“Are you certain?” Verena asked quietly. “This has never been done. It may break you.”
Roxy, pale and resolute, nodded. “Then let me break. As long as the core reaches him.”
Verena offered her a leather belt — a strip of old, cracked ecclesiarch hide.
“Bite. When it begins.”
Roxy took it in her teeth and lay down. Her body was already tense. Her eyes were fixed on the ceiling, lips whispering the Litany of Suffering. But when Verena pressed her gloved hand to Roxy’s thigh and began the process — careful, slow, unforgiving — all pretense shattered.
Roxy screamed.
The belt muffled it only slightly as the edges of the capsule stretched her farther than she thought possible. The pain was white, all-consuming. Her hands clawed at the stone floor, her legs trembling violently.
Verena whispered prayers as she worked — half to comfort Roxy, half to steel herself. She had prepared the core, anointed it, warmed it with sacred oils to ease the passage. But it wasn’t enough. Nothing could prepare a body for this.
The capsule slid in by degrees. Each movement brought fresh waves of agony. Roxy sobbed around the belt. Her pride shattered. Her will flickered — but never failed. She endured, because there was no choice.
After endless minutes, the pressure shifted. The weight seated fully. It was done.
Roxy lay still, drenched in sweat, her face contorted in silent pain.
“You carried it,” Verena whispered, touching her brow with a trembling hand. “You carried it, child.”
Roxy said nothing. She simply rolled onto her side and wept — not from shame, but from the knowledge that her body was no longer hers. It was a tool. A vessel.
They took her without resistance.
The heretics believed she was a captured missionary — a discarded Sister cast off by the Ecclesiarchy. They beat her. Spat on her. Laughed.
They never suspected that deep within her, past layers of bruised and trembling muscle, pulsed the one thing that could awaken a Space Marine’s broken armor and turn him into a weapon again.
They threw her into a cell of rot and rust, where Brother-Sergeant Caelen hung in chains. His chest was a ruin of ceramite and scar tissue. One eye was swollen shut. But he looked up as she entered.
“Roxy,” he rasped.
She dropped to her knees, wincing at the shift in weight inside her.
“I carry the fire,” she whispered.
“Where?”
Her voice cracked.
“Inside. Still sealed.”
He said nothing. He only looked at her — truly looked — and understood what she had done. What she had become.
“We need to remove it.”
“Quietly,” she said. “They will hear us.”
There was no time. No tools. She lay on the cold stone floor on her side and forced the leather belt back into her mouth. Her hands gripped her knees. Caelen, grim and silent, began the extraction.
She did not scream.
She could not.
The pressure was overwhelming. Her entire body resisted — locked up — twisted in silent torment. Her vision swam. The belt cut into her mouth as her jaw clenched. She arched her back. Her legs shaked. But still she did not cry out.
The pain was unspeakable. But worse than pain was the silence she had to hold.
After long, hellish moments, the weight slid free.
Caelen caught the capsule, cradling it like a relic. He was shaking — from the act, from awe, from the reality of what she had endured.
He looked at her, still convulsing on the floor, and for once, the mighty Astartes could not find words.
“I am ready to die,” she whispered, the belt falling from her mouth.
“No,” he said, voice hoarse. “You’ve already done enough.”
He locked the core into his broken plate. Lights flickered. Vents hissed. Power returned with a low, reverent hum. The Emperor’s wrath ignited anew.
The alarms began to scream across the compound.
Caelen stood over her, full height restored. Roxy lay still, her body exhausted, her purpose fulfilled.
“You carried the future,” he said.
“Make it worth it,” she whispered.
And then the bolter fire began.
Epilogue: The Silence of Saints
Roxy was later recovered alive — barely. She never spoke of what she endured. She didn't have to. Those who served with her never forgot.
In the halls of the Reclusiam, a mural was painted in her honor. No armor. No weapons. Just a kneeling woman, lit by a single beam of light, her hands on her belly, eyes raised in prayer.