The Night Lords series, thus far, seems to be his signature however. THe basic premise is much along the lines of Storm of Iron, except that Honsou doesn't become annoying - there's a struggle between just surviving and in maintaining their own ways and the 'old war' thing. Talos is our 'central' character, but it doesn't always just focus on him (or totally favor tim.) A fair bit of time is devoted to their non-Astartes Characters (Septimus, the Navigator, etc.) which is also what helps to keep the novel interesting (borrowing from various other novels which are 'a glimpse into 40k' type things like the Inqisition War or the Path of the Eldar novels - a 'day in the life' sort of thing.)
I think the best thing, aside from ADB's ability at writing interesting characters, is the way he has them interact and represent different viewpoints. Each of the 'signature' marines in the book represents different points of view - one is from the more 'classic' Heresy-era POV, another is a Night Lord more given to Chaos.. you get Raptors, etc.
Anyhow, befoer we actually start the Night Lords stuff I'm going to do Simon Spurrier's "Lord of the Night" because it ties in (and ADB doesnt seem to like the novel.. not that I blame him.) Think of it as sort ofa prequel and a contrast to how ADB's Night Lords are presented. Two parts, but the entire novel. so next time you get the full series.
Page 14-15
Night Lord (or at least the Raptor) armour seems to involve some sort of combat-stimm enhancements to boost capabilities even further, and lasting half an hour, but blocking out all conscious thought. Good for psychological terror I suspect, but not good for tactics or discipline.He launched himself one final time, overexerted muscles triggering cunning devices within his armour, pumping a slick of combat-stimms into his blood. He shivered with the rush of adrenaline that followed, watching the ground streak past below: a forest of crippled decks giving way to deep, endless grey. Snow by night.
...
The quickening effects of the stimm lasted half an hour, and when his rages and screams were all spent, when the bodies of the men he'd killed could be diced no further, when his claws steamed with bloody red vapour, when finally his mind cleared of the drughaze and began - at last - to awaken fully, only then did he think of the thieves' leader.
Page 18
Chaos strike cruiser. Implied to be at least half a kilometre long.Crooked ribs slumped from fractured expanses. Crevices gaped like whip-wounds where conflicting pressures had buckled and pierced her hull. Her great spine was broken, crumpled across half a kilometre of steaming waste. Her beak had been thrust with such violence into the earth that her flanks had snapped, reactors sagging then pitching up and outwards, shearing vicious rents before detonating; their colossal energies vaporising what little substance had survived the atmosphere's passage.
Sahaal could barely imagine the calamitous impact. Were it not for the evidence of his own eyes - this pitiful thing smeared like metal paste across the ice - he would have doubted that such a vessel as the Umbrea Insidior could be brought so low.
Page 21
Always it was like this, after the trance. Always she allowed the subtle skeins of perception and concept to break free from her focus, shifting her mind state from some inner vantage to the mundane outer realities, the province of conventional sense and thought.
She returned to her corporeal self like an eagle resuming its eyrie...
..
In the Scholastia Psykana she'd learnt to call this the pater donum: the brief flush of warmth and contentment that followed a scrying trance, like a reward from the Emperor's own hand.
...
She opened her eyes, focused on the single guttering candle at the centre of the scrying-ring, and allowed the sludge of recollection to break through.
- Psyker scrying trances seem to be like "out of body" experiences.. sending the soul outwards questing from the corporeal body. The person in question, by the way, is an interrogator
Page 23
Scrying rituals and their attendants on other worlds,On Safaur, her trance-awakenings had been tended by gentle servants: smooth-skinned subordinates with tongues neatly removed and ownership studs across each eye, hurrying to mop her sweat and massage her shoulders, lovingly recording on scented parchment whatever insights the meditation bestowed. On Safaur her trance-suite flocked with locust-like automata: emeralds for eyes and rubies for jaws, coloured streamers of psychoactive pheromones falling like musk from their tails. On Safaur a dozen cogitators existed solely to interpret her signs.
Page 30
Orders to an inqisitorial retinue."'Cold-weather gear, night-sight, fully armed."
Page 31
Mita's night vision gear. Also a hive city of 200 million souls, explicitly mentioend as there being "larger hives" on other wordsl.. although this is a "remote" hive world.Through night-vision binox - baroque coils of cabling and lenses enveloping her eyes like a hungry kiss - the hive was a flaming steeple.
Peering over her shoulder, shivering despite thick furs, Mita regarded the city-world as the convoy left it behind, swallowed by the horizon like a melting stalagmite. That there were larger hives on worlds less remote couldn't detract from its magnificence: the city's vastness snagged at her eyes, sucking on her attention. Two hundred million souls, crushed together like termites, eking out their blind lives in the belly of a spine-tipped beast.
Page 32
Mita can register the soul of every person on that place. This might suggest it is a fairly accurate assessment (and a possible way the Imperium assesses a census of its planets.)More pronounced still was the brightness in the chambers of her mind: in those unseen tendrils of psychic thought that swarmed about her like the arms of an anemone, she could taste the life of the city. Two hundred million souls, each one a guttering candle of psychic light. Each one as fragile as it was bright.
Page 32
The name for the local enforcers. This suggests that Enforcers are usually an independent body controlled by the Arbites (sort of an equivlaent of PDF for arbites, like I suspected) but practical matters can put them in the influence of local politics and other Imperial officials.Officially the Preafectus was an independent body, administrated by the galaxy-spanning Adeptus Arbites, but a certain amount of diplomatic compromise to Imperial officials was customary.
Page 47
An intresting shopping list of augmetics. Including the dermis circuitry.The man was dressed strangely, even to Sahaal's eye, sporting a robe of white and red grids. Not some flimsy ragsheet, this, but expensively tailored and elaborately decorated, hung with gold and crystal pendants. Small cables looped delicately through the stitches at the sleeves and collar, and where his flesh showed - pallid and puffy - the wires burrowed into the man's skin, unbroken lines like capillaries. More startling still was his face - what little remained of it - with its near-total coverage by augmetic devices, steel-sheet plating and bristling, spiny sensors.
Both eyes were gone, replaced in messy cavities by mismatching bionics, a thick layer of pus and infection marking their boundaries. A duct coiled over his shoulder like unruly hair, and the soft lines of his lips were broken by ragged scars, as if his mouth had once been sealed shut then broken open. Rebreather tubes writhed, hooked into sockets on his chin and neck, like train tracks bisecting his face. Dermis-circuitry patterned his throat, vanishing into the folds of his robes which, on closer inspection, concealed also the hard edges and uncertain outlines of more mechanical devices.
His movements were jerky but precise - like a grounded canary - and Sahaal judged him more machine than man.
PAge 49 - Night Lord Raptor's claws are described as "half metre" long. DAmned unwieldy, that is.
PAge 56
I have to say I am hard pressed to believe that Orks would actually fall for that idea simply on the existence of Fangs (as opposed to "Beat in the ass of someone") Especially a non-ork. However, Orks can be unpredictable and it is possible some tribes do in fact fall for this. Imagine the dude's surprise when he meets some that don't."Indeed they do. To the ork, symbols of status are vital. I've seen the vermin retreat rather than face a human with tusks greater than their own. I've seen them turn on their own lords when their enemy's fangs are taller or sharper than his. A simple thing, but so very effective,"
Page 59-60
rough idea of populatino density in the hive, although I'm not entirely sure how to calculate it, especially since its identified as an industrial loci. It coudl also lead to some pretty insane dimensions for the hive.Cuspseal was as low within the hive as one could travel within the broadly defined 'civilised' sectors. It dominated six full tiers, extended in five kilometres in each direction and had a population - depending upon where one chose to imagine its borders - of somewhere between six and ten million citizens. As with all such industrial loci it wasn't so much a city as a borough of the hive itself, segueing horizontally and upwards with such other townships, settlements and factories as had germinated nearby.
Page 62
- a rather unintelligent (probably abhuman) member of an Inquisitorial retinue is described as being smaller than an ogryn, but substnatially stronger"Not really. It stopped when he pulled off its arms. I demand that you release him,"
Page 62-63
The aforementioned probable abhuman.His name was Cog, and he was human - broadly speaking. Whatever feral world had sired him had been isolated for millennia, denied the purifying light of the Emperor's influence, and its sparse population had stagnated in a downward spiral of inbreeding and corruption.
Still human, if only just.
Cog and his kin had grown massive. Shunning the need for higher thought, rapid evolution had seen their skins grow thick, their brows brachiate, their chests barrel. Over long centuries of clambering through forests their arms had elongated and formed secondary elbows, their legs had shortened and their hands had grown massive.
Kaustus had found Cog in the slaughterpits of Tourelli Planis, where he was goaded by his captives with energised spears and electroflails, forced to grapple a succession of beasts and automata for the crowd's amusement. His hands had been taken from him, replaced with crude bionics. Watching the giant enter the ring with a tribal prayersong to the Emperor, Kaustus had been impressed with his piety as well as his physique, and had purchased him from the slavers for a princely sum.
Page 63-64
Cog rather neatly smashes a door apart in his enthusiasm.The door, set firmly in a ferrocrete bracket, crumpled like a dead leaf. Cog followed it through with his head dipped and his shoulders hunched, roaring like a hive-tram. The vindictor sergeants reacted as if electrified, staggering away, fumbling for power mauls. A third
voice added to their panicky exclamations, and it took Mita a moment to spot Orodai's unlucky aide, clutched in the giant's mechanical hand like a fleshy club.
Page 67 - the hive has "hundreds" of unexplained deaths each day. Also the Vindictors (Arbites) use autoguns as well as shotguns.
Page 76
"Preysight" which is a version of terrorsight. A form of infrared and night vision. Mentioned alot in the FFG material."Preysight," Sahaal whispered, and the bitter machine-spirit of his armour nictitated new lenses across his eyeslits, magnifying his view. Brought into sudden and sharp relief, the smoky pall broke apart where the dead and dying staggered, stumbling with faces blackened and limbs gone. There were far fewer than had entered.
Page 77
A glimpse at one of the potential feeding mechanisms in a hive. "A thousand tons of starchpaste" annually to a million habs. That's like 1 kg of paste per hab per year. or 3 grams per day.The centre had been a colereum, at one time.
A vast hydroponics dome, bristling with sludge-farmed crops, its inwardly-mirrored surface recalled an insect's eye; iridescent and multifaceted. At one time it had disgorged a thousand tonnes of starchpaste every year, diverted among rust-thick pipes to a million habs. At one time.
It had borne its relocation into the abyss with poor grace.
The crops had died when the collapse occurred, their irrigation channels cut forever. What little water filtered into the underhive was tainted by its descent, and those few hardy weeds that had escaped had grown shaggy and truculent, skins thick with mutant bristles. Only the lamps had survived; globular drones of archaic design with thrumming gravmotors and simple logic-minds.
They roved the dome with ultraviolet torches blazing, unconcerned with the absence of vegetation, faltering only when their aeons-old fuel reserves perished.
Page 78
Voxcaster doubling as sonic weapons.At its maximum volume, the voxcaster of his ancient helm could burst the veins of a man's skull and turn his teeth to powder. He'd seen men fall paralysed to
the floor at the Raptor's shriek, and birds fall stunned from the sky.
In Herniatown, the colereum's mirrored dome exploded.
Page 83
Yes you read that right. a space marine Strike cruiser running on a "Promethium reactor cell" that reaches critical mass, and detonates with the force of a thousand grenades. I don't even know how to begin to discuss it - promethium as hydrogen maybe, used in some sort of weird fusion reaction (or whatever the fuck a plasma reactor does I'm sure some will say "THIS MEANS ITS FUSION" but what the fuck ever. Be selective. Maybe its proof its diesel fusion.)And then the Umbrea Insidior's promethium reactor-cell, the bulky package he had removed so carefully from its crippled generarium, reached critical mass in the heart of the Glacier Rats' territory and detonated with the force of a thousand grenades.
The underhive shook, the floor quaked like a living tiling, and as his new congregation cowered around him, Sahaal basked in the phosphorlight of Hernia-town's rain.
assuming a modern hand grendae, we're talking an equivalent to 250 kg of TNT, at least.
Page 99
Again the truth of the Heresy and the existence of the Traitor legions is considred something of a secret. At least to some parts of the Imperium.The Emperor had created the Space Marines: that much they knew. He had fashioned their primarchs, modelled their Legions, dispatched them to crusade in his name. They knew little of the intricacies of Imperial history, but they could not question the benevolence of such angelic warriors. A Space Marine was beyond imperfection.
They had never heard of the Horus Heresy. Sahaal wasn't surprised. The churning propaganda machines of the Imperium could hardly countenance the popular exposure of its own flawed past.
In the haze of his trance, Sahaal mused upon revealing the truth to his new acolytes, then discounted the possibility... To learn that half the Emperor's angels had turned to the dark fires of Chaos: to these under-hive scum such realities would seem ludicrous. Impossible. Cruel.
Page 107
The Imperium used Chimeras during the Heresy, it would seem.The intruders' vehicles were familiar, at least. Coiling their way through the Steel Forest, they made light work of the debris flows around the ducts' bases: Chimera-class chasses, albeit lacking the artillery mounts and dozer-scoops of their forebears. He had once orchestrated the advances of legions of their kind, savaging the enemy with his Raptor packs whilst the guns of the Chimerae battered their flanks. It seemed somehow ludicrous that he should now find himself opposing such familiar machines, accompanied only by a mob of zealots devoted to his enemy's worship.
Page 108
LascannonThat first carefully gauged blast from the Shadowkin's solitary lascannon, positioned at the edge of a high balcony, punched through the trailing vehicle's tracks like a fiery blade, gobbets of molten metal sputtering from the wound. The pilot's attempt to brake was as doomed as the vehicle itself: its track peeled, thrashing at the hull as it sluiced away, whipping back on itself at the last instant to slice the vindictor riding shotgun into two ragged halves.
Page 109
Grenade blows apart the Enforcer.type.A frag grenade, dropped almost casually from the gantries above, split apart an exposed Preafect, showering his comrades with whirligig shrapnel and gore. His shriek lasted a fraction of a second, aborted on a froth of viscera and clutching limbs.
Page 110
Salamander using ablative armor.A dagger of light punctured the ablative guts of the overturned Salamander, a wound that lanced thick armour and stabbed deep into its fuel reserves. The vehicle seemed to judder and draw a breath, swelling, before detonating in a storm of shattered light.
The metal carcass lifted high on a spout of flame, breaking apart and littering the air, razor fragments blizzarding outwards. At its apex it slouched onto its back like a dying whale, flames running off its scars like water, then crashed - ruined - to the earth.
Page 112-113
Implies the lascannon firing along the Vindicators pretty much slices them apart/explodes the bodies without much in the way of charring or such. Single digit MJ's perhaps, although how many killed per shot or second or whatever isnt known.Sahaal found himself swooping to join the frenzy when the lascannon crew fired their third - and final - blast.
This time, perhaps recognising that the remaining Salamander had found its range and was already tilting its autocannon towards them, they eschewed the obvious target presented by the vehicle and tilted their scripture-pocked weapon towards the vindictor ranks; resolving to inflict as much damage as possible before the end.
...
At the centre of the killing ground, where the lascannon's discharge slid like an arrow into the earth, the vindictors fell apart at their joints: swallowed in a torus of iridescence that incised bone and sinew like a blade through water. They found themselves blasted up and out on the cusp of a Shockwave; meaty slabs parting along torn seams, shredded alive. This was no great pyrotechnic spectacle, no flaming tumult, no smokeless fireball: merely a sooty chrysanthemum of uncontainable energy, blindingly bright, that dismantled its targets like dried leaves before a storm.
As if in reply, the autocannon found its target. The lascannon crew died in fire and lead; tumbling to the earth like rag-dolls, dead of their wounds long before they struck the ground.
Page 121
The Inquisition's reputation. Interesting that a City leader thinks he can fight it. Politics are funny in the Imperium like that."Your organisation's reputation precedes it." he snapped, fingers questing for blemishes at his throat. "I've heard the stories. Worlds virus-bombed on the strength of a single rumour. Whole populations wiped out for fear of one heretic." His jaw tightened. "I won't trust the fate of my city to the word of... of..." he glanced across at Mita, searching for some sufficiently derogatory term, settling finally for a derisive: "that!"
PAge 126-127
Mita dwells on the differences between her Inquisitorial overseer and the Night Lord - insofar as wearing power armor goes at least.To her great relief the retinue was absent when she reached Kaustus's chambers. He stood amongst a gaggle of macabre servitor-attendants and skull-drones, meticulously fastening his power armour and layering his magnificent robes. Up until the moment that a hovering arcocherub - a baby's corpse riddled with preservative machinery and cogitation engines - settled his mask over his tusked features, he appeared utterly bored by the whole procedure.
Ignored in the doorway, Mita found herself reflecting upon how differently he wore his armour to the fiend that stalked her nightmares, that blue,’black monstrosity from the underhive. As an alumnus of the Inquisitorial scholastia she knew more than most about the elaborate biological changes that the warriors of the Adeptus Astartes - the Emperor's Space Marines - underwent.
Such things were shrouded in mysticism, and the mere knowledge that each Marine started life as a lowly human marked her as the recipient of privileged secrets. Nonetheless, the specifics of such alterations were beyond her, and she had imagined that, like Kaustus, such warriors wore their armour as she wore a cloak: the fastenings more complex, perhaps, the fabric more arcane, but 'clothing' nonetheless.
And yet the Night Lord had moved like his armour was his skin; unencumbered, his movement recalling liquid in its smooth, roiling reactions.
Compared to that shadowed figure Kaustus's motions abruptly seemed cumbersome, and Mita marvelled to find herself so unimpressed by him where previously she had thought him awesome.
Page 134
The Night Lords, at least the way Sahaal thinks, considered the Chaos Gods to largely be tools ot be used when needed. Oh, the irony.The witch, the witch... She had struck him to the floor with a single flex of her powers, like a bomb between his eyes, and he shivered that such a slight being should hold such power over him. The witch. The bitch. He had not expected to face psykers.
Steeling himself - disgruntled by the need to sink so low - he breathed a reluctant prayer to the Dark Gods. The ruinous powers had always been allies to his cause - enemies of his enemies, but never his friends - and even now, when he needed their patronage, he shivered at the prospect of openly courting their involvement. If the deities of the warp resented his reluctance they gave no sign of it; within instants a dark stirring played at the edge of his senses.
He would not be unprepared for the witch a second time.
Page 140
- The main character's (Night Lord's) recollections of Konrad Kurze seem to indicate that he is, indeed, dead. Or at least he expected to die
Page 149-150
Brief discussion of the various disciplines of the Psychic arm of the Imperium - especially precog and TK. The other two seem to be telepathy/empathy, and "remote viewing" -eg scrying, seance or clairvoyance.Of the four major disciplines practised in the scholastia psykana, she had always considered herself primarily a precognitor - observing the whimsy of the warp to determine future events - and had occasionally employed her talents as an empathitor - skimming emotion and thought from the minds of those around her. Even in the field of animus motus - telekinesis, the most physically draining of all - she had some small natural talent... but in mastering the role of proculitor, the remote viewer, she had failed dismally.
It was a discipline that carried its own risks, and was best suited to those without the distraction of other talents: allowing one's astral form to roam free was to expose it to any malevolent force within the warp that paid an interest. Mita had tried it only once, during her first year at the scholastia, and had been informed by the grim-faced adept-tutors that her mind was too ordered, too anxious, too uptight, to engender success. The discipline required the ability to un-focus, to relax - but to maintain a careful veneer of security nonetheless.
Page 153
The Raptor can lift and fly with a squad of humans in his arms - some 700-800 kilos?The Raptor dragged behind him a jaegar squad of humans, coated warriors who wasted little effort in attempting to speed his climb, content to allow their lord to take their weight. One by one they joined him at the edge of the platform, casting off ropes and buckles, unlimbering from cases upon their backs long tubes, hollow and undecorated, like the blowpipes of some jungle race.
Page 161
He seems to have lost a good many enforcers, but has at least a thousand left.In the wake of the assault upon the starport, unwilling to endure one more attack upon his Preafectus Vindictaire, and eschewing the assistance of the Inquisition whose presence he was quickly growing to resent, Commander Orodai had mustered as many of his lawmen as he could, had mobilised the precinct's entire complement of armoured vehicles, and had personally led a battle-group a thousand strong into the darkness below Cuspseal.
PAge 168
Sahaal reflects on srvitors and non-servitors. He considers it impossible (at least by his time and knowledge) for servitors to be unemotional yet still aware/sentinet.'Slake! It's... not a person. Not one of us,’ His eyes rolled, mouth quivering. 'It's a collective. A group, you see? The gestalim surgery... we took the implant! Separate us, we're just people. But together, all three joined...' He pawed his bound hands at the cables hanging from his skull, broken nails clattering against their sockets. Together we are Slake. Th-three people, one machina. We share memories. We share intellect! Alone we are nothing!
Sahaal ground his teeth.
"You are servitors?"
"No! No, the servitor is a slave to the machina. Together, we control it."
There had been servitors, even in Sahaal's time. Empty minded things: human bodies with machines for brains, controlled and governed by the chattering logic engines inside. Such contrivances left no room for personality or self awareness; rendering a servitor little more than a mobile tech-console. Their lives -such as they were - were a sequence of parameter and stimulus.
Could it be that these three nothings, these human fools with more avarice than sense, had found a way to retain their minds - their ambitions - yet to foster the cold intellect of a servitor nonetheless?
Page 170
Implies that Astropaths serve as both a deteciton and communication function.Sahaal wondered vaguely how they might react if they knew the truth: that without such astropathic wretches as this their mighty Imperium was a doomed giant, without eyes or ears or mouth.
Page 171
Astropathic abilities (detection and maybe communication) blocked by lead."What have you done to me?" the voice grew loud, indignation at the theft of its greatest sense puncturing its fear. Sahaal allowed himself an indulgent smile.
"It is lead." he said, bending to run fingers across the thick strip of bent metal, powder-white, coiled across his furrowed forehead like a circlet. Sahaal flicked it playfully. "It is anathema to your... gifts, yes? You may no more penetrate it than a hawk may escape its hood."
"Who are you?" The astopath's voice became a whisper, an awestruck quail that wrestled between curiosity and horror. "How do you know so much about the gift? I... I am not afraid of you!"
Page 181
Public TV viewer for propgoanda and other purposes I imagine.Their human counterparts - acolytes and scribes in the employ of the Vindictare, whose taskmasters had deserted them in their march to war - clustered at the chamber's apex, where a rusting civilian worship viewspex glimmered with a broken image; a breathless voice barking terse reports from horn-like speakers. Periodically the crowd cheered, fists punching at the air, and Mita drew close to their swarm with a sinking heart. She could well imagine what they were watching.
".. .and onwards into the gulley known as Spit Run, where resistance was overcome with mighty deeds and..."
Propaganda. Damn Orodai for his wounded pride -he'd led the Preafects on a crusade and he'd taken the Hivecasters with him.
Page 182
More on the communal, hivewide TV network,, or what passes for it.The presenter, who stood at a safe distance from the growing maelstrom of tracer fire and sooty explosions behind him, was clean and elaborately dressed; his unassuming features betraying not a single hint of mechanised augmentation. Mita was hardly surprised: she'd seen broadcasts on other Civilian Worship systems on other populous worlds - joyous reports of the Emperor's victories, lectures in religious dogma, uplifting sermons, vilification of captured criminals and heretics - and in every case the chosen representative of the state embodied pure, unthreatening humanity. Mita had little doubt that beyond the gaze of the servoskull trained upon him, the small man sported a plethora of control articulators, autofocus diaphragms and self-viewing vambrances to broadcast his own image into his retina; but such paraphernalia could hardly be considered photogenic.
"...seem to have routed insurrectionists with - praise his glory - no reported casualties! Truly an example to us all..." The little man waved an arm grandly at the scene behind him - some unnamed underhive township being bombed to dust by a circle of Preafect tanks. Through the unclear flickers of pixelated flames, if she concentrated hard, Mita could make out the small silhouettes of staggering figures; writhing and dying. Children and women, burned alive.
She wondered, distantly, how many millions of eyes were fixed upon communal hivecasters throughout Equixus. Most worlds practised compulsory viewing: at least an hour of every day spent by each citizen in passive absorption of CW doctrine, and from what Mita had seen of this hive its customs were no less rigorous than elsewhere. She prayed to the Emperor with what
small part of her mind remained untarnished by doubt and exhaustion that Inquisitor Kaustus was not amongst this broadcast's audience.
Not that it would stop him from hearing about it, one way or another.
Page 201 - Eldar sorcerers are able to create some sortt of stasis "bubble" in the warp, sealing a Night Lord strike cruiser (And its occupants) off from the warp and real space in some kind of pocket. Why they did so, we dont know. Maybe they found SAhaal annoying too.
Page 211
Difference between rpassively reading surface thoughts and active, deep scanning of a human mind. At least, not without caution.To skim a mind for the vaguest impressions of its inner workings was one thing; to hunt for specific detail was another, far more damaging thing entirely.
She shattered his mind and left his brain haemorrhaging - blood pouring from eyes and nose.
Her own objectives outweighed everything now.
Page 213-214
Interesting, rather agile combat servitors compared to the large bulky clunky ones we've seen. Also, servitors are hard for Mita's psychic awareness to pick up on due to their lack of emotion/awareness.He had used combat servitors, of course. Clever.
Devoid of emotion, lacking even a basic self awareness which might have betrayed them to her senses, they were as invisible to her astral gaze as any other machine. They dropped from recesses above the door and sprung from concealed pits in the rockcrete of the lobby with only the whine of smooth hydraulics to betray their movement. Four of them: sleek models with gangly parts and chequerboards of surgical scars, ramshackle homunculi with a dangerous, graceful aesthetic. Two racked ungainly weapons from plastic holsters, deformed remnants of human flesh held together by circuit wiring. Autoguns - multibarreled and undecorated - loomed in each cybermetallic paw.
The two others started forwards, bird-jointed legs endowing them with a predatory, hopping gait, like reptiles hybridised with zombie corpses. Each sported a shimmering forceblade in the place of a left wrist -flesh and absorption coils interknitted like brambles -and a three-digit powerfist to the right.
Page 214
Autogun fire.The autoguns opened fire with a roar and Mita ducked on impulse, acknowledging even as she did so that it was a futile gesture: not a single part of the lead firestorm could find its way to her. Bullets impacted on Cog's broad chest like stones striking the flanks of a tank - punching ragged holes in his robe and plucking messy eruptions of blood and flesh into the air - but appearing only to enrage him further. He stretched wide his tri-jointed arms and roared like a beast, great fists clenching in rage, bullets whining as they ricocheted from steel knuckles.
Page 237
hint of the extent of Tau infiltration of the Eastenr fringe, as well as the location of this particular hive."Tauists," he blurted, red smog spilling from his nostrils like some ghastly dragon. "Got hold of a tau propaganda vidslug - we're looking into how. Heretical hogwash. 'Greater good' this, 'mutual benefit', that. And the idiots believe it - can you image? No place in the Emperor's light for fools like that,"
...
"Oh, spare me." she snapped, patience expiring. "We're on the Eastern Fringes, you fool. The chances are there are Tauist cells on every warpdamned tier. You didn't come all the way from Steepletown to boast about shooting up a bunch of bored idealists." She crossed her arms and slumped, inwardly annoyed at the ease with which her temper had broken.