Konstantin meaningfully met Erdene’s eyes as he rhetorically oscillated. I’m trying, Erdene. I’m trying. The static flicker of the interrogator’s mind remained dull and unmoved. Either she had dosed herself with kalma before the encounter, or the icewater in her veins that had permitted her to step out in front of forty-odd Patriot guns wasn’t going to thaw in the face of his gestures.
Still, he tried.
“I see no logical reason why the Republic and the Imperium should debase ourselves by slaughtering each other for Skorgulian analysis – and likely amusement – when regardless of whomever prevails, they will be dependent on the victor for the sustenance of trade, unless they prefer to starve unto an ignominious death.” Stan paused, and quirked his brows. “The tail does not wag the canid, after all.”
Silence buzzed at him from the rafters of the conveyor house, like the angry hissing of watchful ghosts. As his words hung in the air, Konstantin saw the unaugmented soldiers on both sides edging nervously toward cover, only the skitarii holding their ground.
Only the skitarii and Erdene.
He could tell from her greyscale expression that a part of her wanted to believe him - why didn’t her brain-patterns so much as flicker?
Erdene eyed her former teammate, the ten metres that separated them both too close and too far. “Does everyone here answer to you, Stan?”
There was a soft hiss of pneumatics some distance behind. “No, ac-tually.” Freylis spoke up. “They an-swer to me, they do.”
Erdene’s eyes flickered past Konstantin, a smile ghosting briefly across her lips. “That’s a nice try, but my Thrones are on the ones keeping quiet.” She stretched out a hand, hovering for a moment in thought, and then pointed. “You, I think.” she said, indicating Enki. “And you.” she decided, pointing at Delzharian.
Delzharian hummed, low in his throat. “Excellent deduction, Throne agent. I won’t insult your intellect by denying it.”
Erdene looked at the tall archmagos for a long moment.
“
Delzharian?” she whispered. “It can’t be.”
This time Delzharian didn’t answer, but the tiny motors beneath his face whirred as he smiled.
Konstantin looked back at the interrogator, and the space between them seemed to stretch, receding away from him like a dolly zoom.
“I’m afraid that changes things, Stan.” she said quietly.
As she spoke, something began to crawl out of her face on thin, spidery legs.
Delzharian’s skitarii reacted first, a microburst from the magos jerking their weapon hands up. A radium bullet scorched across the chamber and struck Erdene in the forehead, snapping her skull back. Somehow she didn’t fall, held up as if by invisible strings.
Weapons that had been held on a hair trigger blasted, the whip-crack of lasbeams like a series of tight-wound bowstrings snapping one after the other. The panicked shots fed off each other, windows detonating like glass bombs, concrete bursting like sheet ice, throwing chips and slivers into the air. A dozen lasbeams struck Stan, his voltagheists waking into hissing anger as they soaked the energy.
Erdene was still standing, but she was stuttering in the air, flickering left to right like a paused vid-reel. She gave a shudder, and her skin began to melt off her in pixels, revealing a bony, corpse-pale form studded with implants and holo-projectors. The servitor hung in its locked exoskeleton, blood running from its cratered forehead, a last sigh of breath escaping its nose as the vox-caster that had replaced its mouth fell silent. Its chest was crawling, tiny metallic spiders wriggling their way free of the webbing rig slung around its chest and shoulders. They buzzed up into the air, targeter lights winking as they dove for the Patriots.
There was, Konstantin corrected himself, one logical reason for Imperials and Patriots to slaughter each other for Skorgulian analysis: to kill the sector’s most notorious heretek a second time.
The swarm of kill-drones parted, picking out specific figures in the crowd and pulling in their glass wings to dive for exposed faces. The Adrantean lieutenant crumpled, her head bursting into a red fog. A whole clutch of the drones swarmed upon Delzharian, and the last Enki saw of the archmagos he was raising his hands and swatting the constructs from the air with bolts of light from his metal fingertips. Then the magos reductor had to look away, as his own passive sensors rang with half a dozen target locks. Zahir stepped in front of him, voltagheists blazing with white arcs. The drones fell from the air, shrivelled and twitching.
The walls around Enki lit up with lurid flashes as Delzharian’s acolytes deployed their refractor fields. Freylis was trying to reach him, arms up against the lashing gunfire like a woman wading into a blizzard. Enki’s audio sensors were working overtime - cataloguing a dozen different weapons and their relative threat level. A barbed attack-code clawed at his data ports, a familiar dragon symbol flashing before his eyes, but his recent modifications held firm and the signal glanced off and scattered away. He heard a flesh-voice curse in Perinetine. A musical, mocking laugh answered it.
“Allow me, darling.”
Enki saw a tech-priestess drifting above the fray, a hovering angel in flowing crimson, arms spread like a conductor glorying in their own symphony of destruction. She swept a hand towards Enki, and one of the burnished gun-servitors ceased obliterating Tierce’s honour guard and swept its rotor cannon in his direction, mauling a burning line of tracer shells through the support beams in its path.
Konstantin’s aural implants were working too. Firstborn were screaming at him in his native tongue, cursing him, promising to kill him. Somewhere behind the Imperial line, the real interrogator Erdene was shouting to the Perinetine magos as she clawed her way out of a motion-register suit. More important to him were the repeated thuds of boots on steel as the Sentinel pilot kicked his way out of the emergency hatch and tumbled to the ground. Konstantin saw him coughing through gritted teeth, his face scored by the welts of lightning burn.
Leo.
His implants screeched with static as Red and Purple laughed.
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