Chapter 2
The shuttle of the Hammer of Heresy pierced the atmosphere like a knife through flesh. Outside, beyond the narrow portholes armored with grates and layers of lead, the world of Galtha-Secundus unfolded in a panorama of suffocating grandeur.
First — the sky. It was neither blue, nor black, nor even crimson like the Warp-tainted worlds. It was rust-colored. Thick layers of industrial smog, belched from thousands of factory stacks, hung over the planet like a shroud. The sun, dim and sickly, broke through this veil in rare rays, staining everything the color of old blood. Occasionally, lightning flashed in the gloom — not natural, but generated by the massive energy discharges of the orbital docks, where hundreds of cargo ships swarmed like insects.
Then — the city. Or rather, what had once been a city and had since become a machine. Galtha-Secundus had not been built — it had been grown, layer by layer, like a cancerous tumor. Giant factory complexes, resembling cathedrals of steel and concrete, rose toward the sky, their spires piercing the smog like spears driven into a demon's belly. Monorails twisted between them, carrying freight trains overloaded with raw materials or servitors. The streets, if they could even be called that, were labyrinths of metal walkways, pipelines, and cables, entangling everything like a spider's web. Below, in the canyons between the factories, people scurried — thousands, millions of them, small and gray like ants, infected with the techno-plague of hopelessness.
But the most terrifying thing — was the eyes. Everywhere. Surveillance cameras embedded in the walls. Sensors tracking movement. Holographic billboards where the dead faces of Departmento Mercantile officials preached of "progress" and a "new era." And behind it all — the feeling. The sense that the city wasn't just watching. It saw.
The shuttle shuddered, and I pressed myself into the seat, feeling the gravitational compensators whine under the strain of turbulence. Syla clicked the safety off her Thunderclap, her yellow eyes narrowing.
"Welcome committee," she hissed, nodding toward the porthole.
Beyond the glass, in the rust-colored haze, silhouettes took shape. Ornithopters — local patrol craft resembling birds of prey with spread wings. Their hulls, adorned with the planet's heraldry and guild logos, gleamed with dull metal. They circled the shuttle like vultures, scanning it with their sensors.
"Don't worry," Kastor muttered, his mechanical fingers tapping nervously against the armrest. "Their systems are blind. I... made arrangements."
One of the ornithopters drew closer, its spotlight sliding across the shuttle's hull. For a second, a beam of light pierced the cabin, illuminating our faces. I froze, feeling goosebumps crawl beneath my skin.
"If they decide to check the documents..." I began.
"Then we'll give them a different kind of inspection," Syla patted the barrel of her shotgun.
Ezekiel, who had been sitting with his eyes closed, suddenly spoke:
"They won't check."
"Divine revelation?" I tried to joke, but my voice wavered.
The priest opened his eyes. There was no fear in them, no doubt—only cold certainty.
"No. I just see their pilots."
I looked closer. Behind the ornithopters' cockpit glass sat... figures. Not people—servitors. Their faces were hidden behind masks, but their posture—too rigid, too mechanical—betrayed them as machines. They didn't breathe. Didn't blink. Just watched.
"New models?" I asked.
Kastor shook his head sharply.
"No. These... aren't servitors."
"Then what?"
He didn't answer. His red eyes flickered, as if scanning something beyond reality. The shuttle jerked violently, and the pilot announced:
"Landing in two minutes. Prepare."
I took a deep breath, feeling a cold knot tighten in my chest. Somewhere down there, in that metallic hell, they were already waiting for us. Syla cocked her weapon.
"Well, ink rat," her voice was almost cheerful, "ready to see the real hell?"
I looked out the porthole. Far below, among the factory stacks, a yellow light flickered. For a moment, I thought it winked at me.
"Ready," I whispered.
The shuttle plunged downward, into the heart of darkness.
***
The shuttle landed with a dull thud, its landing gear creaking under the weight like an old skeleton protesting the load. Hydraulics hissed, releasing plumes of steam, and the ramp slowly lowered, letting in the suffocating air of Galtha. It was thick, saturated with the stench of overheated metal, ozone, and something else — sickly sweet, almost organic, as if meat were rotting somewhere nearby, carefully masked by the industrial reek.
The first thing that struck me — was the emptiness. The spaceport, which should have been teeming with people — dockworkers, officials, passengers, smugglers — was nearly deserted. Instead,
they roamed the landing pads. Servitors. Hundreds of them. Maybe thousands. Small, no taller than a man's waist, with streamlined white-plastic bodies so smooth they reflected light like ceramic. Their limbs — thin, flexible, with chrome-plated joints — moved with unnatural fluidity, as if they had neither bones nor mechanical limits. But the most unsettling thing — was their faces.
Smooth black screens, with two yellow dots glowing — eyes. And beneath them — a mouth. Not a mechanical slit, not a speaker, but a
mouth — a thin horizontal line that sometimes stretched into something resembling a smile when the servitors "spoke" to each other in a quiet, clicking language that sounded like static. Many of them wore bright-yellow hard hats, as if their heads needed protection from workplace accidents.
"What the hell..." Syla whispered, her fingers tightening around the
Thunderclap until her knuckles turned white.
I silently watched as one of the servitors stopped right in front of our shuttle. Its "face" turned toward us, yellow eyes narrowing as if focusing. Then its mouth twitched — and stretched into a wide,
too-wide smile.
"Greeting: Welcome to Galtha-Secundus, honored guests."
Its voice was soft, almost human, but with a faint mechanical vibration, as if someone were speaking underwater.
"Request: Your documents for inspection?"
I exchanged a glance with Kastor. The tech-priest stood motionless, his red eyes flickering as if scanning the servitor on some level beyond our perception.
"This isn't standard protocol," he finally said. "They shouldn't
ask for documents. They should
demand them."
The servitor tilted its head, as if intrigued.
"Response: Protocol updated. Efficiency increased by 12.7%."
I glanced nervously at Kastor. I wasn't exactly an expert on Mechanicus protocols, but like any citizen of the Imperium, I knew machines weren't supposed to engage in human conversation. His eyes flickered, and I slowly pulled out the forged papers, careful not to make any sudden moves. The servitor took them with its hands — not clamps, not manipulators, but
fingers, too flexible, too... soft. Its screen scanned the text, yellow eyes darting back and forth.
"Confirmation: Documents in order," it extended them back, "recommendation: Visit the administrative block for pass issuance."
Then it turned and walked away, its plastic feet slapping against the metal as if its soles weren't solid but something else entirely.
"That's not techno-heresy," Kastor said quietly once the servitor was out of sight. "That's... worse."
"Explain," I felt a chill run down my spine.
"They aren't just machines. They
feel. See how it moves? How it looks? That's not programming. That's
consciousness."
Syla snorted.
"So the local priests have finally lost their minds."
"No," Kastor shook his head sharply. "They couldn't have created this. They
found it."
I looked toward the horizon, where factory stacks breathed poisonous smoke. Somewhere in the depths of that metallic hell, it was waiting for us. And it had yellow eyes.
***
The glass doors of the administrative block slid open with a soft hiss, letting in sterile, cooled air. The interior was a stark contrast to the grime and noise of the spaceport—everything here was white, yellow, and black, with smooth lines and rounded shapes that resembled the temple of some alien religion rather than an Imperial bureaucratic facility. Two figures approached us.
The official — if he could still be called that — wore a white uniform with yellow trim, his face pale and waxy, stretched unnaturally tight. His eyes, dark and glossy like the servitors', watched us with cold, calculating politeness.
"Welcome, Inspector Altex," his voice was too even, emotionless, but with a faint metallic echo, as if not just he but
something else were speaking. "We were informed of your visit."
I nodded, careful not to linger on his hands — his fingers were long, thin, with barely visible seams at the joints. Augmetics? Or something worse?
The tech-priests — three of them — stood slightly behind, their white robes embroidered with yellow cog-patterns rustling softly with every movement. Their hoods were pulled low, hiding their faces, but beneath the fabric, the outlines of something — not standard mechanical augments, but smooth, almost organic masks — could be discerned. One of them stepped forward, and his hand — not a metal manipulator, but something covered in white plastic, with flexible, almost
living fingers — rose in a gesture of benediction.
"May the light of the Omnissiah be with you," his voice was sweet, almost melodic, but with a faint static hum. "We are pleased to welcome representatives of the Departmento Mercantile."
Syla, standing behind me, tensed almost imperceptibly. I felt her fingers tighten around the
Thunderclap's grip.
"Thank you for your hospitality," I pretended not to notice the strangeness and extended the documents. "We need to inspect the compliance of the new production lines with Imperial standards."
The official took the papers, his fingers gliding over the surface with unnatural smoothness.
"Of course. Everything will be arranged. Our servitors will escort you."
I glanced at Kastor. The tech-priest stood motionless, but his red eyes burned, scanning those around us with an almost hungry intensity.
"Your robes... are unusual," I remarked cautiously.
One of the tech-priests tilted his head, and in that moment, the light caught his face. Beneath the hood, there was no metal. No flesh. Only smooth white plastic, with two yellow eyes and a thin, smiling slit for a mouth.
"Progress is inevitable," he whispered.
In the distance, beyond the glass wall, a shadow flickered — a tall, slender silhouette with outstretched wings. Then the lights went out. The darkness lasted only seconds, but it was enough. The walls
breathed. The smooth white plastic of the administrative block pulsed with veins, as if something alive lay beneath the surface. The floor beneath our feet grew soft, springy, as if we stood not on tiles but on living flesh. And then I saw them—the tech-priests.
Their white robes fused with their bodies, revealing what lay beneath — a hybrid of metal and flesh, gleaming plastic muscles woven with wires like nerves. Their faces, those smooth masks, were now part of their skulls, their yellow eyes expanding to fill almost the entire space beneath their brows, their mouths stretching into impossibly wide, hungry smiles.
The servitors froze, but their silhouettes changed — their spines arched, limbs elongated, fingers sharpening into thin, metallic blades. And somewhere in the darkness behind them stood
something. Tall, winged, with eyes burning yellow fire.
Then — the light returned as suddenly as it had vanished.
The walls were white and smooth again. The tech-priests stood as if nothing had happened, their hoods hiding their faces. The servitors resumed their work, their plastic bodies gleaming under fluorescent lights. The official smiled — a normal, human smile, though his eyes remained too dark, too glossy.
"Apologies for the inconvenience. A temporary power fluctuation."
I barely suppressed the tremor in my hands but nodded, pretending I'd noticed nothing.
"No harm done. You never introduced yourself."
"Ah, yes," he inclined his head slightly. "Allow me — Magister-Administrator Weyland Gross."
I nodded stiffly, my heart pounding. Had that been real? Or had the Warp played a cruel trick on us? Nearby, Kastor was quietly conversing with one of the tech-priests. His mechanical arm was still, but his fingers trembled slightly, as if catching invisible signals.
"Your servitors... an interesting design," he murmured, his red eyes studying the priest intently. "They use a biological interface?"
The tech-priest tilted his head, and for a second, the light slipped beneath his hood — something smooth, white —
"They are perfect," he replied, his voice sounding like a chorus of several voices. "They are the next stage. Flesh and machine, fused as one. No more separation. No more pain."
Kastor slowly clenched his fist, his hydraulics hissing softly.
"And who... gave you this knowledge?"
The tech-priest went still, then his voice grew even sweeter:
"She came to us. She showed the way. Let her show you too, brother."
He extended a smooth plastic hand toward Kastor, yellow sparks dancing across its surface. Meanwhile, Ezekiel approached another priest, his face calm but his fingers tightening around his rosary until his knuckles whitened.
"You have almost no living workers," he observed, his voice soft but with a hint of reproach. "Does not the Dogma state: 'The human soul is the conduit of the Omnissiah's will'?"
The tech-priest froze, then slowly turned to him.
"The human soul... is limited," he whispered. "But we have found a way to free it."
"And where are those who worked here before?"
Silence hung in the air for a moment.
"Reassigned to other facilities," the tech-priest finally answered.
Ezekiel took a step back, clearly unconvinced — just as I was. Syla stood beside me, her yellow eyes narrowed to slits.
"I don't like any of this," she hissed, so quietly only I could hear.
I subtly touched the grip of my pistol.
"We need to inspect the production floors," I said to Gross. "The sooner, the better."
The official smiled.
"Of course. The servitors will guide you."
One of the small white machines stepped closer, its yellow eyes flashing.
"Escort: Please follow me."
Its mouth stretched into a smile — too wide for its design — and I realized what had been unsettling me all along.
It had human teeth.
***
The limousine was as white and smooth as the servitors, its body polished to a mirror shine. Inside, it smelled sterile, almost medicinal, and the seats were upholstered in leather of an unnaturally white shade — too soft, too warm, as if alive. The servitor-driver turned its black mask toward us, yellow eyes flickering.
"Estimated travel time: 17.3 minutes. Please enjoy the view."
Its mouth stretched into a smile, and the limousine moved.
Beyond the tinted windows, the new Galtha-Secundus unfolded — a nightmare clad in white plastic and chrome. The old Imperial structures — massive, grim, built of black stone and wrought iron — still stood, but now they were wrapped in smooth white panels, as if being shrouded for burial. Gothic arches framed new, flowing chrome constructions, and Imperial crests peeked out from beneath layers of modern plating like ancient ruins.
Building facades, once heavy and grim with reliefs of saints and double-headed eagles, were now partially concealed beneath chrome panels, their sharp angles softened, their lines smoothed. Somewhere, the arched windows of Gothic spires had been bricked up, replaced with round portholes resembling eyes. Elsewhere, old statues — of warriors, saints, tech-priests — had been wrapped in plastic film, their features blurred as if melting away. The sidewalks, paved with gray tiles, sagged in places beneath white polymer overlays — new, smooth, with barely visible pores, like skin.
The streetlights emitted a sickly yellow glow. Halogen bulbs, too bright for ordinary lighting, cast harsh shadows where something occasionally stirred — too fast to make out. Above us floated holograms — advertisements for the new servitors:
"Galtha-Secundus proudly presents the next generation of assistants! Efficiency. Obedience. Perfection."
Images of flawless white machines gave way to footage of them at work — assembling mechanisms, caring for children, standing behind counters. But sometimes the holograms glitched — for a split second, the servitors' faces distorted, their smiles stretching too wide, their eyes growing too large, and winged shadows flickered in the background.
The asphalt was old and cracked, but here and there it had been patched with white polymer, too smooth, too alien. Few people walked the streets, and those who did moved quickly, never looking around. Only the servitors — hundreds, thousands of them — moved along the sidewalks, their plastic bodies reflecting the yellow light. They carried loads, cleaned the streets, repaired facades. Some simply stood, watching the passing limousine, their black masks turning to follow us with mechanical smoothness.
In one alley, I spotted him — an old man in a dirty robe, crouching as he gathered debris with trembling hands. A servitor stood beside him, its yellow eyes intently tracking his every movement. The limousine drove on, and I didn't see what happened next. Kastor sat motionless, his red eyes scanning the streets with cold fury.
"They're rebuilding the city," he whispered.
"Not just repairing it. They're remaking it."
Syla tightened her grip on the
Thunderclap, her fingers tapping against the stock.
"I counted at least three spots where we could set a good ambush."
Ezekiel remained silent. His fingers worked over his rosary beads, but his eyes were fixed on the window — on the dark alleys where yellow lights occasionally flickered. The limousine turned onto a wide plaza paved with stone slabs, between which thin tendrils of white plastic had begun to emerge — as if the city were slowly digesting even the rock beneath it.
And then we saw the Temple of the Emperor.
The grand structure of black stone, once adorned with golden aquilas and the visages of Holy Terra, now stood sealed. Its massive oak doors had been welded shut with steel plates, and strings of yellow halogen lights coiled along its façade, casting jagged shadows over the ancient reliefs. Above the entrance hung a holographic sign:
"Closed for Renovation."
Ezekiel erupted. His fingers dug into the seat, his knuckles whitening, while his eyes — usually calm, filled with fanatical patience — burned with fury.
"How DARE they?!" His voice struck like a hammer blow, forcing even the emotionless servitor-driver to turn its head slightly.
"Corrective clarification: Temporary measure. The temple will be enhanced in accordance with new standards."
The servitor's voice was sweet, almost lulling, but something flickered in its yellow eyes — something mocking,
alive.
"ENHANCED?!" Ezekiel lunged forward, his hand instinctively reaching for his pistol.
"This is the HOUSE of the GOD-EMPEROR! You do not 'improve' it — you PRAY in it!"
Syla grabbed his shoulder sharply — not to restrain him, but in solidarity, her fingers tightening in shared rage.
"Easy, preacher," she hissed, though her own eyes burned with the same fire.
"They'll hear your wrath. Later."
I glanced back at the temple. In the narrow stained-glass windows of the upper tier, movement flickered—as if something watched us from within. The servitor turned smoothly toward us, its head tilting at an unnatural angle with an audible
crack from its chrome-plated neck.
"Assurance: All places of worship remain under ecclesiastic supervision. However, current regulations require... spatial optimization."
Its mouth stretched into a smile, and for a second, I saw something shift beneath the black screen — like a tongue, too long, too
flexible. The limousine moved on, leaving the temple behind. Ezekiel's breathing was heavy, his fingers clenching the rosary so tightly the obsidian skulls creaked.
"They mock Him," he whispered.
"And for that — "
He didn't finish. But his voice carried a promise.
***
The limousine stopped before the massive gates of the Central Production Complex. Even here, in the heart of the industrial cult, the old Imperial grandeur hadn't been forgotten — the towering arches of black adamantine rose hundreds of meters high, their surfaces once engraved with the faces of holy mechanists. But now, overlaying the ancient reliefs, shone a new symbol.
A hexagon.
Huge, blazing with yellow halogen light, with a second hexagon inscribed within. From three of its angles extended lines with arrows — as if pointing somewhere. Down? Inward? Into another dimension?
The servitor-driver turned to us, its voice solemn:
"Arrival. Magister-Fabricator Dominius Kalk awaits you."
The gates slid open with a quiet hiss, and we saw the master of this place.
His body was a monster of metal and flesh — massive, at least three meters tall, it resembled a mechanical spider more than a man. His lower half consisted of six flexible mechanical limbs, gliding smoothly across the floor as if he were sliding rather than walking. His upper half retained a semblance of humanity — but only a semblance.
His torso was clad in white plastic armor adorned with yellow hexagonal patterns. His arms — one human, pale, almost translucent, with thin blue veins beneath the skin; the other mechanical, but not crude like those of orthodox tech-priests — elegant, with smooth chrome joints and fingers too flexible.
But the most horrifying thing was his face.
Half of it remained human — old, wrinkled, with piercing blue eyes full of fanatical fire. The other half was a white mask. Smooth, featureless, save for two yellow eyes and a thin slit for a mouth. When he spoke, his voice was a fusion of two entities — an old, raspy human tone and something else, metallic, almost melodic.
"Welcome to the future, Inspector."
Kalk led us through the workshops, his mechanical legs stepping soundlessly. The complex was enormous — kilometers of conveyor belts where hundreds of servitors assembled something. Not weapons. Not tanks. Parts. White plastic shells. Chrome joints. Smooth black screens with yellow eyes.
"Our servitors are not mere machines," Kalk explained fervently. "They are the extension of the Omnissiah's will. They feel. They learn. They evolve."
He raised a hand, and one of the servitors approached. Its "face" turned to us, its mouth stretching into a smile.
"They no longer require programming. They...
understand."
A chill ran down my spine.
"And what does the planetary governor think of this?" I asked carefully.
Kalk froze. His human eye narrowed, while the yellow one widened.
"The governor... is unwell. He has temporarily delegated administrative functions to me."
Behind him, in the shadows between machines, a shape flickered — tall, winged. Kastor stood motionless, his red eyes scanning the workshop.
"There are no machine spirits here," he whispered. "Only them."
Syla tightened her grip on the
Thunderclap, her finger already on the trigger. Ezekiel stared at Kalk with cold hatred.
"You've crossed a line, Fabricator."
Kalk turned to him, his mask splitting — the thin slit of his mouth stretching into a smile.
"No. We've erased it."
***
Magister-Fabricator Dominius Kalk continued guiding us through the endless workshops, his voice — a blend of human fanaticism and mechanical sweetness — flowing like honey, drawing us deeper into the web of his vision.
"The orthodox of Mars cling to ancient dogmas like the blind to a cane," he said, gliding smoothly on his six limbs past conveyor belts. "They limit themselves, afraid to step beyond. But we... we have
transcended."
Around us, work buzzed. The white-bodied, yellow-eyed servitors moved with eerie synchronicity, their finger-manipulators assembling intricate mechanisms, soldering microcircuits, testing components. No shouts, no curses, no fatigue — just the quiet hum of motors and the clicking of servos.
"They do not tire. They do not rebel. They do not demand payment. They are perfect."
Syla, walking beside me, smirked.
"Do they work in brothels too?"
Kalk turned his mask toward her. The yellow eye flickered.
"If required. Models with flexible interfaces are already undergoing testing."
His mouth-slit twitched, as if picturing the sight. I felt Kastor tense. His mechanical hand clenched into a fist, whispering something in techna-lingua — a curse or a prayer.
"And security?" I asked, trying to sound merely curious. "Surely you have combat models as well?"
Kalk paused. His human eye gleamed.
"Oh, yes. They surpass anything humans have created. Faster. Stronger. More merciless."
He let the silence hang, savoring it.
"They will replace the Arbites. The Guard. Perhaps even... the Adeptus Astartes."
Syla scoffed, but a shadow crossed her eyes. Even she understood — this wasn't empty boasting.
"Where are they produced?" I asked.
"In Workshop Omega. A classified facility. But for you... we could make an exception."
His tone was inviting, but the trap was obvious.
We pressed on. Everywhere — white plastic, chrome, the yellow eyes of servitors. But sometimes, anomalies flickered in the corners. Walls partially covered in strange growths — as if the white material pulsed, slowly expanding. Servitors frozen in unnatural poses — spines arched, fingers elongated into claws. Holograms glitching for a split second, revealing something else — winged silhouettes, yellow sigils, hexagons floating in the void.
Kalk, meanwhile, spoke fervently of
Her, his voice shifting. The metallic coldness gave way to something warm, almost human — which only made it more terrifying.
"She... She is beautiful," he whispered, his human eye rolling back in ecstasy while the yellow lens of his mask narrowed, as if in rapture. "Her mind is an ocean in which all our pitiful dogmas drown. Her touch... It rewrites flesh and metal like clay in a sculptor's hands."
He ran his mechanical hand over his mask, as if caressing an invisible face.
"She showed me the true form of the Omnissiah. Not the one hidden on Mars. Not the one the blind fanatics pray to.
Perfection."
I tried to catch his gaze:
"Who is She?"
Kalk froze. The human half of his face twisted — whether in ecstasy or horror, I couldn't tell.
"You will see. If She permits."
His mask smiled.
"Her wisdom, her beauty... She revealed the truth to us. Showed us the path beyond flesh and iron."
At last, the tour ended. Kalk escorted us back to the limousine, his mask inscrutable but impatience creeping into his voice.
"Will you return? Workshop Omega awaits."
I nodded, careful not to show my revulsion.
"Of course. After reviewing the documents."
The human half of his face twitched — he knew it was a lie. But the servitors were already opening the limousine doors. The vehicle pulled away, and heavy silence settled inside.
"We can't handle this," Kastor finally said. His red eyes burned. "There are too many of them. My ice barely managed to scrape the surface of the data they're exchanging in that facility."
Syla traced a finger along the
Thunderclap's barrel.
"I counted at least twenty spots where we could make a good stand. But yeah — there's four of us. And a whole city of them. Maybe a whole planet."
Ezekiel stared silently out the window. His fingers tightened around his flask, but he didn't drink.
"They sealed the temple and defiled the symbols. And now they speak of replacing the Astartes..."
I looked out the window too. On a building wall, servitors were painting over graffiti — a crude drawing of themselves, but with fangs and wings, hovering in the sky. The city wasn't completely dead. Among the white plastic facades and yellow-eyed servitors, people still lingered. Figures in ragged clothes, hiding from patrols — their faces gaunt, but their eyes burning. Some houses had windows boarded shut, and bloody handprints marked the doors.
Then the limousine passed an alley where something lay in pieces — white plastic, chrome joints. Someone had taken a servitor apart. Syla pressed closer to the glass:
"Someone's still tearing these things apart."
Ezekiel slowly made the sign of the Aquila:
"Then there are still those who remember the Emperor."
The limousine turned onto the central boulevard, and before us stretched a sea of white plastic figures. But now we knew — beneath this facade, a living heart still beat.
And it hated.