screwed into its throat spoke.
'Gregor… Liber… It's been a long time/
NINETEEN
Walking through stone.
Lith.
The Inmate.
This is Medea Betancore,' I said, once Geard Bure's strong mechanical grip had finally released my hand.
'Miss Betancore/ Bure bowed slightly. 'The Adeptus Mechanicus of Mars, holy servants of the God-Machine, bids you take sanctuary in this, its worthy device/
I was about to hiss at Medea and explain mat she had been greeted formally, but, typically, she needed no prompting.
She deftly made the machine-fist salute of the Mechanicus and bowed in return. 'May your devices and desires serve the God-Emperor until time runs its course, magos/
Bure chuckled – an eerie sound when it came from a prosthetic voice-box – and turned his unblinking green eye-lights to me.
'You've trained this one well, Eisenhorn/
'He has, magos/ said Medea quickly. 'But that response I learned from study of the Divine Primer/
'You've read the Primer?' Bure asked.
'It was basic study in air school on my home world/ she replied.
'Medea has a… considerable aptitude for machines/ Aemos said. 'She is our pilot/
'Indeed…' Bure walked around her and uninhibitedly caressed her body with his metal fingers. Medea temporarily humoured him.
'She is machine-wise, yet she has no augmentation?' Bure questioned me.
Medea stripped off her gloves and showed him the intricate circuits inlaid into her hands.
'I beg to differ, magos/
He took her hands in his and gazed in hungry wonder. Drool-like ropes of clear lubricant oil trickled out between his chrome teeth like spittle.
'A Glavian! Your enhancements are… so… beautiful…'
Thank you, sir/
You've never thought to permit any other augmentation? Limbs? Organs? It is quite liberating/
'I… get by with what I've got/ smiled Medea.
'I'm sure you do/ Bure said, suddenly swinging round to face me. 'Welcome to my translithopede, Eisenhorn. You too, Aemos, my old friend. I must admit I can't conceive what brought you here. Is it the Lith? Has the Inquisition sent you to deal with the Lidi?'
News of my disgrace clearly hadn't reached him, and for that, I was thankful.
'No, magos/ I said. A stranger quirk has brought us here/
'Has it? How odd. When I first detected your signal – in dear Hapshant's old private code – I couldn't believe it. I nearly shot you down/
'I took a chance/ I said.
'Well, that chance has led you to me and I'm glad. Come, this way/
His skeletal silver hands ushered us towards the door lock.
Bure had no lower limbs. He floated on anti-gravity suspensors, the hem of his orange robe hanging a few centimetres above the plated deck. We fell in step behind him and walked the length of a long, oval companion-way lined with brass bulkheads and more gas filament lamps.
This burrowing machine is a wonder/ Aemos said.
'AH machines are wonders/ Bure replied. This is a necessity, the primary tool of my work here on Cinchare. There were, of course, a number of lesser prototypes before I made the necessary refinements. This translithopede was engineered from my designs by the Adeptus fabricatory on Rysa and shipped here for my use three standard years ago. With it, I can go where I please in this rock, and unlock the secret lore of Cinchare's metals/
Magos Bure had been a metallurgy specialist for two hundred years, his knowledge and discoveries almost worshipped by his brethren in the tech-priesthood. Before that, he had been a fabricator-architect in the titan forges of Triplex Phall. To my certain knowledge, he was almost seven hundred years old. Hapshant had occasionally hinted that Bure was far older than that.
Not a shred of the magos's flesh remained. The vestigial organic parts of Geard Bure the human being – his brain and neural systems – were sealed inside his gleaming mechanoid body. I had never learned if this was a matter of design or necessity. Perhaps, as is the case with so many, disease or
grievous injury had forced such extreme augmentation upon him. Or perhaps, like Tobias Maxilla, he had deliberately discarded the weakness of flesh in favour of machine perfection. Knowing the technophiliac disposition of the Mechanicus priesthood, the latter seemed more likely to me.
My late mentor, Inquisitor Hapshant, had encountered Magos Bure in the early part of his career, during the celebrated mission to secure the STC Lectionary from the ashrams of Ullidor the Techsmith. As I have remarked, the Inquisition – indeed most august bodies of the Imperium – find dealings with the Cult Mechanicus problematic at best. Its power is legendary and its insularity notorious. The cult is a closed order which guards the secrets of its technologies jealously. But Bure and Hapshant developed a beneficial working relationship based on mutual esteem. On several occasions, Bure's specialist wisdom assisted my mentor in the prosecution of important cases, and on several others, the favour was returned.
That is why, a century before, I entrusted an item of particular importance to his expert custody.
The control chamber of the wheezing translithopede was a split-level chapel where a raised command podium, like a giant brass pulpit, overlooked two semi-circular rows of busy control stations. The rivetted iron walls were painted matt red and etched with the various aspects and runes of the Machine God. The forward wall was shrouded in long drapes of red velvet.
Six oil-streaked servitors worked at the chattering control stations, their hands and faces plugged directly into the systems via thick, metal-sleeved cables or striped flexes marked with purity seals and parchment labels. Glass valves and dials flickered and glowed, and the air was heady with the scent of oils and sacred unguents.
Two relatively human tech-adepts in orange robes were overseeing the activity. One was linked directly into the vehicle's mind-impulse unit through a trio of neural plugs, and he murmured aloud the rites and scriptures of the Adeptus. The other turned and bowed as we came onto the podium.
He had a wire-mesh speaker where his mouth should have been. When he spoke, it was in a pulse of binary machine code.
Bure responded in kind, and for a few moments they exchanged tight bursts of condensed data. Then Bure floated over to a brass lectern built into the podium's rail and opened his robe. Two probing neural cables extended from his chrome sternum like sucker-worms hunting for prey and connected swiftly with the polished sockets on the lectern.
Now Bure was also conjoined with the translithopede's mind-impulse unit.
'We make good speed,' he told us. He twitched, and the velvet drapes at the far end of the chamber drew aside automatically, revealing a large holographic display. Secondary images overlaid the main one, showing
three-dimensional charts and power/speed graphics. The main image was just a dark rushing blur laced with crackles of blue energy.
