Warhammer 40k: Shattered Steel Soul

Chapter 346 Galaspa on the Tip of the Tongue

Garaspa once belonged to a superior order of knights, but later it evolved into an ownerless ruin. The ground was broken, covered with brown and yellow and dark green poisonous gas billowing from the thick fog, like a layer of dirty The shrouds were stacked in an unreasonable manner.

When Mortarion brought Sanguinius and Horus Luperkar, who had come from afar, to set foot on the land of Garaspar's main nest again, the corpses scattered everywhere were still piled up like mountains. Stack them into categories and count them.

Several hills of corpses about ten meters high are like pustules on the earth, waiting for the force of nature to decompose and reconstruct them.

The poisonous gas used by Mortarion greatly slowed this process, but nature would eventually overcome whatever humanity had imposed upon its existence.

At the same time, Mortarion noticed with displeasure that there seemed to be some kind of worry hidden behind the perfect smile of Archangel Sanguinius.

"You used poison gas?" Sanguinius said worriedly, biting his lip with his teeth.

"Efficient," Mortarion said, his voice dull through the respirator. "They die faster."

Horus coughed in a low voice, "Just looking at the color, there isn't much difference. Is it more toxic?"

"Don't worry, this kind of large-scale statistics will inevitably have some deviations," Horus comforted.

"Far stronger." Mortarion sneered, "I told you, I provided my legionnaires with the standard poison wine, Horus."

The Lord of Death noticed that Sanguinius's expression changed slightly when he heard him mention the Captain, and there seemed to be a potential embarrassment hidden in it.

This made Mortarion even more dissatisfied. He didn't like others to show hypocrisy in front of him. The more dazzling they were, the more unbearable they were.

"Leaving in which direction?" the angel asked. "What to do?"

"I've heard of them." Mortarion thought of the rumors he had heard during his time studying on Terra. A ruthless army with some bad reputations, looking very different from their Primarch.

"Did you use the one prepared by the Ministry of Military Affairs?" Sanguinius asked.

Having said that, before his brothers could stop him, Sanguinius spread his wings and flew away, passing through the thick smoke left over from the war, heading towards the direction pointed by the sergeant.

But Sanguinius seemed even more nervous.

"This can enhance their resistance to the military poison gas inside the Death Guard, and is more conducive to fighting in high poison gas concentration environments."

"No," Sanguinius said, "I must know - have any red-armored Space Marines been here before?"

"Is there a problem with the body count here?" Sanguinius asked cautiously, refusing to appear more anomalous.

He might as well be as candid as the Emperor, Mortarion thought.

"What's up?"

Horus showed an awkward smile: "There is something I might want to thank you for, my dear brother."

"This is the Barbarus way of dealing with overlords and tyrants," Mortarion said. "The company commanders you send to explore various parts of Garaspa will come to the same conclusion."

Are the Blood Angels really here to learn their fighting methods?

"Uh, yes, what next?" Horus asked.

He doubted Sanguinius had ever been confronted like this, after all the angel's wings were trembling uneasily.

The sergeant was a little confused: "Yes, sir. They came here and asked us how Lord Mortarion made military decisions. They wanted to learn. We couldn't answer, so they left."

"Can you tell me why you think Galasper deserves a ruthless slaughter?" He looked at the mortals who were counting the dead, and seemed to want to say something else, but hesitated.

After Mortarion finished speaking, he noticed that Horus and Sanguinius exchanged a cryptic look that seemed to hide a mystery. He doesn't understand what this means and is resentful of the secret that lies between them.

"Then it seems you don't have to worry," Horus smiled, tapping Sanguinius's back lightly with his elbow, "I have a file to record the experience."

Horus Luperkar, more perceptive than Mortarion, reached over his wings and rested his hand on Sanguinius's shoulder.

"Before I do that, I want to know what you're worried about," Mortarion said, not giving an inch. “Is that all I’ve done to the city?”

To be honest, after meeting Sanguinius, Mortarion found it difficult to believe in the authenticity of those rumors, just as he simply did not believe in one of the classic rumors about Perturabo - the non-existent mentor. .

"This is enough to explain the sins of the Knights."

"What happened to him?" Mortarion asked blankly, not knowing why.

Mortarion nodded to the working mortals, and a sergeant came over. After understanding the needs of the Primarchs, the sergeant said: "There are deviations, but the missing figures are within the error range, my lord."

"And I have heard of you," Sanguinius sighed softly, "and I believe we can learn much from you. We all do."

Sanguinius shook his head: "This was a massacre caused by poison gas and artillery fire."

"No, it's not the way you fight that worries me," the angel said.

"You left no one alive," Horus said seriously.

"That's not what we meant," Horus said awkwardly, glancing furtively at Sanguinius.

"No, I mixed it myself."

"They asked if there were any living prisoners, and we said no, so we don't know what the Space Marines did. About 120 degrees, the team has about fifteen people, and the speed is difficult to estimate."

"Sorry," Sanguinius said hurriedly, "I'll leave first."

"The Galaspar Knights have internal records. They have preserved a lot of ancient technology and culture, as well as narrative archives." Mortarion said suspiciously, "Read them, and you will understand why I have to judge this planet."

"Ah?" Mortarion asked muffledly through the respirator, "But doesn't the Imperial Truth guide us to treat humans well?"

"Excuse me, do people here have the habit of writing history books?" Horus asked.

"We understand, Mortarion, we understand what you did here, although it is a bit..." He chose the right words, "cruel, but the Empire needs one or more troops that are good at annihilation. The Ninth Legion also knows the necessity of doing so, I think."

"Missing?" Sanguinius murmured.

He took a breath and looked around the environment they were walking to. They were next to a hill of corpses. Some mortals were dragging corpses and reporting to each other, counting the number of deaths in this area.

Mortarion was surprised, and suddenly felt that Sanguinius's light was no longer so dazzling.

"What do you think about this?" he asked.

"Is that why I did it? I left no tyrants above the planet, no prisoners, no captives. Does this make you feel uncomfortable?"

He asked this because Sanguinius's face was indeed not very comfortable.

"It's not detailed enough," Sanguinius whispered, "For them, the files are too pale."

Horus meaningfully brushed off the dust accumulated on Mortarion's brass armor.

"You gave them less chance," he whispered, controlling his voice so that only the two of them could hear, "After all, the living are fresher."

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