Chapter Approved: Imperial Robots (by Mike Brunton, excerpted
from WD 104)
IMPERIAL ROBOTS
The command bunker had been under fire for more than three hours.
Each time a shell exploded overhead a fine layer of dust fell from
the ceiling and drifted through the bob-map. It interfered with
the mechanism, and the picture flickered continuously. Chavez sighed.
He had long since decided that the situation was critical. He grinned
at the Adeptus Mechanicus technician huddled behind a stack of ammunition
boxes.
"Not like the training rituals, is it?"
Another shell burst overhead, and the lights went out. The shoulder
light in Chavez's armour came on automatically.
"Damn. That was close." Chavez turned the holo-map on again.
The Orks were closer than ever. Eight-to-one odds were the stuff
of Chapter history, unless you had to face them.
"Where's our support? Anything?"
The Brother-Sergeant at the commnet terminal shook his head.
"Three Dreadnoughts a moment ago, but they stopped transmitting.
No telemetry. They're dead, Brother-Captain."
"Time to leave. Up to the ridge. Set the destruct charges, Brother.
We leave nothing for those Orks. You..." Chavez pointed at the
adept. "You come with me. We'll see what those damn machines can
do..."
The technician scrambled to his feet and followed Chavez up
the access tunnel. They came out in a small copse at the base
of the hill. Four large machines stood just inside the tree-line.
The comninet in Chavez's ear was a constant chatter of reports
and casualty lists. Chavez checked his bolter and slapped home
afresh magazine. "I don't like using machines to do a Marine's
job, but I'm down to less than a demi-company. Get them punched,
or programmed or whatever mumbo-jumbo you use. Pray if you must."
"Sir. Lord. Captain. The Rite of Battleprep is a delicate ceremony.
I must have time to offer the libations and the sweetmeats. I
must cast the runes of Robotics. I must-glmpfff! The adept fell
silent as Chavez placed a bolt pistol under his chin.
"You must... understand what is about to happen. Either I will
kill you, the Orks will kill you slowly, or your damned Robots
will kill the Orks. Am I making sense?"
"Yes." The adept was already working on his precious machines.
"Yes."
"Good. Five from now I want those things in supporting positions."
Chavez was running up towards the ridge. The Brother-Sergeant
followed him. A circle of smoke and dust popped out of the tunnel
and rolled across the valley, keeping its shape all the way. The
bunker's demolition charges had done their work.
As Chavez reached the ridge the first Robot began the same climb.
The explosions rocked the hill and showered earth on the Marine
positions, but help was coming...
THE LEGIO CYBERNETICA
The Adeptus Mechanicus is divided into many sub-branches and divisions.
Each specialises in one of the myriad areas of the technical arcana.
The Legio Cybernetica is one of the oldest parts of the Adeptus
Mechanicus. Its records stretch back almost unbroken to the very
first days of the Imperium and, it's assumed, to the times before
the Imperium. The Legio has a long history, and its members regard
themselves as an elite.
The Legio is responsible for the care and construction of all
Robots throughout the Imperium. Robots may be used by all kinds
of Army and Marine forces, but they are always under the Legio's
final control. Indeed, many of the Adepts of the Legio have been
killed while taking part in military operations. The Legio continues
to serve, aware of its value as a fighting force, even in the
face of 90% plus casualties.
The Legio is organised into several thousand cohorts, although
only a percentage of these is ever active at any one time. Each
cohort is in turn organised into maniples of three, four or five
Robots plus a Legion tech-adept. The number of maniples in a cohort
varies, but is rarely more than 100. However, a cohort is usually
spread across an entire Marine force of several Chapters or a
single Army. Battles involving more than 4 or 5 maniples are rare.
This is not to say that they have never occurred - during the
Horus Heresy in particular large numbers of Robots were committed
by both sides in an effort to minimise human casualties until
a decisive final battle could be fought.
Each maniple is virtually a self-contained unit. The (typically)
four units are managed on the battlefield by a single tech-adept.
He has little more to do than give the Robot's their final programs
and then monitor their progress. He is, however, also charged
with making sure that a damaged Robot (which could be dangerous
to its own side) is destroyed as quickly as possible. Each Robot
carries a self-destruct system which can be detonated by remote
control should its programming fail in some way. Although rarely
present on the battlefield (if they can help it) there are also
a number of other, lesser tech-adepts who perform all maintenance
and repair functions for the maniple. Their services are also
highly sought after for other purposes. It is said that a tech-adept
of the Legio is worth his weight in spares and can repair virtually
any item of Imperial equipment.
Legio cohorts are occasionally attached to campaigning Marine
Chapters, such as during Operation Carthage (the Second Pacification
of Isstvan V). When the Desert Lions Chapter took the planet's
defence forts they were preceded by a complete Legio Cohort of
Robots. The Robots had been programmed to advance in an apparently
mindless fashion, and proved easy targets for the defenders. However,
the Desert Lions used the opportunity to map out the defenders'
fire-plans and blind spots. In the Lions' ensuing assault only
seven Marines were lost.
All the surviving Robots were inducted into the Chapter as honorary
members as a mark of respect.
The Inquisition has also put Cohorts of the Legio to good use.
Robots are, by their very natures, utterly incorruptible. Their
preprogrammed, non-biological natures make them the perfect troops
to use against mutants and other contaminated populations. The
terror value of Robots when used against unprepared and underarmed
troops has not gone unnoticed by the Inquisition. This, combined
with their unflagging loyalty, has made them valued additions
to the Inquisition's armoury. Cohorts attached to the Inquisition
are usually staffed by technician-Inquisitors rather than Legio
Adepts. Robots may be pure and incorruptible; men are not.
This was proven during the Horus Heresy, when many Legio Cohorts
rebelled under the leadership of Warmaster Horns. The Cohorts
had been placed under the Warmaster's command in preparation for
a new crusade. When Horus commanded his forces to move against
the Emperor, the Legio Cohorts at his disposal were among those
to obey. In the subsequent fighting many more of the Adeptus Mechanicus
joined Horus and his rebels, but this did not alter the fact that
parts of the Legio had been the first to declare for the Warmaster.
Following the defeat of the Heresy and the banishment of the Traitor
Legions, the dishonoured Legio Cohorts also fled into the Eye
of Terror, where they remain to this day.
Since the defeat of Horus the Legio Cybernetica has pledged
itself anew to the Imperium. Its members now take binding oaths
of loyalty more terrible than any Marine Chapter oaths. Over the
millennia they have regained the respect and admiration of the
rest of the Adeptus Mechanicus, the Imperial Guard, and the Adeptus
Astartes.
Legio maniples require less transport space than standard military
units (Robots can be carried in open space without harm), less
life support and food (Robots neither eat nor drink) and less
battlefield support (Robots usually carry their own heavy weapons).
Many Robots use standard armaments, reducing the need for specialised
supplies, and can interchange parts with Dreadnoughts. All this
makes them extremely popular with practical military commanders.
Some of the older Cybernetica cohorts claim that their Robotic
troops date, in part at least, back to the First Crusade of the
Imperium and earlier. These claims may have some validity, as
Robots are often cannibalised to provide parts for their damaged
brethren. Given the lifespans of Imperial technologies when maintained,
such claims become reasonable. It is indeed possible that one
Robot's leg, or Power Field or cortex has been in almost constant
use for more than ten thousand years.
Like a Dreadnought, a Robot is the product of the many advanced
technologies which have produced its armoured shell, its artificial
muscle and nerve bundles, its cortex, power plant, weapons control
systems, equipment interfaces and cortex. The Mechanicus Weapon-shops
turn out many Robots to the age-old designs held in the memory
banks. Castellan and Crusader pattern Robots, for example, are
known to have fought on both sides during the Horns Heresy. The
designs have remained virtually unchanged since that time, with
perhaps only minor cosmetic variations.
Many Robot components are identical (or nearly so) to Dreadnought
parts. This compatibility simplifies many supply and repair problems.
Legio cohorts have, for example, been cannibalised out of existence
to provide spares for Dreadnought suits! In return Legio Cybernetica
adepts have not been averse to dismantling Dreadnought suits -
sometimes even killing the pilot in the process - when making
battlefield repairs.
What makes a Robot different from an unoccupied Dreadnought
suit is its cortex. This is an artificial brain of sorts, which
is constructed from artificial proteins and enzymes. This cortex
is imprinted with simple maintenance and movement routines - a
rudimentary 'mind'. These enable the Robot to obey simple instructions
("Open the Weapon Bay Door, Please... Move Ahead to the Holding
Area" etc) when away from the battlefield. These 'firmware' routines
(so called because they are 'wired in' software) are often patterned
after living creatures, and a Robot may develop a dog-like devotion
to its technician-master.
Before a battle the firmware routines are overlaid and replaced
by the Robot's combat wetware (ie the software of a protein computer).
This new cortex program, which can be changed for every battle,
defines, for example, how and when the Robot is to fire its weapons
or detonate its self-destruct charges.
Each piece of wetware is held in a small slice of bioplastic,
about the same size as a credit card. Many warriors take these
from 'dead' robots, believing that them to hold the soul and courage
of the robot. When kept in a medicine pouch some of the robot's
bravery passes into the warrior; even some Marine Chapters have
been known to follow this tradition.
Without its cortex a Robot is as helpless as a bolter without
a Marine. It can do nothing other than take whatever punishment
is meted out to it. With its cortex fully programmed, however,
a Robot can prove itself the equal of many other creatures on
the battlefield.
|