Here’s how it came to be: I was at one of the regular writers’ meetings at Games Workshop HQ in Nottingham with Graham McNeill and Dan Abnett, a story conference that was taking place to wrangle the narrative between the two connected books they were working on –
But here’s the thing. When you put writers in a room together, writers who are passionate about a storyline, at the top of their game, who are engaged and enthusiastic about their shared fictional world, what you get is a kind of synergy that is pretty damned amazing. Story ideas start to emerge out of nothing, and there’s a crackle of creativity in the air that can be thrilling. I hear musicians talk about the energy they get while jamming, and I know it’s the same thing.
So we were off on a little side-conversation about exactly how the Legio Custodes operated during the Emperor of Mankind’s rule, and an idea for a story coalesced right there in the middle of my train of thought. ‘What about the Officio Assassinorum?’ I said. ‘What were they doing during the havoc of the Heresy?’
We kicked the idea around for a bit, and then things went back to the destruction of Prospero – but I was frantically scribbling down ideas in my notebook, trying to get them all on to paper before they got lost in the ether.
By the time the story meeting ended, I had the outline for a book. As we were packing up to leave, Graham leaned over and asked if I was going to write “that assassin thing”... because if I didn’t, he was going to. I went away and drew up the formal pitch for what would become
I’d been thinking about writing something assassin-y for Black Library for a while. Editor Lindsey Priestley and I had toyed with the idea of a 41st millennium series of four novellas all set in the same city at the same time, detailing the missions of different Assassinorum operatives whose stories would cross over each other – but we just couldn’t make it work at the time.
However, using the assassins during the Heresy, now that had real potential.
And it also dovetailed with something else that hadn’t been explored in the ten or so books written up to that point: what was it like to be an ordinary person during the Horus Heresy? We talked about a hypothetical everyman character (whom we nicknamed ‘Joe Hivecity’) and wondered how his life would be under the threat of Horus’s rebellion and the darker powers massing across the galaxy. I’d later return to this theme in ‘Liar’s Due’, a short story I wrote for the
The novel is made up of two threads – one follows the assassins as they assemble their ill-fated mission to terminate the Warmaster, and the second is that street-level story of ordinary folks who find themselves caught up in a war beyond reason.
In a war (and a series) about primarchs and Space Marines,
But this book
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Once more, tips of the helm to Dan Abnett and Graham McNeill for that moment when the core concept for
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