Mortarion was necessarily and excessively wary of the Ultramarines, or indeed any Legion.
Especially after Mortarion and Guilliman had a friendly and moderate virtual fight, Mortarion strictly prohibited those Ultramarines from running over to try to harass the Death Guard, and worked overtime in the apothecary room -
Therefore, in recent days, Garro told Hades that Mortarion's poison gas bombs against the Ultramarines were ready, and Hades needed to ask the Foundry to produce a small number of samples for preservation.
That was good, except that Hades, who was in a friendly conversation with the Ultramarines Gage, almost couldn't hold it together.
One second, he was still immersed in the friendly atmosphere with the Extreme Warriors, and the next second, he was urged to start making bombs in the private channel.
In fact, not only the Ultramarines, but all the legions that had ever cooperated with the Death Guard were not spared.
So far, Mortarion has launched Iron Warriors Happy Bullets, Luna Wolves Happy Bullets and Ultramarines Happy Bullets.
Mortarion had also been trying to extract targeted genes from some of the dandruff and hair left over from Hades beating the Thousand Sons at the banquet, but the Primarch's plan failed because the amount was too small.
Mortarion's comment on this was that he had hit too lightly and should remember to draw blood next time.
Hades. Hades did not comment on this.
Although the Death Guard's Foundry was working overtime to produce the Ultramarines' Happy Bombs, thanks to the Ultramarines' high efficiency, the battle reports on Abstuo were approved quite quickly, and soon the two legions would be able to set sail again.
What really takes time is not those files that can be quickly completed by just filling in the format.
The Ultramarines, led by Guilliman, and the Death Guard, led by Mortarion and Hades, signed some [undisclosed] agreements between the two armies.
As a witness to the entire agreement, Garro said that he did not understand how Hades persuaded Mortarion to hold his nose and sign the terms with the Ultramarines, and the final result was -
Even though the two Primarchs seemed to have some personal conflicts, at least they could see that they had a logical basis for negotiation, as well as common goals (? What did Hades say?), and common interests (a little, not too much).
At least thanks to Guilliman's efforts in rhetoric, Mortarion believed that his Macragge brother at least understood the dangers of the Warp and wizards, and Guilliman was willing to try to target wizards.
The Death Guard might be able to hand over some individual anti-psychic weapons to the Ultramarines - but only if the Ultramarines keep the origin of these weapons a secret and do not display them in front of other legions.
And the types of these weapons are limited to those used by the Death Guard on Abstul, namely two types of grenades and flame incinerators.
After Hades' consideration, the agreement with the Ultramarines only stipulated two types of weapons, black bullets and incinerators. For those who do not often fight with psychics, the use of white bullets is still somewhat dangerous.
These two weapons are enough. As long as you don't encounter psychic species on a large scale, you can throw a black bullet at the place where the psychic species gather, and then rush up and fight normally. Those psychic species will automatically lose their combat effectiveness in the place where the subspace is weakened.
After the battle is over, use flames to purify everything and block as many possible sources of psychic corruption as possible.
The quantity of this batch of weapons is also very small, not enough to support large-scale and long-term operations.
Both parties who signed the agreement knew that these were just minor fights. Guilliman had a tradition of imitating and learning from other legions, so he would not say anything.
At the same time, part of the reason why Guilliman was so enthusiastic about this agreement was also due to the idea of buying a horse's bones for a large sum of money.
On the other hand, what Hades really values is the terms similar to "polite words" written by both parties at the end of this agreement -
[If the two legions are attacked by psychic species in the nearby star field, if one side requests support, the other side must rush to provide support; if necessary, the two sides can negotiate on their own regarding the production and distribution of anti-psychic weapons.]
As long as Guilliman is willing to transform the 500 worlds of Macragge into [Explosion Mode].
Guilliman might be confused by this condition, but it didn't matter. When that day came, the Lord of Macragge would quickly realize what was going on.
But if the Ultramarines are corrupted, they will be wary of the Death Guard.
After careful consideration, Hades decided to trust Mortarion's specially made Space Marine happy bullet, and also decided to trust his own judgment of Guilliman.
During his contact with Guilliman, Hades indirectly found out that the Lord of Macragge had a happy family, his mother was still alive, and he had a sound character and was not extreme.
It's the one he's been thinking about day and night, no.
Most importantly, Guilliman was currently quite alert to the Warp, while not being damn curious.
Furthermore, the Ultramarines have not yet seen the full anti-psychic power of the Death Guard. On the Endurance, the Wandering Knights are standing quietly, and countless ammunition are lying peacefully.
Hades thought that different drugs could be used for different situations. With their impartial attitude and slow sensitivity to psychic energy, the Extreme Marines could obviously be trusted a little by the Death Guard.
Hades would not admit that there was a filter for the Extreme Warriors in this. These were all reliable conclusions he had drawn after personal investigation in the past few days.
But in Hades' heart, there was a voice whispering that he was still betting that this was the official history line he was familiar with. Even though some details didn't match now, the various legions and primarchs were still as described in the official history.
No way, there is no way someone would really travel through time, or travel to a secondary fan fiction world.
Besides, if the Four Gods really use flying bricks with great force, a small information gap alone will not cause much trouble. The real winner will still have to be strength and tactics.
On the other hand, because of similar information and positions, after realizing what Hades really values, Mortarion's attitude towards these terms became quite vague.
Mortarion looked at Guilliman again and again. This time the Lord of Death was attentive. Mortarion began to quickly read the relevant information about the Ultramarines.
Gradually, he seemed to understand what Hades meant.
If the opponent is unaware of the anti-psychic properties of the Death Guard, then they will continue to conceal it; but if the Death Guard exposes its anti-psychic forces due to war, and the opponent also witnesses the abnormalities of the Warp, then the Death Guard will remind the opponent of the dangers of the Warp and leave some anti-wizard means for the opponent.
I see.
In fact, even when facing Horus, Mortarion was doing his best to leave warning signs for his brother.
It was a pity that the Death Guard had not developed the black bullet at that time. Mortarion thought silently that perhaps giving each brother a black bullet would be a good choice. At least they could have a certain ability to defend against the warp.
Unfortunately, the main material of the black bullet is still the Untouchables, and the Untouchables are still too scarce. Mortarion listened to the conversation between Hades and Guilliman and glanced at Hades unconsciously.
I'm stuck. I really have no more time for today. I've been updating for at least three consecutive days... _(:з」∠)_
Then I will start the next legion and just write a few transitions and then I can start it... Spoiler alert, it's the Night Lords... But the work I borrowed Curze's character from was the Biographies of the Primarchs, and the timeline of that was later.
(End of this chapter)