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Xenos
Xenos.jpg
Author Dan Abnett
Performer Toby Longworth
Publisher Black Library
Series Inquisitor, Eisenhorn
Followed by Malleus
Released May 2001
Pages 320
Length 9 hours 56 minutes
Editions 2001 softcover:
ISBN 1-84154-146-X

2011 ebook:
ISBN 9780857870698

2020 softcover:
ISBN 13: 978 1 84970 872 2

Xenos is the first novel in a series by Dan Abnett featuring Inquisitor Gregor Eisenhorn.

The novel was selected by David Annandale in May 2014 as part of Black Library's "Author's Choice" marathon.[1]

Cover Description[1]

The Inquisition moves amongst mankind like an avenging shadow, striking down the enemies of humanity with uncompromising ruthlessness. When he finally corners an old foe, Inquisitor Gregor Eisenhorn is drawn into a sinister conspiracy. As events unfold and he gathers allies - and enemies - Eisenhorn faces a vast interstellar cabal and the dark power of daemons, all racing to recover an arcane text of abominable power: an ancient tome known as the Necroteuch.

Synopsis

Spoiler!
This page contains spoilers for: Xenos (Novel)

Part One: Hubris

240.M41: After years of pursuit, Gregor Eisenhorn has finally run Murdin Eyclone to ground on Hubris, inside the enormous cryonic vaults where the majority of the planet's elites spend the nine-month winter season. Eyclone manages to kill Eisenhorn's retainer, Lores Vibben, but Eisenhorn corners him in one of the vaults and shoots him dead with Vibben's pistol, though not before Eyclone has triggered a systemic failure of several hundred stasis cells, killing their inhabitants.[2a][2b]

Eisenhorn is placed under arrest by the planet's regency government, accusing him of driving Eyclone to Hubris, but he archly informs them that Eyclone arrived on Hubris well ahead of Eisenhorn, and his sabotage of the cryonic cells was no spur-of-the-moment act of spite, but planned in advance. Both pieces of evidence clearly indicate that Eyclone had some higher purpose in coming to Hubris, and it is essential that Eisenhorn discover what that was. The acting governor relents, but insists on Arbites Chastener Fischig accompanying Eisenhorn.[2c]

Eyclone's trail takes them to a local tenement block, where they find the last of his hired thugs amusing themselves with a "pleasure girl", who grabs a dropped gun and shoots one of them with it in the ensuing firefight, fancying herself to have saved Eisenhorn's life. Eisenhorn is surprised to realize that the girl, Alizebeth Bequin, is a pariah, an incredibly rare variant of humans that have no psychic imprint, and nullify psychic attacks. Eisenhorn asks her to join his retinue.[2d]

Eyclone's communications logs reveal that he was planning on stowing away on a ship bound for Gudrun, the sector capital, and contain cryptic references to "the Pontius." Eisenhorn's savant, Uber Aemos, rattles off a list of people and places with that name, but one seems too much of a coincidence: Pontius Glaw, one of the sector's most infamous heretics, though he has been dead for centuries, and his family, House Glaw, is still one of the most prominent aristocratic houses on Gudrun.[2e]

Part Two: Gudrun

Eisenhorn and his retinue, still accompanied by Fischig, travel from Hubris to Gudrun aboard the Essene, captained by Tobius Maxilla.[2f][2g] Upon reaching Gudrun, the Essene is inspected by a Naval team, which attempts to kill Eisenhorn.[2h] Managing to find Tanokbrey, the Rogue Trader who transported Eyclone, Eisenhorn attempts to capture him, but Tankobrey is killed during the chase.[2i] That night, Eisenhorn is ambushed by Commodus Voke, another inquisitor who has been investigating House Glaw. The two inquisitors ultimately agree to work together, with Eisenhorn infiltrating the House accompanied by Voke's interrogator Heldane.[2j]

Disguising himself as a grain merchant named Farchaval, Eisenhorn and his team infiltrate House Glaw under guise of a trade deal. Sneaking around at night, Eisenhorn discovers the Pontius, seemingly an oversized uncut gemstone, but is captured immediately afterwards. Eisenhorn is tortured and interrogated, with the damage caused to his face making him physically unable to smile. The entire group is imprisoned by House Glaw, except for Betancore. Still badly injured, Eisenhorn and his team are forced into a pit fight against several carnodons. Heldane is badly wounded, but Eisenhorn manages to release a carnodon into the crowd, causing a distraction, before the group is rescued by Inquisitorial forces under Voke who were alerted of the group's plight by Betancore.[2k]

House Glaw is entirely destroyed in the aftermath, but the leaders manage to escape off-world. In addition, a frigate wing of Battlefleet Scarus commanded by Captain Estrum took to the warp when the explosion of a spaceship sowed confusion amongst the vessels gathered in preparation of the Ophidian Crusade which, combined with Urisel Glaw's dogged resistance to torture and a sudden outbreak of unrest throughout the subsector, leads to the conclusion that a broader, more terrible scheme is afoot.[2l]

Part Three: The Necroteuch

Thus Eisenhorn and retinue head for Damask, a Frontier World where they find an excavation seemingly under the supervision of a Chaos Space Marine.[2m] Learning of the enslavement of the planet's population by escaped prisoner Rhizor, they find out that Estrum's rogue wing has appeared in orbit and decide to return to the excavation site, where they find traces of the Xenos known as saruthi: unsettlingly asymmetrical eight-sided tiles which the slavers mean to extract.[2n] Discovered by the runaway leaders of the Gudrun conspiracy and their allies, the inquisitorial ground team barely manage to escape after a tense exchange with their foes and the Emperor's Children Traitor Astartes known as Mandragore Carrion.[2o] After eluding the traitors' void forces, they are joined by the Essene and set out in pursuit as Eisenhorn proffers his prize: "The Pontius", a crystallized psy-memory of the infamous Pontius Glaw, which he begins to interrogate.[2p]

Characters

Images

Trivia

Conflicting sources

  • In Chapter Seventeen, while discussing the lack of symmetry displayed by the saruthi species, Aemos makes reference to the tyranids, stating "All species - even the most obscene kinds like the tyranid - have some order of it."[2q] However, although tyranids had been encountered by the Imperium over the millennia, they were not formally classified under the name "tyranid" until after the destruction of the planet Tyran in 745.M41[3], well after the events of this novel take place.

See also

Sources

  • 1: Black Library (last accessed December 20 2018)
  • 2: Xenos (Novel):
    • 2a: One – A cold coming. Death in the dormant vaults. Some puritanical reflections.
    • 2b: Two – The dead awake. Betancore’s temper. Elucidations by Aemos.
    • 2c: Three – Nissemay Carpel. A light in endless darkness. The Pontius.
    • 2d: Four – The Sun-dome toured at speed. Thaw-view 12011. Questioning Saemon Crotes.
    • 2e: Five – Covered traces. The Glaws of Gudrun. Unwelcome companions.
    • 2f: Six – Divination by auto-seance. A dream. Joining the Essene.
    • 2g: Seven – With the master of the Essene. A farewell. Scrutiny.
    • 2h: Eight – A dozen killers. The procurator. Grain merchants from Hesperus.
    • 2i: Nine – At Dorsay. Market forces. In pursuit of Tanokbrey.
    • 2j: Ten – A conflict of jurisdiction. The House of Glaw. Stalking secrets.
    • 2k: Eleven – Revelations. The noble sport. Pacification 505.
    • 2l: Twelve – In the ruins of the great house. Murmurings. Uprising.
    • 2m: Thirteen – Damask. North Qualm. Sanctum.
    • 2n: Fourteen – A tale of repression. Rogue. Return to the flame hills.
    • 2o: Fifteen – Exposed in the midst of the foe. An ill-matched war. Flight.
    • 2p: Sixteen – Void Duel. Betancore’s last stand. Traces.
    • 2q: Seventeen – Discourses. Speculations on an unsymmetrical theme. Betrayal.
  • 3: Codex: Tyranids (5th Edition), pg. 8