JE CHERCHE UN LIVRE

"That will give us ninety seconds of combat runtime. Then we fall."

She threw Malachar into the burning wreckage of his own command platform and turned the Panzer Paladin toward the rising sun. The suit’s joints seized. Its visor flickered. Step by grinding step, it walked until it could walk no more.

She hurled the dissolving greatsword into a third demon, pinning it to a rock face. The blade shattered into luminous fragments. Without pausing, the Paladin stomped forward and wrenched a war-pike from a fresh corpse. "Gloom Lance, class-B. Leech property. Interesting."

Ariane had lost her squad to those blades. She had lost her voice screaming into a dead comms channel. All that remained was the Panzer Paladin and its strange, sacred function: to wield the weapons of fallen enemies.

Inside the cockpit, a cold space no larger than a coffin, Pilot Ariane pressed her palm against the neural interface. The suit’s spirit—a blunt, ancient entity named Flint—rumbled in her mind. "Left knee actuator is redlining. Shoulder cannon depleted. We have three minutes, maybe four."

It fell to one knee in a field of wildflowers no demon had bothered to burn.

Panzer Paladin File

"That will give us ninety seconds of combat runtime. Then we fall."

She threw Malachar into the burning wreckage of his own command platform and turned the Panzer Paladin toward the rising sun. The suit’s joints seized. Its visor flickered. Step by grinding step, it walked until it could walk no more. Panzer Paladin

She hurled the dissolving greatsword into a third demon, pinning it to a rock face. The blade shattered into luminous fragments. Without pausing, the Paladin stomped forward and wrenched a war-pike from a fresh corpse. "Gloom Lance, class-B. Leech property. Interesting." "That will give us ninety seconds of combat runtime

Ariane had lost her squad to those blades. She had lost her voice screaming into a dead comms channel. All that remained was the Panzer Paladin and its strange, sacred function: to wield the weapons of fallen enemies. Its visor flickered

Inside the cockpit, a cold space no larger than a coffin, Pilot Ariane pressed her palm against the neural interface. The suit’s spirit—a blunt, ancient entity named Flint—rumbled in her mind. "Left knee actuator is redlining. Shoulder cannon depleted. We have three minutes, maybe four."

It fell to one knee in a field of wildflowers no demon had bothered to burn.