Night Lords

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

"Death is nothing compared to vindication."

The Night Lords are one of the most iconic legions of Chaos Space Marines in Warhammer 40,000. Even before the Horus Heresy broke out they were infamous for their brutal attacks (which often involved excessive amounts of force) and terror tactics. Essentially, think of an entire army of eight-foot-tall genetically enhanced supersoldiers in power armour, and now they incorporate all the darkest aspects of Batman filtered through the characteristic grim darkness of the far future. This will only come a fraction of the way to summarising what the Night Lords are, but for our purposes it will do.

The Night Lords were originally the subject of only one book, Lord of the Night (2005) by Simon Spurrier, which presented an alternate interpretation of their history where their Primarch and progenitor, the Night Haunter, was a highly focused individual who shunned the accolades that were heaped upon his peers. Instead, he prosecuted his own brutal kind of warfare precisely because none of the other Legions would and was loyal to the Emperor up until the end, even when his father had abandoned him. This interpretation, bolstered by the quality of the book, proved popular and enjoyed renewed interest with the release of Aaron Dembski-Bowden's Soul Hunter series, which includes, in chronological order, included the short story Shadow Knight (2009), the novel Soul Hunter (2010), the audio drama Throne of Lies (2010), the novel Blood Reaver (2011), the short story The Core (2010), and finally the final novel Void Stalker (2012).


The following tropes are common to many or all entries in the Night Lords franchise.
For tropes specific to individual installments, visit their respective work pages.

Lord of the Night contains the following tropes:

  • Berserk Button: If not for the narrator explicitly telling the reader that Cog is not an Ogryn, one would assume he is one from the description. People regularly make this mistake, making Cog extremely angry.
  • Blessed with Suck: Mita, who has incredible psychic powers but is treated like garbage by the people she protects and constantly thrust into danger. By extension, all psykers in the book are in this boat, as this is a general W40k theme.
  • Black and Gray Morality: The whole book, really. The good guys are often worse than the bad guys. The bad guys are even worse than that. Wait, why are we still being designated the bad guys?
  • Board to Death: When Zso Sahaal was uniting gangs and underhive elements into he personal army, he has the respective leaders brought to him and intimidated into swearing their people to his service. Then he kills them all at once, to keep power firmly in his control.
  • Knowledge Broker: Pavulti's trade after going renegade from the Mechanicum.
  • The Man Behind the Man: The Eldar also want the Corona Nox, and to this end a Seer Council took control of an Inquisitor to look for it.
  • Manipulative Bastard: All part of The Reveal.
  • Mob War: Sahaal orchestrates one to delay the Inquisitor's retinue while he searches for the Corona Nox.
  • The Power of Trust
  • Requisite Royal Regalia: The Corona Nox.
  • The Reveal: Just between you and me, it wouldn't be much of a reveal if I spelled it out here.
  • Revenge by Proxy
  • Smoke Shield: The result of Zso Sahaal's attempt to kill Krieg Acerbus at point blank range with a holy bolter given to him by the Primarch of his chapter. He emerges from the smoke completely unharmed and backhands Sahaal across the room, cracking his power armor.
  • Succession Crisis: A very large one after the death of the Night Haunter lead to the start of the story.
  • Suicide by Cop: Inquisitor Kaustus was under control of the Eldar throughout the entire book and was waiting until he could break free or for Mita to kill him.
  • Twist Ending: Played straight because it probably wasn't the twist you were expecting.
  • Too Kinky to Torture: Being a cogboy would already mean that the knowledge broker can switch his pain receptors as desired, but Sahaal's interrogation of him shows that he takes some pleasure or satisfaction from the whole thing.
  • What Measure Is a Non-Human?: This takes place within the Imperium of Man, even the nominally human Cog is heavily discriminated against.
  • What Year Is This?: Sahaal asked this of one of his victims, as an afterthought, he asked what millenium it was, as well. He first thought he had been gone longer than expected, but he was completely taken aback when he found out that he was gone not a few centuries, but for ten millenia.


These Tropes have come for you! Tropes demonstrated by the Talos trilogy:

  • A Good Way to Die: Double Subverted with Xarl's "death" in the Blood Reaver epilogue
    • Then played straight by Xarl in Void Reaver.
  • Aerith and Bob: First Claw circa the Great Crusade: Talos, Cyrion, Xarl, Sar Zell and Vandred.
  • Always Night: A defining characteristic of Nostramo, and by extension The Covenant of Blood and the Echo of Damnation.
  • Animal Motifs: Sharks are often used in reference to anything voidgoing.
    • There are a number of bird-of-prey motifs for the Night Lords, such as their use of Raptors and referring to their squads as "[X]th Claw".
    • Lucoryphus acts more animalistic than human.
  • Antagonist Title: Blood Reaver, and apparently Void Stalker.
  • Atop a Mountain of Corpses: The parts of the Mausoleum on Tsagualsa which weren't made of living flesh were generally statues of rockrete shaped from slain civilians.
    • Repeated on Tsagualsa when Talos returns there in Void Stalker.
  • Badass Baritone / Evil Sounds Deep: Demonstrated in Throne Of Lies, although Xarl, the most martial, is noticeably deeper than Talos, Cyrion and Mercutian.
  • Badass Boast: "Even in death I will avenge myself."
    • Additionally, from The Dark King CD: "Death haunts the darkness, and he knows. Your. Name."
    • In Blood Reaver, when Third Claw challenges First Claw, the former claims to outnumber the latter seven to five. Talos, wanting Third Claw to back off, replies that one of the five is Xarl.
  • Bad Boss: To be expected in the 40K universe, but surprisingly averted in the case of the Night Lord's slaves. Yes, they are enslaved to vicious demi-gods who commit acts of horror and slaughter as standard procedure, but the Night Lords still treat their slaves and crew better than other chaos legions (and possibly a few Imperial organisations).
    • However, the Night Lords will not hesitate to do something horrible to their slaves if they misbehave.
  • Black Speech: Nostraman, although subverted in that it isn't as much a language of evil, as a language spoken primarily by those who regularly do evil.
  • Band of Brothers: Inherent in the nature of Astartes, but Zig Zagged throughout Tenth Company, given the nature of the VIII Legion (although that is not strictly atypical in the Traitor Legions). First Claw plays it straight, despite the immense suspicion and near hatred some members have for each other.
  • Battle in the Rain: The covers of Soul Hunter and Void Stalker.
  • Bittersweet Ending: The ending of Void Stalker. All members of First Claw, apart from Variel, are dead, but they succeeded in taking down a Phoenix Lord and Octavia and Septimus manage to get away alive.
  • Blood From the Mouth: Ruven attempting to use his powers after they were bound by the Red Corsairs for months. Probably also overlaps with Psychic Nosebleed.
    • Talos, as Variel is convinced that his body is rejecting the Night Lords' geneseed.
  • Boarding Party: First Claw boards the Imperial ship The Sword of the God Emperor and proceeds to slaughter the bridge crew in Soul Hunter. They also did this on a space station in Blood Reaver.
    • The favor is later returned to them by The Blood Angels.
    • ...which they return to the Red Corsairs aboard the Echo of Damnation...
    • ...before having the favor returned to them again by the Genesis Marines.
  • Bridal Carry: After Septimus and Octavia finally admit their love to each other, he scoops her up in his arms and would have carried her back to his quarters if the plot hadn't intervened.
  • Broken Faceplate: Talos' helm at the opening of Blood Reaver, echoed in the damage to the helm of the Marine Errant.
  • Bullet Hell: First Claw's duel with Third Claw.
    • Mercutian's heavy bolter.
  • Canis Latinicus: Ave Dominvs Nox: allegedly, Hail the Lord of the Night. (it should be Ave Domine Noctem)
  • City Noir: Nostramo Quintus--the city that had spawned of the Night Haunter, Talos and Xarl--took this trope practically to 11 before Curze took control and after he left to lead his legion.
  • A Chat with Satan: Talos' encounter with the Ruinous Powers in Soul Hunter. Originally intended to initiate a Deal with the Devil, but Talos' Heroic Willpower twisted it into this.
    • When Talos speaks with Ruven's dead remains... kinda'.
  • Cold-Blooded Torture: The Legion's hat alongside being The Dreaded, as demonstrated extensively in Void Stalker to the point where Talos weaponizes it into an astropath-annihilating pulse. Put to use explicitly in Throne of Lies and Blood Reaver and used in Soul Hunter during an Imagine Spot.
  • Cold Flames: Used by the Eldar to ignite Cyrion's corpse in Talos' epilogue nightmare, Variel isn't as lucky and dies much more slowly.
  • Combat Medic: Talos and Variel. Talos doesn't really do much medic stuff any more, even by 40k's standards of the word. Variel on the other hand, does and still finds the time to be a murderous badass.
  • Computer Voice: Of the masculine type for servitors in Throne of Lies, The Covenant of Blood itself is supposed to sound more gender neutral.
  • Cool Chair: Konrad Curze's Osseous Throne in the Tsagualsan mausoleum/fortress
    • The command throne in The Covenant of Blood and The Echo of Damnation
  • Cool Starship: The Covenant of Blood
  • Coup De Grace: Talos beheading J'sara in Throne of Lies. It plays out a bit like a Mercy Kill, but given Talos was the one doing the torturing that left her in that much pain, the mercy is lessened somewhat.
    • The Genesis Marines' company captain, delivered by Xarl, of course.
    • After half her body is blown up by Talos, Jain Zar is crushed under Malcharion's Dreadnought feet; "I...HAVE TO FINISH EVERYTHING...FOR THAT BOY".
  • Creation Sequence: The first half of Shadow Knight, depicting Talos' biological and mental transition from an accomplished child thief in the slums of Nostramo Quintus to a hardened junior Space Marine watching his homeworld go up in an Earthshattering Kaboom.
  • Cyberpunk with a Chance of Rain: Talos' dream flashback to his childhood in the slums of Nostramo Quintus.
  • The Dead Have Names: Invoked by The Exalted of a all people.
  • Dead Person Conversation: Talos' dream conversation with Ruven's crucified skeleton, doubles as A Chat with Satan
  • Deadpan Snarker: A lot of Night Lords do this, given that Nostramans seem to be known for their poetic linguistics. Xarl in particular does this a lot.
  • Decapitation Presentation: Most commonly Uzas, but other members of 10th company have been known to do it.
  • Determinator: Daemon Prince Caleb, who survives being sucked out into space, being exposed directly to the Warp, being shot in the throat with a shotgun, and having a chainaxe thrown in his face!
    • First Claw also has its moments, most noticeably The duel with Third Claw, after which Talos sustained severe enough damage to temporarily blind him and eventually merit a new arm and Talos' nightmare sequence at the end of Blood Reaver which features Mercutian fighting past the point of death and running on sheer hatred and brotherhood to defend Cyrion and Variel's corpses for a few moments, and Uzas pulling a One-Man Army maneuver physically impossible even for a Space Marine.
  • Do Not Taunt Cthulhu: Briefly invoked in both books. Talos ends up meeting two of the most powerful Chaos Warlords in the galaxy (including Abbadon himself). Despite knowing how powerful they are, Talos is remarkably casual about voicing opinions that would see anyone slaughtered in a moment. There are mitigating circumstances in both cases; Talos genuinely finds Abbadon a broken, twisted warlord with delusion of grandeur (even mentioning the consistent lack of success in all his Black Crusades) and in the other case, he is deliberately being cocky to endear himself to Lufgt Huron.
  • Dramatic Irony: Often hits like a brick during flashbacks to the golden age of the Night Lords.
  • Dramatic Space Drifting: Used in Soul Hunter to emphasize how little The Exalted cares for the lives of First Claw after it decides the fastest way to liberate them from The Sword of the God Emperor is to blow a hole in the side and let the difference in pressure suck them out into the void for easy collection.
  • Duel to the Death: Between First Claw and Third Claw over Uzas' Khornate delusion-fueled slaying of their sergeant.
  • Dying Moment of Awesome: Vandred reassuming his body and taking five or so Red Corsair ships with him and the Covenant at the end of Blood Reaver
    • Xarl versus the Genesis Marines captain.
  • Eating the Eye Candy: Maruc in a bar in Hell's Iris. Septimus warns him against looking too hard at anything living on a semi corrupted planet.
  • Establishing Character Moment: Talos' seizure in the opening Soul Hunter
    • Variel's handling of surgery at his introduction in Blood Reaver
    • In a flashback, when Uzas takes the freshly-killed Sar Zell's chainaxe, seemingly cementing First Claw's hatred for him ever since.
  • Everybody's Dead, Dave: Talos' nightmare in Blood Reavers epilogue
  • Evil Cannot Comprehend Good
  • Eye Scream: Talos scoops out J'sara's eyes in the process of torturing her for information in Throne of Lies.
    • He also blinded M'shen with his acidic spit in the process of hunting her down and earning his epithet.
      • Throne of Lies mentions that J'sara and M'shen sound nearly identical. The eye damage may be a Meaningful Echo.
  • Flaying Alive: Done with great glee to a loyalist Astartes in the opening of Blood Reaver.
    • Also mentioned as a means of punishment that the 10th company use to keep their slaves and / or brothers in line.
    • Taken Up to Eleven when ten million people are flayed on Tsagualsa in the first half of Void Stalker.
  • Four-Temperament Ensemble: Soul Hunter era First Claw. Played for the worst of each humor, because to do otherwise wouldn't be Grimdark.
    • Sanguine -- Uzas. His emotions are all or nothing; he's almost universally violent, irritated or sullen when he isn't an unreadable shell. Thinks only of himself, which is how he became corrupt in the first place. He himself admits he all but runs on a slow, seething rage.
    • Choleretic -- Xarl. Cynic, chronic complainer, suspicious pessimist, and yet somehow a very capable Lancer for Talos. Throws his whole life into the sword and it shows in every sense of the word.
    • Melencholic -- Talos. His romanticism of his Legion's past and the power his prophetic abilities have over his life have left him worn thin all around. Known to brood over both. His stubbornness won't let him put anything less than his heart and soul into what he does however, and it's nearly killed him before.
    • Phlematic -- Cyrion. Possibly the most easy going of the group, and the most vocally distressed at the state of the Legion, although it also means he stands out the least in the shambling wreck of a squad.
  • Friendship Moment: A rather grim example. When Talos is shredded following the duel with Third Claw, he reaches out first to Cyrion, then Septimus, Mercution, and he surprises himself by asking for Xarl as well.
    • Cemented even deeper by Talos' harvesting Xarl's geneseed himself by hand and giving him a makeshift Viking Funeral in his own quarters. He realizes many commendatory, honorable or brotherly things could be said over Xarl's corpse, but the truest thing was that if there was a hell, Talos would join him there soon.
  • General Failure: Discussed in a bit of back-and-forth between Talos and one Abaddon the Despoiler on why his Black Crusades haven't yet succeeded.
    • Talos himself isn't much of a general when given the chance to lead, which is part of why he doesn't like leading.
  • Ghostly Chill: Indicative of the presence of a Neverborn.
  • Heel Realization: Septimus has one while going off to kill disruptive new inductees into The Covenant's crew in exchange for a lasrifle for Maruc.
  • I Gave My Word: Why Night Lords let their primarch be assassinated.
  • I Owe You My Life: Variel to Talos
  • Impaled Palm: A minor part of the damage to the crucified, flayed and mutilated loyalist Astartes in the opening of Blood Reaver
  • Insignia Rip Off Ritual: Every piece of scavenged Imperial material must have the insignia removed or (in the case of warplate, where this would be too difficult), ritually defaced.
  • Insistent Terminology: The contention between the two of the mare brought up when Mercutian insists to Xarl that 10th company did not steal from Ganges Station, they "liberated materials".
  • Intercontinuity Crossover: With the Salamander saga in the short stories, The Core and Promethius Requiem in the Fear the Alien anthology.
    • Zso Sahaal can be seen in a number of Talos' flashbacks, and Acerbus is mentioned at least once
  • It Gets Easier: Shadow Knight and Soul Hunter both feature Talos' memory of his first kill at the age of 12. He's more contemplative than anything after the fact, while his unblooded friend Xarl, the future Blood Knight and Master Swordsman, is the one freaked out.
  • It Was a Gift: Subverted when Talos loses his bolter and no less a hero than Malcharion the War Sage casually hands over his own as a replacement. Despite Talos' initial misgivings over a Legion relic, Malcharion points out that he is now a Dreadnought and doesn't need it.
    • Occasionally the human characters will barter around legion coins, signifying the legion's protection over that person. The voidborn's parents are given one, not that it helps.
  • Job Title: Soul Hunter
  • Journey to the Center of the Mind
  • Last Stand: Vandred's death
  • Make an Example of Them: A core part of the Nostraman/VIII Legion doctrine, demonstrated with the stringing up of the loyalist Astartes over Blackmarket in Blood Reaver and the crucifixion of Ruven's corpse on the bridge of The Echo of Damnation
  • Made a Slave: Fates of Septimus, Eurydice (later Octavia) and Maruc
  • Malicious Slander
  • Mauve Shirt: Maruc
  • Meaningful Rename: Talos renames all of his slaves for (presumably) High Gothic ordinal numbers.
    • Konrad Curze is said to have nicknamed a number of his brethren.
  • Meaningful Echo: "It was a curse, to be a god's son"
    • "Death is nothing compared to vindication." Echoed by Talos, whose actions in Void Stalker seem to echo Konrad Curze's end-of-life breakdown. Only Talos seems like he's going to take the entire 10th Company down with him...
  • Meat Moss: The Screaming Gallery in the mausoleum on Tsagualsa. Made of the fused flesh of hundreds of shrieking faces which were kept alive with fleshcraft for the sole purpose of being both terrifying and Badass. Konrad Curze was not particularly fond of cheery design.
    • Some parts of the lower decks in the Echo of Damnation feature steel walls mutating into flesh due to the warp mutations the ship went under when the Red Corsairs had it.
  • The Mole: Septimus at the start of Blood Reaver.
  • Moment Killer: Cyrion acts as one between Septimus and Octavia before they admit their feelings to each other. After they do, and Septimus is in the process of Bridal Carrying Octavia to his quarters, Talos interrupts them once again.
    • First Claw eventually stops cock-blocking them, though, given that Talos's vision in the Epilogue shows Octavia is pregnant...and running from the Inquisition.
    • By Void Stalker, it seems that the cock-blocking was on purpose, as if Talos beating Septimus half to death as if he should've known better is anything to go by. Justified, considering Octavia is the 10th Company's sole navigator and they can't get very far (at least no FTL) without her.
  • Monster From Beyond the Veil: Octavia killing people with her Warp Eye tends to pull ghosts from the Void back into the vicinity. This results in shambling, in(post)humanly tough zombies called Neverborn.
  • My Sensors Indicate You Want to Tap That: Ruven notes he can smell Septimus' attraction to Octavia.
    • Talos's super-hearing is what first alerts him to Octavia's pregnancy. His super-smelling would've tipped him off first, but, especially ignominious for a Combat Medic, what he doesn't know about human pregnancy could fill a battle barge.
      • Given Crusade-era Astartes probably weren't trained in obstetrics, it isn't that unusual
  • Named Weapons: Well...
    • Aurum, the power sword Talos stole from the Blood Angels
    • Anethema, his old bolter
    • Mordax Tenebrae, Zso Sahaal's bolter
    • Executioner, Xarl's chainsword
  • Nay Theist: The Night Lords' theology in a nutshell, applying in equal measure to both the Emperor and the chaos gods. The only reason some Night Lords even dignify the chaos gods is to momentarily channel their power and then abandon them when their blessings are no longer needed.
  • Nice to the Waiter: Talos In Soul Hunter.
  • Nightmare Sequence: Talos' dream of the Eldar at the end of Blood Reaver
  • Not Me This Time: Uzas is held guilty for killing Arkiah, the father of the Voidborn, despite his constant lucid insistance that he did not.
  • Not So Different
  • Not-So-Safe Harbor: Hell's Iris. The name alone should be enough explanation.
  • Noun Verber: Soul Hunter, Blood Reaver and now Void Stalker. Also, Night Haunter.
  • Obligatory War Crime Scene: You know the Blood Angels? The guys we've been saying are one of the nicest Chapters of Space Marines? They kill the Void-born and her mother during the boarding of the Covenant of Blood. It doesn't even appear to have been by a Death Company brother, which might be excusable.
    • This troper didn't even find that particularly surprising. Like all the crew of the Covenant of Blood, The Void-born and her mother were heretics and traitors. Besides, the Night Lords are big on Trying to Catch Me Fighting Dirty. Where you or I see mercy, they see opportunity.
  • One Head Taller: Septimus to Octavia
  • 108: When the crew of The Covenant of Blood finds Eurydice on a shard of Nostramo, she is scooped up along with one hundred and seven servitors.
  • Pardon My Klingon: Septimus swears in nothing but Nostraman, even when speaking Gothic for Octavia's benefit.
  • People Jars: The titan princeps in Deltrian's posession.
  • Persona Non Grata: Subverted, The Covenant's populace is surprised they aren't banned from Hell's Iris.
  • Phlegmings: Shows up about as often as Tears of Blood, usually as a milder version. Bonus points for most incidents involving acidic spit.
    • Uzas drools near constantly as a result of his Khornate corruption.
    • The Exalted drools as a result of being physically incapable of closing its mouth, which in turn is the result of daemonic possession and Warp-induced mutation.
    • In two separate books Talos has found a human psychically fused to a machine who drooled when the link was damaged.
    • Ruven drools constantly as a prisoner of the Red Corsairs, as he is chained in an uncomfortable position, psychically bound and perpetually in a state of mild Mind Rape.
    • On at least one occasion Talos has begun drooling in rage.
    • The Hamadrya does this on occasion, even its spit in acidic.
  • Picky People Eater: Uzas takes great joy in eating the geneseed of his fallen enemies on multiple occasions. One could take it solely as a sign of his status as the resident Ax Crazy, but Talos makes mention of the practice in a "The Reason You Suck" Speech to a fallen dreadnought.
    • Aaron Dembski-Bowden eventually confirmed this as a Legion-wide tradition.
    • When confronting the father of the Voidborn about his desire for revenge, Talos tells the man he ate the heart of the Blood Angel who killed his daughter, and that that should satisfy vengeance.
  • Praetorian Guard: The Atramentar, one of the results of the Terminator First Company fracturing into bodyguards around other company captains after Zso Sahaal inherited Sevatar's position.
  • Protagonist Journey to Villain: Used as a framing device in Shadow Knight.
  • Power Limiter: In the form of a runic collar on Ruven while he is held captive by the Red Corsairs.
  • Radio Voice: Used in Throne Of Lies to indicate vox transmissions.
  • Rape as Drama: To Octavia In Soul Hunter. By Blood Reaver, she's pretty well adjusted, but Maruc mentions to Septimus that the trauma isn't completely gone.
  • Ravens and Crows: Lord of the Night recounts Zso Sahaal's memory of Curze appearing to his men clad only in a cloak of raven feathers following the Siege of Terra. Additionally, one of Sevatar's epithets was "Prince of Crows".
  • Room Full of Crazy: Any place Talos sleeps or has his prophethetic seizures in turns into this.
    • Uzas' chamber is shown to be very messy version of this. In the entire room there is nothing but rubbish, a small altar to Khorne made mostly of skulls, half cleaned skulls, and the waste products of said cleaning.
  • Salvage Pirates: The 10th company/Warband of the Exalted. Depicted in Shadow Knight and mentioned elsewhere upon occasion. Having (for the most part) rejected the gifts of Chaos, they are denied the Offscreen Villain Dark Matter given to most of the traitor legions.
  • Sand in My Eyes: A variant with Melcharion the War Sage. Talos claims that he serves as an inspiration to everyone else, to which Melcharion replies that all he did was shout loudly and kill things. His dreadnought body then makes a rattling crunching noise which he claims is his cannon's autoloaders cycling. He's actually laughing instead.
  • Sapient Ship: The Covenant of Blood has a machine spirit of its own and it doesn't like or trust its new navigator.
    • The Echo of Damnation is a little more accommodating, but more as a feral, eager beast that Octavia has to keep restrained.
  • Sequel Hook: The epilouge of Blood Reaver
    • Talos' visions of fighting Eldar, which as of the end of Blood Reaver are never realized.
  • Shadow Archetype: In Soul Hunter, there's a theme of the Night Lords being this to the Blood Angels. Although in terms of tactical doctrine, they're more of a shadow archetype to the Raven Guard.
    • Bizarrely enough, Night Haunter is this to Konrad Curze, making the man his own shadow archetype.
  • Shattered World: The VIII legion homeworld of Nostramo following the Earthshattering Kaboom at the end of The Dark King. The Talos saga opens with Eurydice being found on one of the remaining shards.
    • A moon around Tsagualsa, which Talos shoots with planet-busting torpedoes, allowing them to blow up a nearby retreating Genesis Marine battle barge that hid behind it.
  • Shout-Out Theme Naming: Most things related to the VIII legion are named for something related to Joseph Conrad or his works, when they don't relate to fear in some way.
  • Soiled City on a Hill: Nostramo as a whole upon Curze's return.
  • Space Pirates: The Red Corsairs, who appear in Blood Reaver. The 10th company has to resort to this occasionally, much to Talos' disgust.
  • The Squad: First Claw is a very dysfunctional example.
  • Take Up My Sword: Talos' acquisition of the former Captain's bolter makes it even harder to deny his suitability as a leader.
  • Tarot Troubles: Konrad Curze regularly read Nostramo Quintus' version of the Tarot. Following the annihilation of the planet at the end of The Dark King it only bodes ill for him.
  • Tears of Blood: Seems to show up a lot
    • The Exalted produces black, oily bloody tears whenever it attempts to smile.
    • Lucoryphus is constantly shedding them, leading to his epithet.
    • Ruven, when exposed to light too bright for Nostraman eyes (although presumably not too much for a someone not born on a night world).
    • When psychically stressed, Octavia will cry blood from her third eye.
  • There Is No Kill Like Overkill: The Night Lords were driven from Tsagualsa by the Ultramarines and their successor chapters. All of their successor chapters, meaning about two-thirds of all the Space Marines in the Imperium.
  • This Is Unforgivable!: After Uzas kills fourteen serfs/slaves, some servitors, and the sergeant of Third Claw, just mere days after getting his slaughter on at Ganges station, the members of First Claw debate what to do. The consensus is kill Uzas, and Talos tells them that the Exalted has ordered Uzas's death, so if they spare him, they better have a damn good reason. They get one when the more numerous Third Claw comes looking for payback.
    • Once Talos finds out that Septimus got Octavia knocked up.
  • Three-Point Landing: Talos on the cover of Void Stalker.
  • Through the Eyes of Madness: Talos' visions, and Uzas' Khornate fugues when he's given some perspective in Blood Reaver.
    • A less insane variant for Deltrian in Void Stalker.
  • Thrown Out the Airlock: Threatened to Octavia in Throne of Lies if she continues to make trouble with The Exalted.
  • Under New Management: Zso Sahaal replacing Sevatar as First Captain after the Siege of Terra. The majority of the Legion did not appreciate this.
    • When Talos takes (unwilling) command.
    • Void Stalker explains that Night Lords have traditionally very poor track records at uniting their entire legion under one commander since Kurze's assassination. Their legion is just too fractured, so it's not like it's entirely Sahaal's fault.
  • Unusually Uninteresting Sight: For a small and seemingly insignificant company like 10th, they sure seem to run into a lot of big name chaos marine commanders (Abaddon in Soul Hunter, Huron Blackheart in Blood Reaver).
    • Possibly explicable due to Talos' rare gift as a prophet untainted by the Warp.
  • Theme Naming: Many things important to the Night Lords are named for the works of Joseph Conrad.
  • Vice City: The city of Nostramo Quintus
  • Viking Funeral / Burn, Baby, Burn: Following Xarl's fatal Heroic Sacrifice in Void Stalker, Talos harvests his brother's geneeseed by hand in his own quarters and incinerates the corpse and everything in the room with a looted flamer, telling Xarl he'd see him in hell soon.
  • We Can Rebuild Him: Huron Blackheart, Septimus following a run in with Black Legion slaves in Soul Hunter, Talos after the duel with Third Claw.
  • "Well Done, Son" Guy: Most of the legion.
  • What Happened to the Mouse?: Cyrion's Slaaneshi gift isn't brought up at all in Blood Reaver. It gets brought up in Void Stalker, by Lucoryphus of all people.
  • What You Are in the Dark: The Night Haunter does not agree with this trope.
  • Where I Was Born and Razed: Night Haunter destroyed Nostramo, the Night Lords did little more than watch.
  • Wild Child: Curze raised himself on Nostramo. He subverted the trope, but that's because he was a Primarch.
  • Windows of the Soul: Throughout the franchise, but most notably in Savage Weapons, the most obvious indicator of Konrad Curze's growing madness and eventual Superpower Meltdown is the continual "fever bright" state of his eyes.
  • Womb Level: The mausoleum/palace on Tsagualsa is an unusual variation; it's made of an amalgamation of thousands of living human corpses as opposed to one creature.
  • The Worf Effect: Xarl, the most skilled combatant of the Claw, is the first to die against the Eldar in Talos' vision at the end of Blood Reaver.
    • When the rest of First Claw (sans Xarl at that point) attempt to fight the heavily-armed Genesis Marine captain. Then Xarl shows up and evens up the score.
  • Wretched Hive: Nostramo (and later Tsagualsa) on a planetary level
  • You!: Ruven is unable to say anything else to Talos as he dies
  • You Shall Not Pass: Vandred holding off the Red Corsair armada so the Echo of Damnation and the surviving portions of Tenth Company can escape.
  • You Should Have Died Instead: Cyrion says this to Uzas in a half-joking manner before a boarding action, wishing Uzas had died in a previous raid instead of the apparently uncorrupted Sar Zell.
    • We later see exactly how this went down in a two-chapter-long flashback in Void Stalker. Sar Zell was gunned down by Ultramarines as First Claw tried to board their Thunderhawk, after which then-tagalong-sergeant Uzas added insult to injury by unceremoniously claiming Sar Zell's chainaxe. No one was thrilled.