Galactic Sapper wrote:The short window of action before the subject's own nervous system reasserts itself is mentioned explicitly in text. I just don't remember where.
It's one of those narration things that we know but the characters do not. The characters may have deduced something along those lines but they can't be completely confident in that knowledge without having seen it.
Only time I recall the short window being mentioned, is when Honor is explaining to the Andermani prince, and even then she admits up front it's only a theory about it being limited from her father. Who theorized that it does have a maximum duration, that it works on transferred muscle memory (similar to her prothestic arm) and that there's an upper limit to exactly how many movements can be programmed into the nanotech. You can stand in place and just swing your arm to shoot an entire room, or clear a street, but you can't program in the ability to duck & dodge and use any cover ... but they're only (Manticoran) theories and so far the Mesans themselves haven't actually stated ANY actual limitations beyond how difficult it is to find the proper carrier, and acquiring a sample of their blood/DNA and getting it to Mesa (and back) for the programming to be carried out.
Every actual case they can prove, or suspect the nanotech bodycontrol, the threat dies almost immediately.
-Hofschultze was gunned down by other Andermani bodyguards
-Havenite driver gunning down Webster on Earth simply stood in place to get gunned down
-Yves Grosclaude & Rajani both committed direct suicide, driving his aircar into a canyon wall at high speed and shooting his own head.
-we 'think' Crandall also committed suicide, although that may be a Weber standard red herring, since she shot herself in the BACK of the head and nobody else confessed to seeing anything. Possibly a red herring because why were even Solly Navy admirals carrying sidearms? They surrendered in the end, and they surely had to know Manticore would be boarding with battlearmored Marines (afaik hand pulsers aren't upto stopping full battlearmor)
-Tim Meares was a suicide in the same manner of the Havenite driver, he simply stood in place although in fairness, nobody (else) knew about the finger pulser so it's possible if he had succeeded in killing Honor he might have been released, or the compulsion may have ended the full-room gunning with releasing the trigger only long enough to point the armsman pulser into his own skull to ensure Meares died too (we don't know)
I don't remember even the Mesans mentioning if there's a time limit, but based on pretty much all prior (known) usages of the nanotech compulsion, every single time it's been used it's in a way that almost guarantees the compelled victim WILL die. Any further events like the Havenite Driver/Webster or Hofschultze can't take the risk of waiting in the 'hope' the compulsion will end... they might go for a leg shot to knock the 'victim' over and that only assumes the nanotech has no reserve programming that 'if incapacitated, point gun at own head and suicide' which is something I'd be including in the code if at all possible.