Necropolis

Read Necropolis for Free Online Page A

Book: Read Necropolis for Free Online
Authors: Dan Abnett
assembly for points of order.
    Around seventy holographic runes lit the plate display and glowed overhead via hovering repeater screens.
    “Noble Anko has the floor.” There were moans from the commons pit.
    Anko got up, or rather was helped up by his entourage. His raspy, vox-amplified voice rang around the hall.
    “I deplore the attack on our city-hive by our erstwhile friends of Zoica. I press to vote we deny them and send them home, tails between their legs.”
    No argument there, thought Chass. Typical Anko, going for the easy vote.
    Anko went on. “I wish the Legislature to back me on another matter. My plant is being overrun by indigents from the suburbs. House officers tell me that the plant is already overwhelmed and immediate production will be impossible. This hurts Vervunhive. I move that House Anko be allowed to eject the indigents from its premises.”
    More squabbling and yelling from below.
    “Noble Yetch?”
    “Are we to disabuse our work population so, cousin Anko? You like them well enough when they raise your quotas. Do you hate them now they choke your factories?”
    Commotion, louder than before. Several nobles and many guilders thumped their assent sirens vigorously. Anko sat down, his expression vile.
    “Noble Chass?”
    Chass rose. “I fear my cousin Anko fails to read the larger story here. Ninety years have passed since we faced such a crisis. We face a Second Trade War. Reports are that the wave of enemy force is quite humbling to our own defences. We have all seen how the tumult today has wounded our hive. Why, my own dear daughter barely reached home alive.”
    Sympathetic holograms flashed sycophantically from the tiers of some of the houses ordinary.
    Chass continued. “If this attack inconveniences our houses, I say: Let us be inconvenienced! We have a duty to the hive population and cousin Anko should put that bald fact before his production quota. I wish to frame more important questions to this Legislature. One: Why did this attack come as a surprise? Two: Should we signal the Imperium for assistance? Three: Where is the High Master, what did he know of this and why was the Shield ignited so late?”
    Now the roaring grew. Assent sigils lit up all around. The Legislator screamed for order.
    “Noble Chass,” a voice said, lilting through the huge hall. “How would you wish me answer that?”
    The place fell silent. Escorted by ten impassive, uniformed officers of the VPHC, High Master Salvador Sondar entered the Hall.
     
    He was blind in one eye and limping badly. His flesh was blistered and charred, and his clothes were tattered. But he was still plant supervisor.
    Using an axe-rake as a crutch, Agun Soric bellowed as best his crisped lungs could manage, as he brought over three hundred smeltery workers out through the northern processing ramps of Vervun Smeltery One. Most were as soot-black as he was, the only things showing against the grime being the glistening red of wounds or the white of fresh dressings.
    That and the workers’ white, fear-filled eyes.
    They carried their injured with them, some on makeshift stretchers, some in carriers made of tied sacking, some pushed in ore-barrows.
    Soric stomped around and looked back with his one good eye. Vervun Smeltery One and parts of the surrounding ore plants were burning furiously. Chimney stacks collapsed in the heat, sending up white cinders against the yellow flames. The Veyveyr Rail Terminal, to the west, was also torching out.
    He heard shouting and disputes from the concourse below him and he hobbled down, pushing his way through the rows of men and women from his plant.
    A dozen Vervun Primary soldiers were stopping the survivors’ advance down transit channel 456/k into the inner habs. A VPHC officer was leading them.
    “We need to get in there,” Soric said, stomping up to the commissariat officer. Even with one eye, Soric could see the twitchy, frantic light in the young VPHCer’s eyes.
    “Orders from Main Spine, old man,” the

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