atmospheric re-entry. It was very much out of place here.
The chest opened in a gust of gas, and inside Soalm saw the shimmer of a stasis
envelope. Within the ephemeral sphere of slowed time was a book of the most ornate,
fantastic design, and it seemed to radiate the very power of history from its open
pages.
“See,” said Sinope, bowing deeply to the tome. “Look, child, and see the touch of
His hand.”
Soalm’s gaze misted as tears pricked her eyes. Before her, gold and silver and
purple illuminated a stark page of vellum. On it, the portrait of the angelic might of
the God-Emperor standing over a kneeling man in the finery of a rogue trader. In the
trader’s hands this book; and falling from his Master’s palm, the shimmering droplet
of crimson vitae that rested on the recto page. The scarlet liquid glittered like a
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flawless ruby, frozen in that distant past, as bright and as new as it had been the
second it fell.
Jenniker Soalm sank to her knees in unrestrained awe, bowing her head to the
Warrant of Trade of the Clan Eurotas.
181
FOURTEEN
Arrival
Let Me See You
Kill Shot
The dawn was close as the Dove-class shuttle dropped from the cold, black sky on its
extended aerofoils. The craft made an elongated S-turn and came in from over the
wastelands to make a running touchdown on the only runway that was still intact.
The landing wheels kicked up spurts of rock dust and sparks as the
slowed to a shuddering halt, the wings angling to catch the air and bleed off its
momentum.
The shuttle was the only source of illumination out among the shadows of
Dagonet’s star-port, the running lights casting a pool of white across the cracked,
ash-smeared ferrocrete. The surroundings had a slick sheen to them; the rains had
only ceased a few hours ago.
No one came out from the dark, lightless buildings to examine the new arrivals; if
anyone was still in there, then they were staying silent, hoping that the world would
ignore them.
In the cockpit, the pilot and co-pilot exchanged glances. Following the
operative’s orders, they had made no attempt to contact Dagonet port control on their
way down, but both men had expected to be challenged by the local PDF at least
once for entering their airspace unannounced.
There had been nothing. When the
raised to them. The skies over Dagonet were choked with debris and the remnants of
recent conflict. It had tested the skills of the cutter’s bridge crew to keep the vessel
from colliding with some of the larger fragments, the husks of gutted space stations
or the hulls of dead system cruisers still burning with plasma fires. What craft they
had spotted that were intact, the operative ordered them to give a wide berth.
the way down the flight crew saw the devastation. Places where the map-logs said
there should have been cities were smoke-wreathed craters glowing with the
aftershock of nuclear detonations; other settlements had simply been abandoned.
Even here, just over the ridge from the capital itself, the planet was silent, as if it
were holding its breath.
“You saw the destruction,” said the pilot, watching his colleague skim across the
vox channels. “All that dust and ash in the atmosphere could attenuate signal traffic.
Either that or they’ve shut down all broadcast communications planetwide.”
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The other man nodded absently. “Wired comm is more secure. They could be
using telegraphies instead.”
Before the pilot could answer, the hatch behind them opened and the man called
Hyssos filled the doorway. “Douse the lights,” he ordered. “Don’t draw more
attention than we need to.”
“Aye, sir.” The co-pilot did as he was told, and the illumination outside died.
The pilot studied the operative. He had heard the stories about Hyssos. They had
said he was a hard man, hard but fair, not a martinet like some commanders the pilot
had served with. He found it difficult to square that description with his passenger,
though. All through the voyage from the Eurotas flotilla to the planet, Hyssos had
been withdrawn and frosty, terse and unforgiving when he did take the time to bother
speaking to someone. “How do you wish to proceed, operative?”
“Drop the cargo lift,” came the reply.
Again, the co-pilot did this with a nod. The elevator-hatch in the belly of the
shuttle extended down to the runway; cradled on it was a swift jetbike, fuelled and
ready to fly.
“A question,” said Hyssos, as he turned this way and that, studying the interior of
the shuttle cockpit. “This craft has a cogitator core aboard. Is it capable of taking us
to orbit on its own?”
“Aye,” said the pilot, uncertain of where the question was leading. “It’s not
recommended, but it can be done in an emergency.”
“What sort of emergency?”