propaganda. He snapped the plate off and dropped the wand.
His bodyguard approached. They had both shrouded their weapons again, as was the custom inside guild households.
Worlin sat back on the suspensor couch and sipped his drink, smiling. Outside the window, the sprawl of Vervunhive spread out, many parts of it ablaze. The green, Shield-tinted sky contorted with the constant shelling.
You have served me well tonight, Worlin told them.
The bodyguards paused, uncertain.
Menx! Troor! My friends! Fetch yourselves a drink from the cart and relax! Your master is proud of you!
They hesitated and then turned. Troor raised a decanter as Menx found glasses. As soon as they had their backs to him, Worlin pulled the needle pistol from his robes and fired.
The first shot blew Menxs spine out and he was flung face first into the cart, which broke under him and shattered. Troor turned and the decanter in his hand was shattered by the second shot. The third exploded his face and he dropped backwards onto the cart wreckage.
Worlin got up and, drink in hand, fired thirty more needles into the twisted corpses, just to be sure. Then he sat back, sipping his drink, watching Vervunhive burn.
The road is blocked, sir! the tank driver yelled through the intercom to Kowle. Chasing up the Southern Highway, through the wrecked outer habs, with shells still falling, Kowles column had reached the rear of the queue of refugees tailing back from Sondar Gate.
Kowle sat up in the turret, looking ahead, taking in the sea of milling bodies before them.
Shells fell to the west and lit up the night.
Kowle dropped into the turret and said, Drive through.
The driver looked back at him in amazement.
But commissar
Are you denying a direct order? Kowle snapped.
No, sir, commissar, sir, but
Kowle shot him through the throat and dragged his twitching body out of the drivers seat.
He settled into the blood-slick metal chair and keyed the intercom. Armour column. Follow me.
Just outhab wretches
worthless, he decided, as he drove the tank down through the masses, crushing a path to the distant gates of Vervunhive.
THREE
A MIDNIGHT SUN
After this, all battles will be easy, all victories simple, all glories hollow.
General Noches Sturm,
after his victory on Grimoyr
The bombardment continued, both day and night, for two and a half weeks. By the close of the twelfth day, day and night were barely distinguishable, so great was the atmospheric smoke-haze hanging around Vervunhive. The Shield held firm, but the southern outhabs and manufactories became a fire-blown wasteland, fifty kilometres square. Some shelling had also been deliberately ranged over the Shield, catastrophically wounding the unprotected northern districts and large sections of the Hass docklands.
On the afternoon of the sixth day, Marshal Edric Croe, the Legislatures appointed successor to Gnide, ordered the closing of the southern hive gates. The new marshal, brother of Lord Croe of that noble house, had been a serving major-colonel in Vervun Primary and his election was ratified by seven of the nine noble houses. Noble House Anko who were sponsoring their own General, Heskith Anko, for the post voted to deny. Noble House Chass abstained.
Marshal Croe was a pale, white-haired giant, well over two metres tall. His fierce black eyes and hard gaze were the subject of barrack legend, but he was personally calm, quiet and inspirational, judicious in leadership and popular with the men. The majority vote of the noble houses reflected their confidence in him and the fact they felt he would remain answerable to them in all circumstances. Heskith Anko, a plump, swarthy brute who approached war politically rather than tactically, was appointed Croes chief of staff to appease House Anko. The two did not get on and their furious arguments in House Command became notorious.
Croes decision to close the gates at this