why?â
Why? Shaking her head, Yasmeen signaled for the rope ladder, which would take her back to her lady. Zenobia had begun that morning tied up and gagged, then had a gun shoved against her throat and her body used as a shieldâand yet she had to ask Why?
The answer was obvious. âBecause thereâs no other way to survive.â
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Yasmeen flew into Port Fallow from the east, high enough that the Hordeâs combines were visible in the distance. After their war machines had driven the European population away and the zombies had infected those remaining, the Horde had used the Continent as their breadbasket. Theyâd dug mines and stripped the forests. Machines performed most of the workâand what the machines couldnât do was done by Horde workers living in enormous walled outposts scattered across Europe. Soldiers within those compounds protected the laborers from zombies and crushed any New Worlderâs attempt to reclaim the land.
But thirty years before, Port Fallow had been established as a small hideaway for pirates and smugglers on the ruins of Amsterdam, and had boomed into a small city when the Horde hadnât bothered to crush it. Either they hadnât considered the city a threat or they hadnât been able to afford the effort. Yasmeen suspected it was the latter.
Two generations ago, a plague had decimated the Horde population, including those living in the walled compounds. A rebellion within the Horde had been gaining in popularity for years, and after the plague, had increased in strength from one end of the empire to the other. Now, the Horde was simply holding on to what they still had, not reclaiming what theyâd lostâwhether that loss was a small piece of land like Port Fallow or the entire British isle. No doubt that in the coming years, more pieces would fight their way out from under Horde control.
Just as well. A five-hundred-year reign was long enough for any empire. Yasmeen would be glad to see them gone. But then, sheâd be glad to see a lot of people goneâand currently, Franz Kessler was at the top of her list.
It wouldnât be difficult to find him. Port Fallow contained three distinct sections between the harbor and the city wall, arranged in increasing semicircles and divided by old Amsterdamâs canals: the docks and warehouses between the harbor and the first canal, with the necessary taverns, inns, and bawdyrooms; the large residences between the first and second canals, where the established âfamiliesâ of Port Fallow made their homes; and beyond the second and third canals, the small flats and shacks where everyone else lived. Kesslerâs home lay in the second, wealthy ring of residences, and he sometimes ventured into the first ringâbut heâd never run toward the shacks, and only an idiot would try to climb the wall. Few zombies stumbled up to Fladstrand, but not so here. The plains beyond the town teemed with the ravenous creatures, and gunmen continually monitored the cityâs high walls. Kessler couldnât run that way. The harbor offered the only possibility for escape, but Yasmeen wasnât concerned. Though dozens of boats and airships were anchored at Port Fallow, not a single one could outrun Lady Corsair .
And of those ships, only one made her glad to see it: Vesuvius . Mad Machenâs blackwood pirate ship had been anchored apart from the others, floating in the harbor near the south dock. Yasmeen ordered Lady Corsair to be tethered nearby. She leaned over the airshipâs railing, hoping to see Mad Machen on his decks. A giant of a man, he was always easy to spotâbut he wasnât in sight. She caught the attention of his quartermaster, instead, which suited her just as well. Yasmeen liked Obadiah Barker almost as much as she liked his captain.
With a few signals, she arranged to meet with him and descended into the madness of Port Fallowâs busy dockside.