Woken Furies Read Online Free Page A

Woken Furies
Book: Woken Furies Read Online Free
Author: Richard K. Morgan
Tags: Retail, Personal
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recommend a good place for breakfast?” I asked.
    Silence. A polite static backdrop. I weighed the phone in my palm for a moment, then tossed it back to Yukio.
    “So.” I looked from the yakuza to Plex and back. “Either of
you
recommend a good place for breakfast?”

CHAPTER TWO
    Before Leonid Mecsek unleashed his beneficence on the struggling economies of the Saffron Archipelago, Tekitomura scraped a seasonal living out of big-game bottleback charters for rich sportsmen across from Millsport or the Ohrid Isles, and the harvest of webjellies for their internal oils. Bioluminescence made these latter easiest to catch at night, but the sweeper crews that did it tended not to stay out for more than a couple of hours at a time. Longer and the webjellies’ gossamer-fine stinging aerials got plastered so thick over clothing and onboard surfaces that you could lose serious productivity to toxin inhalation and skin burns. All night long, the sweepers came in so that crew and decks could be hosed clean with cheap biosolvent. Behind the Angier lamp glare of the hosing station, a short parade of bars and eating houses stayed open until dawn.
    Plex, spilling apologies like a leaky bucket, walked me down through the warehouse district to the wharf and into an unwindowed place called Tokyo Crow. It wasn’t very different from a low-end Millsport skipper’s bar—mural sketches of Ebisu and Elmo on the stained walls, interspersed with the standard votive plaques inscribed in kanji or Amanglic Roman: CALM SEAS, PLEASE, AND FULL NETS . Monitors up behind the mirrorwood bar, giving out local weather coverage, orbital behavior patterns, and global breaking news. The inevitable holoporn on a broad projection base at the end of the room. Sweeper crew members lined the bar and knotted around the tables, faces blurred weary. It was a thin crowd, mostly male, mostly unhappy.
    “I’ll get these,” said Plex hurriedly, as we entered.
    “Too fucking right, you will.”
    He gave me a sheepish look. “Um. Yeah. What do you want, then?”
    “Whatever passes for whiskey around here. Cask strength. Something I’ll be able to taste through the flavor circuits in this fucking sleeve.”
    He sloped off to the bar, and I found a corner table out of habit. Views to the door and across the clientele. I lowered myself into a seat, wincing at the movement in my blaster-raked ribs.
    What a fucking mess.
    Not really.
I touched the stacks through the fabric of my coat pocket.
I got what I came for.
    Any special reason you couldn’t just cut their throats while they slept?
    They needed to know. They needed to see it coming.
    Plex came back from the bar, bearing glasses and a tray of tired-looking sushi. He seemed unaccountably pleased with himself.
    “Look, Tak. You don’t need to worry about those sniffer squads. In a synth sleeve—”
    I looked at him. “Yes. I know.”
    “And, well, you know. It’s only six hours.”
    “And all of tomorrow until the ’loader ships out.” I hooked my glass. “I really think you’d better just shut up, Plex.”
    He did. After a couple of brooding minutes, I discovered I didn’t want that, either. I was jumpy in my synthetic skin, twitching like a meth comedown, uncomfortable with who I physically was. I needed distraction.
    “You know Yukio long?”
    He looked up, sulkily. “I thought you wanted—”
    “Yeah. Sorry. I got shot tonight, and it hasn’t put me in a great mood. I was just—”
    “You were
shot
?”
    “Plex.”
I leaned intently across the table. “Do you want to keep your
fucking
voice down.”
    “Oh. Sorry.”
    “I mean.” I gestured helplessly. “How the fuck do you stay in business, man? You’re supposed to be a criminal, for Christ’s sake.”
    “It wasn’t my choice,” he said stiffly.
    “No? How’s that work, then? They got some kind of conscription for it up here?”
    “Very funny. I suppose you
chose
the military, did you? At seventeen fucking standard years
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