Read this ebook for free! No credit card needed, absolutely nothing to pay.
Words: 28043 in 18 pages
This is an ebook sharing website. You can read the uploaded ebooks for free here. No credit cards needed, nothing to pay. If you want to own a digital copy of the ebook, or want to read offline with your favorite ebook-reader, then you can choose to buy and download the ebook.

: Slaves to the Metal Horde by Marlowe Stephen Terry W E Illustrator - Science fiction; Adventure stories; Robots Fiction; Apocalyptic fiction; Epidemics Fiction
Johnny Hope knew the robot armies had been created to serve Man. But war and a plague had destroyed civilization, leaving humans as--
Slaves To The Metal Horde
Johnny Hope backed off warily, retreating toward the sun-dried creek bed, a jagged brown scar across the parched grassland. He carried no weapon and as the others closed in about him in a tightening semi-circle his eyes darted furtively in all directions. But all the faces were stamped, as from a mold, with uncompromising hostility.
Johnny licked his lips and said, "I want to bury them. Let me bury them and then I'll go. I promise."
DeReggio, the mayor, brandished his club--which was an old rifle stock with half the jagged, corroded barrel forming a handle. "Go," he said. He took a long stride toward Johnny, then changed his mind when the youth held his ground. "They cannot be buried, Johnny Hope. You know your parents must be burned as the law dictates."
Blinking sweat from his eyes, Johnny felt the sun scorching down through the glaring midsummer heat-haze. "It was the last wish of my father," he said softly, his voice hardly more than a whisper. "That I should take them forth from the village and bury them with a prayer for their Christian souls."
"No!" DeReggio bellowed. He was a great-chested man with sloping shoulders and almost no neck. "We cannot deliver their bodies to you. We cannot let you come back into Hamilton Village and take them, for you comforted them in their last hours and are therefore a victim of the Plague yourself." He pointed with the rifle stock toward the far hills, purple with distance. "Go."
Johnny shook his head, planting his feet firmly, wiping sweat-dampened hands on the worn fabric of his denim trousers. Then he held his palms up and said, "Where? Where is the Plague?"
"You've been contaminated."
Nearly the entire village had gathered behind their mayor now, and the mutterings were angry. When Johnny began to walk toward them, his hands outstretched to show no plague scars marked their skin, someone hurled a stone. Instinctively, Johnny hunched his shoulder and caught the missile on his collar bone. It jarred him and left an angry red mark where the capillaries had burst beneath the skin.
Johnny forced himself upright on trembling legs. "I thank you for my life," he said, "but not for how you treat your dead companion-in-arms."
Free books android app tbrJar TBR JAR Read Free books online gutenberg
More posts by @FreeBooks

: The Remains of Hesiod the Ascræan Including the Shield of Hercules Translated into English rhyme and blank verse; with a dissertation on the life and æra the poems and mythology of Hesiod and copious notes. by Hesiod Chapman George Translator Elton Char

: The Cosmic Courtship by Hawthorne Julian - Science fiction; Man-woman relationships Fiction; Interplanetary voyages Fiction; Saturn (Planet) Fiction; Inventions Fiction