Read Return of the Crimson Guard Online
Authors: Ian C. Esslemont
Tags: #Fantasy, #War, #Azizex666, #Science Fiction
His man remained. He'd sat again, not out of bravado, Ereko realized, but for warmth as he hugged his legs to his chest.
The Chosen used knots that pulled in a certain way released their burden and in this fashion the prisoners were stranded at their landings. Some grabbed hold of the ropes in a futile effort to regain the heights but archers shot these and the lesson was not lost on the others.
The surf of the strait regathered its power. The Riders who had been circling far out swung landward once again. And so it would go for days on end until the storm blew itself out. Then would come a week or two of relative calm when the wall faced mere mundane weather. During this time the incomprehensible presence deep within the strait regenerated its strength.
That night the second wave came swiftly. As it closed, a Malazan prisoner of war farther along the curving wall bellowed a challenge or prayer and launched himself from his landing. A Korelri Chosen was swiftly lowered to take his place. The crest struck, shuddering the stone of the Stormwall as if the force of an entire sea were launching itself against the land.
When the waters and ice slabs sloughed away from the scarred stone, his man remained. Another, a fellow Malazan prisoner by his rags, was shouting to him, calling, one arm out entreating. His man saluted him and the fellow straightened and gravely responded in kind.
As the storm continued through the night Ereko's man was the only original left within his line of sight. Prisoners continued to be lowered from above – the Korelri considered it a favour to offer these men and women the chance to regain their dignity by falling in defence of the wall. The prisoners obviously held other opinions.
Slowly, almost imperceptibly, the pattern of Rider attacks at this section of wall changed. Pressure eased along the curtain as the Riders circled and withdrew. Korelri Chosen gathered above, watching, pointing excitedly. Ereko peered out to sea: darker smears had emerged from the depths, the Wandwielders, Stormrider mages. He raised himself higher; rarely did he see these beings. Night-black ice was their armour, forged perhaps within the lightless utter depths of the sea. They carried rods and wands of precious stone and crystal, olivine, garnet and serpentine, with which they lashed the wall with summoned power and shattering cold during the most hard-pressed and ferocious assaults.
The Riders circled out amid the whitecaps; one approached, headed directly for the man the Enchantress had pointed out to Ereko as being the instrument of his deliverance. The Rider closed, rearing as his wave crested and smashed upon the wall. When the spume and mist cleared his man still stood and the Rider was gone.
A bloodthirsty, triumphant cheer went up among the Korelri Chosen gathered above. It seemed to Ereko to shake the wall just as ferociously as the waves themselves.
His man peered up for a time, then pointedly turned his back.
Another single Rider rolled forward, lance raised. Ereko was
horrified to see his man toss his sword aside to stand unarmed, waiting. The Rider pulled up short, lance couched. It rose and fell with the waves and it seemed to Ereko that the two spoke. Then the Rider leaned to one side and withdrew.
Far out, the Wandwielders lowered their staves of glittering crystal and all withdrew to the right and left of this course of the broad Stormwall curtain. For this section of wall, the attack was over.
The Korelri Chosen left Ereko's man chained to his landing. That night Ereko yanked open the corroded fetter at his ankle, climbed the wall, descended to the fellow's station, tore the fetter from him and carried him numb with cold up and over the wall. He swam the warmer inner Crack Narrows behind the wall with him held high at his shoulder. He reached the abandoned shores of what the Korelri name Remnant Isle before dawn touched the uppermost pennants of the wall's watchtowers.
Within the shelter of boulders he sat and waited for sunrise. The man lay insensate, almost dead from exposure. Yet he was undoubtely much more than a man. Ereko's sight, while nowhere as penetrating as that of his ancestors, told him that. And then there was the attention of his Enchantress, whom some now named the Queen of Dreams. The fellow was fit, certainly. But not overly broad or large, which so many mistakenly equate with prowess in combat. No, it was more an aura about him – even in repose. A great burden and a great danger. Not in the mere physical sense. Rather, a spirituality. Potential. Great potential to create. Or to destroy. And there the danger.
After the sun warmed the fellow sufficiently he wakened and Ereko greeted him. ‘My name is Ereko.’
‘Traveller.’ He peered around at the weed-encrusted rocks of the shore. ‘Why have you done this?’
‘I have been planning my own escape for some time. Yet I knew I would have a much better chance were I not alone. Your performance yesterday convinced me that with you my chances would be much greater.’
The man laughed. ‘It looks like I wasn't much help.’
‘Do not be fooled. We are far from free. We are in the centre of the Korelan subcontinent. The Korelri Chosen have no doubt alerted everyone to hunt for us. We have far to go yet.’
He nodded at that; accepting the story or merely disinclined to pursue it. Ereko could not be certain. ‘And who are you? You are no Jaghut – you are taller. You are not Toblakai either, nor Trell. But there is something of them about you.’
‘We called ourselves “The People” –
Thel Akai:
Traveller stared, confused. ‘Tarthinoe … or Thelomen, you mean?’
‘No, Thel Akai. Those you name are descendants of my people.’
‘Their ancestor? But that is impossible. I have never heard of your kind.’
‘All have been gone for ages – save myself. That is, I have met no others.’
‘I am sorry.’
‘Thank you.’
‘And I am sorry for something else as well.’
‘What is that?’
‘I must return to the wall. They have my sword.’
Ereko took a long deep breath.
Enchantress, how could you have done this to me?
‘I see. Then it seems I must unrescue you.’
The next morning at’ Canton's Landing they marked trees for the ship. At noon they returned to the hut to find an old man crouched there in the shade awaiting them. This was the nephew? The man nodded and smiled and nodded and smiled, stopping only when Traveller knelt beside him and rested a reassuring hand on his arm.
‘You have suffered a tragedy here,’ he said, startling the man.
‘Yes, honoured sir. We are afflicted. Death from the seas. Slavers and raiders. Again and again they come. Soon there will be none of us left.’
‘Move inland,’ Ereko suggested.
The old man's smile was gap-toothed. ‘We are fisher folk here. We know of no other way of life.’
‘We are very sorry but we cannot—’ Ereko began, but Traveller raised a hand.
‘Do you have any possessions from these raiders? Weapons? Armour?’
The old man nodded eagerly. ‘Yes, yes … old gear can be found here and there.’
‘Show us.’
Mystified, Ereko accompanied Traveller and the old man as they patrolled the strand. They picked up a piece of corroded metal here, a fragment of broken stone there. Traveller knelt to pull a length of sun-bleached wood from the sand; the broken handle of a war club. A tassel of some sort hung from its grip. He rubbed the ragged feathers and dried leather in his fingers then stood.
‘I will help you,’ he said, and he brushed his hands clean.
Ereko stared, astonished.
What unforeseen turn does the Lady send now?
‘Yes, yes,’ the old man repeated. ‘Yes. Thank you, honoured sir. We can never—’
‘Help us build our boat.’
‘Yes. Of course. Whatever you need.’
As they walked Traveller asked over the loud susurrus of the waves, ‘You are expecting them soon, aren't you?’
The old man flinched, startled again. ‘Yes. Soon. They come this season. The grey raiders from the sea.’
* * *
A patrol of Malazan regulars posted to the Wickan frontier spotted the smoke in the distance and altered their route to investigate. They found a burnt camp of the Crow Clan. The Wickan dead lay where they had fallen. The patrol sergeant, Chord, took in the Crow bodies: elders wrapped in prayer blankets, three obvious cripples and an assortment of youths. He studied the trampled wreckage of pennants, flag-staves, a covered cart and painted yurts. All hinted at some sort of a Wickan religious pilgrimage or ceremonial procession. Seated around a roaring fire, a gang of invaders, more of the tide of self-styled ‘settlers’, feasted on slaughtered Crow horses in front of bound Wickan captives. As they gorged themselves on horseflesh they ignored the regulars.
‘Ran out of supplies on your long march, hey?’ Chord called to the closest man.
This one smiled, continued to eat. A felt blanket flew back and a man straightened from one squat dwelling, cinching up his pants. Chord glimpsed a small pale figure curling beneath blankets.
‘Greetings, brother Malazans,’ this one called.
‘We ain't your brothers.’
‘Well, thank you for coming by, but we're safe now from these barbarians.’
‘You're
safe.’
‘They attacked us.’
‘You invaded their lands.’
‘Malazan
lands, as the Empress has reminded us all. In any case, they refused to sell even one of their horses – and us starving!’
‘Wickans regard their horses like members of their own family. They'd no more sell one of them than their own son or daughter.’
‘We offered fair price. They refused us out of plain obstinacy.’
Chord leaned to one side, spat a brown stream of rustleaf juice. ‘So you helped yourself.’
The man gestured his confusion. ‘We set down a fair price in coin and took the worst of the herd. Lame, useless to anyone. And they attacked! All of them. Children! Crones! Like rabid beasts they are. Less than human.’
The sergeant looked to the bound youths, pushed a handful of leaves into his mouth. ‘And these?’
‘Ours. Captives of war. We'll sell them.’
‘Hey? What's that you say? Captives of
war?’
‘Aye. A war of cleansing. These Wickan riff-raff have squatted on the plains long enough. All this good land uncultivated. Wasted.’
Adjusting his crossbow, the sergeant pressed a hand to his side, fingers splayed. As one, the men of the patrol levelled their crossbows on the gang of settlers.
The men gaped, strips of flesh in their hands. Their spokesman paused but then calmly resumed straightening his clothes. ‘What's this? We've broken no laws. The Empress has promised this land to all who would come to farmstead. Put up your weapons and go.’
‘We will, once we've taken what's ours.’
‘Yours? What's that?’
‘Just so happens I'm also a student of Imperial law, an’ those laws say that any captives of war are the property of the Throne. An’ as a duly sanctioned representative of the Throne I will now take possession of the captives.’
‘You'll
what
? Whoever heard of such a law!’
‘I have, an’ that's good enough. Now stand aside.’
A skinny shape exploded from the tent, a waif in an oversized torn shirt. She yelled a torrent of Wickan at the sergeant, who cocked a brow. ‘Well, well. Seems everyone's a damned lawyer these days.’
‘What's she on about?’ the spokesman asked.
‘This lass here has invoked Wickan law ‘gainst you. A blood cleansing.’