Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
What had the defenders been signalling then?
Distress. Help.
He stared up at the kite, watched it climb ever higher. Until the wind-spun smoke devoured it.
Hearing a familiar curse, he turned to see the Host's High Mage struggling past a knot of children at the top of the stairs, his face twisted in disgust as if navigating a mob of lepers. The fish spine clenched between his teeth jerking up and down in agitation, he strode up to the High Fist.
âI swear there're more of them than yesterday, and how is that possible? They don't leap out of someone's hip already half grown, do they?'
âStill creeping out from the caves,' Ganoes Paran said, fixing his attention on the enemy ranks once more.
Noto Boil grunted. âAnd that's another thing. Whoever thought a cave was a decent place to live? Rank, dripping, crawling with vermin. There will be disease, mark my words, High Fist, and the Host has had quite enough of that.'
âInstruct Fist Bude to assemble a clean-up crew,' Paran said. âWhich squads got into the rum store?'
âSeventh, Tenth and Third, Second Company.'
âCaptain Sweetcreek's sappers.'
Noto Boil plucked the spine from his mouth and examined the pink point. He then leaned over the wall and spat something red. âAye, sir. Hers.'
Paran smiled. âWell then.'
âAye, serves them right. So, if they stir up more verminâ'
âThey are children, mage, not rats. Orphaned children.'
âReally? Those white bony ones make my skin crawl, that's all I'm saying, sir.' He reinserted the spine and it went up and down. âTell me again how this is better than Aren.'
âNoto Boil, as High Fist I answer only to the Empress.'
The mage snorted. âOnly she's dead.'
âWhich means I answer to no one, not even you.'
âAnd that's the problem, nailed straight to the tree, sir. Nailed to the tree.' Seemingly satisfied with that statement, he pointed with a nod and jab of the fish spine in his mouth. âLots of scurrying about over there. Another attack coming?'
Paran shrugged. âThey're stillâ¦upset.'
âYou know, if they ever decide to call our bluffâ'
âWho says I'm bluffing, Boil?'
The man bit something that made him wince. âWhat I mean is, sir, no one's denying you got talents and such, but those two commanders over there, well, if they get tired of throwing Watered and Shriven against us â if they just up and march themselves over here, in person, wellâ¦that's what I meant, sir.'
âI believe I gave you a command a short while ago.'
Noto scowled. âFist Bude, aye. The caves.' He turned to leave and then paused and looked back. âThey see you, you know. Standing here day after day. Taunting them.'
âI wonder,' Paran mused as he returned his attention to the enemy camp.
âSir?'
âThe Siege of Pale. Moon's Spawn just sat over the city. Months, years. Its lord never showed himself, until the day Tayschrenn decided he was ready to try him. But here's the thing, what if he had? What if, every damned day, he'd stepped out on to that ledge? So Onearm and all the rest could pause, look up, and see him standing there? Silver hair blowing, Dragnipur a black god-shitting stain spreading out behind him.'
Noto Boil worked his pick for a moment, and then said, âWhat if he had, sir?'
âFear, High Mage, takes time. Real fear, the kind that eats your courage, weakens your legs.' He shook his head and glanced at Noto Boil. âAnyway, that was never his style, was it? I miss him, you know.' He grunted. âImagine that.'
âWho, Tayschrenn?'
âNoto, do you understand anything I say? Ever?'
âI try not to, sir. No offence. It's that fear thing you talked about.'
âDon't trample any children on your way down.'
âThat's up to them, High Fist. Besides, the numbers could do with some thinning.'
âNoto.'
âWe're an army, not a crèche, that's all I'm saying. An army under siege. Outnumbered, overcrowded, confused, bored â except when we're terrified.' He plucked out his fish spine again, whistled in a breath between his teeth. âCaves filled with children â what were they doing with them all? Where are their parents?'
âNoto.'
âWe should just hand them back, that's all I'm saying, sir.'
âHaven't you noticed, today's the first day they're finally behaving like normal children. What does that tell you?'
âDoesn't tell me nothing, sir.'
âFist Rythe Bude. Now.'
âAye sir, on my way.'
Ganoes Paran settled his attention on the besieging army, the precise rows of tents like bone tesserae on a buckled floor, the figures scrambling tiny as fleas over the trebuchets and Great Wagons. The foul air of battle never seemed to leave this valley.
They look ready to try us again. Worth another sortie? Mathok keeps skewering me with that hungry look. He wants at them.
He rubbed at his face. The shock of feeling his beard caught him yet again, and he grimaced.
No one likes change much, do they? But that's precisely my point.
The silk dragon cut across his vision, diving down out of the reams of smoke. He glanced over to the boy on the tower, saw him struggling to keep his footing. A scrawny thing, one of the ones from up south. A Shriven.
When it gets too much, lad, be sure to let go.
Seething motion now in the distant camp. The glint of pikes, the chained slaves marching out to the yokes of the Great Wagons, High Watered emerging surrounded by runners. Dust slowly lifting in the sky above the trebuchets as they were wheeled forward.
Aye, they're still upset all right.
Â
âI knew a warrior once. Awakening from a wound to the head believing he was a dog, and what are dogs if not loyalty lacking wits? So here I stand, woman, and my eyes are filled with tears. For that warrior, who was my friend, who died thinking he was a dog. Too loyal to be sent home, too filled with faith to leave. These are the world's fallen. When I dream, I see them in their thousands, chewing at their own wounds. So, do not speak to me of freedom. He was right all along. We live in chains. Beliefs to shackle, vows to choke our throats, the cage of a mortal life, this is our fate. Who do I blame? I blame the gods. And curse them with fire in my heart.
âWhen she comes to me, when she says that it's time, I shall take my sword in hand. You say that I am a man of too few words, but against the sea of needs, words are weak as sand. Now, woman, tell me again of your boredom, this stretch of days and nights outside a city obsessed with mourning. I stand before you, eyes leaking with the grief of a dead friend, and all I get from you is a siege of silence.'
She said, âYou have a damned miserable way of talking your way into my bed, Karsa Orlong. Fine then, get in. Just don't break me.'
âI only break what I do not want.'
âAnd if the days of this relationship are numbered?'
âThey are,' he replied, and then he grinned. âBut not the nights.'
Faintly, the distant city's bells tolled their grief at the fall of darkness, and in the blue-lit streets and alleys, dogs howled.
Â
In the innermost chamber of the palace of the city's lord, she stood in shadows, watching as he moved away from the hearth, brushing charcoal from his hands. There was no mistaking his legacy of blood, and it seemed the weight his father had borne was settling like an old cloak on his son's surprisingly broad shoulders. She could never understand such creatures. Their willingness to martyrdom. The burdens by which they measured self-worth. This embrace of duty.
He settled into the high-backed chair, stretched out his legs, the awakening fire's flickering light licking the studs ringing his knee-high leather boots. Resting his head back, eyes closed, he spoke. âHood knows how you managed to get in here, and I imagine Silanah's hackles are lifting at this very moment, but if you are not here to kill me, there is wine on the table to your left. Help yourself.'
Scowling, she edged out from the shadows. All at once the chamber seemed too small, its walls threatening to snap tight around her. To so willingly abandon the sky in favour of heavy stone and blackened timbers, no, she did not understand this at all. âNothing but wine?' Her voice cracked slightly, reminding her that it had been some time since she'd last used it.
His elongated eyes opened and he observed her with unfeigned curiosity. âYou prefer?'
âAle.'
âSorry. You will need to go to the kitchens below for that.'
âMare's milk, then.'
His brows lifted. âDown to the palace gate, turn left, walk half a thousand leagues. And that is just a guess, mind you.'
Shrugging, she edged closer to the hearth. âThe gift struggles.'
âGift? I do not understand.'
She gestured at the flames.
âAh,' he said, nodding. âWell, you stand in the breath of Mother Darkâ' and then he started. âDoes she know you're here? But then,' he settled back again, âhow could she not?'
âDo you know who I am?' she asked.
âAn Imass.'
âI am Apsal'ara. His night within the Sword,
his one night
, he freed me. He had the time for that. For me.' She found she was trembling.
He was still studying her. âAnd so you have come here.'
She nodded.
âYou didn't expect that from him, did you?'
âNo. Your father â he had no reason for regret.'
He rose then, walked over to the table and poured himself a goblet of wine. He stood with the cup in hand, staring down at it. âYou know,' he muttered, âI don't even want this. The needâ¦to do something.' He snorted. â“No reason for regret”, wellâ¦'
âThey look for him â in you. Don't they?'
He grunted. âEven in my name you will find him. Nimander. No, I'm not his only son. Not even his favoured one â I don't think he had any of those, come to think of it. Yet,' and he gestured with the goblet, âthere I sit, in his chair, before his fire. This palace feels likeâ¦feels likeâ'
âHis bones?'
Nimander flinched, looked away. âToo many empty rooms, that's all.'
âI need some clothes,' she said.
He nodded distractedly. âI noticed.'
âFurs. Skins.'
âYou intend to stay, Apsal'ara?'
âAt your side, yes.'
He turned at that, eyes searching her face.
âBut,' she added, âI will not be his burden.'
A wry smile. âMine, then?'
âName your closest advisers, Lord.'
He swallowed half the wine, and then set the goblet down on the table. âThe High Priestess. Chaste now, and I fear that does not serve her well. Skintick, a brother. Desra, a sister. Korlat, Spinnock, my father's most trusted servants.'
âTiste Andii.'
âOf course.'
âAnd the one below?'
âThe one?'
âDid he once advise you, Lord? Do you stand at the bars in the door's window, to watch him mutter and pace? Do you torment him? I wish to know the man I will serve.'
She saw clear anger in his face. âAre you to be my jester now? I have heard of such roles in human courts. Will you cut the sinews of my legs and laugh as I stumble and fall?' He bared his teeth. âIf yours is to be my face of conscience, Apsal'ara, should you not be prettier?'
She cocked her head, made no reply.
Abruptly his fury collapsed, and his eyes fell away. âIt is the exile he has chosen. Did you test the lock on that door? It is barred from within. But then,
we
have no problem forgiving him. Advise me, then. I am a lord and it is in my power to do such things. To pardon the condemned. Yet you have seen the crypts below us. How many prisoners cringe beneath my iron hand?'
âOne.'
âAnd I cannot free him. Surely that is worth a joke or two.'
âIs he mad?'
âClip? Possibly.'
âThen no, not even you can free him. Your father took scores for the chains of Dragnipur, scores just like this Clip.'
âI dare say he did not call it freedom.'
âNor mercy,' she replied. âThey are beyond a lord's reach, even that of a god.'
âThen we fail them all. Both lords and gods â we fail them, our broken children.'
This, she realized, would not be an easy man to serve. âHe drew others to him â your father. Others who were not Tiste Andii. I remember, in his court, in Moon's Spawn.'
Nimander's eyes narrowed.
She hesitated, unsure, and then resumed. âYour kind are blind to many things. You need others close to you, Lord. Servants who are not Tiste Andii. I am not one of theseâ¦jesters you speak of. Nor, it seems, can I be your conscience, ugly as I am to your eyesâ'
He held up a hand. âForgive me for that, I beg you. I sought to wound and so spoke an untruth, just to see it sting.'
âI believe I stung you first, my lord.'
He reached again for the wine, and then stood looking into the hearth's flames. âApsal'ara, Mistress of Thieves. Will you now abandon that life, to become an adviser to a Tiste Andii lord? All because my father, at the very end, showed you mercy?'
âI never blamed him for what he did. I gave him no choice. He did not free me out of mercy, Nimander.'
âThen why?'
She shook her head. âI don't know. But I mean to find out.'
âAnd this pursuit â for an answer â has brought you here, to Black Coral. Toâ¦me.'
âYes.'
âAnd how long will you stand at my side, Apsal'ara, whilst I govern a city, sign writs, debate policies? Whilst I slowly rot in the shadow of a father I barely knew and a legacy I cannot hope to fill?'