Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
Aranict arrived, reining in. âPrince, it pleases me to see you smiling. What so amuses you?'
âNothing, Atri-Ceda. That is, nothing of import. We have been found by the K'Chain Che'Malle â such a motley collection of allies we make, don't you think? No matter. Ride with me. I would become acquainted with our new commanders.'
The woman frowned. âAre they not two common marines, sire? Anyone can acquire a title â it hardly makes them fit to demand the obedience of a prince, not to mention the queen of the Bolkando.'
âGesler and Stormy are far more than just Malazan marines, Aranict. And I am not referring to their new titles.'
âI don't recall meeting them.'
âI will be pleased to introduce you, if you like.'
With the standard-bearer twenty paces ahead, they set out side by side, horse hoofs thumping as if on hollow ground. âBrys, do you hear that?'
âWe ride across an ancient lake bed,' he said. âOften the lake remains, but only beneath the surface, and I think that must have been the case here, once. But nowâ¦'
âThe water's gone.'
âYes. Gone.'
âMight we all fall through?'
He shrugged.
âSo now even the ground under us is uncertain.'
âI am sorry, Aranict. I have been neglecting you.'
âYes, you have.'
The flying wing was swinging in behind them, thirty Bluerose lancers in perfect formation. Brys thought about the soldier he'd lost â
to love, no less.
Henar Vygulf now marched with the Bonehunters.
And if I have sent him to his deathâ¦I do not think he will curse my name.
âI am not very good with grief, Aranict. When our parents died, well, without Tehol and Hull I don't think I would have made it through. Kuru Qan once told me that grieving had nothing to do with the ones gone, and everything to do with the ones left behind. We feel the absences in our life like open wounds, and they never really close, no matter how many years pass.'
âDo you grieve then for the Adjunct and the Bonehunters?'
âIt makes no sense, does it? Sheâ¦wellâ¦she is a difficult woman to like. She views a human gesture as if it was some kind of surrender, a weakness. Her responsibilities consume her, because she will allow herself nothing else.'
âIt was said she had a lover,' said Aranict. âShe died saving Tavore's life.'
âImagine the wound that made.'
âNo one wants to be un-liked, Brys. But if it must be so, one can strive for other things. Like respect. Or even fear. Choices fall away, without you even noticing, until there are very few left, and you realize that you are nothing but what you are.'
Brys thought about that, and then sighed. âI should have liked her. I should have found something â beyond her competence, beyond even her stubbornness. Somethingâ¦'
âBrys, what is it that you grieve over? Is it your own failure to find in Tavore the reasons you need for following her?'
He grunted. âI should have talked to you days ago.'
âYou were too busy saying nothing.'
âI stayed close, as long as I could. Like a man dying of thirst â was she my salvation? Or just a mirage?' He shook his head.
âWe won't turn back, will we?'
âNo, we won't.'
âWe'll see this through.'
âYes, and so I must hide my uncertainty â from my officers, from my soldiersâ'
âBut not from me, Brys.'
He turned to study her face, was shocked to see tears streaking her dusty cheeks. âAranict?'
âNever mind this,' she said, as if angry with herself. âDo you want to be like her, Brys? Do you want your responsibilities to consume you?'
âOf course not.'
âAnd since we began marching with the Bonehunters, what has the Adjunct given you?'
âNot muchâ'
âNothing,' she snapped. âNothing but silence. Every time you needed something else, she gave you silence. Brys, you've said little to anyone for days. Don't take on someone else's wounds. Don't.'
Chastened, he looked ahead. The dark stain of legions in the hazy distance, and a nearer group, humans and lizards both, drawing closer.
When the Guardian of the Names came for me, the sea ran from him like tears. But I was dead by then. I saw none of that. Only upon my rebirth did these visions find me. I see poor Rhulad Sengar lying cut and broken on the blood-spattered floor, crying out to his brothers. I see them turn away. I see my body slumping down against the dais. I see my king sitting lifeless on his throne.
Could we but have left him there, so useless to resist the puppet-masters who ever gather to symbols of power â are they all so blind as to not see the absurdity of their ambitions? The pathetic venality of all their petty scheming? Grasp those dead limbs, then, and make him do your will.
I have dreamed the names of a thousand lost gods. Will I ever speak them? Will I break upon this world one last time those names of the fallen? Is that enough, to give remembrance to the dead? A name upon my breath, spoken out loud, a whisper, a bold shout â will a distant soul stir? Find itself once more?
In speaking a god's name, do we conjure it into being?
âBrys.'
âAranict?'
âDid you hear me?'
âI did, and I will heed your warning, my love. But you should bear in mind that, sometimes, solitude is the only refuge left. Solitudeâ¦and silence.'
He saw how his words left her shaken, and was sorry.
Shall I by name resurrect a god? Force its eyes to open once more? To see what lies all about us, to see the devastation we have wrought?
Am I that cruel? That selfish?
Silence. Tavore, I think I begin to understand you. Must the fallen be made to see what they died for, to see their sacrifice so squandered? Is this what you mean â what you have always meant â by âunwitnessed'?
âNow it is you who weep â Errant's shove, Brys, what a wretched pair we make. Gather yourself, please â we are almost upon them.'
He drew a shaky breath and straightened in his saddle. âI could not have stopped her, Aranict.'
âDid you really expect to?'
âI don't know. But I think I have figured something out. She gives us silence because she dares not give us anything else. What we see as cold and indifferent is in fact the deepest compassion imaginable.'
âDo you think that is true?'
âI choose to believe it, Aranict.'
âWell enough, then.'
Brys raised his voice. âBearer!'
The young man reined in and swung his mount out to the right. Brys and Aranict drew up alongside him.
The two marines had dismounted, joining a woman, a boy and a girl. The woman was middle-aged, possibly an Awl by birth. The children were Malazans, though clearly unrelated. Had he seen these two before? In the palace? Possibly. Behind them all stood a half-dozen K'Chain Che'Malle, including three of the saddled creatures. Two of the remaining lizards were not as robust, yet bore huge blades instead of hands, while the third one was broader of snout, heavier of girth, and unarmed. Two ragged-looking dogs wandered out from between the legs of the lizards. The humans approached.
âAranict,' said Brys under his breath, âtell me what you see.'
âNot now,' she said, her voice hoarse.
He glanced across to see her setting alight a stick of rustleaf, her hands shaking. âTell me this at least. Shall a prince of Lether relinquish command to these ones?'
Smoke hissed out, and then, âThe marinesâ¦yes, for one simple reason.'
âWhich is?'
âBetter them than those two children.'
I see.
At five paces away they halted, and the clean-shaven marine was the first to speak. His eyes on the standard, he said, âSo it's true.'
Brys cleared his throat. âMy brother the kingâ'
âHas no respect at all for the institutions of the military,' said the marine, nodding. âHood take me, for that reason alone I'd follow him anywhere. What think you, Stormy?'
The man scowled, scratched his red beard, and then grunted. âDo I have to?'
âDo what? You oaf, I was sayingâ'
âAnd I wasn't listening, so how do I know what you was saying, Gesler? And do I even care? If I did, I'd probably have listened, wouldn't I?'
Gesler muttered something, and then said to Brys, âPrince, I'd beg you to excuse my companion's boorish manners, but then he ain't five years old and I ain't his dada, so feel welcome to regard him with disgust. We do, all of us here, ain't that right, Stormy?'
âI ain't listening.'
âPrince Brys, about the chain of command the Adjunct wantsâ'
âI am content, Mortal Sword Gesler, to accede to her wishes.'
âWell, we ain't.'
âY'got that right,' Stormy growled. âIt's all right Ges handling the Che'Malle â it's all down to smells, y'see? All he needs to do is fart or whatever and all the swords come out, which come to think of it, is just like old times. In the barracks, whyâ'
âIt's down to trust,' said the boy. The bigger of the two dogs had drawn up next to him. Belligerent eyes glared out from a mangled face.
No one spoke. The silence stretched.
âYou'd better explain that, Grub,' said Gesler, his expression dark.
Brys started to speak but Aranict stayed him with a hand on his arm.
âIt's down to the people she knows best,' Grub continued. âThat's all.'
âWe saved their lives!' blurted the standard-bearer, his face flushed.
âThat's enough, soldier,' said Brys. âWhat the boy says makes sense, Gesler. After all, what can she make of our motives? This is her war, it always has been. Why are we here? Why does Queen Abrastal seem intent on making this her cause as well? The Bonehunters brought the Letherii to their knees â might we not harbour resentment over that? Might we not contemplate betrayal? As for Bolkando, well, from all accounts the Khundryl laid waste to vast regions in that kingdom, and spilled the blood of the queen's subjects. Together with the Perish, they effectively subjected Bolkando to outright extortion.'
âSo why should she have any better reason to trust
us
?' Gesler demanded. âWe got snatched, and now we're commanding our own damned army of lizards. The fact is, we deserted theâ'
âI ain't deserted nothing!' Stormy shouted. The smaller of the two dogs barked.
Brys noted the growing alarm on the face of the Awl woman. He caught her eye and said, âYou are the Destriant?'
âI am Kalyth,' she said. âI do not understand what is going on. The way you use the trader's tongue â there are words I don't know. I am sorry.' She faced Gesler. âHe is Mortal Sword of the K'Chain Che'Malle. He is defender of Matron Gunth Mach. We must fight to stay alive. There are old woundsâ¦oldâ¦crimes. We cannot escape. Gunth Mach cannot escape. We fight, will fight.'
âAnd somehow,' Brys mused, âthe Adjunct understands the truth of that. How?'
Kalyth shook her head. âI do not know her. But' â and she pointed at the girl standing near Grub â âwhere this one goes, there will be fire.'
Gesler rubbed at his face with both hands. âOurâ¦Ceda. Sinn. Without her sorcery, and Grub's, the Nah'ruk would have defeated us. Not on the ground, but from the sky keeps. So,' he sighed, âSinn and Grub saved us all. The Adjunct said we'd need themâ'
âNo,' corrected Stormy, âshe said they'd be safer with us than with her.'
Gesler said to Brys, âWe've been thinking of going after them â into that desert.'
âShe will not be swayed,' said Brys. âAnd she wants none of us to follow her. It is her conviction that we will be needed elsewhere.'
âI can't assume command,' said Gesler. âI'm a Hood-damned marine, a fucking sergeant.'
âYou was a damned
Fist
, Gesler!' Stormy said.
âFor three daysâ'
âTill they busted you down, aye! And why was you busted down? No, you don't want to say, do you?'
âLeave itâ'
âI won't!' Stormy jabbed a finger at his companion. âYou went and thought you could be another Dassem! You went and got us all to swear our souls to a damned god! This ain't your first time as a Mortal Sword, is it?'
Gesler wheeled on Stormy. âHow should I know? It's not like Fener reached down and patted me on the head, is it? And what about you,
Adjutant
? You lied to the damned Empress!'
âI did what Cartheron and Urko asked me to do!'
âYou betrayed the Empire!'
Ceda Sinn was laughing, but it was a cold, cruel laugh.
Kalyth had gone white and had backed up a step, her eyes wide as she looked from Gesler to Stormy and back again.
Sinn said to Gesler. âThat's why you'll be needed. But you won't like it. Hah! You won't like any of it!'
Gesler made to advance on the girl but Stormy stepped into his path and shoved him back.
â
Will all of you stop it!
'
Aranict's shout halted everyone.
Swearing under his breath, Gesler turned away from Stormy's challenging glare. âPrince, this ain't what I was looking for. I wanted you to take overall command â you or Krughava. Gods, even that queen you talked about. I don't want any of this.'
âThe matter,' said Brys, âhas proved far more complicated than even I had thought. But I mean to hold to my agreement with the Adjunct. Nor do I expect Queen Abrastal to change her mind, either. Our royal titles are nothing but a product of circumstance. They confer no special talent or ability, and we are both aware of that. Mortal Sword Gesler, it is undeniable that you are in command of the most formidable army in this alliance, and as such, the full weight of command must fall on you.'