Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
The captain scowled. âNo doubt you would have made it even easier for them. As it is, we might bloody their noses enough to encourage them to seek somewhere else.'
âNo, you won't, Captain. Things will simply getâ¦messier.'
âIs this how the Empress simplifies matters, Kollen? An unlocked gate. Loyal guards cut down from behind. Have you honed your knife for my back?'
âI am not here at the behest of the Empress, Captain.'
Gamet's eyes narrowed.
âNo harm is to come to her,' the man went on after a moment. âProvided I have your full co-operation. But we are running out of time.'
âThis is Tavore's answer? What of her parents? There was nothing to suggest that their fate would be any different from that of the others who'd been rounded up.'
âAlas, the Adjunct's options are limited. She is under someâ¦scrutiny.'
âWhat is planned for Felisin, Kollenâor whoever you are?'
âA brief stint in the otataral minesâ'
âWhat!?'
âShe will not be entirely alone. A guardian will accompany her. Understand, Captain, it is this, or the mob outside.'
Nine loyal guards cut down, blood on the floors and walls, a handful of servants overwhelmed at flimsy barricades outside the child's bedroom door. Then, for the childâ¦no-one.
âWho is this “guardian”, then, Kollen?'
The man smiled. âMe, Captain. And no, my true name is not Kollen.'
Gamet stepped up to him, until their faces were but a hand's width apart. âIf any harm comes to her, I will find you. And I don't care if you're a Clawâ'
âI am not a Claw, Captain. As for harm coming to Felisin, I regret to say that there will be some. It cannot be helped. We must hope she is resilientâit is a Paran trait, yes?'
After a long moment, Gamet stepped back, suddenly resigned. âDo you kill us now or later?'
The man's brows rose. âI doubt I could manage that, given those crossbows levelled behind me. No, but I am to ask that you now escort me to a safe house. At all costs, we must not permit the child to fall into the mob's hands. Can I rely upon your help in this, Captain?'
âWhere is this safe house?'
âOn the Avenue of Soulsâ¦'
Gamet grimaced.
Judgement's Round. To the chains. Oh, Beru guard you, lass.
He strode past Kollen. âI will awaken her.'
Â
Pearl stood at the round table, leaning on both hands, his head lowered as he studied the scroll. The Adjunct had departed half a bell past, her Fist on her heels like a misshapen shadow. Lostara waited, arms crossed, with her back against the door through which Tavore and Gamet had left. She had held silent during the length of Pearl's perusal of the scroll, her anger and frustration growing with each passing moment.
Finally, she'd had enough. âI will have no part of this. Return me to Tene Baralta's command.'
Pearl did not look up. âAs you wish, my dear,' he murmured, then added: âOf course I will have to kill you at some pointâcertainly before you report to your commander. It's the hard rules of clandestine endeavours, I regret to say.'
âSince when are you at the Adjunct's beck and call, Pearl?'
âWhy,' he glanced up and met her gaze, âever since she unequivocally reasserted her loyalty to the Empress, of course.' He returned his attention to the scroll.
Lostara scowled. âI'm sorry, I think I missed that part of the conversation.'
âNot surprising,' Pearl replied, âsince it resided
in between
the words actually spoken.' He smiled at her. âPrecisely where it belonged.'
With a hiss, Lostara began pacing, struggled against an irrational desire to take a knife blade to these damned tapestries and their endless scenes of past glories. âYou will have to explain, Pearl,' she growled.
âAnd will that relieve your conscience sufficiently to return you to my side? Very well. The resurgence of the noble class in the chambers of imperial power has been uncommonly swift. Indeed, one might say unnaturally so. Almost as if they were receiving helpâbut
who?
we wondered. Oh, absurd rumours of the return of the Talons persisted. And every now and then some poor fool who'd been arrested for something completely unrelated went and confessed to being a Talon,
but they were young, caught up in romantic notions and the lure of cults and whatnot. They might well call themselves Talons, but they did not even come close to the real organization, to Dancer's ownâof which many of us Claw possessed firsthand experience.
âIn any case, back to the matter at hand. Tavore is of noble blood, and it's now clear that a truly covert element of Talons has returned to plague us, and has been making use of the nobility. Placing sympathetic agents in the military and administrationâa mutually profitable infiltration. But Tavore is now the Adjunct, and as such, her old ties, her old loyalties, must needs be severed.' Pearl paused to tap a finger on the laid-out scroll before him. âShe has given us the Talons, Captain. We will find this Baudin Younger, and from him we will unravel the entire organization.'
Lostara said nothing for a long moment. âIn a sense, then,' she said, âour mission is not extraneous to the interests of the empire after all.'
Pearl flashed a smile.
âBut if so,' Lostara continued, âwhy didn't the Adjunct just say so?'
âOh, I think we can leave that question unanswered for the time beingâ'
âNo, I would have it answered now!'
Pearl sighed. âBecause, my dear, for Tavore, the surrendering of the Talons is secondary to our finding Felisin. And that is extraneous, and not only extraneous, but also damning. Do you think the Empress would smile upon this clever little scheme, the lie behind this all-too-public demonstration of the new Adjunct's loyalty? Sending her sister to the otataral mines! Hood take us all, that's a hard woman! The Empress has chosen well, has she not?'
Lostara grimaced.
Chosen wellâ¦based on what, though?
âIndeed she has.'
âAye, I agree. It's a fair exchange in any caseâwe save Felisin and are rewarded with a principal agent of the Talons. The Empress will no doubt wonder what we were doing out on the Otataral Isle in the first placeâ'
âYou will have to lie to her, won't you?'
Pearl's smile broadened. âWe both will, lass. As would the Adjunct, and Fist Gamet if it came to that. Unless, of course, I take what the Adjunct has offered me. Offered me personally, that is.'
Lostara slowly nodded. âYou are at a loose end. Yes. Out of favour with the Clawmaster and the Empress. Eager to make reparations. An independent missionâyou somehow latched onto the rumour of a true Talon, and set off on his trail. Thus, the credit for unravelling the Talons is to be yours, and yours alone.'
âOr ours,' Pearl corrected. âIf you so desire.'
She shrugged. âWe can decide that later. Very well, Pearl. Now,' she moved to his side, âwhat are these details with which the Adjunct has so kindly provided us?'
Â
Admiral Nok had been facing the hearth, his gaze on its cold ashes. At the sound of the door opening, he slowly turned, his expression as impassive as ever.
âThank you,' the Adjunct said, âfor your patience.'
The admiral said nothing, his level gaze shifting to Gamet for a moment.
The midnight bell's muted echoes were only now fading. The Fist was exhausted, feeling fragile and scattered, unable to meet Nok's eyes for very long. This night, he'd been little more than the Adjunct's pet, or worse, a familiar. Tacitly conjoined with her plans within plans, bereft of even so much as the illusion of a choice. When Tavore had first drawn him into her entourageâshortly after Felisin's arrestâGamet had briefly considered slipping away, vanishing in the time-honoured tradition of Malazan soldiers who found themselves in unwelcome circumstances. But he hadn't, and his reasons for joining the Adjunct's core of advisersânot that they were ever invited to
advise
âhad, upon ruthless self-reflection, proved less than laudable. He had been driven by macabre curiosity. Tavore had ordered the arrests of her parents, had sent her younger sister into the horrors of the otataral mines.
For her career's sake
. Her brother, Paran, had in some way been disgraced on Genabackis. He had subsequently deserted.
An embarrassment, granted, but surely not sufficient to warrant Tavore's reaction. Unless
â¦There were rumours that the lad had been an agent of Adjunct Lorn's, and that his desertion had led, ultimately, to the woman's death in Darujhistan. Yet, if that were true, then why did the Empress turn her royal gaze upon another child of the House of Paran? Why make
Tavore
the new Adjunct?
âFist Gamet.'
He blinked. âAdjunct?'
âSeat yourself, please. I would have some final words with you, but they can wait for the time being.'
Nodding, Gamet glanced around until he spied the lone high-backed chair set against one of the small room's walls. It looked anything but comfortable, which was probably an advantage, given his weariness. Ominous creaks sounded when he settled into the chair and he grimaced. âNo wonder Pormqual didn't send this one off with all the rest,' he muttered.
âIt is my understanding,' Nok said, âthat the transport ship in question sank in the harbour of Malaz City, taking the late High Fist's loot with it.'
Gamet's wiry brows rose. âAll that wayâ¦just to sink in the harbour? What happened?'
The admiral shrugged. âNone of the crew reached the shore to tell the tale.'
None?
Nok seemed to note his scepticism, for he elaborated, âMalaz Harbour is well known for its sharks. A number of dories were found, all awash but otherwise empty.'
The Adjunct had, uncharacteristically, been permitting the exchange to continue, leading Gamet to wonder if Tavore had sensed a hidden significance to the mysterious loss of the transport ship. Now she spoke. âIt remains, then, a peculiar curseâunexplained founderings, empty dories, lost crews. Malaz Harbour is indeed notorious for its sharks, particularly since they seem uniquely capable of eating victims whole, leaving no remnants whatsoever.'
âThere are sharks that can do just that,' Nok replied. âI know of at least twelve ships on the muddy bottom of the harbour in questionâ'
âIncluding the
Twisted
,' the Adjunct drawled, âthe old emperor's flagship, which mysteriously slipped its moorings the night after the assassinations, then promptly plummeted into the deeps, taking its resident demon with it.'
âPerhaps it likes company,' Nok observed. âThe island's fishermen all swear the harbour's haunted, after all. The frequency with which nets are lostâ'
âAdmiral,' Tavore cut in, her eyes resting on the dead hearth, âthere is you, and three others. All who are left.'
Gamet slowly straightened in his chair.
Three others. High Mage Tayschrenn, Dujek Onearm, and Whiskeyjack. Fourâ¦gods, is that all now? Tattersail, Bellurdan, Nightchill, Duikerâ¦so many fallenâ
Admiral Nok was simply studying the Adjunct. He had stood against the wrath of the Empress, first with Cartheron Crust's disappearance, then Urko's and Ameron's. Whatever answers he had given, he had done so long ago.
âI do not speak for the Empress,' Tavore said after a moment. âNor am I interested inâ¦details. What interests me isâ¦a matter of personalâ¦curiosity. I would seek to understand, Admiral, why they abandoned her.'
There was silence, filling the room, growing towards something like an impasse. Gamet leaned back and closed his eyes.
Ah, lass, you ask questions ofâ¦of loyalty, as would someone who has never experienced it. You reveal to this admiral what can only be construed as a critical flaw. You command the Fourteenth Army, Adjunct, yet you do so in isolation, raising the very barricades you must needs take down if you would truly lead. What does Nok think of this, now? Is it any wonder he does not
â
âThe answer to your question,' the admiral said, âlies in what was both a strength and a flaw of the Emperor'sâ¦family. The family that he gathered to raise an empire. Kellanved began with but one companionâDancer. The two then hired a handful of locals in Malaz City and set about conquering the criminal element in the cityâI should point out, that criminal element happened to rule the entire island. Their target was Mock, Malaz Island's unofficial ruler. A pirate, and a cold-blooded killer.'
âWho were these first hirelings, Admiral?'
âMyself, Ameron, Dujek, a woman named Hawlâmy wife. I had been First Mate to a corsair that worked the sea lanes around the Napan Islesâwhich had just been annexed by Unta and were providing a staging point for the Untan king's planned invasion of Kartool. We'd taken a beating and had limped into Malaz Harbour, only to have the ship and its crew arrested by Mock, who was negotiating a trade of prisoners with Unta. Only Ameron and Hawl and I escaped. A lad named Dujek discovered where we were holed up and he delivered us to his new employers. Kellanved and Dancer.'
âWas this before they were granted entry into the Deadhouse?' Gamet asked.
âAye, but only just. Our residency in the Deadhouse rewarded us withâas is now clearly evidentâcertain gifts. Longevity, immunity to most diseases, andâ¦other things. The Deadhouse also provided us with an unassailable base of operations. Dancer later bolstered our numbers by recruiting among the refugee Napans who'd fled the conquest: Cartheron Crust and his brother, Urko.
And SurlyâLaseen. Three more men were to follow shortly thereafter. Toc Elder, Dassem Ultorâwho was, like Kellanved, of Dal Honese bloodâand a renegade High Septarch of the D'rek Cult, Tayschrenn. And finally, Duiker.' He half smiled at Tavore. âThe family. With which Kellanved conquered Malaz Island. Swiftly done, with minimal lossesâ¦'