Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
âPlenty of killing going on lately,' he muttered, staring down at her with amber eyes. âAll those loose threads being knotted, I expect.'
She watched him reach down with that glowing, taloned hand. It settled, palm-downward, warm between her breasts. The tips of the claws pricked her skin and a tremble ran through her.
That spread, coursing hot through her veins. That heat grew suddenly fierce, along her throat, in her lungs, between her legs.
The man grunted. âI thought it was consumption, that rattling breath. But no, it's just too much durhang. As for the rest, well, it's an odd thing about pleasure. Something Bidithal would have you never know. Its enemy is not pain. No, pain is simply the path taken to indifference. And indifference destroys the soul. Of course, Bidithal likes destroyed soulsâto mirror his own.'
If he continued speaking beyond that, she did not hear, as sensations long lost flooded into her, only slightly blunted by the lingering, satisfying haze of the durhang. She felt badly used between her legs, but knew that feeling would pass.
âOutrage.'
He was gathering her into his arms, but paused. âYou spoke?'
Outrage. Yes. That
. âWhere are you taking me?' The question came out between coughs, and she pushed his arms aside to bend over and spit out phlegm while he answered.
âTo my temple. Fear not, it's safe. Neither Febryl nor Bidithal will find you there. You've been force-healed, lass, and will need to sleep.'
âWhat do you want with me?'
âI'm not sure yet. I think I will need your help, and soon. But the choice is yours. Nor will you have to surrenderâ¦anything you don't want to. And, if you choose to simply walk away, that is fine as well. I will give you money and suppliesâand maybe even find you a horse. We can discuss that tomorrow. What is your name?'
He reached down once more and lifted her effortlessly.
âScillara.'
âI am Heboric, Destriant to Treach, the Tiger of Summer and the God of War.'
She stared up at him as he began carrying her along the path. âI am afraid I am going to disappoint you, Heboric. I think I have had my fill of priests.'
She felt his shrug, then he smiled wearily down at her. âThat's all right. Me too.'
Â
Felisin awoke shortly after L'oric returned with a freshly slaughtered lamb for his demon familiar, Greyfrog. Probably, the High Mage reflected when she first stirred beneath the tarpaulin, she had been roused to wakefulness by the sound of crunching bones.
The demon's appetite was voracious, and L'oric admired its singlemindedness, if not its rather untidy approach to eating.
Felisin emerged, wrapped in her blankets, and walked to L'oric's side. She was silent, her hair in disarray around her young, tanned face, and watched the demon consuming the last of the lamb with loud, violent gulps.
âGreyfrog,' L'oric murmured. âMy new familiar.'
âYour familiar? You are certain it's not the other way round? That thing could eat both of us.'
âObservant. She is right, companion L'oric. Maudlin. I would waddle. Alas. Torpid vulnerability. Distraught. All alone.'
âAll right.' L'oric smiled. âAn alliance is a better word for our partnership.'
âThere is mud on your boots, and snagged pieces of reed and grass.'
âI have travelled this night, Felisin.'
âSeeking allies?'
âNot intentionally. No, my search was for answers.'
âAnd did you find any?'
He hesitated, then sighed. âSome. Fewer than I would have hoped. But I return knowing one thing for certain. And that is, you must leave. As soon as possible.'
Her glance was searching. âAnd what of you?'
âI will follow, as soon as I can.'
âI'm to go alone?'
âNo. You will have Greyfrog with you. And one otherâ¦I hope.'
She nodded. âI am ready. I have had enough of this place. I no longer dream of vengeance against Bidithal. I just want to be gone. Is that cowardly of me?'
L'oric slowly shook his head. âBidithal will be taken care of, lass, in a manner befitting his crimes.'
âIf you are intending to murder him, then I would advise against sending Greyfrog with me. Bidithal is powerfulâperhaps more so than you realize, I can travel aloneâno-one will be hunting me, after all.'
âNo. Much as I would like to kill Bidithal myself, it will not be by my hand.'
âThere is something ominous in what you are saying, or, perhaps, in what you're not saying, L'oric.'
âThere will be a convergence, Felisin. With someâ¦unexpected guests. And I do not think anyone here will survive their company for long. There will beâ¦vast slaughter.'
âThen why are you staying?'
âTo witness, lass. For as long as I can.'
âWhy?'
He grimaced. âAs I said, I am still seeking answers.'
âAnd are they important enough to risk your own life?'
âThey are. And now, I will leave you here in Greyfrog's trust for a time. You are safe, and when I return it will be with the necessary supplies and mounts.'
She glanced over at the scaled, ape-like creature with its four eyes. âSafe, you said. At least until it gets hungry.'
âAppreciative. I will protect this one. But do not be gone too long. Ha ha.'
Â
Dawn was breathing light into the eastern sky as Heboric stepped outside to await his visitor. The Destriant remained in as much darkness as he could manage, not to hide from L'oricâwhom he now watched stride into view and approachâbut against any other watchers. They might well discern a figure, crouched there in the tent's doorway, but little more than that. He had drawn a heavy cloak about himself, hood drawn up over his head, and he kept his hands beneath the folds.
L'oric's steps slowed as he drew near. There would be no hiding the truth from this man, and Heboric smiled as he saw the High Mage's eyes widen.
âAye,' Heboric muttered, âI was reluctant. But it is done, and I have made peace with that.'
âAnd what is Treach's interest here?' L'oric asked after a long, uneasy moment.
âThere will be a battle,' Heboric replied, shrugging. âBeyond thatâ¦well, I'm not sure. We'll see, I expect.'
L'oric looked weary. âI was hoping to convince you to leave. To take Felisin away from here.'
âWhen?'
âTonight.'
âMove her camp a league, out beyond the northeast edge of the oasis. Three saddled horses, three more pack horses. Food and water sufficient for three, to take us as far as G'danisban.'
âThree?'
Heboric smiled. âYou are not aware of it, but there is a certainâ¦poetry to there being three of us.'
âVery well. And how long should she expect to wait?'
âAs long as she deems acceptable, L'oric. Like you, I intend to remain here for a few days yet.'
His eyes grew veiled. âThe convergence.'
Heboric nodded.
L'oric sighed. âWe are fools, you and I.'
âProbably.'
âI had once hoped, Ghost Hands, for an alliance between us.'
âIt exists, more or less, L'oric. Sufficient to ensure Felisin's safety. Not that we have managed well in that responsibility thus far. I could have helped,' Heboric growled.
âI am surprised, if you know what Bidithal did to her, that you have not sought vengeance.'
âVengeance? What is the point in that? No, L'oric, I have a better answer to Bidithal's butchery. Leave Bidithal to his fateâ¦'
The High Mage started, then smiled. âOdd, only a short time ago I voiced similar words to Felisin.'
Heboric watched the man walk away. After a moment, the Destriant turned and re-entered his temple.
Â
âThere is somethingâ¦inexorable about themâ¦'
They were in the path of the distant legions, seeing the glimmer of iron wavering like molten metal beneath a pillar of dust that, from this angle, seemed to rise straight up, spreading out in a hazy stain in the high desert winds. At Leoman's words, Corabb Bhilan Thenu'alas shivered. Dust was sifting down the folds of his ragged telaba; the air this close to the Whirlwind Wall was thick with suspended sand, filling his mouth with grit.
Leoman twisted in his saddle to study his warriors.
Anchoring his splintered lance into the stirrup cup, Corabb settled back in the saddle. He was exhausted. Virtually every night, they had attempted raids, and even when his own company had not been directly involved in the fighting there had been retreats to cover, counterattacks to blunt, then flight. Always flight. Had Sha'ik given Leoman five thousand warriors, the Adjunct and her army would be the ones retreating. All the way back to Aren, mauled and limping.
Leoman had done what he could with what he had, however, and they had purchasedâwith bloodâa handful of precious days. Moreover, they had gauged the Adjunct's tactics, and the mettle of the soldiers. More than once, concerted
pressure on the regular infantry had buckled them, and had Leoman the numbers, he could have pressed home and routed them. Instead, Gall's Burned Tears would arrive, or Wickans, or those damned marines, and the desert warriors would be the ones fleeing. Out into the night, pursued by horse warriors as skilled and tenacious as Leoman's own.
Seven hundred or so remainedâthey'd had to leave so many wounded behind, found and butchered by the Khundryl Burned Tears, with various body parts collected as trophies.
Leoman faced forward on his saddle once more. âWe are done.'
Corabb nodded. The Malazan army would reach the Whirlwind Wall by dusk. âPerhaps her otataral will fail,' he offered. âPerhaps the goddess will destroy them all this very night.'
The lines bracketing Leoman's blue eyes deepened as he narrowed his gaze on the advancing legions. âI think not. There is nothing pure in the Whirlwind's sorcery, Corabb. No, there will be a battle, at the very edge of the oasis. Korbolo Dom will command the Army of the Apocalypse. And you and I, and likely Mathok, shall find ourselves a suitable vantage pointâ¦to watch.'
Corabb leaned to one side and spat.
âOur war is done,' Leoman finished, collecting his reins.
âKorbolo Dom will need us,' Corabb asserted.
âIf he does, then we have lost.'
They urged their weary horses into motion, and rode through the Whirlwind Wall.
Â
He could ride at a canter for half a day, dropping the Jhag horse into a head-dipping, loping gait for the span of a bell, then resume the canter until dusk. Havok was a beast unlike any other he had known, including his namesake. He had ridden close enough to the north side of Ugarat to see watchers on the wall, and indeed they had sent out a score of horse warriors to contest his crossing the broad stone bridge spanning the riverâriders who should have reached it long before he did.
But Havok had understood what was needed, and canter stretched out into gallop, neck reaching forward, and they arrived fifty strides ahead of the pursuing warriors. Foot traffic on the bridge scattered from their path, and its span was wide enough to permit easy passage around the carts and wagons. Broad as the Ugarat River was, they reached the other side within a dozen heartbeats, the thunder of Havok's hoofs changing in timbre from stone to hard-packed earth as they rode out into the Ugarat Odhan.
Distance seemed to lose relevance to Karsa Orlong. Havok carried him effortlessly. There was no need for a saddle, and the single rein looped around the stallion's neck was all he needed to guide the beast. Nor did the Teblor hobble the horse for the night, instead leaving him free to graze on the vast sweeps of grass stretching out on all sides.
The northern part of the Ugarat Odhan had narrowed between the inward curl
of the two major riversâthe Ugarat and the other Karsa recalled as being named either Mersin or Thalas. A spine of hills had run northâsouth, dividing the two rivers, their summits and slopes hard-packed by the seasonal migration of bhederin over thousands of years. Those herds were gone, though their bones remained where predators and hunters had felled them, and the land was used now as occasional pasture, sparsely populated and that only in the wet season.
In the week it took to cross those hills, Karsa saw naught but signs of shepherd camps and boundary cairns, and the only grazing creatures were antelope and a species of large deer that fed only at night, spending days bedded down in low areas thick with tall, yellow grasses. Easily flushed then run down to provide Karsa with an occasional feast.
The Mersin River was shallow, almost dried up this late in the dry season. Fording it, he had then ridden northeast, coming along the trails skirting the south flanks of the Thalas Mountains, then eastward, to the city of Lato Revae, on the very edge of the Holy Desert.
He traversed the road south of the city's wall at night, avoiding all contact, and reached the pass that led into Raraku at dawn the following day.
A pervasive urgency was driving him on. He was unable to explain the desire in his own mind, yet did not question it. He had been gone a long time, and though he did not believe the battle in Raraku had occurred, he sensed it was imminent.
And Karsa wanted to be there. Not to kill Malazans, but to guard Leoman's back. But there was a darker truth, he well knew. The battle would be a day of chaos, and Karsa Orlong meant to add to it.
Sha'ik or no Sha'ik, there are those in her camp who deserve only death. And I shall deliver it.
He did not bother conjuring a list of reasons, of insults delivered, contempt unveiled, crimes committed. He had been indifferent for long enough, indifferent to so many things. He had reined in his spirit's greatest strengths, among them his need to make judgements, and act decisively upon them in true Teblor fashion.
I have tolerated the deceitful and the malicious for long enough. My sword shall now answer them.