Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
âHull's very own inspiration. And that is why he is with Buruk the Pale.'
âDo you intend to stand in his way at the Great Meeting?'
âIt might well be too late by that time, Brys. Assuming that is my intention.'
âIt isn't?'
âI haven't decided.'
âYou want war?'
Gerun's gaze remained level. âThat particular tide stirs the deepest silts. Blinding everyone. A man with a goal can get a lot done in that cloud. And, eventually, it settles.'
âAnd lo,' Brys said, unable to hide his bitterness, âthe world has changed.'
âPossibly.'
âWar as the meansâ'
âTo a peaceful endâ'
âThat you will find pleasing to your eye.'
Gerun pushed his plate away and sat back once more. âWhat is life without ambition, Brys?'
Brys rose, his meal pried apart into a chaotic mass on the plate before him. âTehol would be better at answering that than am I, Finadd.'
Gerun smiled up at him. âInform Nifadas and Kuru Qan that I am not unaware of the complexities wrought through the impending Great Meeting. Nor am I blind to the need to usher me out of the city for a time. I have, of course, compensated for my own absence, in anticipation of my triumphant return.'
âI will convey your words, Finadd.'
âI regret your loss of appetite, Brys. The fish was excellent. Next time, we will speak of inconsequential things. I both respect and admire you, Champion.'
âAh, so I am not on your list.'
âNot yet. A joke, Brys,' he added upon seeing the Champion's expression. âBesides, you'd cut me to pieces. How can I not admire that? I see it this wayâthe history of this decade, for our dear Letheras, can be most succinctly understood by a faithful recounting of the three Beddict brothers. And, as is clear, the tale's not yet done.'
So it would seem
. âI thank you, Finadd, for the company and the invitation.'
Gerun leaned forward and picked up the Champion's plate. âTake the back exit, if you please,' he said, offering Brys the plate. âThere's a starveling lad living in the alley. Mind, he's to return the silverâmake sure he understands that. Tell him you were my guest.'
âVery well, Finadd.'
Â
âTry these on.'
Tehol stared at the woollen trousers, then reached for them. âTell me, Bugg, is there any point in you continuing?'
âDo you mean these leggings, or with my sorry existence?'
âHave you hired your crew?' He stripped off his skirt and began donning the trousers.
âTwenty of the most miserable malcontents I could find.'
âGrievances?'
âEvery one of them, and I'm pretty certain they are all legitimate. Granted, a few probably deserved their banishment from the trade.'
âMost de-certifications are political, Bugg. Just be sure none of them are incompetent. All we need is for them to keep a secret, and for that, spite against the guilds is the best motivation.'
âI'm not entirely convinced. Besides, we've had some warnings from the guilds.'
âIn person?'
âDelivered missives. So far. Your left knee will stay warm.'
âWarm? It's hot out there, Bugg, despite what your old rheumy bones tell you.'
âWell, they're trousers for every season.'
âReally? Assure the guilds we're not out to underbid. In fact, the very opposite. Nor do we pay our crew higher rates. No benefits, eitherâ'
âBarring a stake in the enterprise.'
âSay nothing of that, Bugg. Look at the hairs on my right thigh. They're standing on end.'
âIt's the contrast they don't like.'
âThe guilds?'
âNo, your hairs. The guilds just want to know where by the Errant I came from. And how dare I register a company.'
âDon't worry about that, Bugg. Once they find out what you're claiming to be able to do, they'll be sure you'll fail and so ignore you thereafter. Until you succeed, that is.'
âI'm having second thoughts.'
âAbout what?'
âPut the skirt back on.'
âI'm inclined to agree with you. Find some more wool. Preferably the same colour, although that is not essential, I suppose. In any case, we have a meeting with the three darlings this evening.'
âRisky.'
âWe must be circumspect.'
âThat goes both ways. I stole that wool.'
Tehol wrapped the sheet once more about his waist. âI'll be back down later to collect you. Clean up around here, will you?'
âIf I've the time.'
Tehol climbed the ladder to the roof.
The sun's light was deepening, as it edged towards the horizon, bathing the surrounding buildings in a warm glow. Two artists had set up easels on the Third Tier, competing to immortalize Tehol and his bed. He gave them a wave that seemed to trigger a loud argument, then settled down on the sun-warmed mattress. Stared up at the darkening sky.
He had seen his brother Brys at the Drownings. On the other side of the canal, in conversation with Gerun Eberict. Rumour had it that Gerun was accompanying the delegation to the Tiste Edur. Hardly surprising. The King needed that wild man out of the city.
The problem with gold was the way it crawled. Where nothing else could. It seeped out from secrets, flowered in what should have been lifeless cracks. It strutted when it should have remained hidden, beneath notice. Brazen as any weed between the cobbles, and, if one was so inclined, one could track those roots all the way down. Sudden spending, from kin of dead hirelings, followed quicklyâbut not quickly enoughâby sudden, inexplicable demises. A strange severing that left the king's inquisitors with no-one to question, no-one to torture to find the source of the conspiracy. Assassination attempts were no small thing, after all, especially when the king himself was the target. Extraordinary, almost unbelievable successâto have reached Diskanar's own bedchamber, to stand poised above the man, mere heartbeats from delivering death. That particular sorceror had never before shown such skill in the relevant arts. To conjure sand to fill the chests of two men was highest sorcery.
Natural curiosity and possible advantage, these had been Tehol's motives, and he'd been much quicker than the royal inquisitors. A fortune, he had discovered, had been spent on the conspiracy, a life's savings.
Clearly, only Gerun Eberict had known the full extent of the scheme. His hirelings would not have anticipated their employer's attacking them. Killing them. They'd fought back, and one had come close to succeeding. And the Finadd carried the scars still, lips and crooked teeth, to show the nearness of the thing.
Immunity from conviction. So that Gerun Eberict could set out and do what he wanted to do. Judge and executioner, for crimes real and imagined, for offences both major and minor.
In a way, Tehol admired the man. For his determination, if not his methods. And for devising and gambling all on a scheme that took one's breath away with its boldâ¦extremity.
No doubt Brys had official business with the man. As King's Champion.
Even so, worrying. It wouldn't do to have his young brother so close to Gerun Eberict.
For if Tehol possessed a true enemy, a foe to match his own cleverness whoâit would appearâsurpassed Tehol himself in viciousnessâit was Finadd Gerun Eberict, possessor of the King's Leave.
And he'd been sniffing around, twisting arms. Safer, then, to assume Gerun knew that Tehol was not as destitute as most would believe. Nor entirelyâ¦inactive.
Thus, a new fold to consider in this rumpled, tangled tapestry.
Gerun was immune. But not without enemies. Granted, deadly with a sword, and known to have a dozen sworn, blood-bound bodyguards to protect him when he slept. His estate was rumoured to be impregnable, and possessed of its own armoury, apothecary with resident alchemist well versed in poisons and their antidotes, voluminous storehouses, and independent source of water. All in all, Gerun had planned for virtually every contingency.
Barring the singular focus of the mind of one Tehol Beddict
.
Sometimes the only solution was also the simplest, most obvious.
See a weed between the cobblesâ¦pull it out
.
âBugg!'
A faint voice from below. âWhat?'
âWho was holding Gerun's tiles on that bet this afternoon?'
His servant's grizzled head appeared in the hatch. âYou already know, since you own the bastard. Turble. Assuming he's not dead of a heart attackâ¦or suicide.'
âTurble? Not a chance. My guess is, the man's packing. A sudden trip to the Outer Isles.'
âHe'll never make it to the city gates.'
âMeaning Gerun is on the poor bastard.'
âWouldn't you be? With that payoff?'
Tehol frowned. âSuicide, I'm now thinking, might well be Turble's conclusion
to his sorry state of affairs. Unexpected, true, and all the more shocking for it. He's got no kin, as I recall. So the debt dies with him.'
âAnd Gerun is out eight hundred docks.'
âHe might wince at that, but not so much as you'd notice. The man's worth a peak, maybe more.'
âYou don't know?'
âAll right, so I was generalizing. Of course I know, down to the last dock. Nay, the last stripling. In any case, I was saying, or, rather, suggesting, that the loss of eight hundred docks is not what would make Gerun sting. It's the
escape
. The one trail even Gerun can't doggedly followânot willingly, anyway. Thus, Turble has to commit suicide.'
âI doubt he'll agree to it.'
âNo, probably not. But set it in motion, Bugg. Down to the Eddies. Find us a suitable corpse. Fresh, and not yet drained. Get a bottle or two of Turble's blood from him in exchangeâ'
âWhat'll it be? Fire? Who commits suicide using fire?'
âThe fire will be an unfortunate consequence of an unattended oil lamp. Unattended because of the suicide. Burnt beyond recognition, alas, but the scrives will swear by the blood's owner. That's how they work, isn't it?'
âA man's veins never lie.'
âRight. Only, they can.'
âRight, if you're insane enough to drain a corpse and pump new blood into it.'
âA ghastly exercise, Bugg. Glad you're up to it.'
The wizened face at the hatch was scowling. âAnd Turble?'
âWe smuggle him out the usual way. He's always wanted to take up fishing. Put someone in the tunnel, in case he bolts sooner than we expect. Gerun's watchers will be our finest witnesses. Oh, and won't the Finadd spit.'
âIs this wise?' Bugg asked.
âNo choice. He's the only man who can stop me. So I'm getting him first.'
âIf he catches a whiff that it's youâ'
âThen I'm a dead man.'
âAnd I'm out of work.'
âNonsense. The lasses will carry on. Besides, you are my beneficiaryâunofficially, of course.'
âShould you have told me that?'
âWhy not? I'm lying.'
Bugg's head sank back down.
Tehol settled back onto the bed.
Now, I need to find me a thief. A good one.
Ah! I know the very one. Poor lassâ¦
âBugg!'
Â
Shurq Elalle's fate had taken a turn for the worse. Nothing to do with her profession, for her skills in the art of thievery were legendary among the lawless class. An argument with her landlord, sadly escalating to attempted murder on his part,
to which she of courseâin all legalityâresponded by flinging him out the window. The hapless man's fall had, unfortunately, been broken by a waddling merchant on the street below. The landlord's neck broke. So did the merchant's.
Careless self-defence leading to the death of an innocent had been the charge. Four hundred docks, halved. Normally, Shurq could have paid the fine and that would have been that. Alas, her argument with the landlord had been over a certain hoard of gold that had inexplicably vanished from Shurq's cache. Without a dock to her name, she had been marched down to the canal.
Even then, she was a fit woman. Two hundred docks were probably manageableâhad not the retrieval rope snagged on the spines of a forty-stone lupe fish that had surfaced for a look at the swimmer, only to dive back down to the bottom, taking Shurq with it.
Lupe fish, while rare in the canal, ate only men. Never women. No-one knew why this was the case.
Shurq Ellale drowned.
But, as it turned out, there was dead and then there was dead. Unbeknownst to her, Shurq had been cursed by one of her past victims. A curse fully paid for and sanctified by the Empty Temple. So, though her lungs filled with foul water, though her heart stopped, as did all other discernible functions of the body and mind, there she stood when finally retrieved from the canal, sheathed in mud, eyes dull and the whites browned by burst vessels and lifeless blood, all in all most miserable and sadly bemused.
Even the lawless and the homeless shunned her thereafter. All the living, in fact. Walking past as if she was in truth a ghost, a dead memory.
Her flesh did not decay, although its pallor was noticeably unhealthy. Nor were her reactions and deft abilities in any way diminished. She could speak. See. Hear. Think. None of which improved her mood, much.
Bugg found her where Tehol had said she'd be found. In an alley behind a bordello. Listening, as she did every night, to the moans of pleasureâreal and improvisedâissuing from the windows above.
âShurq Elalle.'
Listless, murky eyes fixed on him. âI give no pleasure,' she said.
âAlas, neither do I, these days. I am here to deliver to you an indefinite contract from my master.'
âAnd who would that be?'
âNot yet, I'm afraid. Thieving work, Shurq.'
âWhat need have I for riches?'
âWell, that would depend on their substance, I'd imagine.'