Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
âMayen,' Tomad said once she had seated herself, âwelcome to the hearth of the Sengar. It grieves me that this night also marks, for the next while, the last in which all my sons are present. They undertake a journey for the Warlock King, and I pray for their safe return.'
âI am led to believe the ice-fields pose no great risks for warriors of the Edur,' Mayen replied. âYet I see gravity and concern in your eyes, Tomad Sengar.'
âAn aged father's fretting,' Tomad said with a faint smile. âNothing more.'
Rhulad spoke, âThe Arapay rarely venture onto the icefields, for fear of hauntings. More, ice can blind, and the cold can steal life like the bleeding of an unseen wound. It is said there are beasts as wellâ'
Fear cut in, âMy brother seeks resounding glory in the unknown, Mayen, so that you may look upon us all with awe and wonder.'
âI am afraid he has left me with naught but dread,' she said. âAnd now I must worry for your fates.'
âWe are equal to all that might assail us,' Rhulad said quickly.
Barring the babbling tongue of an unblooded fool.
Wine goblets were refilled, and a few moments passed, then Uruth spoke. âWhen one does not know what one seeks, caution is the surest armour.' She faced Binadas. âAmong us, you alone have ventured beyond the eastern borders of Arapay land. What dangers do the ice-fields pose?'
Binadas frowned. âOld sorcery, Mother. But it seems inclined to slumber.' He paused, thinking. âA tribe of hunters who live on the iceâI have seen naught but tracks. The Arapay say they hunt at night.'
âHunt what?' Trull asked.
His brother shrugged.
âThere will be six of us,' Rhulad said. âTheradas and Midik Buhn, and all can speak to Theradas's skills. Although unblooded,' he added, âMidik is nearly my equal with the sword. Hannan Mosag chose well in choosing the warrior sons of Tomad Sengar.'
This last statement hung strange in the air, as if rife with possible meanings, each one tumbling in a different direction. Such was the poison of suspicion. The women had their beliefs, Trull well knew, and now probably looked upon the six warriors in question, wondering at Hannan Mosag's motivations, his reasons for choosing these particular men. And Fear, as well, would hold to his own thoughts, knowing what he knewâ
as we Sengar all know, now.
Trull sensed the uncertainty and began wondering for himself. Fear, after all, was Weapons Master for all the tribes, and indeed had been tasked with reshaping the Edur military structure. From Weapons Master to War Master, then. It seemed capricious to so risk Fear Sengar. And Binadas was considered by most to be among the united tribes' more formidable sorcerors. Together, Fear and Binadas had been crucial during the campaigns of conquest, whilst Theradas Buhn was unequalled in leading raids from the sea.
The only expendable members of this expedition are myself, Rhulad and Midik.
Was the issue, therefore, one of trust?
What precisely
was
this gift they were to recover?
âThere have been untoward events of late,' Mayen said, with a glance at Uruth.
Trull caught his father's scowl, but Mayen must have seen acquiescence in Uruth's expression, for she continued, âSpirits walked the darkness the night of the vigil. Unwelcome of aspect, intruders upon our holy sitesâthe wraiths fled at their approach.'
âThis is the first I have heard of such things,' Tomad said.
Uruth reached for her wine cup and held it out to be refilled by a slave. âThey are known none the less, husband. Hannan Mosag and his K'risnan have stirred deep shadows. The tide of change risesâand soon, I fear, it will sweep us away.'
âBut it is we who are rising on that tide,' Tomad said, his face darkening. âIt is one thing to question defeat, but now you question victory, wife.'
âI speak only of the Great Meeting to come. Did not our own sons tell of the summoning from the depths that stole the souls of the Letherii seal-hunters? When those ships sail into the harbour at Trate, how think you the Letherii will react? We have begun the dance of war.'
âIf that were so,' Tomad retorted, âthen there would be little point to treat with them.'
âExcept,' Trull cut in, recalling his father's own words when he first returned from the Calach beds, âto take their measure.'
âIt was taken long ago,' Fear said. âThe Letherii will seek to do to us as they have done to the Nerek and the Tarthenal. Most among them see no error or moral flaw in their past deeds. Those who do are unable or unwilling to question the methods, only the execution, and so they are doomed to repeat the horrors, and see the resultâno matter its natureâas yet one more test of firmly held principles. And even should the blood run in a river around them, they will obsess on the details. One cannot challenge the fundamental beliefs of such people, for they will not hear you.'
âThen there will be war,' Trull whispered.
âThere is always war, brother,' Fear replied. âFaiths, words and swords: history resounds with their interminable clash.'
âThat, and the breaking of bones,' Rhulad said, with the smile of a man with a secret.
Foolish conceit, for Tomad could not miss it and he leaned forward. âRhulad Sengar, you speak like a blind elder with a sack full of wraiths. I am tempted to drag you across this table and choke the gloat from your face.'
Trull felt sweat prickle beneath his clothes. He saw the blood leave his brother's face.
Oh, Father, you deliver a wound deeper than you could ever have imagined.
He glanced over at Mayen and was startled to see something avid in her eyes, a malice, a barely constrained delight.
âI am not so young, Father,' Rhulad said in a rasp, ânor you so old, to let such words passâ'
Tomad's fist thumped the tabletop, sending cups and plates clattering. âThen speak like a man, Rhulad! Tell us all this dread knowledge that coils your every strut and has for the past week! Or do you seek to part tender thighs with your womanish ways? Do you imagine you are the first young warrior who seeks to walk in step with women? Sympathy, son, is a poor path to lustâ'
Rhulad was on his feet, his face twisting with rage. âAnd which bitch would you have me bed, Father? To whom am I promised? And in whose name? You have leashed me here in this village and then you mock when I strain.' He glared at the others, fixing at last on Trull. âWhen the war begins, Hannan Mosag will announce a sacrifice. He must. A throat will be opened to spill down the bow of the lead ship. He will choose me, won't he?'
âRhulad,' Trull said, âI have heard no such thingâ'
âHe will! I am to bed three daughters! Sheltatha Lore, Sukul Ankhadu and Menandore!'
A plate skittered out from the hands of a slave and cracked onto the tabletop, spilling the shellfish it held. As the slave reached forward to contain the accident, Uruth's hands snapped out and grasped the Letherii by the wrists. A savage twist to reveal the palms.
The skin had been torn from them, raw, red, glittering wet and cracked.
âWhat is this, Udinaas?' Uruth demanded. She rose and yanked him close.
âI fellâ' the Letherii gasped.
âTo weep your wounds onto our food? Have you lost your mind?'
âMistress!' another slave ventured, edging forward. âI saw him come in earlierâhe bore no such wounds then, I swear it!'
âHe is the one who fought the Wyval!' another cried, backing away in sudden terror.
âUdinaas is possessed!' the other slave shrieked.
âQuiet!' Uruth set a hand against Udinaas's forehead and pushed back hard. He grunted in pain.
Sorcery swirled out to surround the slave. He spasmed, then went limp, collapsing at Uruth's feet.
âThere is nothing within him,' she said, withdrawing a trembling hand.
Mayen spoke. âFeather Witch, attend to Uruth's slave.'
The young Letherii woman darted forward. Another slave appeared to help her drag the unconscious man away.
âI saw no insult in the slave's actions,' Mayen continued. âThe wounds were indeed raw, but he held cloth against them.' She reached out and lifted the plate to reveal the bleached linen that Udinaas had used to cover his hands.
Uruth grunted and slowly sat. âNone the less, he should have informed me. And for that oversight he must be punished.'
âYou just raped his mind,' Mayen replied. âIs that not sufficient?'
Silence.
Daughters take us, the coming year should prove interesting.
One year, as demanded by tradition, and then Fear and Mayen would take up residence in a house of their own.
Uruth simply glared at the younger woman, then, to Trull's surprise, she nodded. âVery well, Mayen. You are guest this night, and so I will abide by your wishes.'
Through all of this Rhulad had remained standing, but now he slowly sat once more.
Tomad said, âRhulad, I know of no plans to resurrect the ancient blood sacrifice to announce a war. Hannan Mosag is not careless with the lives of his warriors, even those as yet unblooded. I cannot fathom how you came to believe such a fate awaited you. Perhaps,' he added, âthis journey you are about to undertake will provide you with the opportunity to become a blooded warrior, and so stand with pride alongside your brothers. So I shall pray.'
It was a clear overture, this wish for glory, and Rhulad displayed uncharacteristic wisdom in accepting it with a simple nod.
Neither Feather Witch nor Udinaas returned, but the remaining slaves proved sufficient in serving the rest of the meal.
And for all this, Trull still could not claim any understanding of Mayen, Fear's betrothed.
Â
A stinging slap and he opened his eyes.
To see Feather Witch's face hovering above his own, a face filled with rage. âYou damned fool!' she hissed.
Blinking, Udinaas looked around. They were huddled in his sleeping niche. Beyond the cloth hanging, the low sounds of eating and soft conversation.
Udinaas smiled.
Feather Witch scowled. âSheâ'
âI know,' he cut in. âAnd she found nothing.'
He watched her beautiful eyes widen. âIt is true, then?'
âIt must be.'
âYou are lying, Udinaas. The Wyval hid. Somehow, somewhere, it hid itself from Uruth.'
âWhy are you so certain of that, Feather Witch?'
She sat back suddenly. âIt doesn't matterâ'
âYou have had dreams, haven't you?'
She started, then looked away. âYou are a Debtor's son. You are nothing to me.'
âAnd you are everything to me, Feather Witch.'
âDon't be an idiot, Udinaas! I might as well wed a hold rat! Now, be quiet, I need to think.'
He slowly sat up, drawing their faces close once again. âThere is no need,' he said. âI trust you, and so I will explain. She looked deep indeed, but the Wyval was gone. It would have been different, had Uruth sought out my shadow.'
She blinked in sudden comprehension, then: âThat cannot be,' she said, shaking her head. âYou are Letherii. The wraiths serve only the Edurâ'
âThe wraiths bend a knee because they must. They are as much slaves to the Edur as we are, Feather Witch. I have found an allyâ¦'
âTo what end, Udinaas?'
He smiled again, and this time it was a much darker smile. âSomething I well understand. The repaying of debts, Feather Witch. In full.'
We are seized in the age
of our youth
dragged over this road's stones
spent and burdened
by your desires.
And unshod hoofs clatter beneath bones
to remind us of every
fateful charge
upon the hills you have sown
with frozen seeds
in this dead earth.
Swallowing ground
and grinding bit
we climb into the sky so alone
in our fretted ways
a heaving of limbs
and the iron stars burst from your heels
baffling urgency
warning us of your savage bite.
D
ESTRIERS
(S
ONS TO
F
ATHER
)
F
ISHER KEL
T
ATH
The Errant bends fate,
As unseen armour
Lifting to blunt the blade
On a field sudden
With battle, and the crowd
Jostles blind their eyes gouged out
By the strait of these affairs
Where dark fools dance on tiles
And chance rides a spear
With red bronze
To spit worlds like skulls
One upon the other
Until the seas pour down
To thicken metal-clad hands
So this then is the Errant
Who guides every fate
Unerring
Upon the breast of men.
T
HE
C
ASTING OF
T
ILES
C
EDA
A
NKARAN
Q
AN
(1059 B
URN'S
S
LEEP
)
The Tarancede tower rose from the south side of Trate's harbour. Hewn from raw basalt it was devoid of elegance or beauty, reaching like a gnarled arm seven storeys from an artificial island of jagged rocks. Waves hammered it from all sides, flinging spume into the air. There were no windows, no doors, yet a series of glossy obsidian plates ringed the uppermost level, each one as tall as a man and almost as wide.
Nine similar towers rose above the borderlands, but the Tarancede was the only one to stand above the harsh seas of the north.
The sun's light was a lurid glare against the obsidian plates, high above a harbour already swallowed by the day's end. A dozen fisherboats rode the choppy waters beyond the bay, plying the shelf of shallows to the south. They were well out of the sea-lanes and probably heedless of the three ships that appeared to the north, their full-bellied sails as they drove on down towards the harbour, the air around them crowded with squalling gulls.
They drew closer, and a ship's pilot scow set out from the main pier to meet them.
The three harvest ships were reflected in the tower's obsidian plates, sliding in strange ripples from one to the next, the gulls smudged white streaks around them.
The scow's oars suddenly backed wildly, twisting the craft away.
Shapes swarmed across the rigging of the lead ship. The steady wind that had borne the sails fell, sudden as a drawn breath, and canvas billowed down. The figures flitting above the deck, only vaguely human-shaped, seemed to drift away, like black banners, across the deepening gloom. The gulls spun from their paths with shrill cries.
From the scow an alarm bell began clanging. Not steady. Discordant, a cacophony of panic.
Â
No sailor who had lived or would ever live discounted the sea's hungry depths. Ancient spirits rode the currents of darkness far from the sun's light, stirring silts that swallowed history beneath endless layers of indifferent silence. Their powers were immense, their appetites insatiable. All that came down from the lit world above settled into their embrace.
The surface of the seas, every sailor knew, was ephemeral. Quaint sketchings across an ever-changing slate, and lives were but sparks, so easily quenched by the demon forces that could rise from far below to shake their beast hides and so up-end the world.
Propitiation was aversion, a prayer to pass unnoticed, to escape untaken. Blood before the bow, dolphins dancing to starboard and a gob of spit to ride blessed winds. The left hand scrubs, the right hand dries. Wind widdershins on the cleats, sun-bleached rags tied to the sea-anchor's chain. A score of gestures, unquestioned and bound in tradition, all to slide the seas in peace.
None sought to call up the ravelled spirits from those water-crushed valleys that saw no light. They were not things to be bound, after all. Nor bargained with. Their hearts beat in the cycles of the moon, their voice was the heaving storm and their wings could spread from horizon to horizon, in towering white-veined sheets of water that swept all before them.
Beneath the waves of Trate Harbour, with three dead ships like fins on its back, the bound spirit clambered in a surge of cold currents towards shore. The last spears of sunlight slanted through its swirling flesh, and the easing of massive pressures made the creature grow in size, pushing onto the rocky coastlines ahead and to the sides the bay's own warmer waters, so that the fish and crustaceans of the shallows tumbled up from the waves in mangled shreds of flesh and shattered shell, granting the gulls and land crabs a sudden feast of slaughter.
The spirit lifted the ships, careering wild now, on a single wave that rose high as it swelled shoreward. The docks, which had a few moments earlier been crowded with silent onlookers, became a swarm of fleeing figures, the streets leading inland filling with stampedes that slowed to choking, crushing masses of humanity.
The wave tumbled closer, then suddenly fell away. Hulls thundered at the swift plunge, spars snapped and, on the third ship, the main mast exploded in a cloud of splintered wood. Rocking, trailing wreckage, the harvesters coasted between the piers.
Pressures drawing inward, building once more, the spirit withdrew from the bay. In its wake, devastation.
Glimmering in its obsidian world, the first ship crunched and slid against a pier, and came to a gentle rest. The white flecks of the gulls plunged down to the deck, to begin at long last their feeding. The Tarancede Tower had witnessed all, the smooth tiles near its pinnacle absorbing every flickering detail of the event, despite the failing light.
And, in a chamber beneath the old palace in the city of Letheras, far to the southeast, Ceda Kuru Qan watched. Before him lay a tile that matched those of the distant tower above Trate's harbour, and, as he stared at the enormous black shadow that had filled the bay and most of the inlet, and was now beginning its slow withdrawal, the sorceror blinked sweat from his eyes and forced his gaze back to those three harvest ships now lolling against the piers.
The gulls and the gathering darkness made it difficult to see much, barring the twisted corpses huddled on the deck, and the last few flickering wraiths.
But Kuru Qan had seen enough.
Â
Five wings to the Eternal Domicile, of which only three were complete. Each of the latter consisted of wide hallways with arched ceilings sheathed in gold-leaf. Between elaborate flying buttresses to either side and running the entire length were doorways leading to chambers that would serve as offices and domiciles of the Royal Household's administrative and maintenance staff. Towards the centre the adjoining rooms would house guards, armouries and trapdoors leading to private passagesâbeneath ground levelâthat encircled the entire palace that was the heart of the Eternal Domicile.
At the moment, however, those passages were chest-deep in muddy water, through which rats moved with no particular purpose barring that of, possibly, pleasure. Brys Beddict stood on a landing three steps from the silt-laden flood and watched the up-thrust heads swimming back and forth in the gloom. Beside him stood a palace engineer covered in drying mud.
âThe pumps are next to useless,' the man was saying. âWe went with big hoses, we went with small ones, made no difference. Once the pull got strong enough in went a rat, or ten, plugging things up. Besides, the seep's as steady as ever. Though the Plumbs still swear we're above the table here.'
âI'm sure the Ceda will consent to attaching a mage to your crew.'
âI'd appreciate it, Finadd. All we need is to hold the flow back for a time, so's we can bucket the water out and the catchers can go down and collect the rats. We lost Ormly last night, the palace's best catcher. Likely drownedâthe fool couldn't swim. If the Errant's looking away, we might be spared finding much more than bones. Rats know when it's a catcher they've found, you know.'
âThese tunnels are essential to maintaining the security of the kingâ'
âWell, ain't nobody likely to try using them if they're floodedâ'
âNot as a means of ingress for assassins,' Brys cut in. âThey are to permit the swift passage of guards to any area above that is breached.'
âYes, yes. I was only making a joke, Finadd. Of course, you could choose fast swimmers among your guardsâ¦all right, never mind. Get us a mage to sniff round and tell us what's going on and then to stop the water coming in and we'll take care of the rest.'
âPresumably,' Brys said, âthis is not indicative of subsidenceâ'
âLike the other wings? No, nothing's slumpedâwe'd be able to tell. Anyway, there's rumours that those ones are going to get a fresh look at. A new construction company has been working down there, nearby. Some fool bought up the surrounding land. There's whispers they've figured out how to shore up buildings.'
âReally? I've heard nothing about it.'
âThe guilds aren't happy about it, that's for sure, since these upstarts are hiring the Unwelcomesâthose malcontents who made the List. Paying 'em less than the usual rate, though, which is the only thing going for them, I suppose. The guilds can't close them down so long as they do that.' The engineer shrugged, began prying pieces of hardened clay from his forearms, wincing at the pulled hairs. âOf course, if the royal architects decide that Bugg's shoring works, then that company's roll is going sky-high.'
Brys slowly turned from his study of the rats and eyed the engineer. âBugg?'
âDamn, I need a bath. Look at my nails. Yeah, Bugg's Construction. There must be a Bugg, then, right? Else why name it Bugg's Construction?'
A shout from a crewman down on the lowest step, then a scream. Wild scrambling up to the landing, where the worker spun round and pointed.
A mass of rats, almost as wide as the passageway itself, had edged into view. Moving like a raft, it crept into the pool of lantern light towards the stairs. In its centreâthe revelation eliciting yet another scream from the worker and a curse from the engineerâfloated a human head. Yellow-tinted silver hair, a pallid, deeply lined face with a forehead high and broad above staring, narrow-set eyes.
Other rats raced away as the raft slipped to nudge against the lowest step.
The worker gasped, âErrant take us, it's Ormly!'
The eyes flickered, then the head was rising, lifting the nearest rats in the raft with it, humped over shoulders, streaming glimmering water. âWho in the Hold else would it be?' the apparition snapped, pausing to hawk up a mouthful of phlegm and spitting it into the swirling water. âLike my trophies?' he asked, raising his arms beneath the vast cape of rats. âStrings and tails. Damned heavy when wet, though.'
âWe thought you were dead,' the engineer muttered, in a tone suggesting that he would rather it were true.
âYou
thought
. You're always
thinking
, ain't ya, Grum? Maybe this, probably that, could be, might be, should beâhah! Think these rats scared me? Think I was just going to drown? Hold's welcoming pit, I'm a catcher and not any old catcher. They know me, all right. Every rat in this damned city knows Ormly the Catcher! Who's this?'
âFinadd Brys Beddict.' The King's Champion introduced himself. âThat is an impressive collection of trophies you've amassed there, Catcher.'
The man's eyes brightened. âIsn't it just! Better when it's floating, though. Right now, damned heavy. Damned heavy.'
âBest climb out from under it,' Brys suggested. âEngineer Grum, I think a fine meal, plenty of wine and a night off is due Ormly the Catcher.'
âYes, sir.'
âI will speak with the Ceda regarding your request.'
âThanks.'
Brys left them on the landing. It seemed increasingly unlikely that the Eternal Domicile would be ready for the birth of the Eighth Age. Among the populace, there seemed to be less than faint enthusiasm for the coming celebration. The histories might well recount prophecies about the glorious empire destined to rise once more in less than a year from now, but in truth, there was little in this particular time that supported the notion of a renaissance, neither economically nor militarily. If anything, there was a slight uneasiness, centred on the impending treaty gathering with the tribes of the Tiste Edur. Risk and opportunity; the two were synonymous for the Letherii. Even so, war was never pleasant, although thus far always satisfactory in its conclusion. Thus risk led to opportunity, with few thoughts spared for the defeated.
Granted, the Edur tribes were now united. At the same time, other such alliances had formed in opposition to Letherii ambitions in the past, and not one had proved immune to divisive strategies. Gold bought betrayal again and again. Alliances crumbled and the enemy collapsed. What likelihood that it would be any different this time round?
Brys wondered at the implicit complacency of his own people. He was not, he was certain, misreading public sentiment. Nerves were on edge, but only slightly. Markets remained strong. And the day-in, day-out mindless yearnings of a people for whom possession was everything continued unabated.
Within the palace, however, emotions were more fraught. The Ceda's divinations promised a fundamental alteration awaiting Lether. Kuru Qan spoke, in a meandering, bemused way, of some sort of Ascension. A transformationâ¦
from king to emperor
, although how such a progression would manifest itself remained to be seen. The annexation of the Tiste Edur and their rich homelands would indeed initiate a renewed vigour, a frenzy of profit. Victory would carry its own affirmation of the righteousness of Lether and its ways.
Brys emerged from the Second Wing and made his way down towards Narrow Canal. It was late morning, almost noon. Earlier that day, he had exercised and sparred with the other off-duty palace guards in the compound backing the barracks, then had breakfasted at a courtyard restaurant alongside Quillas Canal, thankful for this brief time of solitude, although his separation from the palaceâpermitted only because the king was visiting the chambers of the First Concubine and would not emerge until midafternoonâwas an invisible tether that gradually tightened, until he felt compelled to resume his duties by visiting the Eternal Domicile and checking on progress there. And then back to the old palace.
To find it, upon passing through the main gate and striding into the Grand Hall, in an uproar.
Heart thudding hard in his chest, Brys approached the nearest guard. âCorporal, what has happened?'
The soldier saluted. âNot sure, Finadd. News from Trate, I gather. The Edur have slaughtered some Letherii sailors. With foulest sorcery.'
âThe king?'
âHas called a council in two bells' time.'
âThank you, Corporal.'
Brys continued on into the palace.
He made his way into the inner chambers. Among the retainers and messengers rushing along the central corridor he saw Chancellor Triban Gnol standing with a handful of followers, a certain animation to his whispered conversation. The man's dark eyes flicked to Brys as the Champion strode past, but his lips did not cease moving. Behind the Chancellor, Brys saw, was the Queen's Consort, Turudal Brizad, leaning insouciantly against the wall, his soft, almost feminine features displaying a faint smirk.