Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
âWhat of this region of lakes?' he asked, pointing to the northerly bulge along the coast, west of Yath Alban.
She set her equipment down, then, sighing, she crouched at his side. âDifficult to cross. The bedrock is exposed there, badly folded, pocked with lakes and only a few, mostly impassable rivers. The forest is spruce, fir and pine, with low-lying thickets in the basins.'
âHow do you know all that if you have never been there?'
She pointed. âI am reading Dela's notes, there, along the border. He also says he found signs suggesting there were people living there, but no contact was ever made. Beyond lies the island kingdom of Sepik, now a remote subject of the Malazan Empire, although I would be surprised if the Malazans ever visited. The king was clever enough to send delegates proposing conditions of surrender, and the Emperor simply accepted.'
âThe mapmaker hasn't written that much.'
âNo, some of that information was mine. I have heard, now and then, certain odd stories about Sepik. There are, it seems, two distinct populations, one the subject of the other.' She shrugged at his blank look. âSuch things interest me.' Then frowned, as it became obvious that the distant expression on the giant's tattooed visage was born of something other than indifference. âIs something wrong?'
Karsa Orlong bared his teeth. âTell me more of this Sepik.'
âI am afraid I have exhausted my knowledge.'
Scowling at her answer, he hunched down over the map once more. âI shall need supplies. Tell me, is the weather the same as here?'
âYou are going to Sepik?'
âYes. Tell the Falah'd that I demand equipment, two extra horses, and five hundred crescents in silver. Dried foods, more waterskins. Three javelins and a hunting bow with thirty arrows, ten of them bird-pointed. Six extra bowstrings and a supply of fletching, a brick of waxâ'
âWait! Wait, Karsa Orlong. Why would the Falah'd simply gift you all these things?'
âTell him, if he does not, I will stay in this city.'
âAh, I see.' She considered for a time, then asked, âWhy are you going to Sepik?'
He began rolling up the map. âI want this oneâ'
âSorry, no. It is worth a fortuneâ'
âI will return it.'
âNo, Karsa Orlong.' She straightened. âIf you are prepared to wait, I will copy it â on hide, which is more resilientâ'
âHow long will that take?'
âI don't know. A few daysâ¦'
âVery well, but I am getting restless, witch.' He handed her the rolled-up map and walked into the other chamber. âAnd hungry.'
She stooped once more to gather in the other maps. The candles she left alone. Each one was aspected to a local, minor god, and the flames had, one and all, drawn the attention of the host of spirits. This hallway was crowded with presences, making the air taut, bridling, since many of them counted others as enemies. Yet, she suspected, it had been more than just the flickering flames that had earned the regard of the spirits. Something about Toblakai himselfâ¦
There were mysteries, she believed, swirling in Karsa Orlong's history. And now, the spirits drawn close, close andâ¦frightenedâ¦
âAh,' she whispered, âI see no choice in the matter. None at allâ¦' She drew out a belt-knife, spat on the blade, then began waving the iron through the flame of each candle.
The spirits howled in her mind, outraged at this unexpected, brutal imprisonment. She nodded. âYes, we mortals are cruelâ¦'
Â
âThree leagues,' Quick Ben said under his breath.
Kalam scratched at the stubble on his chin. Some old wounds â that enkar'al at the edge of the Whirlwind's wall had torn him up pretty bad â were aching after the long forced march back towards the Fourteenth Army. After what they had seen in the warren, no-one was in the mood to complain, however. Even Stormy had ceased his endless griping. The squad was hunkered down behind the assassin and the High Mage, motionless and virtually invisible in the darkness.
âSo,' Kalam mused, âdo we wait for them here, or do we keep walking?'
âWe wait,' Quick Ben replied. âI need the rest. In any case, we all more or less guessed right, and the trail isn't hard to follow. Leoman's reached Y'Ghatan and that's where he'll make his stand.'
âAnd us with no siege equipment to speak of.'
The wizard nodded. âThis could be a long one.'
âWell, we're used to that, aren't we?'
âI keep forgetting, you weren't at Coral.'
Kalam settled down with his back against the ridge's slope and pulled free a flask. He drank then handed it to the High Mage. âAs bad as the last day at Pale?'
Quick Ben sipped, then made a face. âThis is water.'
âOf course it is.'
âPaleâ¦we weren't fighting anyone. Just collapsing earth and raining rocks.'
âSo, the Bridgeburners went down fighting.'
âMost of Onearm's Host went down fighting,' Quick Ben said. âEven Whiskeyjack,' he added. âHis leg gave out under him. Mallet won't forgive himself for that, and I can't say I'm surprised.' He shrugged in the gloom. âIt was messy. A lot went wrong, as usual. But Kallor turning on usâ¦that we should have foreseen.'
âI've got a space on my blade for a notch in his name,' Kalam said, retrieving the flask.
âYou're not the only one, but he's not an easy man to kill.'
Sergeant Gesler edged into view. âSaw you two passing something.'
âJust water,' Kalam said.
âThe last thing I wanted to hear. Well, don't mind me.'
âWe were discussing the siege to come,' the assassin said. âCould be a long one.'
âEven so,' Gesler said with a grunt, âTavore's a patient woman. We know that much about her, anyway.'
âNothing else?' Quick Ben asked.
âYou've talked with her more than any of us, High Mage. She keeps her distance. No-one really seems to know what she is, behind the title of Adjunct. Nobleborn, aye, and from Unta. From House Paran.'
Kalam and Quick Ben exchanged glances, then the assassin pulled out a second flask. âThis one ain't water,' he said, tossing it to the sergeant. âWe knew her brother. Ganoes Paran. He was attached to the Bridgeburners, rank as captain, just before we infiltrated Darujhistan.'
âHe led the squads into Coral,' Quick Ben said.
âAnd died?' Gesler asked after pulling at the flask.
âMost everyone died,' answered the High Mage. âAt any rate, he wasn't an embarrassment as far as officers go. As for Tavore, well, I'm in the dark as much as the rest of you. She's all edges, but they're for keeping people away, not cutting them. At least from what I've seen.'
âShe's going to start losing soldiers at Y'Ghatan,' Kalam said.
No-one commented on that observation. Different commanders reacted in different ways to things like that. Some just got stubborn and threw more and more lives away. Others flinched back and if nothing then happened, the spirit of the army drained away. Sieges were battles of will, for the most part, along with cunning. Leoman had shown a capacity for both in this long pursuit west of Raraku. Kalam wasn't sure what Tavore had shown at Raraku â someone else had done most of the killing for her, for the entire Fourteenth, in fact.
Ghosts. Bridgeburnersâ¦ascended. Gods, what a chilling thought. They were all half-mad when alive, and now
â¦âQuick,' Kalam said, âthose ghosts at Rarakuâ¦where are they now?'
âNo idea. Not with us, though.'
âGhosts,' Gesler said. âSo the rumours were true â it wasn't no sorcerous spell that slaughtered the Dogslayers. We had unseen allies â who were they?' He paused, then spat. âYou both know, don't you, and you're not telling. Fiddler knows, too, doesn't he? Never mind. Everybody's got secrets and don't bother asking me to share mine. So that's that.' He handed the flask back. âThanks for the donkey piss, Kalam.'
They listened as he crawled back to rejoin his squad.
âDonkey piss?' Quick Ben asked.
âGround-vine wine, and he's right, it tastes awful. I found it at the Dogslayer camp. Want some?'
âWhy not? Anyway, when I said the ghosts weren't with us, I think I was telling the truth. But something
is
following the army.'
âWell, that's just great.'
âI'm notâ'
âHush! I hearâ'
Figures rose from behind the ridge. Gleaming, ancient armour, axes and scimitars, barbaric, painted faces â Khundryl Burned Tears. Swearing, Kalam settled back down, resheathing his long-knives. âThat was a stupid move, you damned savagesâ'
One spoke: âCome with us.'
Â
Three hundred paces up the road waited a number of riders, among them the Adjunct Tavore. Flanked by the troop of Khundryl Burned Tears, Kalam, Quick Ben and Gesler and his squad approached the group.
The misshapen moon now cast down a silvery light on the land â it was looking rougher round the edges, Kalam realized, as if the surrounding darkness was gnawing at it â he wondered that he'd not noticed before. Had it always been like that?
âGood evening, Adjunct,' Quick Ben said as they arrived.
âWhy have you returned?' she demanded. âAnd why are you not in the Imperial Warren?'
With Tavore were the Fists, the Wickan Temul, Blistig, Keneb and Tene Baralta, as well as Nil and Nether. They looked, one and all, to have been recently roused from sleep, barring the Adjunct herself.
Quick Ben shifted uneasily. âThe warren was being usedâ¦by something else. We judged it unsafe, and we concluded you should be told of that as soon as possible. Leoman is now in Y'Ghatan.'
âAnd you believe he will await us there?'
âY'Ghatan,' Kalam said, âis a bitter memory to most Malazans â those that care to remember, anyway. It is where the Firstâ'
âI know, Kalam Mekhar. You need not remind me of that. Very well, I shall assume your assessment is correct. Sergeant Gesler, please join the Khundryl pickets.'
The marine's salute was haphazard, his expression mocking.
Kalam watched Tavore's eyes follow the sergeant and his squad as they headed off. Then she fixed her gaze on Quick Ben once more.
âHigh Mage.'
He nodded. âThere wereâ¦Moon's Spawns in the Imperial Warren. Ten, twelve came into sight before we retreated.'
âHood take us,' Blistig muttered. âFloating fortresses? Has that white-haired bastard found more of them?'
âI don't think so, Fist,' Quick Ben said. âAnomander Rake has settled in Black Coral, now, and he abandoned Moon's Spawn, since it was falling to pieces. No, I believe the ones we saw in the warren have their, uh, original owners inside.'
âAnd who might they be?' Tavore asked.
âK'Chain Che'Malle, Adjunct. Long-Tails or Short-Tails. Or both.'
âAnd why would they be using the Imperial Warren?'
âI don't know,' Quick Ben admitted. âBut I have some notions.'
âLet us hear them.'
âIt's an old warren, effectively dead and abandoned, although, of course, not nearly as dead or abandoned as it first seems. Now, there is no known warren attributed to the K'Chain Che'Malle, but that does not mean one never existed.'
âYou believe the Imperial Warren was originally the K'Chain Che'Malle warren?'
The High Mage shrugged. âIt's possible, Adjunct.'
âWhat else?'
âWell, wherever the fortresses are going, they don't want to be seen.'
âSeen by whom?'
âThat I don't know.'
The Adjunct studied the High Mage for a long moment, then she said, âI want you to find out. Take Kalam and Gesler's squad. Return to the Imperial Warren.'
The assassin slowly nodded to himself, not at all surprised at this insane, absurd command. Find out? Precisely how?
âHave you any suggestions,' Quick Ben asked, his voice now strangely lilting, as it always was when he struggled against speaking his mind, âon how we might do that?'
âAs High Mage, I am certain you can think of some.'
âMay I ask, why is this of particular importance to us, Adjunct?'
âThe breaching of the Imperial Warren is important to all who would serve the Malazan Empire, would you not agree?'
âI would, Adjunct, but are we not engaged in a military campaign here? Against the last rebel leader in Seven Cities? Are you not about to lay siege to Y'Ghatan, wherein the presence of a High Mage, not to mention the empire's most skilled assassin, might prove pivotal to your success?'
âQuick Ben,' Tavore said coolly, âthe Fourteenth Army is quite capable of managing this siege without your assistance, or that of Kalam Mekhar.'
All right, that clinches it. She knows about our clandestine meeting with Dujek Onearm and Tayschrenn. And she does not trust us. Probably with good reason.
âOf course,' Quick Ben said, with a modest bow. âI trust the Burned Tears can resupply our soldiers, then. I request we be permitted to rest until dawn.'
âAcceptable.'
The High Mage turned away, his eyes momentarily meeting Kalam's own.
Aye, Quick, she wants me as far away from her back as possible.
Well, this was the Malazan Empire, after all. Laseen's empire, to be more precise.
But Tavore, it's not me you have to worry about
â¦
At that moment a figure emerged from the darkness, approaching from one side of the road. Green silks, graceful motion, a face very nearly ethereal in the moonlight. âAh, a midnight assignation! I trust all matters of grave import have already been addressed.'
Pearl. Kalam grinned at the man, one hand making a gesture that only another Claw would understand.
Seeing it, Pearl winked.
Soon, you bastard.