Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
âAttend, Fist Keneb!' The warning came from the Destriant. âAssassins, seeking to penetrate our defencesâ'
A hiss from Throatslitter, and he turned, called down to the marines on the jetty. âSergeant! Get the squads up here! We got Claws on the way!'
Keneb faced Run'Thurvian. âCan you block them?'
A slow nod of the suddenly pallid face. âThis time, yes â at the last moment â but they are persistent, and clever. When they breach, they will appear, suddenly, all about us.'
âWho is their target? Do you know?'
âAll of us, I believe. Perhaps, most of all,' the Destriant glanced over at Nil and Nether, who stood on the foredeck, silent witnesses to the defence, âthose two. Their power sleeps. For now, it cannot be awakened â it is not for us, you see. Not for us.'
Hood's breath.
He turned to see the first marines arrive. Koryk, Tarr, Smiles â
damn you, Fiddler, where are you?
â then Cuttle and Corabb Bhilan Thenu'alas. A moment later Sergeant Balm appeared, followed by Galt and Lobe. âSergeant, where is your healer â and your mage?'
âUsed up,' the Dal Honese replied. âThey're recovering on the
Silanda,
sir.'
âVery well. I want you to form a cordon around Nil and Nether â the Claw will go for them first and foremost.' As the soldiers scrambled he turned to Run'Thurvian, and said in a low voice, âI assume you can protect yourself, Destriant.'
âYes, I have held myself in abeyance, anticipating such a moment. But what of you, Fist Keneb?'
âI doubt I'm important enough.' Then something occurred to him and he called over to the marines. âSmiles! Head down to the First Mate's cabin â warn Quick Ben and if you can, convince him to get up here.' He made his way to the starboard rail, leaned out to study the fighting at the base of the jetty.
There were uniformed Malazan soldiers amidst the mob, now, all pretence gone. Armoured, many with shields, others holding back with crossbows, sending one quarrel after another into the line of Perish. The foreign allies had been pushed back almost to the jetty itself.
Cuttle was on the foredeck, yelling at the ballista crew â the sapper held a handful of fishing net in one hand and a large round object in the other. A cusser. After a moment the crew stepped back and Cuttle set to affixing the munition just behind the head of the oversized dart.
Nice thinking. A messy way to clear a space, but there's little choice.
Smiles returned, hurried up to Keneb. âFist, he's not there.'
âWhat?'
âHe's gone!'
âVery well. Never mind. Go join your squad, soldier.'
From somewhere in Malaz City, a bell sounded, the sonorous tones ringing four times.
Gods below, is that all?
Â
Lieutenant Pores stood beside his captain, staring across the dark water to the mayhem at Centre Docks. âWe're losing, sir,' he said.
âThat's precisely why I made you an officer,' Kindly replied. âYour extraordinary perceptiveness. And no, Lieutenant, we will not disobey our orders. We remain here.'
âIt's not proper, sir,' Pores persisted. âOur allies are dying there â it's not even their fight.'
âWhat they choose to do is their business.'
âStill not proper, sir.'
âLieutenant, are you truly that eager to kill fellow Malazans? If so, get out of that armour and you can swim ashore. With Oponn's luck the sharks won't find you, despite my fervent prayers to the contrary. And you'll arrive just in time to get your head lopped off, forcing me to find myself a new lieutenant, which, I grant you, will not be hard, all things considered. Maybe Hanfeno, now there's officer material â to the level of lieutenant and no higher, of course. Almost as thick and pig-headed as you. Now go on, climb out of that armour, so Senny can start laying bets.'
âThank you, sir, but I'd rather not.'
âVery well. But one more complaint from you, Lieutenant, and I'll throw you over the side myself.'
âYes, sir.'
âIn your armour.'
âYes, sir.'
âAfter docking your pay for the loss of equipment.'
âOf course, Captain.'
âAnd if you keep trying to get the last word here I think I will kill you outright.'
âYes, sir.'
âLieutenant.'
Pores clamped his jaws shut, and held off. For the moment.
Â
With barely a whisper, the figure landed on the sundered, pitched rooftop. Paused to look round at the sprawl of corpses. Then approached the gaping hole near one end.
As it neared, another figure seemed to materialize as if from nowhere, crouched down on one knee above a body lying face-down near the breach. A quarrel was buried deep in that body's back, the fletching fashioned of fish bone â the cheek sections of some large sea-dwelling species, pale and semi-translucent. The newcomer swung a ghostly face up to regard the one who approached.
âThe Clawmaster killed me,' the apparition said in a rasp, gesturing to its own body beneath it. âEven as I cursed his name with my last breath. I thinkâ¦yes, I think that is why I am still here, not yet ready to walk through Hood's Gate. It is a giftâ¦to you. He killed Kalam Mekhar. With Kartoolian paralt.' The ghost turned slightly and gestured to the edge of the hole. âKalam â he pulled the quarrel looseâ¦no point of course, it makes no difference since the paralt's in his blood. But I did not tell Pearl â it's right there, balanced on the very lip. Take it. There is plenty of poison left. Take it. For the Clawmaster.'
A moment later the ghost was gone.
The cloth-wrapped figure crouched down and collected the blood-smeared quarrel in one gloved hand. Tucked it into a fold of the sash belt, then straightened, and set off.
Â
Through skeins of vicious sorcery, the lone figure moved with blinding speed down the street, deftly avoiding every snare â the coruscating pockets of High Ruse, the whispering invitations of Mockra â and then into the light-stealing paths of Rashan where assassins of the Claw had raced along only moments earlier â and onto their trail, fast closing, a dagger in each leather-clad hand.
Near the harbourfront the Claws began emerging from their warrens, massing by the score, moments from launching an all-out assault on the foreign soldiers, on everyone aboard the two moored ships.
Approaching fast from behind, the figure's movements acquired a fluidity, sinuous, weaving a flow of shadows, and the approach that had been quick transformed into something else â faster than a mortal eye could perceive in this night of gloom and smoke â and then the lone attacker struck the first of the Hands.
Blood sprayed, sheeted into the air, bodies spun to either side from its path, a whirlwind of death tearing into the ranks. Claws spun round, shouted, screamed, and died.
Â
Clawmaster Pearl turned at the sounds. He was positioned over twenty Hands from the rearguard â a rearguard now down, writhing or motionless on the cobbles, as something â
someone
â tore through them.
Gods below
. A Shadow Dancer.
Who â Cotillion?
Cold terror seized his chest with piercing talons.
The god. The Patron of Assassins â coming for me.
In Kalam Mekhar's name, coming for me!
He spun round, eyes searching frantically for a bolt-hole.
To Hood with the Hands!
Pearl pushed his way clear, then ran.
An alley, narrow between two warehouses, swallowed in darkness. Moments to go, then he would open his warren, force a rent, plunge through â through, and
away
.
Weapons in his hands now.
If I go down, it will be fighting â god or no god
â
Into the alley, embraced by darkness â behind him more screams, coming closer â Pearl reached in his mind like a drowning man for his warren. Mockra.
Use it
.
Twist reality, cut into another warren â Rashan, and then the Imperial, and then
â
Nothing answered his quest. A ragged gasp burst from Pearl's throat as he sprinted onward, up the alleyâ
Something behind him â right behindâ
Strokes of agony, slicing through both Achilles tendons â Pearl shrieked as the severed ligaments rolled up beneath the skin, stumbled on feet that felt like clods of mud, shifting hopelessly beneath him. Sprawling, refusing to release his weapons, still grasping out for his warrenâ
Blade-edges licking like tongues of acid. Hamstrings, elbows â then he was lifted from the blackened cobbles by a single hand, and thrown into a wall. The impact shattered half his face, and as he fell backward, that hand returned, fingers digging in, forcing his head back. Cold iron slashed into his mouth, slicing, severing his tongue. Choking on blood, Pearl twisted his head around â he was grasped again, thrown into the opposite wall, breaking his left arm. Landing on his side â a foot hammered down on the point of his hip, the bone cradle collapsing into a splintered mess beneath it â
gods, the pain
, sweeping up through his mind, overwhelming him â his warren â
where?
All motion ceased.
His attacker was standing over him. Crouching down.
Pearl could see nothing â blood filled his eyes â a savage ringing filled his head, nausea rising up his throat, spilling out in racking heaves, streaked with gore from the gouting stub of his tongue.
Lostara, my love, come close to the gate â and you will see me. Walking.
A voice, soft and low, cut through it all, brutally clear, brutally close. âMy final target. You, Pearl. I had planned to make it quick.' A long pause, in which he heard slow, even breathing. âBut for Kalam Mekhar.'
Something stabbed into his stomach, was pushed deep.
âI give you back the quarrel that killed him, Pearl.' And the figure straightened once more, walked a few paces away, then returned, even as the first horrifying pulses of fire began to sear his veins, gathering behind his eyes â a poison that would keep him alive for as long as possible, feeding his heart with everything it needed, even as vessels throughout his body burst, again and again and againâ
âKalam's long-knives, Pearl. You weren't thinking. You cannot open a warren with otataral in your hand. And so, he and I together, we have killed you. Fitting.'
Fires! Gods! Fire!
As Apsalar walked away. Continuing up the alley, away from the harbourfront. Away, from everything.
Â
A scrawny, shadowy apparition appeared before her near the far end, where the alley reached a side street just this side of a bridge leading across the river and into the Mouse. Apsalar halted before it.
âTell Cotillion, I have done as he asked.'
Shadowthrone made a whispering sound, like sighing, and one almost formless hand emerged from the folds of his ghostly cloak, gripping the silver head of a cane, that tapped once on the cobbles. âI watched, my dear. Your Shadow Dance. From the foot of Rampart Way and onward, I was witness.'
She said nothing.
Shadowthrone resumed. âNot even Cotillion. Not even Cotillion.'
Still, Apsalar did not speak.
The god suddenly giggled. âToo many bad judgements, the poor woman. As we feared.' A pause, then another giggle. âTonight, the Clawmaster, and three hundred and seven Claws â all by your hands, dear lass. I stillâ¦disbelieve. No matter. She's on her own, now. Too bad for her.' The barely substantial hooded head cocked slightly. âAh. Yes, Apsalar. We keep our promises. You are free. Go.'
She held out the two long-knives, handles first.
A bow, and the god accepted Kalam Mekhar's weapons.
Then Apsalar moved past Shadowthrone, and walked on.
He watched her cross the bridge.
Another sigh. A sudden lifting of the cowled head, sniffing the air. âOh, happy news. But for me, not yet. First, a modest detour, yes. My, what a night!'
The god began to fade, then wavered, then re-formed. Shadowthrone looked down at the long-knives in his right hand. âAbsurd! I must walk. And, perforce, quickly!'
He scurried off, cane rapping on the stones.
Â
A short time later, Shadowthrone reached the base of a tower that was not nearly as ruined as it looked. Lifted the cane and tapped on the door. Waited for a dozen heartbeats, then repeated the effort.
The door was yanked open.
Dark eyes stared down at him, and in them was a growing fury.
âNow now, Obo,' Shadowthrone said. âThis is a courtesy, I assure you. Two most meddling twins have commandeered the top of your tower. I humbly suggest you oust them, in your usual kindly manner.' The god then sketched a salute with his cane, turned about and departed.
The door slammed shut after two strides.
And now, Shadowthrone began to quicken his pace once more. For one last rendezvous this night, a most precious one. The cane rapped swift as a soldier's drum.
Halfway to his destination, the top of Obo's tower erupted in a thunderous fireball that sent pieces of brick and tile flying. Amidst that eruption there came two outraged screams.
Recovering from his instinctive duck, Shadowthrone murmured. âMost kindly, Obo. Most kindly indeed.'
And the god walked the streets of Malaz City. Once more with uncharacteristic haste.
Â
They moved quickly along the street, keeping to the shadows, ten paces behind Legana Breed, who walked down the centre, sword tip clattering along the cobbles. The few figures who had crossed their path had hurriedly fled upon sighting the tattered apparition of the T'lan Imass.
Fiddler had given Gesler and Stormy crossbows, both fitted with the sharper-packed grenados, whilst his own weapon held a cusser. They approached a wider street that ran parallel to the harbourfront, still south of the bridge leading over to Centre Docks. Familiar buildings for Fiddler, on all sides, yet a surreal quality had come to the air, as if the master hand of some mad artist had lifted every detail into something more profound than it should have been.