Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
From the docks came the roar of battle, punctuated with the occasional crackle of Moranth munitions. Sharpers, mostly.
Cuttle. He's using up my supply!
They reached the intersection. Legana Breed paused in the middle, slowly faced the sagging façade of a tavern opposite. Where the door slammed open and two figures stumbled out. Reeling, negotiating the cobbles beneath them as if traversing stepping stones across a raging river, one grasping the other by an arm, tugging, pulling, then leaning against him, causing both to stagger.
Swearing under his breath, Fiddler headed towards them. âSergeant Hellian, what in Hood's name are you doing ashore?'
Both figures hitched up at the voice, turned.
And Hellian's eyes fixed on the T'lan Imass. âFiddler,' she said, âyou look awful.'
âOver here, you drunken idiot.' He waved Gesler and Stormy ahead as he came closer. âWho's that with you?'
Hellian turned and regarded the man she held by an arm, for what seemed a long time.
âYour priz'ner,' the man said by way of encouragement.
âThaz right.' Hellian straightened as she faced Fiddler again. âHe's wanted for questioning.'
âBy whom?'
âMe, thazoo. So's anyway, where's the boat?'
Gesler and Stormy were making their way towards the bridge. âGo with them,' Fiddler said to Legana Breed, and the T'lan Imass set off, feet scraping. The sapper turned back to Hellian. âStay close, we're heading back to the ships right now.'
âGood. Glad you could make it, Fid, in case thiz one tries an' 'scapes, right? Y'got my p'mission to shoot 'im down. But only in the foot. I wan' answers from 'im an' I'm gonna get 'em.'
âHellian,' Fiddler said, âcould be we'll need to make a run for it.'
âWe can do that. Right, Banash?'
âFool,' Fiddler muttered. âThat's Smiley's there. The demon doesn't serve regular ale. Any other placeâ¦' He then shook his head. âCome on, you two.'
Up ahead, Gesler and Stormy had reached the bridge. Crouched low, they moved across its span.
Fiddler heard Gesler shout, a cry of surprise and alarm â and all at once both he and Stormy were running â straight for a heaving crowd that loomed up before them.
â
Shit!
' Fiddler sprinted forward.
Â
A winding trench swallowed in gloom, a vein that seemed to run beneath the level where the frenzy of slaughter commanded every street, every alley to either side. The woman behind her coughing gouts of blood as she sloshed along, the Adjunct, Tavore Paran, waded through a turgid stream of sewage.
Ever closer to the sounds of fighting at Centre Docks.
It had seemed impossible â the Claws had not found them, had not plunged down the rotted brick walls to deliver murder in the foul soup that was Malaz River. Oh, Tavore and T'amber had pushed past enough corpses on their journey, but the only sounds embracing them were the swirl of water, the skittering of rats along the ledges to either side, and the whine of biting insects.
That all changed when they reached the edge of the concourse. The concussion of a sharper, startlingly close, then the tumbling of a half-dozen bodies as a section of the retaining wall collapsed directly ahead. More figures sliding down, screaming, weapons waving in the airâ
âand a soldier turned, saw themâ
As he bellowed his discovery, T'amber pushed past the Adjunct. Longsword arced across, diagonally, and cut off the top third of the man's head, helm and bone, white matter spraying out.
Then T'amber reached back, closed a bloody hand on the Adjunct's cloak, dragged her forward, onto the sunken bank of dislodged brick, sand and gravel.
The strength in that grip stunned Tavore, as T'amber assailed the slope, dragging the Adjunct from her feet, up, up onto the level of the concourse. Stumbling onto her knees, even as that hand left her and the sounds of fighting erupted around themâ
City Guard, three squads at least â detonations had pushed them to this side of the concourse, and they turned upon the two women like rabid wolvesâ
Tavore pushed herself upright, caught a sword-thrust reaching for her midsection with a desperate parry, the weapons ringing. She instinctively counter-attacked, and felt the tip of her sword tear through chain and gouge the muscles of a shoulder. Her opponent grunted, flinched back. Tavore chopped down onto the knee of his lead leg, cutting in two the patella. He shrieked and fell.
To her left, T'amber cut, slashed, parried and lunged, and bodies were falling all around her. Even as swords sank into the woman â and she staggered.
Tavore cried out, twisting to move towards T'amberâ
And saw, less than twenty paces away, a score or more Claws, rushing to join the fray.
A sword burst from T'amber's back, between the shoulder-blades, and the soldier gripping the weapon pushed close to the woman and heaved her from her feet, throwing her backward, where she slid off the length of iron, landing hard on the cobbles, her own sword leaving her hand, clattering away.
Six paces between the Adjunct and a dozen Guards â and behind them and closing fast, the Claws. Tavore backed away â faces turned to her, faces twisted in blind rage, eyes cold and hard, inhuman. The Adjunct raised her sword, both hands on the grip now, took a step backâ
The Guards rushed forwardâ
Then, a blinding flash, immediately behind them, and that rush became a mass of torn bodies, severed limbs, sheets of blood â the roar of the detonation seemed to ignite in the centre of Tavore's skull. The world pitched, she saw night sky, wheeling, stars seeming to race outward in all directions â her head cracking on the cobbles, dislodging her helm, and she was on her back, staring up, confused by the tumbling smoke, the red mist, the thundering protest of every muscle and bone in her body.
A second explosion lifted her from the cobbles, pounded her back down on a surface suddenly heaved askew. More blood rained downâ
Someone skidded up against her, a hand reaching down to rest lightly on her sternum, a face, blurred, looming close. She watched the mouth move but heard nothing.
A flash, recognition.
Sergeant Fiddler
.
What? What are you doing?
And then she was being dragged along, boots pulling loose at the ends of senseless legs. The right one dislodging, left behind. She stared at her cloth-wrapped foot, soaked in river-slime and blood.
She could now see behind her as the sergeant continued pulling her towards the jetty. Two more marines, covering their retreat with strange, oversized crossbows in their hands. But no-one was coming after them â they were busy dying beneath a stone sword in the desiccated hands of a T'lan Imass â the creature punched at by virulent sorcery, yet pushing ever forward, killing,
killing
.
What was happening? Where had the marines come from? She saw another one, struggling with a prisoner â he wasn't trying to escape, however, just stay on his feet.
They're drunk, the both of them â well, on this night, I think I'll let it pass.
Oh, T'amber
â¦
More figures surrounding them now. Bloodied soldiers. The Perish. People were shouting â she could see that â but the roaring in her head was unabated, drowning out all else. She half-lifted one arm, stared at her gauntleted hand â
my sword. Where is my sword?
Never mind. Just sleep, now. Sleep.
Â
Grub led her into the alley, to where a body was lying, curled up, racked with spasms and voicing a dreadful moaning. As she drew closer, Lostara recognized him. Anguish rose up within her and she lunged past Grub, fell to her knees.
Pearl was covered in wounds, as if he had been systematically tortured. And pain was consuming him. âOh, my loveâ¦'
Grub spoke behind her. âThe poison has him, Lostara Yil. You must take his life.'
What?
âHe thought you were dead,' the boy continued. âHe'd given up. On everything. Except revenge. Against the Adjunct.'
âWho did this?'
âI won't tell you,' Grub said. âPearl hungered for vengeance, and vengeance was repaid him. That's all.'
That's all.
âKill him now, Lostara. He can't hear you, he can't see you. There's only the pain. It's the spiders, you see, they breathe the blood of their victims, they need it rich, bright red. And so the venom, it doesn't let go. And then, there's the acid in the stomach, leaking out, eating everything up.'
Numbed, she drew out her knife.
âMake the heart stop.'
Yes, there, behind and beneath the shoulder-blade. Push deep, work the edges. Pull it loose, look, how the body stills, how the muscles cease their clenching. It's quiet, now. He's gone.
âCome along, there's more. Quickly.'
He set off, and she rose and followed.
You've left me. You were there, in Mock's Hold, but I didn't know. You didn't know.
Past a tumbled mass of corpses now. Claws. The alley was filled with them.
Ahead, Centre Docks, the clearingâ
Sudden detonations, rocking the buildings. Screams.
At the alley mouth, between warehouses, Grub crouched and waved her down to his side.
People were fleeing â those still on their feet, and they were scant few. At least two cussers had exploded in the midst of the mobs. Cussers and sharpers, and there a Hood-damned T'lan Imass, cutting down the last ones within reach.
âGods,' Lostara muttered, âthere must be a thousand dead out there.'
âYes. But look, you must see this.' He pointed to their right, near the river.
âWhat?'
âOh.' Grub reached out and settled a hand on her forearm.
And the scene seemed to somehow shift, a new illumination â it was gathered about a single body, too distant to make out detailsâ
âT'amber,' Grub said. âOnly you and me can see. So watch, Lostara. Watch.'
The golden glow was coalescing, rising up from the corpse. A faint wind flowed past Lostara and Grub, familiar now, heady with the scent of savannah grasses, warm and dry.
âShe stayed with us a long time,' Grub whispered. âShe used T'amber. A lot. There wasn't any choice. The Fourteenth, it's going to war, and we're going with it. We have to.'
A figure now stood at a half-crouch over the body. Furred, tall, and female. No clothing, no ornamentation of any kind.
Lostara saw the T'lan Imass, thirty or more paces away, slowly turn to regard the apparition. And then, head bowing, the undead warrior slowly settled onto one knee. âI thought you said we were the only ones who could see, Grub.'
âI was wrong. She has that effect.'
âWho â what is she?'
âThe Eres'al. Lostara, you must never tell the Adjunct. Never.'
The Red Blade captain scowled. âAnother damned secret to keep from her.'
âJust the two,' Grub said. âYou can do that.'
Lostara glanced over at the boy. âTwo, you said.'
Grub nodded. âHer sister, yes. That one, and this one. Two secrets. Never to tell.'
âThat won't be hard,' she said, straightening. âI'm not going with them.'
âYes you are. Look! Look at the Eres'al!'
The strange female was lowering her head towards the body of T'amber. âWhat's she doing?'
âJust a kiss. On the forehead. A thank-you.'
The apparition straightened once more, seemed to sniff the air, then, in a blur, vanished.
âOh!' said Grub. Yet added nothing. Instead, taking her hand in his. âLostara. The Adjunct, she's lost T'amber now. You need to take that placeâ'
âI'm done with lovers, male or femaleâ'
âNo, not that. Justâ¦at her side. You have to. She cannot do this alone.'
â
Do what?
'
âWe have to go â no, not that way. To the Mouse Docksâ'
âGrub â they're casting off!'
âNever mind that! Come on!'
Â
Deadsmell pushed Fiddler out of the way and knelt beside the body of the Adjunct. He set a hand on her begrimed forehead, then snatched it back. âHood's breath! She doesn't need me.' He backed away, shaking his head, âDamned otataral â I never could get that, what it doesâ¦'
Tavore's eyes opened. After a moment, she struggled into a sitting position, then accepted Fiddler's hand in helping her to her feet.
The
Froth Wolf
was edging away from the jetty. The
Silanda
had pulled further out, the oars sweeping and sliding into the water.
Blinking, the Adjunct looked round, then she turned to Fiddler. âSergeant, where is Bottle?'
âI don't know. He never made it back. Seems we lost Quick Ben, too. And Kalam.'
At the last name, she flinched.
But Fiddler had already known.
The game
â¦âAdjunctâ'
âI have never seen a man fight as he did,' she said. âHim, and T'amber, the two of them â cutting through an entire cityâ'
âAdjunct. There's signals from the other ships. Where are we going?'
But she turned away. âBottle â we have failed, Sergeant. He was to retrieve someone.'
âSomeone? Who?'
âIt doesn't matter, now. We have failed.'
All of this? All of the fallen this night â for one person?
âAdjunct, we can wait here in the bay until light, send a detachment into the city lookingâ'
âNo. Admiral Nok's escorts will be ordered to sink the transports â the Perish will intervene, and more will die. We must leave.'
âThey can chase us downâ'
âBut they won't find us. The Admiral has assured me of his impending incompetence.'
âSo, we signal the others to ship their anchors and make sail?'