Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
âSorry, I didn't mean to offendâ¦Cutter. You're just seeming somewhatâ¦restless, as if you'd rather be elsewhere.'
It's not that easy.
âIt all feelsâ¦different. That's all. Bit of a shock, finding you nearly dead.'
âI imagine besting Rallick in a knife fight was rather shocking, as well.'
Cutter didn't much want to think about that. âI could never have imagined that you'd lose a duel, Murillio.'
âEasy to do, when you're drunk and wearing no breeches.'
âOh.'
âActually, neither of those is relevant to my present situation. I was careless. Why was I careless? Because I'm getting old. Because it's all slowing down.
I'm
slowing down. Look at me, lying here, healed up but full of aches, old pains, and nothing but cold ashes in my soul. I've been granted a second chance and I intend to take it.'
âMeaning?'
Murillio shot him a look. Seemed about to say something, then changed his mind and said something else. âI'm going to retire. True, I've not saved up much, but then, I should be able to live with more modest expectations, shouldn't I? There's a new duelling school in the Daru. I've heard it's doing rather well, long lists of applicants and all that. I could help out, a couple of days a week.'
âNo more widows. No more clandestine trysts.'
âPrecisely.'
âYou'll make a good instructor.'
âNot likely,' he replied with a grimace, âbut I have no aspirations to be one, either. It's work, that's all. Footwork, forms, balance and timing â the more serious stuff they can get from someone else.'
âIf you go in there talking like that,' Cutter said, âyou'll never get hired.'
âI've lost my ability to charm?'
Cutter sighed and rose from his chair. âI doubt it.'
âWhat brought you back?' Murillio asked.
The question stopped him. âA conceit, maybe.'
âWhat kind of conceit?'
The city is in danger. It needs me.
âOh,' he said, turning to the door, âthe childish kind. Be well, Murillio â I think your idea is a good one, by the way. If Rallick drops by looking for me, tell him I'll be back later.'
He took the back stairs, went through the dank, narrow kitchen, and out into the alley, where the chill of the night just past remained in the air. He did need to speak to Rallick Nom, but not right now. He felt slightly punch-drunk. The shock of his return, he supposed, the clash inside himself between who he had once been and who he was now. He needed to get settled, to get the confusion from his mind. If he could begin to see clearly again, he'd know what to do.
Out into the city, then, to wander. Not quite
running wild
, was it?
No, those days were long gone.
Â
The wound had healed quickly, reminding him that there had been changes â the powder of otataral he had rubbed into his skin only a few days ago, or so it seemed. To begin a night of murder now years past. The other changes, however, were proving far more disconcerting. He had lost so much time. Vanished from the world, and the world just went on without him. As if Rallick Nom had been dead, yes â no different from that, only now he was back, which wasn't how things should be.
Pull a stick from the mud and the mud closes in to swallow up the hole, until no sign remains that the stick ever existed.
Was he still an assassin of the Guild? Not at the moment, and this truth opened to him so many possibilities that his mind reeled, staggered back to the simpler notion of descending into the catacombs, walking up to Seba Krafar and announcing his return; resuming, yes, his old life.
And if Seba was anything like old Talo, he would smile and say
welcome back, Rallick Nom.
From that moment the chances that Rallick would make it back out alive were virtually nonexistent. Seba would see at once the threat standing before him. Vorcan had favoured Rallick and that alone was sufficient justification for getting rid of him. Seba wanted no rivals â he'd had enough of those if Krute's tale of the faction war was accurate.
He had another option when it came to the Guild. Rallick could walk in and kill Seba Krafar, then announce he was interim Master, awaiting Vorcan's return. Or he could stay in hiding for as long as possible, waiting for Vorcan to make her own move. Then, with her ruling the nest once again, he could emerge out of the woodwork and those missing years would be as nothing, would be without meaning. That much he shared with Vorcan, and because of that she would trust no one but Rallick. He'd be second in command, and how could he not be satisfied with that?
Oh, this was an old crisis â years old now. His thought that Turban Orr would be the last person he killed had been as foolish then as it was now.
He sat on the edge of the bed in his room. From the taproom below he could hear Kruppe expounding on the glories of breakfast, punctuated by some muted no doubt savage commentary by Meese, and with those two it was indeed as if nothing had changed. The same could not be said for Murillio, alas. Nor for Crokus, who was now named Cutter â an assassin's name for certain, all too well suited to the man Crokus had become.
Now who taught him to fight with knives like that? Something of the Malazan style â the Claw, in fact.
Rallick had been expecting Cutter to visit, had been anticipating the launch of a siege of questions. He would want to explain, wouldn't he? Try to justify his decisions to Rallick, even when there was no possible justification.
He didn't listen to me, did he? Ignored my warnings. Only fools think they can make a difference.
So, where was he?
With Murillio, I expect, holding off on the inevitable.
A brief knock at the door and Irilta entered â she'd been living hard of late, he could see, and such things seemed to catch up faster with women than with men â though when men went they went quickly. âBrought you breakfast,' she said, carrying a tray over. âSee? I remembered it all, right down to the honey-soaked figs.'
Honey-soaked figs?
âThank you, Irilta. Let Croâer, Cutter know that I'd like to see him now.'
âHe went out.'
âHe did? When?'
She shrugged. âNot so long ago, according to Murillio.' She paused for a hacking cough that reddened her broad face.
âFind yourself a healer,' Rallick said when she was done.
âListen,' she said, opening the door behind her, âI ain't got no regrets, Rallick. I ain't expecting any god's kiss on the other side, and ain't nobody gonna say of Irilta she didn't have no fun when she was alive, no sir.'
She added something else but since she was in the corridor and closing the door Rallick didn't quite catch it. Might have been something like â
try chewin' on that lesson someâ¦
', but then, she'd never been the edgy one, had she?
He looked down at the tray, frowned, then picked it up and rose.
Out into the corridor, balancing it one-handed while he lifted the latch of the next door along and walked into Murillio's room.
âThis is yours,' Rallick said. âHoney-soaked figs, your favourite.'
A grunt from Murillio on the bed. âExplains these strips of spiced jerky â you are what you eat, right?'
âYou're not nearly as sweet as you think, then,' Rallick said, setting the tray down. âPoor Irilta.'
âPoor Irilta nothing â that woman's crowded more into her years than all the rest of us combined, and so now she's dying but won't bother with any healer because, I think, she's ready to leave.' He shook his head as he reached for the first glazed fig. âIf she knew you were pitying her, she'd probably kill you for real, Rallick.'
âMissed me, did you?'
A pause, a searching glance, then Murillio bit into the fig.
Rallick went and sat down in one of the two chairs crowding the room along with the bed. âYou spoke to Cutter?'
âSomewhat.'
âI thought he'd come to see me.'
âDid you now?'
âThe fact that he didn't shouldn't make me think he got scared, should it?'
Murillio slowly shook his head.
Rallick sighed. Then he said, âSaw Coll last night â so our plan worked. He got his estate back, got his name back, his self-respect. You know, Murillio, I didn't think anything could work out so well. Soâ¦perfectly. How in Hood's name did we ever manage such a thing?'
âThat was a night for miracles all right.'
âI feelâ¦lost.'
âNot surprising,' Murillio replied, reaching for another fig. âEat some of that jerky â the reek is making me nauseated.'
âBetter on my breath?'
âWell, I don't see us kissing any time soon.'
âI'm not hungry,' Rallick said. âI was when I first woke up, I think, but that faded.'
âWoke up â you slept all that time in the Finnest House? All tucked up in bed?'
âOn stone, just inside the door. With Vorcan lying right beside me, apparently. She wasn't there when I came round. Just an undead Jaghut.'
Murillio seemed to think about that for a while, then said, âSo, what now, Rallick Nom?'
âWish I knew.'
âBaruk might need things done, like before.'
âYou mean, like guarding Cutter's back? Keeping an eye on Coll? And how long before the Guild learns I'm back? How long before they take me down?'
âAh, the Guild. Well, I'd figured you'd just head straight in, toss a few dozen lifeless bodies around and resume your rightful place. With Vorcan backâ¦well, it seems obvious to me what needs doing.'
âThat was never my style, Murillio.'
âI know, but circumstances change.'
âDon't they just.'
âHe'll be back,' Murillio said. âWhen he's ready to talk to you. Keep in mind, he's gone and collected some new scars, deep ones. Some of them still bleeding, I think.' He paused, then said, âIf Mammot hadn't died, well, who knows what might have happened. Instead, he went off with the Malazans, to return Apsalar to her home â oh, I see you have no idea what I'm talking about. All right, let me tell you the story of how that night ended â after you left. Just eat that damned jerky, please!'
âYou drive a damned hard bargain, friend.'
And for the first time that morning, he saw Murillio smile.
Â
Her scent clung to the bedding, sweet enough to make him want to weep, and even some of her warmth remained, or maybe that was just the sun, the golden light streaming in from the window and carrying with it the vaguely disturbing sound of birds mating in the tree in the back yard.
No need to be so frantic, little ones. There's all the time in the world.
Well, he would be feeling that right now, wouldn't he?
She was working the wheel in the outer room, a sound that had once filled his life, only to vanish and now, at long last, return. As if there had been no sordid crimes of banditry and the slavery that came as reasonable punishment, as if there had been no rotting trench lying shackled alongside Teblor barbarians. No huge warrior hanging from a cross amidships, with Torvald trickling brackish water between the fool's cracked lips. No sorcerous storms, no sharks, no twisted realms to crawl in and out of. No dreams of drowning â no, all that had been someone else's life, a tale sung by a half-drunk bard, the audience so incredulous they were moments from rage, ready to tear the idiot to pieces at the recounting of just one more unlikely exploit. Yes, someone else's life. The wheel was spinning, as it always did, and she was working clay and giving it form, symmetry, beauty. Of course, she never did her best work the day after a night of lovemaking, as if she'd used up something essential, whatever it was that fed creativity, and sometimes he felt bad about that. She'd laugh and shake her head, dismissing his concerns, spinning the wheel yet harder.
He'd seen, on the shelves of the outer room, scores of mediocre pots. Should this fact bother him? It might have, once, but no longer. He had vanished from her life â no reason, however, for her to waste away in some lonely vigil or prolonged period of mourning. People got on with things, and so they should. Of course she'd taken lovers. Might still have them, in fact, and it had been something of a miracle that she'd been alone when he showed up â he'd half expected some over-muscled godling with tousled golden locks and the kind of jaw that just begged to be punched to answer the door.
âMaybe he's visiting his mother,' Torvald mumbled.
He sat up, swung his legs round and settled feet on the woven mat covering the floor. Noticed that flat pillows had been sewn on to the mat, stuffed with lavender that crackled under his feet. âNo wonder her feet smell nice.' Anyway, he didn't mind what she'd been up to all that time. Didn't even mind if she was still up to a few things now, though those things might make things a little crowded. âThings, right.'
The day had begun, and all he needed to do was settle up certain matters and then he could resume his life as a citizen of Darujhistan. Maybe visit a few old friends, some members of his estranged family (the ones who'd talk to him, anyway), see the sights that'd make him the most nostalgic, and give some thought to what he was going to do with the rest of his life.
But first things first. Pulling on his foreign-cut clothes (the clean set, that had dried in a rather wrinkled state, alas), Torvald Nom made his way to the outer room. Her back was to him as she hunched over the wheel, legs pumping the pedals. He saw the large bowl of clean water where it always was, went over and splashed his face. Was reminded that he needed a shave â but now he could actually pay someone else to do such things. To the opportunistic shall come rewards. Someone had said that, once, he was sure.
âMy sweetness!'
She half turned and grinned at him. âLook how bad this is, Tor. See what you've done?'