Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
âAnd that is why I rejected the notion of worship.'
âWhy?'
âBecause, sooner or later, the believers shatter their icons.'
She grunted, and thought about that for a time, before sighing and nodding. âA hundred fallen, forgotten civilizations, yes. And in the ruins all those statuesâ¦with their faces chopped off. The loss of faith is ever violent, it seems.'
âOurs was.'
The statement stung her. âAh, we are not so different then, after all. What a depressing realization.'
âEndest Silann,' he said.
âYour stare is making the legs of my desk tremble, Lord Rake â am I so unpleasant that you dare not rest eyes upon me?'
He slowly turned his head and settled his gaze upon her.
And seeing all that was in his eyes almost made her flinch, and she understood, all at once, the mercy he had been giving her â with his face turned away, with his eyes veiled by distraction. But then she had asked for his regard, as much out of vanity as the secret pleasure of her attraction to him â she could not now break this connection. Marshalling her resolve, she said, âEndest Silann, yes. The reason for this visit. I understand.'
âHe is convinced he was broken long ago, High Priestess. We both know it is not true.'
She nodded. âHe proved that when he sustained Moon's Spawn beneath the sea â proved it to everyone but himself.'
âI reveal to him my confidence,' said Rake, âand each time heâ¦contracts. I cannot reach through, it seems, to bolster what I know is within him.'
âThen it is his faith that is broken.'
He grimaced, made no reply.
âWhen the time comes,' she said, âI will be there. To do what I can. Although,' she added, âthat may not be much.'
âYou need not elaborate on the efficacy of your presence, High Priestess. We are speaking, as you said, of faith.'
âAnd there need be no substance to it. Thank you.'
He glanced away once more, and this time the wry smile she had seen before played again across his features. âYou were always my favourite,' he said.
âMe, or the desk you so seem to love?'
He rose and she did the same. âHigh Priestess,' he said.
âSon of Darkness,' she returned, with another bow.
And out he went, leaving in his wake a sudden absence, an almost audible clap of displacement â but no, that was in her mind, a hint of something hovering there behind her memory of his face, his eyes and all that she had seen there.
Mother Dark, hear me. Heed me. You did not understand your son then. You do not understand him now.
Don't you see? This was all Draconus's doing.
Â
âThis ain't right,' gasped Reccanto Ilk, each word spraying blood. âWhen it comes to screaming women, they should be leaving the bar, not trying to get in!'
The ragged hole the shrieking, snarling, jaw-snapping women had torn through the tavern's door was jammed with arms stretching, fingers clutching, all reaching inward in a desperate attempt to tear through the barrier. Claws stabbed into the Trell's tattooed shoulders and he ducked his head lower, grunting as the demons battered at the door, planks splintering â but that Trell was one strong bastard, and he was holding 'em back, as he had been doing since that first rush that nearly saw Reccanto's precious head get torn off.
Thank whatever gods squatted in the muck of this damned village that these demons were so stupid. Not one had tried either of the shuttered windows flanking the entrance, although with that barbed hulk, Gruntle, waiting at one of 'em with his cutlasses at the ready, and Faint and the Bole brothers at the other, at least if them demons went and tried one of 'em they'd be cut to pieces in no time. Or so Reccanto hoped, since he was hiding under a table and a table wasn't much cover, or wouldn't be if them demons was nasty enough to tear apart Gruntle and Faint and the Boles and the Trell, and Sweetest Sufferance, too, for that matter.
Master Quell and that swampy witch, Precious Thimble, were huddled together at the back, at the barred cellar door, doing Hood knew what. Glanno Tarp was missing â he'd gone with the horses when they went straight and the carriage went left, and Reccanto was pretty sure that the idiot had gone and killed himself bad. Or worse.
As for that corpse, Cartographer, why, the last Ilk had seen of it it was still lashed to a wheel, spinning in a blur as the damned thing spun off its axle and bounded off into the rainy night. Why couldn't the demons go after it? A damned easier fightâ
Repeated blows were turning the door into a shattered wreck, and one of the arms angled down to slash deep gouges across Mappo's back, making the Trell groan and groaning wasn't good, since it meant Mappo might just give up trying to hold 'em back and in they'd come, straight for the man hiding under the table. It wasn't fair. Nothing was fair and what was fair about that, dammit?
He drew out his rapier and clutched the grip in one shaky hand. A lunge from the knees â was such a thing possible? He was about to find out. Oh, yes, he'd skewer one for its troubles, just watch. And if the other two (he was pretty sure there were three of 'em) ripped him up then fine, just fine. A man could only do so much.
Gruntle was shouting something at Mappo, and the Trell bellowed a reply, drawing his legs up under himself as if about to dive to one side â thanks a whole lot, you ogre! â and then all at once Mappo did just that, off to the right, slamming into the legs of the Boles and Faint and taking all three down with him.
An explosion of wood splinters and thrashing arms, clacking fangs, unclean hair and terribly unreasonable expressions, and the three screeching women plunged in.
Two were brought up short pretty fast, as their heads leapt up in gouts of greenish uck and their bodies sprawled in a thrashing mess.
Even as this was happening, the third woman charged straight for Reccanto. He shrieked and executed his lunge from the knees, which naturally wasn't a lunge at all. More like a flèche, a forward flinging of his upper body, arm and point extended, and as he overbalanced and landed with a bone-creaking thump on the floorboards the rapier's point snagged on something and the blade bowed alarmingly and so he let go, so that it sprang up, then back down, the pommel crunching the top of Reccanto's head, not once, but twice, each time driving his face into the floor, nose crackling in a swirl of stinging tears and bursting into his brain the horrid stench of mouse droppings and greasy dirt â immediately replaced by a whole lot of flowing blood.
It was strangely quiet, and, moaning, Reccanto rolled on to his side and lifted himself up on one elbow.
And found himself staring into the blank, horrible eyes of the woman who'd charged him. The rapier point had driven in between her eyes, straight in, so far that he should be able to see it coming back out from somewhere beneath the back of her skull â but it wasn't there. Meaningâ
âShe broke it!' he raged, clambering on to his feet. âShe broke my damned rapier!'
The demonic woman was on her knees, head thrust forward, mouth still stretched open, the weight of her upper body resting on the knocked-over chair that had served as pathetic barricade. The other two, headless, still thrashed on the floor as green goo flowed. Gruntle was studying that ichor where it slathered the broad blades of his cutlasses.
Mappo, the Boles and Faint were slowly regaining their feet.
Sweetest Sufferance, clutching a clay bottle, staggered up to lean against Reccanto. âToo bad about your rapier,' she said, âbut damn me, Ilk, that was the neatest flèche I ever did see.'
Reccanto squinted, wiped blood from his streaming nose and lacerated lips, and then grinned. âIt was, wasn't it. The timing of a masterâ'
âI mean, how could you have guessed she'd trip on one of them rolling heads and go down on her knees skidding like that, straight into your thrust?'
Tripped? Skidded? âYes, well, like I said, I'm a master duellist.'
âI could kiss you,' she continued, her breath rank with sour wine, âexcept you went and pissed yourself and there's limits t'decency, if you know what I mean.'
âThat ain't piss â we're all still sopping wet!'
âBut we don't quite smell the way you do, Ilk.'
Snarling, he lurched away. Damned overly sensitive woman! âMy rapier,' he moaned.
âShattered inside her skull, I'd wager,' said Gruntle, âwhich couldn't have done her brain any good. Nicely done, Reccanto.'
Ilk decided it was time to strut a little.
Â
Whilst Reccanto Ilk walked round like a rooster, Precious Thimble glanced over worriedly at the Boles, and was relieved to see them both apparently unharmed. They hadn't been paying her enough attention lately and they weren't paying her any now either. She felt a tremor of unease.
Master Quell was thumping on the cellar door. âI know you can hear me,' he called. âYou, hiding in there. We got three of 'em â is there more? Three of 'em killed. Is there more?'
Faint was checking her weapons. âWe got to go and find Glanno,' she said. âAny volunteers?'
Gruntle walked over, pausing to peer out of the doorway. âThe rain's letting off â looks as if the storm's spent. I'll go with you, Faint.'
âI was asking for volunteers â I wasn't volunteering myself.'
âI'll go!' said Amby.
âI'll go!' said Jula.
And then they glared at each other, and then grinned as if at some private joke, and a moment later both burst out laughing.
âWhat's so funny?' Precious Thimble demanded, truly bewildered this time.
Have they lost their minds? Assuming they have minds, I mean.
Her harsh query sobered them and both ducked, avoiding her stare.
The cellar door creaked open, drawing everyone's attention, and a bewhiskered face poked out, eyes wide and rolling. âThree, ya said? Ya said three?'
The dialect was Genabackan, the accent south islander.
âYa got ah three? Deed?'
Quell nodded. âAny more lurking about, host?'
A quick shake of the head, and the tavern keep edged out, flinching when he saw the slaughtered bodies. âOh, darlings,' he whispered, âahm so soory. So soory!'
âYou know them?' Quell asked. âYou know what they were?'
More figures crowded behind the keep, pale faces, frightened eyes. To Quell's questions the whiskered man flinched. âCoarsed,' he said in a rasp. âOur daughtersâ¦coarsed.'
âCursed? When they come of age, right?'
A jerky nod, and then the man's eyes widened on the wizard. âYou know it? You know the coarse?'
âHow long have you had it, host? Here, in this village â how long have you had the curse?'
âFoor yars now. Foor yars.' And the man edged out. âAai, their heeds! Ya cart erf their heeds!' Behind him the others set up a wailing.
Precious Thimble met Quell's eyes and they exchanged a nod. âStill about, I'd say,' Precious said under her breath.
âAgreed. Should we go hunting?'
She looked round once more. Mappo was dragging the first naked, headless corpse out through the doorway. The green blood had blackened on the floor and left tarry streaks trailing the body. âLet's take that Trell with us, I think.'
âGood idea.' Quell walked up to the tavern keep. âIs there a constable in this village? Who rules the land â where in Hood's name are we anyway?'
Owlish blinks of the eyes. âReach of Woe is war ye are. Seen the toower? It's war the Provost leeves. Yull wan the Provost, ah expeect.'
Quell turned away, rubbed at his eyes, then edged close to Precious Thimble. âWe're agreed, then, it's witchery, this curse.'
âWitch or warlock,' she said, nodding.
âWe're on the Reach of Woe, a wrecker coast. I'd wager it's the arrival of strangers that wakes up the daughters â they won't eat their kin, will they?'
âWhen the frenzy's on them,' said Precious Thimble, âthey'll eat anything that moves.'
âThat's why the locals bolted, then, right. Fine, Witch, go collect Mappo â and this time, tell him he needs to arm himself. This could get messy.'
Precious Thimble looked over at the last body the Trell was now dragging outside. âRight,' she said.
Â
Flanked by the Boles, Jula on his right, Amby on his left, Gruntle walked back down to the main street, boots squelching in the mud. The last spits of rain cooled his brow. Oh, he'd wanted a nastier fight. The problem with mindless attackers was their mindlessness, which made them pathetically predictable. And only three of the damned thingsâ
âI was going first,' said Amby.
âNo, I was,' said Jula.
Gruntle scowled. âGoing where? What are you two talking about?'
âThat window back there,' said Jula, âat the tavern. If'n the girlies got in through the door, I was goin' out through the window â only we couldn't get the shutters pulled backâ'
âThat was your fault,' said Amby. âI kept lifting the latch and you kept pushing it back down.'
âThe latch goes down to let go, Amby, you idiot.'
âNo it goes up â it went up, I saw itâ'
âAnd then back downâ'
âUp.'
âThen down.'
Gruntle's sudden growl silenced them both. They were now following the hoof prints and various furrows of things being dragged in the wake of the animals. In the squat houses to either side, muted lights flickered through thick-glassed windows. The sound of draining water surrounded them, along with the occasional distant rumble of thunder. The air mocked with the freshness that came after a storm.
âThere they are,' said Amby, pointing. âJust past that low wall. You see them, Gruntle? You see them?'
A corral. The wreckage of the carriage high bench was scattered along the base of the stone wall.