Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
The spiders run away.
Thus, the tableau is set.
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âOut of my way!' screeched Iskaral Pust. âWho is this fool and how dare he fool with me? I'll gnash him! I'll crush him down. I'll feint right and dodge left and we'll be by in a flash! Look at that pathetic mule â he'll never catch us! I got a sword to claim. Mine, yes, mine! And then won't Shadowthrone grovel and simper! Iskaral Pust, High Priest of Dragnipur! Most feared swordsman in ten thousand worlds! And if you think you've seen justice at its most fickle, you just wait!' He then leaned forward and smiled. âKind sir, could you kindly move yourself and yon beast to one side? I must keep an appointment, you understand. Hastily, in fact.' Then he hissed, âGo climb up your own arse, you red-vested ball of lard that someone rolled across a forest floor! Go! Scat!'
âMost confounding indeed,' Kruppe replied with his most beatific smile. âIt seems we are in discord, in that you seek to proceed in a direction that will inevitably collide with none other than Kruppe, the Eel of Darujhistan. Poor priest, it is late. Does your god know where you are?'
âEel? Kruppe? Collide? Fat and an idiot besides, what a dastardly combination, and on this of all nights! Listen, take another street. If I run into this Crappy Eel I'll be sure to let him know you're looking for him. It's the least I can do.'
âHardly, but no matter. I am Kruppe the Crappy Eel, alas.'
âSo fine, we've run into each other. Glad that's over with. Now let me pass!'
âKruppe regrets that any and every path you may seek shall be impeded by none other than Kruppe himself. Unless, of course, you conclude that what you seek is not worth the effort, nor the grief certain to follow, and so wisely return to thy shadowy temple.'
âYou don't know what I want so it's none of your damned business what I want!'
âMisapprehensions abound, but wait, does this slavering fool even understand?'
âWhat? I wasn't supposed to hear that? But I did! I did, you fat idiot!'
âHe only thought he heard. Kind priest, Kruppe assures you, you did not hear but mishear. Kind priest? Why, Kruppe is too generous, too forgiving by far, and hear hear! Or is it here here? No matter, it's not as if this grinning toad will understand. Why, his mule's got a sharper look in its eye than he has. Now, kindly priest, it's late and you should be in bed, yes? Abjectly alone, no doubt. Hmm?'
Iskaral Pust stared. He gaped. His eyes darted, alighting on the bhokaral squatting on the cobbles beside him as it made staring, gaping, darting expressions. âMy worshippers! Of course! You! Yes, you! Gather your kin and attack the fat fool! Attack! Your god commands you! Attack!'
âMlawhlaoblossblayowblagmilebbingoblaiblblafblablall-blayarblablabnablahblallblah!'
âWhat?'
âBla?'
âBla?'
âYarb?'
âBah! You're stupid and useless and ugly!'
âBlabluablablablahllalalabala, too!'
Iskaral Pust scowled at it.
The bhokaral scowled back.
âRat poison!' Pust hissed. And then smiled.
The bhokaral offered him a dung sausage. And then smiled.
Oh, so much for reasoned negotiation.
Iskaral Pust's warbling battle cry was somewhat strangled as he leaned forward, perched high in the stirrups, hands reaching like a raptor's talons, and the mule reluctantly stumped forward.
Kruppe watched this agonizingly slow charge. He sighed. âReally now. It comes to this? So be it.' And he kicked his war-mule into motion.
The beasts closed, step by step. By step.
Iskaral Pust clawed the air, weaving and pitching, head bobbing. Overhead, the bhokarala screamed and flew in frenzied circles. The High Priest's mule flicked its tail.
Kruppe's war-mule edged to the right. Pust's beast angled to
its
right. Their heads came alongside, and then their shoulders. Whereupon they halted.
Snarling and spitting, Iskaral Pust launched himself at Kruppe, who grunted a surprised
oof!
Fists flew, thumbs jabbed, jaws snapped â the High Priest's crazed attack â and the Eel threw up his forearms to fend it off, only to inadvertently punch Pust in the nose with one pudgy hand. Head rocked back, a stunned gasp. Attack renewed.
They grappled. They toppled, thumping on to the cobbles in a flurry of limbs.
The bhokarala joined in, diving from above with screeches and snarls, swarming the two combatants before beginning to fight with each other. Fists flying, thumbs jabbing, jaws snapping. Spiders swept in from all sides, tiny fangs nipping everything in sight.
The entire mass writhed and seethed.
The two mules walked a short distance away, then turned in unison to watch the proceedings.
Best leave this egregious scene for now.
Honest.
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When the two women appeared some distance down a side avenue, dressed in diaphanous robes, and approached side by side with elegant grace â like noble-born sisters out for a late night stroll â the Great Ravens scattered, shrieking, and the Hounds of Shadow drew up, hackles rising and lips stretching back to reveal glistening fangs.
Even at this distance, Samar Dev could feel the power emanating from them. She stepped back, her chest tightening. âWho in Hood's name are they?'
When Karsa did not reply she glanced over to see that he was watching a lone horseman coming up from the lakefront. This rider held a lance and the moment her eyes alit upon that weapon she drew a sharp, ragged breath.
Gods, now what?
The horse's hoofs echoed like a cracked temple bell.
Ignoring the rider, the Hounds of Shadow set out in the direction of the two women. The five enormous beasts moved warily, heads held low.
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At this moment, High Alchemist Baruk stood beside his carriage in the estate compound. It might have seemed to the servants and guards watching that he was studying the crazed night sky, but none of these worthies was positioned to see anything of his face.
The man was weeping.
He did not see the shattered moon. Nor the wreaths of low smoke drifting past. In truth, he saw nothing that anyone else could possibly see, for his vision was turned inward, upon memories of friendship, upon burdens since accepted, and, through it all, there was a rising flood of
something
â he could not be certain, but he believed it was humility.
In the course of a life, sacrifices are made, dire legacies accepted. Burdens are borne upon a humble back, or they ride the shoulders of bitter martyrs. These are the choices available to the spirit. There was no doubt, none at all, as to which one had been chosen by the Son of Darkness.
A great man was dead. So much cruelly taken away on this sour night.
And he had lost a friend.
It availed him nothing that he understood, that he accepted that so many other choices were made, and that he had his own role still to play out in this tragic end.
No, he simply felt broken inside.
Everything seemed thin, fragile. All that he felt in his heart, all that he saw with his eyes. So very fragile.
Yes, the moon died, but a rebirth was coming.
Could he hold to that?
He would try.
For now, however, all he could manage were these tears.
Baruk turned to his carriage, stepped inside. The door was shut behind him as he settled on the cushioned bench. He looked across to his guest, but could say nothing. Not to this one, who had lost so much more than he had.
So much more.
The gates were opened and the carriage set out, its corner lanterns swinging.
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Cutter dismounted, leaving the horse to wander where it would. He walked forward, indifferent to the presence of the Hounds â they seemed intent on something else in any case â and indifferent as well to the Great Ravens as they drove onlookers away with beaks eager to stab and slash. His eyes were on the body lying on the cobbles.
He walked past a woman who stood beside a towering warrior who was drawing loose a two-handed flint sword as he stared at something in the direction from whence Cutter had just come.
None of these details could drag Cutter's attention from the body, and that gleaming black sword so brutally driven into the head and face. He walked until he stood over it.
The woman moved up beside him. âThat weapon in your hands â it's notâ'
âWe are in trouble,' Cutter said.
âWhat?'
He could not believe what he was seeing. Could not accept that the Lord of Moon's Spawn was lying here, one eye closed, the other open and staring sightlessly. Killed by his own sword. Killedâ¦
taken.
By Dragnipur. âHow did this happen? Who could haveâ¦'
âDassem Ultor.'
He finally looked at her. She was Seven Cities, that much he could see at once. Older than Cutter by a decade, maybe more. âThe name's familiar, butâ¦' He shrugged.
She pointed to one side and Cutter turned.
A man was crouched, slumped against a wall, a sword propped up beside him. He had buried his face in his arms. Cutter's eyes went back to that sword.
I've seen that thing beforeâ¦but where? When?
âHe was known to us,' said the woman, âas Traveller.'
Memories rushed through Cutter, leaving in their wake something cold, lifeless. âIt's not the same,' he whispered. âVengeance. Or grief. Your choice.' He drew an uneven breath. âThat sword â it was forged by Anomander Rake. It was his weapon. Before Dragnipur. He left it with his brother, Andarist. And then Iâ¦Iâ¦
Beru fend
â¦'
The giant warrior now twisted round. âIf you would protect that body,' he said in a growl, âthen ready that spear.'
The two women had halted a street away, their path blocked by a half-circle of Hounds, with less than twenty paces separating the parties.
Seeing those women, Cutter frowned. âSpite,' he muttered. âDid you guess? Or was it just some damned itch?'
âSamar Dev,' snapped the giant. â
Witch!
Get Traveller on his feet! I will need him!'
â
Damn you!
' screamed the woman beside Cutter. â
What is it?
'
But there was no need for an answer. For she saw now, as did Cutter.
More Hounds, these ones pale as ghosts, a pack twice the number of the Hounds of Shadow. Loping up the street from Lakefront, moments from a charge.
âIt's the sword,' said the woman named Samar Dev. âThey've come for the sword.'
Cutter felt his limbs turn to ice, even as the lance in his hands flared with heat.
âGive me room,' said the giant, lumbering forward into a clear space.
Against ten Hounds? Are you mad?
Cutter moved out to the left of the warrior. The witch rushed over to Traveller.
The lance trembled. It was getting too hot to hold, but what else did he have? Some damned daggers â against these things?
Gods, what am I even doing here?
But he would stand. He would die here, beside a giant â who was just as doomed. And for what?
There is nothingâ¦there is nothing in my life. To explain any of this.
He glared at the white Hounds.
It's just a sword. What will you even do with it? Chew the handle? Piss on the blade?
He looked across at the huge warrior beside him. âWhat's your name at least?'
The giant glanced at him. âYes,' he said with a sharp nod. âI am Karsa Orlong of the Teblor. Toblakai. And you?'
âCrokus. Crokus Younghand.' He hesitated, then said, âI was once a thief.'
âBe one again,' said Karsa, teeth bared, âand steal me a Hound's life this night.'
Shit.
âI'll try.'
âThat will do,' the Toblakai replied.
Thirty paces away now. And the white Hounds fanned out, filled the street in a wall of bleached hide, rippling muscle and rows of fangs.
A gust of charnel wind swept round Cutter; something clattered, rang sharp on cobbles, and then a hand swept downâ
The Hounds of Light charged.
As, on the side street to the left, the daughters of Draconus unleashed their warrens in a howling rush of destruction that engulfed the five beasts before them.