Blood and Bone

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Authors: Ian C. Esslemont

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BOOK: Blood and Bone
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About the Book

 

In the western sky, the bright emerald banner of the Visitor descends like a portent of annihilation.

On the continent of Jacuruku, the Thaumaturgs have mounted another expedition to tame the wild jungle that is their neighbour. Yet this is no normal wilderness. Named Himatan, it is said to be both of the spirit realm and of the earth. It is also said that it is ruled over by a powerful entity some call the Queen of Witches and others the ancient goddess Ardata. Saeng has grown up knowing only life under the Thaumaturgs – but it is the voices of her country’s forgotten past that speak to her. And when these magician rulers begin their invasion of Himatan, the voices strengthen – urging Saeng and her brother to undertake a desperate mission.

To the south, the desert tribes are united by the arrival of a foreign war leader, a veteran commander in battered mail. His men call him the Grey Ghost and he will lead these tribes on a raid like none that has gone before – deep into the heart of Thaumaturg lands.

And then the mercenary Crimson Guard are issued a contract against a renegade of their ranks. Skinner has returned to Jacuruku and is rumoured to want to reclaim a kingdom he once held. And who are the Guard to refuse the command of a god?

Contents

 

Cover

About the Book

Title Page

Dedication

Acknowledgements

Map

Dramatis Personae

Prologue

Chapter I

Chapter II

Chapter III

Chapter IV

Chapter V

Chapter VI

Chapter VII

Chapter VIII

Chapter IX

Chapter X

Chapter XI

Chapter XII

Chapter XIII

Chapter XIV

Chapter XV

Epilogue

Glossary

About the Author

Also by Ian C. Esslemont

Copyright

This novel is dedicated to the memory of my father,

John Roy Esslemont, 1934–1989.

You are greatly missed.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

 

It is with gratitude that I acknowledge my time at the University of Minnesota, where I was encouraged to pursue my interest in nineteenth-century travel writing, colonial texts, and the myths of imperialism. I hope to return to this rich material some day. Truth is indeed stranger than fiction.

DRAMATIS PERSONAE

 

Thaumaturg Villagers

Saeng

A descendant of local priestesses

Hanu

Her brother

Himatan Villagers

Oroth-en

Village headman

Ursa

A female warrior

The Mountain Bandits

Kenjak Ashevajak

The Bandit Lord

Loor-San

 

Myint

 

Thet-mun

 

Of the Thaumaturg

Golan

Commander of the Army of Righteous

 

Chastisement

U-Pre

Second in Command

Thorn

Principal Scribe of the army

Waris

An officer of the army

Pon-lor

A newly trained Thaumaturg

Tun

An overseer of the army (similar to a sergeant)

Surin

The Prime Master of the ruling Circle

 

of Masters

Servants of Ardata

Rutana

A witch

Nagal

A warrior

Citravaghra

The ‘man-leopard’

Varakapi

The ‘man-ape’

Of the Tribes of the Adwami

Jatal

A prince of the Hafinaj

Andanii

Princess of the Vehajarwi

Ganell

A chief of the Awamir

Sher’ Tal

Horsemaster of the Saar

Pinal

Horsemaster of the Hafinaj

The Warleader

A mercenary commander

Scarza

His lieutenant

Of the Crimson Guard Avowed

K’azz D’Avore

Commander

Shimmer

A captain

Gwynn

A mage, once of Skinner’s company

Lor-sinn

A mage

Turgal

 

Cole

 

Amatt

 

Of the Disavowed

Skinner

Captain

Jacinth

Lieutenant

Mara

A mage

Petal

A mage

Red

A mage

Shijel

Weaponmaster

Black the Lesser

 

Hist

 

Leuthan

 

Of the Malazan Mercenaries

Yusen

Captain

Burastan

Lieutenant

Murk

A mage

Sour

A mage

Ostler

A soldier

Tanner

A soldier

Dee

A soldier

Sweetly

A scout

Others

Ardata

Also known as the Queen of Witches

The Queen of

Also known as the Enchantress, T’riss

Dreams

 

Ina

A Seguleh, of the top thousand fighters, the

 

Jistarii

The Witch Queen

Also known as the Queen of Monsters, Ardata

Old Man Moon

An elder

Ripan

One of his offspring

Sister Spite

Daughter of Draconus

Osserc

A Tiste Liosan, worshipped by some as a

 

sky god

L’oric

Son of Osserc

Gothos

A Jaghut

PROLOGUE

 

In the third moon of the third year of the Great Drought, we put out to sea from the estuary of Holy Ubaryd. On the fifteenth day of the third moon we arrived at an island of the barbarian Falarese. From then on, we were harassed by contrary winds, which delayed our arrival. Further, we encountered treacherous fields of ice that could only be navigated with the greatest care. It was not until the eleventh moon when we finally dropped anchor at the mouth of a great river. Certain it is that so short a visit cannot encompass all the customs and peculiarities of this country, yet we may at least outline its principal characteristics.

Ular Takeq

Customs of Ancient Jakal-Uku

GHOSTS RULED THE
jungles of Jacuruku. Saeng remembered staying awake through the night as she strained to understand their whispered calls. Somehow their murmuring beckoned so much more seductively than her own dreams. One of her earliest memories was of walking alone through moonlit leaves hunting for the source of the jungle’s voice. She’d been utterly self-composed and without fear – as only a child could be. Long into her wandering she distinctly recalled a hand taking hers and guiding her through the dense fronds and stands of damp grasses back to the village. Her mother swept up then, her face wet with tears, to squeeze her to her bony chest while Saeng calmly explained that everything was all right. That there was no need to cry. That a friend had brought her back.

And of course later everyone swore to seeing her wander in from the dark alone.

Since then the leagues of impenetrable jungle surrounding the village had held no fear for her. A dangerous and, she could admit, rather reckless attitude in a land where flower garlands and prayer scarves festooned trees in honour of countless spirits, restless dead, ghosts, lost forgotten gods, and far too many missing children and adults.

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