Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
BOOK THREE OF THE
MALAZAN BOOK OF THE FALLEN
STEVEN ERIKSON
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
MEMORIES OF ICE: BOOK THREE OF THE MALAZAN BOOK OF THE FALLEN
Copyright © 2001 by Steven Erikson
All rights reserved.
Originally published in Great Britain in 2001 by Bantam Press, a division of Transworld Publishers.
Maps by Neil Gower
A Tor Book
Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC
175 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10010
Tor
®
is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, LLC.
ISBN 978-0-7653-4880-7
First Tor Edition: November 2005
First Tor Mass Market Edition: August 2006
eISBN 9781429926638
First eBook edition: October 2012
To
R. S. L
UNDIN
Acknowledgments
I extend my gratitude to the following for their support and friendship: Clare, Bowen, Mark, David, Chris, Rick, Cam, Courtney; Susan and Peter, David Thomas Sr. and Jr., Harriet and Chris and Lily and Mina and Smudge; Patrick Walsh and Simon and Jane. Thanks also to Dave Holden and his friendly staff (Tricia, Cindy, Liz, Tanis, Barbara, Joan, Nadia, Amanda, Tony, Andi and Jody) of the Pizza Place, for the table and the refills. And thanks to John Meaney for the disgusting details on dead seeds.
Dramatis Personae
The Caravanserai
Gruntle,
a caravan guard
Stonny Menackis,
a caravan guard
Harllo,
a caravan guard
Buke,
a caravan guard
Bauchelain,
an explorer
Korbal Broach,
his silent partner
Emancipor Reese,
a manservant
Keruli,
a trader
Marble,
a sorceror
I
N
C
APUSTAN
Brukhalian,
Mortal Sword of Fener’s Reve (the Grey Swords)
Itkovian,
Shield Anvil of Fener’s Reve (the Grey Swords)
Karnadas,
Destriant of Fener’s Reve (the Grey Swords)
Recruit Velbara
(the Grey Swords)
Master Sergeant Norul
(the Grey Swords)
Farakalian
(the Grey Swords)
Nakalian
(the Grey Swords)
Torun
(the Grey Swords)
Sidlis
(the Grey Swords)
Nilbanas
(the Grey Swords)
Jelarkan,
prince and ruler of Capustan
Arard,
prince and ruler in absentia of Coral
Rath’Fener
(Priest of the Mask Council)
Rath’Shadowtbrone
(Priest of the Mask Council)
Rath’Queen of Dreams
(Priestess of the Mask Council)
Rath’Hood
(Priest of the Mask Council)
Rath’D’rek
(Priest of the Mask Council)
Rath’Trake
(Priest of the Mask Council)
Rath’Burn
(Priestess of the Mask Council)
Rath’Togg
(Priest of the Mask Council)
Rath’Fanderay
(Priestess of the Mask Council)
Rath’Dessembrae
(Priestess of the Mask Council)
Rath’Oponn
(Priest of the Mask Council)
Rath’Beru
(Priest of the Mask Council)
O
NEARM’S
H
OST
Dujek Onearm,
commander of renegade Malazan army
Whiskeyjack,
second-in-command of renegade Malazan army
Twist,
commander of the Black Moranth
Artanthos,
standard-bearer of renegade Malazan army
Barack,
a liaison officer
Hareb,
a noble-born captain
Ganoes Paran,
Captain, Bridgeburners
Antsy,
sergeant, 7th Squad, Bridgeburners
Picker,
corporal, 7th Squad, Bridgeburners
Detoran,
soldier, 7th Squad
Spindle,
mage and sapper, 7th Squad
Blend,
soldier, 7th Squad
Mallet,
healer, 9th Squad
Hedge,
sapper, 9th Squad
Trotts,
soldier, 9th Squad
Quick Ben,
mage, 9th Squad
Aimless
(Bridgeburner corporal)
Bucklund
(Bridgeburner sergeant)
Runter
(Bridgeburner sapper)
Mulch
(Bridgeburner healer)
Bluepearl
(Bridgeburner mage)
Shank
(Bridgeburner mage)
Toes
(Bridgeburner mage)
B
ROOD’S
H
OST
Caladan Brood,
warlord of liberation army on Genabackis
Anomander Rake,
Lord of Moon’s Spawn
Kallor,
the High King, Brood’s second-in-command
The Mhybe,
matron of the Rhivi Tribes
Silverfox,
the Rhivi Reborn
Korlat,
a Tiste Andii Soletaken
Orfantal,
Korlat’s brother
Hurlochel,
an outrider in the liberation army
Crone,
a Great Raven and companion to Anomander Rake
T
HE
B
ARGHAST
Humbrall Taur,
warchief of the White Face Clan
Hetan,
his daughter
Cafal,
his first son
Netok,
his second son
D
ARUJHISTAN
E
NVOYS
Coll,
an ambassador
Estraysian D’arle,
a councilman
Baruk,
an alchemist
Kruppe,
a citizen
Murillio,
a citizen
T
HE
T
’LAN
I
MASS
Kron,
ruler of the Kron T’lan Imass
Cannig Tol,
Clan Leader
Bek Okhan,
a Bonecaster
Pran Chole,
a Bonecaster
Okral Lom,
a Bonecaster
Bendal Home,
a Bonecaster
Ay Estos,
a Bonecaster
Olar Ethil,
the First Bonecaster and First Soletaken
Tool, the Shorn,
once First Sword
Kilava,
a renegade Bonecaster
Lanas Tog,
a Kerluhm T’lan Imass
T
HE
P
ANNION
D
OMIN
The Seer,
priest-king of the Domin
Ultentha,
Septarch of Coral
Kulpath,
Septarch of the besieging army
Inal,
Septarch of Lest
Anaster,
a Tenescowri Child of the Dead Seed
Seerdomin Kahlt
O
THERS
K’rul,
an Elder God
Draconus,
an Elder God
Sister of Cold Nights,
an Elder Goddess
Lady Envy,
a resident of Morn
Gethol,
a Herald
Treach,
a First Hero (the Tiger of Summer)
Toc the Younger,
Aral Fayle, a Malazan scout
Garath,
a large dog
Baaljagg,
a larger wolf
Mok,
a Seguleh
Thurule,
a Seguleh
Senu,
a Seguleh
The Chained One,
an unknown ascendant (also known as the Crippled God)
The Witch of Tennes
Munug,
a Daru artisan
Talamandas,
a Barghast sticksnare
Ormulogun,
artist in Onearm’s Host
Gumble,
his critic
Haradas,
a Trygalle Trade Guild caravan master
Azra Jael,
a marine in Onearm’s Host
Straw,
a Mott Irregular
Sty,
a Mott Irregular
Stump,
a Mott Irregular
Job Bole,
a Mott Irregular
Prologue
The ancient wars of the Tlan Imass and the Jaghut saw the world torn asunder. Vast armies contended on the ravaged lands, the dead piled high, their bone the bones of hills, their spilled blood the blood of seas. Sorceries raged until the sky itself was fire …
A
NCIENT
H
ISTORIES
, V
OL
I
K
INICIK
K
ARBAR’N
I
Maeth’ki Im (Pogrom of the Rotted Flower), the 33rd Jaghut War
298,665 years before Burn’s Sleep
Swallows darted through the clouds of midges dancing over the mudflats. The sky above the marsh remained grey, but it had lost its mercurial wintry gleam, and the warm wind sighing through the air above the ravaged land held the scent of healing.
What had once been the inland freshwater sea the Imass called Jaghra Til – born from the shattering of the Jaghut ice-fields – was now in its own death-throes. The pallid overcast was reflected in dwindling pools and stretches of knee-deep water for as far south as the eye could scan, but none the less, newly birthed land dominated the vista.
The breaking of the sorcery that had raised the glacial age returned to the region the old, natural seasons, but the memories of mountain-high ice lingered. The exposed bedrock to the north was gouged and scraped, its basins filled with boulders. The heavy silts that had been the floor of the inland sea still bubbled with escaping gases, as the land, freed of the enormous weight with the glaciers’ passing eight years past, continued its slow ascent.
Jaghra Til’s life had been short, yet the silts that had settled on its bottom were thick. And treacherous.
Pran Chole, Bonecaster of Cannig Tol’s clan among the Kron Imass, sat motionless atop a mostly buried boulder along an ancient beach ridge. The descent before him was snarled in low, wiry grasses and withered driftwood. Twelve paces beyond, the land dropped slightly, then stretched out into a broad basin of mud.
Three ranag had become trapped in a boggy sinkhole twenty paces into the basin. A bull male, his mate and their calf, ranged in a pathetic defensive circle. Mired and vulnerable, they must have seemed easy kills for the pack of ay that found them.
But the land was treacherous indeed. The large tundra wolves had succumbed to the same fate as the ranag. Pran Chole counted six ay, including a yearling. Tracks indicated that another yearling had circled the sinkhole dozens of times before wandering westward, doomed no doubt to die in solitude.
How long ago had this drama occurred? There was no way to tell. The mud had hardened on ranag and ay alike, forming cloaks of clay latticed with cracks. Spots of bright green showed where wind-borne seeds had germinated, and the Bonecaster was reminded of his visions when spiritwalking – a host of mundane details twisted into something unreal. For the beasts, the struggle had become eternal, hunter and hunted locked together for all time.
Someone padded to his side, crouched down beside him.
Pran Chole’s tawny eyes remained fixed on the frozen tableau. The rhythm of footsteps told the Bonecaster the identity of his companion, and now came the warm-blooded smells that were as much a signature as resting eyes upon the man’s face.
Cannig Tol spoke. ‘What lies beneath the clay, Bonecaster?’
‘Only that which has shaped the clay itself, Clan Leader.’