Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
âLiar,' Kalam said. âMinala has banished me. But you already know that, which is why you've come to find me.'
âI am the Patron of Assassins,' Cotillion said. âI do not mediate marital disputes.'
âDepends on how fierce they get, doesn't it?'
âAre you ready to kill each other, then?'
âNo. I was only making a point.'
âWhich was?'
âWhat are you doing here, Cotillion?'
The god was silent for a long moment. âI have often wondered,' he finally said, âwhy it is that you, an assassin, offer no obeisance to your patron.'
Kalam's brows rose. âSince when have you expected it? Hood take us, Cotillion, if it was fanatical worshippers you hungered for, you should never have looked to assassins. By our very natures, we're antithetical to the notion of subservienceâas if you weren't already aware of that.' His voice trailed off, and he turned to study the shadow-wreathed figure standing beside him. âMind you, you stood at Kellanved's side, through to the end. Dancer, it seems, knew both loyalty and servitudeâ¦'
âServitude?' There was a hint of a smile in the tone.
âMere expedience? That seems difficult to countenance, given all that the two of you went through. Out with it, Cotillion, what is it you're asking?'
âWas I asking something?'
âYou want me toâ¦serve you, as would a minion his god. Some probably disreputable mission. You need me for something, only you've never learned how to
ask
.'
Rood slowly rose from his haunches, then stretched, long and languorous. The massive head then swung round, lambent eyes settling on Kalam.
âThe Hounds are troubled,' Cotillion murmured.
âI can tell,' the assassin replied drily.
âI have certain tasks before me,' the god continued, âthat will consume much of my time for the near future. Whilst at the same time, certain otherâ¦activitiesâ¦must be undertaken. It is one thing to find a loyal subject, but another entirely to find one conveniently positioned, as it were, to be of practical useâ'
Kalam barked a laugh. âYou went fishing for faithful servants and found your subjects wanting.'
âWe could argue interpretation all day,' Cotillion drawled.
There was a detectable irony in the god's voice that pleased Kalam. In spite of his wariness, he admitted that he actually liked Cotillion.
Uncle
Cotillion, as the child Panek called him. Certainly, between the Patron of Assassins and Shadowthrone, only the former seemed to possess any shred of self-examinationâand thus was actually
capable
of being humbled. Even if the likelihood was in truth remote. âAgreed,' Kalam replied. âVery well, Minala has no interest in seeing my pretty face for a time. Leaving me free, more or lessâ'
âAnd without a roof over your head.'
âWithout a roof over my head, aye. Fortunately it never seems to rain in your realm.'
âAh,' Cotillion murmured, âmy realm.'
Kalam studied Rood. The beast had not relinquished its steady stare. The assassin was growing nervous under that unwavering attention. âIs your claimâyours and Shadowthrone'sâbeing contested?'
âDifficult to answer,' Cotillion murmured. âThere have beenâ¦trembles. Agitationâ¦'
âAs you said, the Hounds are troubled.'
âThey are indeed.'
âYou wish to know more of your potential enemy.'
âWe would.'
Kalam studied the gate, the swirling shadows at its threshold. âWhere would you have me begin?'
âA confluence to your own desires, I suspect.'
The assassin glanced at the god, then slowly nodded.
Â
In the half-light of dusk, the seas grew calm, gulls wheeling in from the shoals to settle on the beach. Cutter had built a fire from driftwood, more from the need to be doing something than seeking warmth, for the Kanese coast was subtropical, the breeze sighing down off the verge faint and sultry. The Daru had collected water from the spring near the trail head and was now brewing tea. Overhead, the first stars of night flickered into life.
Apsalar's question earlier that afternoon had gone unanswered. Cutter was not yet ready to return to Darujhistan, and he felt nothing of the calm he'd expected to follow the completion of their task. Rellock and Apsalar had, finally, returned to their home, only to find it a place haunted by death, a haunting that had slipped its fatal flavour into the old man's soul, adding yet one more ghost to this forlorn strand. There was, now, nothing for them here.
Cutter's own experience here in the Malazan Empire was, he well knew, twisted and incomplete. A single vicious night in Malaz City, followed by three tense days in Kan that closed with yet more assassinations. The empire was a foreign place, of course, and one could expect a certain degree of discord between it and what he was used to in Darujhistan, but if anything what he had seen of daily life in the cities suggested a stronger sense of lawfulness, of order and calm. Even so, it was the smaller details that jarred his sensibilities the most, that reinforced the fact that he was a stranger.
Feeling vulnerable was not a weakness he shared with Apsalar. She seemed possessed of absolute calm, an ease, no matter where she wasâthe confidence of the god who once possessed her had left something of a permanent imprint on her soul.
Not just confidence
. He thought once more of the night she had killed the man in Kan.
Deadly skills, and the icy precision necessary when using them
. And, he recalled with a shiver, many of the god's own memories remained with her, reaching back to when the god had been a mortal man, had been Dancer. Among those, the night of the assassinationsâwhen the woman who would become Empress had struck down the Emperorâ¦and Dancer.
She had revealed that much, at least, a revelation devoid of feeling, of sentiment, delivered as casually as a comment about the weather. Memories of biting knives, of dust-covered blood rolling like pellets across a floorâ¦
He removed the pot from the coals, threw a handful of herbs into the steaming water.
She had gone for a walk, westward along the white beach. Even as dusk settled, he had lost sight of her, and he had begun to wonder if she was ever coming back.
A log settled suddenly, flinging sparks. The sea had grown entirely dark, invisible; he could not even hear the lap of the waves beyond the crackling fire. A cooler breath rode the breeze.
Cutter slowly rose, then spun round to face inland as something moved in the gloom beyond the fire's light. âApsalar?'
There was no reply. A faint thumping underfoot, as if the sands trembled to the passage of something hugeâ¦huge and four-legged.
The Daru drew out his knives, stepping away from the flickering light.
Ten paces away, at a height to match his own, he saw two glowing eyes, set wide, gold and seemingly depthless. The head and the body beneath it were darker stains in the night, hinting at a mass that left Cutter cold.
âAh,' a voice said from the shadows to his left, âthe Daru lad. Blind has found you, good. Now, where is your companion?'
Cutter slowly sheathed his weapons. âThat damned Hound gave me a start,' he muttered. âAnd if it's blind, why is it looking straight at me?'
âWell, her name is something of a misnomer. She sees, but not as we see.' A cloaked figure stepped into the firelight. âDo you know me?'
âCotillion,' Cutter replied. âShadowthrone is much shorter.'
âNot that much, though perhaps in his affectations he exaggerates certain traits.'
âWhat do you want?'
âI would speak with Apsalar, of course. There is the smell of death hereâ¦recent, that isâ'
âRellock. Her father. In his sleep.'
âUnfortunate.' The god's hooded head turned, as if scanning the vicinity, then swung back to face Cutter. âAm I your patron now?' he asked.
He wanted to answer no. He wanted to back away, to flee the question and all his answer would signify. He wanted to unleash vitriol at the suggestion. âI believe you might be at that, Cotillion.'
âI amâ¦pleased, Crokus.'
âI am now named Cutter.'
âFar less subtle, but apt enough, I suppose. Even so, there was the hint of deadly charm in your old Daru name. Are you sure you will not reconsider?'
Cutter shrugged, then said, âCrokus had noâ¦patron god.'
âOf course. And one day, a man will arrive in Darujhistan. With a Malazan name, and no-one will know him, except perhaps by reputation. And he will eventually hear tales of the young Crokus, a lad so instrumental in saving the
city on the night of the Fete, all those years ago. Innocent, unsullied Crokus. So be itâ¦Cutter. I see you have a boat.'
The change of subject startled him slightly, then he nodded. âWe have.'
âSufficiently provisioned?'
âMore or less. Not for a long voyage, though.'
âNo, of course not. Why should it be? May I see your knives?'
Cutter unsheathed them and passed them across to the god, pommels forward.
âDecent blades,' Cotillion murmured. âWell balanced. Within them are the echoes of your skill, the taste of blood. Shall I bless them for you, Cutter?'
âIf the blessing is without magic,' the Daru replied.
âYou desire no sorcerous investment?'
âNo.'
âAh. You would follow Rallick Nom's path.'
Cutter's eyes narrowed.
Oh, yes, he would recall him. When he saw through Sorry's eyes, at the Phoenix Inn, perhaps. Or maybe Rallick acknowledged his patronâ¦though I find that difficult to believe
. âI think I would have trouble following that path, Cotillion. Rallick's abilities areâ¦wereâ'
âFormidable, yes. I do not think you need use the past tense when speaking of Rallick Nom, or Vorcan for that matter. No, I've no newsâ¦simply a suspicion.' He handed the knives back. âYou underestimate your own skills, Cutter, but perhaps that is for the best.'
âI don't know where Apsalar's gone,' Cutter said. âI don't know if she's coming back.'
âAs it has turned out, her presence has proved less vital than expected. I have a task for you, Cutter. Are you amenable to providing a service to your patron?'
âIsn't that expected?'
Cotillion was silent for a moment, then he laughed softly. âNo, I shall not take advantage of yourâ¦inexperience, though I admit to some temptation. Shall we begin things on a proper footing? Reciprocity, Cutter. A relationship of mutual exchanges, yes?'
âWould that you had offered the same to Apsalar.' Then he clamped his jaw shut.
But Cotillion simply sighed. âWould that I had. Consider this new tact the consequence of difficult lessons.'
âYou said reciprocity. What will I receive in return for providing this service?'
âWell, since you'll not accept my blessing or any other investment, I admit to being at something of a loss. Any suggestions?'
âI'd like some questions answered.'
âIndeed.'
âYes. Such as, why did you and Shadowthrone scheme to destroy Laseen and the empire? Was it just a desire for revenge?'
The god seemed to flinch within his robes, and Cutter felt unseen eyes harden. âOh my,' Cotillion drawled, âyou force me to reconsider my offer.'
âI would know,' the Daru pressed on, âso I can understand what you didâ¦did to Apsalar.'
âYou demand that your patron god justify his actions?'
âIt wasn't a demand. Just a question.'
Cotillion said nothing for a long moment.
The fire was slowly dying, embers pulsing with the breeze. Cutter sensed the presence of a second Hound somewhere in the darkness beyond, moving restlessly.
âNecessities,' the god said quietly. âGames are played, and what may appear precipitous might well be little more than a feint. Or perhaps it was the city itself, Darujhistan, that would serve our purposes better if it remained free, independent. There are layers of meaning behind every gesture, every gambit. I will not explain myself any further than that, Cutter.'
âDoâdo you regret what you did?'
âYou are indeed fearless, aren't you? Regret? Yes. Many, many regrets. One day, perhaps, you will see for yourself that regrets are as nothing. The value lies in how they are answered.'
Cutter slowly turned and stared out into the darkness of the sea. âI threw Oponn's coin into the lake,' he said.
âAnd do you now regret the act?'
âI'm not sure. I didn't like theirâ¦attention.'
âI am not surprised,' Cotillion muttered.
âI have one more request,' Cutter said, facing the god again. âThis task you shall set me onâif I am assailed during it, can I call upon Blind?'
âThe Hound?' The astonishment was clear in Cotillion's voice.
âAye,' Cutter replied, his gaze now on the huge beast. âHer attentionâ¦comforts me.'
âThat makes you rarer than you could imagine, mortal. Very well. If the need is dire, call upon her and she will come.'
Cutter nodded. âNow, what would you have me do on your behalf?'
Â
The sun had cleared the horizon when Apsalar returned. After a few hours' sleep, Cutter had risen to bury Rellock above the tide line. He was checking the boat's hull one last time when a shadow appeared alongside his own.
âYou had visitors,' she said.
He squinted up at her, studied her dark, depthless eyes. âAye.'
âAnd do you now have an answer to my question?'
Cutter frowned, then he sighed and nodded. âI do. We're to explore an island.'
âAn island? Is it far?'
âMiddling, but getting farther by the moment.'
âAh. Of course.'
Of course
.
Overhead, gulls cried in the morning air on their way out to sea. Beyond the shoals, their white specks followed the wind, angling southwestward.