Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
For those that had appeared in the ruins of a city in Raraku, however, to find two creatures whose existence was very nearly lost to the demons' racial memory, the moments immediately following their arrival proved somewhat more problematic. For it became quickly apparent that the hounds were not inclined to relinquish their territory, such as it was.
The fight was fierce and protracted, concluding unsatisfactorily for the five azalan, who were eventually driven off, battered and bleeding and eager to seek deep shadows in which to hide from the coming day. To hide, and lick their wounds.
And in the realm known as Shadow, a certain god sat motionless on his insubstantial throne. Already recovered from his shock, his mind was racing.
Racing.
Â
Grinding, splintering wood, mast snapping overhead to drag cordage down, a heavy concussion that shivered through the entire craft, then only the sound of water dripping onto a stone floor.
With a muted groan, Cutter dragged himself upright. âApsalar?'
âI'm here.'
Their voices echoed. Walls and ceiling were closeâthe runner had landed in a chamber.
âSo much for subtle,' the Daru muttered, searching for his pack amidst the wreckage. âI've a lantern. Give me a moment.'
âI am not going anywhere,' she replied from somewhere near the stern.
Her words chilled him, so forlorn did they sound. His groping hands closed on his pack and he dragged it close. He rummaged inside until his hand closed on and retrieved first the small lantern and then the tinder box.
The fire-making kit was from Darujhistan, and consisted of flint and iron bar, wick-sticks, igniting powder, the fibrous inner lining from tree bark, and a long-burning gel the city's alchemists rendered from the gas-filled caverns beneath the city. Sparks flashed three times before the powder caught with a hiss and flare of flame. The bark lining followed, then, dipping a wick-stick into the gel, Cutter set it alight. He then transferred the flame to the lantern.
A sphere of light burgeoned in the chamber, revealing the crushed wreckage of the runner, rough-hewn stone walls and vaulted ceiling. Apsalar was still seated near the splintered shaft of the tiller, barely illumined by the lantern's light. More like an apparition than a flesh and blood person.
âI see a doorway beyond,' she said.
He swung about, lifting the lantern. âAll right, at least we're not in a tomb, then. More like some kind of storage room.'
âI smell dustâ¦and sand.'
He slowly nodded, then scowled in sudden suspicion. âLet's do some exploring,' he grated as he began collecting his gear, including the bow. He froze at a chittering sound from the doorway, looked up to see a score of eyes, gleaming with the lantern's reflected light. Close-set but framing the doorway on all sides, including the arch where, Cutter suspected, they were hanging upside down.
âBhok'arala,' Apsalar said. âWe've returned to Seven Cities.'
âI know,' the Daru replied, wanting to spit. âWe spent most of last year trudging across that damned wasteland, and now we're back where we started.'
âSo it would seem. So, Crokus, are you enjoying being the plaything of a god?'
He saw little value in replying to that question, and chose instead to clamber down to the puddled floor and approach the doorway.
The bhok'arala scampered with tiny shrieks, vanishing into the darkness of the hallway beyond. Cutter paused at the threshold and glanced back. âComing?'
Apsalar shrugged in the gloom, then made her way forward.
The corridor ran straight and level for twenty paces, then twisted to the right, the floor forming an uneven, runnelled ramp that led upward to the next level. There were no side chambers or passages until they reached a circular room, where sealed doorways lining the circumference hinted at entrances to tombs. In one curved wall, between two such doorways, there was an alcove in which stairs were visible.
And crouched at the base of those stairs was a familiar figure, teeth gleaming in a wide smile.
âIskaral Pust!'
âMissed me, didn't you, lad?' He edged forward like a crab, then cocked his head. âI should soothe him nowâboth of them, yes. Welcoming words, a wide embrace, old friends, yes, reunited in a great cause once more. Never mind the extremity of what will be demanded of us in the days and nights to come. As if I need helpâIskaral Pust requires the assistance of no-one. Oh, she might be useful, but she hardly looks inclined, does she? Miserable with knowledge, is my dear lass.' He straightened, managing something between an upright stance and a crouch. His smile suddenly broadened.
âWelcome! My friends!'
Cutter advanced on him. âI've no time for any of this, you damned weaselâ'
âNo time? Of course you have, lad! There's much to be done, and much time in which to do it! Doesn't that make for a change? Rush about? Not us. No, we can
dawdle
! Isn't that wonderful?'
âWhat does Cotillion want of us?' Cutter demanded, forcing his fists to unclench.
âYou are asking me what Cotillion wants of you? How should I know?' He ducked down. âDoes he believe me?'
âNo.'
âNo what? Have you lost your mind, lad? You won't find it here! Although my wife mightâshe's ever cleaning and clearing upâat least, I think she is. Though she refuses to touch the offeringsâmy little bhok'arala children leave them everywhere I go, of course. I've become used to the smell. Now, where was I? Oh yes, dearest Apsalarâshould you and I flirt? Won't that make the witch spit and hiss! Hee hee!'
âI'd rather flirt with a bhok'aral,' she replied.
âThat tooâI'm not the jealous type, you'll be relieved to hear, lass. Plenty of 'em about for you to choose from, in any case. Now, are you hungry? Thirsty? Hope you brought your own supplies. Just head on up these stairs, and when she asks, you haven't seen me.'
Iskaral Pust stepped back and vanished.
Apsalar sighed. âPerhaps hisâ¦wife will prove a more reasonable host.'
Cutter glanced back at her.
Somehow I doubt it
.
âThere is no death in light.'
A
NARMANN,
H
IGH
P
RIEST OF
O
SSERC
âMezla one and all,' Febryl muttered as he hobbled along the worn, dusty path, his breath growing harsher. There was little in this world that much pleased him any more. Malazans. His failing body. The blind insanity of power so brutally evinced in the Whirlwind Goddess. In his mind, the world was plunging into chaos, and all that it had beenâall that he had beenâwas trapped in the past.
But the past was not dead. It merely slept. The perfect, measured resurrection of old patterns could achieve a rebirth. Not a rebirth such as had taken Sha'ikâthat had been nothing more than the discarding of one, badly worn vessel for a new one not nearly so battered. No, the rebirth Febryl imagined was far more profound.
He had once served the Holy Falah'd Enqura. The Holy City of Ugarat and its host of tributary cities had been in the midst of a renaissance. Eleven great schools of learning were thriving in Ugarat. Knowledge long lost was being rediscovered. The flower of a great civilization had turned to face the sun, had begun to open.
The Mezla and their implacable legions had destroyedâ¦everything. Ugarat had fallen to Dassem Ultor. The schools were assailed by soldiers, only to discover, to their fury, that their many riches and texts had, along with philosophers and academics, vanished. Enqura had well understood the Mezla thirst for knowledge, the Emperor's lust for foreign secrets, and the city's Holy Protector would give them nothing. Instead, he had commanded Febryl, a week before the arrival of the Malazan armies, to shut down the schools, to confiscate the hundred thousand scrolls and bound volumes, the ancient relics of the First Empire, and the teachers and scholars themselves. By the Protector's decree, Ugarat's coliseum became the site of a vast conflagration, as everything was burned, destroyed. The scholars were crucifiedâthose that did not fling themselves on the pyre in a fit of madness and griefâand their bodies dumped into the pits containing the smashed relics just outside the city wall.
Febryl had done as he had been commanded. His last gesture of loyalty, of pure, unsullied courage. The terrible act was necessary. Enqura's denial was per
haps the greatest defiance in the entire war. One for which the Holy Protector paid with his life, when the horror that was said to have struck Dassem Ultor upon hearing of the deed transformed into rage.
Febryl's loss of faith had come in the interval, and it had left him a broken man. In following Enqura's commands, he had so outraged his mother and fatherâboth learned nobles in their own rightâthat they had disowned him to his face. And Febryl had lost his mind that night, recovering his sanity with dawn staining the horizon, to find that he had murdered his parents. And their servants. That he had unleashed sorcery to flay the flesh from the guards. That such power had poured through him as to leave him old beyond his years, wrinkled and withered, his bones brittle and bent.
The old man hobbling out through the city gate that day was beneath notice. Enqura searched for him, but Febryl succeeded in evading the Holy Protector, in leaving the man to his fate.
Unforgivable.
A hard word, a truth harder than stone. But Febryl was never able to decide to which crime it applied. Three betrayals, or two? Was the destruction of all that knowledgeâthe slaying of all those scholars and teachersâwas it, as the Mezla and other Falad'han later pronouncedâthe foulest deed of all? Fouler even than the T'lan Imass rising to slaughter the citizens of Aren? So much so that Enqura's name has become a curse for Mezla and natives of Seven Cities alike?
Three, not two?
And the bitch knew. She knew his every secret. It had not been enough to change his name; not enough that he had the appearance of an old man, when the High Mage Iltara, most trusted servant to Enqura, had been young, tall and lusted after by both men and women? No, she had obliterated, seemingly effortlessly, his every barricade, and plundered the pits of his soul.
Unforgivable.
No possessor of his secrets could be permitted to live. He refused to be soâ¦vulnerable. To anyone. Even Sha'ik. Especially Sha'ik.
And so she must be removed. Even if it means dealing with Mezla.
He had no illusions about Korbolo Dom. The Napan's ambitionsâno matter what claims he made at presentâwent far beyond this rebellion. No, his ambitions were imperial. Somewhere to the south, Mallick Rel, the Jhistal priest of Elder Mael, was trekking towards Aren, there to surrender himself. He would, in turn, be brought before the Empress herself.
And then what? That snake of a priest would announce an extraordinary reversal of fortunes in Seven Cities. Korbolo Dom had been working in her interests all along. Or some such nonsense.
Febryl was certain of his suspicions. Korbolo Dom wanted a triumphant return into the imperial fold. Probably the title of High Fist of Seven Cities as well. Mallick Rel would have twisted his part in the events at the Fall and immediately afterwards. The dead man, Pormqual, would be made the singular focus for the debacle of Coltaine's death and the slaying of the High Fist's army. The Jhistal would slip through, somehow, or, if all went awry, he would somehow manage to escape. Korbolo Dom, Febryl believed,
had agents in the palace in Untaâwhat was being played out here in Raraku was but a tremble on a much vaster web.
But I shall defeat it in the end. Even if I must appear to acquiesce right now. He has accepted my conditions, after allâa lie, of courseâand I in turn accept hisâanother lie, naturally.
He had walked through the outskirts of the city and now found himself in the wilder region of the oasis. The trail had the appearance of long disuse, covered in crackling, dried palm fronds and gourd husks, and Febryl knew his careless passage was destroying that illusion, but he was indifferent to that. Korbolo's killers would repair the mess, after all. It fed their self-deceptions well enough.
He rounded a bend in the path and entered a clearing ringed in low stones. There had once been a well here, but the sands had long since filled it. Kamist Reloe stood near the centre, hooded and vulpine, with four of Korbolo's assassins positioned in a half-circle behind him.
âYou're late,' Kamist Reloe hissed.
Febryl shrugged. âDo I look like a prancing foal? Now, have you begun the preparations?'
âThe knowledge here is yours, Febryl, not mine.'
Febryl hissed, then waved one claw-like hand. âNo matter. There's still time. Your words only remind me that I must suffer foolsâ'
âYou're not alone in that,' Kamist Reloe drawled.
Febryl hobbled forward. âThe path yourâ¦servants would take is a long one. It has not been trod by mortals since the First Empire. It has likely grown treacherousâ'
âEnough warnings, Febryl,' Kamist Reloe snapped, his fear showing through. âYou need only open the path. That is all we ask of youâall we have ever asked.'
âYou need more than that, Kamist Reloe,' Febryl said with a smile. âWould you have these fools stride in blind? The goddess was a spirit, onceâ'
âThat is no secret.'
âPerhaps, but what kind of spirit? One that rides the desert winds, you might think. But you are wrong. A spirit of stone? Sand? No, none of these.' He waved one hand. âLook about you. Raraku holds the bones of countless civilizations, leading back to the First Empire, the empire of Dessimbelackis. And still furtherâaye, the signs of that are mostly obliterated, yet some remain, if one has the eyes to seeâ¦and understand.' He limped over to one of the low stones ringing the clearing, struggling to hide the wince of pain from his overworked bones. âWere you to dig down through this sand, Kamist Reloe, you would discover that these boulders are in fact menhirs, stones standing taller than any of us here. And their flanks are pitted and grooved in strange patternsâ¦'
Kamist swung in a slow circle, studying the protruding rocks with narrowed eyes. âT'lan Imass?'
Febryl nodded. âThe First Empire of Dessimbelackis, Kamist Reloe, was not the first. That belonged to the T'lan Imass. There was little, it is true, that you or I might recognize as beingâ¦imperial. No cities. No breaking of the ground to plant crops or irrigate. And its armies were undead. There was a throne, of course,
upon which was meant to sit a mortalâthe progeny race of the T'lan Imass. A human. Alas, humans viewed empireâ¦differently. And their vision did not include T'lan Imass. Thus, betrayal. Then war. An unequal contest, but the T'lan Imass were reluctant to annihilate their mortal children. And so they leftâ'
âOnly to return with the shattering of the warren,' Kamist Reloe muttered, nodding. âWhen the chaos erupted with the ritual of Soletaken and D'ivers.' He faced Febryl once more. âThe goddess spirit isâ¦wasâ¦T'lan Imass?'
Febryl shrugged. âThere were once textsâinscribed on fired clayâfrom a cult of the First Empire, copies of which survived until the fall of Ugarat. The few T'lan Imass the humans managed to destroy when they rebelled were each buried in sacred sites. Sites such as this one, Kamist Reloe.'
But the other mage shook his head. âShe is a creature of rage. Such fury does not belong to T'lan Imassâ'
âUnless she had reason. Memories of a betrayal, perhaps, from her mortal life. A wound too deep to be eradicated by the Ritual of Tellann.' Febryl shrugged. âIt does not matter. The spirit is T'lan Imass.'
âIt is rather late in the day for you to be revealing this to us,' Kamist Reloe growled, turning his head to spit. âDoes the Ritual of Tellann still bind her?'
âNo. She broke those chains long ago and has reclaimed her soulâRaraku's secret gifts are those of life and death, as primal as existence itself. It returned to her all that she had lostâperhaps even the rebirth of her rage. Raraku, Kamist Reloe, remains the deepest mystery of all, for it holds its own memoriesâ¦of the sea, of life's very own waters. And memories are power.'
Kamist Reloe drew his cloak tighter about his gaunt form. âOpen the path.'
And when I have done this for you and your Mezla friends, High Mage, you will be indebted to me, and my desires. Seven Cities shall be liberated. The Malazan Empire will withdraw all interests, and our civilization shall flower once more
â¦
He stepped to the centre of the ring of stones and raised his hands.
Â
Something was coming. Bestial and wild with power. And with each passing moment, as it drew ever nearer, L'oric's fear grew.
Ancient warsâ¦such is the feel of this, as of enmity reborn, a hatred that defies millennia.
And though he sensed that no-one mortal in the oasis city was the subject of that wrath, the truth remained thatâ¦
we are all in the way.
He needed to learn more. But he was at a loss as to which path he should take. Seven Cities was a land groaning beneath unseen burdens. Its skin was thick with layers, weathered hard. Their secrets were not easily prised loose, especially in Raraku.
He sat cross-legged on the floor of his tent, head lowered, thoughts racing. The Whirlwind's rage had never before been so fierce, leading him suspect that the Malazan army was drawing close, that the final clash of wills was fast approaching. This was, in truth, a convergence, and the currents had trapped other powers, pulling them along with relentless force.
And behind it all, the whispers of a songâ¦
He should flee this place. Take Felisinâand possibly Heboric as wellâwith him. And soon. Yet curiosity held him here, at least for the present. Those layers were splitting, and there would be truths revealed, and he would know them.
I came to Raraku because I sensed my father's presenceâ¦somewhere close.
Perhaps here no longer, but he had been, not long ago. The chance of finding his trailâ¦
The Queen of Dreams had said Osric was lost. What did that mean? How? Why? He hungered for answers to such questions.
Kurald Thyrllan had been born of violence, the shattering of Darkness. The Elder Warren had since branched off in many directions, reaching to within the grasp of mortal humans as Thyr. And, before that, in the guise of life-giving fire, Tellann.
Tellann was a powerful presence here in Seven Cities, obscure and buried deep perhaps, but pervasive none the less. Whereas Kurald Thyrllan had been twisted and left fraught by the shattering of its sister warren. There were no easy passages into Thyrllan, as he well knew.
Very well, then. I shall try Tellann.
He sighed, then slowly climbed to his feet. There were plenty of risks, of course. Collecting his bleached telaba in the crook of one arm, he moved to the chest beside his cot. He crouched, passing a hand over it to temporarily dispel its wards, then lifted back the lid.
Liosan armour, the white enamel gouged and scarred. A visored helm of the same material, the leather underlining webbed over eyes and cheeks by black iron mail. A light, narrow-bladed longsword, its point long and tapering, scabbarded in pale wood.
He drew the armour on, including the helm, then pulled his telaba over it, raising the hood as well. Leather gauntlets and sword and belt followed.
Then he paused.
He despised fighting. Unlike his Liosan kin, he was averse to harsh judgement, to the assertion of a brutally delineated world-view that permitted no ambiguity. He did not believe order could be shaped by a sword's edge. Finality, yes, but finality stained with failure.
Necessity was a most bitter flavour, but he saw no choice and so would have to suffer the taste.
Once more he would have to venture forth, through the encampment, drawing ever so carefully on his powers to remain unseen by mortals yet beneath the notice of the goddess. The ferocity of her anger was his greatest ally, and he would have to trust in that.
He set out.
Â
The sun was a crimson glare behind the veil of suspended sand, still a bell from setting, when L'oric reached the Toblakai's glade. He found Felisin sleeping beneath the shade they had rigged between three poles on the side opposite the
carved trees, and decided he would leave her to her rest. Instead, sparing a single bemused glance at the two Teblor statues, he strode over to stand before the seven stone faces.