Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
Turudal cocked his head, then frowned. âHe pursuesâ¦a woman.'
Brys studied the man. âWho are you, Turudal Brizad?'
The eyes met his own. âToday, a witness. We have come, after all, to the day of the Seventh Closure. An end, and a beginningâ'
Brys raised a hand to silence the man, then took a step past him.
The Ceda was stirring in the hallway beyond. Then, rising to his feet, adjusting his grimy, creased robes, he lifted the lenses to his face and settled them in place.
Turudal Brizad turned to join Brys. âAh, yes.'
The silhouettes of a group of tall figures had appeared at the distant doors, which were now open.
âThe Cedaâ¦'
âHe has done very well, thus far.'
Brys shot the First Consort a baffled look. âWhat do you mean? He has doneâ¦nothing.'
Brows rose. âNo? He has annihilated the sea-god, the demon chained by Hannan Mosag. And he has been preparing for this moment for days now. See where he stands? See the tile he has painted beneath himself? A tile from which all the power of the Cedance shall pass, upward, into his hands.'
The gloom of the hallway vanished, a white, glowing light suffusing the dusty air.
Revealing the row of Tiste Edur now facing the Ceda, less than fifteen paces between them.
The Edur in the centre of the row spoke. âCeda Kuru Qan. The kingdom you serve has fallen. Step aside. The emperor wishes to claim his throne.'
âFallen?' The Ceda's voice was thin in comparison, almost quavering. âRelevant? Not in the least. I see you, Hannan Mosag, and your K'risnan. I feel you gathering your power. For your mad emperor to claim the throne of Lether, you shall have to pass through me.'
âIt is pointless, old man,' Hannan Mosag said. âYou are alone. All your fellow mages are dead. Look at you. Half blind, barely able to standâ'
âSeek out the demon you chained in the sea, Warlock King.'
From this distance, Trull could not make out Hannan Mosag's expression, but there was sudden fury in his voice. âYou have done this?'
âLetherii are well versed in using greed to lay traps,' Kuru Qan said. âYou'll not have its power today, nor ever again.'
âFor that,' the Warlock King said in a growl, âyou willâ'
The white mist exploded, the roar shaking ceiling and walls, and thundered forward, striking the Tiste Edur warlocks.
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Ten paces behind Hannan Mosag and his K'risnan, Trull Sengar cried out, ducking away at the blazing concussion, his brothers following suit. He heard screams, cut short, then a body skidded across the polished floor to thud against Trull's feet, knocking him downâ
He found himself staring at a K'risnan, burnt beyond recognition, blackened slime melting away from split bones. Rising to his hands and knees, Trull looked up.
Only two Edur remained standing, battling the raging sorcery of the Ceda. Hannan Mosag and Binadas. The other K'risnan were all dead, as were the four slaves who had been crouching beside the two sacks.
As Trull stared, he saw Binadas flung to the ground as if by a thousand fists of light. Blood sprayedâ
Then Fear was diving forward, skidding on the bucking tiles to within reach of his brother. Hands closed on a wrist and an ankle, then Fear was dragging Binadas back, away from the conflagration.
Hannan Mosag bellowed. Swirling grey tendrils sprang up from the floor, entwining the raging motes of fire. A blinding detonationâ
Then darkness once more, slowly giving way to gloom.
Hannan Mosag, standing alone now, facing the Ceda.
A heartbeatâ
Kuru Qan struck again, a moment before Hannan Mosag's own attack. The two powers collided three paces in front of the Warlock Kingâ
âand Trull saw Hannan Mosag stagger, sheathed in blood, his hands reaching back, groping, the left one landing atop one of the sacks and clutching tight. The other hand then found the other and grasped hold. The Warlock King steadied himself, then began to straighten once more against the onslaught.
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The sorcery pouring from the Ceda had twisted the marble walls, until they began to bleed white liquid. The ceiling overhead had sagged, its paints scorched away, its surfaces polished and slick. Brys had stared, disbelieving, as the magic swatted away whatever defensive spells the K'risnan had raised before themselves, swatted it away in an instant, to rush in and slaughter them.
Against Hannan Mosag himself, it battered again and again, driving ever closer.
Then the Warlock King riposted, and the pressure in that hallway pushed Brys and Turudal back a step, then two.
All at once, the two battling powers annihilated each other in a flash, the thunder of the detonation sending cracks through the floor, bucking tiles into the airâeverywhere but where the two sorcerors stood.
Dusty silence.
The marble columns to either side were burning in patches, melting from the top down like massive tallow candles. Overhead, the ceiling groaned, as if moments from collapse.
âNow,' Turudal Brizad hoarsely whispered, âwe will see the measure of Hannan Mosag's desperationâ¦'
The sorceries roared to life once again, and Brys saw the Warlock King stagger.
The Ceda, Kuru Qan, the small, ancient man, stood unscathed, and the magic raging from him in wave after wave seemed to Brys to be that of a god.
The Warlock King would not survive this. And, once he fell, this ancient, pri
mal sorcery would sweep out, taking the emperor and his kin, devouring them one and all. Outward, into the city. An entire people, the Tiste Edur, would be annihilatedâBrys could sense its hunger, its outrage, its cold lust for vengeanceâthis was the power of the Letherii, the Cedance, the voice of destiny, a thing terrible beyond comprehensionâ
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Trull saw the Warlock King steady himself, his hands gripping the sacks, and power began to flow from them, up his arms, as he began, slowly, to push back the Ceda's attack.
Those arms twisted, grew into horrific, misshapen appendages. Hannan Mosag's torso began to bend, the spine curving, writhing like a snake on hot stones, new muscles rising, knobs of bone pushing at the skin. He shrieked as the power burgeoned through him.
A grey wave rising, battering at the white fire, tearing its edges, pushing harder, filling half the long, colonnaded hallway, closing on the Ceda, who stood unmoving, head tilted up, the strange lenses flashing before his eyes. Standing, as if studying the storm clawing towards him.
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Brys stared in horror as the foul sorcery of the Edur edged ever closer to the Ceda, towering over the small man. He saw a nearby column turn porous, then crumble to dust. A section of the ceiling it had been supporting collapsed downward, only to vanish in a cloudy haze and land in a thud of billowing dust.
Kuru Qan was looking up at the raging wall looming over him.
Brys saw him cock his head, the slightest of gestures.
A renewed burst of white fire, expanding outward from where he stood, surging up and outward, hammering into the grey wall.
Driving fissures through it, tearing enormous pieces away to whip like rent sails up towards the malformed ceiling.
Brys heard the Warlock King's shriek, as the white flames roared towards him.
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Trull felt himself dragged to his feet. He turned, stared into Fear's face. His brother was shouting somethingâ
âbut the Warlock King was failing. Crumbling beneath the onslaught. Whatever energies he had drawn upon from what was hidden within the sacks were ebbing. Insufficient to counter the Ceda. The Warlock King was about to dieâand with himâ
all of us
â¦
âTrull!' Fear shook him. âAlong the wall.' He pointed. âThere, edge forward. For a throwâ'
A
throw?
He stared at the spear in his hands, the Blackwood glistening with beads of red sweat.
âFrom the shadows, Trull, behind that pillar! From the
shadows
, Trull!'
It was pointless. Worse, he did not want to even try. What if he succeeded? What would be won?
âTrull! Do this or we all die! Mother, FatherâMayenâher child! All the children of the Edur!'
Trull stared into Fear's eyes, and did not recognize what he saw in them. His brother shook him again, then pushed him along the wall, into the bathing heat of the sorcery battering down at Hannan Mosag, then behind a friable column of what had once been solid marble.
Into cool shadow. Absurdly cool shadow. Trull stumbled forward at a final push from his brother. He was brought up against a warped, rippled wallâand could see, now, the Ceda. Less than seven paces distant. Head tilted upward, watching his assault on the Warlock King's failing defences.
Tears blurred Trull's eyes. He did not want to do this.
But they will kill us all. Every one of us, leaving not a single Tiste Edur alive. I know this. In my heart I know this. They will take our lands, our riches. They will sow salt on our burial grounds: They will sweep us into history's forgotten worlds. Iâ¦I know this
.
He raised his spear, balanced now in his right hand. Was still for a moment, breath held, then two quick strides, arm flashing forward, the weapon flying straight and true.
Piercing the Ceda in his side, just below his left ribs, its solid weight and the momentum from Trull's arm driving the point deep.
The Ceda spun with the impact, left leg buckling, and fellâaway from the painted tileâ
âthat suddenly shattered.
The white fire vanished, and darkness swept in from all sides.
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Numbed, Brys stepped forwardâ
âand was stayed by the hand of Turudal Brizad. âNo, Champion. He's gone.'
The Ceda. Kuru Qan. My friend
â¦
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Kettle sat in the mud, staring down at the man's face. It looked to be a kind face, especially with the eyes closed in sleep. The scars were fading, all across his lean, tanned body. Her blood had done that. She had been dead, once, and now she had given life.
âYou're a strange one,' the wraith whispered from where it crouched by the water.
âI am Kettle.'
A grunted laugh. âAnd what boils within you, I wonder?
âYou,' she said, âare more than just a ghost.'
âYes.' Amused. âI am Wither. A good name, don't you think? I was Tiste Andii, once, long, long ago. I was murdered, along with all of my kin. Well, those of us that survived the battle, that is.'
âWhy are you here, Wither?'
âI await my lord, Kettle.' The wraith suddenly roseâshe had not known how tall it was before. âAnd nowâ¦he comes.'
An up-rush of muddy water, and a gaunt figure rose, white-skinned as a blood-drained corpse, long pale hair plastered across its lean face. Coughing, pulling itself clear, crawling onto the bank.
âThe swords,' he gasped.
Kettle hurried over to him and pushed the weapons into his long-fingered hands. He used them, points down, to help himself to his feet. Tall, she saw, shrinking back, taller even than the wraith. And such cold, cold eyes, deep red. âYou said you would help us,' she said, cowering beneath his gaze.
âHelp?'
The wraith knelt before his lord. âSilchas Ruin, I was once Killanthir, Third High Mage of the Sixth Cohortâ'
âI remember you, Killanthir.'
âI have chosen the new name of Wither, my lord.'
âAs you like.'
The wraith glanced up. âWhere is the Wyval?'
âI fear he will not survive, but he keeps her occupied. A noble beast.'
âPlease,' Kettle whimpered, âthey're out. They want to kill meâyou promisedâ'
âMy lord,' Wither said, âI would help the Wyval. Together, we can perhaps succeed in driving her deep. Even in binding her once again. If you would give me leaveâ¦'
Silchas Ruin was silent for a moment, staring down at the kneeling wraith. Then he said, âAs you like.'
Wither bowed his head, paused to glance over at Kettle, and said, âLeave the Letherii to me. He will not awaken for some time.' Then the wraith flowed down into the swirling water.
Silchas Ruin drew a deep breath, and looked down at the swords in his hands for the first time. âStrange, these. Yet I sense the mortal chose well. Child, get behind me.' He regarded her, then nodded. âIt is time to fulfil my promise.'
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Corlo had no idea what would come of this. An Avowed could indeed die, if sufficiently damaged. It was, he believed, a matter of will as much as anything else. And he had known Iron Bars for a long time, although not as long as he had known other of the Avowed. To his mind, however, there was no other who could compare with Iron Bars, when it came to sheer will.
The High Mage was exhausted, used up. No longer could he deftly manipulate the four remaining gods, although, luckily, one of those was in enough trouble all on its own, with a crazed Tarthenal seemingly doing the impossibleâsqueezing the very life out of it. Talk about stubborn.
He had been beaten on, again and again, yet he would not relax his deadly embrace. Iron Bars had fought brilliantly, distracting the remaining three repeatedly,
sufficient to keep the Tarthenal alive, but the Avowed was very nearly done. Corlo had never before seen such fighting, had never before witnessed the fullest measure of this Avowed's ability. It had been said, by Guardsmen who would know, that he was nearly a match to Skinner. And now Corlo believed it.
He was more than a little startled when two corpses walked past him towards the gateway, one of them clawing the air and hissing.
They halted at the entrance to the yard, and he heard the woman swear with admirable inventiveness, then say, âI don't know how we can help them. Oh, Ublala, you big, stupid fool.'
The other said, âWe must attack, Shurq Elalle. I have fangs and talons, you know.'
âWell, go on then.'
Shurq Elalle? The captain of the ship we've signed on with? Ourâ¦employer?
Corlo pried his legs loose from their crossed position, wincing in pain, and pushed himself to his feet. âHey, you.'