Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
He found the main avenue and made his way towards the large command tent at the centre of the encampment. Soldiers walked past, paying him no heed. This was Onearm's Host, but he'd yet to see a single familiar face, which wasn't too surprising â he had commanded the Bridgeburners, and the Bridgeburners were gone. Most of these soldiers would be newcomers to the army, drawn in from garrisons at Pale, Genabaris and Nathilog. They would have arrived since the Pannion War. Nonetheless, he expected to find at least someone from the original force that had marched all the way to Coral, someone who had been part of that devastating battle.
Four soldiers stood guard outside Dujek's command tent. A fifth figure was nearby, holding the reins of a mud-spattered horse.
Paran walked closer, eyes on the horseman. Familiar â he'd found what he had been looking for. An outrider â but one who'd belonged to Caladan Brood's army, he believed â
though I might be wrong in that. Now, what was his name?
The man's pale brown eyes fixed on him as Paran approached. From within the shadow of the hood, there came the flicker of recognition, then confusion. The outrider straightened, then saluted.
Paran shook his head, but it was too late for that. The four guards all stood to attention as well. Paran answered the salute with a vague, sloppy gesture, then stepped close to the outrider. âSoldier,' he murmured, âdo you know me? Make your answer quiet, if you please.'
A nod. âCaptain Ganoes Paran. I don't forget faces or names, sir, but we'd heard you wereâ'
âAye, and that's how it stays. Your name?'
âHurlochel.'
âNow I remember. You acted as chronicler on occasion, didn't you?'
A shrug. âI keep an account of things, yes, sir. What are you doing here?'
âI need to speak with Dujek.'
Hurlochel glanced over at the guards, then scowled. âWalk with me, sir. Don't mind them, they're new enough not to know all the officers.'
Leading the horse, Hurlochel guided Paran away, down a side alley nearby, where he halted.
âHurlochel,' Paran said, âwhy is Dujek's tent guarded by green soldiers? That doesn't make sense at all. What's happened and why are you camped outside G'danisban?'
âYes, sir, we've had a hard time of it. It's the plague, you see â the legion healers were keeping it from us, but what it's done to Seven Citiesâ¦gods, Captain, there's bodies in the tens of thousands. Maybe hundreds of thousands. Every city. Every village. Caravan camps â everywhere, sir. We had a Gold Moranth accompanying us, you see, a renegade of sorts. Anyway, there's a temple, in G'danisban. The Grand Temple of Poliel, and it's where this foul wind is coming from, and it's getting stronger.' Hurlochel paused to wipe rain from his eyes.
âSo Dujek decided to strike at the heart, didn't he?'
âYes, sir.'
âGo on, Hurlochel.'
âWe arrived, a month back, and the High Fist formed up companies of his veterans, along with the Gold Moranth. They planned an assault on that damned temple. Well, they expected at least a High Priestess or some other sort, but they were ready for it. What nobody planned on, though, was the Grey Goddess herself.'
Paran's eyes widened. âWho made it back out?'
âMost of them, sir, except the Gold Moranth. Butâ¦they're all sick, sir. The plague's got hold of them and they're only still alive because of the healersâ¦only the healers are losing the battle. So, here we are. Stuck, and nobody skank enough to take real command and make some real decisions.' Hurlochel hesitated, then said, âUnless that's why you're here, Captain. I sure hope so.'
Paran looked away. âI'm officially dead, Outrider. Dujek threw us out of the army, myself and a few othersâ'
âBridgeburners.'
âYes.'
âWell, sir, if anybody earned their days in the sweet sunâ¦'
Paran grimaced. âAye, I'm sure that sun's around somewhere. Anyway, I can hardly take command â besides, I'm just a captainâ'
âWith absolute seniority, sir. Dujek took his officers with him â they were the veterans, after all. So, we got nearly ten thousand soldiers camped here, and the nearest thing to a commander is Captain Sweetcreek, who's a Falari princess, if you can believe that.'
âRed hair?'
âWild red, aye, and a pretty faceâ'
âWith a swollen jaw. We've met.'
âA swollen jaw?'
âIt wasn't a pleasant meeting.' Still Paran hesitated, then he swore and nodded. âAll right. I'll keep the rank of captainâ¦with seniority. But I need a new nameâ'
âCaptain Kindly, sir.'
âKindly?'
âOld soldiers talk about him like grandmothers talk monsters to the brats, to keep them in line, sir. Nobody here's met him â at least nobody who's not fevered and half out of their minds.'
âWell, where was Kindly last posted?'
âFourteenth, sir. The Adjunct's army out west of Raraku. Which direction did you come in from?'
âWest.'
âThat'll do, sir, I think. I'll make it so's I recognize you. Nobody knows a thing about me, only that the High Fist used me to run messages.'
âSo why would I let two soldiers arrest me if I'm supposed to take over command?'
âYou did? Well, maybe you wanted to see how we were running things here.'
âAll right. One more question, Hurlochel. Why aren't you still with Caladan Brood on Genabackis?'
âThe alliance broke up, sir, not long after the Tiste Andii settled in Black Coral. Rhivi back to the plains, the Barghast back to their hills. The Crimson Guard, who were up north, just vanished â no-one knows where they went. When Onearm shipped out, well, seemed like they were headed somewhere interesting.'
âRegrets?'
âWith every heartbeat, sir.' Hurlochel then frowned. âCaptain Sweetcreek's got a swollen jaw, you said?'
âI punched her. Along with some soldier named Futhgar. They're bound and gagged in the captain's tent. They might have come round by now.'
The man grinned, but it was not a pleasant grin. âCaptain, you knocked out cold a Falari princess â that's perfect. It fits with what people have heard about Kindly. That's brilliant.'
Paran winced, then rubbed at his face.
Gods below, what is it with me and royalty?
Â
She had slowly emerged from the hidden temple to see a straggling line of battered figures walking the road below. Making her way down the dusty, stony slope, she was within fifteen paces before anyone noticed her. There was a strangeness in that moment of meeting, survivors eye to eye, both recognition and disbelief. Acceptance, a sense of something shared, and beneath it the ineffable flow of sorrow. Few words were exchanged.
Joining the soldiers in their march, Lostara Yil found herself alongside Captain Faradan Sort, who told her something of Y'Ghatan's aftermath. âYour Fist, Tene Baralta, was hovering on the edge of death, if not of the flesh, then of the spirit. He has lost an arm â it was burned beyond repair â and there was other damageâ¦to his face. I believe he was a vain man.'
Lostara grunted. âThat damned beard of his, slick with oil.' She thought about Tene Baralta for a time. She'd never liked him much. More than just vain. Perhaps, truth be told, something of a coward, despite all his belligerence and posturing. She remembered the way he had led the retreat following her assassination of the elder Sha'ik, and his eagerness to take credit for every success whilst dancing from the path of disaster. There had been a sadistic streak in the man, and Lostara now feared that it would burgeon, as Tene Baralta sought means to feed all that was wounded within him. âWhy did the army leave all of you behind?'
Faradan Sort shrugged. âThey assumed no-one who had been trapped within the city could have survived the firestorm.' She paused, then added, âIt was a reasonable assumption. Only Sinn knew otherwise, and something told me to trust the girl. So we kept looking.'
âThey're all wearing ragsâ¦and they're unarmed.'
âAye, which is why we need to rejoin the army as soon as possible.'
âCan Sinn magically contact the Fourteenth? Or Quick Ben?'
âI have not asked her. I do not know how much of her ability is unformed talent â such creatures occur occasionally, and without the discipline of schooling as an apprentice, they tend to become avatars of chaos. Power, yes, but undirected, wild. Even so, she was able to defeat the wall of fire and so save Fist Keneb's companiesâ¦well, some of them.'
Lostara glanced over at the captain, then back at the soldiers in their wake for a moment before saying, âYou are Korelri?'
âI am.'
âAnd you stood the Wall?'
A tight smile, there for an instant then gone. âNone are permitted to leave that service.'
âIt's said the Stormriders wield terrible sorcery in their eternal assault upon the Wall.'
âAll sorcery is terrible â to kill indiscriminately, often from a great distance, there is nothing more damaging to the mortal who wields such power, whether it is human or something else.'
âIs it better to look your foe in the eye as you take his life?'
âAt the very least,' Faradan replied, âyou gave them the chance to defend themselves. And Oponn decides in the end, decides in which set of eyes the light shall fade.'
âOponn â I thought it was skill.'
âYou're still young, Captain Lostara Yil.'
âI am?'
Faradan Sort smiled. âWith each battle I find myself in, my faith in skill diminishes. No, it is the Lord's push or the Lady's pull, each time, every time.'
Lostara said nothing. She could not agree with that assessment, even disregarding the irritation of the other woman's condescension. A clever, skilled soldier lived where dim-witted, clumsy soldiers died. Skill was a currency that purchased Oponn's favour â how could it be otherwise?
âYou survived Y'Ghatan,' Faradan Sort said. âHow much of that was the Lady's pull?'
Lostara considered for a moment, then replied, âNone.'
Once, years ago, a few score soldiers had stumbled clear of a vast swamp. Bloodied, half-mad, their very skin hanging in discoloured strips from weeks slogging through mud and black water. Kalam Mekhar had been among them, along with the three he now walked beside, and it seemed that, in the end, only the details had changed.
Black Dog had brutally culled the Bridgeburners, a protracted nightmare war conducted in black spruce stands, in lagoons and bogs, clashing with the Mott Irregulars, the Nathii First Army and the Crimson Guard. The survivors were numbed â to step free of the horror was to cast aside despair, yet whatever came to replace it was slow in awakening. Leavingâ¦very little.
Look at us
, he remembered Hedge saying,
we're nothing but hollowed-out logs. We done rotted from the inside out, just like every other damned thing in that swamp.
Well, Hedge had never been one for optimism.
âYou're looking thoughtful,' Quick Ben observed at his side.
Kalam grunted, then glanced over. âWas wondering, Quick. You ever get tired of your own memories?'
âThat's not a good idea,' the wizard replied.
âNo, I suppose it isn't. I'm not just getting old, I'm feeling old. I look at all those soldiers behind us â gods below, they're young. Except in their eyes. I suppose we were like that, once. Onlyâ¦from then till now, Quick, what have we done? Damned little that meant anything.'
âI admit I've been wondering a few things about you myself,' Quick Ben said. âThat Claw, Pearl, for example.'
âThe one that stabbed me in the back? What about him?'
âWhy you ain't killed him already, Kalam. I mean, it's not something you'd normally set aside, is it? Unless, of course, you're not sure you can take him.'
From behind the two men, Fiddler spoke: âIt was Pearl that night in Malaz City? Hood's breath, Kalam, the bastard's been strutting round in the Fourteenth since Raraku, no wonder he's wearing a sly smile every time he sees you.'
âI don't give a damn about Pearl, not about killing him, anyway,' Kalam said in a low voice. âWe got bigger things to worry about. What's our Adjunct got in mind? What's she planning?'
âWho says she's planning anything?' Fiddler retorted. He was carrying one of the children in his arms, a girl, fast asleep with her thumb in her mouth. âShe went after Leoman, and now she's fleeing a plague and trying to link up with the transport fleet. And then? My guess is, we're on our way back to Genabackis, or maybe the Korel Peninsula. It's more of the same 'cause that's what soldiers do, that's how soldiers live.'
âI think you're wrong,' Kalam said. âIt's all snarled, now.'
âWhat do you mean?'
âPearl's the key, sapper,' the assassin said. âWhy is he still around? What's the point of spying on the Adjunct? What's the point of dogging the Fourteenth's heels? I'm telling you, Fid, what the Adjunct does next depends on Empress Laseen, her and nobody else.'