Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
Until a hand closed on his wrist.
Through a red haze, Bruthen Trana looked over, met the calm eyes of K'ar Penath.
âCommander, if you continue so with this unconscious man, you will break his neck.'
âYour point, warlock?'
âThe First Concubine is dead, by his hand. Is it for you to exact this punishment?'
âSister take you,' Bruthen Trana growled, then he flung Karos Invictad to the floor. âBoth bodies come with us.'
âCommander, the Chancellorâ'
âNever mind him, K'ar Penath. Wrap well the bodies. We return to the Eternal Domicile.'
âWhat of the dead Letherii below?'
âHis guards? What of them? They chose to step into our path, warlock.'
âAs you say. But with their healer dead, some of them will bleed out unless we call uponâ'
âNot our concern,' Bruthen Trana said.
K'ar Penath bowed. âAs you say, Commander.'
Â
Half blind with terror, Tanal Yathvanar approached the entrance to the headquarters. She was gone. Gone, from that place, that most hidden place â her shackle snapped, the iron bent and twisted, the links of the chain parted as if they were nothing but damp clay.
Karos Invictad, it was your work. Again. Yet another warning to me â do as you command. You know all, you see all. For you, nothing but games, ones where you make certain you always win. But she was not a game. Not for me, you bastard. I loved her â where is she? What have you done with her?
Slowly, it registered upon him that something was amiss. Guards running in the compound. Shouts, wavering torchlight. The front entrance to the building yawned wide â he saw a pair of boots, attached to motionless legs, prone across the threshold.
Errant take us, we have been attacked!
He hurried forward.
A guard emerged, stepping over the body.
âYou!' shouted Tanal. âWhat has happened here?'
A rough salute. The man's face was pale. âWe have called for healers, sirâ'
âWhat has happened, damn you?'
âEdur â a vicious ambush â we did not expectâ'
âThe Master?'
âAlive. But beaten badly.
Beaten, sir, by a Tiste Edur!
The liaison â Trana â Bruthen Tranaâ'
Tanal Yathvanar pushed past the fool, into the hallway, to the stairs. More bodies, guards cut down without so much as their weapons drawn.
What initiated this from the Edur? Did they catch word of our investigations? Bruthen Trana â does his file remain? Damn him, why didn't he just kill the bastard? Choke the life from him â make his face as red as those damned silks? Oh, I would run this differently indeed. Given the chance
â
He reached the office, stumbled to a halt upon seeing the spattered blood on the walls, the pools of it on the floor. The reek of piss was heavy in the air. Looking small and broken, Karos Invictad sat hunched in his oversized chair, stained cloths held to his swollen, bruised face. In the man's eyes, a rage as sharp as diamonds. Fixing now upon Tanal Yathvanar.
âMaster! Healers are on the wayâ'
From mashed lips, muffled words: â
Where were you?
'
âWhat? Why, at home. In bed.'
âWe arrested Nisall tonight.'
Tanal looked about. âI was not informed, sirâ'
âNo â
no-one could find you!
Not at your home â not anywhere!'
âSir, has Bruthen Trana retrieved the whore, then?'
A hacking, muffled laugh. âOh yes. Her cold flesh â but not her spirit. But he carries her written confession â by the Holds, it hurts to speak!
He broke my face!
'
And how many times did your fist do the same to a prisoner?
âWill you risk some wine, sir?'
A glare above the cloths, then a sharp nod.
Tanal went quickly to the cabinet. Found a clay jug containing undiluted wine.
A better smell than â the piss of your terror, little man.
He poured a goblet, then hesitated â and poured another for himself.
Damn you, why not?
âThe healers will be here soon â I informed the guards that any delay risks their lives.'
âSwift-thinking Tanal Yathvanar.'
He carried the goblet over to Karos Invictad, not sure if there was irony in that last statement, so distorted was the voice. âThe guards were struck unawares â vicious betrayalâ'
âThose that aren't yet dead will wish they were,' the Master of the Patriotists said. âWhy weren't we warned? Chancellor or no, I will have his answer.'
âI did not think we'd take the whore yet,' Tanal said, retrieving his own wine. He watched over the rim of the goblet as Karos pulled the soaked cloth away, revealing the terrible assault done on his face as he gingerly sipped at the wine â wincing as the alcohol bit into gashes and cuts. âPerhaps the Edur should have been first. Bruthen Trana â he did not seem such a viper. He said not a word, revealed nothingâ'
âOf course not. Nor would I in his place. No. Wait, observe, then strike without warning. Yes, I underestimated him. Well, such a failing occurs but once. Tonight, Tanal Yathvanar, a war has begun. And this time the Letherii will not lose.' Another sip. âI am relieved,' he then said, âthat you got rid of that academic â too bad you did not get Nisall to play with, but I needed to act quickly. Tell me how you disposed of her â the academic. I need some satisfying news for a changeâ¦'
Tanal stared at the man.
If not you
â¦
From the corridor, rushing feet. The healers had arrived.
Â
âCommander,' K'ar Penath said as he hurried alongside Bruthen Trana, âdo we seek audience with the Emperor?'
âNo. Not yet. We will watch all of this play out for a time.'
âAnd the bodies?'
âHide them well, warlock. And inform Hannan Mosag that I wish to speak to him. As soon as possible.'
âSir, he is not in the Emperor's favour at the momentâ'
âYou misunderstand me, warlock. This has nothing to do with Rhulad. Not yet. We conquered this empire. It seems the Letherii have forgotten that. The time has come to stir the Tiste Edur awake once more. To deliver terror, to make our displeasure clear. This night, K'ar, the weapons are drawn.'
âYou speak of civil war, Commander.'
âIn a manner of speaking, although I expect nothing overt from the Chancellor or Invictad. A war, yes, but one waged behind the Emperor's back. He will know nothingâ'
âCommanderâ'
âYour shock at my words does not convince me. Hannan Mosag is no fool â nor are you or any of his other warlocks. Tell me now you anticipated nothingâ¦ah, I thought as much.'
âI fear we are not readyâ'
âWe aren't. But neither were they. This taking Nisall â
this murder
â tells me something gave them reason to panic. We need to find out what. Something has happened, or is happening even now, that forced matters to a head. And that is the trail Hannan Mosag must pursue â no, I do not presume to command himâ'
âI understand, Bruthen Trana. You speak as a Tiste Edur. I will support your advice to the Warlock King with all my zeal.'
âThank you.'
âTonight, Commander,' K'ar Penath said, âin witnessing youâ¦I was proud. We areâ¦awakened, as you said. This civilization, it is a poison. A rot upon our souls. It must be excised.'
And now I hear Hannan Mosag speaking through you, warlock. Answering otherâ¦suspicions. So be it.
Nisall. First Concubine, I am sorry. But know this, I will avenge you in truth. As I will avenge my brave warrior â Sister take me, that was carelessâ
âThe Chancellor will speak to the Emperorâ'
âOnly if he is stupid,' Bruthen Trana said, âor inclined to panic. He is neither. No, he needs to be pushed, kept off balance â oh, we will deliver panic, yes, and sooner or later he will do as you say. Speak to Rhulad. And then we will have him. And Invictad. Two snakes in the same basket â a basket soaked in oil. And it will be Triban Gnol himself who strikes the spark.'
âHow?'
âYou will see.'
Tehol stared down through the roof hatch in unmitigated horror. âThat was a mistake,' he said.
Leaning beside him, also looking down, Bugg nodded. âIt was an act of mercy, Master. Twelve hens in a sack, half crushing each other, jostled about in fetid darkness. There was the risk of suffocation.'
âPrecisely! Peaceful demise, remote, unseen. No wringing of necks required! But now look at them! They've taken over our room! My house. My abode, my very hearthâ'
âAbout that â seems one of them has caught fire, Master.'
âIt's smouldering, and too brainless to care. If we wait we can dine on roast chicken for breakfast. And which one laid that egg?'
âHmm, a most gravid mystery indeed.'
âYou may find this amusing right now, Bugg, but you are the one who will be sleeping down there. They'll peck your eyes out, you know. Evil has been bred into them, generation after generation, until their tiny black bean brains are condensed knots of maliceâ'
âYou display unexpected familiarity with hens, Master.'
âI had a tutor who was a human version.'
Bugg leaned back and glanced over at the woman sleeping in Tehol's bed.
âNot her. Janath was only mildly vicious, as properly befits all instructors, plagued as they often are by mewling, lovestruck, pimply-faced students.'
âOh, Master, I am sorry.'
âBe quiet. We're not talking about that. No, instead, Bugg, my house has been invaded by rabid hens, because of your habit of taking in strays and the like.'
âStrays? We're going to eat those things.'
âNo wonder strays avoid you these days. Listen to them â how will we sleep with all that racket going on?'
âI suppose they're happy, Master. And in any case they are taking care of that cockroach infestation really fast.'
Creaking from the bed behind them drew their attention.
The scholar was sitting up, looking about in confusion.
Tehol hastily pushed Bugg towards her.
She frowned as the old man approached. âWhere am I? Who are you? Are we on a roof?'
âWhat do you last recall?' Bugg asked.
âBeing alone. In the dark. He moved meâ¦to a new place.'
âYou have been freed,' he said.
Janath was examining her shapeless, rough tunic. âFreed,' she said in a low voice.
âThat shift was all we could find at short notice,' Bugg said. âOf course, we will endeavour to, uh, improve your apparel as soon as we are able.'
âI have been healed.'
âYour physical wounds, yes.'
Grimacing, she nodded. âThe other kind is rather more elusive.'
âYou seem remarkablyâ¦sound, Janath.'
She glanced up at him. âYou know me.'
âMy master was once a student of yours.' He watched as she sought to look past him, first to one side, then the other. Bemused, Bugg turned, to see Tehol moving back and forth in an effort to keep the manservant between himself and the woman on the bed. âTehol? What are you doing?'
âTehol? Tehol Beddict?'
Bugg spun round again, to see Janath gathering her tunic and stretching it out here and there in an effort to cover as much of her body as she could.
âThat lecherous, pathetic worm? Is that you, Tehol? Hiding there behind this old man? Well, you certainly haven't changed, have you? Get out here, front and centre!'
Tehol stepped into view. Then bridled. âHold on, I am no longer your student, Janath! Besides, I'm well over you, I'll have you know. I haven't dreamt of you inâ¦inâ¦years! Months!'
Her brows rose. âWeeks?'
Tehol drew himself straighter. âIt is well known that an adult man's adolescent misapprehensions often insinuate themselves when said man is sleeping, in his dreams, I mean. Or, indeed, nightmaresâ'
âI doubt I feature in your nightmares, Tehol,' Janath said. âAlthough you do in mine.'
âOh, really. I was no more pathetic than any other pathetic, lovestruck student. Was I?'
To that she said nothing.
Bugg said to her, âYou are indeed on a roofâ'
âAbove a chicken coop?'
âWell, as to that. Are you hungry?'
âThe fine aroma of roasting chicken is making my mouth water,' she replied. âOh, please, have you no other clothes? I have no doubt at all what is going on in my former student's disgusting little brain right now.'
âCome the morning,' Bugg said, âI will pay a visit to Selush â her wardrobe, while somewhat abysmal in taste, is nonetheless extensive.'
âWant my blanket?' Tehol asked her.
âGods below, Master, you're almost leering.'
âDon't be insane, Bugg. I was making light. Ha ha, we're trapped in a dearth of attire. Ha ha. After all, what if that had been a child's tunic?'