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The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen

Page 440

by Steven Erikson


  The Avowed, she realized, was an easy man to watch.

  Coughing, the mage Corlo clawed free of his blanket and stumbled over. ‘Where’s that tea?’

  ‘Almost ready,’ Iron Bars replied.

  ‘Got a headache,’ Corlo said. ‘Something’s up.’

  ‘Heard horses earlier,’ the Avowed said. ‘Screaming.’

  ‘That’s brewed enough for me.’

  The Avowed dipped a ladle into the pot, filled the tin cup Corlo held out.

  Seren saw the mage’s hand trembling.

  ‘May need the diadem today, sir.’

  ‘Uh, rather not. Let’s try to avoid that if we can.’

  ‘Aye.’

  ‘The diadem?’ Seren asked. ‘The one you used to open that path in Trate?’

  Corlo shot her a sharp look, then nodded. ‘But not for that. There’s other rituals woven into it. Forty of ’em, in fact. The one we might have to use speeds us up, makes us faster than normal. But we go that way as rarely as we can since it leaves us with the shakes—and those shakes get worse the more we use it.’

  ‘Is that why you’re trembling now?’

  He glanced down at his hand after taking a sip of the herbal brew. ‘No. That’s something else.’

  ‘Whatever’s happening right now at Brous.’

  ‘I guess.’

  ‘Wake up the others, Corlo,’ Iron Bars said. ‘Acquitor, should we be avoiding Brous?’

  ‘Hard to do. There’s a ridge of hills to the east of here. No tracks to speak of across them. We’d lose a day, maybe two, if we went that way.’

  ‘All right.’

  ‘I’ll see to the horses,’ Seren said after a moment.

  The Avowed nodded. ‘Then come back and eat.’

  ‘Aye, sir.’

  She was pleased at the answering smile, slight though it was.

  They were among the ruins well before the village came into view. Most were half buried, rising in humps from the forest floor. Ancient roots gripped the stone, but had clearly failed in forcing cracks into the strange rock. Causeways that had once been raised now formed a crazed web of roads through the forest, littered in dead leaves but otherwise defying intrusion. Reaching the edge of the wood, they could see a scattering of domed buildings in the clearing ahead, and beyond it the palisade wall of Brous, over which woodsmoke hung in a sullen wreath of grey.

  The ancient domed buildings possessed formal entrances, a projecting, arched corridor with doorways as wide as they were tall—three times the height of a man.

  ‘Hood’s breath,’ Corlo hissed, ‘these dwarf even K’Chain Che’Malle tombs.’

  ‘Can’t say I’ve ever seen those—’ Seren began.

  But the mage interrupted. ‘Then I’m surprised, since there are plenty of remnants in these lands. They were something between lizards and dragons, walking on two legs. Lots of sharp teeth—Trate’s markets had the occasional stall selling the old teeth and bones. K’Chain Che’Malle, lass, ruled this entire continent, once. Long before humans arrived. Anyway, their tombs look something like these ones, only smaller.’

  ‘Oh. It’s been assumed that those were Tarthenal. Nothing was ever found inside them.’

  ‘The K’Chain Che’Malle never got the chance to use them, that’s why. Most of them, anyway.’

  They fell silent as they rode past the first structure, and saw, on the near side of the village, a hundred or more soldiers and workers gathered. It appeared they were excavating into a small, longish hill. A barrow. Capstones had been dragged from the top of the barrow by teams of horses, and crowds of diggers were attacking the sides.

  ‘Don’t want to be a part of that, sir,’ Corlo said.

  They reined in.

  ‘What’s in there?’ Iron Bars asked.

  ‘Nothing that has anything to do with these ruins, I don’t think.’

  ‘Picking up the dock-rat version of our language doesn’t serve you well, you know,’ Seren said.

  ‘Fine,’ Corlo rasped. ‘What I meant was, the low barrows belong to something else. And the interment was messy. Lots of wards. There’s a mage in that company, Avowed, who’s been busy dismantling them.’

  ‘All of them?’

  ‘Almost. Left a couple in place. I think he means to bind whatever’s in there.’

  ‘We’ve been noticed,’ Seren said.

  A troop of mounted soldiers was riding towards them, an officer in the lead.

  ‘Recognize him?’ the Avowed asked her.

  ‘Finadd Arlidas Tullid,’ she replied. ‘He commands the Brous garrison.’

  Iron Bars glanced at her. ‘And?’

  ‘He’s not a nice man.’

  The Finadd’s troop comprised sixteen riders. They reined in, and Arlidas nodded at Seren. ‘Acquitor. Thought I recognized you. You come from where?’

  ‘Trate.’

  ‘That’s a long ride. I take it you left before it fell.’

  She did not contradict him.

  The Finadd scanned the Crimson Guardsmen, and apparently did not like what he saw. ‘Your arrival is well timed,’ he said. ‘We’re recruiting.’

  ‘They have already been recruited,’ Seren said, ‘as my escort. I am riding to Letheras, for an audience with the king.’

  Arlidas scowled. ‘No point in that, Acquitor. The man just sits there, cowering on his throne. And the Ceda’s lost his mind. That is why I decided to declare our independence. And we intend to defend ourselves against these damned grey-skins.’

  Seren’s laugh was sudden, instantly regretted. ‘Independence, Finadd? The village of Brous? With you in charge? As what, its emperor?’

  ‘You have entered our territory, Acquitor, meaning you and your escort are now subject to me. I am pleased to see you all armed, since I have few spare weapons.’

  ‘You are not recruiting us,’ Iron Bars said. ‘And I suggest you do not make an issue of it, Finadd, or in a short while you will find yourself with a much smaller army.’

  Arlidas sneered. ‘The six of you and an Acquitor—’

  ‘Finadd.’ A rider nudged his horse from the troop to halt alongside Arlidas. Round, hairy, small-eyed and filthy from crawling tunnels of dirt. ‘That one’s a mage.’ He pointed at Corlo.

  ‘So are you, you damned Nerek halfling,’ the Finadd snapped.

  ‘Tell him,’ Corlo said to the other mage. ‘Your name’s Urger, isn’t it? Tell your Finadd, Urger.’

  The half-Nerek licked his lips. ‘He’ll kill us all, sir. Every one of us. He won’t even break a sweat. And he’ll start with you, Finadd. He’ll pluck your brain out and drop it in a cauldron of boiling oil.’

  Corlo said, ‘You’d best return to that barrow, Urger. Your demon’s trying to get out, and it just might succeed. You’ll lose your chance to bind it.’

  The mage twisted round in his saddle. ‘Errant take me, he’s right! Finadd, I must go! No waiting!’ With that he wheeled his horse and drove heels into its flanks.

  Arlidas glared at Seren, Iron Bars and Corlo in turn, then he snarled wordlessly and gestured to his soldiers. ‘Back to the barrow. Back, damn you!’

  They rode off.

  Seren looked over at Corlo. ‘You made yourself pretty scary, didn’t you?’

  The mage smiled.

  ‘Let’s get going,’ the Avowed said, ‘before they gather their wits.’

  ‘I’d like to learn how you do that, Corlo.’

  His smile broadened. ‘You would, would you?’

  ‘There is always something ominous in dust rising from a distant road, do you not think?’

  Trull Sengar squinted eastward until he spied the telltale smear. ‘Nothing to worry about, Lilac,’ he said. ‘It’s a column from my father’s army, I suspect. A portion of it occupied the Manse not long ago.’

  ‘There was fighting there,’ the demon said, then sighed. ‘Two of my kin fell.’

  ‘I am sorry for that,’ Trull said.

  They were camped on the outskirts of Thetil, preparing
for the fast, extended march down to First Reach, where their army would join up with the emperor’s before striking southeast to Letheras. Tomad’s army would march down Mappers’ Road to approach the capital city from the north. The Letherii forces were fleeing before them along every approach. Even so, one more battle lay ahead, probably outside the walls of Letheras.

  Trull glanced over at his company. A dozen or so warriors were gathered round Sergeant Canarth, who was in the midst of a gesture-filled tirade of some sort. Trull’s captain, Ahlrada Ahn, stood nearby, apart yet listening.

  Since Trull had acquired his demon bodyguard, the other warriors had kept their distance, the squad leaders reluctant to stand still even when Trull approached with orders. There was something wrong, clearly, with singling out a demon, with making it obvious that the creature was intelligent, an individual. Understandable, given the usual treatment of the Kenyll’rah by their Tiste Edur masters. But, he well knew, there was more to it than that.

  During their march down from High Fort, Trull Sengar had found himself mostly shunned by his warrior kin and by the women. No official sanction had yet been pronounced, but silent judgement had already occurred, and it was these unspoken forms of punishment that maintained the necessary cohesion of the Edur tribes—rejection of aberrant behaviour must be seen, the punishment one of public participation, the lesson clear to all who might harbour similar dangerous impulses. Trull understood this well enough, and did not rail against it.

  Without the demon at his side, it would have been far more painful, far more lonely, than it was. Yet even with Lilac, there was a truth that stung. The demon was not free, and had it been so it would not now be here, at his side. Thus, the premise of companionship was flawed, and Trull could not delude himself into believing otherwise.

  Fear had not spoken to him once since High Fort. Orders were conveyed through B’nagga, who was indifferent to, or unaware of, the tensions swirling about Trull.

  Nearby sat their two charges, the queen and her son, for whom Trull and his company had provided escort down from High Fort. They had been carried by ox-drawn wagon, the prince’s minor wounds tended to by a Letherii slave, the queen provided with a female slave of her own to cook meals and do other chores as required. An indulgence permitting the king’s wife to resume her haughty demeanour. Even so, the two prisoners had said little since their capture.

  Ahlrada Ahn made his way over.

  Trull spoke first. ‘Captain. What has Sergeant Canarth so animated?’

  The dark-skinned warrior frowned. ‘You, Trull Sengar.’

  ‘Ah, and you’ve come to warn me of insurrection?’

  The suggestion clearly offended him. ‘I am not your ally,’ he said. ‘Not in this matter. Canarth intends to approach Fear and request a new commander.’

  ‘Well, that would be a relief,’ Trull said. ‘What is it you want, then?’

  ‘I want you to excuse yourself before Canarth delivers his request.’

  Trull looked away. Southward, the sprawl of farms on the other side of Thetil. No livestock, no workers in the fields. The rains had been kind, and all was a luscious, deep green. ‘A Bluerose slave, wasn’t she? Your mother. Which was why you were always apart from the rest of us.’

  ‘I am ashamed of nothing, Trull Sengar. If you are seeking to wound me—’

  He met Ahlrada’s hard gaze. ‘No, the very opposite. I know you do not like me. Indeed, you never have—long before I struck…a woman. Oddly enough, I have always admired you. Your strength, your determination to rise above your birth—’

  ‘Rise above?’ Ahlrada’s grin was cold. ‘I suffered under no such compulsion, Trull Sengar. Before she died, my mother told me many secrets. The Bluerose are the survivors, from a war in which it was supposed there were no survivors. It was believed the Edur had killed them all, you see. It was necessary to believe that.’

  ‘You have lost me, Ahlrada Ahn,’ Trull said. ‘What war are you speaking of?’

  ‘I am speaking of the Betrayal. When the Edur and the Andii fought as allies against the K’Chain Che’Malle. The Betrayal, which was not as the Edur histories would have it. The Andii were the ones betrayed, not the Edur. Scabandari Bloodeye stabbed Silchas Ruin. In the back. All that you learned as a child and hold true to this day, Trull Sengar, was a lie.’ His smile grew colder. ‘And now you will accuse me of being the liar.’

  ‘The Bluerose are Tiste Andii?’

  ‘The blood is thinned, but it remains.’

  Trull looked away once more. After a time, he slowly nodded to himself. ‘I see no reason, Ahlrada Ahn, to call you a liar. Indeed, your version makes more sense. After all, had we been the ones betrayed, then we should have been as the Andii today—mere remnants of a broken people—’

  ‘Not as broken as you think,’ Ahlrada said.

  ‘You do not think Bluerose will capitulate? Is it not already a protectorate of the Letherii? A nation of subjugated people?’

  ‘They have been waiting for this, Trull Sengar. After all, the truth cannot be hidden—once the Edur occupy Bluerose, it will be discovered that its ruling class possess Andii blood.’

  ‘Probably.’

  They were silent for a time, then Ahlrada Ahn said, ‘I hold no particular hatred for you, Trull Sengar. My hatred is for all the Tiste Edur.’

  ‘I understand.’

  ‘Do you? Look upon the shadow wraiths. The ghosts who have been bound to the Edur, who are made to fight this war. To find oblivion beneath swords of Letherii steel, the fatal iron against which they have no defence. They are Tiste Andii, the shades of those who fell in that betrayal, long ago.’

  The demon, Lilac, spoke. ‘It is true, Trull Sengar. The wraiths are compelled, as much as we Kenyll’rah. They are not your ancestors.’

  ‘To all of this,’ Trull said, ‘I can do nothing.’

  Without another word, he strode away. Through the camp, deftly avoided by all, his path appearing before him devoid of any obstruction, as if by the hand of sorcery. Trull was not immune to regret. He would have liked to have taken back that moment when he’d lost control, when his outrage had broken through. The woman had been right, he supposed. The wounded Edur must be healed first and foremost. There was no time for demons. He should not have struck her.

  No-one cared for his reasons. The act was inexcusable, as simple as that.

  He approached the command tent.

  And saw that the riders they’d seen earlier on the road had arrived. Among them, Uruth, his mother.

  She was standing beside her horse.

  Fear emerged from the tent and strode to her.

  Uruth was speaking as Trull arrived. ‘…I can barely stand. Should we run low on food on our march south, allow me to be the first to suggest we slaughter the horses.’ She noted Trull and faced him. ‘You have made terrible mistakes, my son. None the less, this over-reaction on the part of the women in this camp will not be tolerated. It is for me to sanction you, not them.’ She returned her attention to Fear. ‘Are the warriors naught but children? Grubby hands on their mother’s skirts? Did your brother Trull reveal cowardice on the field of battle?’

  ‘No,’ Fear replied, ‘there was no question of his courage—’

  ‘For you and your warriors, Fear, nothing else obtains. I would have thought better of you, my eldest son. Your brother sought the healing of a fallen comrade—’

  ‘A demon—’

  ‘And did not demons fight at High Fort? Did not many of them give their lives to win victory? Healers are to accede to the wishes of the warriors after a battle. They are not to make judgements on who is worthy of healing. Had I been here, I myself might well have struck her for her impudence. Shall every Edur woman now assume the flaws of our Empress Mayen? Not if I have a say in the matter. Now, Fear, you will correct your warriors’ attitudes. You will remind them of Trull’s deeds during the journey to retrieve the emperor’s sword. You will tell them to recall his delivery of the news of the Letherii harvest of the tus
ked seals. Most importantly, Fear, you will not turn away from your brother. Do you challenge my words?’

  It seemed a vast weight lifted from Fear, as he straightened with a wry smile. ‘I would not dare,’ he said.

  Trull hesitated, then said, ‘Mother, Fear’s anger with me has been over my disagreement with the necessity of this war. I have been careless in voicing my objections—’

  ‘A crisis of loyalty to the emperor is a dangerous thing,’ Uruth said. ‘Fear was right to be angry, nor am I pleased by your words. Only the emperor has the power to halt this conquest, and he will not do that. Neither Fear nor I, nor anyone else, Trull, are capable of responding to your doubts. Do you not see that? Only Rhulad, and he is not here.’

  ‘I understand,’ Trull said. He looked to Fear. ‘Brother, I apologize. I shall save my words for Rhulad—’

  ‘He is not interested in hearing them,’ Fear said.

  ‘None the less.’

  They studied each other.

  Uruth sighed. ‘Enough of this. Trull, is that the demon in question?’

  Trull swung round to where Lilac stood, five paces back. ‘Yes.’

  His mother approached the demon. ‘Kenyll’rah, do your kin still rule over you in your home realm?’

  A deferential nod. ‘The tyrants remain, mistress, for the war continues.’

  ‘Yet you were not a soldier.’

  Lilac shrugged. ‘Even the Kenryll’ah must eat, mistress.’

  ‘We found few soldiers among those we summoned,’ Uruth said.

  ‘We are losing the war. Four of the Kenryll’ah towers have fallen. Korvalahrai ships were seen far up the Chirahd River.’

  ‘I must leave to join the emperor tomorrow morning,’ Uruth said. ‘Which leaves us this night.’

  ‘For what?’ Trull asked.

  ‘A conversation with a Kenryll’ah tyrant,’ she replied, her regard still on the demon. ‘Perhaps the time has come for a formal alliance.’

  Lilac spoke. ‘They are not pleased with your thefts, Tiste Edur.’

  Uruth turned away. ‘You are a peasant, demon. All I need from you is the path into your realm. Keep your opinions to yourself.’

 

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