The Malazan Empire Series: (Night of Knives, Return of the Crimson Guard, Stonewielder, Orb Sceptre Throne, Blood and Bone, Assail) (Novels of the Malazan Empire)

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The Malazan Empire Series: (Night of Knives, Return of the Crimson Guard, Stonewielder, Orb Sceptre Throne, Blood and Bone, Assail) (Novels of the Malazan Empire) Page 257

by Ian C. Esslemont


  Great roiling choking clouds drove the Seguleh from the pit. The smoke gnawed the tissue of the nose and seared the lungs. Coughing and gagging, Madrun, Lazan and Thurule backed away.

  ‘They have been consumed!’ Madrun announced, hand on chest.

  A shadow moved within the clouds and a figure emerged: the taller of the two dragging the shorter. The three quickly rushed in to aid the man, who went to his knees hacking and gasping. The smaller of the two, the Malazan, sat up and made for the pit again. Lazan held him back. ‘You’ll die, man. It’s poison!’

  ‘The rest have to go!’ the Malazan answered. His eyes were weeping uncontrollably and a stream of blood dripped from his nose.

  ‘There’s nothing you can do.’

  ‘Oh yes there is!’ and the fellow raised his arms to inscribe a great circle in the air. If Lazan had had one hair on his head he knew it would be prickling and he edged away. The Malazan ducked back within the dense clouds.

  Madrun was thumping the other on the back. Then he raised his head to peer about. ‘Am I mad, or do you hear horses screaming?’

  In the Great Hall the Legate lurched away from reaching after Kruppe to face the doors. Something like a muffled snarl of panic sounded from his throat. He made unsteadily for the exit. Halfway there he fell to his knees, swayed, then crashed face down, crossbow belt snapping, the mask clanging against the floor.

  Still wary, Kruppe edged slightly forward to peer more closely.

  The Legate’s limbs shifted and he fumbled at the polished stone flagging. He began dragging himself onward. Kruppe threw his arms out in vexation. Great Elemental Forces! What more must Kruppe do?

  Sliding one arm ahead of the other, the Legate began to chuckle. As he crawled the chuckle swelled into a muffled full laugh.

  Kruppe backed away. He tucked the handkerchief into a sleeve and set his hands on his hips. His dimpled cheeks pulled down in an uncertain frown.

  Really now. This is quite unreasonable.

  Torvald stood immobile, listening as intently as he could. He felt as if his nerves were as taut as those annoying high-pitched Seven Cities stringed instruments. He believed he could discern a lessening in the clash of battle. Did that mean one side or the other was winning? Exactly what was going on? From their vantage they could see only a small portion of the overall extent of the front. Galene still held the baton ready in one hand but he saw her stance shift as if she, too, sensed the change.

  ‘Something …’ he began, but she raised a hand for silence.

  A Black trooper ran to them from the woods. Torvald pushed closer to hear the report.

  ‘The Seguleh have withdrawn to the interior,’ he announced.

  Galene examined the blasted field dotted with fallen. ‘Why would they … Our numbers?’ she snapped.

  ‘Less than three hundred of the flight remain viable.’

  ‘Ancestors,’ the Silver breathed, and the baton creaked in her ferocious grip. ‘And they?’

  ‘Perhaps seventy.’

  ‘Then why … One last charge …’

  ‘Perhaps,’ Torvald observed, breaking in, ‘someone could go and ask.’

  And Galene turned to look him up and down.

  ‘It is very quiet,’ Councillor D’Arle whispered from his post next to the stairs up from the lowest of the cellars. ‘Perhaps I should take a look.’

  Coll rested a hand on the old man’s arm. ‘I’ll go.’ He turned back to examine all the gathered councillors, aristocrats and court bureaucrats staring from the dark. No one else volunteered. Sighing, he loosed his sword in its sheath and started up.

  Halfway up he stopped as he heard footsteps behind him. Redda Orr came up round a corner. ‘What are you doing?’ he hissed.

  ‘I’m coming with you.’

  ‘No you’re not. This isn’t some summer jaunt. Stay below!’

  ‘I’m trained!’ She drew her slim sword in a flash of steel.

  Coll shook his head. ‘I’m sure you are, child. But this isn’t the duelling field.’

  ‘I could take you, old man …’

  ‘Perhaps.’ Coll motioned to one side. ‘What’s that?’

  Redda looked. He snatched the blade from her hand. She gaped, frozen, then fury blazed in her eyes. ‘What a dirty trick!’

  ‘Yes it was.’ He started up the stairs again carrying both swords. ‘The world’s full of them so you’d better get used to it.’

  As he approached the top landing he lay flat to peer over the lip, his blade ready. He met the sandalled feet of two Seguleh. One motioned him back down the stairs.

  Damn. We’re prisoners. Goddamned prisoners.

  What’s going on? Has the Legate won?

  A thought struck him on the way down and he paused, swallowing. Gods! Were they expendable now?

  Madrun, Lazan, Thurule and Fisher all crouched as near as possible to the foaming roiling clouds steaming from the pit. The noisome fumes seemed to repel all the birds and bats stooping in upon them, and the dogs charging from the woods – even one mad horse that had stormed past threatening to run them down.

  A dull thud sounded from nearby and Madrun observed, disbelieving, ‘Did that owl just crash into a tree?’

  The mist churned and out came the Malazan, a cloth pressed to his nose and mouth. He would have fallen had Fisher not lunged to support him. He hung coughing and gagging, and waved an arm weakly to the pit. ‘That’s the lot. But it’s still there – still in one piece!’

  ‘What is, Malazan?’ Madrun asked.

  Lazan had been squinting off into the woods and now he backed away to tap Madrun on the arm. The giant glanced over and visibly started, amazement and panic in his gaze. ‘Holy Ancestors, I cannot believe it,’ he murmured to Lazan. The two began edging away.

  ‘Come, Thurule,’ Lazan called. ‘We have fulfilled our mistress’s instructions – now is the time to withdraw!’

  Spindle watched in stunned astonishment as the three ran off in what could only be described as a panicked flight. He even sensed his ma grow quiescent in what felt almost like respectful deference. He turned to the woods and saw something huge approaching. Clearing his throat, he spat up a mouthful of the awful fumes he’d endured and raised his Warren to its highest pitch.

  Fisher, an arm under one of Spindle’s, whispered, awed, ‘Is that …’

  The shape emerged from the shadows to resolve into a wide and massive figure that Spindle recognized as Caladan Brood, the Warlord. The man’s narrowed gaze was turned aside, following Madrun and Lazan Door’s hasty retreat. Bizarrely, he held a spitting cat by the scruff of the neck. His heavy gaze swung to Spindle.

  ‘What are those two fools doing here?’ he demanded.

  ‘I … I don’t know,’ said Spindle.

  The Warlord held out the frenzied cat. ‘That’s quite enough, Malazan,’ he growled.

  Spindle blinked. ‘Oh! Sorry.’ He lowered his Warren. Brood handed the cat to him; it ravaged his hand and arm escaping.

  ‘Fisher,’ Brood said. ‘What are you doing here?’

  The bard shrugged. ‘You know how I feel about witnessing things.’

  The Warlord grunted his understanding. ‘Careful. One day you might just buy yourself too much trouble.’ He studied the pit just visible through the cloud of fumes. ‘Let’s have a look, then.’ And he walked into the cloud of poisonous steam.

  Spindle watched as best he could through the mist. Peering forward, he thought he saw the Warlord down in the pit studying the stones, tapping them. The man sat back as if thinking. Then he raised both arms up over his head, clasped his hands into a great double fist and brought it down in a tremendous blow that shook the ground beneath Spindle’s feet. Once more he raised his fists and swung them down. This time the air was split by an immense crack that felt almost like a knife jabbing Spindle’s ears.

  The Warlord pulled himself up from the pit and emerged waving the fumes from his face. He paused to glance down at Spindle. ‘I warned the creature,’ he said, and
walked off the way he’d come.

  Spindle let out a long slow breath. Fisher echoed the sentiment with a nod. Spindle gestured to the pit. ‘Well – you know, we must’ve weakened it for him …’

  ‘Oh, of course …’

  Jan found the double doors of the Great Hall closed, but they opened easily at his touch. Within lay the Legate, or his body. He lay on his back, hands crossed over his chest. A forest of broken bolts stood from him at all angles. They gleaming gold oval remained fixed to his face. Yet it was marred now; a crack ran from the bottom up one cheek to just below a graven eye. Jan approached. He wanted to kneel; but to do so would possibly reopen the wound at his side. Was the man dead? He could not be sure.

  A voice whispered then, within his mind: ‘Servant …’

  He flinched away. What was this?

  ‘Take the mask, servant.’

  The mask?

  ‘Yes. I sense you are wounded. Accept it and you will live for ever.’

  Accept it? Wear it?

  ‘Yes. I have been banished from this flesh – but accept the mask and together we shall live again.’

  Jan retreated from the corpse. No.

  ‘No? No! You have no choice, servant. Do as I command!’

  No. Our slavery is long over. We have found our own way. We are our own masters now. I consign you to the past. I turn my face from you. You no longer exist.

  ‘Slave! Come back! I order you! Obey!’

  Jan walked away. Leaving the throne room he met one of the pet mages at the doors; the one who paraded as a dancing girl. She came staggering up, an arm across her stomach, agony on her panicked face. ‘What is going on?’ she gasped. ‘Where are the others? What has happened?’

  ‘To us he is as dead,’ Jan said, flatly, and walked on, stiffly.

  ‘No! Impossible!’ She lurched into the room.

  Within, alone, Taya edged up to the body. ‘Master!’ She reached out, but at the last instant she yanked back her hand as if stung. She started to her feet, flinching away. ‘No …’ she murmured, wincing. ‘Please … not that. Anything but—’

  A sound spun her around. Someone emerged from one of the pillars. He was tall, dressed all in shades of green, and his hair hung silver and black. A long snarled hiss escaped her. ‘You …’

  Topper bowed. ‘As they say, all good things, et cetera. And look at you. You are a bonus. One I’ve been hoping to pluck for some time now.’

  Taya flicked her hands and short thin blades appeared. ‘I will have your head.’

  ‘I rather doubt that.’

  They charged, meeting in a maelstrom of whirling flashing blades. Competing Warrens rose together, spinning and swirling until both disappeared in a loud burst of displaced air.

  Torvald had never felt so exposed in all his life. Unarmed, he walked across the gouged and overturned dirt and broken flags of the once-groomed grounds. Galene limped at his side supported by a single Black. They made for the group of Seguleh guarding the main entrance, the majority of whose masks, he noted, bore very few marks.

  As they neared, one Seguleh signalled for them to halt. Another, who carried a single bold line across his brow, signed to a third and these two approached.

  ‘I am Councillor Nom,’ Torvald said quickly. ‘I am come to propose negotiations.’

  ‘What is it you wish?’ the smaller Seguleh asked. She carried five hatch lines on her mask.

  ‘We come to demand your surrender,’ Galene said.

  ‘Our surrender? I rather think it is you who should surrender.’

  Galene held up an empty gauntleted hand then slowly reached into her shoulder bag to remove a red baton. She held it up. ‘Your protective sorceries are gone, Seguleh. I merely have to signal with this and the hilltop will be reduced to rubble.’

  The Seguleh Sixth motioned to Torvald. ‘What think you of this, Councillor Nom?’

  Torvald swallowed. His voice came faint: ‘Darujhistan would consider that an act of war.’

  Galene’s helm shifted to face him. ‘Better that than the alternative. ’

  ‘We propose,’ said the Sixth, ‘that you merely stand aside and allow us to return to our homeland.’

  ‘Happily,’ Galene snapped. ‘We propose that you merely set down your swords and go unarmed.’

  ‘That is unacceptable to us.’

  ‘Then we have an impasse.’

  ‘Not so,’ the Sixth began again, a new iron in her voice. ‘We could march out right now if we so chose and there are none here who could stop us.’

  ‘Go ahead. We will chase you down like dogs and slay every one of you from above!’

  Torvald loudly cleared his throat. ‘What of the hostages?’

  The Sixth reluctantly pulled her gaze from Galene. ‘What hostages? ’

  ‘The councillors and other citizens.’

  The Sixth glanced to the one with her, obviously the Seguleh Second. Torvald felt almost dizzy standing this close to the highest living ranked of them. He couldn’t imagine what it must take to occupy such a position – let alone have all the others accept it as fully justified.

  The Second signed something and the Sixth inclined her masked head. She turned to Galene. ‘They will be released. It is not our way to hide behind hostages.’

  Torvald bowed. ‘Very good. My – our – thanks.’

  Galene held out the red baton. ‘Once the non-combatants are clear consider your final answer carefully.’

  ‘You have it already,’ the Sixth replied, and the two Seguleh turned away.

  Torvald and Galene watched them go. ‘Stiff-necked fools,’ she ground out. ‘They merely have to set aside their swords and all this would be behind us.’

  ‘Galene, I believe you are asking for the one thing they simply cannot do.’

  Spindle and Fisher crouched in the woods, peering through the branches.

  ‘Looks like a parley,’ Spindle whispered.

  ‘Shh,’ Fisher warned. ‘We don’t want—’

  Bursting eruptions of munitions drove them to the ground with their hands over their heads. Feet ran past nearby. Alarms were shouted, followed by more munitions.

  Spindle raised his head for a peep. He saw a handful of Seguleh dodging for the entrance, Moranth running to intercept. Another group followed in the distance and Spindle gaped, astonished, at who was among them. He put fingers to his mouth and let go a piercing whistle. The fellow he had spotted skidded to a halt, grabbing another and gesturing.

  Spindle jumped to his feet, waving. The whole group made for him.

  Spindle opened his arms wide and to his further amazement Antsy accepted the greeting, giving an answering hug in return. ‘You dog!’ Spindle laughed, cuffing him.

  ‘What are you doin’ here?’ Antsy said. ‘Thought you were down south.’

  ‘You too!’ He gestured to the lad with him. ‘Who’s this?’

  ‘Corien,’ the lad answered. ‘Corien Lim.’

  ‘Lim! No …’

  ‘Fisher!’ one of the giants with Antsy suddenly bellowed. He grabbed hold of the bard and lifted him from his feet in a great bear hug.

  ‘Great Mother!’ Fisher cursed. ‘Cull? Cull Heel? What are you doing here!’

  ‘Fisher! Come back home with us, yes? You have been gone too long!’

  At that moment Moranth emerged from the woods to surround them.

  Jan ordered the release of the citizens, then saw to the defences of the main entrance. Should the Moranth return to their aerial bombardment his plan was for his people to occupy those same deepest cellars, wait for night to return, then scatter in all directions to return to Cant in ones and twos. Undignified, but perhaps the best way of ensuring that as many as possible made it out alive. His side was completely numb and he was weak from loss of blood, but if he could he just avoid any further exertion he believed he may yet live to see this through.

  It was here that the guards assigned to the west found him. They came escorting exhausted and bedraggled brothers and sisters
whom he did not immediately recognize. It was not until one went to one knee before him that Jan realized who he was. With that understanding came a wave of anticipation that nearly caused him to faint. Great Ancestors! Oru, the Eleventh, gone more than two years, assumed lost by so many, returned now, at such a time!

  Jan moved to raise him up but restrained himself, exclaiming instead, ‘Oru!’ He then clamped down on his breathing to observe dispassionately, ‘You are returned to us. I am pleased – but you should not have come here.’

  The Eleventh stood. His eyes shone now with even greater passion than Jan remembered from years ago. ‘I believe it was fated that I should do so, Second.’ He drew from his waist a small object wrapped in a fine black cloth. ‘Just as I believed it was my fate to one day find this.’

  Jan stared at the flat object held so delicately in Oru’s hands. This was it? The Unmarred? It seems so small. His arms remained petrified at his sides. His eyes rose to meet Oru’s eager, avid gaze. ‘There can be no doubt?’

  ‘None, Second.’

  ‘Then call everyone. All must witness this.’

  Oru bowed. ‘Yes … Second.’

  They assembled in the main entrance foyer, all remaining of the Five Hundred. Jan was stricken through the heart to count less than one hundred. Of the Eldrii, the Ten, only he, Gall and Palla yet lived.

  He raised his chin for their attention. Through the windows the sky was lightening to the dark blue and violet of a coming predawn. Please, all our Ancestors, he invoked, eyes on the coming day, allow me the strength to see this through! Grant me that and you shall have me.

  ‘Brothers and sisters,’ he started, his voice thick with emotion – and more. ‘In this time of our greatest testing, one who has been gone from us on a long journey has returned – with the thing he vowed never to return without.’

  The gathered stirred, masks shifting to the Eleventh at his side. ‘Oru,’ Jan went on, ‘hold up the Mask of our Ancestors. The Pure One crafted by the First who led us on our exile …’ Even as he repeated the traditional words of invocation a sudden new realization came to Jan and their meaning shifted, taking on an utterly new significance. His breath caught at the truth of this new formulation. Everything made sense now: his people’s fate, their exile. It came to him that this must be what others describe as a religious awakening.

 

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