Dust of Dreams

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Dust of Dreams Page 100

by Steven Erikson


  The two younger women said nothing.

  ‘Parents,’ resumed Hanavat, ‘may choose to have children, but they do not choose their children. Nor can children choose their parents. And so there is love, yes, but there is also war. There is sympathy and there is the poison of envy. There is peace and that peace is the exhausted calm between struggles for power. There is, on rare occasions, true joy, but each time that precious, startling moment then dwindles, and in each face you see a hint of sorrow—as if what was just found will now be for ever remembered as a thing lost. Can you be nostalgic for the instant just past? Oh yes, and it’s a bittersweet taste.’ She finished her tea. ‘That whispering serpent—it’s whispered its last lie in me. I strangled the bitch. I tied it neck and tail to two horses. I collected every knuckled bone and crushed it to dust, then blew that dust to contrary winds. I took its skin and made it into a codpiece for the ugliest dog in the camp. I then took that dog—’

  Rafala and Shelemasa were laughing, their laughs getting louder with each antic of vengeance Hanavat described.

  Other warriors, round other small fires, were all looking over now, smiling to see old pregnant Hanavat regaling two younger women. And among the men there were stirrings of curiosity and perhaps a little unease, for women possessed powerful secrets, and none more powerful than those possessed by a pregnant woman—one need only to look into the face of a mahib to know that. The women, watching on but like their male companions too distant to hear Hanavat’s words, also smiled. Was that to soothe the men in their company? Possibly, but if so the expression was instinctive, a dissembling born of habit.

  No, they smiled as the urgent whispers of their dream serpents filled their heads. The child within. Such joy! Such pleasure! Put away the swords, O creature of beauty—instead sing to the Seed Wakeners! Catch his eye and watch him fall in—the darkness beckons and the night is warm!

  Was a scent released upon the air? Did it drift through the entire camp of the Khundryl Burned Tears?

  In the Warleader’s campaign tent, Gall sat with a bellyful of ale heavy as a cask leaning on his belt, and eyed with gauging regard the tall iron-haired woman pacing in front of him. Off to one side sat the Gilk Barghast, Spax, even drunker than Gall, his own red-shot, bleary gaze tracking the Mortal Sword as she sought to prise from Gall every last detail regarding the Malazans. Where had this sudden uncertainty come from? Had not the Perish sworn to serve the Adjunct? Oh, if Queen Abrastal could witness what he was witnessing! But then she’d be interested in all the unimportant matters, wouldn’t she? Eager to determine if the great alliance was weakening . . . and all that.

  All the while missing the point, the matters that were truly interesting and so sharply relevant to this scene before him.

  The Warleader’s wife was nowhere to be seen, and it had already occurred to Spax that he should probably leave. Who knew if or when Krughava would finally take note of the look in Gall’s eyes—and what might she do then? Instead, Spax sat sprawled in the leather sling of the three-legged chair, too comfortable to move and, it had to be admitted, too fascinated as she fired question after question into the increasingly senseless arrow butt that was Gall. When would she realize that the man had stopped answering? That while she went on attacking and attacking, he’d stopped defending long ago? He so wanted to see that moment—her expression, yes, one he could take away with him and remember for evermore.

  What would it take for her to notice? If he pulled out his gooseneck and took aim? Would that do it? Or just wrestled his way out of his clothes? Gods below, the drooling’s not done it.

  He should leave. But they’d have to drag him out of this tent. Come on, Krughava, you can do it. I know you can. Take a second look, woman, at the man you’re talking to. No, he wasn’t going anywhere.

  Ah, but this was a most agitated woman. Something about a weakening resolve, or was it a failure of confidence—a sudden threat from within the ranks of the Grey Helms themselves. Someone missing in the command structure, the necessary balance all awry. A young man of frightening ambitions—oh, swamp spirits be damned! He was too drunk to make sense of any of this!

  Why am I sitting here?

  What is she saying? Pay attention, Krughava! Never mind him—can’t you see this bulge? No one wants the goose to honk, come and strangle it, woman! I’ll solve your agitation. Yes, if only you women understood that. Your every answer, right here between my legs.

  Half the world’s mired in ignorance!

  Half the world . . .

  Gooseneck.

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Listen then these are the charms

  And will I see your pleasure stretched

  An even dozen they crowd the tomb

  You can read the dead in twelve faces

  And the winter months are long

  The shields are hammered into splinters

  Beating war’s time will never ring true

  Fools stir in the crypt counting notches

  And the snow settles burying all traces

  Crows spill the sky knocked like ink

  Babies crawl to the front line

  Plump arms shouting proof ’gainst harm

  The helms rock askew in pitching tumult

  And the brightest blood is the freshest

  Round the well charged and spatted

  Cadavers cherish company’s lonely vigil

  The tomb’s walls trumpet failures

  Dressed as triumphs and glory’s trains

  And the fallen are bundled lying under foot

  Each year Spring dies still newborn

  Listen then these are the charms

  History is written for the crows

  By children with red lips and eyes blinking

  On the cocked ends of their tongues

  And it seems summer will never end

  HAIL THE SEASON OF WAR

  GALLAN

  C

  ity of darkness, see how that darkness hides your ugly face.

  They were on the bridge. She was leaning heavily on her husband’s shoulder, both relieved and irritated by his stolid strength. ‘But you don’t see, do you?’

  ‘Sand?’

  She shook her head. ‘Doesn’t matter. The air is alive. Can you feel that? Withal, can you feel that much at least?’

  ‘Your goddess,’ he said. ‘Alive, aye, alive with tears.’

  That was true. Mother Dark had returned with sorrow knotted into grief. Darkness made helpless fists, like a widow trying to hold on to all she had lost. Lost, yes, something has been lost. She is no longer turned away, but in mourning. Her eyes are averted, downcast. She is here, yet behind a veil. Mother, you make this a most bitter gift.

  Her strength was slow in returning. Memories like wolves, snapping on all sides. Kharkanas. Sandalath clutched Withal’s right arm, feeling the thick muscles, the cables of his will. He was one of those men who were like a finely made sword, sheathed in a hard skin, hiding a core that could bend when it had to. She didn’t deserve him. That was brutally clear. Take me hostage, husband. That much I will understand. That much I know how to live with. Even though it too will break in the end—no, stop thinking that way. It’s a memory no one here deserves.

  ‘There are fires in the city.’

  ‘Yes. It is . . . occupied.’

  ‘Savages in the ruins?’

  ‘Of course not. These are the Shake. We’ve found them.’

  ‘So they made it, then.’

  She nodded.

  He drew her to a halt ten steps from the bridge’s end. ‘Sand. Tell me again why you wanted to find them. You wanted to warn them, isn’t that right? Against what?’

  ‘Too late for that. Gallan sent them out, and now his ghost pulls them back. He cursed them. He said they could leave, but then he made them remember enough—just enough—to force them to return.’

  Withal sighed, his expression showing he was unconvinced. ‘People need to know where they came from, Sand. Especially if they’ve li
ved generations not knowing. They were a restless people, weren’t they? What do you think made them restless?’

  ‘Then we’re all restless, Withal, because at the very heart, none of us know where we came from. Or where we’re going.’

  He made a face. ‘Mostly, nobody much cares. Very well, have it your way. These Shake were cursed. You didn’t reach them in time. Now what?’

  ‘I don’t know. But whatever Andii blood remains within them is all but drowned in human blood. You will find in them close company, and that is something.’

  ‘I have all the company I need in you, Sand.’

  She snorted. ‘Sweet, but nonsense. See it this way, then. I am of the land—this land. You are of the sea—a distant sea. And the Shake? They are of the Shore. And look at us here, now, standing on a bridge.’ She paused and then grimaced. ‘I can almost see the blind poet’s face. I can almost see him nodding. When grief was too much, Withal, we were in the habit of tearing out our own eyes. What kind of people would do such a thing?’

  He shrugged. ‘I’m not following you, Sand. You need simpler thoughts.’

  ‘The Shake are home, and yet more lost than they ever have been. Does Mother Dark forgive them? Will she give them her city? Will she grant them the legacy of the Tiste Andii?’

  ‘Then perhaps you have a purpose being here, after all, Sand.’

  She searched his eyes, was stung by his compassion. ‘What do you mean?’

  ‘You need to convince Mother Dark to do all those things. For the Shake.’

  Oh, husband. I was a hostage, nothing more. And then, and then, I lost even that. ‘Mother Dark has no time for the likes of me.’

  ‘Tell me, what was the purpose of being a hostage?’

  He’d caught her thoughts. She looked away, studied the wreckage-cluttered river sliding under the bridge. Dark waters . . . ‘The First Families sparred. Power was a wayward tide. We were the coins they exchanged. So long as we were never spent, so long as we’—remained unsullied—‘remained as we were, the battles saw little blood. We became the currency of power.’ But gold does not feel. Gold does not dream. Gold does not long for a man’s hand closing about it. You can win us, you can lose us, but you can’t eat us. You can hide us away. You can polish us bright and hang us from a chain round your neck. You can bury us, you can even carve a likeness of your face into us, but in the next season of fire all sign of you vanishes.

  You can’t eat us, and you can’t fuck us. No, you can’t do that.

  ‘Sand?’

  ‘What?’

  ‘Were hostages ever killed?’

  She shook her head. ‘Not until the end. When everything . . . fell apart. All it needs,’ she said, memories clouding her mind, ‘is the breaking of one rule, one law. A breaking that no one then calls to account. Once that happens, once the shock passes, every law shatters. Every rule of conduct, of proper behaviour, it all vanishes. Then the hounds inside each and every one of us are unleashed. At that moment, Withal’—she met his eyes, defiant against the anguish she saw in them— ‘we all show our true selves. We are not beasts—we are something far worse. There, deep inside us. You see it—the emptiness in the eyes, as horror upon horror is committed, and no one feels—no one feels a thing.’

  She was trembling in his arms now and he held her tight—to keep her from sinking to her knees. Sandalath pressed her face into the curve of his shoulder and neck. Her words muffled, she said, ‘She should have stayed turned away. I will tell her—go away—we weren’t worth it then, we’re not worth it now. I will tell you—her—’

  ‘Sand—’

  ‘No, I will beg her. Turn away. I’m begging you, my love, turn away.’

  ‘Sand. The Shake—’

  The bridge beneath them seemed to be swaying. She held him as hard as she could.

  ‘The Shake, my love. They’ve found us.’

  Her eyes closed. I know. I know.

  ‘Well?’

  Brevity adjusted her sword belt. ‘Well what?’

  ‘Should we go and talk to ’em, love?’

  ‘No, let’s just stand here. Maybe they’ll go away.’

  Snorting, Pithy set out. ‘Dark dark dark,’ she muttered, ‘it’s all dark. I’m sick of dark. I’m gonna torch the forest, or maybe a few buildings. Fire, that’s the solution. And lanterns. Giant lanterns. Torches. Oil lamps. White paint.’

  ‘You going to go on like that all the way to ’em?’ Brevity asked, keeping pace a step behind her.

  ‘That woman looks like she walked outa one of them wall paintings in the temple.’

  ‘Maybe she did.’

  ‘Then what? Got lost? Our lookout watched ’em coming up the road. Nah, the point is, her people built this city. She’s got more claim to it than the Shake. And that’s a problem.’

  ‘Y’saying she won’t like the new neighbours? Too bad. She’s only got that one man. Besides, she looks sick.’

  Their conversation ended as they drew closer to the two strangers.

  The man’s eyes were on them, even as he continued to support the woman in his arms. ‘Hello,’ he said.

  Trader tongue. Pithy nodded. ‘And the same. Meckros?’

  ‘Good guess,’ he replied. ‘I am named Withal. You’re Letherii, not Shake.’

  ‘Good guess,’ Pithy responded. ‘We’re the Queen’s Honour Guard. I’m Captain Pithy, and this is Captain Brevity. Is your mate sick?’

  ‘She is Tiste Andii,’ he said. ‘She was born in this city.’

  ‘Oh,’ said Pithy, and she shot her friend a look that asked: Now what?

  Brevity cleared her throat. ‘Well then, if it’s a homecoming, we’d best bring her in.’

  At that the woman finally looked up.

  Pithy’s breath caught, and beside her Brevity started.

  ‘Thank you,’ said the Tiste Andii. Tears had streaked her face.

  ‘Need another shoulder to lean on?’ Pithy asked.

  ‘No.’ And she disengaged herself from Withal’s arms. Straightening, she faced the gate. ‘I’m ready.’

  Pithy and Brevity let her and Withal take the lead, at a pace of their choosing. As soon as they’d moved a half-dozen strides ahead, Brevity turned and plucked Pithy’s sleeve.

  ‘See her face?’ she whispered.

  Pithy nodded.

  ‘She ain’t just like them in the wall paintings, Pithy. She is one of ’em! I’d swear it!’

  ‘Side room, first one on the left just inside the altar room—the only one without stone beds. She’s in there. Her and maybe ten others. They got manacles on their wrists.’

  ‘That’s right! One of them!’

  No wonder she ain’t happy about coming home. Pithy said, ‘Once we’re in, you go get the witches and bring ’em over. Unless Tovis or Yedan have come back, in which case get them.’

  ‘That’d be a better choice,’ Brevity replied. ‘Them witches are still drunk—’

  ‘They ain’t drunk for real.’

  ‘You know what I mean. Eel-eyed. Horny. The kinda drunk that makes a woman ashamed of being a woman.’

  ‘They ain’t drunk. I told you. So get ’em, all right?’

  ‘All right, but we should a buried ’em when we had the chance.’

  The deeper shadow of the gate’s arch slipped over them like a shawl. Sandalath slowly released her breath. Mother Dark’s pervasive presence filled the city, and she felt her weariness drain away as the goddess’s power touched her, but the benediction felt . . . indifferent. The grief was still there, appallingly fresh—a reopened wound, or something else? She could not be sure. So . . . sorrow does not end. And if you cannot let it go, Mother, what hope do I have?

  Something brushed her mind. An acknowledgement, a momentary recognition. Sympathy? She sighed. ‘Withal, will you walk with me?’

  ‘Of course—as I am doing right now, Sandalath.’

  ‘No. The temple, the Terondai.’ She met his eyes. ‘Kurald Galain. To the very foot of Mother Dark.’

&nb
sp; ‘What is it you seek?’ he asked, searching her face.

  She turned back to the two Letherii women standing a few paces behind. ‘You spoke of a Queen,’ she said.

  ‘Twilight,’ said Pithy. ‘Yan Tovis.’

  ‘And her brother,’ added Brevity. ‘Yedan Derryg, the Watch.’

  ‘I must go to the temple,’ Sandalath said.

  ‘We heard.’

  ‘But I would speak with her.’

  ‘They left us a while back,’ Pithy said. ‘Went into the forest. When the witches finally come round they said the two of ’em, Tovis and her brother, probably rode to the First Shore. That was after they was in the temple—the Queen and the Prince, I mean. The witches won’t go anywhere near it, the temple, I mean.’

  Sandalath cocked her head. ‘Why do I make you so nervous, Captain?’

  ‘You ain’t changed much,’ blurted Brevity.

  ‘I—what? Oh. In the Skeral—the Chamber of Hostages.’

  Pithy nodded. ‘Only, the witches said this city’s been dead a long, long time.’

  ‘No,’ said Brevity, ‘a long time.’

  ‘I said that,’ Pithy retorted, scowling at her companion.

  ‘You didn’t say it right, is all. Long. Long.’

  Sandalath faced her husband again. ‘This world is born anew,’ she said. ‘Mother Dark has returned and now faces us. The Shake have returned as well. Who remains missing? The Tiste Andii. My people. I want to know why.’

  ‘And do you think she’ll answer you?’ Withal asked, but it was a question without much behind it, and that made Sandalath curious.

  ‘Husband. Has she spoken to you?’

  He grimaced. Then reluctantly nodded.

  But not to me. Mother Dark, am I so flawed in your eyes now?

 

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