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 29

by Ian C. Esslemont


  Gently, Denuth turned the being over only to start, amazed. ‘Liossercal! Father’s own first born! Who is it that set upon you?’

  A savage smile of blunt canine tusks. ‘None. Best ask whom I set upon. Are there no others?’

  ‘None I saw.’

  The smile crooked down to a feral scowl. ‘All consumed then. Taken by the blast.’

  ‘Blast?’ Denuth narrowed his gaze upon the alien power. Yes, alien – for who could possibly fathom the mind of one born with Light’s first eruption? ‘What exactly has occurred here?’

  Wincing, Liossercal shrugged himself from Denuth’s support. He sat hunched, arms clasped tight about himself as if to hold his body together. Thick dark blood welled fresh from his deeper lacerations. ‘An experiment. An attempt. An assault. Call it what you will.’

  ‘An assault? Upon what? There was naught here but..’ Denuth’s voice died away into the stillness of the ash-choked water. ‘Mother Preserve us! An Azath!’ Glancing about, he took in the immense crater, attempted to grasp the scale of the calamity. It has pained us all! ‘You fool! Would you stop at nothing in your questing?’

  The pale head rose, amber eyes hot. ‘I do as I choose.’

  Denuth recoiled. Indeed. And here then was the quandary. Something must be done about these ancient powers before their antagonisms and limitless ambitions destroy all order once again. Draconus’s solution horrifies, yet well now could I almost understand such…exigencies. After all, was not eternal imprisonment preferable to such potential for destruction?

  Liossercal struggled to his feet, stiff, hissing at his many wounds, and Denuth knew a terrible temptation. Never before had he heard an account of this entity so vulnerable, so weakened. Soletaken, Elient, what were such labels to this power who may have moved through Light before it knew Dark? Yet now he was obviously wounded almost unto expiration. Should he act now? Would ever such a chance come again to anyone?

  As if following the chain of the Child of Earth’s thoughts, Liossercal smiled, upthrusting canines prominent. ‘Do not be tempted, Denuth. Draconus is a fool. His conclusions flawed. Rigidity is not the answer.’

  ‘And what is?’

  A pained grimace, fingers gently probed a deep laceration high on one cheek. ‘I was exploring alternatives.’

  ‘Explore elsewhere.’

  A flash of white rage, quelled. ‘Well taken, Child of Earth. He comes, does he not?’

  ‘He does. And he brings his answer with him.’

  ‘I had best go.’

  ‘Indeed.’

  Liossercal threw his arms up, his outline blurring, sembling, but he gasped in mid-shift, roared his pain and collapsed to the shore. A dragon shape of silver and gold writhed over the brittle rocks before Denuth who hurriedly backed away. Boulders crashed into the lake as slashed wings laboured. Eventually, unsteady, the enormous bulk arose to snake heavily away. Its long tail hissed a cut through the steaming waters of the crater.

  Denuth remained, motionless. Wavelets crossed the limpid water, lapped silently. The snow of cinders limned the dull black basalt of his shoulders and arms. Then steps crunched over the broken rock and he felt a biting cold darkness at his side, as of the emptiness that was said to abide between the stars. Keeping his face averted, Denuth bowed. ‘Consort of Dark and Suzerain of Night. Draconus. Greetings.’

  ‘Consort no longer,’ came a dry rasping voice. ‘And that suzerainty long defied. But I thank you just the same.’

  Rigid, Denuth refused to turn to regard the ancient potent being, and the equally alarming darkness he carried at his side. How many had disappeared into that Void, and what horrifying shape would its final forging take? Such extreme measures yet revolted him.

  ‘So,’ Draconus breathed. ‘The Bastard of Light himself. And weakened. His essence will be a great addition.’

  That which Denuth thought of as his soul shivered within him. ‘He is not for you.’

  A cold regard. Denuth urged himself not to look.

  After some time, ‘Is this a foretelling – from Her?’

  ‘My own small adeptness. I suspect he may one day find that which he seeks.’

  ‘And that is?’

  ‘That which we all seek. Union with the All.’

  Time passed. Denuth sensed careful consideration within the entity at his side. He heard rough scales that were not of metal catching and scraping as armoured arms crossed. A slow thoughtful exhalation. ‘Nonetheless. I will pursue. After all, I offer my own version of union…Is that not so?’

  Your perversion of it. But Denuth said nothing; he knew he walked a delicate line with this power that could take him should he wish. Only a reluctance to antagonize his parent, Mother to all who come from the Earth, stilled this ancient one’s hand. ‘Perhaps Anomandaris—’ Denuth began.

  ‘Speak not to me of that upstart,’ Draconus grated. ‘I will bring him to heel soon enough.’

  And I hope to be nowhere near when that should come to pass…

  The power stirred, arms uncrossed. ‘Very well, Child of the Earth. I leave you to your – ah, contemplations. A troubling manifestation of existence, this world. All is change and flux. Yet I find in it a strange attraction. Perhaps I shall remain a time here.’ Such a prospect made Denuth’s stone hands grind as they clenched.

  Ultimately, after no further words from either, the soul-numbing cold night gathered, swirling, and Denuth once again found himself alone on the bleak shore. It occurred to him that peace would evade everyone so long as entities such as these strode the face of the world pursuing their ages-old feuds, enmities and uncurbed ambitions. Perhaps once the last has withdrawn to uninterrupted slumber – as so many have, or been slain, or interred – perhaps only then would accord come to those who may walk the lands in such a distant time.

  Or perhaps not. Denuth was doubtful. If he had learned anything from observing these struggles it was that new generations arose to slavishly take up the prejudices and goals of the old. A sad premonition of the future. He sat on the shore and crossed his legs – a heap of rock no different from the tumbled broken wreckage surrounding him. This unending strife of all against all wearied him. Why must they contend so? Was it truly no more than pettiness and childish prickliness, as Kilmandaros suggests? He would consider what it might take to end these eternal cycles of violence. And he would consult with Mother. It would, he imagined, take some time to find an answer. Should there be any.

  Book I

  Diaspora’s End

  Chapter I

  ‘The wise say that as vows are sworn, so are they reaped. I have found this to be true.’

  Prince K’azz D’Avore

  Founder of the Crimson Guard

  The Weeping Plains,

  Bael Subcontinent

  1165th year of Burn’s Sleep

  11th year of Empress Laseen’s reign

  99th year of the Crimson Guard’s Vow

  ON THE EDGE OF A TILED ROOFTOP, A SMALL TENT HEAVED AND swayed under the force of the battering wind. It was nothing more than an oilskin cape propped up by a stick, barely enough to keep off the worst of the pounding rain. Beneath it sat a youth squinting into the growing murk of storm and twilight. Occasionally he glimpsed the ruins of surrounding buildings wrecked by the siege and, if he looked hard enough, he could just make out high above the rearing silhouette of the Spur.

  What, he wondered, was the point of having a watch if you couldn’t see a damned thing?

  The Spur towered alone, hundreds of feet above the plains. Local legend had it an ancient power raised it when the world was young – perhaps the warlock, Shen, occupying it now. Kyle knew nothing of that. He knew only that the Guard had besieged the rock more than a year ago and still wasn’t anywhere near to taking it. What was more, he knew that from the fortress on its peak Shen could take on all the company’s mage corps and leave them cross-eyed and panting. He was powerful enough for that. And when a situation like that comes around, Stoop had told him, it’s time for us pike
-pushers to stick our noses in.

  Stoop – a saboteur, and old enough to know better. He was down in the cellar right now, wielding a pick in his one hand. And he wasn’t alone – with him worked the rest of the Ninth Blade alongside a few other men tapped by Sergeant Trench. All of them bashing away at the stone floor with hammers and sledges and picks.

  The wind gusted rain into Kyle’s face and he shivered. To his mind the stupid thing was that they hadn’t told anyone about it. Don’t want anyone stealing our thunder, Stoop had said grinning like a fool. But then, they’d all grinned like fools when Stalker put the plan to Trench. They trusted his local knowledge being from this side of Seeker’s Deep, like Kyle himself. Stalker had been recruited a few years back during the Guard’s migration through this region. He knew the local dialects, and was familiar with local lore. That was to be expected from a scout, Kyle knew.

  The Guard had bought him from a Nabrajan slave column to help guide them across the steppes. But he didn’t know these southern tongues. His people raided the Nabrajans more often than they talked to them.

  Kyle pulled the front fold of the cloak tighter about himself. He wished he understood the Guard’s native tongue, Talian, better too. When Stoop, Trench and Stalker had sat with their heads together, he’d crept close enough to overhear their whispers. Their dialect was difficult to make out, though. He’d had to turn the words over and over before they began to make sense. It seemed Stalker had put together different legends: that of the ancient Ascendant who’d supposedly raised the Spur and started a golden age, and this current ‘Reign of Night’ with its ruins. Since then he and the others had been underground taking apart the walls and stone floor, Stoop no doubt muttering about his damned stolen thunder. Kyle whispered a short prayer to Father Wind, his people’s guiding spirit. If this worked he figured they were in for more thunder than they’d like.

  Then there was the matter of these ‘Old Guard’ rivalries and jealousies. He couldn’t understand the first of it even though he’d been with the Guard for almost a year now. Guard lore had it his Ninth Blade was one of the storied, established a century before, and first commanded by a legendary figure named Skinner. Stoop put a lot of weight on such legends. He’d hopped from foot to foot in his eagerness to put one over the Guard’s mage corps and its covert Veils.

  The rain fell hard now, laced by hail. Above, the clouds in the darkening sky tumbled and roiled, but something caught Kyle’s eye – movement. Dim shapes ducked through the ceiling of clouds. Winged fiends summoned by Shen on the Spur above. Lightning twisted actinic-bright about them, but they circled in a lazy descent. Kyle peered up as they glided overhead, wings extended and eyes blazing. He prayed to Wind for them to pass on.

  Then, as if some invisible blade had eviscerated it, the leading creature burst open from chin to groin. It dissolved into a cloud of inky smoke and its companions shrieked their alarm. As one they bent their wings and turned towards the source of the attack. Kyle muttered another prayer, this one of thanks. Cowl must be on the roster tonight – only the company’s premier mage could have launched so strong an assault.

  Despite the battle overhead, Kyle yawned and stretched. His wet clothes stuck to his skin and made him shiver. A year ago such a demonstration would have sent him scrambling for cover. It was the worst of his people’s stories come to life: fiends in the night, men wielding the powers of a shaman but turned to evil, warlocks. Then, he had cringed beneath broken roofs. Now, after so many months of sorcerous duelling the horror of these exchanges had completely worn away. For half a bell the fireworks kept up – fireworks – something else Kyle hadn’t encountered until his conscription into the Guard. Now, as though it was there for his entertainment, he watched a green and pink nimbus wavering atop a building in the merchants’ district. The fiends swooped over it, their calls harsh, almost taunting, as they attacked. One by one they disappeared – destroyed, banished or returned of their own accord to the dark sky. Then there was nothing but the hissing rain and the constant low grumble of thunder that made Kyle drowsy.

  Footsteps from the tower at the corner of the roof brought him around. Stalker had come up the stairs. His conical helmet made him look taller, elegant even, with the braided silk cord that wrapped it. No cloak this night – instead he wore the Guard’s surcoat of dark crimson over a boiled and studded leather hauberk, and his usual knee-high leather moccasins. The man squinted then sniffed at the rain. Beneath his blond moustache his mouth twisted into a lazy half-smile. Stalker’s smiles always made Kyle uneasy. Perhaps it was because the man’s mouth seemed unaccustomed to them, and his bright hazel eyes never shared them.

  ‘All right,’ he announced from the shelter of the stairwell. ‘We’re set. Everyone’s downstairs.’

  Kyle let the tented cape fall off his head and clambered over the roof’s broken tiles and dark gaps. Stalker had already started down the circular stairway, so Kyle followed. They were halfway down before it occurred to him that when Stalker had smiled, he’d been squinting up at the Spur.

  The cellar beneath was no more than a vault-roofed grotto. Armed and armoured men stood shoulder to shoulder. They numbered about thirty. Kyle recognized fewer than half. Steam rose from some, mixing with the sooty smoke of torches and lanterns. The haze made Kyle’s eyes water. He rubbed them with the back of his hand and gave a deep cough.

  A hole had been smashed through the smoothly set blocks of the floor and through it Kyle saw steps leading down. A drop ran coldly from his hair down his neck and he shivered. Everyone seemed to be waiting. He shifted his wet feet and coughed into his hand. Close by a massive broad-shouldered man was speaking in low tones with Sergeant Trench. Now he turned Kyle’s way. With a catch of breath, Kyle recognized the flattened nose, the heavy mouth, the deeply set grey-blue eyes. Lieutenant Greymane. Not one of the true elite of the Guard himself, but the nearest thing to it. The man waved a gauntleted hand to the pit and a spidery fellow in coarse brown robes with wild, kinky black hair led the way down. Smoky, that was his name, Kyle remembered. A mage, an original Avowed – one of the surviving twenty or so men and women in this company who had sworn the Vow of eternal loyalty to the founder of this mercenary company, K’azz D’Avore.

  The men filed down. Greymane stepped in followed by Sergeant Trench, Stoop, Meek, Harman, Grere, Pilgrim, Whitey, Ambrose and others Kyle didn’t know. He was about to join the line when Stalker touched his arm.

  ‘You and I – we’re the rear guard.’

  ‘Great.’

  Of course, Kyle reflected, as the Ninth’s scouts, the rear was where they ought to be given what lay ahead. They’d been watching the fireworks for too long now and seen the full mage corps of the company scrambling on the defensive. Kyle was happy to leave that confrontation to the heavies up front.

  The stairs ended at a long corridor flooded with a foot of stagnant water. Rivulets squirmed down the worked-stone walls. Rats squealed and panicked in the water, and the men cursed and kicked at them. From what Kyle could tell in the gloom, the corridor appeared to be leading them straight to the Spur. He imagined the file of dark figures an assembly of ghosts – phantoms sloshing wearily to a rendezvous with fate.

  His thoughts turned to his own youthful night raids. Brothers, sisters and friends banding together against the neighbouring clan’s young warriors. Prize-stealing mostly, a test of adulthood, and, he could admit now, there had been little else to do. The Nabrajans had always been encroaching upon his people’s lands. Settlements no more than collections of homesteads, but growing. His last raid ended when he and his brothers and sisters encountered something they had no words for: a garrison.

  The column stopped abruptly and Kyle ran into the compact, bald-headed man at his front. This man turned and flashed a quick smile. His teeth were uneven but bright in the dark. ‘Ogilvy’s the name.’ His voice was so hoarse as to be almost inaudible. ‘The Thirty-Second.’

  ‘Kyle. The Ninth.’

  Ogilvy nodded, glanced
to Stalker, nodded again. ‘We’ll have the spook this time. Ol’ Grey’s gonna get Cowl’s goat.’

  Cowl. Besides being the company’s most feared mage, the Avowed was also second in command under Shimmer and the leader of the Veils, killers of a hardened kind Kyle couldn’t have imagined a year before. He had seen those two commanders only from a distance and hoped to keep it that way.

  Stalker frowned his scepticism. ‘This Greymane better be as good as everyone says.’

  Ogilvy chuckled and his eyes lit with a hidden joke. ‘A price on his head offered by the Korelans and the Malazans too. Renegade to both, he is. They call him Stonewielder. I hear he’s worth a barrelful of black pearls.’

  ‘Why?’ Kyle asked.

  Ogilvy shrugged his beefy shoulders. ‘Betrayed ’em both, didn’t he? Hope to find out exactly how one of these days, hey?’ He winked to Kyle. ‘You two are locals, ain’t ya?’

  Kyle nodded. Stalker didn’t. He didn’t move at all.

  Ogilvy rubbed a hand over the scars marbling his bald scalp. ‘Well, I’ve been with the Guard some ten years now. Signed on in Genabackis.’

  Kyle had heard much of that contract. It was the company’s last major one, ending years ago when the Malazan offensive fell to pieces. All the old hands grumbled that the Malazan Empire just wasn’t what it used to be. And while the veterans were close-mouthed about their and the Guard’s past, Kyle gathered they often opposed these Malazans.

  ‘This contract’s been a damned strange one,’ Ogilvy continued. ‘We’re just keeping our heads down, hey? While the mage corps practise blowing smoke outta their arses. Not the Guard’s style.’ He glanced significantly at them. ‘Been recruiting to bust a gut, too.’

 

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