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The Bonehunters Page 17


  Felisin shook her head. 'Not much. Except when I wake up at night, after my bad dreams. Then he sings to me.'

  'Sings?'

  'Yes, in his people's language. Songs for children. He says he needs to practise them.'

  Scillara shot her a glance. 'Really? Did he say why?'

  'No.'

  'How old were you, Felisin, when your mother sold you off?'

  Another shrug. 'I don't remember.'

  That might have been a lie, but Scillara did not pursue it.

  Felisin stepped closer. 'Will you take care of me, Scillara?'

  'What?'

  'I feel as if I am going backwards. I felt... older. Back in Raraku. Now, with every day, 1 feel more and more like a child. Smaller, ever smaller.'

  Uneasy, Scillara said, 'I have never been much good at taking care of people.'

  'I don't think Sha'ik was, either. She had... obsessions...'

  'She did fine by you.'

  'No, it was mostly Leoman. Even Toblakai. And Heboric, before Treach claimed him. She didn't take care of me, and that's why Bidithal...'

  'Bidithal is dead. He got his own balls shoved down his scrawny throat.'

  'Yes,' a whisper. 'If what Heboric says really happened. Toblakai...'

  Scillara snorted. 'Think on that, Felisin. If Heboric had said that L'oric had done it, or Sha'ik, or even Leoman, well, you might have some reason to doubt. But Toblakai? No, you can believe it. Gods below, how can you not?'

  The question forced a faint smile from Felisin and she nodded. 'You are right. Only Toblakai would have done that. Only Toblakai would have killed him... in that way. Tell me, Scillara, do you have a spare pipe?'

  'A spare pipe? How about a dozen? Want to smoke them all at once?'

  Felisin laughed. 'No, just one. So, you'll take care of me, won't you?'

  'I will try.' And maybe she would. Like Greyfrog. Practice. She went looking for that pipe.

  ****

  Cutter lifted the bucket clear and peered at the water. It looked clean, smelling of nothing in particular. Nonetheless, he hesitated.

  Footsteps behind him. 'I found feed,' Heboric said. 'More than we can carry.'

  'Think this water is all right? What killed those priests?'

  'It's fine. I told you what killed them.'

  You did? 'Should we look in the temple?'

  'Greyfrog's already in there. I told him to find money, gems, food that hasn't spoiled yet. He wasn't happy about it, so I expect he'll be quick.'

  'All right.' Cutter walked to a trough and dumped the water into it, then returned to the well. 'Think we can coax the horses in here?'

  'I'll try.' But Heboric made no move to do so.

  Cutter glanced over at him, saw the old man's strange eyes fixed on him. 'What's wrong?'

  'Nothing, I think. I was noticing something. You have certain qualities, Cutter. Leadership, for one.'

  The Daru scowled. 'If you want to be in charge, fine, go ahead.'

  'I wasn't twisting a knife, lad. I meant what I said. You have taken command, and that's good. It's what we need. I have never been a leader. I've always followed. It's my curse. But that's not what they want to hear. Not from me. No, they want me to lead them out. Into freedom. I keep telling them, I know nothing of freedom.'

  'Them? Who? Scillara and Felisin?'

  'I'll get the horses,' Heboric said, turning about and walking off in his odd, toad-like gait.

  Cutter refilled the bucket and poured the water into the trough. They would feed the horses here with what they couldn't take with them. Load up on water. And, even now, loot the temple. Well, he had been a thief once, long ago. Besides, the dead cared nothing for wealth, did they?

  A splitting, tearing sound from the centre of the com­pound behind him. The sound of a portal opening. Cutter spun round, knives in his hands.

  A rider emerged from the magical gate at full gallop. Reining in hard, hoofs skidding in clouds of dust, the dark grey horse a monstrous apparition, the hide worn away in places, exposing tendons, dried muscle and ligaments. Its eyes were empty pits, its mane long and greasy, whipping as the beast tossed its head. Seated in a high-backed saddle, the rider was, if anything, even more alarming in appear­ance. Black, ornate armour, patched with verdigris, a dented, gouged helm, open-faced to reveal mostly bone, a few strips of flesh hanging from the cheek ridges, tendons binding the lower jaw, and a row of blackened, filed teeth. In the brief moment as the horse reared, dust exploding outward, Cutter saw more weapons on the rider than he could count. Swords at his back, throwing axes, sheathed handles jutting upward from the saddle, something like a boar-spitter, the bronze point as long as a short sword, gripped in the gauntleted left hand. A long bow, a short bow, knives—

  'Where is he!?' The voice was a savage, enraged roar. Pieces of armour bounced on the ground as the figure twisted round, searching the compound. 'Damn you, Hood! I was on the trail!' He saw Cutter and was suddenly silent, motionless. 'She left one alive? I doubt it. You're no whelp of D'rek. Drink deep that water, mortal, it matters not. You're dead anyway. You and every damned blood-swishing living thing in this realm and every other!'

  He pulled his horse around to face the temple, where Greyfrog had appeared, arms heaped with silks, boxes, foodstuffs and cooking utensils. 'A toad who likes to cook in comfort! The madness of the Grand Ending is upon us! Come any closer, demon, and I'll spit your legs and roast them over a fire — do you think I no longer eat? You are right, but I will roast you in vicious spite, drooling with irony — ah! You liked that, didn't you?' He faced Cutter once more. 'Is this what he wanted me to see? He pulled me from the trail... for this?'

  Cutter sheathed his knives. Through the gates beyond came Heboric Ghost Hands, leading the horses. The old man paused upon seeing the rider, head cocking, then he continued on. 'Too late, Soldier,' he said. 'Or too early!' He laughed.

  The rider lifted the spear high. 'Treach made a mistake, I see, but I must salute you nonetheless.'

  Heboric halted. 'A mistake, Soldier? Yes, I agree, but there is little I can do about it. I acknowledge your reluctant salute. What brings you here?'

  'Ask Hood if you want the answer to that!' He upended the spear and drove it point first into the ground, then swung down from the saddle, more fragments of the rotting armour falling away. 'I expect I must look around, as if I cannot already see all there is to see. The pantheon is riven asunder, what of it?'

  Heboric pulled the nervous horses towards the trough, giving the warrior a wide berth. As he approached Cutter he shrugged. 'The Soldier of Hood, High House Death. He'll not trouble us, I think.'

  'He spoke to me in Daru,' Cutter said. 'At first. And Malazan with you.'

  'Yes.'

  The Soldier was tall, and Cutter now saw something hanging from a knife-studded belt. An enamel mask, cracked, smudged, with a single streak of red paint along one cheek. The Daru's eyes widened. 'Beru fend,' he whispered. 'A Seguleh!'

  At that the Soldier turned, then walked closer. 'Daru, you are far from home! Tell me, do the Tyrant's children still rule Darujhistan?'

  Cutter shook his head.

  'You look crazed, mortal, what ails you?'

  'I — I'd heard, I mean — Seguleh usually say nothing — to anyone. Yet you...'

  'The fever zeal still grips my mortal kin, does it? Idiots! The Tyrant's army still holds sway in the city, then?'

  'Who? What? Darujhistan is ruled by a council. We have no army—'

  'Brilliant insanity! No Seguleh in the city?'

  'No! Just... stories. Legends, I mean.'

  'So where are my masked stick-pivoting compatriots hiding?'

  'An island, it's said, far to the south, off the coast, beyond Morn—'

  'Morn! Now the sense of it comes to me. They are being held in readiness. Darujhistan's council — mages one and all, yes? Undying, secretive, paranoid mages! Crouching low, lest the Tyrant returns, as one day he must! Returns, looking for his army! Hah, a council!'


  'That's not the council, sir,' Cutter said. 'If you are speak­ing of mages, that would be the T'orrud Cabal—'

  'T'orrud! Yes, clever. Outrageous! Barukanal, Derudanith, Travalegrah, Mammoltenan? These names strike your soul, yes? I see it.'

  'Mammot was my uncle—'

  'Uncle! Hah! Absurd!' He spun round. 'I have seen enough! Hood! I am leaving! She's made her position clear as ice, hasn't she? Hood, you damned fool, you didn't need me for this! Now I must seek out his trail all over again, damn your hoary bones!' He swung back onto the undead horse.

  Heboric called out from where he stood by the trough, 'Soldier! May I ask — who do you hunt?'

  The sharpened teeth lifted and lowered in a silent laugh. 'Hunt? Oh yes, we all hunt, but I was closest! Piss on Hood's bony feet! Pluck out the hairs of his nose and kick his teeth in! Drive a spear up his puckered behind and set him on a windy mountain top! Oh, I'll find him a wife some day, lay coin on it! But first, I hunt!'

  He collected the reins, pulled the horse round. The portal opened. 'Skinner! Hear me, you damned Avowed! Cheater of death! I am coming for you! Now!' Horse and rider plunged into the rent, vanished, and a moment later the gate disappeared as well.

  The sudden silence rang like a dirge in Cutter's head. He took a ragged breath, then shook himself. 'Beru fend,' he whispered again. 'He was my uncle...'

  'I will feed the horses, lad,' Heboric said. 'Go out to the women. They've likely been hearing shouting and don't know what's going on. Go on, Cutter.'

  Nodding, the Daru began walking. Barukanal. Mammoltenan... What had the Soldier revealed? What ghastly secret hid in the apparition's words? What do Baruk and the others have to do with the Tyrant? And the Seguleh? The Tyrant is returning? 'Gods, I've got to get home.'

  Outside the gates, Felisin and Scillara were seated on the track. Both puffing rustleaf, and although Felisin looked sickly, there was a determined, defiant look in her eyes.

  'Relax,' Scillara said. 'She's not inhaling.'

  'I'm not?' Felisin asked her. 'How do you do that?'

  'Don't you have any questions?' Cutter demanded.

  They looked at him. 'About what?' Scillara asked.

  'Didn't you hear?'

  'Hear what?'

  They didn't hear. They weren't meant to. But we were. Why? Had the Soldier been mistaken in his assumptions? Sent by Hood, not to see the dead priests and priestesses of D'rek... but to speak with us.

  The Tyrant shall return. This, to a son of Darujhistan. 'Gods,' he whispered again, 'I've got to get home.'

  Greyfrog's voice shouted in his skull, 'Friend Cutter! Surprise and alarm!'

  'What now?' he asked, turning to see the demon bound­ing into view.

  'The Soldier of Death. Wondrous. He left his spear!'

  Cutter stared, with sinking heart, at the weapon clutched between the demon's teeth. 'Good thing you don't need your mouth to talk.'

  'Solemn agreement, friend Cutter! Query. Do you like these silks?'

  ****

  The portal into the sky keep required a short climb. Mappo and Icarium stood on the threshold, staring into a cavernous chamber. The floor was almost level. A faint light seemed to emanate from the walls of stone. 'We can camp here,' the Trell said.

  'Yes,' Icarium agreed. 'But first, shall we explore?'

  'Of course.'

  The chamber housed three additional mechanisms, identical to the one submerged in the lake, each positioned on trestles like ships in dry-dock. The hatches yawned open, revealing the padded seats within. Icarium walked to the nearest one and began examining its interior.

  Mappo untied the pouch at his belt and began removing the larger one within. A short time later he laid out the bedrolls, food and wine. Then he drew out from his pack an iron-banded mace, not his favourite one, but another, expendable since it possessed no sorcerous virtues.

  Icarium returned to his side. 'They are lifeless,' he said. 'Whatever energy was originally imbued within the machinery has ebbed away, and I see no means of restoring it.'

  'That is not too surprising, is it? I suspect this keep has been here a long time.'

  'True enough, Mappo. But imagine, were we able to enliven one of these mechanisms! We could travel at great speed and in comfort! One for you and one for me, ah, this is tragic. But look, there is a passageway. Let us delve into the greater mystery this keep offers.'

  Carrying only his mace, Mappo followed Icarium into the broad corridor.

  Storage rooms lined the passage, whatever they had once held now nothing more than heaps of undisturbed dust.

  Sixty paces in,.they reached an intersection. An arched barrier was before them, shimmering like a vertical pool of quicksilver. Corridors went to the right and left, both appearing to curve inward in the distance.

  Icarium drew out a coin from the pouch at his belt, and Mappo was amused to see that it was of a vintage five centuries old.

  'You are the world's greatest miser, Icarium.'

  The Jhag smiled, then shrugged. 'I seem to recall that no-one ever accepts payment from us, no matter how egregious the expense of the service provided. Is that an accurate memory, Mappo?'

  'It is.'

  'Well, then, how can you accuse me of being niggardly?' He tossed the coin at the silver barrier. It vanished. Ripples rolled outward, went beyond the stone frame, then returned.

  'This is a passive manifestation,' Icarium said. 'Tell me, did you hear the coin strike anything beyond?'

  'No, nor did it make a sound upon entering the... uh, the door.'

  'I am tempted to pass through.'

  'That might prove unhealthy.'

  Icarium hesitated, then drew a skinning-knife and inserted the blade into the barrier. Gentler ripples. He pulled it out. The blade looked intact. None of the sub­stance had adhered to it. Icarium ran a fingertip along the iron. 'No change in temperature,' he observed.

  'Shall I try a finger I won't miss much?' Mappo asked, holding up his left hand.

  'And which one would that be, friend?'

  'I don't know. I expect I'd miss any of them.'

  'The tip?'

  'Sound caution.' Making a fist, barring the last, smallest finger, Mappo stepped close, then dipped the finger up to the first knuckle into the shimmering door. 'No pain, at least. It is, I think, very thin.' He drew his hand back and examined the digit. 'Hale.'

  'With the condition of your fingers, Mappo, how can you tell?'

  'Ah, I see a change. No dirt left, not even crusted under the nail.'

  'To pass through is to be cleansed. Do you think?'

  Mappo reached in with his whole hand. 'I feel air beyond. Cooler, damper.' He withdrew his hand and peered at it. 'Clean. Too clean. I am alarmed.'

  'Why?'

  'Because it makes me realize how filthy I've become, that's why.'

  'I wonder, will it do the same with our clothes?'

  'That would be nice, although it may possess some sort of threshold. Too filthy, and it simply annihilates the offend­ing material. We might emerge on the other side naked.'

  'Now I am alarmed, friend.'

  'Yes. Well, what shall we do, Icarium?'

  'Do we have any choice?' With that, the Jhag strode through the barrier.

  Mappo sighed, then followed.

  Only to be clutched at the shoulder and pulled back from a second step — which, he saw, would have been into empty air.

  The cavern before them was vast. A bridge had once connected the ledge they stood on to an enormous, tower­ing fortress floating in space, a hundred or more paces opposite them. Sections of that stone span remained, seem­ingly unsupported, but others had broken away and now floated, motionless, in the air.

  Far below, dizzyingly far, the cavern was swallowed in darkness. Above them, a faintly glittering dome of black rough-hewn stone, like a night sky. Tiered buildings rose along the inner walls, rows of dark windows but no balconies. Dust and rubble clouded the air, none of it moving. Mappo said nothing, he was too stunned
by the vista before them.

  Icarium touched his shoulder, then pointed to something small hovering directly before them. The coin, but not motionless as it had first seemed. It was drifting away, slowly. The Jhag reached out and retrieved it, returning it to the pouch at his waist. 'A worthy return on my invest­ment,' he murmured. 'Since there is momentum, we should be able to travel. Launch ourselves from this ledge. Over to the fortress.'

  'Sound plan,' Mappo said, 'but for all the obstacles in between.'

  'Ah, good point.'

  'There may be an intact bridge, on the opposite side. We could take one of the side passages behind us. If such a bridge exists, likely it will be marked with a silver barrier as this one was.'

  'Have you never wished you could fly, Mappo?'

  'As a child, perhaps, I am sure I did.'

  'Only as a child?'

  'It is where dreams of flight belong, Icarium. Shall we explore one of the corridors behind us?'

  'Very well, although I admit I hope we fail in finding a bridge.'

  ****

  Countless rooms, passages and alcoves along the wide, arched corridor, the floors thick with dust, odd, faded symbols etched above doorways, possibly a numerical system of some sort. The air was stagnant, faintly acrid. No furnishings remained in the adjoining chambers. Nor, Mappo realized, any corpses such as the one Icarium had discovered in the mechanism resting on the lake-bed. An orderly evacuation? If so, where had the Short-Tails gone?

  Eventually, they came upon another silver door. Cautiously passing through it, they found themselves standing on the threshold of a narrow bridge. Intact, lead­ing across to the floating fortress, which hovered much closer on this, the opposite side from whence they had first seen it. The back wall of the island keep was much rougher, the windows vertical slashes positioned seemingly hap­hazardly on the misshapen projections, crooked insets and twisted towers.

  'Extraordinary,' Icarium said in a low voice. 'What, I wonder, does this hidden face of madness reveal of the makers? These K'Chain Che'Malle?'

  'A certain tension, perhaps?'

  'Tension?'

  'Between,' Mappo said, 'order and chaos. An inner dichotomy, conflicting impulses…'

  'The contradictions evident in all intelligent life,' Icarium said, nodding. He stepped onto the span, then, arms wheeling, began drifting away.