Page 108 of Reaper's Gale


  Because I cannot follow.

  Udinaas gently disengaged his hand from Kettle’s, then lifted free the Imass spear strapped to his back. He walked over to Seren Pedac. Set the weapon into her hands, ignoring her raised brows, the confusion sliding into her gaze.

  Yes, Acquitor, if you will seek to aid Fear Sengar – and I believe you will – then your need is greater than mine.

  After all, I intend to run.

  Silchas Ruin drew his two swords, thrust them both point-first into the ground. And then began tightening the various buckles and straps on his armour.

  Yes, no point in rushing in unprepared, is there? You will need to move quickly, Silchas Ruin, won’t you? Very quickly indeed.

  He found his mouth was dry.

  Dry as this pathetic corpse at his feet.

  Seren Pedac gripped his arm. ‘Udinaas,’ she whispered.

  He shook his arm free. ‘Do what you must, Acquitor.’ Our great quest, our years of one foot in front of the other, it all draws now to a close.

  So hail the blood. Salute the inevitability.

  And who, when all is done, will wade out of this crimson tide?

  Rud Elalle, my son, how I fear for you.

  Three specks in the sky above the hills to the south. The one named Hedge now half turned and squinted at Ulshun Pral, then said, ‘Best withdraw to the cave. Stay close to Onrack the Broken. And Trull Sengar.’

  Ulshun Pral smiled.

  The man scowled. ‘Quick, this oaf doesn’t understand Malazan.’ He then pointed back towards the rocks. ‘Go there! Onrack and Trull. Go!’

  The taller man snorted. ‘Enough, Hedge. That oaf understands you just fine.’

  ‘Oh, so why ain’t he listening to me?’

  ‘How should I know?’

  Ulshun waited a moment longer, fixing into his memory the faces of these two men, so that death would not take all of them. He hoped they were doing the same with him, although of course they might well not understand the gift, nor even that they had given it.

  Imass knew many truths that were lost to those who were, in every sense, their children. This, alas, did not make Imass superior, for most of those truths were unpleasant ones, and these children could not defend themselves against them, and so would be fatally weakened by their recognition.

  For example, Ulshun Pral reminded himself, he had been waiting for this time, understanding all that was coming to this moment, all the truths bound within what would happen. Unlike his people, he had not been a ghost memory. He had not lived countless millennia in a haze of self-delusion. Oh, his life had spanned that time, but it had been just that: a life. Drawn out to near immortality, not through any soul-destroying ritual, but because of this realm. This deathless realm.

  That was deathless no longer.

  He set out, then, leaving these two brave children, and made his way towards the cave.

  It might begin here, beneath this empty sky. But it would end, Ulshun Pral knew, before the Gates of Starvald Demelain.

  Where a Bentract Bonecaster had failed. Not because the wound proved too virulent, or too vast. But because the Bonecaster had been nothing more than a ghost to begin with. A faded, pallid soul, a thing with barely enough power to hold on to itself.

  Ulshun Pral was twenty paces from the entrance to the cave when Onrack the Broken emerged, and in Ulshun’s heart there burgeoned such a welling of pride that tears filled his eyes.

  * * *

  ‘So I take it,’ Hedge said, locking the foot of his crossbow, ‘that what we were both thinking means neither of us is much surprised.’

  ‘She gave in too easily.’

  Hedge nodded. ‘That she did. But I’m still wondering, Quick, why didn’t she grab that damned Finnest a long time ago? Squirrel it away some place where Silchas Ruin would never find it? Answer me that!’

  The wizard grunted as he moved out to the crest of the slope. ‘She probably thought she’d done just as you said, Hedge.’

  Hedge blinked, then frowned. ‘Huh. Hadn’t thought of that.’

  ‘That’s because you’re thick, sapper. Now, if this goes the way I want it to, you won’t be needed at all. Keep that in mind, Hedge. I’m begging you.’

  ‘Oh, just get on with it.’

  ‘Fine then. I will.’

  And Ben Adaephon Delat straightened, then slowly raised his arms.

  His scrawny arms. Hedge laughed.

  The wizard glared back at him over a shoulder. ‘Will you stop that?’

  ‘Sorry! Had no idea you were so touchy.’

  Quick Ben cursed, then turned and walked back to Hedge.

  And punched him in the nose.

  Stunned, eyes filling with tears, the sapper staggered back. Brought a hand to his face to stem the sudden gushing of blood. ‘You broke my damned nose!’

  ‘So I did,’ the wizard answered, shaking one hand. ‘And look, Hedge, you’re bleeding.’

  ‘Is it any surprise? Ow—’

  ‘Hedge. You are bleeding.’

  I’m – oh, gods.

  ‘Get it now?’

  And Quick turned and walked back, resumed his stance at the crest.

  Hedge stared down at his bloody hand. ‘Shit!’

  Their conversation stopped then.

  Since the three dragons were now no longer tiny specks.

  Menandore’s hatred of her sisters in no way diminished her respect for their power, and against Silchas Ruin that power would be needed. She knew that the three of them, together, could destroy that bastard. Utterly. True, one or two of them might fall. But not Menandore. She had plans to ensure that she would survive.

  Before her now, minuscule on the edge of that rise, a lone mortal – the other one was crouching as if in terror, well behind his braver but equally stupid companion – a lone mortal, raising his hands.

  Oh, mage, to think that will be enough.

  Against us!

  Power burgeoned within her and to either side she felt the same – sudden pressure, sudden promise.

  Angling downward now, three man-heights from the basin’s tawny grasses, huge shadows drawing closer, yet closer. Sleeting towards that slope.

  She unhinged her jaws.

  Hedge wiped blood from his face, blinked to clear his vision as he swore at his own throbbing head, and then lifted the crossbow. Just in case. Sweet candy for the middle one, aye.

  The trio of dragons, wings wide, glided low above the ground, at a height that would bring them more or less level with the crest of this ancient atoll. They were, Hedge realized, awfully big.

  In perfect unison, all three dragons opened their mouths.

  And Quick Ben, standing there like a frail willow before a tsunami, unleashed his magic.

  The very earth of the slope lifted up, heaved up to hammer the dragons like enormous fists into their chests. Necks whipped. Heads snapped back. Sorcery exploded from those jaws, waves lashing skyward – flung uselessly into the air, where the three sorceries clashed, writhing in a frenzy of mutual destruction.

  Where the slope had been there were now clouds of dark, dusty earth, pieces of sod still spinning upward, long roots trailing like hair, and the hill lurched as the three dragons, engulfed by tons of earth, crashed into the ground forty paces from where stood Quick Ben.

  And down, into that chaotic storm of soil and dragon, the wizard marched.

  Waves erupted from him, rolling amidst the crackle of lightning, sweeping down in charging crests. Striking the floundering beasts with a succession of impacts that shook the entire hill. Black fire gouted, rocks sizzled as they were launched into the air, where they simply shattered into dust.

  Wave after wave unleashed from the wizard’s hands.

  Hedge, staggering drunkenly to the edge, saw a dragon, hammered full on, flung onto its back, then pushed, skidding, kicking, like a flesh and blood avalanche, down onto the basin, gouging deep grooves across the flat as it was driven back, and back.

  Another, with skin seeming af
ire, sought to lift itself into the air.

  Another wave rose above it, slapped the beast back down with a bone-snapping crunch.

  The third creature, half buried beneath steaming soil, suddenly turned then and launched itself straight for the dragon beside it. Jaws opening, magic ripping forth to lance into the side of its once-ally. Flesh exploded, blood spraying in a black cloud.

  An ear-piercing shriek, the struck one’s head whipping – even as enormous jaws closed on its throat.

  Hedge saw that neck collapse in a welter of blood.

  More blood poured from the stricken dragon’s gaping mouth, a damned fountain of the stuff—

  Quick Ben was walking back up the slope, seemingly indifferent to the carnage behind him.

  The third dragon, the one driven far out on the basin, at the end of a torn-up track that stretched across the grass like a wound, now lifted itself into the air, streaming blood, and, climbing still higher, banked south and then eastward.

  The warring dragons at the base of the slope slashed and tore at each other, yet the attacker would not release its death-grip on the other’s neck, and those huge fangs were sawing right through. Then the spine crunched, snapped, and suddenly the severed head and its arm-length’s worth of throat fell to the churned ground with a heavy thud. The body kicked, gouging into its slayer’s underbelly for a moment longer, then sagged down as a spraying exhalation burst from the severed neck.

  Quick Ben staggered onto the summit.

  Hedge dragged his eyes from the scene below and stared at the wizard. ‘You look like Hood’s own arse-wipe, Quick.’

  ‘Feel like it too, Hedge.’ He pivoted round, the motion like an old man’s. ‘Sheltatha – what a nasty creature – turned on Menandore just like that!’

  ‘When she realized they weren’t getting past you, aye,’ Hedge said. ‘The other one’s going for the Imass, I’d wager.’

  ‘Won’t get past Rud Ellalle.’

  ‘No surprise, since you turned her into one giant bruise.’

  Below, Sheltatha Lore, her belly ripped open, was dragging herself away.

  Hedge eyed the treacherous beast.

  ‘Aye, sapper,’ Quick Ben said in a hollow voice. ‘Now you get to play.’

  Hedge grunted. ‘Damn short playtime, Quick.’

  ‘And then you nap.’

  ‘Funny.’

  Hedge raised the crossbow, paused to gauge the angle. Then he settled his right index finger against the release. And grinned. ‘Here, suck on this, you fat winged cow.’

  A solid thunk as the cusser shot out, then down.

  Landing within the gaping cavity of Sheltatha Lore’s belly.

  The explosion sent chunks of dragon flesh in all directions. The thick, red, foul rain showered down on Hedge and Quick Ben. And what might have been a vertebra hammered Hedge right between the eyes, knocking him out cold.

  Flung onto his hands and knees by the concussion, Quick Ben stared across at his unconscious friend, then began laughing. Higher-pitched than usual.

  As they strode into the cave of paintings, Onrack reached out a hand to stay Ulshun Pral. ‘Remain here,’ he said.

  ‘That is never easy,’ Ulshun Pral replied, yet he halted nonetheless.

  Nodding, Onrack looked at the images on the walls. ‘You see again and again the flaws.’

  ‘The failing of my hand, yes. The language of the eyes is ever perfect. Rendering it upon stone is where weakness is found.’

  ‘These, Ulshun Pral, show few weaknesses.’

  ‘Even so . . .’

  ‘Remain, please,’ Onrack said, slowly drawing his sword. ‘The Gate . . . there will be intruders.’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Is it you they seek?’

  ‘Yes, Onrack the Broken. It is me.’

  ‘Why?’

  ‘Because a Jaghut gave me something, once, long ago.’

  ‘A Jaghut?’

  Ulshun Pral smiled at the astonishment on Onrack’s face. ‘Here, in this world,’ he said, ‘we long ago ended our war. Here, we chose peace.’

  ‘Yet that which the Jaghut gave you now endangers you, Ulshun Pral. And your clans.’

  Deep thundering concussions suddenly shook the walls around them.

  Onrack bared his teeth. ‘I must go.’

  A moment later Ulshun Pral was alone, in the cave with all the paintings he had fashioned, and there was no light now that Onrack and the torch he had been carrying were gone. As the drums of grim magic reverberated through the rock surrounding him, he remained where he was, motionless, for a dozen heartbeats. Then he set out, after Onrack. On the path to the Gate.

  There was, in truth, no choice.

  Rud Elalle had led the Imass deeper into the rugged hills, then down the length of a narrow, crooked defile where some past earthquake had broken in half an entire mass of limestone, forming high, angled walls flanking a crack through its heart. At the mouth of this channel, as Rud Elalle urged the last few Imass into the narrow passage, Hostille Rator, Til’aras Benok and Gr’istanas Ish’ilm halted.

  ‘Quickly!’ cried Rud Elalle.

  But the clan chief was drawing out his cutlass-length obsidian sword with his right hand and a bone-hafted, groundstone maul with his left. ‘An enemy approaches,’ Hostille Rator said. ‘Go on, Rud Elalle. We three will guard the mouth of this passage.’

  They could hear terrible thunder from just south of the old camp.

  Rud Elalle seemed at a loss.

  Hostille Rator said, ‘We did not come to this realm . . . expecting what we have found. We are now flesh, and so too are those Imass you call your own. Death, Rud Elalle, has arrived.’ He pointed southward with his sword. ‘A lone dragon has escaped the High Mage. To hunt down you and the Bentract. Rud Elalle, even as a dragon, she must land here. She must then semble into her other form. So that she can walk this passageway. We will meet her here, the three of us . . . strangers.’

  ‘I can—’

  ‘No, Rud Elalle. This dragon may not prove the only danger to you and the clans. You must go, you must prepare to stand as their final protector.’

  ‘Why – why do you do this?’

  ‘Because it pleases us.’ Because you please us, Rud Elalle. So too Ulshun Pral. And the Imass . . .

  And we came here with chaos in our hearts.

  ‘Go, Rud Elalle.’

  Sukul Ankhadu knew her sisters were dead, and for all the shock this realization engendered – the shattering of their plan to destroy Silchas Ruin, to enslave the Finnest of Scabandari and subject that torn, vulnerable soul to endless cruelty – a part of her was filled with glee. Menandore – whom she and Sheltatha Lore had intended to betray in any case – would never again befoul Sukul’s desires and ambitions. Sheltatha – well, she had done what was needed, turning upon Menandore at the moment of her greatest weakness. And had she survived that, Sukul would have had to kill the bitch herself.

  Extraordinary, that a lone mortal human could unleash such venomous power. No, not a mere mortal human. There were other things hiding inside that scrawny body, she was certain of that. If she never encountered him again, she would know a life of peace, a life without fear.

  Her wounds were, all things considered, relatively minor. One wing was shattered, forcing her to rely almost entirely on sorcery to keep her in the air. An assortment of scrapes and gouges, but already the bleeding had ebbed, the wounds were closing.

  She could smell the stench of the Imass, could follow their trail with ease as it wound through the broken hills below.

  Rud Elalle was a true child of Menandore. A Soletaken. But so very young, so very naive. If brute force could not defeat him, then treachery would. Her final act of vengeance – and betrayal – against Menandore.

  The trail led into a high-walled, narrow channel, one that seemed to lead downward, perhaps to caves. Before its mouth was a small, level clearing, bounded on both sides by boulders.

  She dropped down, slowed her flight.

&nbsp
; And saw, standing before the defile’s entrance, an Imass warrior.

  Good. I can kill. I can feed.

  Settling down into the clearing – a tight fit, her one working wing needing to draw in close – and then sembling, drawing her power inward. Until she stood, not twenty paces from the Imass.

  Mortal. Nothing more than what he appeared.

  Sukul Ankhadu laughed. She would walk up to him, wrest his stone weapons away, then sink her teeth into his throat.

  Still laughing, she approached.

  He readied himself, dropping into a crouch.

  At ten paces, he surprised her. The maul, swung in a loop underhand, shot out from his extended arm.

  Sukul threw herself to one side – had that weapon struck, it would have shattered her skull – then, as the Imass leapt forward with his sword, she reached out and caught his wrist. Twisted, snapping the bones. With her other hand she grasped his throat and lifted him from his feet.

  And saw, in his face, a smile – even as she crushed that throat.

  Behind her, two Bonecasters, veered into identical beasts – long-legged bears with vestigial tails, covered in thick brown and black hair, with flattened snouts, at their shoulders the height of a Tiste – emerged from the cover of the boulders and, as Hostille Rator died, the Soletaken arrived at a full charge.

  Slamming into Sukul Ankhadu, one on her left, the other on her right. Huge talons slashing, massive forelimbs closing about her as jaws, opened wide, tore into her.

  Lower canines sank under her left jawline, the upper canines punching down through flesh and bone, and as the beast whipped its head to one side, Sukul’s lower jaw, left cheekbones and temporal plate all went with it.

  The second beast bit through her right upper arm as it closed its jaws about her ribcage, clamping round a mouthful of crushed ribs and pulped lung.

  As the terrible pain and pressure suddenly ripped away from her head, Sukul twisted round. Her left arm – the only one still attached to her – had been holding up the warrior, and now, releasing the dying Imass, she swung that arm backhand, striking the side of the giant bear’s head. And with that impact, she released a surge of power.

  The beast’s head exploded in a mass of bone shards, brains and teeth.