Page 121 of The Crippled God


  He heard footsteps coming down the trail nearby and turned to see Onos and Hetan. They were carrying reed baskets to join in the harvest. Udinaas saw Onos pause, look out towards the children.

  ‘Relax, Onos,’ Udinaas said. ‘I’ll keep an eye on them.’

  The warrior smiled. Hetan took his hand to lead him down.

  Reclined on a high shelf of limestone above Udinaas, Ryadd said, ‘Stop worrying, Father. It’ll wear you out.’

  From one of the caves higher up the climb behind them, there drifted out the sound of a crying baby. Poor Seren. That’s one cranky baby she has there.

  ‘We’re safe,’ Ryadd said. ‘And if some damned mob of vicious humans shows up, well, they’ll have Kilava, Onrack, Onos Toolan and me to deal with.’

  ‘I know,’ Udinaas replied. He rubbed and massaged his hands. The aches were coming back. Maybe it was time to try that foul medicine Lera Epar kept offering him. Ah, it’s just years of cold water. Sinks in. That’s all.

  Glancing over, he grunted to his feet.

  ‘Father?’

  ‘It’s all right,’ he said. ‘The twins have buried Absi up to his neck. Those girls need a good whipping.’

  ‘You’ve never whipped a child in your life.’

  ‘How would you know? Well. Maybe I haven’t, but the threat still works.’

  Ryadd sat up, looked down on Udinaas with his young, sun-darkened face. Squinting, Udinaas said, ‘In the bright sun, I see your mother in your smile.’

  ‘She smiled?’

  ‘Once, I think, but I won’t take credit for it.’

  Udinaas set off down to the beach.

  Absi had clambered free and tackled one of the girls and was now tickling her into a helpless state. Trouble passed, but he continued anyway.

  Out in the sea beyond the small bay, whales broached the surface, sending geysers into the air, announcing the coming of summer.

  The rider paused on the road, glancing down at the untended turnips growing wild in the ditch, and after a moment he kicked his horse onward. The sun was warm on his face as he rode west along Itko Kan’s coastal track.

  In his wake, in the lengthening shadows, two figures took form. Moments later huge hounds appeared. One bent to sniff at the turnips, and then turned away.

  The figure with the cane sighed. ‘Satisfied?’

  The other one nodded.

  ‘And you imagine only the best now, don’t you?’

  ‘I see no reason why not.’

  Shadowthrone snorted. ‘You wouldn’t.’

  Cotillion glanced over at him. ‘Why not, then?’

  ‘Old friend, what is this? Do you still hold to a belief in hope?’

  ‘Do I believe in hope? I do.’

  ‘And faith?’

  ‘And faith. Yes. I believe in faith.’

  Neither spoke for a time, and then Shadowthrone looked over at the Hounds, and cocked his head. ‘Hungry, are we?’ Bestial heads lifted, eyes fixing on him.

  ‘Don’t even think it, Ammeanas!’

  ‘Why not? Remind that fop on the throne who’s really running this game!’

  ‘Not yet.’

  ‘Where is your impatience? Your desire for vengeance? What sort of Patron of Assassins are you?’

  Cotillion nodded down the road. ‘Leave them alone. Not here, not now.’

  Shadowthrone sighed a second time. ‘Misery guts.’

  The shadows dissolved, and a moment later were gone, leaving nothing but an empty road.

  The sun set, dusk closing in. He’d yet to pass any traffic on this day and that was a little troubling, but he rode on. Having never been this way before, he almost missed the side track leading down to the settlement on the shelf of land above a crescent beach, but he caught the smell of woodsmoke in time to slow up his mount.

  The beast carefully picked its way down the narrow path.

  Reaching the bottom, now in darkness, he reined in.

  Before him was a small fishing village, though it looked mostly abandoned. He saw a cottage nearby, stone-walled and thatch-roofed, with a stone chimney from which smoke drifted in a thin grey stream. An area of land had been cleared above and behind it where vegetables had been planted, and working still in the growing gloom was a lone figure.

  Crokus dismounted, hobbled the horse outside an abandoned shack to his left, and made his way forward.

  It should not have taken long, yet by the time he reached the verge of the garden the moon overhead was bright, its effervescent light glistening along her limbs, the sheen of her black hair like silk as she bent to gather up her tools.

  He stepped between rows of bushy plants.

  And she turned. Watched him walk up to her.

  Crokus took her face in his hands, studied her dark eyes. ‘I never liked that story,’ he said.

  ‘Which one?’ she asked.

  ‘The lover … lost on the moon, tending her garden alone.’

  ‘It’s not quite like that, the story I mean.’

  He shrugged. ‘It’s what I remember from it. That, and the look in your eyes when you told it to me. I was reminded of that look a moment ago.’

  ‘And now?’

  ‘I think,’ he said, ‘the sadness just went away, Apsalar.’

  ‘I think,’ she replied, ‘you are right.’

  The boy watched the old man come down to the pier as he did almost every day whenever the boy happened to be lingering along the waterfront at around this time, when the morning was stretching towards noon and all the fish were asleep. Day after day, he’d seen the old man carrying that silly bucket with the rope tied to the handle for the fish he never caught – and the fishing rod in his other hand would most likely snap in half at a crab’s tug.

  Bored, as he was every day, the boy ambled down to stand on the edge of the pier, to look out on the few ships that bothered sheltering in the harbour of Malaz City. So he could dream of the worlds beyond, where things exciting and magical happened and heroes won the day and villains bled out in the dirt.

  He knew he was nobody yet. Not old enough for anything. Trapped here where nothing ever happened and never would. But one day he would face the whole world and, why, they’d all know his face, they would. He glanced over to where the old man was sitting down, legs over the edge, working bait on to the hook.

  ‘You won’t never catch nothing,’ the boy said, idly pulling at a rusty mooring ring. ‘You sleep in too late, every day.’

  The old man squinted at the hook, adjusted the foul-smelling bait. ‘Late nights,’ he said.

  ‘Where? Where you go? I know all the taverns and bars in the whole harbour district.’

  ‘Do you now?’

  ‘All of them – where d’you drink, then?’

  ‘Who said anything about drinking, lad? No, what I do is play.’

  The boy drew slightly closer. ‘Play what?’

  ‘Fiddle.’

  ‘You play at a bar?’

  ‘I do, aye.’

  ‘Which one?’

  ‘Smiley’s.’ The old man ran out the hook on its weighted line and leaned over to watch it plummet into the depths.

  The boy studied him suspiciously. ‘I ain’t no fool,’ he said.

  The old man glanced over, nodded. ‘I can see that.’

  ‘Smiley’s doesn’t exist. It’s just a story. A haunting. People hearing things – voices in the air, tankards clunking. Laughing.’

  ‘That’s all they hear in the night air, lad?’

  The boy licked his suddenly dry lips. ‘No. They hear … fiddling. Music. Sad, awful sad.’

  ‘Hey now, not all of it’s sad. Though maybe that’s what leaks out. But,’ and he grinned at the boy, ‘I wouldn’t know that, would I?’

  ‘You’re like all the rest,’ the boy said, facing out to sea once again.

  ‘Who are all the rest, then?’

  ‘Making up stories and stuff. Lying – it’s all anybody ever does here, ’cause they got nothing else to do. They’re all wasti
ng their lives. Just like you. You won’t catch any fish ever.’ And he waited, to gauge the effect of his words.

  ‘Who said I was after fish?’ the old man asked, offering up an exaggeratedly sly expression.

  ‘What, crabs? Wrong pier. It’s too deep here. It just goes down and down and for ever down!’

  ‘Aye, and what’s down there, at the very bottom? You ever hear that story?’

  The boy was incredulous and more than a little offended. ‘Do I look two years old? That demon, the old emperor’s demon! But you can’t fish for it!’

  ‘Why not?’

  ‘Well – well, your rod would break! Look at it!’

  ‘Looks can be deceiving, lad. Remember that.’

  The boy snorted. He was always getting advice. ‘I won’t be like you, old man. I’m going to be a soldier when I grow up. I’m going to leave this place. For ever. A soldier, fighting wars and getting rich and fighting and saving people and all that!’

  The old man seemed about to say one thing, stopped, and instead said, ‘Well, the world always needs more soldiers.’

  The boy counted this as a victory, the first of what he knew would be a lifetime of victories. When he was grown up. And famous. ‘That demon bites and it’ll eat you up. And even if you catch it and drag it up, how will you kill it? Nobody can kill it!’

  ‘Never said anything about killing it,’ the old man replied. ‘Just been a while since we last talked.’

  ‘Ha! Hah! Hahaha!’

  High above the harbour, the winds were brisk coming in from the sea. They struck and spun the old battered weathervane on its pole, as if the demon knew not where to turn.

  A sudden gust took it then, wrenched it hard around, and with a solid squeal the weathervane jammed. The wind buffeted it, but decades of decay and rust seemed proof to its will, and the weathervane but quivered.

  Like a thing in chains.

  This ends the Tenth and Final Tale of the

  Malazan Book of the Fallen

  And now the page before us blurs.

  An age is done. The book must close.

  We are abandoned to history.

  Raise high one more time the tattered standard of the Fallen. See through the drifting smoke to the dark stains upon the fabric.

  This is the blood of our lives, this is the payment of our deeds, all soon to be forgotten.

  We were never what people could be.

  We were only what we were.

  Remember us

  APPENDIX

  DRAMATIS PERSONAE

  Characters appearing in both Dust of Dreams and

  The Crippled God

  THE MALAZANS

  Adjunct Tavore Paran

  High Mage Quick Ben

  Fist Keneb

  Fist Blistig

  Captain Lostara Yil

  Banaschar

  Fist Kindly

  Captain Skanarow

  Fist Faradan Sort

  Captain Ruthan Gudd

  Lieutenant Pores

  Captain Raband

  Sinn

  Grub

  THE SQUADS

  Captain Fiddler

  Sergeant Tarr

  Koryk

  Smiles

  Bottle

  Corabb Bhilan Thenu’alas

  Cuttle

  Sergeant Gesler

  Corporal Stormy

  Shortnose

  Flashwit

  Mayfly

  Sergeant Cord

  Corporal Shard

  Limp

  Ebron

  Crump

  Sergeant Hellian

  Corporal Touchy

  Corporal Brethless

  Maybe

  Sergeant Balm

  Corporal Deadsmell

  Throatslitter

  Widdershins

  Sergeant Urb

  Corporal Clasp

  Masan Gilani

  Saltlick

  Burnt Rope

  Lap Twirl

  Sad

  Sergeant Sinter

  Corporal Pravalak Rim

  Honey

  Lookback

  Sergeant Badan Gruk

  Corporal Ruffle

  Nep Furrow

  Reliko

  Vastly Blank

  Corporal Kisswhere

  Skulldeath

  Drawfirst

  Sergeant Gaunt-Eye

  Corporal Rib

  Himble Thrup

  Dead Hedge

  Alchemist Bavedict

  Sergeant Sweetlard

  Sergeant Rumjugs

  THE HOST

  Ganoes Paran, High Fist and Master of the Deck

  High Mage Noto Boil

  Fist Rythe Bude

  Imperial Artist Ormulogun

  Warleader Mathok

  Bodyguard T’morol

  Gumble

  Skintick

  Desra

  Nemanda

  Kalam Mekhar

  THE KHUNDRYL

  Warleader Gall

  Hanavat (Gall’s wife)

  Shelemasa

  Jastara

  THE PERISH GREY HELMS

  Mortal Sword Krughava

  Shield Anvil Tanakalian

  Destriant Run’Thurvian

  Commander Erekala

  THE LETHERII

  King Tehol

  Queen Janath

  Brys Beddict

  Atri-Ceda Aranict

  Henar Vygulf

  Shurq Elalle

  Skorgen Kaban

  Ublala Pung

  THE BOLKANDO

  Queen Abrastal

  Spultatha

  Felash, Fourteenth Daughter

  Handmaid

  Gilk Warchief-Spax

  THE BARGHAST

  Hetan

  Stavi

  Storii

  Absi

  Skincut Ralata

  Awl Torrent

  Setoc of the Wolves

  THE SNAKE

  Rutt

  Held

  Badalle

  Saddic

  Yan Tovis (Twilight)

  Yedan Derryg (the Watch)

  Witch Pully

  Witch Skwish

  Brevity

  Pithy

  Sharl

  Corporal Nithe

  Sergeant Cellows

  Withal

  THE IMASS

  Onrack T’emlava

  Kilava Onass

  Ulshun Pral

  THE T’LAN IMASS

  Warleader Onos T’oolan

  Bitterspring (Lera Epar)

  Kalt Urmanal

  Rystalle Ev

  Ulag Togtil

  Nom Kala

  Urugal the Woven

  Thenik the Shattered

  Beroke Soft Voice

  Kahlb the Silent Hunter

  Halad the Giant

  THE K’CHAIN CHE’MALLE

  J’an Sentinel Bre’nigan

  K’ell Hunter Sag’Churok

  Matron Gunth Mach

  Shi’gal Assassin Gu’Rull

  Destriant Kalyth (Elan)

  THE TISTE ANDII

  Nimander Golit

  Spinnock Durav

  Korlat

  Dathenar Fandoris

  Prazek Goul

  Skintick

  Desra

  Nemanda

  Sandalath Drukorlat

  Silchas Ruin

  THE JAGHUT: AMONG THE FOURTEEN

  Bolirium

  Gedoran

  Daryft

  Gathras

  Sanad

  Varandas

  Haut

  Suvalas

  Aimanan Hood

  THE FORKRUL ASSAIL: THE LAWFUL INQUISITORS

  Reverence

  Serenity

  Equity

  Placid

  Diligence

  Abide

  Aloft

  Calm

  Belie

  Freedom

  Grave

  THE WATERED: THE TIERS OF LESSER ASSAIL

  Am
iss

  Exigent

  Hestand

  Festian

  Kessgan

  Trissin

  Melest

  Haggraf

  THE TISTE LIOSAN

  Kadagar Fant

  Aparal Forge

  Iparth Erule

  Gaelar Throe

  Eldat Pressen

  OTHERS

  Rud Elalle (Ryadd Eleis)

  Telorast

  Curdle

  The Errant (Errastas)

  Knuckles (Sechul Lath)

  Kilmandaros

  Mael

  Olar Ethil

  Udinaas

  Bent

  Roach

  Shadowthrone (Ammeanas)

  Cotillion

  Draconus

  K’rul

  Kaminsod (the Crippled God)

  Karsa Orlong

  Silanah

  Apsal’ara

  Tulas Shorn

  D’rek, the Worm of Autumn

  Gillimada (Teblor leader)

  Faint

  Precious Thimble

  Amby Bole

  Gruntle

  Mappo

  Icarium

  Korabas, the Otataral Dragon

  Absi

  Spultatha

  Spindle

  Munug

  Table of Contents

  Acknowledgements

  Map

  Dramatis Personae

  Book One : ‘He was a soldier’

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Book Two : All the takers of my days

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Book Three : To charge the spear

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Book Four : The fists of the world

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Book Five : A hand upon the fates

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Book Six : To one in chains

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Book Seven : Your private shore

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Epilogue I

  Epilogue II

  Appendix

  About the Author

 


 

  Steven Erikson, The Crippled God

 


 

 
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