Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
âThere are no subtleties in command, Captain. Neither my sister nor me is one for rousing speeches. We make our expectations plain and we expect them to be met. Without complaint. Without hesitation. It's not enough to fight to stay alive. We must fight determined to win.'
âPeople ain't stupid â well, forget I said that. Plenty of 'em are. But something tells me there's a difference between fighting to stay alive and fighting for a cause bigger than your own life, or even the lives of your loved ones, or your comrades. A difference, but for the life of me I couldn't say what it is.'
âYou were always a soldier, Captain?'
Pithy snorted. âNot me. I was a thief who thought she was smarter than she really was.'
Yedan considered that for a time. Before him, blurred faces pushed through the light, mouths opening, expressions twisting into masks of rage. Hands stretched to find his throat, clutched empty. He could reach out and touch the wall, if he so chose. Instead, he observed the enemy before him. âWhat cause, Captain, would you fight for? In the manner you describe â beyond one's own life or those of loved ones?'
âNow that's the question, isn't it? For us Letherii, this ain't our home. Maybe we could come to want it to be, in time, a few generations soaking our blood into the land. But there won't be any time. Not enough for that.'
âIf that is your answerâ'
âNo it ain't. I'm working on it, sir. It's called
thinking things through.
A cause, then. Can't be some Tiste Andii queen or her damned throne, or even her damned city. Can't be Yan Tovis, even though she brought 'em all through and so saved their lives. Memories die like beached fish and soon enough just the smell will do t'drive 'em away. Can't be you neither.'
âCaptain,' said Yedan Derryg, âif the enemy destroy us, they will march down the Road of Gallan. Unobstructed, they will breach the gate to your own world, and they will lay waste to every human civilization, until nothing remains but ash. And then they will slay the gods themselves. Your gods.'
âIf they're that nasty, how can we hope to hold 'em here?'
Yedan nodded at the Lightfall. âBecause, Captain, there is only one way through. This stretch of beach. A thousand paces wide. Only here is the wall scarred and thin from past wounds. Only here can they hope to break the barrier. We bar this door, Captain, and we save your world.'
âAnd just how long are we supposed to hold 'em back?'
He ruminated for a moment, and then he said, âAs long as needed, Captain.'
She rubbed at the back of her neck, squinted at Yedan for a time, and then looked away. âHow can you do that, sir?'
âDo what?'
âStand there, so close, just watching them â can't you see their faces? Can't you feel their hatred? What they want to do to you?'
âOf course.'
âYet there you stand.'
âThey serve to remind me, Captain.'
âOf what?'
âOf why I exist.'
She hissed between her teeth. âYou just sent a chill right through me.'
âI asked about a worthy cause.'
âYeah, saving the world. That might work.'
He shot her a look. âMight?'
âTrue, you'd think saving your world is a good enough reason for doing anything and everything, wouldn't you?'
âIsn't it?'
âPeople being what people areâ¦we'll see.'
âYou lack faith, Captain.'
âWhat I lack is proof to the contrary, sir. I ain't seen it yet, in all my years. What do you think makes criminals in the first place?'
âStupidity and greed.'
âBesides those? I'll tell you. It's looking around, real carefully. It's seeing what's really there, and who wins every time, and it's deciding that despair tastes like shit. It's deciding to do whatever it takes to sneak through, to win what you can for yourself. It's also condemning your fellow humans to whatever misery finds them â even if that misery is by your own hand. To hurt another human being is to announce your hatred of humanity â but mostly your thinking is about hating back what already hates you. A thief steals telling herself she's evening out crooked scales. That's how we sleep at night, y'see.'
âA fine speech, Captain.'
âTried making it short as I could, sir.'
âSo indeed you are without faith.'
âI have faith that what's worst in humanity isn't hard to find â it's all around us, sour as a leaking bladder, day after day. It's the stink we all get used to. As for what's bestâ¦maybe, but I wouldn't push all my stacks of coin into the centre of the table on that bet.' She paused and then said, âThinking on it, there's one thing you could do to buy their souls.'
âAnd that is?'
âEmpty out the palace treasury and bury it ten paces up the beach. And make a show of it. Maybe even announce that it's, you know, the Sword's Gold. To be divided up at day's end.'
âAnd would they fight to save the soldier beside them? I doubt it.'
âHmm, good point. Then announce a fixed amount â and whatever is unclaimed on account of the soldier being dead goes back into the treasury.'
âWell, Captain, you could petition the Queen of Darkness.'
âOh, I can do better. Sister Brevity's the treasurer now.'
âYou are a cynical woman, Captain Pithy.'
âIn case saving the world don't work, that's all. Make getting rich the reward and they'll eat their own children before backing a single step.'
âAnd which of the two causes would you more readily give your life for, Captain?'
âNeither, sir.'
His brows lifted.
She spat again. âI was a thief once. Plenty of hatred then, both ways. But then I walked a step behind your sister and watched her bleed for us all. And then there was you, too, for that matter. That rearguard action that saved all our skins. So now,' she scowled at the Lightfall, âwell, I'll stand here, and I'll fight until the fight's left them or it's left me.'
Yedan studied her in earnest now. âAnd why would you do that, Pithy Islander?'
âBecause it's the right thing to do, Yedan Derryg.'
Â
Rightness.
The word was lodged in Yan Tovis's throat like shards of glass. She could taste blood in her mouth, and all that had seeped down into her stomach seemed to have solidified into something fist-sized, heavy as stone.
The Shore invited her, reached out and clawed at her with its need. A need it yearned to share with her.
You stand with me, Queen. As you once did, as you shall do again. You are the Shake and the Shake are of the Shore, and I have tasted your blood all my life.
Queen, I thirst again. Against this enemy, there shall be Rightness upon the Shore, and you will stand, and you will yield not a step.
But there was betrayal, long ago. How could the Liosan forget? How could they set it aside? Judgement, the coarse, thorn-studded brambles of retribution, they could snag an entire people, and as the blood streamed down each body was lifted higher, lifted from the ground. The vicious snare carried them into the righteous sky.
Reason could not reach that high, and in the heavens madness spun untamed.
Rightness rages on both sides of the wall. Who can hope to halt what is coming? Not the Queen of Darkness, not the queen of the Shake. Not Yedan Derryg â oh no, my brother strains for that moment. He draws his wretched sword again and again. He smiles at the Lightfall's lurid play on the blade. He stands before the silent shrieking insanity of hatred made manifest, and he does not flinch.
But, and this was the impossible contradiction, her brother had not once in his life felt a single spasm of hatred â his soul was implacably incapable of such an emotion. He could stand in the fire and not burn. He could stand before those deformed faces, those grasping hands, andâ¦andâ¦
nothing.
Oh, Yedan, what waits within you? Have you surrendered completely to the need of the Shore? Are you one with it? Do you know a single moment of doubt? Does it?
She could understand the seductive lure of that invitation. Absolution through surrender, the utter abjection of the self. She understood it, yes, but she did not trust it.
When that which offers blessing predicates such on the absolute obeisance of the supplicantâ¦demands, in fact, the soul's willing enslavement â no, how could such a force stand tall in moral probity?
The Shore demands our surrender to it. Demands our enslavement in the glory of its love, the sweet purity of its eternal blessing.
There is something wrong with that. Somethingâ¦monstrous. You offer us the freedom of choice, yet avow that to turn away is to lose all hope of glory, of salvation. What sort of freedom is that?
She had held that her faith in the Shore set her above other worshippers, those quivering mortals kneeling before fickle carnate gods. The Shore was without a face. The Shore was not a god, but an idea, the eternal conversation of elemental forces. Changeable, yet for ever unchangeable, the binding of life and death itself. Not something to be bargained with, not a thing with personality, mercurial and prone to spite. The Shore, she had believed, made no demands.
But now here she was, feeling the desiccated wind rising up from the bone strand, watching her brother speaking to Pithy, seeing her brother less than a stride away from Lightfall's terrible fury, drawing his sword again and again. And the First Shore howled in her soul.
Here! Blessed Daughter, I am here and with me you belong! See this wound. You and I shall close it. My bones, your blood. The death underfoot, the life with sword in hand. You shall be my flesh. I shall be your bone. Together we will stand. Changeable and unchangeable.
Free and enslaved.
A figure edged up on her right, and then another on her left. She looked to neither.
The one on the right crooned something melodic and wordless, and then said, âWeen decided, Queen. Skwish to stand with the Watch, an mine to stand with you.'
âAn the Shore an the day,' added Skwish. âLissen to it sing!'
Pully moaned again. âY'ain knelled afore the Shore, Highness. Y'ain done it yet. An be sure y'need to, afore the breach comes.'
âEen the queen's got to srender,' said Skwish. âT'the Shore.'
Crumbled bones into chains. Freedom into slavery. Why did we ever
agree to this bargain? It was never equal. The blood was ours, not the Shore's. Errant fend, even the bones came from us!
Empty Throne, my certainty isâ¦gone. My faithâ¦crumbles.
âDon't my people deserve better?'
Pully snorted. âSingle droppa Shake inem, they hear the song. They yearn t'come, t'standâ'
âTo fight,' finished Skwish.
âButâ¦'
they deserve better
.
âGo down t'the Shore, Highness. Een you tain't above the First Shore.'
Yan Tovis grimaced. âYou think to force me, Pully? Skwish?'
âIf yer brotherâ'
âHadn't killed all your allies,' Yan Tovis said, nodding. âYes. Oddly enough, I don't think he fully comprehended the consequences. Did he? A hundred and more witches and warlocksâ¦yes, they could compel me, perhaps. But you two? No.'
âIs a mistake, Highness.'
âDidn't stop you feeding on my blood, did it? Made young again, and now you roll like sluts in every man's tent.'
âEen Witchslayer saysâ'
âYes, you all say. “Kneel, O Queen.” “Surrender to the Shore, sister.” You know, the only person here who comes close to understanding me isn't even human. And what did I do? I destroyed the friendship growing between us by forcing her on to the Throne of Dark. I fear she will never forgive me.' Yan Tovis gestured suddenly. âBoth of you, leave me now.'
âAs witches we got to warn yeeâ'
âAnd so you have, Pully. Now go, before I call Yedan up here to finish what he started all those months ago.'
She listened to their footfalls in the sand, and then through the grasses.
Below, on the Shore, Captain Pithy was departing, moving off to the left, probably making her way to the Letherii encampment. Her brother remained, though now he began walking the length of the strand.
Like a caged cat.
But remember, dear brother. The Hust sword broke.
She lifted her gaze, studied the hissing storm of light, high above the blurred shapes of Liosan warriors. She was not sure, but at times lately she'd thought she'd seen vast shapes wheeling up there.
Clouds. Thunderheads.
Rightness was a vicious word.
Is it right to demand this of us? Is it right to invite us in one breath and threaten us in the next? Am I not queen of the Shake? Are these not my subjects? You would I simply give them to you? Their blood, their lives?
Errant's nudge, how I envy Sandalath Drukorlat, the Queen with no subjects.
The liquid sky of Lightfall was a thick, opaque swirl. No thunderheads today. Seeing that should have relieved her, but it didn't.
Â
Upon the Great Spire overlooking Kolanse Bay, five Pures ascended the steep stairs carved into the crater's ravaged flank. To their right, as they climbed towards the Altar of Judgement, the slope fell away to a sheer cliff, and far below the seas thrashed, the waters raging into foaming spume the colour of mare's milk. Centuries of pounding fury had gnawed into the Spire, down to its very roots, apart from a narrow, treacherous isthmus on the inland side.
From above, foul winds bled down, pulled towards the waves in endless streams. At times Shriven had been poisoned in their pilgrimage, here on the weathered pumice steps, but the Pures could withstand such vicissitudes, and when they passed the shrivelled corpses huddled against the stairs they simply stepped over them.