The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen (1225 page)

BOOK: The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen
2.38Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

But time is running out.

Mappo drank once more and then stored the waterskin. Shouldering the pack, he set off. Northeast.

The Jade Spears slashed a path into the night sky, and green light bled down, transforming the desert floor into a luminescent sea. As he jogged, Mappo imagined himself crossing the basin of an ocean. The bitter cold air filled his lungs, biting like ice with each indrawn breath. From this place, he knew, he would never surface. The thought disturbed him and with a growl he cast it from his mind.

As he ran, shooting stars raced and flared overhead, growing into an emerald storm, criss-crossing the heavens. He thought that, if he listened carefully enough, he might hear them, hissing like steam as they skipped, and then igniting with a crack of thunder once they began their final descent. But the rasping was only his own breath, the thunder nothing but the drum of his own heart. The sky stayed silent, and the burning arrows remained far, far away.

The sorrow in his soul had begun to taste sour. Aged and dissolute, moments from crumbling. He did not know what would come in its wake. Resignation, as might find a fatally ill man in his last days? Or just an exultant eagerness to see it all end? At the moment, even despair seemed too much effort.

He drew closer, eyes fixing on what seemed a range of tall crystals, green as glacial ice, rising to command the scene ahead. His exhausted mind struggled to make sense of it.
Something…order, a pattern…

Oh, gods, I've seen its like before. In stone.

Icarium—

Immortal architect, builder of monuments, you set out to challenge the gods, to defy the weavers of time. Maker of what cannot die, but with each edifice you raise the things that you need the most – the memories the rest of us guard so zealously – and they arrive stillborn in your hands. Each one as dead as the one before.

And look at us, we who would pray to forget so much – our regrets, our foolish choices, the hurts we delivered over a lifetime – we think nothing of this gift, this freedom we see as a cage, and in our rattling fury we wish that we were just like you.

Raiser of empty buildings. Visionary of silent cities.

But how many times could he remind Icarium of friendship? The precious comfort of familiar company? How many times could he fill once more all those empty rooms?
My friend, my bottomless well. But should I tell you the truth, then you would take your own life.

Is that so bad a thing? With all that you have done? Is it?

And now you are threatened. And helpless. I feel this. I know it as truth. I fear that you will be awakened, in all your rage, and that this time there will be more than just humans within reach of your sword. This time there will be gods.

Someone wants you, Icarium, to be their weapon.

But…if I reach you first, I could awaken you to who you are. I could speak the truth of your history, friend. And when you set the point of the dagger to your chest, I could stand back. Do nothing. I could honour you with the one thing I still had – myself. I could be the witness to your one act of justice.

I could talk you into killing yourself.

Is it possible? That this is where friendship can take us?

What would I do then?

I would bury you. And weep over the stones. For my loss, as friends will do.

The city was his genius – Mappo could see that truth in every line – but as he drew closer, squinting at the strangely flowing light and shadows in the facets of crystal, he saw evidence of occupation. His steps slowed.

Broken husks of fruit, fragments of clothing, the musty smell of dried faeces.

The sun was beginning to rise – had it been that far? He approached the nearest, broadest avenue. As he passed between two angular buildings, he froze at a flicker of movement – there, reflected from a facet projecting from the wall to his right. And as he stared, he saw it again.

Children. Walking past.

Yet no one was here –
no one but me.

They were wending their way out of the city – hundreds upon hundreds of children. Stick-thin limbs and bellies swollen with starvation. As he watched the procession, he saw not a single adult among them.

Mappo walked on, catching glimpses in the crystals of their brief occupation, their squatting presence amidst palatial – if cold – splendour.
Icarium, I begin to understand. And yet, cruellest joke of all, this was the one place you could never find again.

Every time you said you felt close…this city was the place you sought. These crystal machines of memory. And the trail you hunted – it did not matter if we were on another continent, it did not matter if we were half a world away – that trail was one of remembering. Remembering this city.

He went on, piecing together the more recent history, the army of children, and many times he caught sight of one girl, her mouth crusted with sores, her hair bleached of all colour. And huge eyes that seemed to somehow find his own – but that was impossible. She was long gone, with all the other children. She could not be—

Ah! This is the one! Voicing songs of incantation – the banisher of the d'ivers. Opals gems shards – this is the child.

He had come to a central square. She was there, looking out at him from a tilted spire of quartz. He walked until he stood in front of her, and her eyes tracked him all the way.

‘You are just a memory,' Mappo said. ‘It is a function of the machine, to trap the life passing through it. You cannot be looking at me – no, someone has walked my path, someone has come to stand before you here.' He swung round.

Fifteen paces away, before the sealed door of a narrow structure, Mappo saw a boy, tall, clutching a bundled shape. Their eyes met.

I am between them. That is all. They do not see me. They see each other.

But the boy's eyes pinned him like knife points. And he spoke. ‘Do not turn away.'

Mappo staggered as if struck.

Behind him, the girl said, ‘Icarias cannot hold us. The city is troubled.'

He faced her again. A boy had come up beside her, in his scrawny arms a heap of rubbish. He studied the girl's profile with open adoration. She blew flies from her lips.

‘Badalle.' The tall boy's voice drifted past him. ‘What did you dream?'

The girl smiled. ‘No one wants us, Rutt. Not one – in their lives they won't change a thing to help us. In their lives they make ever more of us, but when they say they care about our future, they're lying. The words are empty. Powerless. But I have seen words of
real
power, Rutt, and each one is a weapon.
A weapon.
That is why adults spend a lifetime blunting them.' She shrugged. ‘No one likes getting cut.'

When the boy spoke again, it was as if he stood in Mappo's place. ‘What did you dream, Badalle?'

‘In the end we take our language with us. In the end, we leave them all behind.' She turned to the boy beside her and frowned. ‘Throw them away. I don't like them.'

The boy shook his head.

‘What did you dream, Badalle?'

The girl's gaze returned, centring on Mappo's face. ‘I saw a tiger. I saw an ogre. I saw men and women. Then a witch came and took their children away. And not one of them tried to stop her.'

‘It wasn't like that,' Mappo whispered. But it was.

‘Then one rode after them – he wasn't much older than you, Rutt. I think. He was hard to see. A ghost got in the way. He was young enough to still listen to his conscience.'

‘
It wasn't like that!
'

‘Is that all?' asked the boy named Rutt.

‘No,' she replied, ‘but he's heard enough.'

Mappo cried out, staggered back, away. He shot a look back and saw her eyes tracking him. And in his skull, she said,
‘Ogre, I can't save you, and you can't save him. Not from himself. He is your Held, but every child wakes up. In this world, every child wakes up – and it is what all of you fear the most. Look at Rutt. He has Held in his arms. And you, you go to find your Held, to fill your arms once more. Look at Rutt. He is terrified of Held waking up. He's just like you. Now hear my poem. It is for you.

‘She made you choose which child to save.

And you chose.

One to save, the others to surrender.

It is not an easy choice

But you make it every day

That is not an easy truth

But the truth is every day

One of us among those

You walk away from

Dies

And there are more truths

In this world

Than I can count

But each time you walk away

The memory remains

And no matter how far or fast

You run

The memory remains.'

Mappo spun, fled the square.

Echoes pursued him. Carrying her voice.
In Icarias, memory remains. In Icarias waits the tomb of all that is forgotten. Where memory remains. Where he would have found his truth. Do you choose to save him now, Ogre? Do you choose to bring him to his city? When he opens his own tomb, what will he find?

What do any of us find?

Will you dare map your life, Ogre, by each dead child left in your wake? You see, I dreamed a dream I cannot tell Rutt, because I love him. I dreamed of a tomb, Ogre, filled with every dead child.

It seems, then, that we are all builders of monuments.

Shrieking, Mappo ran. And ran, leaving a trail of bloody footprints, and on all sides, his reflection. Forever trapped.

Because the memory remains.

 

‘Will you ever tire, Setch, of gloom and doom?'

Sechul Lath glanced across at Errastas. ‘I will, the moment you tire of all that blood on your hands.'

Errastas snarled. ‘And is it your task to ever remind me of it?'

‘To be honest, I don't know. I suppose I could carve out my own eyes, and then bless my newfound blindness—'

‘Do you now mock my wound?'

‘No, forgive me. I was thinking of the poet who one day decided he'd seen too much.'

Behind them, Kilmandaros asked, ‘And did his self-mutilation change the world?'

‘Irrevocably, Mother.'

‘How so?' she asked.

‘Eyes can be hard as armour. They can be hardened to see yet feel nothing, if the will is strong enough. You've seen such eyes, Mother – you as well, Errastas. They lie flat in the sockets, like stone walls. They are capable of witnessing any and every atrocity. Nothing gets in, nothing gets out. Now, that poet, he removed those stones. Tore away the veil, permanently. So what was inside, well, it all poured out.'

‘But, being blinded, nothing that was outside could find a way in.'

‘Indeed, Mother, but by then it was too late. It had to be, if you think about it.'

‘So it poured out,' grumbled Errastas. ‘Then what?'

‘I'd hazard it changed the world.'

‘Not for the better,' Kilmandaros muttered.

‘I have no burning need, Errastas,' said Sechul Lath, ‘to cure the ills of the world. This one or any other.'

‘Yet you observe critically—'

‘If all honest observation ends up sounding critical, is it the honesty you then reject, or the act of observation?'

‘Why not both?'

‘Indeed, why not both? Abyss knows, it's easier that way.'

‘Why do you bother, then?'

‘Errastas, I am left with two choices. I could weep for a reason, or weep for no reason. In the latter we find madness.'

‘And is the former any different?' Kilmandaros asked.

‘Yes. A part of me chooses to believe that if I weep long enough, I'll weep myself out. And then, in the ashes – in the aftermath – will be born something else.'

‘Like what?' Errastas demanded.

Sechul Lath shrugged. ‘Hope.'

‘See this hole in my face, Knuckles? I too weep, but my tears are blood.'

‘My friend, at last you have become the true god of all the living worlds. When you finally stand at the very pinnacle of all creation, we shall raise statues marking your holy wounding, symbol of life's ceaseless suffering.'

‘This I will accept, so long as the blood leaking down my face isn't my own.'

Kilmandaros grunted. ‘No doubt your worshippers will be happy to bleed for you, Errastas, until the Abyss swallows us all.'

‘And I shall possess a thirst to match their generosity.'

‘When we—'

But Kilmandaros's hand suddenly gripped Sechul's shoulder and spun him round. ‘Friends,' she said in a rumble, ‘it is time.'

They faced the way they had come.

From the ridge where they stood, the basin to the west stretched out flat, studded with rocks and tufts of wiry grass, for as far as they could see. But now, under the mid-morning light, the vista had begun to change. Spreading in a vast, curved shadow, the ground was bleaching, all colour draining away. From grey to white, until it seemed that the entire basin was a thing of bone and ash, and in the distance – at the very centre of this blight – the earth had begun to rise.

‘She awakens,' said Kilmandaros.

‘And now,' whispered Errastas, his lone eyes glittering bright, ‘we shall speak of dragons.'

A hill where no hill had been before, lifting to command the horizon, bulging, swelling – a mountain—

They saw it explode, a billowing eruption of earth and stone.

Huge cracks ripped across the basin floor. The entire ridge rippled under them and all three Elder Gods staggered.

BOOK: The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen
2.38Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

His Only Wife by Melissa Brown
Simply Amazing by Hadley Raydeen
Ocean Without End by Kelly Gardiner
Faithful by Louise Bay
Highland Fires by Donna Grant
Shadow Soldier by Kali Argent