Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
A sorrowful nod. âThis is a path Hull Beddict has been walking on for a long time. No-one here is surprised, Finadd.'
Brys swallowed, then struggled to speak. âI would haveâ¦thoughtâ¦given that knowledgeâ'
âThat he would have been assassinated?' Ezgara asked. âNo, Brys. His presence is to
our
tactical advantage, not this damned upstart emperor's. We are well aware he is advising the Edur on our manner of waging war, and we mean to make use of that.' The king paused, looked up. âHull's actions in no way impugn you in our eyes, Brys. Be assured of that.'
âThank you, sire.'
And to prove your word, you invite me to this meeting
. âIt is unfortunate that Nifadas failed in his mission. What do we know of this new “upstart” emperor you mentioned?'
âHe has vast magic at his command,' Kuru Qan replied distractedly. âWe can discern little more than that.'
The First Concubine moved from the king's side, seemingly distracted.
âThe most relevant detail for us,' Unnutal Hebaz added, âis that he is in possession of absolute loyalty among the Edur tribes. And, although Hannan Mosag has been usurped, the Warlock King now stands at the emperor's side as his principal adviser.'
Brys was startled by that. âThe Warlock King simply stepped aside? That isâ¦extraordinary.'
The Preda nodded. âSufficient to give us pause. Our forward posts have reported sightings along the frontier. Shadows moving at night.'
âThe wraiths,' the Ceda said, his expression souring. âWe have dealt with them before, of course, and effectively so. None the less, they are an irritant.'
âDo the Tiste Edur have sacred sites?' Nisall asked from where she now stood, close to the far wall. Faces turned towards her. Arms crossed, she shrugged. âSorcery that annihilates those sites might well weaken their hold on these wraiths. Wasn't something similar done to the Nerek and the Tarthenal?'
The Ceda seemed saddened by the suggestion, but he nodded and said, âAn interesting notion, First Concubine. The Edur are very secretive regarding their sacred sites. Although it does appear to be the case that the very ground beneath their villages is sanctified. Thus, when we destroy those villages, the result may well prove more profound than we imagine. This is a relevant consideration. As for the hidden groves and such, we should make use of the various Acquitors who are familiar with that territory.'
âHow soon will the delegation reach the Mouth at Gedry?' Brys asked the Preda.
She nodded towards Kuru Qan. âThe return journey is being hastened. A week, no more.'
Then three days up the river to arrive here
. The war would be well under way by then. âSire, may I ask a question of you?'
âOf course, Brys.'
âWhere is the Queen's Battalion?'
A momentary silence, then the Preda cleared her throat. âIf I may, sireâ¦'
Thin-lipped, the king nodded.
âFinadd, the queen has taken personal command of her forces, along with the Quillas Brigade. She insists on independence in this matter. Accordingly, we are not factoring those assets into our discussion.'
âMy dear wife has always held them to be her own, private army,' Ezgara Diskanar said. âSo be it. Better to have them pursuing her ambitions in the field than here in Letheras.'
âThat being said,' Unnutal Hebaz added, âwe believe they are less than a league south of High Fort, marching northward to meet the Edur in the pass. Her doctrine seems to be one of striking first and striking hard. She will set her mages to clearing the wraiths from her path, which will no doubt be telling enough to eliminate the element of surprise.'
âIs she leading them in person?'
âShe and her retinue departed four days ago,' the king said.
Brys thought back to that time. âThe royal visit to her keep at Dissent?'
âThat was the pretext.'
âThen will Prince Quillas make an effort to join her?'
âMy son has separated his ship from the delegation and now makes for Trate.'
âTo what extent,' Brys asked, âhas her battalion made use of the caches in the region?'
âKnowing her,' the king snapped, âshe's damn near emptied them.'
âWe are hastening to replace the depleted stocks,' Unnutal Hebaz said. âObviously, we are forced to adjust our tactics as a consequence. We will fight defensively, in keeping with our doctrine, and, yes, the Edur will be expecting that. But we will not roll back. We will not retreat. Once engaged, we intend to maintain that contact. This will be, I believe, a brutal warâperhaps the most vicious war we have fought since conquering Bluerose's League of Duchies.'
âNow,' the king said, âI would hear details on the defence of our frontier cities and the Sea of Katter. As well, the disposition of the fleetsâ¦'
Brys found the words that followed drifting into a formless murmur somewhere in the background. He was thinking of his brother, marching with the Tiste Edur to wage war on his homeland. On the kingdom that had so cruelly betrayed him. The queen and the prince would want him, desperatelyâ¦or, at the very least, his head. And through Hull's crimes, they would seek to strike at Brys, at his position as the king's protector. They might well send soldiers to round up Tehol as well, on some fabricated pretext. The added pleasure of avenging financial losses incurred as a result of Tehol's brilliant chaos. They would in fact, waste little time.
Brys needed to warn Tehol.
Â
The Rat Catchers' Guild Chief Investigator sat at a courtyard table beneath torchlight. A small heap of delicate bones sat in the centre of the large plate before her. Within reach was a crystal carafe of white wine. An extra goblet waited in front of the empty chair opposite her.
âYou're not Tehol,' she said as Bugg arrived and sat down. âWhere's Tehol and his immodest trousers?'
âNot here, alas, Chief Investigator, but you can be certain that, wherever they are, they are together.'
âAh, so he has meetings with people more important than me? After all, were he sleeping, he would not be wearing the trousers, would he?'
âI wouldn't know, Rucket. Now, you requested this meeting?'
âWith Tehol.'
âAh, so this was to be romantic?'
She sniffed and took a moment to glare at the only other occupants of this midnight restaurant, a husband and wife clearly not married to each other who
were casting suspicious glances their way, punctuated with close leaning heads and heated whispers. âThis place serves a specific clientele, damn you. What's your name again?'
âBugg.'
âOh yes. I recall being unsurprised the first time it was mentioned. Well, you kept me waiting, you little worm, and what's that smell?'
Bugg withdrew a blackened, wrinkled strip, flat and slightly longer than his hand. âI found an eel in the fish market. Thought I'd make soup for myself and the master.'
âOur financial adviser eats discarded eels?'
âFrugality is a virtue among financiers, Chief Investigator.' He tucked the dried strip back into his shirt. âHow is the wine? May I?'
âWell, why not? Here, care to pick the bones?'
âPossibly. What was it originally?'
âCat, of course.'
âCat. Oh yes, of course. Well, I never liked cats anyway. All those hair balls.' He drew the plate over and perused it to see what was left.
âYou have a fascination for feline genitalia? That's disgusting, although I've heard worse. One of our minor catchers once tried to marry a rat. I myself possess peculiar interests, I freely admit.'
âThat's nice,' Bugg said, popping a vertebra into his mouth to suck out the marrow.
âWell, aren't you curious?'
âNo,' he said around the bone. âShould I be?'
Rucket slowly leaned forward, as if seeing Bugg for the first time. âYouâ¦interest me now. I freely admit it. Do you want to know why?'
âWhy you freely admit it? All right.'
âI'm a very open person, all things considered.'
âWell, I am considering those things, and so consequently admit to being somewhat surprised.'
âThat doesn't surprise me in the least, Bugg. What are you doing later tonight, and what's that insect? There, on your shoulder?'
He pulled the vertebra out and reached for another. âIt's of the two-headed variety. Very rare, for what I imagine are obvious reasons. I thought my master would like to see it.'
âSo you permit it to crawl all over you?'
âThat would take days. It's managed to climb from halfway up my arm to my shoulder and that's taken over a bell.'
âWhat a pathetic creature.'
âI suspect it has difficulty making up its minds.'
âYou're being funny, aren't you? I have a thing for funny people. Why don't you come home with me after you've finished here.'
âAre you sure you don't have any business to discuss with me? Perhaps some news for Tehol?'
âWell, there's a murderous little girl who's undead, and she's been killing lots of people, although less so lately. And Gerun Eberict has been far busier than it would outwardly seem.'
âIndeed? But why would he hide that fact?'
âBecause the killings do not appear to be politically motivated.'
âOh? Then what are his motivations?'
âHard to tell. We think he just likes killing people.'
âWell, how many has he killed this past year?'
âSomewhere between two and three thousand, we think.'
Bugg reached with haste for his goblet. He drank the wine down, then coughed. âErrant take us!'
âSo, are you coming home with me or not? I have this cat-fur rugâ'
âAlas, my dear, I have taken a vow of celibacy.'
âSince when?'
âOh, thousands of yearsâ¦it seems.'
âI am not surprised. But even more intrigued.'
âAh, it's the lure of the unattainable.'
âAre you truly unattainable?'
âExtraordinary, but yes, I am.'
âWhat a terrible loss for womanhood.'
âNow you are being funny.'
âNo, I am being serious, Bugg. I think you are probably a wonderful lover.'
âAye,' he drawled, âthe very oceans heaved. Can we move on to some other subject? You want any more wine? No? Great.' He collected the carafe, then drew a flask from from under his shirt and began the delicate task of pouring the wine into it.
âIs that for your eel soup?'
âIndeed.'
âWhat happens now that I've decided to like you? Not just
like
you, I freely admit, but lust after you, Bugg.'
âI have no idea, Rucket. May I take the rest of these scones?'
âYou certainly may. Would you like me to regurgitate my meal for you as well? I will, you know, for the thought that you will take into you what was previously in meâ'
Bugg was waving both hands in the negative. âPlease, don't put yourself out for me.'
âNo need to look so alarmed. Bodily functions are a wonderful, indeed sensual, thing. Why, the mere blowing clear of a nose is a potential source of ecstasy, once you grasp its phlegmatic allure.'
âI'd best be going, Rucket.' He quickly rose. âHave a nice night, Chief Investigator.' And was gone.
Alone once more, Rucket sighed and leaned back in her chair. âWell,' she sighed contentedly, âit's always been a sure-fire way of getting rid of unwanted company.' She raised her voice. âServant! More wine, please!' That bit about clear
ing the nose was especially good, she decided. She was proud of that one, especially the way, she disguised the sudden nausea generated by her own suggestion.
Any man who'd cook thatâ¦
eel
had surely earned eternal celibacy.
Outside the restaurant, Bugg paused to check the contents of his shirt's many hidden pockets. Flask, eel, cat bones. A successful meeting, after all. Moreover, he was appreciative of her performance.
Tehol might well and truly like this one, I think.
It was worth considering.
He stood for a moment longer, then allowed himself a soft laugh.
In any case, time to head home.
Â
Tehol Beddict studied the three sad, pathetic women positioned variously in the chamber before him: Shand slumped behind the desk, her shaved pate looking dull and smudged; Rissarh lying down on a hard bench as if meditating on discomfort, her red hair spilled out and hanging almost to the floor; and Hejun, sprawled in a padded chair, refilling her pipe's bowl, her face looking sickly and wan. âMy,' Tehol said with a sigh, his hands on his hips, âthis is a tragic scene indeed.'
Shand looked up, bleary-eyed. âOh, it's you.'
âHardly the greeting I was anticipating.' He strode into the room.
âHe's gone,' Hejun said, face twisting as she jabbed a taper into the coals of the three-legged brazier at her side. âAnd it's Shand's fault.'
âAs much yours as mine,' Shand retorted. âAnd don't forget Rissarh!
“Oh, Ublala! Carry me around! Carry me around!”
Talk about excess!'
âUblala's departure is the cause for all this despond?' Tehol shook his head. âMy dears, you did indeed drive him away.' He paused, then added with great pleasure, âBecause none of you was willing to make a
commitment
. A disgusting display of self-serving objectification. Atrocious behaviour by each and every one of you.'
âAll right, all right, Tehol,' Shand muttered. âWe could have been moreâ¦compassionate.'
âRespectful,' Rissarh said.
âYes,' Hejun said. âHow could one not respect Ublala'sâ'
âSee?' Tehol demanded, then flung up his hands. âI am led to despair!'
âYou'll have company here,' Shand said.