Read The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen Online
Authors: Steven Erikson
âHe was to have been your bodyguard. That was the intent. Instead, you abused himâ'
âNo we didn't!' Hejun snapped. âWell, only a little. All in good fun, anyway.'
âAnd now I have to find you a new bodyguard.'
âOh no you don't,' Shand said, sitting straighter. âDon't even think it. We've been corrupted enoughâ'
Tehol's brows rose. âIn any case,' he said, âUblala has now found someone who cares deeply for himâ'
âYou idiot. She's dead. She's incapable of caring.'
âNot true. Or, rather, there's something inside her that does care. A lot. My point is, it's time to get over it. There's work to be done.'
âWe tried following up on that list you gave us. Half those companies don't even exist. You tricked us, Tehol. In fact, we think this whole thing is a lie.'
âWhat an absurd accusation. Granted, I padded the list somewhat, but only because you seemed to need to stay busy. Besides which, you're now rich, right? Wealthy beyond your wildest dreams. My investment advice has been perfect thus far. How many money-lending institutions do you now hold interest in?'
âAll the big ones,' Shand admitted. âBut not controlling interestâ'
âWrong. Forty per cent is sufficient and you've acquired that.'
âHow is forty per cent enough?'
âBecause I hold twenty. Or, if not me, then my agent, Bugg included. We are poised, dear ladies, to loose chaos upon the Tolls.'
He had their attention now, he saw. Even Rissarh sat up. Eyes fixed upon him, eyes in which the gleam of comprehension was dawning. âWhen?' Hejun asked.
âAh, well. That is entirely another matter. There is news on the wind, which, had any of you been in a proper state would already be known to you. It seems, my sweet friend, that Lether is at war.'
âThe Tiste Edur?'
âIndeed.'
âPerfect!' Shand barked, thumping the desktop with a fist. âWe strike now and it'll all come down!'
âLikely,' Tehol said. âAnd also, disastrous. Do you want the Edur to march in and burn everything to the ground?
âWhy not? It's all corrupt anyway!'
âBecause, Shand, bad as it isâand we're all agreed it's badâmatters can get a whole lot worse. If, for example, the Tiste Edur win this war.'
âHold on, Tehol! The plan was to bring about a collapse. But now you're going back on it. You must be a fool to think the Edur would win this war without our help. No one wins against Lether. Never have, never will. But if we strike nowâ¦'
âAll very well, Shand. For myself, however, I am not convinced the Edur will prove ideal conquerors. As I said, what is to stop them from putting every Letherii to the sword, enslaving everyone? What's to stop them from razing every city, every town, every village? It's one thing to bring down an economy, and so trigger a reformation of sorts, reconfiguring of values and all that. It's entirely another to act in a way that exposes the Letherii to genocide.'
âWhy?' Rissarh demanded. âThey've not hesitated at committing genocide of their own, have they? How many Tarthenal villages were burned to the ground? How many children of the Nerek and the Faraed were spitted on spears, how many dragged into slavery?'
âThen you would descend to their level, Rissarh? Why emulate the worst behaviours of a culture, when it is those very behaviours that fill you with horror? Revulsion at babes spitted on spears, so you would do the same in return?' He looked at each of them in turn, but they made no reply. Tehol ran a hand through his hair. âConsider the opposite. A hypothetical situation, if you will. Letheras declares a war in the name of liberty and would therefore assert the right of the moral high ground. How would you respond?'
âWith disgust,' Hejun said, relighting her pipe, face disappearing behind blue clouds.
âWhy?'
âBecause it's not liberty they want, not the kind of liberty that serves the people in question. Instead, it's the freedom of Letherii business interests to profit from those people.'
âAnd if they act to prevent genocide and tyranny, Hejun?'
âThen no moral high ground at all, for they have committed their own acts of genocide. As for tyranny, tyrannies are only reprehensible to the Letherii when they do not operate in collusion with Letherii business interests. And, by that definition, they make their claims of honour suspect to everyone else.'
âAll very well. Now, I have considered each and every one of those arguments. And could only conclude one thing: the Letherii, in that situation, are damned if they do and damned if they don't. In other words, the issue is one of trust. In the past lies the evidence leading one to mistrust. In the present may be seen efforts to reacquire trust, whilst in the future awaits the proof of either one or the other.'
âThis is a hypothetical situation, Tehol,' Shand said wearily. âWhat is your point?'
âMy point is, nothing is as simple as it might at first seem. And paradigms rarely shift through an act of will. They change as a consequence of chaos, in stumbling over a threshold, and all that is most reprehensible in our nature waits in the wings, eager to invade and so give shape to the reforging of order. It falls to every one of us to be mindfull.'
âWhat in the Errant's name are you talking about?' Shand demanded.
âWhat I am saying, Shand, is that we cannot in good conscience trigger a collapse of the Letherii economy right now. Not until we determine how this war is going to play out.'
âGood conscience? Who cares about that? Our motive was
revenge
. The Letherii are poised to annihilate yet another people. And I want to
get them
!'
âDo not dismiss the Tiste Edur just yet, Shand. Our priority right now must be the secret evacuation of destitute and Indebted Nerek, Faraed and Tarthenal. Out to the islands. To my islands. The rest can wait, should wait, and will wait. Until I say otherwise.'
âYou're betraying us.'
âNo, I'm not. Nor am I having second thoughts. I am not blind to the underlying motives of greed upon which my civilization is founded, for all its claims of righteous destiny and unassailable integrity.'
âWhat makes you think,' Hejun asked, âthe Tiste Edur might succeed where everyone else has failed?'
âSucceed? That word makes me uneasy. Might they prove a difficult and at times devastating enemy? I think they will. Their civilization is old, Hejun. Far older than ours. Their golden age was long, long ago. They exist now in a state of fear, seeing the influence and material imposition of Letheras as a threat, as a kind of ongoing unofficial war of cultures. To the Edur, Lether is a poison, a corrupting influence, and in reaction to that the Edur have become a people en
trenched and belligerent. In disgust at what they see ahead of them, they have turned their backs and dream only of what lay behind them. They dream of a return to past glories. Even could the Letherii offer a helping hand, they would view it as an invitation to surrender, and their pride will not permit that. Or, conversely, that hand represents an attack on all they hold dear, and so they will cut it and dance in the blood. The worst scenario I can imagine, for the Edur, is if they win this war. If they somehow conquer us and become occupiers.'
âWon't happen, and what if it did? They couldn't be worse.'
Tehol studied Hejun briefly, then he shrugged. âAll of this awaits resolution. In the meantime, remain vigilant. There are still things that need doing. What happened to that Nerek mother and her children I sent you?'
âWe shipped them to the islands,' Shand said. âThey ate more than she cooked. Started getting fat. It was all very sad.'
âWell, it's late and I'm hungry, so I will take my leave now.'
âWhat about Ublala?' Rissarh demanded.
âWhat about him?'
âWe want him back.'
âToo late, I'm afraid. That's what happens when you won't commit.'
Tehol quickly made his way out.
Walking the quiet streets back to his abode, Tehol considered his earlier words. He had to admit to himself that he was troubled. There was sufficient mystery in some of the rumours to suggest that the impending war would not be like all the others Letherii had waged. A collision of wills and desires, and beneath it a host of dubious assumptions and suspect sentiments. In that alone, no different from any other war. But in this case, the outcome was far from certain, and even the notion of victory seemed confused and elusive.
He passed through Burl Square and came to the entrance to the warehouse storage area, beyond which was the alley leading to his home. Pausing to push up his lopsided sleeves and cinch tight his trousers, he frowned. Was he losing weight? Hard to know. Wool stretched, after all.
A figure stepped from the nearby shadows of an alley mouth. âYou're late.'
Tehol started, then said, âFor what?'
Shurq Elalle came to within two paces of him. âI've been waiting. Bugg made soup. Where have you been?'
âWhat are you doing out?' Tehol asked. âYou're supposed to be holed up right now. This is dangerousâ'
âI needed to talk to you,' she cut in. âIt's about Harlest.'
âWhat about him?'
âHe wants his sharp teeth and talons. It's all we ever hear. Fangs and talons, fangs and talons. We're sick of it. Where's Selush? Why haven't you made arrangements? You're treating us like corpses, but even the dead have needs, you know.'
âWell, no, I didn't know that. In any case, tell Harlest that Selush is working on this, probably right now in fact. Sharp solutions are forthcoming.'
âDon't make me laugh.'
âSorry. Are you in need of a refill?'
âA what?'
âWell, uh, more herbs and stuff, I mean.'
âI don't know. Am I? Do I smell or something?'
âNo. Only of sweet things, Shurq. I assure you.'
âI am less inspired by your assurances as time goes on, Tehol Beddict.'
âWhat a terrible thing to say! Have we stumbled yet?'
âWhen is Gerun Eberict returning?'
âSoon, it turns out. Things should get exciting then.'
âI am capable of excitement regarding one thing and one thing only, and that has nothing to do with Gerun Eberict. However, I want to steal again. Anything, from whomever. Point me in a direction. Any direction.'
âWell, there is of course the Tolls Repository. But that's impregnable, obviously. Or, let's see, the royal vaults, but again, impossible.'
âThe Tolls. Yes, that sounds challenging.'
âYou won't succeed, Shurq. No-one ever has, and that includes Green Pig who was a sorceror nearly to rival the Ceda himselfâ'
âI knew Green Pig. He suffered from overconfidence.'
âAnd was torn limb from limb as a result.'
âWhat do you want stolen from the Tolls Repository?'
âShurqâ'
âWhat?'
Tehol glanced round. âAll right. I want to find out which lender holds the largest royal debt. The king has been borrowing prodigiously, and not just to finance the Eternal Domicile. So, who and how much. Same for Queen Janall. And whatever she's done in her son's name.'
âIs that all? No gold? No diamonds?'
âThat's right. No gold, no diamonds, and no evidence left behind that anyone was ever in there.'
âI can do that.'
âNo you can't. You'll get caught. And dismembered.'
âOh, that will hurt.'
âMaybe not, but it'll prove inconvenient.'
âI won't get caught, Tehol Beddict. Now, what did you want from the royal vaults?'
âA tally.'
âYou want to know the present state of the treasury.'
âYes.'
âI can do that.'
âNo you can't.'
âWhy not?'
âBecause you'll have been dismembered by then.'
âThus permitting me to slip into places where I otherwise wouldn't fit.'
âShurq, they take your head off too, you know. It's the last thing they do.'
âReally? That's barbaric.'
âLike I said, you would be greatly inconvenienced.'
âI would at that. Well, I shall endeavour to be careful. Mind you, even a head can count.'
âWhat would you have me do, break in and lob your head into the vaults? Tied to a rope so I can pull you out again when you're done?'
âThat sounds somewhat problematic.'
âIt does, doesn't it?'
âCan't you plan any better than that, Tehol Beddict? My faith in you is fast diminishing.'
âCan't be helped, I suppose. What's this I hear about you purchasing a seagoing vessel?'
âThat was supposed to be a secret. Bugg said he wouldn't tellâ'
âHe didn't. I have my own sources of intelligence, especially when the owner of the vessel just sold happens to be me. Indirectly, of course.'
âAll right. Me and Ublala and Harlest, we want to be pirates.'
âDon't make me laugh, Shurq.'
âNow you're being cruel.'
âSorry. Pirates, you say. Well, all three of you are notoriously hard to drown. Might work at that.'
âYour confidence and well-wishing overwhelms me.'
âAnd when do you plan on embarking on this new venture?'
âWhen you're done with us, of course.'
Tehol tugged up his trousers again. âYet another edifying conversation with you, Shurq. Now, I smell something that might well be soup, and you need to go back to your crypt.'
âSometimes I really hate you.'
Â
He led her by the hand down the shallow, crumbling steps. She liked these journeys, even though the places he took her were strange and oftenâ¦disturbing. This time, they descended an inverted stepped pyramidâat least that was what he called it. Four sides to the vast, funnelled pit, and at the base there was a small square of darkness.