The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen (604 page)

BOOK: The Complete Malazan Book of the Fallen
13.98Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Calm. No reason to fear. An accident, and there will be more – it cannot be helped. Best go away now, all of you. Soon, the silence will return, we will have gone past, and before long, this wind will end, and you can begin to rebuild. Peace…please
.

They were not convinced.

The wind paused suddenly, then a gust of heat descended from above.

Flee!
He fashioned images of fire in his mind, drew forth from his own memory scenes of people dying, destruction all around—

The spiders fled. Three heartbeats, and he was alone. Nothing clinging still to his skin, nothing but strands of wiry anchor lines, tattered sheets of web. And, trickling down his back, from the soles of his feet, from his arms: blood.

Damn, I'm torn up bad, I think
. Pain, now, awakening…
everywhere
.
Too much –
Consciousness fled.

From far above: ‘
Bottle!
'

Stirring
…blinking awake. How long had he been hanging here?

‘I'm here, Cuttle! I'm climbing down – not much farther, I think!' Grimacing against the pain, he started working his feet downward – the space was narrow enough, now, that he could straddle the gap. He gasped as he pulled his back clear of the wall.

Something whipped his right shoulder, stinging, hard, and he ducked – then felt the object slide down the right side of his chest. The strap of a harness.

From above: ‘I'm climbing down!'

 

Koryk called behind him, ‘Shard, you still with us?' The man had been gibbering – they'd all discovered an unexpected horror. That of
stopping
. Moving forward had been a tether to sanity, for it had meant that, somewhere ahead, Bottle was still crawling, still finding a way through. When everyone had come to a halt, terror had slipped among them, closing like tentacles around throats, and squeezing.

Shrieks, panicked fighting against immovable, packed stone and brick, hands clawing at feet. Rising into a frenzy.

Then, voices bellowing, calling back – they'd reached a shaft of some kind – they needed rope, belts, harness straps – they were going to climb down.

There was still a way ahead.

Koryk had, through it all, muttered his chant. The Child Death Song, the Seti rite of passage from whelp into adulthood. A ritual that had, for girl and boy alike, included the grave log, the hollowed-out coffin and the night-long internment in a crypt of the bloodline. Buried alive, for the child to die, for the adult to be born. A test against the spirits of madness, the worms that lived in each person, coiled at the base of the skull, wrapped tight about the spine. Worms that were ever eager to awaken, to crawl, gnawing a path into the brain, whispering and laughing or screaming, or both.

He had survived that night. He had defeated the worms.

And that was all he needed, for this. All he needed.

He had heard those worms, eating into soldiers ahead of him, soldiers behind him. Into the children, as the worms raced out to take them as well. For an adult to break under fear – there could be no worse nightmare for the child that witnessed such a thing. For with that was torn away all hope, all faith.

Koryk could save none of them. He could not give them the chant, for they would not know what it meant, and they had never spent a night in a coffin. And he knew, had it gone on much longer, people would start dying, or the madness would devour their minds, completely, permanently, and that would kill everyone else. Everyone.

The worms had retreated, and now all he could hear was weeping – not the broken kind, but the relieved kind – weeping and gibbering. And he knew they could taste it, could taste what those worms had left behind, and they prayed:
not again. No closer, please. Never again
. ‘Corporal Shard?'

‘W-what, damn you?'

‘Limp. How is he? I keep kicking at him, hitting what I think is an arm, but he's not moving. Can you climb ahead, can you check?'

‘He's knocked out.'

‘How did that happen?'

‘I crawled onto him and pounded his head against the floor until he stopped screaming.'

‘You sure he's alive?'

‘Limp? His skull's solid rock, Koryk.'

He heard movement back there, asked, ‘What now?'

‘I'll prove it to you. Give this broke leg a twist—'

Limp shrieked.

‘Glad you're back, soldier,' Shard said.

‘Get away from me, you bastard!'

‘Wasn't me who panicked. Next time you think about panicking, Limp, just remind yourself I'm here, right behind you.'

‘I'm going to kill you someday, Corporal—'

‘As you like. Just don't do it again.'

Koryk thought back to the babbling noises he'd heard from Shard, but said nothing.

More scuffling sounds, then a bundle of rope and leather straps – most of them charred – was pushed into Koryk's hands. He dragged it close, then shoved it out ahead to the small boy huddled behind Tavos Pond. ‘Push it on, lad,' he said.

‘You,' the boy said. ‘I heard you. I listened.'

‘And you was all right, wasn't you?'

‘Yes.'

‘I'll teach it to you. For the next time.'

‘Yes.'

 

Someone had shouted back instructions, cutting through the frenzy of terror, and people had responded, stripping away whatever could be used as a rope. Chilled beneath a gritty layer of sweat, Tarr settled his forehead onto the stones under him, smelling dust mingled with the remnants of his own fear. When the bundle reached him he drew it forward, then struggled out of what was left of his own harness and added it to the pathetic collection.

Now, at least, they had a reason to wait, they weren't stopped because Bottle had run out of places to crawl. Something to hold onto. He prayed it would be enough.

Behind him, Balgrid whispered, ‘I wish we was marching across the desert again. That road, all that space on both sides…'

‘I hear you,' Tarr said. ‘And I also remember how you used to curse it. The dryness, the sun—'

‘Sun, hah! I'm so crisp I'll never fear the sun again. Gods, I'll kneel in prayer before it, I swear it. If freedom was a god, Tarr…

If freedom was a god. Now that's an interesting thought…

 

‘Thank Hood all that screaming's stopped,' Balm said, plucking at whatever was tingling against all his skin, tingling, prickling like some kind of heat rash. Heat rash, that was funny—

‘Sergeant,' Deadsmell said, ‘it was you doing all that screaming.'

‘Quiet, you damned liar. Wasn't me, was the kid ahead of me.'

‘Really? I didn't know he spoke Dal Honese—'

‘I will skewer you, Corporal. Just one more word, I swear it. Gods, I'm itchy all over, like I been rolling in Fool's pollen—'

‘You get that after you been panicking, Sergeant. Fear sweat, it's called. You didn't piss yourself too, did you? I'm smelling—'

‘I got my knife out, Deadsmell. You know that? All I got to do is twist round and you won't be bothering me no more.'

‘You tossed your knife, Sergeant. In the temple—'

‘Fine! I'll kick you to death!'

‘Well, if you do, can you do it before I have to crawl through your puddle?'

 

‘The heat is winning the war,' Corabb said.

‘Aye,' answered Strings behind him, his voice faint, brittle. ‘Here.'

Something was pushed against Corabb's feet. He reached back, and his hand closed on a coil of rope. ‘You were carrying this?'

‘Was wrapped around me. I saw Smiles drop it, outside the temple – it was smouldering, so that's not a surprise…'

As he drew it over him, Corabb felt something wet, sticky on the rope. Blood. ‘You're bleeding out, aren't you?'

‘Just a trickle. I'm fine.'

Corabb crawled forward – there was some space between them and the next soldier, the one named Widdershins. Corabb could have kept up had he been alone back here, but he would not leave the Malazan sergeant behind. Enemy or no, such things were not done.

He had believed them all monsters, cowards and bullies. He had heard that they ate their own dead. But no, they were just people. No different from Corabb himself.
The tyranny lies at the feet of the Empress. These – they're all just soldiers. That's all they are.
Had he gone with Leoman…he would have discovered none of this. He would have held onto his fierce hatred for all Malazans and all things Malazan.

But now…the man behind him was dying. A Falari by birth – just another place conquered by the empire. Dying, and there was no room to get to him, not here, not yet.

‘Here,' he said to Widdershins. ‘Pass this up.'

‘Hood take us, that's real rope!'

‘Aye. Move it along fast now.'

‘Don't order me around, bastard. You're a prisoner. Remember that.'

Corabb crawled back.

The heat was building, devouring the thin streams of cool air sliding up from below. They couldn't lie still for much longer.
We must move on
.

From Strings: ‘Did you say something, Corabb?'

‘No. Nothing much.'

From above came sounds of Cuttle making his way down the makeshift rope, his breath harsh, strained. Bottle reached the rubble-filled base of the fissure. It was solidly plugged. Confused, he ran his hands along both walls. His rat?
Ah, there
– at the bottom of the sheer, vertical wall his left hand plunged into air that swept up and past. An archway. Gods, what kind of building was this? An archway, holding the weight of at least two – maybe three – storeys' worth of stonework. And neither the wall nor the arch had buckled, after all this time.
Maybe the legends are true. Maybe Y'Ghatan was once the first Holy City, the greatest city of all. And when it died, at the Great Slaughter, every building was left standing – not a stone taken. Standing, to be buried by the sands.

He lowered himself to twist feet-first through the archway, almost immediately contacting heaps of something – rubble? – nearly filling the chamber beyond. Rubble that tipped and tilted with clunking sounds, rocked by his kicking feet.

Ahead, his rat roused itself, startled by the loud sounds as Bottle slid into the chamber. Reaching out with his will, he grasped hold of the creature's soul once more. ‘All right, little one. The work begins again…' His voice trailed away.

He was lying on row upon row of urns, stacked so high they were an arm's reach from the chamber's ceiling. Groping with his hands, Bottle found that the tall urns were sealed, capped in iron, the edges and level tops of the metal intricately incised with swirling patterns. The ceramic beneath was smooth to the touch, finely glazed. Hearing Cuttle shouting that he'd reached the base behind him, he crawled in towards the centre of the room. The rat slipped through another archway opposite, and Bottle sensed it clambering down, alighting on a clear, level stone floor, then waddling ahead.

Grasping the rim of one urn's iron cap, he strained to pull it loose. The seal was tight, his efforts eliciting nothing. He twisted the rim to the right – nothing – then the left. A grating sound. He twisted harder. The cap slid, pulled loose from its seal. Crumbled wax fell away. Bottle pulled upward on the lid. When that failed, he resumed twisting it to the left, and quickly realized that the lid was rising, incrementally, with every full turn. Probing fingers discovered a canted, spiralling groove on the rim of the urn, crusted with wax. Two more turns and the iron lid came away.

A pungent, cloying smell arose.

I know that smell…honey. These things are filled with honey.
For how long had they sat here, stored away by people long since dust? He reached down, and almost immediately plunged his hand into the cool, thick contents. A balm against his burns, and now, an answer to the sudden hunger awakening within him.

‘Bottle?'

‘Through here. I'm in a large chamber under the straight wall. Cuttle, there's urns here, hundreds of them. Filled with honey.' He drew his hands free and licked his fingers. ‘Gods, it tastes fresh. When you get in here, salve your burns, Cuttle—'

‘Only if you promise we're not going to crawl through an ant nest anywhere ahead.'

‘No ants down here. What's the count?'

‘We got everybody.'

‘Strings?'

‘Still with us, though the heat's working its way down.'

‘Enough rope and straps, then. Good.'

‘Aye. So long as they hold. Seems Urb's proposing to carry Hellian down. On his back.'

‘Is the next one on their way?'

‘Aye. How do these lids come off?'

‘Turn them, widdershins. And keep turning them.'

Bottle listened as the man worked on one of the lids. ‘Can't be very old, this stuff, to still be fresh.'

Other books

Louisiana Laydown by Jon Sharpe
The Case of the Hooking Bull by John R. Erickson
Burned by Thomas Enger
Fate's Wish by Milly Taiden
Light Shaper by Albert Nothlit
The Iron Woman by Ted Hughes