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Book
Information:
Genre:
Epic Fantasy
Author:
R. Scott Bakker
Name:
Warrior-Prophet
Series:
Book Two of The Prince of Nothing
====================== Warrior-Prophet
Book Two of The
Prince of Nothing
By R. Scott Bakker What Has Come Before The First Apocalypse
destroyed the great Norsirai nations of the North. Only the South, the Ketyai
nations of the ThreeSeas, survived the onslaught of the No-God,
Mog-Pharau, and his Consult of generals and magi- The years passed, and the Men
of the ThreeSeas forgot, as Men inevitably do, the
horrors endured by their fathers. Empires rose and empires
fell: Kyraneas, Shir, Cenei. The Latter Prophet, Inri Sejenus, reinterpreted
the Tusk, the holiest of artifacts, and within a few centuries the faith of
Inrithism, organized and administered by the Thousand Temples and its spiritual
leader, the Shriah, came to dominate the entire ThreeSeas.
The great sorcerous Schools, such as the Scarlet Spires, the Imperial Saik, and
the Mysunsai, arose in response to the Inrithi persecution of the Few, those
possessing the ability to see and work sorcery. Using Chorae, ancient artifacts
that render their bearers immune to sorcery, the Inrithi warred against the
Schools, attempting, unsuccessfully, to purify the ThreeSeas.
Then Fane, the Prophet of the Solitary God, united the Kianene, the desert
peoples of the southwestern ThreeSeas, and declared war against the Tusk and the ThousandTemples. After centuries and several
jihads, the Fanim and their eyeless sorcerer-priests, the Cishaurim, conquered
nearly all the western ThreeSeas, including the holy city of Shimeh, the birthplace of Inri Sejenus. Only
the moribund remnants of the Nansur Empire continued to resist them. Now war and strife rule
the South. The two great faiths of Inrithism and Fanimry continually skirmish,
though trade and pilgrimage are tolerated when commercially convenient. The
great families and nations vie for military and mercantile dominance. The minor
and major Schools squabble and plot, particularly against the upstart
Cishaurim, whose sorcery, the Psukhe, the Schoolmen cannot distinguish from the
God’s own world. And the Thousand Temples pursue earthly ambitions under the
leadership of corrupt and ineffectual Shriahs. The First Apocalypse has
become little more than legend. Th Consult, which had survived the death of
Mog-Pharau, has dwindled into myth, something old wives tell small children.
After two thousand years, only the Schoolmen of the Mandate, who relive the
Apocalyps each night through the eyes of their ancient founder, Seswatha,
recall the horror and the prophecies of the No-God’s return. Though the mighty
and the learned consider them fools, their possession of the Gnosis, the
sorcery of the Ancient North, commands respect and mortal envy. Driven by
nightmares, they wander the labyrinths of power, scouring the ThreeSeas
for signs of their ancient and implacable foe—the Consult. And as always, they find
nothing. The Holy War is the name
of the great host called by Maithanet, the leader of the Thousand Temples, to
liberate Shimeh from the heathen Fanim of Kian. Word of Maithanet’s call
spreads across the ThreeSeas, and faithful from all the great Inrithi
nations—Galeoth, Thunyerus, Ce Tydonn, Conriya, High Ainon and their
tributaries—travel to the city of Momemn,
the capital of the Nansur Empire, to become Men of the Tusk. Almost from the outset,
the gathering host is mired in politics and controversy. First, Maithanet
somehow convinces the Scarlet Spires, the most powerful of the sorcerous
Schools, to join his Holy War. Despite the outrage this provokes—sorcery is
anathema to the Inrithi—the Men of the Tusk realize they need the Scarlet
Spires to counter the heathen Cishaurim, the sorcerer-priests of the Fanim. The
Holy War would be doomed without one of the Major Schools. The question is why
the Scarlet Schoolmen would agree to such a perilous arrangement. Unknown to
most, Eleazaras, the Grandmaster of the Scarlet Spires, has waged a long and
secret war against the Cishaurim, who for no apparent reason assassinated his
predecessor, Sasheoka, ten years previous. Second, Ikurei Xerius
III, the Emperor of Nansur, hatches an intricate plot to usurp the Holy War for
his own ends. Much of what is now heathen Kian once belonged to the Nansur, and
recovering the Empire’s lost provinces is Xerius’s most fervent desire. Since
the Holy War gathers in the Nansur Empire, it can march only if provisioned by
the Emperor, hing he refuses to do
until every leader of the Holy War signs his 10re>a
written oath to cede all lands conquered to him. Of course, the first
caste-nobles to arrive repudiate the Indenture, and letnate ensues. As the Holy
War’s numbers swell into the hundreds of sands, however, the titular leaders of
the host begin to grow restless, e they war in the God’s name, they think
themselves invincible, and result see little reason to share the glory with
those yet to arrive. A Tonriyan noble named Nersei Calmemunis comes to an
accommodation ith the Emperor, and convinces his fellows to sign the Imperial
Indenture. Once provisioned, most of those gathered march, even though their
lords and a greater part of the Holy War have yet to arrive. Because the host
consists primarily of lordless rabble, it comes to be called the Vulgar Holy War. Despite Maithanet’s
attempts to bring the makeshift host to heel, it continues marching southward,
and passes into heathen lands, where— precisely as the Emperor had planned—the
Fanim destroy it utterly. Xerius knows that in
military terms the loss of the Vulgar Holy War is insignificant, since the
rabble that largely constituted it would have proven more a liability than an
advantage in battle. In political terms, however, the Vulgar Holy War’s
destruction is invaluable, because it has shown Maithanet and the Men of the
Tusk the true mettle of their adversary. The Fanim, as the Nansur well know,
are not to be trifled with, even with the God’s favour. Only an outstanding
general, Xerius claims, can assure the Holy War’s victory—a man like his
nephew, Ikurei Conphas, who after his recent victory over the dread Scylvendi
at the Battle of Kiyuth has been hailed as the greatest tactician of his age.
The leaders of the Holy War need only sign the Imperial Indenture and Conphas’s
preternatural skill and insight will be theirs. Maithanet, it seems, now
finds himself in a dilemma. As Shriah, he can compel the Emperor to provision
the Holy War, but he cannot compel him to send Ikurei Conphas, his only living
heir. In the midst of this controversy arrive the first truly great Inrithi
potentates of the Holy War: Prince Nersei Proyas of Conriya, Prince Coithus
Saubon of Galeoth, Earl Hoga Gothyelk of Ce Tydonn, and King-Regent
Chepheramunni of High Ainon. The Holy War amasses new strength, though it
remains in effect a hostage, bound by the scarcity of food to the walls of
Momemn and the Emperor’s
granaries. To a man, the caste-nobles repudiate Xerius’s Indenture and demand
that he provision them. The Men of the Tusk begin raiding the surrounding
countryside. In retaliation, the Emperor calls in elements of the Imperial
Army. Pitched battles are fought. In an effort to forestall
disaster Maithanet calls a Council of Great and Lesser Names, and all the
leaders of the Holy War gather in the Emperor’s palace, the AndiamineHeights,
to make their arguments. Here Nersei Proyas shocks the assembly by offering a
many-scarred Scylvendi Chieftain, a veteran of past wars against the Fanim, as
a surrogate for the famed Ikurei Conphas. The Scylvendi, Cnaьir urs Skiotha,
shares hard words with both the Emperor and his nephew, and the leaders of the
Holy War are impressed. The Shriah’s Envoy, however, remains undecided: the
Scylvendi are as apostate as the Fanim, after all. Only the wise words of
Prince Anasurimbor Kellhus of Atrithau settle the matter. The Envoy reads the
decree demanding that the Emperor, under pain of Shrial Censure, provision the
Men of the Tusk. The Holy War will march. Drusas Achamian is a sorcerer sent by the School of Mandate to investigate Maithanet and his
Holy War. Though he no longer believes in his School’s ancient mission, he
travels to Sumna, where the Thousand Temples is based, in the hopes of learning
more about the mysterious Shriah, whom the Mandate fears could be an agent of
the Consult. In the course of his probe, he resumes an old love affair with a
harlot named Esmenet, and despite his misgivings, he recruits a former student
of his, a Shrial Priest named Inrau, to report on Maithanet’s activities.
During this time, his nightmares of the Apocalypse intensify, particularly
those involving the so-called “Celmomian Prophecy,” which foretells the return
of a descendant of Anasurimbor Celmomas before the Second Apocalypse. Then Inrau dies under
mysterious circumstances. Overcome by guilt and heartbroken by Esmenet’s
refusal to cease taking custom, Achamian flees Sumna and travels to Momemn,
where the Holy War gathers under the Emperor’s covetous and uneasy eyes. A
powerful rival of the Mandate, a School called the Scarlet Spires, has joined the
Holy War to prosecute their long contest with the sorcerer-priests of the
Cishaurim, who residein Shimeh. Nautzera, Achamian’s Mandate handler, has ordered him to
observe them and the Holy War. When he reaches the encampment, Achamian joins
the fire of Xinemus, an old friend of his from Conriya. Pursuing his
investigation of Inrau’s death, Achamian convinces Xinemus to take him to see
another old student of his, Prince Nersei Proyas of Conriya, who’s become a
confidant of the enigmatic Shriah. When Proyas scoffs at his suspicions and
repudiates him as a blasphemer, Achamian implores him to write Maithanet
regarding the circumstances of Inrau’s death. Embittered, Achamian leaves his
old student’s pavilion certain his meagre request will go unfulfilled. Then a man hailing from
the distant north arrives—a man calling himself Anasurimbor Kellhus. Battered by his recurrent dreams of the
Apocalypse, Achamian finds himself fearing the worst: the Second Apocalypse. Is
Kellhus’s arrival a mere coincidence, or is he the Harbinger foretold in the
Celmomian Prophecy? Achamian questions the man, only to find himself utterly
disarmed by his humour, honesty, and intellect. They talk history and
philosophy long into the night, and before retiring, Kellhus asks Achamian to
be his teacher. Inexplicably awed and affected by the stranger, Achamian
agrees. But he finds himself in a
dilemma. The reappearance of an Anasurimbor is something the School of Mandate
simply has to know: few discoveries could be more significant. But he fears
what his brother Schoolmen will do: a lifetime of dreaming horrors, he knows,
has made them cruel and pitiless. And he blames them, moreover, for the death
of Inrau. Before he can resolve
this dilemma, Achamian is summoned by the Emperor’s nephew, Ikurei Conphas, to
the ImperialPalace in Momemn, where the Emperor
wants him to assess a highly placed adviser of his—an old man called Skeaos—for
the Mark of sorcery. The Emperor himself, Ikurei Xerius III, brings Achamian to
Skeaos, demanding to know whether the old man bears the blasphemous taint of
sorcery. Achamian sees nothing amiss. Skeaos, however, sees
something in Achamian. He begins writhing against his chains, speaking a tongue
from Achamian’s ancient dreams. Impossibly, the old man breaks free, killing
several before being burned by the Emperor’s sorcerers. Dumbfounded, Achamian
confronts the howling Skeaos, only to watch
horrified as his face peels apart and opens into scorched limbs ... The abomination before
him, he realizes, is a Consult
spy, one that
can mimic and replace others without bearing sorcery’s telltale Mark. A
skin-spy. Achamian flees the palace without warning the Emperor and his court,
knowing they would think his conviction nonsense. For them, Skeaos can only be
an artifact of the heathen Cishaurim, whose art also bears no Mark. Senseless
to his surroundings, Achamian wanders back to Xinemus’s camp, so absorbed by
his horror that he fails to see or hear Esmenet, who has come to rejoin him at
long last. The mysteries surrounding
Maithanet. The coming of Anasurimbor Kellhus. The discovery of the first
Consult spy in generations… How can he doubt it any longer? The Second
Apocalypse is about to begin. Alone in his humble tent,
he weeps, overcome by loneliness, dread, and remorse. Esmenet is a Sumni
prostitute who mourns both her life and her daughter. When Achamian arrives on
his mission to learn more about Maithanet, she readily takes him in. During
this time, she continues to take and service her customers, knowing full well
the pain this causes Achamian. But she really has no choice: sooner or later,
she realizes, Achamian will be called away. And yet she falls ever deeper in
love with the hapless sorcerer, in part because of the respect he accords her and
in part because of the worldly nature of his work. Though her sex has condemned
her to sit half’naked in her window, the world beyond has always been her
passion. The intrigues of the Great Factions, the machinations of the Consult:
these are the things that quicken her soul! Then disaster strikes:
Achamian’s informant, Inrau, is murdered, and the bereaved Schoolman is forced
to travel to Momemn. Esmenet begs him to take her with him, but he refuses, and
she finds herself once again marooned in her old life. Not long after, a
threatening stranger comes to her room, demanding to know everything about
Achamian. Twisting her desire against her, the man ravishes her, and Esmenet
finds herself answering all his questions. Come morning he vanishes as suddenly
as he appears, leaving only pools of black seed to mark his passing. Horrified, Esmenet flees
Sumna, determined to find Achamian and tell him what happened. In her bones she
knows the stranger is somehow connected to the Consult. On her way to Momemn
she pauses in a village, hoping to find someone to repair her broken sandal.
When the villagers recognize the whore’s tattoo on her hand they begin stoning
her—the punishment the Tusk demands of prostitutes. Only the sudden appearance
of a Shrial Knight named Sarcellus saves her, and she has the satisfaction of
watching her tormentors humbled. Sarcellus takes her the rest of the way to
Momemn, and Esmenet finds herself growing more and more infatuated with his
wealth and aristocratic manner. He seems so free of the melancholy and
indecision that plague Achamian. Once they reach the Holy
War, Esmenet stays with Sarcellus, even though she knows Achamian is only miles
away. As the Shrial Knight continually reminds her, Schoolmen such as Achamian
are forbidden to take wives. If she were to run to him, he says, it would be
only a matter of time before he abandoned her again. Weeks pass, and she finds
herself esteeming Sarcellus less and pining for Achamian more and more.
Finally, on the night before the Holy War is to march, she sets off in search
of the portly sorcerer, determined to tell him everything that has happened.
After a harrowing search she finally locates Xinemus’s camp, only to find
herself too ashamed to make her presence known. She hides in the darkness
instead, waiting for Achamian to appear, and wondering at the strange
collection of men and women about the fire. When dawn arrives without any sign
of Achamian, Esmenet wanders across the abandoned site, only to see him
trudging toward her. She holds out her arms to him, weeping with joy and
sorrow… And he simply walks past
her as though she were a stranger. Heartbroken, she flees,
determined to make her own way in the Holy War. Cnaiur urs Skiotha is a Chieftain of the Utemot, a
tribe of Scylvendi, who are feared across the ThreeSeas
for their skill and ferocity in war. Because of the events surrounding the
death of his father, Skiotha, thirty years previous, Cnaiur is despised by his
own people, though none dare challenge him because of his savage strength and
his cunning in war. Word arrives that the Emperor’s nephew, Ikurei Conphas, has
invaded the Holy Steppe, and Cnaьir
rides with the Utemot to join the Scylvendi horde on the distant Imperial
frontier. Knowing Conphas’s reputation, Cnaьir senses a trap, but his warnings
go unheeded by Xunnurit, the chieftain elected King-of-Tribes for the coming
battle. Cnaьir can only watch as the disaster unfolds. Escaping the horde’s
destruction, Cnaьir returns to the pastures of the Utemot more anguished than
ever. He flees the whispers and the looks of his fellow tribesmen and rides to
the graves of his ancestors, where he finds a grievously wounded man sitting
upon his dead father’s barrow, surrounded by circles of dead Sranc. Warily
approaching, Cnaьir night-marishly realizes that he recognizes the man—or almost recognizes him. He resembles
Anasurimbor Moenghus in almost every respect, save that he is too young… Moenghus had been
captured thirty years previous, when Cnaьir was little more than a stripling,
and given to Cnaьir’s father as a slave. He claimed to be Dunyain, a people
possessed of an extraordinary wisdom, and Cnaьir spent many hours with him,
speaking of things forbidden to Scylvendi warriors. What happened afterward—the
seduction, the murder of Skiotha, and Moenghus’s subsequent escape—has
tormented Cnaьir ever since. Though he once loved the man, he now hates him
with a deranged intensity. If only he could kill Moenghus, he believes, his
heart could be made whole. Now, impossibly, this
double has come to him, travelling the same path as the original. Realizing the stranger
could make possible his vengeance, Cnaьir takes him captive. The man, who calls
himself Anasurimbor Kellhus, claims to be Moenghus’s son. The Dunyain, he says,
have sent him to assassinate his father in a faraway city called Shimeh. But as
much as Cnaьir wants to believe this story, he’s wary and troubled. After years
of obsessively pondering Moenghus, he’s come to understand that the Dunyain are
gifted with preternatural skills and intelligence. Their sole purpose, he now
knows, is domination, though where others use force and fear, the Dunyan use
deceit and love. The story Kellhus has
told him, Cnaьir realizes, is precisely the story a Dunyain seeking escape and
safe passage across Scylvendi lands would provide. Nevertheless, he makes a
bargain with the man, agreeing toaccompany him on his quest. The two strike out across
the Steppe, locked in a shadowy war of word and passion. Time and again Cnaьir
finds himself drawn into Kellhus’s insidious nets, only to recall himself at
the last moment. Only his hatred of Moenghus and knowledge of the Dunyain
preserve him. Near the Imperial
frontier they encounter a party of hostile Scylvendi raiders. Kellhus’s
unearthly skill in battle both astounds and terrifies Cnaьir. In the battle’s
aftermath they find a captive concubine, a woman named Serwe‘, cowering among
the raiders’ chattel. Struck by her beauty, Cnaьir takes her as his prize, and
through her he learns of Maithanet’s Holy War for Shimeh, the city where
Moenghus supposedly dwells… Can this be a coincidence? Coincidence or not, the
Holy War forces Cnaьir to reconsider his original plan to travel around the
Empire, where his Scylvendi heritage will mean almost certain death. With the
Fanim rulers of Shimeh girding for war, the only possible way they can reach
the holy city is to become Men of the Tusk. They have no choice, he realizes,
but to join the Holy War, which according to Serwe, gathers about the city of Momemn in the heart of
the Empire—the one place he cannot go. Now that they have safely crossed the
Steppe, Cnaьir is convinced Kellhus will kill him: the Dunyain brook no
liabilities. Descending the mountains
into the Empire, Cnaьir confronts Kellhus, who claims he has use of him still.
While Serwe watches in horror, the two men battle on the mountainous heights,
and though Cnaьir is able to surprise Kellhus, the man easily overpowers him,
holding him by the throat over a precipice. To prove his intent to keep their
bargain, he spares Cnaьir’s life. After so many years among world-born men,
Kellhus claims, Moenghus will be far too powerful for him to face alone. They
will need an army, he says, and unlike Cnaьir he knows nothing of war. Despite his misgivings,
Cnaьir believes him, and they resume their journey. As the days pass, Cnaьir
watches Serwe become more and more infatuated with Kellhus. Though troubled by
this, he refuses to admit as much, reminding himself that warriors care nothing
for women, particularly those taken as the spoils of battle. What does it
matter that she belongs to Kellhus during the day? She is Cnaьir’s at night. After a desperate journey
and pursuit through the heart of the Empire, they at last find their way to
Momemn and the Holy War, where they are taken before one of the Holy War’s
leaders, a Conriyan Prince named Nersei Proyas. In keeping with their plan,
Cnaiur claims to be the last of the Utemot, travelling with Anasurimbor Kellhus,
a Prince of the northern city of Atrithau,
who has dreamt of the Holy War from afar. Proyas, however, is far more
interested in Cnaьir’s knowledge of the Fanim and their way of battle.
Obviously impressed by what he has to say, the Conriyan Prince takes Cnaiur and
his companions under his protection. Soon afterward, Proyas takes Cnaiur and
Kellhus to a meeting of the Holy War’s leaders and the Emperor, where the fate
of the Holy War is to be decided. Ikurei Xerius III has refused to provision
the Men of the Tusk unless they swear to return all the lands they wrest from
the Fanim to the Empire. The Shriah, Maithanet, can force the Emperor to
provision them, but he fears the Holy War lacks the leadership to overcome the
Fanim. The Emperor offers his brilliant nephew, Ikurei Conphas, flush from his
spectacular victory over the Scylvendi at Kiyuth, but only—once again—if the
leaders of the Holy War pledge to surrender their future conquests. In a daring
gambit, Proyas offers Cnaiur in Conphas’s stead. A vicious war
of words ensues, and Cnaiur manages to best the precocious Imperial Nephew. The
Shriah’s representative orders the Emperor to provision the Men of the Tusk.
The Holy War will march. In a mere matter of days,
Cnaiur has gone from a fugitive to a leader of the greatest host ever assembled
in the ThreeSeas. What does it mean for a Scylvendi
to treat with outland princes, with peoples he is sworn to destroy? What must
he surrender to see his vengeance through? That night, he watches
Serwe surrender to Kellhus body and soul, and he wonders at the horror he has
delivered to the Holy War. What will Anasurimbor Kellhus—a Dunyain—make of
these Men of the Tusk? No matter, he tells himself, the Holy War marches to
distant Shimeh—to Moenghus and the promise of blood. Anasurimbor Kellhus is a monk sent by his order, the
Dunyain, to search for his father, Anasurimbor Moenghus. Since discovering the
secret redoubt of the Kunьiric High Kings during the Apocalypse some two
thousand years previous, the Dunyainhave concealed
themselves, breeding for reflex and intellect, and continually training in the
ways of limb, thought, and face—all for the sake of reason, the sacred Logos.
In the effort to transform themselves into the perfect expression of the Logos,
the Dunyain have bent their entire existence to mastering the irrationalities
that determine human thought: history, custom, and passion. In this way, they
believe, they will eventually grasp what they call the Absolute, and so become
true self-moving souls. But their glorious
isolation is at an end. After thirty years of exile, one of their number,
Anasurimbor Moenghus, has reappeared in their dreams, demanding they send to
him his son. Knowing only that his father dwells in a distant city called
Shimeh, Kellhus undertakes an arduous journey through lands long abandoned by
men. While wintering with a trapper named Leweth, he discovers he can read the
man’s thoughts through the nuances of his expression. World-born men, he
realizes, are little more than children in comparison with the Dunyain.
Experimenting, he finds that he can exact anything from Leweth—any love, any
sacrifice—with mere words. So what of his father, who has spent thirty years
among such men? What is the extent of Anasurimbor Moenghus’s power? When a band of inhuman
Sranc discovers Leweth’s steading, the two men are forced to flee. Leweth is
wounded, and Kellhus leaves him for the Sranc, feeling no remorse. The Sranc
overtake him, and after driving them away, he battles their leader, a deranged
Nonman, who nearly undoes him with sorcery.
Kellhus flees, wracked by questions without answers: sorcery, he’d been taught,
was nothing more than superstition. Could the Dunyain have been wrong? What
other facts had they overlooked or suppressed? Eventually he finds
refuge in the ancient city of Atrithau,
where, using his Dunyain abilities, he assembles an expedition to traverse the
Sranc-infested plains of Suskara. After a harrowing trek, he crosses the
frontier only to be captured by a mad Scylvendi Chieftain named Cnaiur urs
Skiotha—a man who both knows and hates his father, Moenghus. Though his knowledge of
the Dunyain renders Cnaiur immune to direct manipulation, Kellhus quickly
realizes he can turn the man’s thirst for vengeance to his advantage. Claiming
to be an assassin sent to murder Moenghus, he asks the Scylvendi to join him on
his quest. Overpowered by his hatred, Cnaьir reluctantly agrees, and the two
men set out across the Jьinati Steppe. Time and again, Kellhus tries to secure
the trust he needs to possess the man, but the barbarian continually rebuffs
him. His hatred and penetration are too great. Then, near the Imperial
frontier, they find a concubine named Serwe, who informs them of a Holy War
gathering about Momemn—a Holy War for Shimeh.
The fact that his father has summoned him to Shimeh at the same time, Kellhus
realizes, can be no coincidence. But what could Moenghus be planning? They cross the mountains
into the Empire, and Kellhus watches Cnaьir struggle with the growing
conviction that he’s outlived his usefulness. Thinking that murdering Kellhus
is as close as he’ll ever come to murdering Moenghus, Cnaьir attacks him, only
to be defeated. To prove that he still needs him, Kellhus spares his life. He
must, Kellhus knows, dominate the Holy War, but he as yet knows nothing of
warfare. The variables are too many. Though his knowledge of
Moenghus and the Dьnyain renders him a liability, Cnaьir’s skill in war makes
him invaluable. To secure this knowledge, Kellhus starts seducing Serwe, using
her and her beauty as detours to the barbarian’s tormented heart. Once in the Empire, they
stumble across a patrol of Imperial cavalry-men; their journey to Momemn
quickly becomes a desperate race. When they finally reach the encamped Holy War
they find themselves before Nersei Proyas, the Crown Prince of Conriya. To
secure a position of honour among the Men of the Tusk, Kellhus lies, and claims
to be a Prince of Atrithau. To lay the groundwork for his future domination, he
claims to have suffered dreams of the Holy War—implying, without saying as
much, that they were godsent. Since Proyas is more concerned with Cnaьir and
how he can use the barbarian’s knowledge of battle to thwart the Emperor, these
declarations are accepted without any real scrutiny. Only the Mandate Schoolman
accompanying Proyas, Drusas Achamian, seems troubled by him—especially by his
name. The following evening,
Kellhus dines with the sorcerer, disarming him with humour, flattering him with
questions. He learns of the Apocalypse and the Consult and many other sundry
things, and though he knows Achamian harbours some terror regarding the name
“Anasurimbor,” heasks the melancholy man to become his teacher. The Dunyain, Kellhus has
come to realize, have been mistaken about many things, the existence of sorcery
among them. There is so much he must know before he confronts his father… A final gathering is
called to settle the issue between the lords of the Holy War, who want to
march, and the Emperor, who refuses to provision them. With Cnaьir at his side,
Kellhus charts the souls of all those present, calculating the ways he might
bring them under his thrall. Among the Emperor’s advisers, however, he observes
an expression he cannot read. The man, he realizes, possesses a false face. While Ikurei Conphas and the Inrithi caste-nobles
bicker, Kellhus studies the man, and determines that his name is Skeaos by
reading the lips of his interlocutors. Could this Skeaos be an agent of his
father? Before he can draw any
conclusions, however, his scrutiny is noticed by the Emperor himself, who has
the adviser seized. Though the entire Holy War celebrates the Emperor’s defeat,
Kellhus is more perplexed than ever. Never has he undertaken a study so deep. That night he consummates
his relationship with Serwe, continuing the patient work of undoing Cnaьir—as
all Men of the Tusk must be undone. Somewhere, a shadowy faction lurks behind
faces of false skin. Far to the south in Shimeh, Anasurimbor Moenghus awaits
the coming storm. One Anserca Ignorance is trust. —ANCIENT KUNIURIC PROVERB hate Spring, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, south
of Momemn Drusas Achamian sat
cross-legged in the darkness of his tent, a silhouette rocking slowly to and
fro, muttering dark words. Light spilled from his mouth. Though the
moon-shining length of the MeneanorSea lay between him and
Atyersus, he walked the ancient halls of his School— walked among sleepers. The dimensionless
geometry of dreams never ceased to startle Achamian. There was something
monstrous about a world where nothing was remote, where distances dissolved
into a froth of words and competing passions. Something no knowledge could
overcome. Pitched from nightmare to
nightmare, Achamian at last found the sleeping man he sought: Nautzera in his
dream, seated on blood-muddied turf, cradling a dead king on his lap. “Our King
is dead!” Nautzera cried in Seswatha’s voice. “Anasurimbor Celmomas is dead!” An unearthly roar
hammered his ears. Achamian whirled, raising his hands against a titanic
shadow. Wracu… Dragon. Billowing gusts staggered
those standing, waved the arms of those Anserca fallen. Cries of dismay
and horror rifled the air, then a cataract of boiling gold engulfed Nautzera
and the High King’s attendants. There was no time for screams. Teeth cracked.
Bodies tumbled like coals from a kicked fire. Achamian turned and saw
Nautzera amid a field of smoking husks. Shielded by his Wards, the sorcerer
laid the dead king on the ground, whispering words Achamian could not hear but
had dreamed innumerable times: “Turn your soul’s eye from this world, dear
friend… Turn so that your heart might be broken no more.” With the force of a
toppled tower, the dragon thundered to earth, his descent yanking smoke and ash
into towering veils. Portcullis jaws clacked shut. Wings like war-galley sails
stretched out. The light of burning corpses shimmered across iridescent scales
of black. “Our Lord,” the dragon grated, “hath tasted thy King’s passing, and he saith, ‘It is done.’” Nautzera stood before the
golden-horned abomination. “Not while I draw breath, Skafra!” he cried. “Never!” Laughter, like the
wheezing of a thousand consumptive men. The Great Dragon reared his bull-chest
above the sorcerer, revealing a necklace of steaming human heads. “Thou art overthrown, sorcerer. Thy tribe
hath perished, dashed like a potter’s vessel by our fury. The earth is sown
with thy nation’s blood, and soon thine enemies will compass thee with bent bow
and whetted bronze. Wilt thou not repent thy folly? Wilt thou not abase thyself
before our Lord?” “As do you, mighty
Skafra? As the exalted Tyrant of Cloud and Mountain abases himself?” Membranes flickered
across the dragon’s quicksilver eyes. A blink. “I am not a God.” Nautzera smiled grimly.
Seswatha said, “Neither is your lord.” Great stamping limbs and
the gnashing of iron teeth. A cry from furnace lungs, as deep as an ocean’s
moan and as piercing as an infant’s shriek. Uncowed by the dragon’s
thrashing bulk, Nautzera suddenly turned to Achamian, his face bewildered. “Who are you?” “One who shares your
dreams…” For a moment they were
like two men drowning, two souls kicking for sharp air… Then darkness. The
silent nowhere that housed men’s souls. Nautzera… his 1. A place of pure voice. Achamian! That dream…It plagues me so of
late. Where are you? We feared you dead. Concern? Nautzera
betraying concern for him, the one Schoolman he despised above all others? But
then Seswatha’s Dreams had a way of sweeping aside petty enmities. With the Holy War, Achamian replied. The contest with the Emperor has been resolved. The
Holy War marches on Kian. Images accompanied these words: Proyas addressing rapt mobs of
armoured Conriyans; the endless trains of armed lords and their households; the
many-coloured banners of a thousand thanes and barons; a distant glimpse of the
Nansur Columns, marching through vineyard and grove in perfect formation… So it begins, Nautzera said decisively. And Maithanet? Were you able to learn anything more of
him? thought Proyas might assist me, but I was
wrong. He belongs to the Thousand Temples… To Maithanet. What is it with your students, Achamian?
Why do they all turn to our rivals, hmm? The ease with which Nautzera had
recovered his sarcasm both stung and curiously relieved Achamian. The grand old
sorcerer would need his wits for what followed. I have seen them, Nautzera. A flash of Skeaos’s naked body,
chained and flailing like a holy shaker in the dust. Seen whom? The Consult. I’ve seen them. 1 know how
they’ve eluded us for all these longyears.
A face
unclenching, like a miser’s fist from a golden ensolarь. Are you drunk? They’re here, Nautzera. Among us. They’ve
always been. Pause. What are you saying? The Consult still plies the ThreeSeas. The Consult… Yes! Witness. {vlore
images flashed, reconstructions of the madness that had occurred in the bowels
of the AndiamineHeights. The hellish face unfolding,
again and again. Without sorcery, Nautzera. Do you
understand? The onta was unmarked! We cannot see these skin-spies for what they
are… Even though Inrau’s death
had intensified his hatred of Nautzera, Achamian had called him because he was
a fanatic, the only man extreme enough in temper to soberly appraise the
extremity of his revelation. The Telcne, Nautzera said, and for the first time
Achamian heard fear in the man’s voice. The Old Science… It must be! The others must dreamthis, Achamian! Send this dream to the others! But… But what? There’s more? Far more. An Anasurimbor
had returned, a living descendent of the dead king Nautzera had just dreamed. Nothing of significance, Achamian replied. Why had he said this? Why conceal
Anasurimbor Kellhus from the Mandate? Why protect— Good. 1 can scarce digest this as it is…
Our ancient foe discovered at last! And behind faces of skin! If they could
penetrate the sequestered heights of the Imperial Court, they could penetrate
nearly any faction, Achamian. Any faction!
Send this dream to the entire Quorum! All Atyersus trembles this night. Daybreak seemed bold, and
Achamian found himself wondering whether mornings always seemed such when
greeted by a thousand spear points. Sunlight swept out from the edge of the
purple earth, illuminating hillsides and tree lines with crisp morning
brilliance. The Sogian Way,
an old coastal road that predated the Ceneian Empire, shot straight to the
southwest, bending only to the rise and fall of the distant hills. A long line
of armed men trudged along it, knotted by baggage trains and flanked by
companies of mounted knights. Where the sun touched them, it stretched their
shadows far across the surrounding pasture. The sight filled Achamian
with wonder. For so many years the
concern of his days had been dwarfed by the horror of his nights. What he’d
witnessed through Seswatha’s eyes possessed no waking
measure. Certainly the daylight world could still injure, could still kill, but
it all seemed to happen at the scale of rats. Until now. Men of the Tusk, as far
as the eye could see, scattered across the countryside, clustered about the
road like ants on an apple peel. There a band of outriders following a faraway
ridge line. Here a broken wain stranded amid streaming thickets of spears.
Horsemen galloping through flowering groves. Local youths hollering from the
tops of young birches. Such a sight! And it comprised only a fraction of their
true might. Shortly after leaving
Momemn, the Holy War had splintered into disparate armies, each under one of
the Great Names. According to Xinemus, this had been motivated in part by
prudence—divided they could better forage if the Emperor fell short on his
promise of provisions—and in part by stubbornness: the Inrithi lords simply
could not agree on the best route to Asgilioch. Proyas had struck for the
coast, intending to follow the Sogian
Way south to its terminus before turning west for
Asgilioch. The other Great Names—Gothyelk with his Tydonni, Saubon and his
Galeoth, Chepheramunni and the Ainoni, and Skaiyelt with his Thunyeri—had
struck across the fields, vineyards, and orchards of the densely populated
Kyranae Plain, thinking Proyas used a circle to travel in a straight line. With
the ancient roads of Cenei little more than ruined tracks strewn across their
homelands, they had no idea how much time the long way could save so long as it
were paved. At their present pace,
Xinemus claimed, the Conriyan contingent would reach Asgilioch days before the
others. And though Achamian worried—How could they win a war when simple
marches defeated them?—Xinemus seemed convinced this was a good thing. Not only
would it win glory for his nation and his prince, it would teach the others an
important lesson. “Even the Scylvendi know roads are fucking better!” the
Marshal had exclaimed. Achamian plodded with his
mule along the road’s verge, surrounded by creaking wains. From the first day
of the Holy War’s march, he had taken to skulking in the baggage trains. If the
columns of marching soldiery seemed like great rolling barracks, then the
baggage trains seemed like great rolling barns. The smell of livestock, so like
that of Anserca I wet dogs. The groan and squeal of
ungreased axles. The muttering of ham-fisted, ham-hearted men, punctuated now
and again by the crack of whips. He studied his feet—the
pulp of trampled grasses had stained his toes green. For the first time, the
question of why he shadowed the baggage trains struck him. Seswatha had always
ridden at the right hand of kings, princes, and generals. So why didn’t he do
the same? Though Proyas maintained his veneer of indifference, Achamian knew he
would accept his company—if only for Xinemus’s sake. What student did not
secretly crave their old teacher’s presence in uncertain times? So why did he march with
the baggage? Was it habit? He was an aging spy, after all, and nothing
concealed so well as humility in humble circumstances. Or was it nostalgia? For
some reason, marching as he did reminded him of following his father to the
boats as a child, his head thick with sleep, the sand cold, the sea dark and
morning-warm. Always the same glance to the east, where cold grey promised a
punishing sun. Always the heavy breath as he resigned himself to the
inevitable, to the hardship become ritual that men called work. But what comfort could
such memories offer? Drudgery didn’t soothe; it numbed. Then Achamian realized:
he marched with the beasts and baggage, not out of habit or nostalgia, but out
of aversion. I’m hiding, he thought. Hiding from him… From Anasurimbor Kellhus. Achamian slowed, tugged
his mule from the verge into the surrounding meadow. The dew-cold grasses made
his feet ache. The wains continued to trundle by, an endless file. Hiding… More and more, it seemed,
he caught himself doing things for obscure reasons. Retiring early, not because
he was exhausted from the day’s march—as he told himself—but because he feared
the scrutiny of Xinemus, Kellhus, and the others. Staring at Serwe, not because
she reminded him of Esmi—as he told himself—but because the way she stared at
Kellhus worried him—as though she knew something… And now this. Am I going mad? Several times now, he’d
found himself cackling aloud for no apparent reason. Once or twice he’d raised
a hand to his cheek to discover he’d been weeping. Each time he’d simply
mumbled away his shock: few things are more familiar, he supposed, than finding
oneself a stranger. Besides what else could he do? Rediscovering the Consult
was cause enough to go mad about the edges, certainly. But to suspect—no, to know—that the Second Apocalypse was beginning… And to be alone with such knowledge! How could someone like
him bear such a weight? The solution, of course, was to share the burden—to
tell the Mandate about Kellhus. Before, Achamian had
merely feared that Kellhus augured the
resurrection of the No-God. He’d omitted him from his reports because he’d
known exactly what Nautzera and the others would have done. They would have
seized him, then, like jackals with a boiled bone, they would have gnawed and
gnawed until he cracked. But the incident beneath the AndiamineHeights
had… had… Things had changed.
Changed irrevocably. For so many years the
Consult had been little more than an empty posit, an oppressive abstraction.
What was it Inrau had called them? A father’s sin… But now—now!—they were as real as a knife’s edge. And Achamian no
longer feared that Kellhus augured the Apocalypse, he knew. Knowing was so much
worse. So why continue
concealing the man? An Anasurimbor had returned. The Celmomian
Prophecy had been fulfilled! Within the space of days, the ThreeSeas
had assumed the same bloated dimensions as the world he suffered night after
night. And yet he said nothing—nothing! Why? Some men, Achamian had
observed, utterly refused to acknowledge things such as illness or infidelity,
as though facts required acceptance to become real. Was this what he was doing?
Did he think that keeping Kellhus a secret made the man less real somehow? That
the end of the world could be prevented by covering his eyes? It was too much. Too
much. The Mandate simply had to know, no matter what the
consequences. / must tell them… Tonight, 1 must tell them. “Xinemus,” a familiar
voice said from behind, “told me I’d find you with the baggage.“ “He did, did he?”
Achamian replied, surprised by the levity of his tone. Kellhus smiled down at
him. “He said you preferred stepping in fresh shit over old.“ Achamian shrugged, did
his best to purge the phantoms from the small corners of his expression. “Keeps
my toes warm… Where’s your Scylvendi friend?” “He rides with Proyas and
Ingiaban.” “Ah. So you’ve decided to
slum with the likes of me.” He glanced down at the Northerner’s sandalled feet.
“To the point of walking no less…” Caste-nobles didn’t march, they rode.
Kellhus was a prince, though like Xinemus, he made it easy for others to forget
his rank. Kellhus winked. “I
thought I’d let my ass ride me for a change.” Achamian laughed, feeling
as though he’d been holding his breath and could only now exhale. Since that
first evening outside Momemn, Kellhus had made him feel this way—as though he
could breathe easy. When he’d mentioned this to Xinemus, the Marshal had shrugged
and said,
“Everyone farts, sooner or
later.” “Besides,” Kellhus
continued, “you promised you’d instruct me.” “I did, did I?” “You did.” Kellhus reached out and
clasped the rope that swayed from his mule’s crude bridle. Achamian looked at
him quizzically. “What are you doing?” “I’m your student,”
Kellhus said, checking the bindings on the mule’s baggage. “Surely in your
youth you led your master’s mule.” Achamian answered with a
dubious smile. Kellhus ran a hand along
the trunk of the beast’s neck. “What’s his name?“ he asked. For some reason the
banality of the question shocked Achamian—to the point of horror. No one—no
man, anyway—had cared to ask before. Not even Xinemus. Kellhus frowned at his
hesitation. “What’s troubling you, Achamian?” You… He looked away, across
the streaming queues of armed Inrithi. His ears both burned and roared. He
reads me like any scroll. “Is it so easy?” Achamian
asked. “So easy to see?” “What does it matter?” “It matters,” he said,
blinking tears and turning to face Kellhus once again. So 1 weep! something desolate within him cried. So 1 weep! “Ajencis,” he continued,
“once wrote that all men are frauds. Some, the wise, fool only others. Others,
the foolish, fool only themselves. And a rare few fool both others and themselves—they
are the rulers of Men But what about men like me, Kellhus? What about men who
fool no one?” And 1 call myself a spy! Kellhus shrugged.
“Perhaps they are less than fools and more than wise.“ “Perhaps,” Achamian
replied, struggling to appear thoughtful. “So what troubles you?” You… “Daybreak,” Achamian
said, reaching out to scratch his mule’s snout. “His name is Daybreak.” For a Mandate Schoolman,
no name was more lucky. Teaching always quickened
something within Achamian. Like the black teas of Nilnamesh, it sometimes made
his skin tingle and his soul race. There was the simple vanity of knowing, of
course, the pride of seeing farther than another. And there was the joy of
watching young eyes pop open in realization, of seeing someone see. To be a teacher was to be a student anew, to relive
the intoxication of insight, and to be a prophet, to sketch the world down to
its very foundation—not simply to tease sight from blindness, but to demand that another see. And then there was the trust that was the counterpart of this demand, so reckless
that it terrified Achamian whenever he considered it. The madness of one man
saying to another, “Please,
judge me…” To be a teacher was to be
a father. But none of this was true
of teaching Kellhus. Over the ensuing days, as the Conriyan host marched ever
farther south, they walked together, discussing everything imaginable, from the
flora and fauna of the ThreeSeas to the philosophers,
poets, and kings of Near and Far Antiquity. Anserca Rather than follow any
curriculum, which would have been impractical iven the circumstances,
Achamian adopted the Ajencian mode, and let Kellhus indulge his
curiosity. He simply answered questions. And told stories. Kellhus’s questions,
however, were more than perceptive—so much so that Achamian’s respect for his
intellect soon became awe. No matter what the issue, be it political,
philosophical, or poetic, the Prince unerringly struck upon the matter’s heart.
When Achamian outlined the positions of the great Kunьiric thinker, Ingoswitu,
Kellhus, following query upon query, actually arrived at the criticisms of
Ajencis, though he claimed to have never read the ancient Kyranean’s work. When
Achamian described the Ceneian Empire’s disarray at the end of the third
millennium, Kellhus pressed him with questions—many of which Achamian couldn’t
answer— regarding trade, currency, and social structure. Within moments he was
offering explanations and interpretations as fine as any Achamian had read. “How?” Achamian blurted
on one occasion. “How what?” Kellhus
replied. “How is it that… that you
see these things? No matter how deep I peer…” “Ah,” Kellhus laughed.
“You’re starting to sound like my father’s tutors.” He regarded Achamian in a
manner that was at once submissive and strangely indulgent, as though he
conceded something to an overbearing yet favoured son. The sunlight teased
golden threads from his hair and beard. “It’s simply a gift I have,” he said.
“Nothing more.” But such a gift! It was
more than what the ancients called noschi—
genius. There was something about the way
Kellhus thought, an elusive mobility Achamian had never before encountered.
Something that made him seem, at times, a man from a different age. Most, by and large, were
born narrow, and cared to see only that which flattered them. Almost without
exception, they assumed their hatreds and yearnings to be correct, no matter
what the contradictions, simply because they felt correct. Almost all men prized the familiar path over
the true. That was the glory of the student, to step from the well-worn path
and risk knowledge that oppressed, that horrified. Even still, Achamian, like
all teachers, spent as much time uprooting prejudices as implanting truths. All
souls were stubborn in the end. inc. I1KS1 IV1AKLH Not so with Kellhus.
Nothing was dismissed outright. Any possibility could be considered.
It was as though his soul moved over something trackless. Only the truth led
him to conclusions. Question after question,
all posed with precision, exploring this or that theme with gentle
relentlessness, so thoroughly that Achamian was astonished by how much he
himself knew. It was as though, prompted by Kellhus’s patient interrogation,
he’d undertaken an expedition through a life he’d largely forgotten. Kellhus
would ask about Memgowa, the antique Zeumi sage who had recently become the
rage among literate Inrithi caste-nobles, and Achamian would remember reading
his Celestial Aphorisms by candlelight at Xinemus’s
coastal villa, savouring the exotic turn of his Zeumi sensibilities while
listening to the wind scour the orchards outside the shuttered window, the
plums thudding like iron spheres against the earth. Kellhus would question his
interpretation of the Scholastic Wars, and Achamian would remember arguing with
his own teacher, Simas, on the black parapets of Atyersus, thinking himself a
prodigy, and cursing the inflexibility of old men. How he had hated those
heights that day! Question after question.
Nothing repeated. No ground covered twice. And with each answer, it seemed to
Achamian that he exchanged guesses for true insight, and abstractions for
recovered moments of his life. Kellhus, he realized, was a student who taught
even as he learned, and Achamian had never known another like him. Not Inrau,
not even Proyas. The more he answered the man, the more Kellhus seemed to hold
the answer to his own life. Who am l! he would often think, listening to Kellhus’s
melodious voice. What do you
see? And then there were the
questions regarding the Old Wars. Like most Mandate Schoolmen, Achamian found
it easy to mention the Apocalypse and difficult to discuss it—very difficult.
There was the pain of reliving the horror, of course. To speak of the
Apocalypse was to wrestle heartbreak into words—an impossible task. And there
was shame as well, as though he indulged some humiliating obsession. Too many
men had laughed. But with Kellhus the
difficulty was compounded by the fact of the man’s blood. He was an Anasurimbor. How does one describe the end of Anserca the world to its
unwitting messenger? At times, Achamian feared he might gag on the irony. And
always he would think: M;y School!
Why do I betray my School? “Tell me of the No-God,”
Kellhus said one afternoon. As often happened when
they crossed flat pasture, the long lines had broken from the road, and men
fanned across the grasses. Some even doffed their sandals and boots and danced,
as though finding second wind in unburdened feet. Achamian, who’d been laughing
at their antics, was caught entirely off guard. Now he shuddered. Not so
very long ago that name—the No-God— had referred to something distant and dead. “You hail from Atrithau,”
Achamian replied, “and you want me to tell you of the No-God?” Kellhus shrugged. “We
read The Sagas, as you do. Our bards sing their
innumerable lays, as do yours. But you… You’ve seen these things.” No, Achamian wanted to say, Seswatha has seen these things. Sesuiatha. Instead he studied the
distance, gathering his thoughts. He clutched his hands, which felt as light as
balsa. You’ve seen these things. You… “He has, as you likely
know, many names. The Men of ancient Kunьiri called him Mog’Pharau, from which we derive ‘No-God.’ In ancient Kyraneas,
he was simply called Tsurumah, the ‘Hated One.’ The Nonmen of
Ishoriol called him—with the peculiar poetry that belongs to all their names—Cara-Sincurimoi, the ‘Angel of Endless Hunger’… He is well named.
Never has the world known a greater evil… A greater peril.” “What is he, then? An
unclean spirit?” “No. Many demons have
walked this world. If the rumours about the Scarlet Spires are true, some walk
this world still. No, he is more and he is less…” Achamian fell silent. “Perhaps,” the Prince of
Atrithau ventured, “we shouldn’t speak—” “I’ve seen him, Kellhus. As much as any man can, I’ve seen him…
Not far from here, at a place called the Plains of Mengedda, the shattered
hosts of Kyraneas and her allies hoisted their pennants anew, determined to die
grappling the Foe. That was two thousand years ago.” Achamian laughed
bitterly, lowering his face. “I’d forgotten…” Kellhus watched him
intently. “Forgotten what?” “That the Holy War would
be crossing the Plains of Mengedda. That I would soon trod earth that had
witnessed the No-God’s death…” He looked to the southern hills. Soon the Unaras
Spur, which marked the ends of the Inrithi world, would resolve from the
horizon. And on the far side… “How could I’ve
forgotten?” “There’s so much to
remember,” Kellhus said. “Too much.” “Which means too much has
been forgotten,” Achamian snapped, unwilling to absolve
himself of this oversight. I
need my wits! The very world… “You are too…” Kellhus
began, then trailed. “Too what? Too harsh? You
don’t understand what it was like! Every infant stillborn for eleven years—for eleven years, Kellhus! Ever since the No-God’s awakening, every womb
a grave… And you could feel him— no matter where you were. He
was an ever-present horror in every heart. You need only look to the horizon,
and you would know his direction. He was a shadow,
an intimation of doom… “The High North had been
laid waste—I need not recite that woe. Mehtsonc, the mighty capital of
Kyraneas, had been overthrown the month before. Every hearthstone had been
cracked. Every idol had been smashed. Every wife violated. All the great
nations had fallen… So little remained, Kellhus! So few survived! “With their vassals and
allies from the south, the Kyraneans awaited the Foe. Seswatha stood at the
right hand of the Kyranean Great King, Anaxophus V. They’d become fast friends
years before, when Celmomas had summoned all the lords of Earwa to his Ordeal,
the doomed Holy War meant to destroy the Consult before they could awaken
Tsurumah. Together they watched his approach…” Tsuramah… Achamian abruptly
stopped, turning to the north. “Imagine,” he said, opening his arms to the sky.
“The day wasn’t unlike this, though the air smelled of wild blossoms… Imagine!
A great shroud of thunderheads, as broad as the horizon and as black as crow,
boiling across this sky, spilling toward us like hot
blood over glass. I remember threads of lightning flashing among the hills. And
beneath the eaves of the storm, great cohorts of Anserca Scylvendi galloping to
the east and the west, intent on enveloping our flanks. And behind them, loping
as fast as dogs, legions upon legions of Sranc, howling… howling …“ Kellhus placed a friendly
hand upon his shoulder. “You needn’t tell me this,“ he said. Achamian stared at him
blankly, blinking tears from his eyes. “No. I need to tell you this, Kellhus. I need you to know. For
this, more than anything else, is who I am… Do you understand?” His eyes shining, Kellhus
nodded. “The dark swept over us,”
Achamian continued, “swallowed the sun. The Scylvendi struck first: mounted
skirmishers harried our lines with archery, while divisions of bronze-armoured
lancers swept into our flanks. When the screen of skirmishers thinned and
withdrew, it seemed all the world had become Sranc. Masses of them, draped in
human skins, bounding through the grasses, over hummocks. The Kyraneans lowered
their spears and drew up their great shields. “There are no words,
Kellhus, for the dread and determination that moved us. We fought with reckless
abandon, intent only on spitting our dying breath against the Foe. We sang no
hymns, intoned no prayers— we’d forsworn these things. Instead, we sang our own
dirges, bitter laments for our people, our race. We knew that after we passed
only the toll we exacted from our foe would survive to sing for us! “Then from nowhere, it
seemed, dragons dropped from the clouds. Dragons, Kellhus! Wracu. Ancient Skafra, his hide scarred
from a thousand battles; magnificent Skuthula, Skogma, Ghoset; all those who’d
survived the arrows and sorceries of the High North. The Magi of Kyraneas and
Shigek stepped into the sky and closed with the beasts.” Achamian stared into the
vacant distance, overcome by images. “Just south of here,” he
said, shaking his head. “Two thousand years ago.” “What happened next?” Achamian stared at
Kellhus. “The impossible. I… no, Seswatha … Seswatha himself struck down
Skafra. Skuthula the Black was driven away, grievously wounded. The Kyraneans
and their allies stood like breakers against a heaving sea, throwing back wave
after black-hearted wave. For a moment, we almost dared rejoice. Almost…” Anserca “Then he came,” Kellhus
said. Achamian nodded, swallowed.
“Then he came… Mog-Pharau. In tk much, the poet of The Sagas speaks true. The Scylvendi withdrew th Sranc
relented. A great rasping chatter passed through them, swellin into
an impossible, keening roar. The Bashrag began beating the ground with their
hammers. A churning blackness resolved on the horizon -great whirlwind, like a black umbilicus joining earth
and cloud. And everyone knew. Everyone simply knew. “The No’God was coming.
Mog-Pharau walked, and the world thundered. The Sranc began shrieking. Many
cast themselves to the ground scratching at their eyes, gouging… I remember
having difficulty breathing… I had joined Anakka—Anaxophus—in his chariot, and
I remember him gripping my shoulders. I remember him crying something I
couldn’t hear… Our horses reared in their harnesses, screaming. Men about us
fell to their knees, clutching their ears. Great clouds of dust rolled over
us…” And then the voice,
spoken through the throats of a hundred thousand Sranc. WHAT DO YOU SEE? / don’t understand… I MUST KNOW WHAT YOU
SEE Death. Wretched death! TELL ME Even you cannot hide from what you don’t
know! Even you! WHAT AM I? “Doomed,” Seswatha
whispered to the thunder. He clutched the Kyranean Great King by the shoulder.
“Now, Anaxophus! Strike now/” I CANNOTS- A thread of silver light,
swaying across the spiralling heights, flashing across the Carapace. A crack
that made ears bleed. Everywhere, raining debris. The anguished wail of
innumerable inhuman throats. The whirlwind undone,
like the smoke of a snuffed candle, spinning into oblivion. Seswatha fell to his
knees, weeping, crying out in grief and exultation. The impossible! The impossible! Beside him, Anaxophus dropped the Heron Spear,
placed an arm about him. “Are y°u y> Achamian?“ Achamian? Who was
Achamian? “Come,” Kellhus said.
“Stand up.” A stranger’s firm hands.
Where was Anaxophus? “Achamian?” frgain. It’s happening again. “Y-yes?” “What is the Heron
Spear?” Achamian didn’t answer.
He couldn’t. Rather, he walked silently for a long while, brooding over the
moments before his tale had overwhelmed him, over the hideous loss of self and
now—which seemed species of the same thing. Then he thought of Kellhus, who
walked discreetly by his side. The overthrow of the No-God was a tale often
referred to and rarely told by Mandate Schoolmen—in fact, Achamian couldn’t
remember ever telling it, not even to Xinemus.
And yet he had yielded it to Kellhus thoughtlessly—even demanded that he hear
it. Why? He’s doing something to me. Stupefied, Achamian found
himself staring at the man with the candour of a sleepy child. Who are you? Kellhus responded without
embarrassment—such a thing seemed too small for him. He smiled, as though
Achamian were in fact a child, an innocent incapable of wishing him ill. The
look reminded Achamian of Inrau, who’d so often seen him for what he wasn’t: a
good man. Achamian looked away, his
throat aching. Must 1 give you
up, too? A student like no other. A handful of soldiers had
started a hymn to the Latter Prophet, and the surrounding rumble of talk and
laughter trailed into deep-throated song. Without warning, Kellhus stopped and
knelt in the grasses. “What are you doing?”
Achamian asked, more sharply than he would have wished. “Removing my sandals,”
the Prince of Atrithau said. “Come, let’s bare our feet with the others.” Not sing with the others.
Not rejoice with them. Just walk. Lessons, Achamian would
later realize. While Achamian taught, Kellhus continually gave lessons. He was
almost certain of it, even though ° The First March he had no inkling as to
what those lessons might be. Intimations of trust perhaps, of
openness, possibly. Somehow, through the course of teaching Kellhus, Achamian
had become a student of a different kind. And all he knew for sure was that his
education was incomplete. But as the days passed,
this revelation simply complicated his anguish One night he prepared the Cants
of Calling no less than three times, only to have them collapse into mumbled
curses and recriminations. The Mandate, his School—his brothers—must be told! An Anasurimbor had returned! The
Celmomian Prophecy was more than some backwater of Seswatha’s Dreams. Many saw
it as their culmination, as the very reason Seswatha had passed from life into
his disciples’ nightmares. The Great Warning. And yet he, Drusas Achamian,
hesitated—no, more than hesitated, wagered. Sweet Sejenus… He wagered his School, his race, his world, on a man he’d known no more than a fortnight. Such madness! He played
number-sticks with the end of the world! One man, frail and foolish—who was
Drusas Achamian to take such risks? By what right had he shouldered such a
burden? What right? One more day, he told himself, pulling on his
beard and his hair. Onemore day… Kellhus found him in the
general exodus from the camp the morning after this resolution, and despite the
man’s good humour, hours passed before Achamian relented and began answering
his questions. Too many things assailed him. Unspoken things. “You worry about our
fortunes,” Kellhus finally said, his look solemn. “You fear that the Holy War
won’t succeed…” Of course Achamian feared
for the Holy War. He’d witnessed too many defeats—in his dreams, anyway. But
despite the thousands of armed men walking in his periphery, the Holy War was
far from his thoughts. Even so, he pretended otherwise. He nodded without
looking, as though making a painful admission. More unvoiced reproaches. More
self-flagellation. With other men, small deceptions seemed both natural and
necessary, but with Kellhus they… they itched. “Seswatha…” Achamian
began, hesitating. “Seswatha was little more than a boy when the first wars
against Golgotterath were waged. In those early days, not even the wisest of
the ancients understood what was at stake. And how could they? They were
Norsirai, and the world was their /‘tnserca A minion. Their barbaric kinsmen had been subdued. The
Sranc had driven into the
mountains. Not even the Scylvendi dared their ath- Their poetry, their sorcery,
and their craft were sought across all of parwa, even by the Nonmen
who had once tutored them. Foreign emis- aries wept at the beauty
of their cities. In courts as far away as Kyraneas nd Shir men adopted their
manner, their cuisine, their style of dress… “They were the very
measure of their time—like us. Everything was less, and they were always more.
Even after Shauriatas, the Grandmaster of the Mangaecca—the
Consult—awakened the No-God, no one truly believed the end had come. Each
heartbreak seemed more impossible than the last. Even the Fall of Kunьiri, the
mightiest of their nations, barely shook the conviction that somehow, some way,
the High North would prevail. Only as disaster piled upon disaster did they
come to understand…” Shielding his eyes he
looked into the Prince’s face. “Glory doesn’t vouchsafe glory. The unthinkable
can always come to pass.” The end is coming… I must decide. Kellhus nodded, squinting
against the sun. “Everything has its measure,” he said. “Every man…” He looked
directly at Achamian. “Every decision.” For an instant Achamian
feared his heart might stop. A coincidence… It has to be! Without warning, Kellhus
bent and retrieved a small stone. He stared at the slope for several moments,
as though searching for something, a bird or a hare, to kill. Then he threw it,
the sleeve of his silk cassock snapping like leather. The stone whistled
through the air, then skipped along the edge of a chapped-stone shelf. A rock
teetered forward, then plummeted, cracking against steeper faces, releasing
whole skirts of gravel, dust, and debris. Shouts of warning echoed from below. “Did
you intend that?” Achamian asked, his breath tight. Kellhus shook his head.
“No…” He shot Achamian a quizzical look. “But then that was your point, wasn’t
it? The unforeseen, the catastrophic, follows hard upon all our actions.” Achamian wasn’t so sure
he’d even had a point. “And decisions,” he said, as though speaking through a
stranger’s mouth. “Yes,” Kellhus replied. “Decisions.” That night Achamian
prepared the Cants of Calling even though h knew he’d be unable to utter the first word. What right have you? he cri to himself. What right? You who are so small … Kellhus was the Harbing The
Messenger. Soon, Achamian knew, the horror of his nights wonM burst across the
waking world. Soon the great cities—Momemn Carythusal, Aoknyssus—would burn.
Achamian had seen them burn before, many times. They would fall as their
ancient sisters had fallen-Tryse, Mehtsonc, Myclai. Screaming. Wailing to
smoke-shrouded skies They would be the new names of woe. What right? What could
justify such a decision? “Who are you, Kellhus?” he murmured in the solitary
darkness of his tent. “I risk everything for you… Everything!” So why? Because there was something… something about him. Something that bid Achamian to
wait. A sense of impossible becoming… But what? What was he becoming? And was
it enough? Enough to warrant betraying his
School? Enough to throw the number-sticks of Apocalypse? Could anything be enough? Other than the truth. The
truth was always enough, wasn’t it? He looked at me and he knew. Throwing the stone, Achamian
realized, had been another lesson. Another clue. But for what? That disaster
would follow if he made the wrong decision? That disaster would follow no
matter what his decision? There was no end, it
seemed, to his torment. HADTER TWo Anserca Duty measures the distance between the
animal and the divine. —EKYANNUS I, 44 EPISTLES The days and weeks before battle are a strange thing. All the contingents, the Conriyans, the
Galeoth, the
Nansur, the Thunyeri, the
Tydonni, the Ainoni, and the Scarlet Spires, marched to the fortress of Asgilioch, to the Southron Gates and the heathen frontier. And though many bent their thoughts
to Skauras, the heathen Sapatishah who would contest us, he was still woven of the same cloth as a thousand other
abstract
concerns. One could still
confuse war with everyday living… —DRUSAS ACHAMIAN,
COMPENDIUM OF THE FIRST HOLY WAR Late Spring, 4111
Year-of-the-Tusk, the province
of Anserca For the first few days of
the march, everything had been confusion, especially at sunset, when the Inrithi
scattered across field and hillside to make camp. Unable to find Xinemus and
too tired to care, Achamian had even pitched his tent among strangers a couple
of nights. As the Conriyan host grew accustomed to itself as a host, however,
collective habit, combined with the gravity of fealty and familiarity, ensured
that the camp took more or less the same shape every evening. Soon Ihe rmsT March Anserca Li Achamian found himself
sharing food and banter, not only with Xinerrtus and his senior officers, Iryssas,
Dinchases, and Zenkappa, but with Kellhus Serwe, and Cnaьir as well. Proyas
visited them twice—difficult evenings for Achamian—but usually the Crown Prince
would summon Xinemus Kellhus, and Cnaьir to the Royal Pavilion, either for
temple or for evening councils with the other great lords of the Conriyan
contingent. As a result, Achamian
often found himself stranded with Iryssas, Dinchases, and Zenkappa. They made
for awkward company, especially with a timid beauty such as Serwe in their
midst. But Achamian soon began to appreciate these nights—particularly after
spending his days marching with Kellhus. There would be the shyness of men
meeting in the absence of their traditional brokers, then the rush of affable
discourse, as though surprised and delighted they spoke the same language. It
reminded him of the relief he and his childhood friends had felt whenever their
older brothers had been called to the boats or the beaches. The fellowship of
overshadowed souls was something Achamian could understand. Since leaving
Momemn, it seemed the only moments of peace he found were with these men, even
though they thought him damned. One night, Xinemus took
Kellhus and Serwe to join Proyas in celebration of Venicata, an Inrithi holy
day. Iryssas and the others departed soon after to join their men, and for the
first time Achamian found himself alone with the Scylvendi, Cnaьir urs Skiotha,
the Last of the Utemot. Even after several nights
of sharing the same fire, the Scylvendi barbarian unnerved him. Sometimes, glimpsing
him in his periphery, Achamian would involuntarily catch his breath. Like
Kellhus, Cnaьir was a wraith from his dreams, a figure from a far more
treacherous ground. Add to this his many-scarred arms and the Chorae he kept
stuffed beneath his iron-plated girdle… But there were so many
questions he needed to ask. Regarding Kellhus, mostly, but also regarding the
Sranc clans to the north of his tribal lands. He even wanted to ask the man
about Serwe—the way she doted on Kellhus yet followed Cnaьir to sleep had been
noticed by all. On those nights the three retired early, Achamian could see the
gossip in the looks exchanged by Iryssas and the others—though they had yet to
share their speculations. When he’d asked Kellhus about her, the man had simply
shrugged and said, “She’s his prize.” For a time, Achamian and
Cnaьir simply did their best to ignore each other. Shouts and cries echoed
through the darkness, and shadowy clots of revellers filed along the
unbounded edges of their firelight. Some stared—gawked even—but for
the most part left them alone. After scowling at a
boisterous party of Conriyan knights, Achamian finally turned to Cnaьir and
said, “I guess we’re the heathens, eh, Scylvendi?“ An uncomfortable silence
followed while Cnaьir continued gnawing at the bone he held. Achamian sipped
his wine, thought of excuses he might use to withdraw to his tent. What did one
say to a Scylvendi? “So you teach him,”
Cnaьir suddenly said, spitting gristle into the fire. His eyes glittered from
the shadow of his heavy brow, studying the flames. “Yes,” Achamian replied. “Has he told you why?” Achamian shrugged. “He
seeks knowledge of the ThreeSeas… Why do you ask?“ But the Scylvendi was
already standing, wiping greasy fingers against his breeches, then stretching
his giant, sinuous frame. Without a word he strode off into the darkness,
leaving Achamian baffled. Short of speaking, the man hadn’t acknowledged him in
any way. Achamian resolved to
mention the incident to Kellhus when he returned, but he quickly forgot the
matter. Against the greater scheme of his fears, bad manners and enigmatic
questions were of little consequence. Achamian typically
pitched his humble wedge tent beneath the weathered slopes of Xinemus’s
pavilion. Without exception, he would spend hours lying awake, his thoughts
either choked by recriminations regarding Kellhus or smothered by the deranged
enormity of his circumstances. And when these things passed into numbness, he
would fret over Esmenet or worry about the Holy War. Too soon, it seemed, it
would wander into Fanim lands—into battle. The nightmares were
becoming more unbearable. Scarcely a night passed where he didn’t awaken long
before the cockcrow horns, thrashing at his blankets or clawing his face,
crying out to ancient comrades. Few Mandate Schoolmen enjoyed anything
resembling peaceful slumber. Esmenet had once joked that he slept “like an old
hound chasing rabbits.” “Try an old rabbit,” he’d replied, “fleeing
hounds.” -iksi iVIARCH But sleep—or the
absolute, oblivious heart of it anyway—began to elude him altogether, until it
seemed he simply shuffled from one clamour to another. He would crawl from his
tent into the predawn darkness hugging himself to still the tremors, and he
would simply stand as the blackness resolved into a cold, colourless version of
the vista he’d seen the previous evening, watching the sun’s golden rim surface
in the east, like a coal burning through painted paper. And it would seem he
stood upon the very lip of the world, that if it tipped by the slightest
measure, he would be cast into an endless black. So alone, he would think. He would imagine Esmenet sleeping in
theь room in Sumna, one slender leg kicked from the covers, banded by threads
of light as the same sun boiled through the cracks of her shutters. And he
would pray that she was safe—pray to the Gods who’d damned them both. One sun keeps us warm. One sun lets us
see. One… Then
he would think of Anasurimbor Kellhus—thoughts of anticipation and dread. One evening, while
listening to others argue about the Fanim, Achamian suddenly realized there was
no reason to suffer his fears alone: he could tell Xinemus. Achamian glanced across
the fire at his old friend, who was arguing battles that had yet to be fought. “Certainly Cnaьir knows
the heathen!” the Marshal was protesting. “I never said otherwise. But until he
sees us on the field, until he sees the might ofConriya, neither I—nor our Prince, I suspect—will take his
word as scripture!” Could he tell him? The
morning after the madness beneath the Emperor’s palace had also been the
morning the Holy War began its march. Everything had been confusion. Even
still, Xinemus had made Achamian his priority, fairly interrogating him on the
details of the previous night. Achamian had started with the truth, or a hollowed
out version of it anyway, saying that the Emperor had required independent
verification of certain claims made by his Imperial Saik. But what followed was
pure fantasy—some story about finding the ciphers to an ensorcelled map.
Achamian could no longer remember. Anserca At the time, the lies had
simply… happened. The events of that night nd the revelations that followed
had been too immediate and far too atastrophic in their
implications. Even now, two weeks later, Achamian felt overmatched by their
dread significance. Back then, he could only flounder. Stories, on the
other hand, were something he could make sense of, something he could
speak. But how could he explain
this to Xinemus? To the one man who believed. Who trusted. Achamian watched and waited,
glancing from face to illuminated face. He’d purposely unrolled his mat on the
smoky side of the fire, hoping for a measure of solitude while he ate. Now it
seemed that providence had placed him here, affording him a furtive glimpse of
the whole. There was Xinemus, of
course, seated knees out and back upright like a Zeumi warlord, the hard set of
his mouth betrayed by the laughter in his eyes and the crumbs in his square-cut
beard. To his left, his cousin, Iryssas, rocked to and fro upon the trunk of a
felled tree, so much like a big-pawed puppy in his exuberance, bullying as much
as the patience of the others would allow. Sitting to his left, Dinchases, or
“Bloody Dinch,” held out his wine bowl for the slaves to refill, the X-shaped
scar on his forehead inked black by the shadows. Zenkappa, as usual, sat by his
side, his ebony skin shining in the firelight. For some reason, his manner and
tone never ceased to remind Achamian of a mischievous wink. Kellhus sat
cross-legged nearby, wearing a plain white tunic, and looking for all the world
like a portrait plundered from some temple—at once meditative and attentive,
remote and absorbed. Serwe leaned against him, her eyes shining beneath drowsy
lids, a blanket pulled across her thighs. As always, the flawlessness of her
face arrested, and the curves of her figure tugged. Close to her, but back
farther from the fire, Cnaьir crouched in the shadows, gazing at the flames and
tearing mouthful after mouthful of bread. Even eating he looked ready to break
necks. Such a strange tribe. His tribe. Could they feel it? he
wondered. Could they feel the end coming? He had to share what he knew. If not
with the Mandate, then with someone. He had to share or he would go mad. If
only Esmi had come with… No. That way lay more pain. The First March He set down his bowl,
stood, and before he realized it, found himself sitting next to his old friend,
Krijates Xinemus, the Marshal of Attrempus. “Zin…” “What is it, Akka?” “I must speak with you,”
he said in a hushed voice. “There’s… there’s…” Kellhus seemed
distracted. Even still, Achamian couldn’t shake the sense of being observed. “That night,” he
continued, “that last night beneath Momemn’s walls. Do you remember Ikurei
Conphas coming for me, escorting me to the Emperor’s palace?” “How could I forget. I
was worried sick!” Achamian hesitated,
glimpsed images of an old man—the Emperor’s Prime Counsel—convulsing against
chains. Glimpses of a face unclutching like hands and flexing outward,
reaching… A face that grasped, that seized. Xinemus studied him by
firelight, frowned. “What’s wrong, Akka?” “I’m a Schoolman, Zin,
bound by oath and duty the same as y—” “Lord Cousin!” Iryssas
called over the flame. “You must listen to this! Tell him, Kellhus!” “Please, Cousin,” Xinemus replied sharply. “Can’t you—” “Pfah. Just listen to
him! We’re trying to understand what this means.” Xinemus began scolding
the man, but it was already too late. Kellhus was speaking. “It’s just a parable,”
the Prince of Atrithau said. “Something I learned while among the Scylvendi… It
goes like this: A slender young bull and his harem of cows are shocked to
discover that their owner has purchased another bull, far deeper of chest, far
thicker of horn, and far more violent of temper. Even still, when the owner’s
sons drive the mighty newcomer to pasture, the young bull lowers his horns,
begins snorting and stamping. ‘No!’ his cows cry. ‘Please, don’t risk your life
for us!’ ‘Risk my life?’ the young bull exclaims. ‘I’m just making sure he
knows I’m a bull!’” A heartbeat of silence, then an explosion of laughter. “A Scylvendi parable?” Xinemus cried out, laughing. “Are you—” “This is my opinion!”
Iryssas called through the uproar. “My interpretation! Listen! It means that
our dignity—no, our honour—is worth more than anything, more
than even our wives!” Anserca “It means nothing,”
Xinemus said, wiping tears from his eyes. “It’s a joke, nothing more.” “It is a parable of
courage,” Cnaьir grated, and everyone fell silent— shocked, Achamian supposed,
that the taciturn barbarian had actually spoken. The man spat into the fire.
“It is a fable that old men tell boys in order to shame them, to teach them
that gestures are meaningless, that only death is real.” Looks were exchanged
about the fire. Only Zenkappa dared laugh aloud. Achamian leaned forward.
“What do you say, Kellhus? What do you think it means?” Kellhus shrugged,
apparently surprised he held the answer so many had missed. He matched
Achamian’s gaze with friendly, yet utterly implacable, eyes. “It means that
young bulls sometimes make good cows…” More gales of laughter,
but Achamian could manage no more than a smile. Why was he so angry? “No,” he
called out. “What do you think it really
means?” Kellhus paused, clasped
Serwe’s right hand and looked from face to shining face. Achamian glanced at
Serwe, only to look away. She was watching him—intently. “It means,” Kellhus said
in a solemn and strangely touching voice, “that there are many kinds of
courage, and many degrees of honour.” He had a way of speaking that seemed to
hush all else, even the surrounding Holy War. “It means that these
things—courage, honour, even love—are problems,
not absolutes. Questions.” Iryssas shook his head
vigorously. He was one of those dull-witted men who continually confused ardour
with insight. Watching him argue with Kellhus had become something of a sport. “Courage, honour,
love—these are problems? Then what are the solutions? Cowardice and depravity?” “Iryssas…” Xinemus said
half-heartedly. “Cousin.” “No,” Kellhus replied.
“Cowardice and depravity are problems as well. As for the solutions? You, Iryssas—you’re a solution. In fact, we’re all solutions. Every life lived sketches a different
answer, a different way…” “So are all solutions
equal?” Achamian blurted. The bitterness of his tone startled him. The First March “A philosopher’s
question,” Kellhus replied, and his smile swept away all awkwardness. “No. Of
course not. Some lives are better lived than others—there can be no doubt. Why
do you think we sing the lays we do? Why do you think we revere our scriptures?
Or ponder the life of the Latter Prophet?” Examples, Achamian
realized. Examples of lives that enlightened, that solved … He knew this but couldn’t bring himself to say it.
He was, after all, a sorcerer, an example of a life that solved nothing.
Without a word, he rolled to his feet and strode into the darkness, not caring
what the others thought. Suddenly, he needed darkness, solitude… Shelter from Kellhus. He was kneeling to duck
into his tent when he realized that Xinemus had yet to hear his confession,
that he was still alone with what he knew. Probably for the best. Skin-spies in their
midst. Kellhus the Harbinger of the world’s end. Xinemus would just think him
mad. A woman’s voice brought
him up short. “I see the way you look at him.” Him—Kellhus. Achamian glanced over his shoulder, saw
Serwe’s willowy silhouette framed by the fire. “And how’s that?” he
asked. She was angry—her tone had betrayed that much. Was she jealous? During
the day, while he and Kellhus wandered the column, she walked with Xinemus’s
slaves. “You needn’t fear,” she
said. Achamian swallowed at the
sour taste in his mouth. Earlier, Xinemus had passed perrapta around instead of wine—wretched drink. “Fear what?” “Loving him.” Achamian licked his lips,
cursed his racing heart. “You dislike me, don’t
you?” Even in the gloom of long
shadows, she seemed too beautiful to be real, like something that had stepped
between the cracks of the world— something wild and white-skinned. For the
first time, Achamian realized how much he desired her. “Only…” She hesitated,
studied the flattened grasses at her feet. She raised her face and for the
briefest of instants looked at him with Esmenet’s eyes. “Only because you
refuse to see,” she murmured. Anserca See what? Achamian wanted to cry. But she’d fled. “Akka?” Kellhus called in
the fading dark. “I heard someone weeping.” “It’s nothing,” Achamian
croaked, his face still buried in his hands. At some point—he was no longer
sure when—he’d crawled from his tent and huddled over the embers of their dying
fire. Now dawn was coming. “Is it the Dreams?” Achamian rubbed his face,
heaved cool air into his lungs. Tell him! “Y-yes… The Dreams.
That’s it, the Dreams.” He could feel the man
stare down at him, but lacked the heart to look up. He flinched when Kellhus
placed a hand on his shoulder, but didn’t pull away. “But it isn’t the Dreams,
is it, Akka? It’s something else… Something more. Hot tears parsed his
cheeks, matted his beard. He said nothing. “You haven’t slept this
night… You haven’t slept in many nights, have you?” Achamian looked over the
surrounding encampment, across the canvas-congested slopes and fields. Against
a sky like cold iron, the pennants hung dead from their poles. Then he looked to
Kellhus. “I see his blood in your face, and it fills me with both hope and
horror.” The Prince of Atrithau
frowned. “So this is about me… I feared as much.” Achamian swallowed, and
without truly deciding to, threw the number-sticks. “Yes,” he said. “But it’s
not so simple.” “Why? What do you mean?” “Among the many dreams my
brother Schoolmen and I suffer, there’s one in particular that troubles us. It
has to do with Anasflrimbor Celmomas II, the High King of Kunьiri—with his
death on the Fields of Eleneot in the year 2146.” Achamian breathed deeply,
rubbed angrily at his eyes. “You see, Celmomas was the first great foe of the
Consult, and the first and most glorious victim of the No-God. The first! He died in my arms, Kellhus. He
was my most hated, most cherished friend and he died in my arms!“ He scowled,
waved his hands in confusion. ”I m-mean I mean in S-Seswatha’s arms…“ “And this is what pains
you? That I—” “You don’t understand!
J-just listen… He, Celmomas, spoke to me__ to Seswatha—before he
died. He spoke to all of us—“ Achamian shook his head, cackled, pulled fingers
through his beard. ”In fact he keeps speaking, night after fucking
night, dying time and again—and always for the first time! And-and he says…“ Achamian looked up,
suddenly unashamed of his tears. If he couldn’t bare his soul before this
man—so like Ajencis, so like lnrau!—then who? “He says that an
Anasurimbor—an Anasurimbor, Kellhus!—will return at the end
of the world.” Kellhus’s expression,
normally so blessedly devoid of conflict, darkened. “What are you saying, Akka?” “Don’t you see?” Achamian
whispered. “You’re the one, Kellhus. The Harbinger! The fact
you’re here means that it’s starting all over again…” Sweet Sejenus. “The Second Apocalypse,
Kellhus… I’m talking about the Second Apocalypse. You are the sign!” Kellhus’s hand slipped
from his shoulder. “But that doesn’t make sense, Akka. The fact I’m here means
nothing. Nothing. Now I’m here, and before I was
in Atrithau. And if my bloodline reaches as far back as you say, then an
Anasurimbor has always been ‘here,’ wherever that might
be…” The Prince of Atrithau’s
eyes lost their focus, wrestled with unseen things. For a moment, the glamour
of absolute self-possession faltered, and he looked like any man overwhelmed by
a precipitous turn of circumstance. “It’s just a…” He paused,
as if lacking the breath to continue. “A coincidence,” Achamian
said, pressing himself to his feet. For some reason, he yearned to reach out,
steady him with his embrace. “That’s what I thought… I admit I was shocked when
I first met you, but I never thought… It was just too mad! But then…” “Then what?” “I found them. I found
the Consult… The night you and the others celebrated Proyas’s victory over the
Emperor, I was summoned to the Anserca Jl AndiamineHeights—by no less than Ikurei Conphas—and
brought to the Imperial Catacombs. Apparently they’d found a spy in their
midst, one that convinced the Emperor that sorcery simply had to be involved. But there was no sorcery, and the man
they showed me was no ordinary spy…“ “How so?” “For one, he called me
Chigra, which is Seswatha’s name in aghurzoi,
the perverted speech of the Sranc. Somehow he could see Seswatha’s trace within
me… For another, he…” Achamian pursed his lips and shook his head. “He had no face. He was an abomination of the flesh, Kellhus! A spy
that can mimic the form of any man without sorcery or sorcery’s Mark. Perfect
spies! “Somehow, somewhere, the
Consult murdered the Emperor’s Prime Counsel and had him replaced. These, these things could be anywhere! Here in the Holy War, in the
courts of the Great Factions… For all we know they could be Kings!” OrShriah… “But how does that make
me the Harbinger?” “Because it means the
Consult has mastered the Old Science. Sranc, Bashrags, Dragons, all the
abominations of the Inchoroi, are artifacts of the Tekne, the Old Science,
created long, long ago, when the Nonmen still ruled Earwa. It was thought
destroyed when the Inchoroi were annihilated by Cu’jara-Cinmoi—before the Tusk
was even written, Kellhus! But these, these skin-spies are new. New artifacts of the Old Science. And if the Consult
has rediscovered the Old Science, there’s a chance they know how to resurrect
Mog-Pharau…” And that name stole his
breath, winded him like a blow to the chest. “The No-God,” Kellhus
said. Achamian nodded, swallowing
as though his throat were sore. “Yes, the No-God…” “And now that an
Anasurimbor has returned…” “That chance has become a
near certainty.” Kellhus studied him for a
stern moment, his expression utterly inscrutable. “So what will you do?” “My mission,” Achamian
said, “is to observe the Holy War. But I’ve a decision to make… One that claws
my heart every waking moment.” “Which is?” The First March Achamian tried hard to
weather his student’s glare, but there seemed to be something in his eyes,
something incomparable—terrifying even. “I haven’t told them about you,
Kellhus. I haven’t told my brothers that the Celmomian Prophecy has been
fulfilled. And so long as I don’t tell them, I betray them, Seswatha,
myself”—he cackled again—“maybe even the world…” “But why then?” Kellhus
asked. “Why haven’t you told them?” Achamian took a deep
breath. “Because when I do, they’ll come for you, Kellhus.” “Perhaps they should.” “You don’t know my
brothers.” Crouching naked in the
pre-dawn gloom of the tent he shared with Kellhus, Cnaьir urs Skiotha peered at
Serwe’s sleeping face and used the tip of his knife to hook and draw away
obscuring threads of her hair. The veil parted, he set aside the knife and ran
two callused fingers along her cheek. She twitched and sighed, nestled deeper
in her blanket. So beautiful. So like his forgotten wife. Cnaьir watched her, as
motionless and awake as she was motionless and asleep. All the while, he
listened to the voices outside: Kellhus and the sorcerer, speaking nonsense. In some ways it seemed a
miracle. Not only had he traversed the length of the Empire, he’d spat at the
feet of the Emperor, humiliated Ikurei Conphas before his peers, and attained
the rights and privileges of an Inrithi Prince. Now he rode as a general in the
greatest host he’d ever witnessed. A host that could crush cities, strike down
nations, murder whole peoples. A host for memorialists’ songs. A Holy War. And it was bent on
storming Shimeh, the stronghold of the Cishaurim. The Cishaurim! Anasurimbor Moenghus was
Cishaurim. Despite the deranged
scale of its ambition, the Dunyain’s plan seemed to be working. In his dreams,
Cnaьir had always come across Moenghus alone. Sometimes there would be words,
sometimes not. There would always be bleeding. But now those dreams seemed
little more than juvenile fantasies. Kellhus was right. After thirty years,
Moenghus would be Anserca far more than someone who
could be cut down in some alley; he would be a potentate. His would be an
empire. And how could it be any other way? He was Dunyain. Like his son, Kellhus. Who could say how far
Moenghus’s power reached? Certainly it encompassed the Cishaurim and the
Kianene—the question was only one of degree. But was that power with them now,
in the Holy War? Did it include Kellhus? Send them a son. What
better way could a Dunyain overthrow his enemies? Already in their councils
with Proyas, the Inrithi caste-nobles fell instantly silent at the sound of
Kellhus’s voice. Already they watched him when they thought him preoccupied,
whispered when they thought he couldn’t hear. And as pompous as they were, they
deferred to him, not the way men accede to
rank or station, but the way men yield to those who possess something they
need. Somehow Kellhus had convinced them he stood outside the circle of the
commonplace, outside even the extraordinary. It was more than just his claim to
have dreamt of the Holy War from afar, more than the nefarious ways he spoke to
them, as though he were a father playing upon the well-known conceits of his
children. It was what he said as well, the truths. “But the God favours, the
righteous!” Ingiaban, the Palatine of Kethantei, had cried one night at
council. At Cnaьir’s insistence, they’d been discussing various strategies the
Sapatishah of Shigek, Skauras, might use to undo them. “Sejenus himself—” “And you,” Kellhus
interrupted, “are you righteous?” The air in the Royal
Pavilion became tense with a strange, aimless expectation. “We are the righteous,
yes,” the Palatine of Kethantei replied. “If not, then what in Juru’s name are
we doing here?” “Indeed,” Kellhus said.
“What are we doing here?” Cnaьir glimpsed Lord
Gaidekki turning to Xinemus—a worried glance. Wary, Ingiaban purchased
time by sipping his anpoi. “Raising arms against the heathen. What else?” “So we raise arms against
the heathen because we’re righteous?” The First March “And because they’re
wicked.” Kellhus smiled with stern
compassion. ‘“He who’s righteous is he who’s not found wanting in the ways of
the God…’ Isn’t this what Sejenus himself writes?” “Yes. Of course.” “And who finds men wanting in the ways of the God? Other men?” The Palatine of Kethantei
paled. “No,” he said. “Only the God and his Prophets.” “So we’re not righteous,
then?” “Yes… I mean, no…”
Baffled, Ingiaban looked to Kellhus, a horrible frankness revealed in his face.
“I mean… I no longer know what I mean!” Concessions. Always
exacting concessions. Accumulating them. “Then you understand,”
Kellhus said, his voice now deep and preternatural^ resonant, a voice that
seemingly spoke from everywhere. “A man can never judge himself righteous, Lord
Palatine, he can only hope. And it’s this that gives meaning
to our actions. In raising arms against the heathen, we’re not the priest
before the altar, we’re the victim. It means nothing to offer up
another to the God, so we make offerings of ourselves. Make no mistake, all of
you… We wager our souls. We leap into the black. This pilgrimage is our
sacrifice. Only afterward will we know whether we’ve been found wanting.” The mutter of startled,
even wondrous assent. “Well said, Kellhus,”
Proyas had declared. “Well said.” All men see from where
they stand, and somehow Kellhus saw farther than any other man. He stood upon a
different ground, greater, as though he occupied the heights of every soul. And
though none of the Inrithi noblemen dared speak this intimation, they felt
it—all of them. Cnaьir could see it in the cast of their eyes, hear it in the
timbre of their voices: the first shadows of awe. The wonder that made men
small. Cnaьir knew these
secretive passions all too well. To watch Kellhus ply these men was to witness
the shameful record of his own undoing at the hands of Moenghus. Sometimes the
urge to cry out in warning almost overpowered him. Sometimes Kellhus seemed
such an abomination that the gulf between Scylvendi and Inrithi threatened to
disappear—particu- Anserca larly where Proyas was
concerned. Moenghus had preyed upon the same vulnerabilities, the same
conceits… If Cnaьir shared these things with these men, how different could he
be? Sometimes crimes seemed
crimes, no matter how ludicrous the victim. But only sometimes. For
the most part Cnaьir merely watched with a numb kind of incredulity. He no
longer heard Kellhus speak so much as observed him cut and carve, whittle and
hew, as though the man had somehow shattered the glass of language and
fashioned knives from the pieces. This word to anger so that word might open.
This look to embarrass so that smile might reassure. This insight to remind so
that truth might injure, heal, or astonish. How easy it must have
been for Moenghus! One stripling lad. One chieftain’s wife. Images, stark and dry, of
the Steppe assailed him. The other women tearing at his mother’s hair, clawing
at her face, clubbing her with rocks, stabbing her with sticks. Mother.1
A bawling infant hoisted from her yaksh, tossed into the all-cleansing fire—his
blond-haired half-brother. The stone faces of the men turning away from his
look… How could he let it
happen again? How could he stand by and watch? How could— Still crouching next to
Serwe, Cnaьir looked down, shocked to see that he’d been stabbing the ground
with his knife. The bone-white reeds of the mat were snapped and severed about
a small pit of black. He shook his black mane,
breathed as though punishing air. Always these thoughts—always! Remorse? For outlanders?
Concern for mewling peacocks? Especially Proyas! “So long as what comes
before remains shrouded,” Kellhus had said on their trek across the Jьinati
Steppe, “so long as men are already deceived, what does it matter?” And what
did it matter, making fools of fools? What mattered was whether the man made a
fool of him; this—this!—was the sharp edge upon which his every thought
should bleed. Did the Dunyain speak true? Was he truly his father’s assassin? I walk with the whirlwind! He could never forget. He
had only his hatred to preserve him. And Serwe? The First March The voices from outside
had trailed into silence. He could hear that weeping fool of a sorcerer
clearing his nose outside. Then Kellhus pressed through the flap into the dim
interior. His eyes flashed from Serwe to the knife to Cnaьir’s face. “You heard,” he said in
flawless Scylvendi. Even after all this time, hearing him speak thus made
Cnaьir’s skin prickle. “This is a camp of war,”
he replied. “Many heard.” “No, they slept.” Cnaьir knew the futility
of debate—he knew the Dunyain—so he said nothing, rooted through his scattered
belongings for his breeches. Serwe complained and
kicked at her blankets. “Do you recall that first
time we spoke in your yaksh?” Kellhus asked. “Of course,” Cnaьir
replied, pulling on his breeches. “I curse that day with every waking breath.” “That witch stone you
threw to me…” “You mean my father’s
Chorae?” “Yes. Do you still have
it?” Cnaьir peered at him
through the gloom. “But you know I do.” “And how would I know?” “You know.” Cnaьir dressed in silence
while Kellhus roused Serwe. “But the horrnns,” she complained, burying her head. “I haven’t heard
the horns…” Cnaьir laughed abruptly,
deep and full-throated. “Treacherous work,” he
said, now speaking in Sheyic. “And what’s that?”
Kellhus replied—more for Serwe’s benefit than anything, Cnaьir realized. The
Dunyain knew what he meant. He always knew. “Killing sorcerers.” Just then, the horns
sounded. Late Spring, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, the AndiamineHeights Xerius stood from the
baths, walked up the marble steps to where the slaves waited with towels and
scented oils. And for the first time in Anserca days he could feel it
move him—harmony, the providence of auspicious deities… He looked up with mild
surprise when the Empress, his mother, appeared from the dark recesses of the
chamber. “Tell me Mother,” he said
without looking at her extravagant figure, “do you simply happen upon me at
inopportune moments?” He turned to her as the slaves gently towelled his groin.
“Or is this too something you measure?” The Empress bowed her
head slightly, as though she were Shriah, an equal. “I’ve brought you a gift,
Xerius,” she said, gesturing to the dark-haired girl at her side. With a
flourish, her eunuch, the giant Pisulathas, opened the girl’s robe and drew it
away. Beneath, she was as white-skinned as a Galeoth—as naked as the Emperor,
and almost as splendid. Gifts from Mother—they
underscored the treachery of gifts from those who were not one’s tributaries.
Such gifts weren’t gifts at all, in fact. Such gifts always demanded exchange. Xerius couldn’t remember
when Istriya had started bringing these men and women to him—these surrogates.
She had the eye of a whore, his mother—he would grant her that. She knew,
unerringly, what would please him. “You are a venal witch, Mother,” he said,
admiring the terrified girl. “Was there ever a son so fortunate as me?” But Istriya said only,
“Skeaos is dead.” Xerius looked at her
momentarily, then returned his attention to the slaves, who’d begun rubbing him
with oil. “Something is dead,” he replied, suppressing
a shudder. “We know not what.” “And why wasn’t I told?” “I knew you’d hear of it
soon enough.” He sat upon the chair brought for him, and his body slaves began
combing his hair with more oils, filing his nails. “You always do,” he added. “The Cishaurim,” Istriya
said after a pause. “But of course.” “Then they know. The
Cishaurim know of your plans.” “It’s of little
consequence. They knew already.” “Have you become such a
vulgar fool, Xerius? I thought that after this you would be ready to
reconsider.” “Reconsider what,
Mother?” “This mad pact you have
made with the heathen. What else?” “Silence, Mother.” Xerius
glanced nervously at the girl, but it was plain that she didn’t speak a word of
Sheyic. “This isn’t to be uttered aloud. Ever again. Do you hear me?” “But the Cishaurim, Xerius! Think of it! At your bosom all these years,
wearing the face of Skeaos! The Emperor’s only confidant! That
vile tongue clucking poison for counsel. All these years, Xerius! Sharing the hearth of your ambitions with an
obscenity!” Xerius had thought of
this—had been able to think of little else these past days. At night he dreamed
of faces—faces like fists. Of Gaenkelti, who had died so… absurdly. And then there was the question, the question that struck with such force it never
failed to jar him from the tedium of his routines. Are there others? Others like it… “You lecture the
educated, Mother. You know that in all things there’s a balance to be struck.
An exchange of vulnerabilities for advantages. You taught me this.” But the Empress didn’t
relent. The old bitch never relented. “The Cishaurim have had
your heart in their clutches, Xerius.
Through you they have supped on the very
marrow of the Empire. And you would let this—an offence like no other—go
unpunished now, when the Gods have delivered to
you the instrument of your vengeance? You’d still pull the Holy War up short?
If you spare Shimeh, Xerius, you spare the
Cishaurim.” “Silence!” His scream pealed throughout the chamber. Istriya
laughed fiercely. “My naked son,” she said. “My poor… naked… son.” Xerius leapt to his feet,
shouldered past the circle of his slaves, his look wounded, quizzical. “This isn’t like you,
Mother. You were never one to cower before damnation. Is it because you grow
old, hmm? Tell me, what’s it like to stand upon the precipice? To feel your
womb wither, to watch the eyes of your lovers grow shy with hidden disgust…” He’d struck from impulse
and found vanity—the only way he knew to injure his mother. But there was no bruise
in her reply. “There comes a time, Xerius, when you care nothing for your
spectators. The spectacles of beauty are Anserca like the baubles of
ceremony—for the young, the stupid. The act, Xerius. The act makes mere
ornament of all things. You’ll see.“ “Then why the cosmetics,
Mother? Why have your body slaves truss you up like an old whore to the feast?” She looked at him
blankly. “Such a monstrous son…” she whispered. “As monstrous as his
mother,” Xerius added, laughing cruelly. “Tell me… Now that your
debauched life is nearly spent, are you filled with regret Mother?” Istriya looked away,
across the steaming bath waters. “Regret is inevitable, Xerius.” These words struck him.
“Perhaps… perhaps it is,” he replied, moved for some reason to sudden pity.
There had been a time when he and his mother had been… close. But Istriya could
be intimate with only those she possessed. She no longer possessed him. The thought of this
touched Xerius. To lose such a godlike son… “Always these savage
exchanges, eh, Mother? I do repent them. I would have you
know that much.” He looked at her pensively, chewed his bottom lip. “But speak
of Shimeh again and I will put your platitude to the test. You will regret… Do you understand this?” “I understand, Xerius.” There was malice in her
eyes when she met his gaze, but Xerius ignored it. A concession, any
concession, was a triumph when dealing with the Empress. Xerius studied the young
girl instead, her taut breasts upswept like swallow’s wings, her soft weave of
pubic hair. Aroused, he held out his hand and she came to him, reluctantly. He
led her to a nearby couch and reclined, stretched out before her. “Do you know
what to do child?” he asked. She opened her lithe
legs, straddled him. Tears streamed down her cheeks. Trembling, she lowered
upon his member… Xerius gasped. It was
like sinking into a warm, unbroken peach. If the world harboured obscene things
like the Cishaurim, it harboured also such sweet fruits. The old Empress turned to
leave. “Will you not stay,
Mother?” Xerius called, his voice thick. “Watch your son enjoy this gift of
yours?” Istriya hesitated. “No,
Xerius.” “But you will, Mother. The Emperor is difficult to please. You must
instruct her.” There was a pause, filled
only by the girl’s whimper. “But certainly, my son,”
Istriya said at length, and walked grandly over to the couch. The rigid girl
flinched when she grasped her hand and drew it down to Xerius’s scrotum. “Gently,
child,” she cooed. “Shushh. No weeping…” Xerius groaned and arched
into her, laughed when she chirped in pain. He gazed into his mother’s painted
face suspended over the girl’s shoulder, whiter even than the porcelain,
Galeoth skin, and he burned with that old, illicit thrill. He
felt a child again, careless. All was as it should be. The Gods were auspicious
indeed… “Tell me, Xerius,” his
mother said huskily, “how was it that you discovered Skeaos?” HApTER Three ASGILIOCH The proposition “I am the centre” need never be uttered. It is the
assumption upon which all certainty and all doubt turns. —AJENCIS, THE THIRD
ANALYTIC OF MEN See your enemies content and your lovers melancholy. —AINONI PROVERB Early Summer, 4111 Year-o/-the-Tusk, the fortress of Asgilioch For the first time in
living memory, an earthquake struck the Unaras Spur and the InunaraHighlands.
Hundreds of miles away the great bustling markets of Gielgath fell silent as
wares swung on their hooks and mortar chipped down shivering walls. Mules kicked,
their eyes rolling in fear. Dogs howled. But in Asgilioch, the
southern bulwark of the peoples of the Kyranae Plains since time immemorial,
men were knocked to their knees, walls swayed like palm fronds, and the ancient
citadel of Ruom, which had survived the Kings of Shigek, the dragons of
Tsurumah, and no less than three Fanim Jihads, collapsed in a mighty column of
dust. As the survivors pulled bodies from the debris, they found themselves
grieving the stone more than the flesh. “Hard-hearted Ruom!” they cried out in
disbelief. “The High Bull of Asgilioch has fallen!” For many in the Empire, Ruom was a totem.
Not since the days of Ingusharotep II, the ancient God-King of Shigek, had the
citadel of Asgilioch been destroyed—the last time the South ever conquered the
peoples of the Kyranae Plains. The first Men of the
Tusk, a troop of hard-riding Galeoth horsemen under Coithus Saubon’s nephew,
Athjeari, arrived four days following. To their dismay, they found Asgilioch in
partial ruin, and her battered garrison convinced of the Holy War’s doom.
Nersei Proyas and his Conriyans arrived the day after, to be followed two days
after that by Ikurei Conphas and his Imperial Columns, as well as the Shrial
Knights under Incheiri Gotian. Where Proyas had taken the Sogian Way along the southern coast, then
marched cross-country through the Inunara Highlands, Conphas and Gotian had
taken the so-called “Forbidden
Road”—built by the Nansur to allow the quick
deployment of their Columns between the Fanim and Scylvendi frontiers. Of those
Great Names who struck through the heart of the province, Coithus Saubon and
his Galeoth were the first to arrive—almost a full week after Conphas. Gothyelk
and his Tydonni appeared shortly after, followed by Skaiyelt and his grim Thunyeri. Of the Ainoni nothing was
known, save that from the outset their host, perhaps hampered by its ponderous
size or by the Scarlet Spires and their vast baggage trains, had trouble making
half the daily distance of the other contingents. So the greater portion of the
Holy War made camp on the barren slopes beneath Asgilioch’s ramparts and
waited, trading rumours and premonitions of disaster. To the sentries posted on
Asgilioch’s walls, they looked like a migrating nation—like something from the
Tusk. When it became apparent
that days, perhaps weeks, might pass before the Ainoni joined them, Nersei
Proyas called a Council of the Great and Lesser Names. Given the size of the
assembly, they were forced to gather in Asgilioch’s inner bailey, beneath the
debris heaped about Ruom’s broken foundations. The Great Names took their
places about a salvaged trestle table, while the others, dressed in the finery
of a dozen nations, sat across the rubble slopes, making an amphitheatre of the
ruin. They fairly shimmered in the bright sunlight. They spent most of the
morning observing the proper rituals and sacrifices: this was the first full
Council since marching from Momemn. The Asgilioch. afternoon they spent
quarrelling, for the most part debating whether Ruom’s destruction portended
catastrophe or nothing at all. Saubon claimed that the Holy War should break
camp immediately, seize the passes of the Southron Gates, and march into Gedea.
“This place oppresses us!” he cried, gesturing to the tiers of ruin. “We
slumber and stir in the shadow of dread!” Ruom, he insisted, was a Nansur
superstition—a “shibboleth of the perfumed and the weak-hearted.” The longer
the Holy War loitered beneath its ruin, the more it would become their
superstition. If many saw sense in
these arguments, many others saw madness. Without the Scarlet Spires, Ikurei
Conphas reminded the Galeoth Prince, the Holy War would be at the mercy of the
Cishaurim. “According to my uncle’s spies, Skauras has assembled all the
Grandees of Shigek and awaits us in Gedea. Who’s to say the Cishaurim aren’t
waiting with him?” Proyas and his Scylvendi adviser, Cnaьir urs Skiotha,
agreed: to march without the Ainoni was errant foolishness. But no amount of
argument, it seemed, could sway Saubon and his confederates. The sun smouldered over
the western turrets, and they’d agreed on nothing save the obvious, such as
dispatching riders to locate the Ainoni, or sending Athjeari into Gedea to
gather intelligence. Otherwise it seemed certain the Holy War, so recently
reunited, would fracture once again. Proyas had fallen silent, his face buried
in his hands. Only Conphas continued to argue with Saubon, if trading
embittered insults could be called such. Then Anasurimbor Kellhus,
the impoverished Prince of Atrithau, stood from his place among those watching
and cried, “You mistake the meaning of what you see, all of you! The loss of
Ruom is no accident, but neither is it a curse!” Saubon laughed, shouting,
“Ruom is a talisman against the heathen, is it not?” “Yes,” the Prince of Atrithau
replied. “So long as the citadel stood, we could turn back. But now… Don’t you
see? Just beyond these mountains, men congregate in the tabernacles of the
False Prophet. We stand upon the heathen’s shore. The heathen’s shore!” He paused, looked at each
Great Name in turn. “Without Ruom there’s no
turning back… The God has burned our ships.” Afterward it was decided:
the Holy War would await the Ainoni and the Scarlet Spires. Far from Asgilioch, in
the centremost chamber of his great tent, Eleazaras, Grandmaster of the Scarlet
Spires, reclined in his chair, the one luxury he’d allowed himself for this mad
journey. Beneath him, his body slaves washed his feet in steaming water. Three
tripods illuminated the surrounding gloom. Smoke curled through the interior,
casting shadows that resembled water-stained script along the bellied canvas. The journey hadn’t been
as hard as he’d feared—thus far. Nevertheless, evenings such as this always
seemed to occasion an almost shameful relief. At first he’d thought it was his
age: more than twenty years had passed since his last journey abroad. Weary
bones, he would think, watching his people labouring in evening light hoisting
tent and pavilion to the very horizon. Weary old bones. But when he recalled
those years spent hiking from mission to mission, city to city, he realized
that what he suffered now had nothing to do with weariness. He could remember
lying beside his fire beneath the stars, no grand pavilion overhead, no silk
pillows kissing his cheek, only hard ground and the humming exhaustion that
comes when a traveller falls completely still. That had been weariness. But this? Borne on litters,
surrounded by dozens of bare-chested slaves… The relief he experienced
every evening, he realized, had nothing to do with fatigue, and everything to
do with standing still… Which was to say, with Shimeh. Great decisions, he
reflected, were measured by their finality as much as by their consequences.
Sometimes he could feel it like a palpable thing: the path not taken, that fork
in history where the Scarlet Spires repudiated Maithanet’s outrageous offer and
watched the Holy War from afar. It didn’t exist and yet it lingered, the way a
night of passion might linger in the entreating look of a slave. He saw it
everywhere: in nervous silences, in exchanged glances, in lyokus’s unrelenting
cynicism, in General Setpanares’s scowl. And it seemed to mock him with
promise—just as the path he now walked mocked him with threat. Asgilioch ^ To join a Holy War!
Eleazaras dealt in unrealities; it was his trade. But the unreality of this,
the Scarlet Spires here, was well nigh indigestible. The
thought of it spawned ironies, not the ironies that cultured men— the Ainoni in
particular—savoured, but rather the ironies that reproduced themselves
endlessly, that reduced all determination to shaking indecision. Add to this the
accumulation of complications: the House Ikurei plotting with the heathen; the
Mandate playing some arcane Gnostic game every single Spires
agent in Sumna uncovered and executed—even though they seemed secure enough before the Scarlet Spires set foot in the Empire. Even
Maithanet, the Great Shriah of the Thousand Temples, worked some dark angle. Small wonder Shimeh
oppressed him. Small wonder each night seemed a respite. Eleazaras sighed as
Myaza, his new favourite, kneaded his right foot with warmed oil. No matter, he told himself. Regret is the opiate of fools. He leaned his head back,
watched the girl work through his eyelashes. “Myaza,” he said softly, grinning
at her modest smile. “Mmmyassssaaa…” “Hanamanu Eleazarassss,” she sighed in turn—daring wench! The other slaves
gasped in shock, then broke into giggles. Such a bad girl! Eleazaras thought. He leaned forward to scoop her
into his arms. But the sight of a black-gowned Usher kneeling on the carpets
halted him. Someone wished to see
him—obviously. Probably General Setpanares with more complaints about the
host’s sloth—which were really complaints about the Scarlet Spires’ sloth. So
the Ainoni would be the last to reach Asgilioch. What did it matter? Let them
wait. “What is it?” he snapped. The young man raised his
face. “A petitioner has come, Grandmaster.” “At this hour? Who?” The Usher hesitated. “A
magi of the MysunsaiSchool, Grandmaster. One
Skalateas.” Mysunsai? Whores—all of
them. “What does he want?” Eleazaras asked. Something churned in his
gut. More complications. “He wouldn’t say
specifically,” the Usher replied. “He says only that he’s ridden hard from
Momemn to speak with you on a matter of great urgency.” L “Panderer,” Eleazaras
spat. “Whore. Delay him momentarily, then him in.” After the man withdrew,
Eleazaras had his body slaves dry his feer and bind his sandals. He
then dismissed them. As the last slav hastened out, the man called Skalateas
was escorted in by two armoured Javreh. “Leave us,” Eleazaras
said to the warrior-slaves. They bowed low, then also withdrew. From his seat, he studied
the mercenary, who was clean shaven in the Nansur fashion, dressed in the
humble garments of a traveller: leggings, a plain brown smock, and leather
sandals. He seemed to tremble, as well he should. He stood before no less than
the Grandmasti of the Scarlet Spires. “This is most
impertinent, my mercenary brother,” Eleazaras said. “There are channels for
this kind of transaction.” “Begging your pardon,
Grandmaster, but there are no channels for what I have to… to trade.” In a rush
he added, “I’m-I’m a Whitewash Peralogue of the Mysunsai Order, Grandmaster,
contracted to the Imperial Family as an Auditor. The Emperor uses me, from time
to time, to confirm certain determinations made by his Imperial Saik…”
Eleazaras digested this, decided to be accommodating. “Continue.” “Sh-should we, ah… ah…” “Should we what?” “Should we discuss the fee 7* A caste-menial, of
course—suthenti. No appreciation of the game. But jnan, as the Ainoni were fond
of saying, brooked no consent. If one man played, everyone played. Rather than reply,
Eleazaras studied his long, painted nails, polished them absently against his
breast. He looked up as though caught in a small indiscretion, then studied the
fool like one burdened by determinations of life and death. The conjunction of
silence and scrutiny nearly undid the man. He clasped his shaking hands before
him. “F-forgive m-my
eagerness, Grandmaster,” Skalateas stammered, falling to his knees. “So often
are knowledge and greed… spurs to each other.” Asgilwch 4/ W done. The man was not
utterly devoid of wit. “Spurs indeed,” Eleazaras
said. “But perhaps you should let me decide which rides which.” “Of course, Grandmaster…
But…” “But nothing, whore. Out
with it.” “Of course, Grandmaster,”
he said again. “It’s the Fanim sorcerer-priests—the Cishaurim… Th-they have a
new kind oi spy.” The dramatics were
forgotten. Eleazaras leaned forward. “Tell me more.” “F-forgive me,
Grandmaster,” the man blurted. “B-but I would be paid before speaking any
further!” A fool after all. Time
was ever the scholar’s most precious commodity. Whore or not, the man should
have known that. Eleazaras sighed, then spoke the first impossible word. His
mouth and eyes burned as bright as phosphor. “No!” Skalateas cried. “Please! I’ll speak! There’s no
need…” Eleazaras paused, though
his arcane muttering continued to echo, as though thrown by walls not found in
this world. The silence, when it did come, felt absolute. “On-on the eve b-before
the Holy War marched from Momemn,” the man began, “I was summoned to the
Catacombs to observe what was supposed to be, they said, the interrogation of a
spy. Apparently the Emperor’s Prime Counsel—” “Skeaos?” Eleazaras
exclaimed. “A spy?” The Mysunsai hesitated,
licked his lips. “Not Skeaos… Someone masquerading as him. Or something…” Eleazaras nodded. “You
have my attention, Skalateas.” “The Emperor himself was
present at the interrogation. He demanded, quite stridently, that I contradict
the findings of the Saik, that I tell him sorcery was involved… The Prime
Counsel was—as you know—an old man, and yet he’d apparently killed or maimed
several members of the Eothic Guard during his arrest—with his bare hands, they said. The Emperor was, well… overwrought.” “So what did you see,
Auditor? Did you see the Mark?” “No. Nothing. He was
unbruised. There was no sorcery whatsoever involved. But when I said as much to
the Emperor, he accused me of HE TIRST MARCH conspiring with the Saik
to overthrow him. Then the Mandate Schoolman arrived—escorted by Ikurei Conphas
no—“ “Mandate Schoolman?”
Eleazaras said. “You mean Drusas Achamian?” Skalateas swallowed. “You
know him? We Mysunsai no longer bother with the Mandate. Does your Eminence
maint—” “Do you wish to sell
knowledge, Skalateas, or trade it?” The Mysunsai smiled
nervously. “Sell it, of course.” “So then what happened
next?” “The Mandati confirmed my
determination, and the Emperor accused him of lying as well. As I said, the
Emperor was… was…” “Overwrought.” “Yes. Even more so at
this point. But the Mandati, Achamian, also seemed agitated. They argued—” “Argued?” For some reason
that didn’t surprise Eleazaras. “About what?” The Mysunsai shook his
head. “I can’t remember. Something about fear, I think. Then the Prime Counsel
began speaking to the Mandati—in some language
I’ve never heard. He recognized him.” “Recognized? Are you
sure?” “Utterly… Skeaos, or
whatever it was, recognized Drusas Achamian. Then he—it—began shaking. We just stood gaping. Then it wrenched
its chains from the wall… Freed itself!” “Did Drusas Achamian
assist him?” “No. He was as horrified
as the rest of us—if not more so. In the uproar, it killed two or three
men—I’ve never seen anything move so fast! That was when the Saik intervened,
burned him… Now that I think about it, burned him over the Mandati’s
objections. The man was wroth.” “Achamian tried to
intercede?” “To the point of
sheltering the Prime Counsel with his own body.” “You’re certain about
that?” “Absolutely. I’ll never
forget because that was when the Prime Counsel’s face… That was when his face… unpeeled.” “Unpeeled…” “Or unfolded… Its face
just… just opened, like fingers but… I know of no other way to
describe it.” “Like fingers?” AsgiLwch This can’t be! He lies! “You doubt me. You
mustn’t, your Eminence! This spy was a double, a mimic without the Mark! And that means he must be an artifact of the Psukhe.
The Cishaurim. It means they have spies you cannot see.” Numbness spilled like
water from Eleazaras’s chest to his limbs. I’ve ivagered m^ School. “But their Art is too
crude…” Skalateas looked
curiously heartened. “Nevertheless, it’s the only explanation. They’ve found
some way of creating perfect spies… Think! How long have they
owned the Emperor’s ear? The Emperor! Who knows how many…” He paused,
apparently wary of speaking too close to the heart of the matter. “But this is
why I rode so hard to find you. To warn you. Eleazaras’s mouth had
become very dry. He tried to swallow. “You must stay with us, of course, so
that we can… interview you, further.” The man’s face had become
the very picture of dread. “I’m af-afraid that won’t be possible, y-your
Eminence. I’m expected back at the Imperial
Court.” Eleazaras clasped his
hands to conceal the tremors. “You work for the Scarlet Spires, now, Skalateas.
Your contract with House Ikurei is dissolved.” “Ah, y-your Eminence, as
much as I abase myself before your glory and power—I am your slave!—I fear that
Mysunsai contracts cannot be dissolved by fiat. N-not even yours. S-so if I
c-could coll-collect my-my…” “Ah yes, your fee.”
Eleazaras stared hard at the Mysunsai, smiled with deceptive mildness. Poor
fool. To think he’d underestimated the value of his information.
This was worth far more than gold. Far more. The Mysunsai’s face had
gone blank. “I suppose I could delay my departure.” “You sup—” At that point, Eleazaras
almost died. The man had started his Cant the instant of Eleazaras’s reply,
purchasing a heartbeat’s advantage— almost enough. Lightning cut the air,
skipped and thundered across the Grandmaster’s reflexive Wards. Momentarily
blinded, Eleazaras tipped back in his chair and tumbled across
the carpeted ground. He was singing before he found his knees. The air danced with hammering
lights. Flurries of burning sparrows The fool cried out,
sputtered as best he could, trying to reinforce his Wards. But for Hanumanu
Eleazaras, the Grandmaster of the Scarlet Spires, he was little more than a
child’s riddle, easily solved. Bird after fiery bird swept into him. Immolation
after immolation, battering his Wards to ruin. Then chains flashed from corners
of empty air, piercing limbs and shoulders, crossing as though looped between a
child’s fingers, until the man hung suspended. Threaded. Skalateas screamed. Javreh charged into the
room, weapons drawn, only to halt, horror-stricken, before the spectacle of the
Mysunsai. Eleazaras barked at them to leave. He glimpsed his Master of
Spies, Iyokus, fighting his way past the retreating warrior-slaves. The chanv
addict fairly tumbled across the carpets, his red-irised eyes wide, his bruised
lips agog. Eleazaras couldn’t recall seeing such passion in the man’s
expression—at least not since the Cishaurim’s fateful attack ten years before… Their declaration of war. “Eli!” Iyokus cried,
staring at Skalateas’s impaled and writhing form. “What’s this?” The Grandmaster absently
stamped at a small fire burning on the carpets. “A gift to you, old friend.
Another enigma for you to interpret. Another threat…” “Threat?” the man cried.
“What’s the meaning of this, Eli? What’s happened here?” Eleazaras studied the
screaming Mysunsai—a scholar distracted by his work. What do I do? “That Mandate Schoolman,”
Eleazaras snapped, turning to Iyokus. “Where’s he now?” “Marching with Proyas—or
so I assume… Eli? Tell me—” “Drusas Achamian must be
brought to me,” Eleazaras continued. “Brought to me or killed.” Iyokus’s expression
darkened. AsgiUoch “Something like that
requires time… planning… He’s a Mandate
Schoolman, Eli!
Not to mention the risk of reprisals… What, do we war against both the
Cishaurim and the Mandate? Either way, nothing will be done until I know what’s going on. It is my
right!” Eleazaras studied the
man, matched his unsettling gaze. For perhaps the first time he felt comforted
rather than chilled by his translucent skin. Iyokus? h has to be you, doesn’t it? “This must seem,” he
said, “irrational…” “Indeed. Mai even.” “Trust me, old friend.
It’s not. Need makes all things rational.” “Why this evasion?” Iyokus
cried. “Patience…” Eleazaras
replied, gathering with his wind the dignity which behooved a Grandmaster. This
was an occasion for control. Calculation. “First you must humour my madness,
Iyokus… And then let me recount the grounds that
make it sane. First you must let me handle your face.” “And why’s that?” the man
asked. Astonishment. From what seemed a
distant place, Skalateas wailed. “I must know that there
are bones beneath… Proper bones.” For the first time since
leaving Momemn, Achamian found himself alone with the evening fire. Proyas was
hosting a temple fete for the other Great Names, and everyone save the sorcerer
and the slaves had been invited. So Achamian had decided to host a celebration
of his own. He drank to the sun, which leaned against the shoulders of the
Unaras Spur, to Asgilioch and her broken towers, and to the encamped Holy War,
her innumerable fires glittering in the dusk. He drank until his head drooped
before the flames, until his thoughts became a slurry of arguments, pleas, and
regrets. Telling Kellhus about his
dilemma, he now knew, had been rash. Two weeks had passed
since his confession. During this time, the Conriyan contingent had abandoned
the stone of the Sogian Way
for the scrub and sandy slopes of the Inunara Highlands. He had walked with
Kellhus much as before, answering his questions, pondering his remarks—and
wondering, always wondering, at the heart and intellect Asguioch of the man. On the
surface, everything was the same, save the lack of a road to follow.
But beneath, everything had changed. He’d thought sharing
would ease his burden, that honesty would absolve his shame. How could he be
such a fool, thinking that the secrecy of his dilemma had caused his
anguish, rather than the dilemma? If anything, secrecy had been a balm. Now
every time he and Kellhus exchanged glances, Achamian saw his anguish reflected
and reproduced until at times it seemed he couldn’t breathe. Far from lessening
his burden, he’d doubled it. “What,” Kellhus had
subsequently asked, “will the Mandate do if you tell them?” “Take you to Atyersus.
Confine you. Interrogate you… Now that they know the Consult runs amok, they’ll
do anything to exercise the semblance of control. For that reason alone, they’d
never let you go.” “Then you mustn’t tell
them, Akka!” There had been an anger and an anxiousness to these words, a cross
desperation that reminded him of Inrau. “And the Second
Apocalypse. What about that?” “But are you sure? Sure enough to
wager an entire life?” A life for the world. Or the world for a life. “You don’t understand!
The stakes, Kellhus! Think of what’s at
stake!” “How,” Kellhus had
replied, “can I think of anything else?” The Cultic priestesses of
Yatwer, Achamian had once heard, always dragged two victims—usually spring lambs—to the sacrificial
altar, one to pass under the knife, the
other to witness the sacred passage. In this way, every beast thrown upon
the altar always knew, in its dim way, what was about to happen. For the
Yatwerians, ritual wasn’t enough: the transfer- mation of casual
slaughter into true sacrifice required recognition. One lamb for ten bulls, a
priestess had told him once, as though she possessed the calculus to measure
such things. One lamb for ten bulls.
At the time, Achamian had laughed. Now he understood. Before the dilemma had
overwhelmed in a harried, flinching way, like some secret perversion. But now
that Kellhus knew, it simply overwhelmed. Before
Achamian could find respite, from time to time, in the man’s remarkable
company. He could pretend to be a simple teacher. But now, the dilemma had become
something between them, something always there whether Achamian averted his eyes or not. There was
no more pretending, no more “forgetting.” Only the knife of inaction. And wine. Sweet unwatered
wine. When they’d arrived at
half-ruined Asgilioch, Achamian began, more out of desperation than anything
else, teaching Kellhus algebra, geometry, and logic. What better way to impose
clarity on soul-bruising confusion, certainty on rib-gnawing doubt? While the
others watched from nearby, laughing, scratching their heads, or in the
Scylvendi’s case, glowering, Achamian and Kellhus spent hours scratching proofs
across the bare earth. Within days the Prince of Atrithau was improvising new
axioms, discovering theorems and formulae that Achamian had never imagined
possible, let alone encountered in the classic texts. Kellhus even proved to
him—proved!—that the logic of Ajencis as laid out in The Sylhgistics was preceded by a more basic logic, one which used relations between entire sentences
rather than subjects and predicates. Two thousand years of comprehension and
insight overturned by the strokes of a stick across dust! “How?” he’d cried. “How?” Kellhus shrugged. “This
is simply what I see.” He’s here, Achamian had thought absurdly, but he doesn’t stand beside me… If all men saw from where they
stood, then Kellhus stood somewhere else—that much was undeniable. But did he
stand beyond the pale of Drusas Achamian’s judgement? Ah, the question. More
drink was required. Achamian rooted through
his satchel, his only fireside companion, and withdrew the map he’d sketched—so
long ago it now seemed—while journeying from Sumna to Momemn. He held it to the
firelight, blinked several bleary times. All of them, every name scratched in black,
was connected, except for ANASURIMBOR KELLHUS Relations. Like
arithmetic or logic it all came down to relations. Achamian had inked those
relations he knew without a doubt, such as the link between the Consult and the
Emperor, and even those he simply Asgilioch X) assumed or feared, such
as that between Maithanet and Inrau. Ink lines-one for the Consult infiltration
of the Imperial Court,
another for Inrau’s murder, another for the Scarlet Spires’ war against the
Cishaurim another for the Holy War’s reconquest of Shimeh, and so on. Ink lines
for relations. A thin skeleton of black. But where did Kellhus fit? Where? Achamian suddenly
cackled, resisted the urge to throw the parchment into the fire. Smoke. Wasn’t
that what relations were in truth? Not ink, but smoke. Hard to see and
impossible to grasp. And wasn’t that the problem? The problem with everything? The thought of smoke
brought Achamian to his feet. He swayed for a moment, then bent to retrieve his
satchel. Again he debated tossing the map into the flames, but thought better
of it—he was a veteran of many drunken blunders—and stuffed the parchment back
with his things. With his satchel and
Xinemus’s wineskin slung over opposite shoulders, he stumbled off into the
darkness, laughing to himself and thinking, Yes, smoke… 1 need smoke. Hashish. Why not? The world was
about to end. Galeoth roar, first in
Sheyic, then in his native tongue. “Wossen het As the sun set behind the
Unaras Spur, each point of firelight became a circle of illumination, until the
encampment became gold coins scattered across black cloth. Among the first to
arrive, the Conriyans had pitched their pavilions on the heights immediately
below Asgilioch and its ready supply of water. As a result Achamian travelled
down, always down, into what seemed an ever darker and more raucous underworld. He walked and stumbled,
exploring the shadowy arteries between pavilions. He passed many others: groups
carousing from camp to camp, drunks searching for latrines, slaves on errands,
even a Gilgallic priest chanting and swinging the carcass of a hawk from a
leather string. From time to time he slowed, stared at the ruddy faces crowded
about each fire, laughed at their antics or pondered their scowls. He watched
them strut and posture, beat their breasts and bellow at the mountains. Soon
they would descend upon the heathen. Soon they would close with their hated
foe. “The God has burned our ships!” Achamian heard one bare-chested Periodically he paused to
search the darkness behind him. Old habit. After a time he found
himself weary and nearly out of wine. He’d trusted Fate, Anagke, to take him to
the camp-followers; she was, after all, called “the Whore.” But as with
everything else, she’d led him astray— the fucking whore. He began daring the
light to find directions. “Wrong way, friend,” an
older man missing his front teeth told him at one camp. “Only mules rutting
here. Oxen and mules.” “Good…” Achamian said,
clutching his groin in the familiar Tydonni manner, “at least the proportions
will be right.” The old man and his comrades burst into laughter. Achamian
winked and tipped back his wineskin. “Then that way,” some wit
called from the fire, pointing to the darkness beyond. “I hope your ass has
deep pockets!” Achamian coughed wine
from his nose, then spent several moments bent over, hacking. The general
merriment this caused won him a place by their fire. An inveterate traveller,
Achamian was accustomed to the company of warlike strangers, and for a time he
enjoyed their companionship, their wine, and his own anonymity. But when their
questions became too pointed, he thanked them and took his leave. Drawn by the throb of
drums, Achamian crossed a portion of the camp that seemed deserted, then quite
without warning found himself in the precincts of the camp-followers. Suddenly
all the activity seemed concentrated between the fires. With every step he
bumped some shoulder, pressed some back. In some places, he pressed through
crowds in almost total darkness, with only heads, shoulders, and the odd face frosted
by the Nail of Heaven’s pale light. In others, torches had been hammered into
the earth, either for musicians, merchants, or leather-panelled brothels.
Several avenues even boasted hanging lanterns. He saw young Men of the Tusk—no
more than boys, really—vomiting from too much drink. He saw ten-year-old girls
drawing thick-waisted warriors behind curtained canopies. He even glimpsed a
boy wearing smeared cosmetics, who watched with fearful promise as man after
man passed. He saw craftsmen manning stalls, walked past more than a few
impromptu smithies. Beneath the rambling canopies of an opium den, he saw men
twitch as though beset by flies. He
passed the gilded pavilions of the Cults: Gilgaol Yatwer, Momas, Ajokli, even
elusive Onkis, who’d been Inrau’s passion as well as innumerable others. He
waved away the ever-present beggars and laughed at the adepts who pressed clay
blessing-tablets into his hands. For tracts of his journey, Achamian saw no
tents at all, only rough shelters improvised from sticks, twine, and painted
leather, or in some cases, a simple mat. While wandering one alley, Achamian
saw no less than a dozen couples, male and female or male and male, rutting in
plain view. Once he paused to watch an improbably beautiful Norsirai girl gasp
between the exertions of two men, only to be accosted by a black-toothed man
with a stick, demanding coin. Afterward he watched an ancient, tattooed hermit
try to force himself on a fat drab. He saw black-skinned Zeumi harlots dancing
in their strange, puppet-limbed manner and dressed in gaudy gowns of false
silk—caricatures of the ornate elegance that so characterized their faraway
land. The first woman found him
more than the other way around. As he walked through a particularly gloomy
alley between canvas shanties, he heard a rattle, then felt small hands groping
for his groin from behind. When he turned and embraced her, she seemed shapely
enough, though he could see little of her face in the dark. She was already
rubbing his manhood through his robe, murmuring, “Jusht a copper, Lord. Jusht a
copper for your sheed…” He could sense her sour smile. “Two coppersh for my
peach. Do you want my peach ?” Almost despite himself,
he leaned into her whisking hands—gasped. Then a file of torch-bearing
cavalrymen—Imperial Kidruhil—rumbled by, and he glimpsed her face: vacant eyes
and ulcerated lips… He pressed her back,
fumbling for his purse. He fished out a copper, meant to hand it to her, but
fumbled it onto the ground instead. She fell to her knees, started combing the
blackness, grunting… Achamian fled. A short time after, he found himself
prowling the darkness, watching a group of prostitutes about their fire. They
sang and clapped while a wanton, flat-chested Ketyai woman pranced around the
flames, wearing only a blanket that reached her hips. This was a common custom,
Achamian knew. They would each take turns, dancing lewdly and calling out into
the surrounding blackness, declaring their wares and their station. Asgilwch He reviewed the women
from the shelter of darkness first, so as to avoid the embarrassment of
choosing in their presence. The girl who danced didn’t appeal to him—too much
of a horse’s mien. But the young ]slorsirai girl, who rolled her pretty face to
the song like a child… She sat on the ground with her knees haphazardly before
her, the firelight chancing upon her inner thighs. When he finally walked
into their midst, they began shouting like slavers at auction, offering
promises and praise that became mockery the instant he took the Galeoth girl by
the hand. Despite the drink, he felt so nervous he could barely breathe. She
looked so beautiful. So soft and unspoiled. Picking a candle from a
small row of votives, she pulled him into the blackness, led him to the last in
a row of crude shelters. She shed her blanket and crawled beneath the stained
leather. Achamian stood above her, panting, wanting to breathe deep the pale
glory of her naked form. The far wall of her shelter, however, consisted of
little more than rags knotted into ropes. Through it, he could see hundreds of
people pressing in this direction and that through a shadowy thoroughfare. “You want fuck me, yes?”
she said as though nothing could be amiss. “Oh, yes,” he mumbled.
Where had his breath gone? Sweet Sejenus. “Fuck me many time? Eh,
Baswutt?” He laughed nervously.
Peered through the rag curtain once again. Two men were cursing at each other,
scuffling near enough to make Achamian flinch. “Many times,” he replied,
knowing this to be the polite way to discuss price. “How many do you think?” “Think four… Four silver
times.” Silver? Obviously she’d
confused his embarrassment for inexperience. Even still, what was money on a
night like this? He celebrated, didn’t he? He shrugged, saying, “An
old man like me?” In this particular
language, the man was forced to deride his own prowess in order to strike a
fair bargain. If he was poor, he complained of being old, infirm, and so on.
Arrogant men, Esmenet had told him once, usually fared poorly in these
negotiations—which, of course, was the point. Harlots hated nothing more than
men who arrived already believing the flattering
lies they would tell them. Esmi called them the simustarapari, or “those-who-spit-twice.” The Galeoth girl studied
him with nebulous eyes: she’d started petting herself in the gloom. “You so
strong,” she said, suddenly thick-tongued. “Like Baswutt… Strong! Two silver times think?” Achamian laughed, tried
hard not to watch her fingers. The ground had started a slow spin. For an
instant she looked pale and skinny in the dark, like an abused slave. The mat
beneath her looked rough enough to cut her skin… He’d drunk too much. Not too much! Just enough… The ground steadied. He
swallowed, nodded his agreement, then pulled the two coins from his purse.
“What does ‘Baswutt’ mean?” he asked, slipping the silver into her small,
waiting palm. “Hmmm?” she replied,
smiling triumphantly. She stashed the two white-shining talents with startling
swiftness—What would she buy? he wondered—then looked back at him with large
questioning eyes. “What does that mean?” he repeated, more slowly. “Baswutt…”
She frowned, then giggled. “For ‘big bear’…” She was full-breasted,
mature, but something about her manner reminded him of a little girl. The
guileless smile. The rolling eyes and bouncing chin. The knees opening and
closing like butterfly wings. Achamian half-expected a scolding mother to come
barging between them. Was that part of the pantomime as well? Like the
shameless banter? His heart hammered. He knelt where her toys
should have been, between her legs. She squirmed and writhed, as though the
threat of his mere presence would make her climax. “Fuck me, Baswutt,” she
gasped. “Emmmbaswutt… Fuck-me-fuck-me-fuck-me… Mmmm, pleassseee…” He swayed, caught
himself, chuckled. He began hitching up his robe, glanced nervously at the
shadowy stream of passersby through the curtain. They walked so close he could
spit on their shins. He tried to ignore the
smell. His smell. “Oooh, such big bear,” she cooed, stroking his cock. Suddenly, his
apprehension melted away, and some deranged part of him actually exulted in the
thought of others watching. Let them watch! Let them leam! Asgmocn Always the teacher… Cackling, he seized her
narrow hips, pulled her across his thighs. How he’d yearned for this moment! To
have licence with a stranger It seemed there could be nothing
so sweet as a fresh peach! He was trembling! Trembling! She moaned silver, cried
gold. Faces turned in the passing crowd. Through the knotted rags, Achamian saw
Esmenet. “Esmi!” Achamian
hollered, barrelling through arms and shoulders. The Galeoth girl was crying
out something behind him—some gibberish. He glimpsed Esmenet
again, hurrying along a row of torches that fronted the canopies of a Yatwerian
lazaret. A tall man, sporting the matted braids of a Thunyeri warrior, held her
arm, but she seemed to be leading. “Esmi!” he cried, jumping
to be seen above the screens of people. She didn’t turn. “Esmi! Stop!” Why would she run? Had
she seen him with the drab? For that matter, what
would she be doing here? “Dammit, Esmenet! It’s
me! Me!” Did she glance back? It
was too dark to tell… For a heartbeat, he
debated using sorcery: he could blind the entire quarter if he wished. But.as
always, he could sense the small points of death scattered throughout the surrounding
crowds: Men of the Tusk, bearing their hereditary Chorae… He redoubled his efforts,
began lunging through the mobs. Someone struck him, hard enough to leave his
ears ringing, but he didn’t care. “Esmi!” He glimpsed her pulling
the Thunyeri into an even darker byway. He stumbled free of what seemed the
last thicket of people, then sprinted to the mouth of the alley. He hesitated
before plunging into the blackness, struck by a sudden premonition of disaster.
Esmenet here? In the Holy War? There was no way. A trap. A thought like a
knife. The ground had resumed
spinning. If the Consult could
fashion a Skeaos, couldn’t they fashion an Esmenet as well? If they knew about
Inrau, then they almost certainly knew about her… What
better way to gull a heartsick Schoolman than to… A skin-spy? Do I chase a skin-spy? In his soul’s eye, he saw
Geshrunni’s corpse pulled from the River Sayut. Murdered. Desecrated. Sweet Sejenus, they took his face. Could the same have happened… “Esmi!” he cried,
charging into the darkness. “Esmi! Essmmь!” Miraculously, she paused
with her escort in the light of a single torch, either alarmed by his cries or… Achamian staggered to a
stop before her, utterly dumbstruck. He reeled. It wasn’t her—the brown eyes were smaller, the cheeks too high.
Almost, but no… Almost Esmenet. “Another madman,” the
woman snorted to her companion. “I-I thought…” Achamian
murmured. “I thought you were someone else.” “Poor girl,” she sneered,
turning her back. “No, wait! Please…” “Please, what?” Achamian blinked at his
tears. She looked so… so close. “I need you,” he whispered. “I
need your… your comfort.” Without warning, the
Thunyeri seized him by the throat, hammered him in the gut. “Kundrout!” the man bellowed. “Parasafau ferautin kun dattas!” Winded, Achamian coughed and
clawed at the man’s massive forearm. Panic. Then gravel and rock—ground—slammed
against his chest and cheek. Concussion. Bright blackness. Someone screaming.
The taste of blood. A dim image of the wild-haired warrior spitting on him. He convulsed, rolled to
his side. Sobbed, then pressed himself to his knees. Through tears he saw their
retreating backs disappear in thickets of people. “Esmi!” he bawled.
“Esmenet, please!” Such an old-fashioned
name. “Esssmmьь!” Come back… Then he felt the touch.
Heard the voice. “Still fetching sticks, I
see… Tired old dog.” Asguiocn Glimpses of menace by
torchlight. Her slender arms bracing
him, they stumbled through a gallery of darkling faces. She smelled of camphor
and the oil of sesame—like a Fanim merchant. Could that be her smell? “Sweet Seja, Akka, you’re
a mess.” “Esmi?” “Yes… It’s me, Akka. Me.” “Your face…” “Some Galeoth ingrate.”
Bitter laugh. “That’s the way it is with Men of the Tusk and their whores. If
you can’t fuck them, beat them.” “Oh, Esmi…” “Once the swelling starts
I’ll look a caste-noble virgin compared to you. Did you hear me scream when
he-he kicked you in the face? What were you doing?” “I’m-I’m not sure…
L-looking for you…” “Shush, Akka… Shhhhh… Not
here. After.” “J-just say it… M-my
name. Just say it!” “Drusas Achamian… Akka.” And he wept, so hard that
at first he didn’t realize she wept with him. Perhaps driven by the
same impulse, they retreated into the blackness behind a dark pavilion, fell to
their knees and embraced. “It’s really you…”
Achamian murmured, seeing twin moons reflected in her wet eyes. She laughed and sobbed.
“Really me…” His lips burned with the
salt of mingled tears. He pulled her left breast free of her hasas, began
circling her nipple with his thumb. “Why did you leave Sumna?” “I was afraid,” she
whispered, kissing his forehead and cheeks. “Why am I always afraid?“ “Because you breathe.” A passionate kiss. Hands
fumbling in the blackness, tugging, clutching. The ground spun. He leaned back,
and she hooked burning thighs about his waist. Then he was inside, and she
gasped. They sat motionless for several
heartbeats, throbbing together exch shallow breaths.“gerner, exchanging “Never again,” Achamian
said. “Promise?” She wiped at her face. Sniffled He began slowly rocking her.
“Promise man, Nailing… “she moaned. For
a time, they seemed one being, dancing about n »ay,n8
from theMmebreatHe8s ^ Ј “I’ve already been
robbed,” she said, trying to smile «IW I h things left. Not far from here.“But I have a few “Will you stay with me?”
he asked with tearful earnestness. “Can you-He watched her swallow, blink. itTti can. He laughed, pushed
himself to his feet. “Then let’s get your things ” her hand into his waiting They walked slowly, like
lovers strolling through a bazaar. Penodically Achamian would stare into her
eyes and laugh in disbelief.* J thought you were gone,“ he said once. “But I’ve always been
here.” Rather than ask what she r Just let this night last. Please… ive me this one mght Asgilioch w rhe Holy War. The
unspoken regions between them were well-marked, and for the moment, they
steered each other clear of painful boundaries. They paused to watch a
mummer dip a leather rope into a basket filled ith scorpions. When he pulled it
clear, it seethed with chitinous limbs, pincers, and stabbing tails. This, the
man proclaimed, was the famed Scorpion Braid, which the Kings of Nilnamesh
still used to punish mortal crimes. When the audience encircled him, anxious
for a closer look, he raised the Braid high for everyone to see, then suddenly
began swinging it over their heads. Women screamed, men ducked or raised their
hands, but not a single scorpion flew from the rope. The rope, the mummer cried
over the commotion, was soaked in a poison that seized the scorpions’ jaws.
Without the antidote, he said, they would remain locked to the leather until
they died. For much of the
demonstration, Achamian watched and delighted in Esmenet’s expression, all the
while wondering that she could seem so new. He found himself discovering things
he’d never before noticed. The dusting of freckles across her nose and cheeks.
The extraordinary white of her eyes. The smattering of auburn through her
luxurious black hair. The athletic slope of her back and shoulders. Everything
about her, it seemed, possessed a bewitching novelty. I must always see her like .this. As the stranger I love… Each time their glances
met, they laughed as though celebrating a fortuitous reunion. But they always
looked away, as though knowing their momentary bliss wouldn’t bear examination.
Then something, a flicker of anxiousness perhaps, passed between them, and they
ceased looking at each other altogether. A sudden hollow opened in the heart of
Achamian’s elation. He clutched her hand for reassurance, but she left her
fingers slack. After several moments,
Esmenet tugged him to a stop in the light of several bright burning pots. She
stared into his face, expressionless save for the hard set of her jaw. “Something’s different,”
she said. “Before, you could always pretend. Even when Inrau died. But now…
something’s different. What’s happened?” He shied from answering
her. It was too soon. “I’m a Mandate
Schoolman,” he said lamely. “What can I say? We all suffer…” She fixed him with a
canny scowl. “Knowledge,” she said. “You all suffer knowledge… If you suffer
more, it means you’ve learned more… Is that it? Have you learned more?” Achamian stared straight
ahead, said nothing. It was too soon! She looked past him,
sorted through the shadowy crowds. “Would you like to hear what’s happened to
me?” “Leave it be, Esmi.” She flinched, turned
away, blinking. She pulled her hand free and resumed walking. “Esmi…” he said,
following her. “You know,” she said, “it
hasn’t been bad, save the odd beating. Plenty of custom. Plenty of—” “That’s enough, Esmi.” She laughed, acted as if
she were engaged in a different, more frank conversation. “I’ve even lain with lords… Caste-nobles, Akka! Imagine. Even their cocks are
bigger—Did you know that? I wouldn’t know about the Ainoni—they seem to prefer
boys. And the Conriyans, they flock about the Galeoth sluts—all that milk-white
skin, you know. But the Columns, the Nansur, they like their peaches homegrown,
though they rarely stray from the military brothels. And the Thunyeri! They can
scarce bridle their seed when my knees flop open! Brutes though, especially
when they’re drunk. Stingy bastards, too. Oh, and the Galeoth— there’s a treat.
They complain I’m too skinny, but they love my skin. If it weren’t for the
guilt and anger afterward, they’d be my favourites. They’re not accustomed to
whores… Not enough old cities in their country, I think. Not enough barter…” She studied Achamian, her
look both bitter and shrewd. He walked, his eyes welded forward. “Custom has been good,”
she said, looking away. The old rage had returned, the one that had driven him
from her arms months before. He clenched his fists, saw himself shaking her,
striking her. Fucking whore! he wanted to scream. Why tell him this? Why
tell him what he couldn’t bear to hear? Especially when she had her own things
to answer for… Asgilioch Why did you leave Sumna? How long have
you been hiding from me? How long? But before he could say
anything, she veered from the armed throngs and walked toward a fire surrounded
by painted faces—more harlots. “Esmi!” a dark-haired
woman called out in a brusque, even mannish, voice. “Who’s your—” She paused,
getting a better look, then laughed. “Who’s your hapless friend?” She was
stout-limbed and thick-waisted, but without being fat—the kind of woman, Esmi
had told him once, prized by certain Norsirai men. Achamian immediately
recognized her as someone who confused ill manners with daring. Esmenet halted, hesitated
long enough to make Achamian frown. “This is Akka.” The drab’s heavy eyebrows
popped up. “The infamous Drusas Achamian?” the woman said. “The Schoolman?” Achamian looked to
Esmenet. Who was this woman? “This is Yasellas,” Esmenet said, speaking the woman’s name as though
it explained everything. “Yassi.” Yasellas’s appraising
stare remained fixed on Achamian. “So what are you doing here, Akka?” He shrugged, saying, “I
follow the Holy War.” “The same as us!”
Yasellas exclaimed. “Though you might say we march for a different Tusk…” The
other prostitutes burst out laughing— like men. “And the little prophet,”
another said, her voice hoarse. “Good for only one sermon…” All the women howled,
with the exception of Yassi, who only smiled. More jokes followed, but
Esmenet was already pulling him into the darkness, toward what must have been
her shelter. “All of us camp in
bands,” she said, pre-empting any questions or observations. “We watch out for
one another.” “So I gathered…” “This is mine,” she said,
kneeling before the greased canvas flaps of a low wedge tent not so unlike his
own. Achamian found himself relieved: without a word she crawled into the
blackness. Achamian followed. Within, there was barely
enough room to sit upright. Beneath the incense, the air smelled of rutting—if
only because Achamian couldn’t stop imagining her with
her men. She disrobed in the routine manner of a harlot, and he studied her
lithe, small-breasted silhouette. She looked so frail in the remains of the
firelight, so small and desolate. The thought of her pinioned here, night after
night, beneath man after man… must make this right! “Do you have a candle?”
he asked. “Some… But we’ll be
burned.” Fire was the perennial fear of those raised in cities. “No,” he replied. “Never
with me…” She withdrew a candle
from a bundle in the corner, and Achamian ignited it with a word. In Sumna,
she’d always marvelled at such tricks. Now, she simply regarded him with a kind
of resigned wariness. They both blinked in the
light. She drew a stained blanket across her lap, stared vacantly at the snarl
of coverings between them. He swallowed.“Esmi? Why tell me… all that.” “Because I had to know,” she replied, looking
down at her hands. “Know what? What makes my hands shake? What makes my eyes
dart in terror?” Her shoulders hitched in
the gloom; Achamian realized she was sobbing. “You pretended I wasn’t
there,” she whispered. “I what?” “That last night at
Momemn… I came to you. I watched your camp, your friends, only hidden because I
was too afraid that I would… that I would… But you weren’t there, Akka! So I
waited and waited. Then I saw… I saw you … I
wept with joy, Akka! Wept! I stood there, right before you, weeping! I held out
my arms, and you… and you…” The anguished light in her eyes dulled, flickered
out. She finished in a different voice—far colder. “You pretended I wasn’t
there.” What was she talking
about? Achamian pressed palms to his forehead, wrestled with the urge to lash
out—to punish. She stood close enough to touch—after all this time!—and yet she
receded… He needed to understand. “Esmi?” he said slowly,
trying to collect his wine-addled wits. “What are you—” Asgilioch “What was it, Akka?” she
asked, rigid and cool. “Was I too polluted, too defiled? Too much a filthy
whore?” “No, Esmi, I—” “Too bruised a peach?” “Esmenet, listen to—” She laughed bitterly. “So
you’re going to take me to your tent, you say? Add me to the bushel—” He seized her by the
shoulders, crying, “You speak of bushels to me? You?“ But he immediately
repented, seeing his own savagery reflected in her terrified expression. She
had even flinched, as though expecting a blow. He noticed, as though for the
first time, the bruising about her left eye. Who did this? Not me. Not me… “Look at us,” he said,
releasing her and carefully drawing back his hands. Both beaten. Both outcasts. “Look at us,” she
mumbled, tears spilling down her cheeks. “I can explain, Esmi…
Everything.” She nodded, rubbed her
shoulders where he’d grabbed her. Female voices chimed in unison outside—they
had started singing like the other harlots, promising soft thighs for hard
silver. Firelight glittered through the open flaps, like gold through dark
waters. “That night you’re
talking about… Sweet Sejenus, Esmi, if I didn’t see you, it wasn’t because I
was ashamed of you! How could I be? How could
anyone—let alone a sorcerer!—be ashamed of a woman such as
you?” She bit her lip, smiled
through more tears. “Then why?” Achamian rolled to his
side and laid next to her, his eyes searching the dark canvas above. “Because I found them, Esmi—that very night… I found the Consult.” “I remember nothing after
that,” he concluded. “I know 1 walked through the night, all the way from the
Imperial Precincts to Xinemus’s camp, but I remember none of it…” The words had splashed
from him, an inarticulate rush, painting the horrific events that transpired
that night beneath the AndiamineHeights. The
unprecedented summons. The meeting with Ikurei Xerius III. The MARCH interrogation of Skeaos,
his Prime Counsel. The face-that-was-not-a-face unclenching like a woman’s
long-fingered fist. The dreadful conspiracy of skin. He told her about
everything except Kellhus… Esmenet had curled into
his arms to listen. Now she perched her chin on his chest. “Did the Emperor believe
you?” “No… I imagine he thinks
the Cishaurim were responsible. Men prefer new loves and old enemies.” “And Atyersus? What of
the Mandate?” “Excited and dismayed in
equal measure, or so I imagine…” He licked his lips. “I’m not sure. I haven’t
contacted them since first reporting to Nautzera. They probably think I’m dead
by now… Murdered because of what I know.” “Then they haven’t
contacted you…” “That’s not the way it works, remember?” “Yes, yes…” she replied,
rolling her eyes and smirking. “How does it go? With the Cants of Calling, you
need to know both the here, the individual, and the there, the location, to initiate
contact. Since you march, they have no idea where you are…” “Exactly,” he said,
bracing himself for the inevitable question to follow. Her eyes probed his,
compassionate yet guarded. “So then why haven’t you contacted them?” Achamian shuddered. He ran
shaking fingers through her hair. “I’m so glad you’re here,” he murmured. “So
glad you’re safe…” “Akka, what is it? You’re frightening me…” He closed his eyes,
breathed deep. “I met someone. Someone whose coming was foretold two thousand
years ago…” He opened his eyes, and she was still there. “An Anasurimbor.” “But that means…” Esmenet
frowned, stared into his chest. “You cried out that name in your sleep once,
woke me…” She looked up, peered into his face. “I remember asking you what it
meant, ‘Anasurimbor,’ and you said… you said…” “I don’t remember.” “You said that it named
the last ruling dynasty of ancient Kunьiri, and…” Her expression slackened in
horror. “This isn’t funny, Akka. You’re really scaring me!” Asgilioch She feared, Achamian
realized, because she believed… He gasped, blinked hot tears. Tears of joy. She really believes…All along she’s
believed! “No, Akka!” Esmenet
cried, clutching his chest. “This can’t be happening!“ How could life be so
perverse? That a Mandate Schoolman could celebrate the world’s
end. With Esmenet pressed
naked against him, he explained why he thought Kellhus, without any doubt, had
to be the Harbinger. She listened without comment, watched him with a fearful
expectancy. “Don’t you see?” he said,
as much to the surrounding darkness as to her. “If I tell Nautzera and the
others, they will take him… No matter whose
protection he enjoys.” “Will they kill him?” Achamian blinked away
disturbing images of past interrogations. “They’ll break him, murder who he
is…” “Even still,” she said.
“Akka, you must surrender him.” There was no hesitation, no pause, only cold
eyes and remorseless judgement. For women, it seemed, the scales of threat and
love brooked no counterweights. “But this is a life, Esmi.” “Exactly,” she replied.
“A life… What difference does it make, the life of one man? So many die, Akka.”
The hard logic of a hard world. “It depends on the man, doesn’t it?” This gave her pause. “I
suppose it does,” she said. “So what kind of man is he? What kind of man is
worth risking Apocalypse?” Despite her sarcasm, he
could tell she feared his answer. Certainty despised complications, and she
needed to be certain. She
thinks she savesme, he realized. She needs me to be wrong for my sake … “He’s…” Achamian
swallowed. “He’s unlike any other man.” “How so?” A prostitute’s scepticism. “It’s difficult to
explain.” He hesitated, pondering his time with Kellhus. So many insights. So
many instants of awe. “You know how it feels when you stand on someone else’s
ground—on their property?” V1AKLH “I suppose… Like a
trespasser or a guest.” “Somehow that’s the way he makes you feel.
Like a guest.” An expression of distaste. “I’m not sure I like the sound of
that.” “Then it’s not how it sounds.” Achamian
breathed deeply, groped for the proper words. “There’s many… many grounds
between men. Some are mutual, and some are not. When you and I speak of the
Consult, for instance, you stand upon my ground, just as I stand upon your
ground when you discuss your… your life. But with Kellhus, it makes no
difference what you discuss or where you stand; somehow the ground beneath your
feet belongs to him. I’m always his guest—always! Even when I teach
him, Esmi!” “You teach him? You’ve
taken him as your student?” Achamian frowned. She
made it sound like a betrayal. “Just the exoterics,” he
said with a shrug, “the world. Not the esoterics. He’s not one of the Few…”
Almost as an afterthought, he added, “Thank the God.” “Why do you say that?” “Because of his
intellect, Esmi! You’ve no idea! I’ve never met such a subtle soul, neither in
life nor in book… Not even Ajencis, Esmi! Ajencis! If Kellhus possessed the ability to work sorcery,
he’d be… he’d be…” Achamian caught his breath. “What?” “Another Seswatha… More
than Seswatha…” “Then I like him even less. He sounds dangerous,
Akka. Let Nautzera and the others know. If they seize him, so be it. At least
you can wash your hands of this madness!” Fresh tears welled in his
eyes. “But…” “Akka,” she pressed,
“this burden isn’t yours to bear!” “But it is!” Esmenet pushed herself
from his chest, propping herself with an arm to lean over him. Her hair draped
over her left shoulder, an impenetrable black in the candlelight. She seemed
watchful, hesitant. “Is it? I think you say
this because of Inrau…” Cold clasped his heart.
Inrau. Sweet boy. Son. “And why not?” he cried
with sudden ferocity. “They killed him!” “But they sent you! They sent you to Sumna to turn Inrau, and that’s Asgilioch what you did, even though
you knew exactly what would happen… You told me this before you even contacted
him!“ “So what are you saying?
That I killed Inrau?” “I’m saying that’s what you think. You think you killed him.” Oh, Achamian, her tone said, please… “And what if I do? Does
that mean I should relent a second time? Let those fools in Atyersus doom
another man that I—” “No, Achamian. It means
you’re not doing this—any of this!—to save this-this Anasurimbor Kellhus.
You’re doing it to punish yourself.” He stared, dumbstruck.
Was that what she thought? “You say this,” Achamian
breathed, “because you know me so well…” He reached out, traced the pale edge
of her breast with a finger. “And Kellhus so little.” “No man is that
remarkable… I’m a whore, remember?” “We’ll see,” he said,
tugging her down. They kissed, long and deep. “We,” she repeated,
laughing as though both hurt and astounded. “It really is ‘we’ now, isn’t it?” With a shy, even scared,
smile, she helped him pull free his weathered robes. “When I can’t find you,”
he said, “or even when you turn away, I feel… I feel hollow, as though my heart’s a thing of smoke… Isn’t that we
? She pressed him against
the mat, straddled him. “I recognize it,” she
replied, tears now streaming down her cheeks. “So it must be…” One lamb, Achamian thought, for ten bulls. Recognition. He hardened against her,
ached to know her again. As always, the images flickered, each as sharp as
glass. Bloodied faces. The clash of bronze arms. Men consumed in billowing
sorceries. Dragons with teeth of iron… But she raised her hips, and with a
single encompassing thrust, sheared away both past and future, sparing only the
glorious pang of the present. He cried out. She began grinding
against him, not with the expertise of a harlot hoping to abbreviate her
labour, but with the clumsy selfishness of a lover seeking surcease—a lover or
a wife. Tonight she would take, and that, Achamian knew, was as much as any
whore could give. Wearing a harlot’s face,
it sat in the blackness, its ears pricked to the sounds of their
lovemaking—glistening sounds—a mere arm’s length away. And it thought of the
weaknesses of the flesh, of all the needs
that it was immune to, that made it powerful, deadly. The air was suffused with
their groaning scent, the heady perfume of unwashed bodies slapping in the
night. It was not an unpleasant smell. Too devoid of fear perhaps. The sound and smell of
animals, aching animals. But it knew something of their ache. Perhaps it knew
far more. Appetite was direction, and its architects had given it direction—such exquisite hungers! Ah yes, the
architects weren’t fools. There was ecstasy in a
face. Rapture in deceit. Climax in the kill… And certainty in the dark. Four Asgilioch No decision is so fine as to not bind us
to its consequences. No consequence is so unexpected as to
absolve us of our decisions. Not even death. —XIUS, THE TRl/CIAN DRAMAS It seems a strange thing to recall these events, like
waking to find I had narrowly missed a fatal fall in the darkness. Whenever I
think back, I’m filled with wonder that I still live, and with horror that I
still travel by night. —DRUSAS ACHAM1AN, THE
COMPENDIUM OF THE FIRST HOLY WAR Early Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, the
fortress of Asgilioch Achamian and Esmenet
awoke in each other’s arms, sheepish with memories of the previous night. They
held each other tight to quell their fears, then as the surrounding encampment
slowly rumbled to life, they made love with quiet urgency. Afterward, Esmenet
fell silent, looked away each time Achamian searched for her eyes. At first, he
found himself baffled and angered by this sudden change of demeanour, but then
he realized she was afraid. Last night she’d shared his tent. Today, she would
share his friends, his daily discourse—his life. “Don’t worry,” he said,
catching her eyes as she fussed with her hasas. “I’m far more particular when
it comes to my friends.” A frown crowded out the
terror in her eyes. “More particular than what?” He winked. “Than when it
comes to my women.” She looked down, smiling and shaking her head. He heard her
mutter some kind of curse. As he clambered from the tent she pinched his
buttocks hard enough to make him howl. Wrapping an arm around
her waist, Achamian led Esmenet to Xinemus, who stood chatting with Bloody
Dinch. When he introduced her, Xinemus merely offered her a perfunctory
greeting, then pointed to a faint swath of smoke across the eastern horizon.
The Fanim, he explained, had infiltrated the mountains and had struck across
the highlands. Apparently a large village, a place called Tusam, had been taken
unawares during the night and burned to the ground. Proyas wanted to survey the
devastation first-hand—with his ranking officers. The Marshal then left
them, bawling orders to his men. Achamian and Esmenet retreated to the fire,
where they sat wordlessly, watching long riles of Attrempan horsemen pass into
the deeper byways of the encampment. He could sense her apprehension, the
certainty that she would shame him, but he could find no more words to amuse or
comfort her. He could only watch as she watched, feeling excluded in the manner
of slaves and cripples. Then Kellhus joined them,
peering as Xinemus had at the eastern horizon. “So it starts,” he said. “What starts?” Achamian
asked. “The bloodshed.” With something of a
bashful air, Achamian introduced Esmenet. He inwardly winced at the coldness of
her tone and expression—at the bruising still visible on her cheek. But
Kellhus, if he noticed, seemed unconcerned. “Someone new,” he said,
smiling warmly. “Neither bearded nor haggard.” “Yet…” Achamian added. “1 don’t get haggard,”
Esmenet said in mock protest. They laughed, and
afterward Esmenet’s hostility seemed to wane. Asgilioch Serwe arrived shortly
afterward, still wrapped in her blanket. From the first, she seemed to regard
Esmenet with something between wonder and terror—more so the latter
after seeing Esmenet talk rather than simply listen to the men. Achamian found
this troubling, but remained certain they would become friends, if only to find
respite from the masculine clamour that characterized their nights by the fire. For some reason, he found
the camp oppressive and sitting still impossible, so he suggested a trek into
the mountains. Kellhus immediately agreed, saying that he’d yet to see the Holy
War from afar. “Nothing is understood,” he said, “until glimpsed from the
heights.” Serwe, who’d so often been abandoned throughout the day, was almost
embarrassingly delighted to join them. Esmenet seemed happy simply to hold
Achamian’s hand. The stout mountains of
the Unaras Spur loomed large against azure skies, curving like a row of ancient
molars toward the horizon. They searched all morning for a vantage that would
let them see the Holy War entire, but the jumbled slopes confounded them, and
the farther they walked, the more it seemed they could see only the outskirts
of the vast encampment, hazed by the smoke of innumerable fires. They
encountered several mounted patrols, who .warned them of Fanim scouting
parties. A band of Conriyan horsemen commanded by one of Xinemus’s kinsmen
insisted on providing an armed escort, but Kellhus ordered them away, invoking
his status as an Inrithi Prince. When Esmenet asked
whether this was wise given the danger, Kellhus said only, “We walk with a
Mandate Schoolman.” True enough, she
supposed, but all this renewed talk of the heathen had unnerved her, reminded her
the Holy War didn’t march against abstractions. She found herself glancing to
the east more and more often, as though expecting the heights they climbed to
reveal the smouldering remains of Tusam. How long had it been
since she’d last sat in her window in Sumna? How long had she’d been walking? Walking. The city whores
called those who followed the Columns peneditari,
the “long-walkers,” a word that often became pembeditari, the “scratchers,” because
many believed camp-whores carried various infestations. Depending on who was
asked, peneditari were either as worldly and thus as admirable as caste-noble
courtesans, or as polluted and thus as despicable as the beggar-whores who laid
with lepers. The truth, Esmenet would discover, lay somewhere in between. She certainly felt like a
peneditari. Never had she walked so much or so far. Even the nights, which
she’d spent on her back or her knees, it seemed she’d walked, following a great
army of capricious cocks and accusing eyes. Never had she pleasured so many men.
Their ghosts still toiled upon her when she awoke in the morning. She would
gather her things, join the march, and it would feel as though she fled rather
than followed. Even still, she’d found
time to wonder, to learn. She studied the changing character of the lands they
passed through. She watched her skin darken, her stomach flatten, her legs
harden with muscle. She learned a smattering of Galeoth, enough to shock and
delight her patrons. She taught herself how to swim by watching children
thrashing in a canal. To be encompassed by cool water. To float! To be cleansed
all at once. But every night was the
same. The slap of pale loins, the crush of sunburned arms, the threats, the
arguments, even the jokes she and the other whores shared about the fire—these
things, it seemed, were flattening her, pounding her into a shape
she could never fit into her previous life. As never before, she dreamed of
faces, leering and whiskered. Then, just the previous
night, she had heard someone shouting her name. She whirled, surprised perhaps,
but incredulous as well, thinking she’d misheard. Then she saw Achamian,
obviously drunk, scuffling with a hulking Thunyeri. She tried to flee, but
she couldn’t move. She could only watch, breathless, as the warrior threw him
to the ground. She screamed when the boot came down, but she still couldn’t
move. Only when he pulled himself sobbing to his knees, cried out her name. She ran to him—What
choice did she have? In all the world, he had only her—only her! The outrage she’d thought she would feel was nowhere
to be found. Instead, his touch, his smell, had exacted an almost perilous
vulnerability, a sense of submission unlike any she’d ever known—and it was good. Sweet Sejenus, was it good! Like the small circle Asgilioch of a child’s embrace, or
the taste of peppered meat after a long hunger. It was like floating in cool,
cleansing water. No burdens, only flashing
sunlight and slow-waving limbs, the smell of green… Now she was no longer
peneditari; she was what the Galeoth called “im hustwarra,” a camp-wife. Now, at long last, she belonged to
Drusas Achamian. At long last she was clean. I could go to temple, she thought. Esmenet had told him
nothing of Sarcellus, nothing of that mad night in Sumna, nothing of what she
suspected regarding Inrau. To speak of one, it seemed, would compel her to
speak of the others. Instead, she said she’d left Sumna out of love for him,
and that she’d joined the camp-followers after he’d repudiated her outside
Momemn. What could she do? Risk everything now that they’d found each other? Besides, she had left Sumna for him; she had joined the camp-followers because of him. Silence did
not contradict truth. Perhaps, if he’d been the
same Achamian who had left her in Sumna… Achamian had always been…
weak, but it was a weakness born of honesty. Where other men became silent and
remote, he spoke, and this gave him a curious kind of strength, one which set
him apart from nearly every man Esmenet had known, and many women. But he was
different now. More desperate. In Sumna, she’d often
accused him of resembling the madmen in the Ecosium Market who continually
howled about iniquity and doom. Whenever they passed one, she’d say, “Look,
another of your friends,” just as he’d say, “Look, another one of your
customers” when they glimpsed some dreadfully obese man. Now, she wouldn’t
dare. Achamian was still Achamian, but he’d acquired the same hollow, spent
look of those madmen, the same stooped eyes, as though he perpetually watched
some horror that walked between what everyone else could see. What he said terrified
her, of course—How couldn’t she believe him?—but what terrified her more was
the way he said it: the rambling, the
erratic laughter, the spiteful vehemence, the bottomless remorse. He was going mad. She
knew this in her bones. But it wasn’t, she understood, the discovery of the
Consult, nor even the certainty of the Second Apocalypse, that
was breaking him, it was this man… this Anasurimbor Kellhus. Such a stubborn fool! Why
wouldn’t he yield him to the Mandate? If Achamian weren’t already a sorcerer,
she’d say he’d been bewitched. No arguments would sway him. Nothing! According to Achamian,
women had no instinct for principle. For them everything was embodied… How had
he put it? Oh yes, that existence
preceded essence
for women. By nature, the tracks travelled by their souls ran parallel to those
demanded by principle. The feminine soul was more yielding, more compassionate,
more nurturing than the masculine. Consequently, principle became more
difficult for them to see, like a staff in a thicket, which was why women were
more likely to confuse selfishness for propriety—which, apparently, was what
she was doing. But for men, whose inclinations ranged so far and so violently,
principle was an ever-present burden, a yoke they either toiled under or cast
off altogether. Unlike women, men could always see what they should do, because it differed so drastically from what they
wanted. At first, Esmenet had
almost believed him. How else could she explain his willingness to risk their
love? But then she realized it
was the principle that galled
her, not some
dim-witted feminine confusion of hope and piety. Had she not given herself to
him? Had she not relinquished her life, her talent? Had she not finally
relented? And what was she asking
him to relinquish in return? A man he’d known but a few weeks—a stranger! A
man, moreover, that according to his own principles, he should surrender. “Perhaps yours is the womanish soul!”
she’d wanted to cry. But for some reason, she couldn’t. If men must spare women
the world, then women must spare men the truth—as though each forever remained
alternate halves of the same defenceless child. Esmenet paused for
breath, watched Achamian and Kellhus exchange some comment—something inaudible and
humorous. Achamian laughed aloud. / must show him. Somehow 1 must show him! Even when one floated,
there was always a current… Always something to fight. Asgilwch /y Serwe walked at her side,
every so often casting nervous glances her way. Esmenet said nothing, though
she knew the girl wanted to talk. She seemed harmless enough, given the
circumstances. She was one of those rare women who could never be deflowered,
never be despoiled. Had she been a fellow whore in Sumna, Esmenet would have
secretly despised her. She would have resented her beauty, her youth, her blond
hair, and her pale skin, but more than anything she would have resented her
perpetual vulnerability. “Akka has—” the girl
blurted. She blushed, looked down to her feet. “Achamian’s been teaching
Kellhus wondrous things—wondrous things!” Even her endearing
accent. Resentment was ever the secret liquor of harlots. Staring at nothing on the
southern horizon, Esmenet said, “He has, has he?” Perhaps that was the
problem. Achamian had offered Kellhus the sanctuary of his instruction before he learned of the Consult skin-spies, which was to
say, before he knew with certainty the man was the Harbinger—if he was in fact
the Harbinger. Perhaps that was the obscure principle Achamian referred to, the
bond… Kellhus was his student, like Proyas orInrau. The thought made Esmenet
want to spit. Without warning, Serwe
sprinted ahead, leaping over hummocks and through braces of weeds.
“The flowers!” she cried. “They’re so beautiful!” Esmenet joined Achamian
and Kellhus where they stood watching her. Several paces away,
the girl kneeled before a bush freighted with extraordinary turquoise
blooms. “Ah,” Achamian said,
moving to join her, “pemembis… Have you never seen them before
?” “Never,” Serwe gasped. Esmenet thought she
could smell lilac. “Never?” Achamian said,
plucking a flower of his own. He glanced back at Esmenet, winked. “You mean
you’ve never heard the legends?” Esmenet waited next to
Kellhus as Achamian related his story: something about an empress and her
bloodthirsty paramours. Several uncomfortable moments passed. The man was tall,
even for a Norsirai, and he possessed those muscular, long-armed proportions
that would have ihe first March sparked uncouth
speculation among her old friends in Sumna. His eyes were striking blue,
possessed of a clarity that recalled Achamian’s stories of ancient northern
kings. And there was something about his manner, a grace that didn’t seem
quite… earthly. “So you lived among the
Scylvendi?” she finally said. Kellhus glanced at her as
though at a distraction, then looked back to Serwe and Achamian. “For a time,
yes.” “Tell me something about
them.” “Such as…” She shrugged. “Tell me
about their scars… Are they trophies?” Kellhus smiled, shook his
head. “No.” “Then what are they?” “That’s not an easy
question to answer… The Scylvendi believe only in actions, though they’d never
say such. For them, only what men do is
real. All else is smoke. They even call life ‘syurtpьitha,’ or ‘the smoke that moves.’ For them a man’s life
isn’t a thing, something that can be owned or
exchanged, but rather a line or a track of actions. A man’s line can be braided
into one’s own, as in the case of one’s fellow tribesmen; herded, as in the
case of slaves; or it can be stopped, as in the case of killing or murder.
Since this latter is the action which ends
action, the Scylvendi see it as the most significant, the most real, of all
actions. The cornerstone of honour. “But the scars, or
swazond, don’t celebrate the taking of life, as every-one in
the ThreeSeas seems to assume. They mark the…
intersection, you might say, between competing lines of action, the point where
one life yields its momentum to another. The fact that Cnaьir, for instance,
bears the scars of many means that he walks with the momentum of many. His swazond are far more than his trophies,
they’re the record of his reality. Seen through Scylvendi eyes, he’s the single
stone that has become an avalanche.” Esmenet stared in wonder.
“But I thought the Scylvendi were uncouth… barbarians. Surely such beliefs are
too subtle!” Kellhus laughed. “All
beliefs are too subtle.” He held her with shining blue eyes. “And ‘barbarity,’
I fear, is simply a word for unfamiliarity that threatens.” Unsettled, Esmenet looked
to the grasses thronging about her sandalled feet. She glanced at Achamian, saw
him watching her from Asgilioch where he and Serwe
crouched. He smiled knowingly, then continued expounding on the bobbing
flowers. He knew this would happen. Then, from nowhere,
Kellhus said, “So you were a whore.” She looked up in shock,
reflexively covered the tattoo on the back of her left hand. “And what if I
was?” Kellhus shrugged. “Tell
me something…” “Such as?” she snapped. “What was it like, lying
with men you didn’t know?” She wanted to be outraged, but there was a compelling innocence
to his manner, a candour that left her baffled—and willing. “Nice… sometimes,” she
said. “Other times, unbearable. But one must feed to be fed. That’s simply the
way of things.” “No,” Kellhus replied. “I
asked you to tell me what it was like …” She cleared her throat,
looked away in embarrassment. She saw Achamian brush Serwe’s fingers,
suppressed a pang of jealousy. She laughed nervously. “Such a strange
question…” “Have you never asked
it?” “No… I mean yes, of course,
but…” “So what was your
answer?” She paused, flustered,
frightened, and curiously thrilled. “Sometimes, after a heavy
rain, the street beneath my window would be rutted by the wains, and I would… I
would watch them—the wheels creaking through the ruts—and I would think, that’s what my life is like…” “A track worn by others.” Esmenet nodded, blinked
away two tears. “And other times?” “Whores are mummers—you
must understand that. We perform …” She hesitated, searched his
eyes as though they held the proper words. “I know the Tusk says we degrade
ourselves, that we abuse the divinity of our sex… and sometimes it feels that
way. But not always… Often, very often, I have these men upon me, these men who
gasp like fish, thinking they’ve mastered me, notched me, and I feel pity for them—for them, not me. I become more… more thief than whore. Fooling, duping, watching myself as
though reflected across silver… It feels like… like…” HE riRST MARCH “Like being free,”
Kellhus said. Esmenet both smiled and
frowned, troubled by the intimacy of the details she’d revealed, shocked by the
poetry of her own insight, and somehow curiously relieved, as though she’d
discharged a great burden. She almost trembled. And Kellhus seemed so… near. “Yes…” She tried to
swallow away the quaver in her voice. “But how—” “So we’ve learned about
holy pemembis,” Achamian said, joining them with Serwe‘. “What have you
learned?” He shot Esmenet a significant glance. “What it’s like to be who
we are,” Kellhus said. Sometimes, though not often,
Achamian would scan the distances and simply know that he’d walked the same or similar path two
thousand years before. He would freeze, as though glimpsing a lion in the
brush, and just look about in witless astonishment. It was a recognition that
baffled, a knowing that could not be. Seswatha had walked these
same hills once, fleeing besieged Asgilioch, searching with a hundred other
refugees for a way through the mountains, for a way to escape dread Tsuramah.
Achamian found himself glancing over his shoulder, always northward, expecting
to see black clouds massing on the horizon. He found himself clutching wounds
he didn’t have, blinking away images of a battle he hadn’t fought: the Kyranean
defeat at Mehsarunath. He found himself walking as though an automaton, gouged
of all hope, of all aspiration save survival. At some point Seswatha
had abandoned the others to wander alone among the windswept rocks. Somewhere,
not far, he’d found a small, shaded grotto, where he curled like a dog, hugging
his knees, shrieking, wailing, imploring death… When morning came, he had
cursed the Gods for drawing breath. Achamian found himself
glancing at Kellhus, his hands shaking, his every thought turmoil. Concerned, Esmenet asked
him what was wrong. “Nothing,” he muttered
brusquely. She smiled, squeezed his
hand as though she trusted him. But she knew. Twice he caught her casting
terrified glances at the Prince of Atrithau. As the afternoon waxed,
Achamian slowly recollected himself. The farther they wandered from Seswatha’s
footsteps, it seemed, the more he could pretend. Without realizing, he’d led
the others too far to return to the Holy War before dark, so he suggested they
find a place to camp. The mountain faces
mellowed against violet clouds. As evening approached, they spied a stand of
blooming ironwoods perched on a squat promontory. They hiked toward them,
climbing the furrowed skirts of the mountain. Kellhus noticed the ruins first:
the heaped remains of an old Inrithi chapel. “Some kind of shrine?”
Achamian asked no one in particular as they waded across scrub and grasses
toward the foundations. The stand, he realized, was in fact an overgrown grove.
The ironwoods stood in rows, their dark limbs knitted in purple and white,
waving in the warm evening breeze. They picked their way
through blocks of stone, then clambered over the heaped walls, where they found
a mosaic floor depicting Inri Sejenus, his head buried in debris, his two
haloed hands outstretched. For a time all four of them simply milled about,
exploring, trampling paths through the thronging weeds, wondering, Achamian
supposed, at all that had been forgotten. “No ash,” Kellhus noted,
after kicking at sandy earth. “It’s as though the place simply fell in upon
itself.” “So beautiful,” Serwe
said. “How could anyone let this happen?” “After Gedea was lost to the Fanim,” Achamian
explained, “the Nansur abandoned these lands… Too vulnerable to raids, I
suppose… Ruins like this probably dot the entire range.” They gathered dead scrub,
and Achamian ignited their fire with a sorcerous word, realizing only afterward
that he’d set the Latter Prophet’s stomach aflame. Seated upon blocks on either
side of the image, they continued talking, the firelight brightening in
proportion to the gathering dark. They drank unwatered
wine, ate bread, leeks, and salted pork. Achamian translated those passages of
text visible across the mosaic. ME TIRST MARCH “The Marrucees,” he said,
studying a stylized seal written in High Sheyic. “This place once belonged to
the Marrucees, an old College of the Thousand Temples… If I remember aright,
they were destroyed when the Fanim took Shimeh… That means this place was
abandoned long before thefallofGedea.” Kellhus followed up with
several questions regarding the Colleges—of course. Since Esmenet knew the
ecclesiastical labyrinths of the Thousand Temples far better than he, Achamian
let her answer. She had, after all, bedded priests from every college, sect,
and cult imaginable… Fucked them. He studied the pinch of
sandal straps across his feet as he listened. He needed new ones, he realized.
A profound sorrow seized him then, the hapless sorrow of a man persecuted by
even the smallest of things. Where would he find sandals in the midst of this
madness/ He excused himself,
wandered into the collapsed byways beyond the fire. He sat for a time at the
ruin’s edge, where the debris tumbled into the grove. All was black beneath the
ironwoods, but their blooming crowns seemed otherworldly in the moonlight,
slowly rocking to and fro in the breeze. The bittersweet scent reminded him of
Xinemus’s orchards. “Moping again?” he heard
Esmenet say from behind him. He turned and saw her
standing in gloom, painted in the same pale tones as the surrounding ruin. He
wondered that night could make stone resemble skin and skin resemble stone.
Then she was in his arms, kissing him, tugging at his linen robes. He pressed
her backward, leaned her onto a cracked altar, his hands roaming across her
thighs and buttocks. She groped for his cock, clutched it with both hands. They
joined fires. Afterward, brushing away
grit from skin and clothes, they grinned knowing, shy grins. “So what do you think?”
Achamian asked. Esmenet made a noise,
something between a laugh and a sigh. “Nothing,” she said.
“Nothing as tender, as wanton or delicious. Nothing as enchanted as this
place…” “I meant Kellhus.” A flash of anger. “Is
there nothing else you think about?” Asgilwch 8D His throat tightened.
“How can I?” She became remote and
impenetrable. Serwe’s laughter chimed across the ruins, and he found himself
wondering what Kellhus had said. “He is remarkable,” Esmenet murmured, refusing to look at
him. So what should I do? Achamian wanted to cry. Instead, he remained
silent, tried to throttle the roar of inner voices. “We do have each other,”
she suddenly said. “Don’t we, Akka?” “Of course we do. But
what does—” “What does anything
matter, so long as we have each other?” Always interrupting… “Sweet Sejenus, woman, he’s the Harbinger.” “But we could flee! From
the Mandate. From him. We could hide, just the two of
us!” “But Esmi… The burden—” “Isn’t ours!” she hissed.
“Why should we suffer it? Let’s run away!
Please, Akka! Leave all this madness behind!” “This is foolishness,
Esmenet. There’s no hiding from the end of the world! Even if we could, I’d be
a sorcerer without a school—a wizard, Esmi. Better to be a witch! They
would hunt me. All of them, not just the Mandate. The
Schools tolerate no wizards…” He laughed bitterly. “We wouldn’t even survive to
be killed.” “But this is the first time,” she said, her voice breaking. “The first time I’ve
ever…” Something—the desolate
stoop of her shoulders, perhaps, or the way she pressed her hands together,
wrist to wrist—moved Achamian to hold her. But a panicked cry halted him.
Serwe. “Kellhus bids you come
quickly!” she called from the dark. “There’s torches in the distance! Riders!” Achamian scowled. “Who’d
be fool enough to ride mountain slopes at night?” Esmenet didn’t answer.
She didn’t need to… Fanim. Esmenet cursed herself
for a fool as they picked their way through the dark. Kellhus had kicked out
their fire, transforming the mosaic of the OD1HE TIRST MARCH Latter Prophet into a
constellation of scattered coals. They hastened across it, joined him on the
grasses beyond the heaped debris. “Look,” the Prince of
Atrithau said, pointing down the slopes. If Achamian’s words had
winded her, then what she saw robbed her of all remaining breath. Strings of
torches wound through the darkness below, following the mighty ramps of earth
that composed the only approach to the ruined shrine. Hundreds of glittering
points. Heathen, come to gut them. Or worse… “They’ll be upon us
soon,” Kellhus said. Esmenet struggled with a
sudden, panting terror. Anything could happen—even with men such as Achamian
and Kellhus! The world was exceedingly cruel. “Perhaps if we hide…” “They know we’re here,”
Kellhus muttered. “Our fire. They followed our fire.” “Then we must see,”
Achamian said. Shocked by his tone,
Esmenet glanced in his direction, only to find herself stumbling backward in
terror. White light flashed from his eyes and mouth, and words seemed to rumble
down like thunder from the mountain faces. Then a line appeared from the earth
between his outstretched arms, so brilliant she raised hands against its glare.
It flashed upward, more perfect than any geometer’s rule, taller than the
brooding Unaras, striking through and illuminating clouds, on into the endless
black… The Bar of Heaven! she thought—a Cant from his
stories of the First Apocalypse. Shadows leapt across the
far precipices. The tumbling landscape winked into existence as though exposed
by a lightning flash. And Esmenet saw armoured horsemen, an entire column of
them, shouting in alarm and struggling with their horses. She glimpsed
astonished faces… “Hold!” Kellhus shouted.
“Hold!” The light went out.
Blackness. “They’re Galeoth,”
Kellhus said, placing a firm hand on her shoulder. “Men of the Tusk.” Esmenet blinked, clutched
her breast. For among the riders, she’d seen Sarcellus. A resonant voice shouted
across the darkness: “We search for the Prince of Atrithau! Anasurimbor
Kellhus!” The many-coloured tones
were unknitted, combed into individual threads: sincerity, worry, outrage,
hope… And Kellhus knew there was no danger. He’s come for my counsel. “Prince Saubon!” Kellhus
called. “Come! The faithful are always welcome at our fire!” “And sorcerers?” another
voice cried. “Are blasphemers welcome as well?“ The indignation and
sarcasm were plain, but the undertones defeated him. Who spoke? A Nansur, from
Massentia perhaps, though his accent was strangely difficult to place. A
hereditary caste-noble, with rank enough to ride with a prince… One of the
Emperor’s generals? “Indeed they are,”
Kellhus called back, “when they serve the faithful!” “Forgive my friend!” Saubon shouted,
laughing. “I fear he brought only one pair of breeches!” Hearty Galeoth cheer
resounded across the slopes: laughter, catcalls, friendly jeers. “What do they want?”
Achamian asked in low tones. Even in the gloom, Kellhus could see the lines of recent
pain through his present apprehension—remnants of some argument with Esmenet.
About him. “Who knows?” Kellhus
said. “At the Council, Saubon was first among those urging the others to march
without the Ainoni and the Scarlet Spires. Perhaps with Proyas afield, he seeks
further mischief…” Achamian shook his head.
“He argued that the destruction of Rudm threatened to demoralize the Men of the
Tusk,” the sorcerer amended. “Xinemus told me that you were the one who silenced him… By reinterpreting the
portent of the earthquake.” “You think he seeks
reprisal?” Kellhus asked. But it was too late. More
and more horsemen were rumbling to a stop in the moonlight, dismounting,
stretching weary limbs. Saubon and his entourage trotted toward them, flanked
by torch-bearers. The Galeoth Prince reined his caparisoned charger to a halt,
his eyes hidden in the shadows of his brow. L Kellhus lowered his head
to the degree required by jnan—a bow between princes. “We tracked you all
afternoon,” Saubon said, jumping from his saddle. He stood almost as tall as
Kellhus, though slightly broader through the chest and shoulders. Like his men,
he was geared for battle, wearing not only his chain hauberk, but his helm and
gauntlets as well. A hasty Tusk had been stitched beneath the Red Lion
embroidered across his surcoat— the mark of the Galeoth Royal House. “And who is ‘we’?”
Kellhus asked, peering at the man’s fellow riders. Saubon made several
introductions, starting with his grizzled groom, Kussalt, but Kellhus spared
them little more than a cursory glance. The lone Shrial Knight, whom the Prince
introduced as Cutias Sarcellus, dominated his attention… Another one. Another Skeaos… “At last,” Sarcellus
said. His large eyes glittered through the fingers of his fraudulent face. “The
renowned Prince of Atrithau.” He bowed lower than his
rank demanded. What does this mean, Father? So many variables. After stationing pickets
and dispersing his men about the edges of the grove, Saubon, along with his
groom and the Shrial Knight, joined their fire in the ruined chapel’s heart.
Following the custom of the southern courts, the Galeoth Prince avoided all
talk of his purpose, scrupulously awaiting what practitioners of jnan called
the memponti, the “fortuitous turn” that would
of its own accord lead to weightier matters. Saubon, Kellhus knew, thought the
ways of his own people rude. With every breath he waged war with who he was. But it was the Shrial
Knight, Sarcellus, who commanded Kellhus’s attention—and not just because of
his missing face. Achamian had smoothed the shock from his expression, yet an
apprehensive fury animated his eyes each time he looked at the Knight of the
Tusk. Achamian not only recognized Sarcellus, Kellhus realized, he hated him.
The Dunyain monk could fairly hear movements of Achamian’s soul: the
seething resentment for some past slight, the wincing memories of being struck,
the remorse… Asgilioch In Sumna, Kellhus realized, recalling to the last detail
Achamian’s every reference to his previous mission. Something happened between himand Sarcellus in Sumna. Something involving Inrau… Despite his hatred, the
sorcerer obviously had no inkling that Sarcellus was another Skeaos… Another
Consult skin-spy. And neither did Esmenet,
though her reaction far eclipsed Achamian’s. Shame. The fear of discovery. The
treacherous hope… Shethinks he’s come to take her… Take her from Achamian. She’d been the thing’s
lover. But these mysteries paled
before the greater question: What was it doing here? Not just in the Holy War,
but here, this night, riding at Saubon’s
side… “How did you find us?”
Achamian was asking. Saubon ran fingers
through his close-cropped hair. “My friend, Sarcellus,
here. He has an uncanny ability to track…” He turned to the Knight-Commander.
“How did you say you learned?” “As a youth,” Sarcellus
lied, “on my father’s western estates”—he pursed his lusty lips, as though
restraining a smile—“tracking Scylvendi…” “Tracking Scylvendi,” Saubon repeated, as though to say, Only in the Nansurium… “I was ready to turn back at dusk, but he insisted
you were near.” Saubon opened his hands and shrugged. Silence. Esmenet sat rigid,
covering her tattooed hand the way others might avoid smiling to conceal bad
teeth. Achamian glanced at Kellhus, expecting him to brush away the awkwardness.
Serwe, sensing the undercurrent of anxiety, clutched his thigh. The faceless
beast stared into its bowl of wine. Ordinarily, Kellhus
would’ve said something. But for the moment he could provide little more than
rote responses. His eyes watched, but they didn’t focus. His expression merely
mirrored those surrounding him. Self had vanished into place, a place of opening, where permutation after
permutation was hunted to its merciless conclusion. Consequence and effect.
Events like concentric ripples unfolding across the black waters of the future…
Each word, each look, a stone. There was great peril
here. The principles of this encounter had to be grasped. Only the Logos could
illuminate the path… Only the Logos. “I followed your smell,”
Sarcellus was saying. He stared directly at Achamian, his eyes glittering with
something incomprehensible. Humour? The joke, Kellhus
decided, was that this was no joke: the thing had tracked them like a dog. He
needed to be exceedingly wary of these creatures. As of yet, he had no idea of
their capabilities. Do you
know of thesethings, Father? Everything had
transformed since he’d taken Drusas Achamian as his teacher. The ground of this
world, he now knew, had concealed many, many secrets from his brethren. The
Logos remained true, but its ways were far more devious, and far more
spectacular, than the Dunyain had ever conceived. And the Absolute… the End of
Ends was more distant than they’d ever imagined. So many obstacles. So many
forks in the path… Despite his initial scepticism,
Kellhus had come to believe much of what Achamian had claimed over the course
of their discussions. He believed the stories of the First Apocalypse. He
believed the faceless thing before him was an artifact of the Consult. But the
Celmomian Prophecy? The coming of a Second Apocalypse? Such things were absurd.
By defi‘ nition, the future couldn’t anticipate the present. What came after
couldn’t come before… Could it? There was so much that
must await his father… So many questions. His ignorance had already culminated
in near disaster. The mere exchange of glances in the Emperor’s PrivyGarden
had triggered several small catastrophes, including the events beneath the AndiamineHeights, which had convinced Achamian
that Kellhus was in fact the Harbinger. If the man decided to tell his School
that an Anasurimbor had returned… There was great peril here. Drusas Achamian had to
remain ignorant—that much was certain. If he knew that Kellhus could see the very skin-spies that so terrified him, he
wouldn’t hesitate to contact his masters in Atyersus. So much depended on him
remaining estranged from his School—isolated. Which meant Kellhus must confront
these things on his own. “My groom,” Saubon was saying to the Shrial Knight,
“swears nothing short of sorcery led you to this place… Kussalt fancies himself
quite the tracker.” j’tsgiuocn Did the Consult somehow
know he’d revealed Skeaos in the Emperor’s court? The Emperor had seen him
studying his Prime Counsel, and more importantly, he’d remembered. Several times
now, Kellhus had seen Imperial spies watching from a discreet distance,
following. It was possible the Consult knew how Skeaos had been uncovered,
perhaps even probable. If they did know, then
this Sarcellus could very well be a probe. They would need to discover whether
Skeaos’s unmasking had been an accident of the Emperor’s paranoia, or whether
this stranger from Atrithau had somehow seen through his face. They would watch him, ask discreet questions, and
when this provided no answers, they would make contact… Wouldn’t they? But there was also
Achamian to consider. Doubtless the Consult would keep close watch on Mandate
Schoolmen, the only individuals who believed they still existed. Sarcellus and
Achamian had made contact before, both directly, as evident from the sorcerer’s
reaction, and indirectly via Esmenet, who obviously had been seduced at some
point in the past. They were using her for some reason… Perhaps they were
testing her, sounding her capacity for deceit
and treachery. She’d told Achamian nothing of Sarcellus; that much was
apparent. The study is so deep, Father. A thousand possibilities,
galloping across the trackless steppe of what was to come. A hundred scenarios
flashing through his soul, some branching and branching, terminally deflected
from his objectives, others flaring out in disaster… Direct confrontation.
Accusations levelled before the Great Names. Acclaim for revealing the horror
within. Mandate involvement. Open war with the Consult… Unworkable. The Mandate
couldn’t be involved until they could be dominated. War against the Consult
couldn’t be risked. Not yet. Indirect confrontation.
Forays into the night. Throats cut. Attempted reprisals. A hidden war gradually
revealed… Also unworkable. If Sarcellus and the others were murdered, the
Consult would know someone could see them. When they learned the details of
Skeaos’s discovery, if they hadn’t already, they would realize it was Kellhus,
and indirect confrontation would become open war. HE riRST MARCH Inaction. Watchful
enemies. Appraisal. Sterile probes. Second guessing. Responses delayed by the
need to know. Worry in the shadow of growing power… Workable. Even if they
learned the details surrounding Skeaos’s discovery, the Consult would only have
suspicions. If what Achamian claimed was
true, they weren’t so crude as to blot out potential threats without first understanding them. Confrontation was inevitable. The outcome
depended only on how much time he had to prepare… He was one of the
Conditioned, Dunyain. Circumstances would yield. The mission must— “Kellhus,” Serwe was saying. “The Prince has asked you a
question.” Kellhus blinked, smiled
as though at his own foolishness. Without exception, everyone about the fire
stared at him, some concerned, some puzzled. “I’m-I’m sorry,” he
stammered. “I…” He glanced nervously from watcher to watcher, exhaled, as
though reconciling himself to his principles, no matter how embarrassing.
“Sometimes I… I see things…” Silence. “Me too,” Sarcellus said
scathingly. “Though usually when my eyes are open.” Had he closed his eyes?
He had no recollection of it. If so, it would be a troubling lapse. Not since— “Idiot,” Saubon snapped, turning to the Shrial Knight.
“Fool! We sit about the man’s fire and you insult him?” “The Knight-Commander has
caused no offence,” Kellhus said. “You forget, Prince, that he’s as much priest
as warrior, and we’ve asked him to share a fire with a sorcerer… It’s like
asking a midwife to break bread with a leper, isn’t it?” A moment of nervous
laughter, over-loud and over-brief. “No doubt,” Kellhus added, “he’s simply out
of temper.” “No doubt,” Sarcellus
repeated. A mocking smile, bottomless, like all his expressions. What does it want? “Which begs the
question,” Kellhus continued, effortlessly grasping the “fortuitous turn” that
had so far eluded Prince Saubon. “What brings a Shrial Knight to a sorcerer’s
fire?” “I was sent by Gotian,”
Sarcellus said, “my Grandmaster…” He glanced at Saubon, who watched stonefaced.
“The Shrial Knights have Asgilwch sworn to be among the first
who set foot upon heathen ground, and Prince Saubon proposes—“ But Saubon interrupted,
blurting, “I would speak to you of this alone, Prince Kellhus.” What would you have me do, Father? So many possibilities.
Incalculable possibilities. Kellhus followed Saubon
through the dark lanes of the ironwood grove. They paused at the edge of the
cliff and looked out over the moonlit reaches of the Inunara Highlands. Clear
of the hissing leaves, the wind buffeted them. The long fall below was littered
with fallen trees. Dead roots reached skyward. Some of the fallen still
brandished great sockets of earth, like dusty fists raised against the
survivors. “You do see things, don’t you?” Saubon finally said. “I mean,
you dreamed of this Holy War from Atrithau.” Kellhus enclosed him in
the circle of his senses. Heart rate. Blush reflex. The orbital muscles ringing
his eyes… He fears me. “Why do you ask?” “Because Proyas is a
stubborn fool. Because those first to plate are those first to feast!” The Prince of Galeoth was
both daring and impatient. Though he appreciated subtlety, he preferred bold
strokes in the end. “You wish to march
immediately,” Kellhus said. Saubon grimaced in the
dark. “I would be in Gedea now,” he snapped, “if it weren’t for you!” He spoke of the recent
Council, where Kellhus’s reinterpretation of Ruom’s destruction had amputated
his arguments. But his resentment, Kellhus could see, was hollow. Though
ruthless and mercenary, Coithus Saubon was not petty. “Then why come to me
now?” “Because what you said…
about the God burning our ships… It had the ring of truth.” He was a watcher of men,
Kellhus realized, someone who continually measured. His whole life he’d thought
himself a shrewd judge of character, prided himself on his honesty, his ability
to punish flattery and reward criticism. But with
Kellhus… He had no yardstick, no carpenter’s string. He’s told himself I’m a seer of some kind. But he fears
I’m more… “And that’s what you
seek? The truth?” Though mercenary, Saubon
did possess a kind of practical piety. For him faith was a game—a very serious
game. Where other men begged and called it “prayer,” he negotiated, haggled. By
coming here, he thought he was giving the Gods their due… He’s terrified of making a mistake. The Whore has given him
but one chance. “I need to know what you
see!” the man cried. “I’ve fought many campaigns—all of them for my wretched
father! I’m no fool when it comes to the field of war. I don’t think I’d march
into a Fanim tra—” “But recall what Cnaьir
said at Council,” Kellhus interrupted. “The Fanim fight from horseback. They’d
bring the trap to you. And remember the Cishaur—” “Pfah! My nephew scouts
Gedea as we speak, sends me messages daily. There’s no Fanim host lurking in
the shadow of these mountains. These skirmishers that Proyas chases are meant
to fool us, delay us while the heathen gathers his might. Skauras is canny
enough to know when he’s overmatched. He’s retreated to Shigek, barricaded
himself in his cities on the Sempis, where he awaits the Padirajah and the Grandees
of Kian. He’s ceded Gedea to whoever has the courage to seize it!” The Galeoth Prince
clearly believed what he said, but could he be believed? His argument seemed sober enough. And
Proyas himself had expressed nothing but respect for the man’s martial acumen.
Saubon had even fought Ikurei Conphas to a standstill just a few years
previous… Cataracts of possibility.
There was opportunity here… And perhaps Sarcellus need not be confronted to be
destroyed. But still. I know so little of war. Too little… “So you hope.” Kellhus said. “Skauras could—” “So I know!” “Then what does it
matter, whether I sanction you or not? Truth is truth, regardless of who speaks
it…” Desperation. “I ask only
for your counsel, for what you see… Nothing more.” f’tsgiuocn Slackness about the eyes.
Shortness of breath. Deadened timbre. Another lie. “But I see many things…”
Kellhus said. “Then tell me!” Kellhus shook his head.
“Only rarely do I glimpse the future. The hearts of men… that is what they…” He paused, glanced nervously down the
sheer drop, to the bleach-bone trees scattered and broken below. “That is what
I’m moved to see.” Saubon had become
guarded. “Then tell me… What do you see in my heart?” Expose him. Strip him of every lie, every
pretense. When the shame passes… Kellhus held the man’s
eyes for a forlorn instant. … he will think it proper to stand naked before me. “A man and a child,”
Kellhus said, weaving deeper harmonics into his voice, transforming it into
something palpable. “I see a man and a child… The man is harrowed by the
distance between the trappings of power and the impotence of his birthright. He
would force what fate has denied him, and so, day by day lives in the midst of
what he does not possess. Avarice, Saubon… Not for gold, but for witness. Greed for the testimony of men—for them to look and
say ‘Here, here is a King by his own hand!’” Kellhus stared into the
giddy void at his feet, his eyes glassy with the tumult of inner mysteries… Saubon watched with
horror. “And the child? You said there was a child!” “Cringes still beneath a
father’s hand. Awakens in the night and cries out, not for witness, but to be known… No one knows him. No one loves.” Kellhus turned to him,
his eyes shining with insight and unearthly compassion. “I could go on…” “No-no,” Saubon
stammered, as though waking from a trance. “Cease. That’s enough…” But what was enough?
Saubon yearned for pretexts; what would he give in return? When the variables
were so many, everything was risk. Everything. What if 1 choose wrong, Father? “Did you hear that?”
Kellhus cried, turning to Saubon in sudden terror The Galeoth Prince jumped
back from the cliff’s edge. “Hear what?” Truth begat truth, even
when it was a lie. Kellhus swayed,
staggered. Saubon leapt forward, pulled him from the long fall. “March,” Kellhus gasped, close enough to kiss. “The Whore will be kind to you… But you must make certain the Shrial
Knights are…” He opened his eyes in stunned wonder—as though to say, This couldn’t be theirmessage! Some destinations
couldn’t be grasped in advance. Some paths had to be walked to be known.
Risked. “You must make certain
the Shrial Knights are punished.” With Kellhus and Saubon
gone, Esmenet sat silently, staring into the fire, studying the mosaic image of
the Latter Prophet reaching out beneath their feet. She pulled her toes from
the circle of a haloed hand. It seemed sacrilege that they should trod upon
him… But then what did she
care? She was damned. Never had that seemed more obvious than now. Sarcellus here! Affliction upon
affliction. Why did the Gods hate her so? Why were they so cruel? Resplendent in his
silvered mail and white surcoat, Sarcellus chatted amiably with Serwe about
Kellhus, asking where he came from, how they first met, and so on. Serwe basked
in his attention; it was plain from her answers that she more than adored the
Prince of Atrithau. She spoke as though she didn’t exist outside her bond to
him. Achamian watched, though for some reason it seemed he didn’t listen. Oh, Akka… Why do 1 know I’m going to lose you? Not fear, know. Such was the cruelty of this world! Murmuring excuses,
Esmenet stood, then with slow, measured steps, fled from the fire. Enfolded by darkness, she
stopped, plopped down on the ruined stump of a pillar. The sounds of Saubon’s
men permeated the night: the rhythmic thwack of axes,
deep-throated shouts, ribald laughter. Beneath the dark trees, warhorses
snorted, stamped the earth. What have I done? What if Akka finds out? Looking back the way
she’d come, she was shocked to discover she could still see Achamian, dusty
orange before the fire. She smiled at the hapless look of him, at the five
white streaks of his beard. He seemed to be talking to Serwe… Where had Sarcellus gone? “It must be difficult
being a woman in such a place,” a voice called from behind her. Esmenet jumped to her
feet and whirled, her heart racing both with dismay and alarm. She saw
Sarcellus strolling toward her. Of course… “So many pigs,” he
continued, “and only one trough.” Esmenet swallowed, stood
rigid. She made no reply. “I’ve seen you before
too,” he said, playing games with their pretense about the fire. “Haven’t I?”
He waved a mocking finger. Deep breath. “No. I’m
sure you haven’t.” “But yes… Yes! You’re a…
harlot.” He smiled winningly. “A whore.” Esmenet glanced around.
“1 have no idea what you’re talking about.” “Sorcerers and whores… It
seems oddly appropriate, I suppose. With so many men licking your crotch, I
imagine it serves to keep one with a magic tongue.” She struck him, or tried
to. Somehow he caught her hand. “Sarcellus,” she
whispered. “Sarcellus, please…” She felt a fingertip
trace an impossible line along her inner thigh. “Like I said,” he
muttered in a tone her body recognized. “One trough.“ She glanced back toward
the fire, saw Achamian peering after her with a frown. Of course he could see
only blackness, such was the treachery of fire, which illuminated small circles
by darkening the entire world. But what Achamian could or could not see did not
matter. “No, Sarcellus,” she hissed. “Not…” … here “… while I live. Do you
understand?” She could feel the heat
of him. No-no-no-no… A different, more
resonant voice called out. “Is there a problem?” Whirling, she saw Prince
Kellhus stride from the shadows of the nearby grove. “N-no. Nothing,” Esmenet
gasped, stunned to find her arm free. “Lord Sarcellus startled me, nothing
more.” “She spooks easily,”
Sarcellus said. “But then most women do.” “You think so?” Kellhus
replied, approaching until even Sarcellus had to look up. Kellhus stared at the
man, his manner mild, even bemused, but there was an implacable constancy to
his look that made Esmenet’s heart race, that urged her limbs to run. Had he
been listening? Had he heard? “Perhaps you’re right,”
Sarcellus said in an offhand manner. “Most men spook easy too.” There was a moment of
uncomfortable silence. Something clawed at Esmenet to fill it, but she could
find no breath to speak. “I’ll leave you two,
then,” Sarcellus declared. With a shallow bow, he turned and strode back to the
fire. Alone with Kellhus,
Esmenet sighed in relief. The hands that had throttled her heart but moments
before had vanished. She looked up to Kellhus, glimpsed the Nail of Heaven over
his left shoulder. He seemed an apparition of gold and shadow. “Thank you,” she
whispered. “You loved him, didn’t you?” Her ears burned. For some
reason, saying no never occurred to her. One just didn’t lie to Prince
Anasurimbor Kellhus. Instead, she said, “Please don’t tell Akka.” Kellhus smiled, though
his eyes seemed profoundly sad. He reached out, as though to touch her cheek,
then dropped his hand. “Come,” he said. “Night waxes.” Clutching hands with the
palm-to-palm urgency of young lovers, Esmenet and Achamian searched through the
scrub and grasses for good sleeping ground. They found a flat area near the
edge of the grove, not far from the cliff, and rolled out their mats. They laid
down, groaning and puffing like an old man and woman. The ironwood nearest them
had died some time ago, and it twined across the sky above them, like a thing
of alabaster. Through smooth-forking branches, Esmenet studied the f’tsguiocn yy constellations, oppressed
by the thought of Sarcellus and the angry memory of Achamian’s earlier words… There’s no hiding from the end of the
world! How could she be such a
fool? A harlot who would place herself upon his scales? He was a Mandate Schoolman. Every night he
lost loves greater than she could imagine, let alone be. She’d heard his cries. The frantic babbling in
unknown tongues. The eyes lost in ancient hallucinations. She knew this! How many
times had she held him in the humid dark? Achamian loved her, sure,
but Seswatha loved the dead. “Did I ever tell you,”
she said, flinching from these thoughts, “that my mother read the stars?” “Dangerous,” he replied,
“especially in the Nansurium. Didn’t she know the penalties?” The prohibitions against
astrology were as severe as those against witchcraft. The future was too
valuable to be shared with caste-menials. “Better
to be a whore, Esmi,”
her mother would say. “Stones are
nothing more than far-flung fists. Better to be beaten than to be burned…” How old had she been?
Eleven? “She knew, which was why
she refused to teach me…” “She was wise.” Meditative silence.
Esmenet struggled with an unaccountable anger. “Do you think they speak
our future, Akka? The stars?” A momentary pause. “No.” “Why?” “The Nonmen believe the
sky is endlessly empty, an infinite void…” “Empty? How could that
be?” “Even more, they think
the stars are faraway suns.” Esmenet wanted to laugh,
but then, as though suddenly seeing through
her reflection across waters, she saw the plate of heaven dissolve into
impossible depths, emptiness heaped upon emptiness, hollow upon hollow, with
stars—no suns!—hanging like points of dust in a shaft of light. She caught her
breath. Somehow the sky had become a vast, yawning pit. Without thinking, she
clenched the grasses, as though she stood upon a ledge rather than lay across
the ground. “How could they believe
such a thing?” she asked. “The sun moves in circles about the world. The stars
move in circles about the Nail.” The riKSI MARCH thought struck her that
the Nail of Heaven itself might be another world, one with a thousand thousand
suns. Such a sky that would be! Achamian shrugged.
“Supposedly that’s what the Inchoroi told them. That they sailed here from
stars that were suns.” “And you believe them,
the Nonmen? That’s why you don’t think the stars weave our fate ?” “I believe them.” “But you still believe
the future is written…” The air became hard between them, the surrounding
grasses as sharp as wire. “You believe Kellhus is the Harbinger.” She realized she’d been
speaking of Kellhus all along. Prince Kellhus. A heartbeat of silence.
The sound of laughter over ruined walls— Kellhus and Serwe‘. “Yes,” Achamian said. Esmenet held her breath.
“What if he’s more? More than the Harbinger…” Achamian rolled onto his
side, propped his head on his palm. For the first time, Esmenet saw the tears
coursing down his cheeks. He’d been crying all along, she realized. All along. He suffers… More than I can ever know. “You understand,” he
said. “You see why he torments me, don’t you?” Her skin recalled the
path of Sarcellus’s finger along her inner thigh. She shuddered, thought she
heard Serwe moaning in the dark, gasping… “I asked you,” Kellhus had said, “to tell me what it was like.” She no longer wanted to
run. “The Mandate cannot know,
Akka… We must bear this burden alone.” Achamian pursed trembling
lips. Swallowed. “We?” Esmenet looked back to
the stars. One more language she could not read. “We.” Five The Plains of Mengedda Why must I conquer, you ask? War makes
clear. Life or Death. Freedom or Bondage. War strikes the sediment from the
waterof life. —TRIAMIS I, JOURNALS AND
DIALOGUES Early Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk,
near the Plains of Mengedda Cnaьir had known
something was amiss long before sighting the fields of trampled pasture and
dead firepits: too little smoke on the horizon, and too few scavenging birds in
the sky. When he mentioned this to Proyas, the Prince had blanched, as though
he’d confirmed a festering concern. When they crested the last of the hills and
saw that only the Conriyans and the Nansur remained beneath Asgilioch’s walls,
Proyas had fallen into an apoplectic fury, fairly shrieking curses as he
whipped his horse down the slopes. Cnaьir, Xinemus, and the
other Conriyan caste-nobles comprising their party chased him all the way to
Conphas’s headquarters, where the Exalt-General explained, in his infuriatingly
glib way, that the morning of the day previous, Coithus Saubon had decided to
make the most of Proyas’s absence. The Shrial Knights, of course, couldn’t lay
hoof or boot in the tracks of another when it came to heathen land, and as for
Gothyelk, Skaiyelt, and their barbaric kinsmen, how could they be The flams of Mengedda expected to distinguish
fools from wise men, what with all that hair in their eyes? “Didn’t you argue with
them?” Proyas had cried. “Didn’t you reason?” “Saubon wasn’t interested
in reason,” Conphas replied, speaking, as he always did, as though
intellectually filing his nails. “He was listening to a louder
voice—apparently.” “The God?” Proyas asked. Conphas laughed. “I was
going to say ‘greed,’ but, yes, I suppose ‘the God’ will do. He said your
friend, the Prince of Atrithau, had a vision…” He glanced at Cnaьir. “You mean Kellhus?”
Proyas cried. “Kellhus told him to march?” “So the man said,”
Conphas replied. Such is the
madness of the world, his tone added, though his eyes suggested something far different. There was a moment of
communal hesitation. Over the past weeks, the Dunyain’s name had gathered much
weight among the Inrithi, as though it were a rock they held at arm’s length.
Cnaьir could see it in their faces: the look of beggars with gold sewn into
their hems—or of drunkards with over-shy daughters… What, Cnaьir wondered,
would happen when the rock became too heavy? Afterward, when Proyas
confronted the Dunyain at Xinemus’s camp, Cnaьir could only think, He makes mistakes! “What did you do?” Proyas
asked the fiend, his voice quavering with rage. Everyone, Serwe,
Dinchases, even that babbling sorcerer and his shrew whore, sat stunned about
the evening fire. No one spoke to Kellhus that way… No one. Cnaьir almost cackled
aloud. “What would you have me
say?” the Dunyain asked. “What happened?” Proyas
cried. “Saubon came to us in the
hills,” Achamian said quickly, “while you were in Tus—” “Silence!” the Prince
cried, without so much as glancing at the Schoolman. “I have asked you—” “You’re not my better!”
Kellhus thundered. All of them, Cnaьir included, jumped—and not merely in
surprise. There was something in his tone. Something preternatural. The Dunyain had leapt to
his feet, and though a length away, somehow seemed to loom over the Conriyan
Prince. Proyas actually stepped backward. He looked as though he had remembered
something unspoken between them. “You’re my peer, Proyas. Do not presume to be more.” From where Cnaьir stood,
the ochre walls and turrets of squat Asgilioch framed the head and shoulders of
the two men. Kellhus, his trim beard and long hair shining gold in the evening
sun, stood a full head taller than the swarthy Conriyan Prince, but both men
emanated grace and potency in equal measure. Proyas had recovered his angry
glare. “What I presume, Kellhus, is to be party to all decisions of moment
regarding the Holy War.” “I made no decision. You
know that. I told Saubon only…” For a fleeting moment, a strange, almost
lunatic vulnerability animated his expression. His lips parted. He seemed to
look through the Conriyan Prince. “Only what?” The Dunyain’s eyes
refocused, his stance hardened—everything about him… converged somehow, as though he were somehow more here than anyone else. As though he stood among ghosts. He speaks in hidden cues, Cnaьir reminded himself. He wars against allof
us! “Only what I see,”
Kellhus said. “And just what is it you
see?” The words sounded forced. “Do you wish to know,
Nersei Proyas? Do you really want me to tell you?” Now Proyas hesitated. His
eyes flickered to those surrounding, fell upon Cnaьir for a heartbeat, no more.
Without expression he said, “You’ve doomed us.” Then turning on his heel, he
strode in the direction of his quarters. Afterward, in the stuffy
confines of their pavilion, Cnaьir set upon the Dunyain in Scylvendi, demanding
to know what had really happened. Serwe huddled in her watchful little corner,
like a puppy beaten by two masters. “I said what I said to
secure our position,” Kellhus asserted, his voice passionless, bottomless—the
way it always was when he affected to reveal his “true self.” J he I lains oj Mengedda 1U “And this is how you
secure our position? By alienating our patron? By sending half the Holy War to
its destruction? Trust me, Dunyain, I have fought the Fanim; this Holy War,
this… this migration, or whatever it is, has precious
little chance of overcoming them as it is—let alone conquering Shimeh! And you
would cut it in half? By the Dead God, you do need me to teach you war, don’t you?” Kellhus, of course, was
unmoved. “Alienating Proyas is to our advantage. He judges men harshly, holds
all in suspicion. He opens himself only when he’s moved to regret. And he will
regret. As for Saubon, I told him only what he wanted to hear. Every man yearns
to hear their flattering delusions confirmed. Every man. This is why they
support—willingly—so many parasitic castes, such as augurs, priests, memorial—” “Read my face, dog!”
Cnaьir grated. “You will not convince me this is a success!” Pause. Shining eyes
blinking, watching. The intimation of a horrifying scrutiny. “No,” Kellhus said, “I
suppose not.” More lies. “I didn’t,” the monk
continued, “anticipate the others—Gothyelk and Skaiyelt—would follow his lead.
With just the Galeoth and the Shrial Knights, I deemed the risk acceptable. The
Holy War could survive their loss, and given what you’ve said regarding the
liabilities of unwieldy hosts, I though it might even profit. But without the
Tydonni…” “Lies! You would have
stopped them otherwise! You could have stopped them if you wished.” Kellhus shrugged.
“Perhaps. But Saubon left us the very night he found us in the hills. He roused
his men when he returned, and set out before dawn yesterday. Both Gothyelk and
Skaiyelt had already followed him into the Southron Gates by the time we
returned. It was too late.” “You believed him, didn’t
you? You believed all that tripe about Skauras fleeing Gedea. You still
believe!” “Saubon believed it. I
merely think it probable.” “As you said,” Cnaьir
snarled with as much spite as he could muster, “every man yearns to hear their
flattering delusions confirmed.” Another pause. “First I require one
Great Name,” Kellhus said, “then the others will follow. If Gedea falls, then
Prince Coithus Saubon will turn to me before making any decision of moment. We
need this Holy War, Scylvendi. I deemed it worth the risk.” Such a fool! Cnaьir
regarded Kellhus, even though he knew his expression would betray nothing, and
his own, everything. He considered lecturing him on the treacherous ways of the
Fanim, who invariably used feints and false informants, and who invariably
gulled fools like Coithus Saubon. But then he glimpsed Serwe glaring at him
from her corner, her eyes brimming with hatred, accusation, and terror. This is always the way, something within him said—something exhausted. And suddenly he realized
that he’d actually believed the Dunyain, believed that he had made a mistake. And yet it was often like
this: believing and not believing. It reminded him of listening to old Haurut,
the Utemot memorialist who’d taught him his verses as a child. One moment
Cnaьir would be sweeping across the Steppe with a hero like the great Uthgai,
the next he would be staring at a broken old man, drunk on gishrut, stumbling
on phrases a thousand years old. When one believed, one’s soul was moved. When one didn’t, everything else moved. “Not everything I say,”
the Dunyain said, “can be a lie, Scylvendi. So why do you insist on thinking I
deceive you in all things?” “Because that way,”
Cnaьir grated, “you deceive me in nothing.” Riding on the flank to
avoid the dust, Cnaьir glanced at Proyas and his entourage of caste-nobles and
servants. Despite the lustre of their armour and dress, they looked grim. They
had negotiated the Southron Gates through the Unaras, and at long last they
rode across heathen land, across Gedea. But their
mood was neither jubilant nor assured. Two days ago, Proyas had sent several
advance parties of horsemen to search for Saubon, the Galeoth Prince. This
morning, outriders belonging to Lord Ingiaban had found one of those parties
dead. Gedea, at least in the
shadow of the Unaras, was a broken land, a jumble of gravel slopes and stunted
promontories. Save for clutches of hardy cedars, the green
of spring was growing tawny beneath the summer sun. The sky was a plate of
turquoise, featureless, sere—so different from the cloudy depths of Nansur
skies. Vultures and jackdaws
screeched into the air at their approach. With a curse, Proyas reined to a
halt. “So what does this mean?” he asked Cnaьir. “That Skauras has somehow
positioned himself behind Saubon and the others? Have the
Fanim encircled them?” Cnaьir raised a hand against the sun. “Perhaps…” The
bodies had been stripped where they’d fallen: some sixty or seventy dead men,
bloating in the hot sun, scattered like things dropped in flight. Without
warning, Cnaьir spurred ahead, forcing the Prince and his entourage to gallop
after him. “Sodhoras was my cousin,”
Proyas snapped, reining to a violent halt beside him. “My father will be
furious!” “Another cousin,” Lord Ingiaban said darkly. He referred to
Calmemunis and the Vulgar Holy War. Cnaьir sniffed the air,
contemplated the smell of rot. He’d almost forgotten what it was like: the
scribbling flies, the swelling bellies, the eyes like painted cloth. He’d
almost forgotten how holy. War… The very earth seemed to tingle. Proyas dismounted and
knelt over one of the dead. He waved away flies with his gauntlets. Turning to
Cnaьir, he asked, “How about you? Do you still believe him?” He looked away, as
though embarrassed by the honesty of his tone. Him… Kellhus. “He…” Cnaьir paused, spat
when he should have shrugged. “He sees things.” Proyas snorted. “Your
manner does little to reassure me.” He stood, casting his shadow across the
dead Conriyan, slapping the dust from the ornamental skirt he wore over his
mail leggings. “This is always the way of it, I suppose.” “What do you mean, my
Prince?” Xinemus asked. “We think things will be
more glorious than they are, that they’ll unfold according to our hopes, our
expectations…” He unstopped his waterskin, took too long a drink. “The Nansur
actually have a word for it,” he continued. “We ‘idealize.’” The Plains of Mengedda 1U/ Statements such as this,
Cnaьir had decided, partially explained the awe and adoration Proyas roused in
his men, including those who were names in their own right, such as Gaidekki
and Ingiaban. The admixture of honesty and insight… Kellhus did much the
same. Didn’t he? “So what do you think?”
Proyas was asking. “What happened here?” He’d clambered back onto his horse. “Hard to tell,” Cnaьir
replied, glancing once again over the dead. “Pfah,” Lord Gaidekki
snorted. “Sodhoras was no fool. He was overwhelmed by numbers.” Cnaьir disagreed, but
rather than dispute the man, he jerked his horse about and spurred toward the
ridge. The soil was sandy, the turf shallow-rooted; his mount—a sleek, Conriyan
black—stumbled several times before reaching the crest. Here he paused, leaning
against his saddle’s cantle to relieve a vagrant pain in his back. Before him,
the far side sloped gradually down, lending the entire ridge the appearance of
a titanic shoulder blade. To the immediate north, the bald heights of the
Unaras Spur gathered in the haze. Cnaьir followed the crest
a short distance, studying the scuffed ground and counting the dead. Seventeen
more, stripped like the others, their arms askew, their mouths teeming with
flies. The sound of Proyas arguing with his Palatines wafted up from below. Proyas was no fool, but
his fervour made him impatient. Despite hours of listening to Cnaьir describe
the resources and methods of the Kianene, he as yet possessed no clear
understanding of their foe. His countrymen, on the other hand, possessed no
understanding whatsoever. And when men who knew little argued with men who knew
nothing, tempers were certain to be thrown out of joint. Since the earliest days
of the march, Cnaьir had harboured severe doubts regarding the Holy War and its
churlish nobles. So far, nearly every measure he’d suggested in council had
been either summarily rejected or openly scoffed at—the yapping fools! In so many ways, the Holy
War was the antithesis of a Scylvendi horde. The People brooked few if any
followers. No pampering slaves, no priests or augurs, and certainly no women,
which could always be had when one ranged enemy country. They carried little
baggage over what a warrior and his mount could bear,
even on the longest campaigns. If they exhausted their amicut and could secure no forage, they either let blood
from their mounts or went hungry. Their horses, though small, unbecoming, and
relatively slow, were bred to the land, not to the stable. The horse he now
rode—a gift from Proyas—not only required grain over and above fodder, but
enough to feed three men! Madness. The only thing Cnaьir had
not protested was the very thing the
dog-eyed idiots ceaselessly clucked and fretted over: the breakup of the Holy
War into separate contingents. What was it with these Inrithi? Did brothers bed
their sisters? Did they beat their children about the head? The larger the
host, the slower the march. The slower the march, the more supplies the host
consumed. It was that simple! The problem wasn’t that the Holy War had divided.
It simply had no choice: Gedea, by all accounts, was a lean country, scarcely
cultivated and sparsely populated. The problem was that it had done so without planning, without advance intelligence of what to expect,
without agreed-upon routes or secure communications. But how to make them
understand? And understand they must: the Holy War’s survival depended on it. Everything depended on it… Cnaьir spat across the dust,
listened to them bicker, watched them gesticulate. Murdering Anasurimbor
Moenghus was all that mattered. It was the weight that drew all lines plumb. Any indignity ... Anything! “Lord Ingiaban,” Cnaьir
called down, startling them into silence. “Ride back to the main column and
return with at least a hundred of your men. The Fanim are fond of surprising
those who come to dispense with the dead.” When none of the milling
nobles moved, Cnaьir cursed and urged his horse back down the slope. Proyas
scowled as he approached, but said nothing. He tests me. “I care not if you think
me impertinent,” Cnaьir said. “I speak only of what must be done.” “I’ll go,” Xinemus
offered, already drawing his horse around. The Flams of Mengedda 1UV “No,” Cnaьir said. “Lord
Ingiaban goes.” Ingiaban grunted, ran
fingers over the blue sparrows embroidered across his surcoat—the sign of his
House. He glared at Cnaьir. “Of all the dogs who’ve dared piss on my leg,” he
said, “you’re the first to aim higher than my knee.” Several guffaws broke from
the others, and the Count-Palatine of Kethantei grinned bitterly. “But before I
change my leggings, Scylvendi, please tell me why you choose to piss on me.” Cnaьir wasn’t amused.
“Because your household is the closest. Because the life of your Prince is at
stake.” The lantern-jawed Palatine paled. “Do as he bids!” Xinemus
cried. “Watch yourself,
Marshal,” Ingiaban snarled. “Playing benjuka with our Prince doesn’t make you
my better.” “Which means, Zin,” Lord
Gaidekki quipped, “that you must piss no higher than his waist.” Another burst of
laughter. Ingiaban ruefully shook his head. He paused before riding off,
dipping his square-bearded chin to Scylvendi, but whether in conciliation or
warning the Scylvendi couldn’t tell. An uncomfortable pause
followed. The shadow of a vulture flickered across the group, and Proyas
glanced skyward. “So, Cnaьir,” he said, blinking away the sun, “what happened
here? Were they overwhelmed by numbers?” Cnaьir scowled. “They
were outwitted, not outnumbered.” “How do you mean?” Proyas
asked. “Your cousin was a fool.
He was accustomed to riding with his men in file, as horsemen must when using a
road. They wound into this depression and began climbing the slope, some three
or four abreast. The Kianene waited for them above, holding their horses to the
ground.” “They were ambushed…”
Proyas raised a hand to better peer along the ridge line. “Do you think the
heathen simply happened on them?” Cnaьir shrugged.
“Perhaps. Perhaps not. Since Sodhoras thought himself an outrider, he obviously
saw no need to deploy scouts of his own. The Fanim are more canny. They could
have tracked him for some time without his knowledge, judged that sooner or
later he would come here…” He brought his horse about and pointed to the group
of bloating dead who littered the centre of the ridge line. They looked oddly peaceful, like
eunuchs snoozing in the sun after bathing. “But this is moot. The Fanim
attacked when the first men crested the ridge, Sodhoras among them—” “How in hell,” Lord
Gaidekki blurted, “could you know wheth—” “Because the horsemen below broke ranks to
rush to their lord’s defence, only to find the Fanim arrayed along the entire
ridge line. Though it looks harmless, that slope is treacherous. Sand and
gravel. Many were slain by arrows at close range as their horses floundered.
Those few who gained the summit caused the Fanim quite some grief—I saw far
more blood than bodies up there—but were eventually overwhelmed. The rest, some
twenty or so more sober but hopelessly courageous men, realized the futility of
saving their lord, and pulled back—there—perhaps intending to draw the Fanim
down and exact some revenge.” Cnaьir glanced at
Gaidekki, daring the brash Palatine to
contradict him. But the man studied the disposition of the dead, like the
others. “The Kianene,” Cnaьir
continued, “remained on the crest… They taunted the survivors, I think, by
desecrating Sodhoras’s corpse— someone was disembowelled. Then they tried to
reduce your kinfolk with archery. Those Inrithi who fought them on the crest
must have unnerved them, because they were taking no chances. Their arrows must
have possessed little effect, even at that short range. At some point they
began shooting their horses—something the Kianene are typically loath to do.
This is something to remember… Once Sodhoras’s men were unhorsed, the Kianene
simply rode them down.” War. The hairs rose on
the nape of his neck… “They stripped the
bodies,” he added, “then rode off to the southwest.” Cnaьir wiped his palms
across his thighs. The fools believed him—that much was plain from their
stunned silence. Before this place had been a rebuke and a dread omen,
but now… Mystery made things titanic. Knowledge made small. “Sweet Sejenus!” Gaidekki
suddenly exclaimed. “He reads the dead like scripture!” Proyas frowned at the
man. “No blasphemy… Please, Lord Palatine.” He scratched his trim beard, his
gaze wandering yet again over the dead. He seemed to be nodding. He fixed
Cnaьir with a canny look. “How many?” The Plains of Mengedda 1 i “Fanim?” The Scylvendi
shrugged. “Sixty, maybe seventy, lightly armoured horsemen. No more.” “And Saubon? Does this
mean he’s encircled?” Cnaьir matched his gaze.
“When one wars on foot against horse, one is always encircled.” “So the bastard may still
live,” Proyas said, his breathlessness betrayed by a faint quaver in his voice.
The Holy War could survive the loss of one nation, but three? Saubon had
gambled more than his own life on this rash gambit—far more—which was why
Proyas, over Conphas’s protestations, had ordered his people to march. Perhaps
four nations could prevail where three could not. “For all we know,”
Xinemus said, “the Galeoth bastard may be right. He could be fanning across
Gedea as we speak, chasing Skauras’s skirmishers to the sea.” “No,” Cnaьir said. “His
peril is great… Skauras has assembled in Gedea. He awaits you
with all his might.” “And how could you know
that?” Gaidekki cried. “Because the Fanim who killed your kinsman took a great
risk.” Proyas nodded, his eyes at once narrow and apprehensive. “They attacked
a larger and more heavily armed force… Which means they were following
orders—strict orders—to prevent any communication between isolated
contingents.” Cnaьir lowered his head
in deference—not to the man, but to the truth. At long last, Nersei Proyas was
beginning to understand. Skauras had been watching, studying the Holy War since
long before it had left Momemn’s walls. He knew its weaknesses… Knowledge. It
all came down to knowledge. Moenghus had taught him
that. “War is intellect,” the
Scylvendi chieftain said. “So long as you and your people insist on waging it
with your hearts, you are doomed.” “Akirea im Vail” a thousand Galeoth throats boomed. “Akirea im Val pa Mahal” Glory to the God. Glory to the
God of Gods. Startled from his
reverie, Coithus Saubon looked down over the great, haphazard column that was
his army, searching for some sign of / ihe Hrst March Kussalt, his groom, who’d
ridden out to meet the scouts. He gnawed at his callused knuckles, as he always
did when he was anxious. Please, he thought. Please… But there was no sign. Pulling helm and coif
from his head, he ran his fingers through his short, autumn-blond hair,
squeezing out the sweat that kept nagging his eyes. He sat astride his horse,
alone on a promontory overlooking a small but fast-running river not marked on
any of his crude maps. Thankfully, the river was fordable, though not without
difficulty. It had already claimed four wains and one life, as well as several
precious hours; the valley was growing more and more congested as men and
supplies gathered behind the ford. On the far side, warriors and followers
alike shook water from their limbs, then fanned out, some following the banks
to refill water-skins or, Saubon noted darkly, even to fish. Others trudged
onward, their faces bovine with weariness, their packs swinging from pikes and
spears. To the south, the
towering ridges that had everywhere obscured his view folded into the river
vale, revealing the hazy contours of what was to come. There, beyond the failing
hills, he could see it: a broad plain, blue with distance, reaching as far as
the horizon. The Plains of Mengedda. The great Battleplain of legend. His chest tightened. He
thought of his older cousin, Tharschilka, whose bones mouldered with those of
Calmemunis and the Vulgar Holy War among those distant grasses. He thought of
Prince Kellhus… I
own this land…It belongs to me!
It must! They’d marched for an
entire week, through the passes of the Southron Gates, then along a ruined
Ceneian road which had inexplicably ended in a ravine. Here he and Gothyelk—the
stubborn old bastard!—had quarrelled to the point of fisticuffs over which way
they should continue. The jewel of Gedea, if it could be called such, was the
city of Hinnereth to the southeast on the MeneanorCoast. Saubon wanted the city for
himself, certainly, but the Holy War needed
it to secure their flank as they continued south. For the great Hoga Gothyelk,
however, Gedea was something to be crossed, not conquered. The fool spoke as
though the lands between the Holy War and Shimeh were nothing more than strides
on a sprinter’s track. They’d bellowed at each other deep into the night, with
Gotian trying time and again to find some common ground, and The Plains of Mengedda Skaiyelt nodding off in
his corner, pretending now and then to listen to his interpreter. In the end,
they resolved to go their separate ways. Gotian, who like all Nansur
caste-nobles had a thorough military education, elected to continue on to
Hinnereth—he was no fool, at least. No one knew what Skaiyelt intended until
the following day, when he struck southward with Gothyelk and his Tydonni. Good riddance, Saubon had
thought. At the time, he’d still
believed that Skauras had yielded Gedea. “March,” the Prince of
Atrithau had said that night in the mountains. “The Whore will be kind to you. Just make certain the Shrial Knights are punished.” Never in his life had
Saubon obsessed so long over so few words. They’d seemed straightforward enough
at the time. But like those eerie, ancient Nonmen statues that looked
benevolent or malicious, divine or demonic, depending upon where one stood,
their meaning transformed with every passing day. Had Prince Kellhus in fact
confirmed his beliefs? The Gods had given their assurances, certainly, and like
the misers they were, they’d named their terms. But they’d said nothing about Skauras yielding Gedea. If anything, they had suggested the opposite… Battle. They suggested battle. How else
was he to punish the Shrial Knights? “Akirea im Val! Akirea im Val!” Saubon glanced down for
an instant, then resumed probing the southern horizon—the Battleplain. Flat,
dark, and blue, it looked more an ocean than a great table of earth, like
something that could swallow nations whole. Skauras hadn’t
relinquished Gedea. He could feel it, like lead in his belly and bones. This
realization, coming as it did hard on the heels of his feud with Gothyelk, had
filled Saubon with terror—so much so that he’d refused to countenance it at
first. He possessed the assurances of the Gods—the Gods.1 What did
it matter whether he marched with Gothyelk and his Tydonni or no? The Whore would be kind to him. Gedea would be his! So he told himself. Then from nowhere, an
inner voice had whispered, Perhaps
PrinceKellhus is a fraud … lit ihe first March The Plains of Mengedda Such was the madness of
things—the perversity!—that one thought one slight twitch of the soul, could
overturn so much. Where before he need only collect the future like a tax
farmer, now he threw number-sticks against the great black—for the lives of
thousands, no less! Perhaps, for the entire Holy War. One thought… So frail was
the balance between soul and world. Dread overcame him, threatened him with
despair. At night, he wept in the secrecy of his tent. Was this not always the
way? Hadn’t the Gods always taunted, frustrated, and humiliated him? First the
fact of his birth—to be the first soul in the body of the seventh son! Then his father, who’d punished him beyond all
reason, beat him for possessing his fire, his cunning! Then the wars against
the Nansurium a few years previous… Mere miles! So close he could see the smear
of Momemn’s smoke on the horizon! Only to be afflicted by Ikurei Conphas—to be
bested by a stripling! And now this… Why? Why cheat himl Hadn’t he given? Hadn’t he observed their petty
statutes, slaked their obscene thirst for blood? Then yesterday, both
Athjeari and Wanhail, whom Saubon had charged with scouting and securing the
country in advance of the main body, had sighted large parties of heathen
horsemen. “Many-coloured, with
thin, flowing coats,” Wanhail, the Earl of Kurigald, had said at evening
council. Despite their similar age and stature, Wanhail always struck Saubon as
one of those men flung far from their natural station by the happenstance of
birth: a tavern clown in the trappings of a caste-noble. “Worse than the
Ainoni, even… Like a troop of fucking dancers!” There was a chorus of
laughter. “But fast,” Athjeari had
added, his gaze fixed upon the fire. “Very
fast.” When he looked to the others, his expression was stern, his long-lashed
eyes sober. “When we gave chase, they outstripped us with ease…” He paused so
the assembled earls and thanes could digest the significance of this. “And
their archery! I’ve never seen the like. Somehow they can draw and release
while they ride—fire backward at their pursuers!” The assembled warlords
were unimpressed: Inrithi caste-nobles, Norsirai or Ketyai, thought archery
base and unmanly. Regarding the sightings themselves, the
preponderance of opinion was that they meant little. “Of course they shadow
us!” Wanhail argued. “The only surprise is that we haven’t seen the
bung-bangers before now.” Even Gotian agreed, though with somewhat more
decorum. “If Skauras wished to contest Gedea,” he said, “then he would have
defended the passes, no?” Only Athjeari dissented. Afterward, he pulled Saubon
aside and fairly hissed, “Something’s amiss, Uncle.” Something was amiss, though Saubon had said nothing at the time.
He’d learned long ago the virtue of suspending judgement in the company of his
commanders—especially in situations where his authority was uncertain. Even
though he could count on many men, mostly relatives or veterans of his previous
campaigns, he was really only the titular head of the Galeoth contingent—a fact
brought home by the number of caste-nobles who continually gambolled through
the hills, hunting or hawking. The deference owed by earls to a lackland prince
was largely ceremonial; his every command, it seemed, had to run a gauntlet of
pride and whimsy. So he pretended to
deliberate, concealed the certainty that weighed so heavy against him.
Concealed the truth. They were alone, some
forty or fifty thousand Galeoth and under nine thousand Shrial Knights, not to
mention the uncounted thousands who followed, stranded in hostile country,
wandering into the clutches of a ruthless, cunning, and determined foe.
Gothyelk and his Tydonni were lost. Proyas and Conphas remained camped about
Asgilioch. They were vastly outnumbered, if the estimates of Skauras’s strength
provided by Conphas could be trusted—and Gotian insisted they could. They had
no real discipline, no real leader. And they had no sorcerers. No Scarlet Spires. But he said the Whore would be kind… He said! Saubon puzzled at the
chorus of voices that continued to reverberate from below. “Akirea im Vail” Usually a patchwork of shouts, chants, and hymns
characterized the march. Something had incited them. Once again, Saubon peered
through the dust and massed men, searching for some sign of his groom. It had
to be Kussalt… Please… There! Riding with a
small party of horsemen. Saubon released a deep, shuddering breath, watched
them pass through a screen of cheering The First March I he riams uj men-at-arms—Agmundrmen by
the look of their teardrop shields—-before climbing the gravel incline to join
him. His relief quickly evaporated. They bore lances, he realized. Lances
capped with severed heads. “Akirea im Val pa Valsa!” Saubon clenched a fist,
beat it against a mail-covered thigh. With thumb and forefinger, he pinched a
glimpse of Prince Kellhus from his eyes. No one knows you… Lances! They bore lances…
A traditional token, used by Galeoth knights to warn their commanders of
imminent battle. “From Athjeari?” he
called out as Kussalt’s horse gained the crest. The old groom scowled, as
though to say, Who else! Everything about the man was
dull: his mail, his ancient, dented battlecap, even the Red Lion on Blue of his
surcoat, which marked him as a member of the House Coithus. Dull and dangerous.
Kussalt cared nothing for his appearance, and this made him appear all the more
formidable. There was much violence in that grizzled face. The only man Saubon
had ever met with eyes as implacable as Kussalt’s had been Prince Kellhus. “What does he say?”
Saubon cried. The old groom tossed the
lance before reining to a halt. Saubon snatched it—almost too late. He found
himself face to face with a severed head planted on its tip. Dark skin blanched
and bloodless. The braids of its goatee swaying. A Kianene noble, possessing
the leathery look of dead things left overlong in the sun. Even still, it
seemed to gaze at him, slack and heavy-lidded, like a man about to spill his
seed. His foe. “War and apples,” Kussalt
said. “He said, ‘War and apples.’” “Apples” was common slang for decapitated
heads among the Galeoth. In days of yore, a tutor had once told Saubon, the
Galeoth had stewed and stuffed them, like the Thunyeri. The others rumbled to the
summit, hailing him. Gotian with his second, Sarcellus. Anfirig, the Earl of
Gesindal, with his groom. Several thanes—representatives of different
households. And four or five beardless adolescents ready to courier messages.
With the exception of Kussalt and Gotian, everyone carried a look somewhere
between desperation and exasperation. The ensuing argument was
as bitter as any Saubon had endured since parting ways with Gothyelk.
Apparently Athjeari and Wanhail had been fighting running battles since early
morning. Athjeari in particular, Kussalt said, was convinced that Skauras assembled
nearby, most likely on the Plains of Mengedda. “He thinks the Sapatishah is
trying to slow us with his pickets, keep us from reaching the Battleplain until
he’s prepared.” But Gotian disagreed, insisting that Skauras had prepared long
ago, that he was actually trying to bait
them. “He knows your people are rash, that the promise of battle will bring
them running.” When Anfirig and the others began protesting, the Grandmaster
screeched, “Don’t you see? Don’t you see?” over and over until everyone, including Saubon, fell silent. “He wants to engage you
as soon as possible on favourable ground! As soon as possible.1“ “So?” Anfirig asked
contemptously. Whether directly or indirectly, Gotian was always lecturing them
on the cunning and ferocity of the Fanim. As a result, many of the Galeoth
thought he feared the heathen— thought he was craven—when what he truly feared,
Saubon knew, was the reckless humour of his Norsirai allies. “So, perhaps he knows
something we don’t! Something that necessitates closing with us quickly!” The words struck Saubon
breathless. “If Gedea is a broken country,” he said numbly, “then the
Battleplain would be the quickest means of crossing it…” He glanced at Gotian,
who nodded cautiously. “What does—” Anfirig
started. “Think!” Saubon
exclaimed. “Think, Anfi, think! Gothyelk! If Gothyelk wishes to cross Gedea as
quickly as possible, what path
would he take?“ The Earl of Gesindal was
no fool, but then neither was he a prodigy. He lowered his greying, leonine
head in concentration, then said, “You’re saying he’s close, that the Tydonni
and Thunyeri have been marching parallel to us this entire time, making for the
Battleplain, as we do…” When he looked up, his eyes were bright with grudging
admiration. As a close mead-friend of his oldest brother, Anfirig, Saubon knew,
had always looked on him as the boy he’d so roundly teased in his youth. L “You’re saying the
Sapatishah is trying to prevent us from joining Gothyelk!” “Exactly,” Saubon
replied. He glanced at Gotian once again, realized the Grandmaster had given him this insight. He wants me to lead. Trusts me. But then the man didn’t
know him. No one did. No one— What are these thoughts! Save the Ainoni, the
Tydonni comprised the largest contingent of the Holy War—some seventy thousand
hard’bitten men. Add to that Skaiyelt’s murderous twenty thousand, and they
possessed nearly all the might of the Middle-North. The greatest Norsirai host
since the fall of the Ancient North! Ah, Skauras, my heathen friend… Suddenly the severed head
upon the lance no longer seemed a rebuke, a totem of their doom; it seemed a
sign, the smoke that promised cleansing fire. With unaccountable certainty,
Saubon realized that Skauras was
afraid… As well he should be. His misapprehensions fell
away, and the old exhilaration coursed like liquor through his veins, a
sensation he had always attributed to Gilgaol, One-Eyed War. The Whore will be kind to you. Saubon tossed the lance
and its grisly trophy back to Kussalt, then began barking orders, dispatching
multiple messengers to inform Athjeari and Wanhail of the situation, charging
Anfirig with the attempt to locate Gothyelk, bidding Gotian to send his knights
throughout the column, urging restraint and discipline. “Until we rejoin
Gothyelk, we remain in the hills,” he declared. “If Skauras wishes to close
with us, either let him fight on foot or break a thousand necks!” Then suddenly, he found
himself alone with Kussalt, his ears buzzing, his face flushed. It was happening, he
realized. It was beginning. After years and months, the
womanish war of words was finally over, and the real war was beginning. The
others, like Proyas, had yearned to untangle the “holy” in “Holy War” from the
Emperor’s knots. Not Saubon. It was the “war” he was most interested in. This
was what he told himself, anyway. The Plains of Mengedda And not only was it
happening, it was happening the way Prince Kellhus had said it would. No one knows you. No one. He glanced at the
retreating forms of Gotian and Sarcellus as they thudded down the slope. The
thought of sacrificing them—as Prince Kellhus, or the Gods, had
demanded—suddenly deadened his heart. Punish them. You must make sure the
Shrial Knights are punished. Something cold caught his
throat, and as quickly as Gilgaol had possessed him, the God fled. “Is something wrong,
m’Lord?” Kussalt asked. It was uncanny, the way the man could guess his moods.
But then, he’d always been there. Saubon’s earliest childhood memory was of
Kussalt scooping him up into his arms and racing into the galleries of Moraor
after a bee sting had nearly choked him. Without realizing, Saubon
resumed chewing on his knuckles. “Kussalt?” “Yes?” Saubon hesitated, found
himself looking away to the south, to the Battleplain. “I need a copy of The Tractate … I need to search for… something.” “What do you need to
know?” the old groom said, his voice both shocked and curiously tender… Saubon glared at him.
“What business—” “I ask only because I
carry The Tractate with me always…” His chapped hand
had wandered to his chest as he spoke; he laid his palm flat across his heart.
“Here.” He’d memorized it, Saubon
realized. For some reason this shocked him to the point of becoming faint. He’d
always known Kussalt to be pious, and yet… “Kussalt…” he began, but
could think of nothing to say. Those old, implacable
eyes blinked, nothing more. “I need…” Saubon finally
ventured, “I need to know what the Latter Prophet has to say regarding…
sacrifice.” The groom’s bushy white
brows knitted together. “Many things. Very many things… I don’t understand.” “What the Gods demand… Is
it proper because they demand it?” The First March “No,” Kussalt said, still
frowning. For some reason, the
thoughtless certainty of this answer angered him. What did the old fool know? “You disbelieve me,”
Kussalt said, his voice thick with weariness. “But it’s the glory of Inri Sej—” “Enough of this prattle,”
Coithus Saubon snapped. He glanced at the severed head—at the apple—noticed the
glint of a golden incisor between slack and battered lips. So this was their
enemy… Drawing his sword, he struck it from the lance, and the lance from
Kussalt’s fist. “I believe what I need
to,” he grated. HADTER S The Plains of Mengedda One sorcerer, the ancients say, is worth a thousand warriors in battle and ten thousand sinners
in Hell. —DRUSAS ACHAMIAN, THE
COMPENDIUM OF THE FIRST HOLY WAR When shields become crutches, and swords
become canes, some hearts are put to rout. When wives become plunder, and foes
become thanes, all hope has guttered out. —ANONYMOUS, “LAMENT FOR
THE CONQUERED” Early Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, near the Plains of Mengedda Morning broke, and rough
Galeoth and Tydonni horns pealed through the clear air, sounding, at the moment
of their highest pitch, like a woman’s shriek. The call to battle. Despite thousands of
Fanim horsemen and dozens of small pitched battles, the day previous had
witnessed the reunion of the Galeoth, Tydonni, and Thunyeri hosts in the hill
country to the immediate north of the Battleplain. Reconciled, Coithus Saubon
and Hoga Gothyelk agreed to march out onto the northern terminus of the plains
that very ihe first March evening, with the hope of
pressing their advantage—if it could be called such. Here, they decided, their
position would be as strong as anything they might hope to find. To the
northeast, they could shelter their flank behind a series of salt marshes,
whereas to the west, they could depend on the hills. A shallow ravine, guttered
by a stream that fed the marshes, wound the entire length, from flank to flank.
Here they had planned to draw up the common line. Its slopes were too shallow
to break any charge, but it would force the heathen to scramble through the
muck. Now the wind came from
the east, and men swore they could smell the sea. Some—a few—wondered at the
ground beneath their feet. They asked others whether their sleep had been
troubled, or whether they could hear a faint sound, like the hiss of foam in
tidal pools. The Great Earls of the
Middle-North gathered their households and their client thanes, who in turn
gathered their households. Majordomos hollered commands over the din. There
were cheers and raucous laughter, the rolling thunder of hooves as bands of
younger knights, already drunk, rushed southward, eager to be among the first
to catch sight of the heathen. Milling on carpets of bruised and trampled
grass, thousands made haste to ready themselves. Wives and concubines embraced
their men. Shrial Priests led crowds of warriors and camp-followers alike in
prayer. Thousands knelt upon the turf, muttering aloud from their ancestor
scrolls, touching morning-cool earth to their lips. Cultic priests intoned
ancient rites, anointed idols with blood and precious oils. Goshawks were
sacrificed in the name of Gilgaol. The shanks of butchered antelope were thrown
across the godfires of the Dark Hunter, Husyelt. Augurs cast their bones.
Surgeons set knives upon the fire, readied their kits. The sun rose bold on the
horizon, bathing the turmoil in golden light. Standards waved listlessly in the
breeze. Men-at-arms gathered in irregular masses, making for their places in
the line. Mounted cohorts filed among them, their arms flashing, their shields
bright with menacing totems and images of the Tusk. Suddenly shouts broke out
among those already gathered along the ravine. The entire horizon seemed to move, winked as though powdered by silver filings. The
heathen. The Kianene Grandees of Gedea and Shigek. The Plains of Mengedda Cursing, thundering
commands, the Earls and Thanes of the Middle-North managed to draw up their
thousands along the ravine’s northern edge. The stream had already become a
black, muddy basin, pocked and clotted with deep hoofprints. On the ravine’s
southern edge, before the massed lines of footmen, the Inrithi knights milled
in great clots. Cries of dismay were raised when those ranging farther afield
discovered bones among the weeds, bundled in rotted leather and cloth. The ruin
of an earlier Holy War. Many different hymns were
taken up, particularly among the low-caste footmen, but they soon faltered,
yielding to the cadences of one deep-throated paean. Soon the air thrummed with
the chorus of thousands. The hornsmen began marking the refrains with sonorous
peals. Even the caste-nobles, as they arranged themselves into long iron ranks,
joined: A warring we have come A reaving we shall work. And when
the day is done, In our eyes the Gods shall lurk! It was a song as old as
the Ancient North, a song from The
Sagas. And as
the Inrithi gave it voice once again, they felt the glory of their past flood
through them, brace them. A thousand voices and one song. A thousand years and one song! Never had they felt so rooted, so
certain. The words struck many with the force of revelation. Tears streamed
down sunburned cheeks. Passions ignited, swept through the ranks, until men
roared inarticulately and brandished their swords against the sky. They were
thousands and they were one. In our eyes the Gods shall lurk! Taking the dawn as their
armature, the Kianene rode out to answer them. They were a race born to the
fierce sun, not to clouds and gloomy forests as the Norsirai, and it seemed to
bless them with glory. Sunlight flashed across silvered battlecaps. The silk
sleeves of their khalats glimmered, transformed their lines into a
many-coloured horizon. Behind them the air resounded with pounding drums. i/‘t Ihe First March And the Inrithi sang, In our eyes the Gods shall lurk! Saubon, Gothyelk, and the
other ranking nobles conferred for one last time before dispersing along the
line. Despite their best efforts, it remained uneven, the ranks painfully
shallow in some places, and point-lessly deep in others. Arguments broke out
among clients of different lords. A man named Trondha, a client thane of
Anfirig, had to be wrestled to the ground after attempting to knife one of his peers.
But still, the song thundered, so loud some clasped their chests, fearing for
the rhythm of their hearts. A warring we have come A reaving we shall work! The Kianene drew closer,
encompassing the grey’green plain, endless thousands of approaching horsemen—far
more, it seemed, than the Inrithi leaders had supposed. Their drums thundered
out across the open spaces, throbbing through an ocean of rumbling sound. The
Galeoth longbow-men, Agmundrmen from the northern marches primarily, raised
their yew bows and released. For a moment the sky was thatched, and a thin
shadow plunged into the advancing heathen line—to little effect. The Fanim were
closer now, and the Inrithi could see the polished bone of their bows, the iron
points of their lances, their wide-sleeved coats fluttering in the breeze. And they sang, the pious
Knights of the Tusk, the blue-eyed warriors of Galeoth, Ce Tydonn, and
Thunyerus. They sang, and the air shivered as though the skies were vaulted in
stone. And when the day is done, In our eyes the
Gods shall lurk! Crying “Glory to the God!” Athjeari and his thanes broke ranks, crouching
forward on their mounts, slowly dipping their lances. More Houses abandoned the
line and pounded toward the Kianene: Wanhail, Anfirig, Werijen Greatheart, and
then old Gothyelk himself, bellowing, The Plains of Mengedda “Heaven wills it!” Like an avalanche, House after House followed,
until almost all the mail-clad might of the Middle-North cantered out to greet
their foe. “There!” footmen on the line would cry,
glimpsing the Red Lion of Saubon or the Black Stag of Gothyelk and his sons. From a trot the massive
warhorses were urged to a slow gallop. Nesting thrushes took flight, burst
slapping into the sky. Everything became breath and iron, the rumble of brothers
before, behind, and to the side. Then, like a cloud of locusts, arrows swept
among them. There was a hellish racket punctuated by screaming horses and
astonished shouts. Warhorses toppled and thrashed, yanking knights to the
ground, breaking backs, crushing legs. Then the madness fell
away. Once again it was the pure thunder of the charge. The strange camaraderie
of men bent to a single, fatal purpose. Hummocks, scrub, and the bones of the
Vulgar Holy War’s dead rushed beneath. The wind bled through chain links,
tousled Thunyeri braids and Tydonni crests. Bright banners slapped against the
sky. The heathen, wicked and foul, drew closer, ever closer. One last storm of
arrows, these ones almost horizontal to the ground, punching against shield and
armour. Some were struck from their saddles. Tongue tips were bitten off in the
concussion of the fall. The unhorsed arched across the turf, screamed and
swatted at the sky. Wounded mounts danced in frothing circles nearby. The rest
thundered on, over grasses, through patches of blooming milkwort waving in the
wind. They couched their lances, twenty thousand men draped in great mail
hauberks over thick felt, with coifs across their faces and helms that swept
down to their cheeks, riding chargers caparisoned in mail or iron plates. The
fear dissolved into drunken speed, into the momentum, became so mingled with exhilaration as to be
indistinguishable from it. They were addicted to the charge, the Men of the
Tusk. Everything focused into the glittering tip of a lance. The target nearer,
nearer… The rumble of hooves and
drums drowned their kinsmen’s song. They crashed through a thin screen of
sumac… Saw eyes whiten in sudden terror. Then impact. The jarring
splinter of wood as lances speared through shield, through armour. Suddenly the
ground became still and solid beneath them, and the air rang with wails and
shouts. Hands drew sword The First March and axe. Everywhere
figures grappled and hacked. Horses reared. Blades pitched blood into the sky. And the Kianene fell, undone
by their ferocity, crumpling beneath northern hands, dying beneath pale faces
and merciless blue eyes. The heathen recoiled from the slaughter—and fled. The Galeoth, the Tydonni,
and the Thunyeri raised a mighty shout and spurred after them. But the Shrial
Knights reined to a stop, seemed to mill in confusion. The Inrithi knights
spurred their warhorses, but the Fanim outdistanced them, peppered them with
arrows as they fled. Suddenly they dissolved into an advancing tide of heathen horsemen, more heavily armoured. The
two great lines crashed. Several desperate moments ensued. The orange and black
standard of Earl Hagarond of Osgald disappeared in the tumult, and the Galeoth
lord was speared lifeless on the ground. A lance through the throat heaved Magga,
cousin of Skaiyelt, from his horse and threw him into his kinsmen. Death came
swirling down. Gothyelk himself was felled, and the roars of his sons pierced
the din. The ululating cries of the Fanim reached a crescendo… But war was bloody work,
and the iron men hammered their foes, split skulls through battlecaps, cracked
wooden shields, broke the arms bearing them. Yalgrota Sranchammer beheaded a
heathen horse with a single blow, tossed Fanim Grandees from their saddles as
though they were children. Werijen Greatheart, Earl of Plaideol, rallied his
Tydonni and scattered the heathen who assailed Gothyelk. On the ground, Goken
the Red, the Thunyeri Earl of Cern Auglai, butchered man and horse alike, and
cut his way back to his struggling standard. Never had the Kianene encountered
such men, such furious determination. Desert-dark faces howled against the
turf. Hawkish eyes slackened with fear. A moment of respite. Householders dragged
their wounded lords to pockets of safety. Injured in the arm, Earl Cynnea of
Agmundr ranted at his kinsmen not to pull him away. Earl Othrain of Numaineiri
wept as he lifted his family’s ancient standard from the lifeless hands of his
son and raised it once more. Prince Saubon bellowed for another horse. Across
the stretch they had thundered across only moments before, men stumbled The Plains of Mengedda or crawled, fumbling to
staunch their wounds. But many more roared in exultation, the madness of battle
upon them, cruel Gilgaol galloping through their hearts. Their enemy was
everywhere, before them, beside them, sweeping in on their flanks. Massive
cohorts wheeled in the near distance, charged them from behind. Splendid in
their silk khalats and golden corselets, the Grandees of Gedea and Shigek yet
again assailed the iron men. Beset on all sides, the
Men of the Tusk died. Taken in the back by lances. Jerked by hooks from their
saddles and ridden down. Pick-like axes punched through heavy hauberks. Arrows
dropped proud warhorses. Dying men cried to their wives, their Gods. Familiar
voices pierced the cacophony. A cousin. A mead-friend. A brother or father,
shrieking. The crimson standard of Earl Kothwa of Gaethuni toppled, was raised
once more, then disappeared forever, as did Kothwa and five hundred of his
Tydonni. The Black Stag of Agansanor was also overcome, trampled into the turf.
Gothyelk’s householders tried to drag their wounded Earl away, but were cut
down amid a flurry of Kianene horsemen. Only a frantic charge by his sons saved
the old earl, though his eldest, Gotheras, was gored in the thigh. Through the din, the
Earls and Thanes of the Middle-North could hear horns desperately signalling
retreat, but there was nowhere to withdraw. Jeering masses of heathen horsemen
swirled about them, peppering them with arrows, rolling back their flanks,
shrugging away their disjointed counter-charges. Everywhere they looked, they
saw the silken standards of the Fanim, stitched in gold, bearing strange animal
devices. And the endless, unearthly drums pounded out the rhythm of their dying. Then suddenly,
impossibly, the Kianene divisions blocking their retreat scattered, and lines
of white-clad Shrial Knights swept into their midst, crying, “Flee, brothers‘. Flee!” Panicked knights
galloped, ran, or stumbled toward their countrymen. Bloodied bands tumbled
through the ravine, careened into their own men. The Shrial Knights fought on
for several moments, then wheeled, racing back, pursued by masses of heathen
horsemen—a howling rush of lances, shields, dark faces, and frothing horses, as
wide as the horizon. Limping across the Battleplain, hundreds of wounded were
cut down I ME riRST MARCH within throwing distance
of the common line. The Men of the Tusk could only watch, aghast. Their song
was dead. They could hear only drums, pounding, pounding, pounding… Dread and the heathen
were upon them. “We had them… Had them!” Saubon screamed, spitting blood. Gotian seized him by both
shoulders. “You had nothing, fool. Nothing! You knew the rule! When you break
them, return to the line!” After he’d skidded
through the muck of the stream and pressed his way through the ranks, Gotian
had sought out the Galeoth Prince, but had found a raving lunatic in his stead. “But we had them!” Saubon cried. There was a sudden shout,
and Gotian reflexively raised his shield. Saubon simply continued to rave.
“They broke like children before—” There was a clatter,
like hail against a copper roof. Men screamed. “—like children! We hacked them to the ground!” A heathen shaft stuck from the Galeoth’s chest. For a
moment, the Grandmaster thought the man was dead, but Saubon merely reached up
and snapped it. It had pierced his hauberk, but had been stilled by the felt
beneath. “We fucking well had them!” Saubon continued to roar. Gotian grabbed him again,
shook him. “Listen!” he cried. “That’s what they
wanted you to think! The Kianene are too nimble, too pliable on the field and
too fierce of heart to truly break. When you charge, you charge to bleed them,
not to rout them!” Saubon looked at him
dully. “I’ve doomed us…” “Gather your wits, man!” Gotian roared. “We’re not like the heathen. We’re
hard, but we’re brittle. We break! Gothyelk is down. Wounded—
perhaps mortally! You must
rally these men!” “Yes… Rally…” Abruptly,
Saubon’s eyes shone, as though some brighter fire now
moved him. “The Whore would be kind!” the Prince cried. “That’s what he said!” Gotian could only stare,
bewildered. Coithus Saubon, a Prince
of Galeoth, the seventh son of old evil Eryeat, hollered for his horse. The Plains of Mengedda Great tides of Fanim
lancers, countless thousands of them, crashed into the Inrithi line—and were
stopped dead. Galeoth and Tydonni pikemen gutted their horses. Tattooed
Nangaels from Ce Tydonn’s northern marches cudgelled the fallen in the mud.
Agmundrmen punched arrows through shield and corselet with their deadly yew
bows. Auglishmen from the deep forests of Thunyerus broke ranks when the Fanim
fled, hurling hatchets that buzzed like dragonflies. At other points along the
ravine, leather-armoured cohorts of Fanim swept parallel to the Inrithi ranks,
loosing arrows and taunts, tossing the heads of those caste-nobles who’d fallen
in the first charge. The Northmen would hunch beneath their kite shields,
weather the barrage, and then, to the dismay of the heathen, throw those self-same
heads back at them. Soon the Fanim began
flinching from sections of the Inrithi line— from the stouthearted Gesindalmen
and Kurigalders of Galeoth, from the grim Numainerish and long-bearded
Plaidolmen of Ce Tydonn—but they found none so fearsome as the flaxen-haired
Thunyeri, whose great shields seemed walls of stone, and whose two-handed axes
and broadswords could split iron-armoured men to the heart. Horseless, the
giant Yalgrota Sranchammer stood before them, roaring curses and waving his axe
wildly in the air. When the Kianene indulged him, he and his clansmen hacked
them into bloody kindling. Yet again and again, the
Grandees of Gedea and Shigek spilled across the ravine and charged headlong
into the iron men, besetting the Galeoth, then the Tydonni, searching for one
ill-forged link. They need only break the Inrithi once, and this knowledge
drove them to acts of fanatic desperation. Men with shattered scimitars, with
spouting wounds, even men with their bowels hanging about their knees, surged forward,
threw themselves at the Norsirai. But each time they became mired in melee,
mud, and carnage before the howls of their lords sent them galloping for the
safety of the open plain. In their wake the Men of the Tusk stumbled to their
knees, crying out in bitter relief. To the northeast, where
the common line trailed into the salt marshes, the Padirajah’s son, Crown
Prince Fanayal, led the Coyauri, his father’s elite heavy cavalry, against the
Cuarwishmen of Ce Tydonn, who had ihe first March crowded into the ranks of
their neighbours to the west and were caught scrambling back to their
positions. For several moments, all was chaos, and dozens of Cuarwishmen could
be seen fleeing into the marshes. Broadswords and scimitars flashed in the
sunlight. Suddenly bands of shimmering Coyauri began spilling behind the line,
though the Fanayal’s White Horse standard remained stalled near the ravine.
Gothyelk’s two younger sons charged the Coyauri with what horse that remained
to them, and the Fanim, without the open ground their tactics favoured, were
driven back with atrocious losses. Heartened by this
success, Prince Saubon of Galeoth mustered those knights still mounted, and the
Inrithi began, with more and more confidence, answering Fanim assaults with
countercharges. They would crash into the seemingly amorphous masses, the Fanim
would melt, then they would race to evade the darting masses trying to envelop
their flanks. Breathless, they would tumble back into the common line, lances
broken, swords notched, ranks thinned. Saubon himself lost three horses. Earl
Othrain of Numaineiri was carried back by his household, mortally wounded. He
soon joined his dead son. The sun climbed high, and
scoured the Battleplain with heat. The Earls and Thanes of the Middle-North
cursed and marvelled at the fluid tactics of the Kianene. They gazed with envy
at their magnificent, glossy-coated horses, which the heathen riders seemed to
guide with thought alone. They no longer scoffed that the heathen Grandees were
proficient with the bow. Many shields were quilled with arrows. Broken shafts
jutted from the hauberks of many men. In the Inrithi camp, thousands sprawled
dead or wounded because of the heathen’s archery. The Fanim withdrew and
reformed, and the Men of the Tusk raised a ragged cheer. Many infantrymen,
suffocated by the heat, dashed into the corpse-strewn ravine and doused their
heads with bloody and fouled water. Many others fell to their knees and shook,
wracked by silent sobs. Body-slaves, priests, wives, and harlots walked among
the men, salving wounds, offering water or beer to the common soldiers and wine
to the caste-nobles. Small hymns were raised among pockets of exhausted
warriors. Officers bawled commands, enlisting hundreds to hammer broken pikes,
spears, even shards of wood to spike the incline before their lines. The Plains of Mengedda Word arrived that the
heathen had sent divisions of horsemen north into the hills in a bid to
outflank the Inrithi position, where, anticipated by Prince Saubon, they had
been utterly undone by the tactics and valour of Earl Athjeari and his Gaenrish
knights. More cheers swept through the common line, and for a short time, they
waxed louder than the incessant thunder of Fanim drums. But their jubilation was
short-lived. Massed on the plains before them, the heathen had assembled
beneath their triangular banners in long, staggered lines. The drums fell
silent. For a moment, the Men of the Tusk could hear wind across the grasses,
even bees as they meandered over the dead that choked the ravine. As they
watched, a small party of horsemen trotted imperiously before the ranks of
motionless Fanim, bearing the Black Jackal device of Skauras, the Kianene
Sapatishah-Governor of Shigek. They heard a faint harangue, answered by
resounding shouts in an unknown tongue. Prince Saubon could be
heard bellowing, offering fifty gold talents to the archer who could kill, and
ten to the one who could wound, the Sapatishah. After testing the wind,
individual Agmundrmen raised their yew bows to the sun and began taking
potshots. Most of the missiles fell far short, but some few made the distance.
The distant horsemen affected not to notice, until abruptly one began swatting
at the back of his neck, then toppled to the turf. . The Men of the Tusk
roared with jeering laughter. As one, they pounded their shields, hooting and
yelling. The Sapatishah’s entourage scattered, leaving one figure: a nobleman
on a magnificent white caparisoned in black and gold, obviously unafraid,
apparently unmoved by the derision booming across the plain. And to a man, the
Inrithi realized they looked upon the great Skauras ab Nalajan, whom the Nansur
called Sutis Sutadra, the Southern Jackal. Arrows fletched in
faraway Galeoth pocked the turf about him, but he didn’t move. More and more
shafts feathered the ground as Agmundrmen began finding the drift and distance.
Facing the Inrithi, the remote Sapatishah pulled a knife from his crimson
girdle—and began paring his nails. Now the Fanim began to
laugh and roar as well, beating their round shields with sun-flashing
scimitars. The very earth seemed to shiver, so ferocious was the din.
Two races, two faiths, willing hate and murder across the littered Battleplain. Then Skauras raised a
hand, and the drums resumed their implacable throbbing. The Fanim began
advancing along the entirety of their line. The Men of the Tusk fell silent,
butted their pikes and squared their shields with those of their neighbours. It
was beginning again. Trailing clouds of dust,
the Kianene ponderously gathered speed. As though counting drumbeats, the
forward ranks lowered their lances in unison, urged their horses to gallop.
With a piercing cry, they threw themselves at the Inrithi, while mounted
archers swept to either side, showering the Northmen with arrows. They came
crashing in successive waves, deeper and more numerous than in the morning.
Entire companies were sacrificed for mere lengths of earth. Here and there,
against the Usgalders of Galeoth, against the battered Cuarwishmen, the
Nangaels and Warnutes of Ce Tydonn, the Kianene gained the crest of the ravine,
pressed the iron men back. Pikes snapped, gouged faces, hooked harnesses.
Curved scimitars cracked helms, snapped collarbones through iron mail. Maddened
horses crashed through rank and shield. And just when the heathen’s numbers and
momentum seemed to fail, more waves resolved from the dust, leaping through the
ravine, pounding over the dead, lancing into the staggered footmen. There was
no time for tactics, no time for prayer, only the desperate scramble to kill
and live. At several points, the
common line wavered, broke… Then, as though stepping
out of the blinding sun, the Cishaurim revealed themselves. Saubon even beat at
several of the fleeing Usgalders with the flat of his sword, but it was no use.
Mad with panic, they scrambled from his warhorse’s snorting path—and from the
gold-armoured horsemen running them down. “The God!” Saubon roared as he barrelled into the pursuing
Coyauri. “The God wills it!” His black crashed against the
mount of the heathen before him. The smaller charger stumbled, and Saubon
punched his swordpoint clear through its astonished rider’s neck. He wheeled
and parried a heavy blow from a Kianene garbed in flowing The Plains of Mengedda crimson. His black
stumbled sideways and screamed, throwing him thigh to thigh with the man—though
Saubon towered higher. Saubon smashed down with his pommel and the man tumbled
backward from his saddle, his face bloody ruin. From somewhere, a blade nicked
Saubon’s helm. He slashed the now riderless charger’s hindquarters and it went
dancing into the heathen dogs before him, then he swept his broadsword in a
great backward arc, shearing off the jaw of his assailant’s mount. The horse
reared; its rider went down. Saubon reined his black to the left and trampled
the shrieking blasphemer. “The God!” he cried, hacking at another man, cracking the wood
of his shield. “Wills!” His second blow shattered the warding arm beneath.
“It!” The third cracked his silvered
helm, halved his dark face. The Coyauri beyond the slumping man hesitated.
Those behind Saubon, however, did not. A lance scraped along his back, snagged
his hauberk, almost throwing him from his saddle. Standing in his stirrups, he
hacked again, snapping the lance. When his opponent reached back for his curved
blade, Saubon plunged his sword into the joints of the man’s harness. Another
down. The heathen milled around him, bewildered. “Craven,” Saubon spat,
and spurred into them with a crazed laugh. They recoiled in terror—that was the
death of two more of them. But Saubon’s black inexplicably reared and stumbled…
Another fucking horse! He slammed hard against the turf. Muddy
thought—confusion. A stamping forest of legs and hooves. Inert bodies. Bruised
weeds. Up… up… must get up! He kicked at his thrashing mount. A great, buoyant
shadow loomed above. Iron-shod hooves chopped the turf about his head. He
jammed his sword upward, felt the point skid along the horse’s sternum, then
plunge into soft brown belly. Flash of sunlight. Then he was clear, stumbling
to his feet. But something shattered across his helm, knocking him back to his
knees. Another concussion sent him face first into the ground. By the God, his fury felt
so empty, so frail against the earth! He
reached out with his bare left hand and grabbed another hand—cold, heavily
callused, leathery fingers and glass nails. A dead hand. He looked up across
the matted grasses and stared at the dead man’s face. An Inrithi. The features
were flattened against the ground and partly sheathed in ihe Mrst March blood. The man had lost
his helm, and sandy-blond hair jutted from his mail hood. The coif had fallen
aside, pressed against his bottom lip. He seemed so heavy, so stationary—like more ground… A nightmarish moment of
recognition, too surreal to be terrifying. It was his face!
His own hand he held! He tried to scream. Nothing. But there was the thunder
of heavier hooves, shouts in familiar tongues. Saubon let slip the cold
fingers, struggled to his hands and knees. Concerned voices. From nowhere it
seemed, arms were hoisting him to his feet. He stared numbly at the bare turf,
at the site where a moment before his corpse
had been… This ground… This ground is cursed! “Here, take my arm,” the
voice was fatherly, as though to a son who’d just learned a hard lesson.
“You’re saved, my Prince.” It was Kussalt. Saved? “Are you whole?” Winded, Saubon spat blood
and gasped, “Bruised only…” Mere yards away, Shrial
Knights and Coyauri jostled and hacked at one another. Swords rang, danced
flashing across sun and sky. So beautiful. So impossibly remote, like a
spectacle woven in cloth… Saubon turned wordlessly
to his groom. The old warrior looked haggard, beaten. “You stemmed the breach,”
Kussalt said, his eyes strange with wonder, perhaps even pride. Saubon blinked at the
blood trickling into his left eye. An inexplicable cruelty overcame him.
“You’re old and slow… Give me your horse!” Kussalt’s look soured.
Old lips tightened. “This is no place to be
thin-skinned, you old fool. Now
give me your fucking horse!” Kussalt jerked, as though
something had popped within him, then slumped forward, staggering Saubon with
his weight. He fell backward with his
groom, crashed on his rump. “Kussalt!” He dragged the man onto
his thighs. An arrow shaft jutted from the small of Kussalt’s back. The Plains of Mengedda The groom gurgled,
coughed dark, old-man’s blood. His rolling eyes found Saubon’s, and the old
warrior laughed, coughed more blood. Saubon’s skin pimpled with dread. How many
times had he heard the man laugh? Three or four, over the course of his entire
lifetime? No’no-no-no… “Kussalt!” “I would have you know…” the old man wheezed, “how much I hated you …“ A convulsion, then he
spat snotty blood. A long gasp, then he went utterly still. Like more earth. Saubon looked around the
strange pocket of calm that held them. Everywhere, through the trampled
grasses, dead eyes watched. And he understood. Cursed. The Coyauri had reeled
away, fleeing through the guttered ravine. But instead of cheering, men
screamed. Somewhere, lights flashed, so bright they threw shadows in the midday
sun. He never hated me… How could he? Kussalt was
the only one who… Funny joke. Ha-ha, you old fool… Someone was standing over
him, shouting. So tired. Had he ever
been so tired? “Cishaurim!” someone was
screaming. “Cishaurim!” Ah, the lights… A slapping blow, torn
links scoring his cheek. Where had his helm gone? “Saubon! Saubon!”
Incheiri Gotian was screaming. “The
Cishaurim!” Saubon pulled his fingers
from his cheek. Saw blood. Fucking ingrate. Fucking
shit-skinned pick. Make sure they’re punished! Punish them! Punish! Fucking picks. “Charge them,” the
Galeoth Prince said mildly. He hugged his dead groom tight against his thighs
and stomach. What a joker. “You must charge the
Cishaurim.” ixvo 1 IVIAKUM They walked to elude the
companies of crossbowmen they knew the Inrithi kept behind their lines, armed
with the Tears of God. Not one among their number could be risked, not with the
Scarlet Spires girding for war—not for any reason. They were Cishaurim,
Indara’s Waterbearers and their breath was more precious than the breath of
thousands. They were oases among men. Drawing their palms over
grass, goldenrod, and white alyssum, they walked toward the common line,
fourteen of them, their yellow silk cassocks whipped by wind and fiery
convections, the five snakes about each of their throats outstretched, like the
spokes of a candelabra, searching every direction. The desperate Northmen fired
volley after volley of arrows, but the shafts burst into puffs of flame. The
Cishaurim continued walking, sweeping their gouged eyes along the bristling
Inrithi lines. Wherever they turned, blue-blinding light exploded among the Men
of the Tusk, blistering skin, welding iron to flesh, charring hearts… Many Northmen held their
position, dropping prone beneath their shields as they’d been taught. But many
others were already fleeing— Usgalders, Agmundrmen, and Gaenrish, Numaineirish
and Plaidolmen— senseless to the rallying cries of their officers and lords.
The Inrithi centre floundered, began to evaporate. Battle had become massacre. Amid the tumult, Crown
Prince Fanayal and his Coyauri fled the ravine, the Shrial Knights pursuing
them through billowing dust and smoke—or so it seemed to all who watched. At
first, the Fanim could scarce credit their eyes. Many cried out, not in fear or
dismay, but in wonder at the deranged ferocity of the idolaters. When Fanayal
wheeled away, Incheiri Gotian, some four thousand Shrial Knights massed behind
him, continued galloping forward, crying—weeping—“The God wills it!” They scattered across the Battleplain, unbloodied
save for the morning’s first disastrous charge, hurtling through the grasses,
crouched low out of terror, crying out their fury, their defiance. They charged
the fourteen Cishaurim, drove their mounts into the hellish lights that
unspooled from their brows. And they died burning, like moths assailing coals
in a fire’s heart. Filaments of blue
incandescence, fanning out, glittering with unearthly beauty, burning limbs to
cinders, bursting torsos, immolating The Plains of Mengedda men in their saddles.
Amid the shrieks and wails, the rumble of hooves, the thunder of men howling “The God wills it!” Gotian was pitched breakneck from the charred
remnants of his horse. Biaxi Scoulas, his leg burnt to a stump, toppled and was
trampled to pulp by those pounding after him. The knight immediately before
Cutias Sarcellus exploded, and sent a knife whistling through his windpipe. The
First Knight-Commander collapsed, slapped face first onto the ground. Death
came swirling down. Brains boiled in skulls.
Teeth snapped. Hundreds fell in the first thirty seconds. Hundreds more in the
second. Scorching light materialized everywhere, like the cracks that dizzy
glass. And still the Shrial Knights whipped their horses forward, leaping the
smouldering ruin of their brothers, racing one another to their doom, thousands
of them, howling, howling. The scrub and grasses ignited. Oily smoke bloomed
skyward, drawn toward the Cishaurim by the wind. Then a lone rider, a
young adept, swept up to one of the sorcerer-priests—and took his head. When
the nearest turned his sockets to regard him, only the boy’s horse erupted in
flame. The young knight tumbled and continued running, his cries shrill, his
dead father’s Chorae bound to the palm of his hand. Only then did the
Cishaurim realize their mistake—their arrogance. For several heartbeats they
hesitated… And a tide of burnt and
bloody knights broke from the rolling smoke, among them Grandmaster Gotian,
hauling the Gold Tusk on White, his Order’s sacred standard. In that final
rush, hundreds more fell burning. But some didn’t, and the Cishaurim rent the
earth, desperately trying to bring those with Chorae down. But it was too
late—the raving knights were upon them. One tried to flee by stepping into the
sky, only to be felled by a crossbow bolt bearing a Tear of God. The others
were cut down where they stood. They were Cishaurim,
Indara’s Waterbearers, and their death was more precious than the death of
thousands. For an impossible moment,
all was silent. The Shrial Knights, those few hundred who survived, began
limping and staggering back to the battered ranks of their Inrithi brothers.
Incheiri Gotian was among the last to reach safety, bearing a burnt youth slumped
across his shoulders. J Ihe March Skauras, knowing the
Cishaurim had accomplished their task despite their deaths, roared at his
Grandees to attack, but the shock of what they had witnessed weighed too
heavily upon them. The Fanim withdrew, milling in confusion, while opposite a
great swath of scorched earth and smoking dead, the Earls and Thanes of the
Middle-North desperately reassembled the centre of the common line. By the time
the Grandees of Shigek and Gedea renewed their assault, the iron men were again
in position, their ranks thinned, their hearts hardened. And they began singing
anew their ancient paean, which now struck them as more prophecy than song: A warring we have come A reaving we shall work. And when
the day is done, In our eyes the Gods shall lurk! As the afternoon waxed,
many more joined the fallen. Earl Wanhail of Kurigald was thrown from his horse
in a counter-charge, and broke his back. Skaiyelt’s youngest brother, Prince
Narradha, was felled by an arrow in the eye. Among the living, some collapsed
of heat exhaustion. Some went mad with grief, and had to be dragged, frothing,
to the priests in the camp. But those who stood couldn’t be broken. The iron
men had rekindled their song, and the song had rekindled their violent fervour.
The pounding of Fanim drums dimmed, then was drowned out altogether. Thousands
of voices and one song. Thousands of years and one song. And when the day is done, In our eyes the
Gods shall lurk! As the sun lowered in the
western skies, the Fanim flinched more and more from the Inrithi line, charged
with ever greater trepidation. For they saw demons in the eyes of their
idolatrous enemy. Skaurus had already
sounded the retreat when the banners of Proyas and his silver-masked Conriyans
came snapping down the western hills. Without signal, the Galeoth, Tydonni, and
Thunyeri ranks surged The Plains of Mengedda forward and ran booming
across the Battleplain. Exhausted, heartbroken, the Fanim panicked; withdrawal
degenerated into rout. The knights of Conriya swept into their midst, and the
great Kianene host of Skaurus ab Nalajan, Sapatishah-Governor of Shigek, was
massacred. Meanwhile, the Earls and Thanes of the Middle-North descended with
what horse they had remaining on the vast Fanim encampment. Succumbing to licentious
fury, the harrowed Northmen raped the women, murdered the slaves, and plundered
the sumptuous pavilions of innumerable Grandees. By sunset, the Vulgar
Holy War had been avenged. Over the following weeks,
the Men of the Tusk would find thousands of bloated horses on the road to
Hinnereth. They had been ridden to death, so mad were the heathen to escape the
iron men of the Holy War. Hunched on his saddle,
Saubon watched files of weary men and women trudge across the moonlit grasses,
no doubt eager to at last overtake Proyas and his knights. The Conriyan Prince,
Saubon realized, must have pressed hard, perilously hard, to have so far
outstripped his baggage and followers. He required no mirror to know how he
looked: the horrified expressions of those walking from the darkness were
reflection enough. Blood soaked his tattered surcoat. Gore clotted the links of
his mail harness. He waited until the man
was almost immediately below before calling out to him… “Your friend. Where is
he?” The sorcerer, Achamian,
shrank from his mounted form, clutching his woman. Small wonder, looming out of
the dark like a bloodied apparition. “You mean Kellhus?” the
square-bearded Schoolman asked. Saubon glowered.
“Remember your place, dog. He’s a prince.” “You mean, Prince Kellhus, then?” Unaccountably chastised,
Saubon paused, licked his swollen lips. “Yes…” The sorcerer shrugged. “I
don’t know. Proyas drove us like cattle to catch you. Everything’s confused…
Besides, princes don’t loiter with the likes of us in the wake of battle.” Saubon glared at the
mealy-mouthed fool, wondering whether he should strike him for his
impertinence. But the memory of seeing his own The First March corpse on the field gave
him pause. He shuddered, clutched his elbows. That wasn’t me! “Perhaps… Perhaps you can
help me, then.” The sorcerer scowled in a
bemused manner Saubon found offensive. “I’m at your disposal, my Prince.” “This ground… What is it
about this ground?” The sorcerer shrugged
again. “This is the Battleplain… This is where the No-God died.” “I know the legends.” “I’m sure you do… Do you
know what topoi are?” Saubon grimaced. “No.” The attractive woman at
his side yawned, rubbed her eyes. Without warning, a wave of fatigue crashed
over the Galeoth Prince. He swayed in his saddle. “You know the way you can
see far from heights,” the sorcerer was saying, “like towers or mountain
summits?” “I’m not a fool. Don’t
deal with me as one.” Pained smile. “Topoi are
like heights, places where one can see far… But where heights are built with
mounds of stone and earth, topoi are built with mounds of trauma and suffering.
They are heights that let us see farther than this world… some say into the
Outside. That’s why this ground troubles you—you stand perilously high… This is
the Battleplain. What you feel isn’t so different from vertigo.” Saubon nodded, feeling
his throat tighten. He understood, and for no apparent reason, that
understanding roused an immeasurable relief. Two ferocious sobs wracked him.
“Exhaustion,” he croaked, wiping angrily at his eyes. The sorcerer watched him,
now with more regret than reproach. The woman stared at her feet. Unable to look at the
man, Saubon vaguely nodded in his direction, then made to ride off. The
Schoolman’s voice, however, brought him up short. “Even among topoi,” he
called, “this place is… special.” There was something different in his tone, a
reluctance, perhaps, which struck Saubon like a winter gust across sweaty skin. “How so?” he managed,
looking into the dark night. The Plains ofMengedda “Do you remember the line
from The Sagas, ‘Em yutiri Tir
mauna, kirn raussaraim…” Saubon blinked away
tears, said nothing. “The soul that encounters
Him,‘” the Schoolman continued, ’“passes no further.‘“ “And just fucking what,”
the Galeoth Prince said, shocked by the savagery of his own voice, “is that
supposed to fucking mean?” The sorcerer looked out
across the dark plains. “That in some way, He’s out there somewhere…
Mog-Pharau.” When he turned back to Saubon, there was real fear in his eyes. “The dead do not escape the
Battleplain, my Prince… This place is cursed. The No-God died here.” jviengeuua ■ g m * HApTER S Mengedda Sleep, when deep enough, is indistinguishable from vigilance. —SORAINAS, THE BOOK OF
CIRCLES AND SPIRALS Early Summer, 4111 Year-of’the-Tusk, the Plains of M.engedda Broad black wings
outstretched, the Synthese drifted on the early morning wind, just savouring
the curious familiarity of it all. The eastern skyline
gradually brightened, then suddenly the sun cracked the horizon, lancing
between the hills, over the corpse-strewn expanse of the Battleplain, and out
into the infinite black, where it would, eventually, trace a thread
incomprehensibly long… Perhaps all the way home. Who could blame it for
indulging in nostalgia? To be here again after millennia, at the place where it
had almost happened, where Men and Nonmen had almost
flickered out forever. Almost. Alas… Soon enough. Soon enough. It lowered its small
human head and studied the patterns the innumerable dead had sketched across
the plains, marvelling at the resemblances to certain sigils once prized by its
species—back when they could actually be called such. Genera. Species. Race. Inchoroi, the vermin had
called them. For a time it wondered at
the sense of depth generated by the thousands of slow-circling vultures
below, each sinking to the feast. Then it caught the scent it had been
searching for… that otherworldly fetor—so distinctive!— encoded in case of just
such a contingency. So Sarcellus was dead.
Unfortunate. At least the Holy War had
prevailed—over the Cishaurim, no less! Golgotterath would
approve. Smiling, or perhaps
scowling, with tiny human lips, the Old Name swooped down to join the vultures
in their ancient celebration. L The distances writhed,
twisted with maggot-white forms draped in human skins—with Sranc, shrieking
Sranc, thousands upon thousands of them, clawing black blood from their skin,
gouging themselves blind. Blind! The whirlwind roared through their masses,
tossing untold thousands into orbit about its churning black base. Mog-Pharau walked. The Great King of
Kyraneas clutched Seswatha about the shoulders, but the sorcerer could not hear
his cry. Instead he heard the voice, uttered through a hundred thousand Sranc
throats, flaring like bright-burning coals packed into his skull… The voice of
the No-God. WHAT DO YOU SEE? See? What could he… I MUST KNOW WHAT YOU
SEE The Great King turned
from him, reached for the Heron Spear. TELL ME Secrets… Secrets! Not
even the No-God could build walls against what was forgotten! Seswatha glimpsed
the unholy Carapace shining in the whirlwind’s heart, a nimil sarcophagus
sheathed in choric script, hanging… WHAT AM- Achamian woke with a
howl, his hands cramped into claws before him, shaking. But there was a tender
voice, shushing, cooing reassurances. Soft hands caressed his face, stroked
sweaty hair from his eyes, daubed tears from his cheek. Esmi. He lay in her arms for a
long while, periodically shuddering, straining to keep his eyes open, to see
what was here—now. “I’ve been thinking of
Kellhus,” she said after his breathing had settled. “Did you dream of him?”
Achamian half-heartedly teased. He tried to clear his voice of phlegm. Esmenet laughed. “No, you
fool. I sa—” WHAT DO YOU SEE? A shrieking chorus, sharp
and brief. He shook his head. “Sorry?” he said, laughing uneasily. “What did
you say? I must have sleep in my eyes and
ears…” “I said, just thinking.” “About what?” Somehow, he could feel
her cock her head, the way she always did when struggling to articulate
something that eluded her. “About the way he speaks… Haven’t you—” I CANNOT
SEE “No,” he wheezed. “Never noticed.” He coughed violently. “That,” she said, “is what you get sitting on the smoky
side of the fire.” One of her traditional admonitions. “Old meat is better
smoked.” His traditional reply. He squeezed sweat from his eyes. “Anyway, Kellhus…” she
continued, lowering her voice. Canvas was thin, and the camp crowded. “With
everyone whispering about him because of the battle and what he said to Prince
Saubon, it struck me—” TELL ME “—before falling asleep
that almost everything he says is either, well… either near or far …” Achamian swallowed,
managed to say, “How do you mean?” He needed to piss. Esmenet laughed. “I’m not
sure… Remember how I told you how he asked me what it was like to be a
harlot—you know, to lie with strange men? When he talks that way, he seems
near, uncomfortably near, until you realize how
utterly honest and unassuming he is… At the time, I thought he was just another
rutting dog—” WHAT AM V. “Thepoint, Esmi…” Mengedda 14b There was an annoyed
pause. “Other times, he seems breathtakingly far when he talks, like he stands on some remote mountain
and can see everything, or almost everything…” She paused again, and from the
length of it, Achamian knew he had bruised her feelings. He could feel her
shrug. “The rest of us just talk in the middle somewhere, while he… And now
this, seeing what happened yesterday before it happened. With each day—” I CANNOT SEE “—he seems to talk a little nearer and a little farther. It makes me— Akka? You’re
trembling! Shaking!” He gasped for breath.
“I-I can’t stay here, Esmi.” “What do you mean?” “This place!” he cried.
“I can’t stay here!” “Shhh. It’ll be all
right. I heard soldiers talking last night about moving come today. Away from
the dead—from the chance of vapours and—” TELL ME Achamian cried out, struggled
to retrieve his wits. “Shhh, Akka, shhh…” “Did they say where?” he
gasped. Esmenet had kicked free
her blankets to kneel naked over him, palms on his chest. She looked worried.
Very worried. “They said something about ruins, I think.” “Ev-even worse.” “What do you mean?” “This place is shaking me
to pieces, Esmi. Echoes. Echoes. R-remember what I’s-said to Saubon last night?
The N-No-God… His… his echo is too strong here. Too strong! And the ruins, that
would be the city of Mengedda.
Where it happened… Where the No-God was struck
down. I know this sounds mad, but I think this place — I think
this place recognizes me… M-me or Seswatha within me.” “So what should we—” TELL “Leave… Camp in the
eastern hills overlooking the Battleplain. We can wait for the others there.” Her expression darkened
with other worries. “Are you sure, Akka?” “We’ll be safe… We just
need to be far for a while.” HE riRST MARCH With the accumulation of
power, Achamian had once said, comes mystery. An old Nilnameshi proverb. When
Kellhus had asked what the proverb meant, the Schoolman had said it referred to
the paradox of power, that the more security one exacted from the world, the
more insecure one became. At the time, Kellhus had thought the proverb yet
another of Achamian’s vacant generalizations, one that exploited the world-born
propensity to confuse obscurity with profundity. Now he wasn’t so sure. Five days had passed
since the battle. The last of the sun had boiled away among the western hills.
The Great Names—including Conphas and Chepheramunni—had gathered with their
retinues in an overgrown amphitheatre that had been excavated in ancient times
from the side of a low hill. An enormous bonfire burned in its centre,
transforming the stage into a hearth. The Great Names sat and conferred around
the amphitheatre’s lowest tier, while their advisers and caste-noble countrymen
bickered and jested on the tiers above. Their ceremonial dress, much of it
looted, glinted and shimmered in the firelight. Their faces shone pale orange.
Before them, bare-chested slaves marched from the darkness to the stage, where
they cast furniture, clothing, scrolls, and other worthless items from the
Kianene camp onto the bonfire. A strange, iron-blue smoke whipped skyward from
the flames. Its smell was offensive—reminiscent of the manural unguents used by
the Yatwerian priestesses—but there was nothing else to burn on the
Battleplain. At long last, the Holy
War was entire. Earlier in the afternoon, the Nansur and Ainoni hosts had filed
across the plains and joined the vast encampment beneath the ruins of
Mengedda—a once great city, Achamian had told Kellhus, destroyed during the
early Age of Bronze. For the first time since faraway Momemn, a full Council of
the Great and Lesser Names had been called. Even though his rank and notoriety
had earned him a place among those sitting above the Great Names, Kellhus had
elected to sit with the knights, men-at-arms, and followers massed on the
heaped mounds of earth and rubble opposite the amphitheatre, where he could
cultivate his reputation for humility and easily survey the expressions of all
those he must conquer. Mengedda For the most part, their
faces exhibited startling contrasts. Some bore marks—bandages, puckered wounds,
and yellowing bruises—of the recent battle, while others bore no marks at all,
particularly among the newly arrived Nansur and Ainoni. Some were flushed with
celebratory cheer, for the back of the heathen had been broken. While others
were ashen with horror and sleeplessness… Victory on the Battleplain,
it seemed, had carried its own uncanny toll. Ever since setting their
pallets and mats across the Plains of Mengedda, various men and women of the
Holy War had complained of suffering brutal nightmares. Each night, they
claimed, they found themselves in desperate straits on the Battleplain,
striving against and falling before foes they’d never before seen: archaic
Nansur, true desert Kianene, Ceneian infantrymen, ancient Shigeki chariots,
bronze-armoured Kyraneans, stir-rupless Scylvendi, Sranc, Bashrags, and even,
some had insisted, Wracu— dragons. When the encampment was
moved clear of the carrion winds to the ruins of Mengedda, the nightmares had
only intensified. Some began claiming they’d dreamed of the recent battle
against the Kianene, that they were burned anew by the Cishaurim, or that they
fell to the battle-maddened Thunyeri. It was as though the ground had hoarded
the final moments of the doomed, and counted and recounted them each night on
the ledger of the living. Many tried to stop sleeping altogether, especially
after a Tydonni thane was found dead one morning in his pallet. Some, like
Achamian, had actually fled. Then the pitted knives,
coins, shattered helms, and bones started to appear, as though slowly vomited
from the earth. At first here and there, found jutting from the turf in the
morning, and in places men insisted they couldn’t have been missed. Then more
frequently. After stubbing his toe, one man allegedly found the skeleton of a
child beneath the rushes of his tent. Kellhus himself had
dreamt nothing, but he’d seen the bones. According to Gotian, who’d explained
the legends regarding the Battleplain in private council two days earlier, this
ground had imbibed too much blood over the millennia, and now, like over-salted
water, had to discharge the old to accommodate the new. The Battleplain was
cursed, he said, but they needn’t fear for their souls so long as they The First March remained resolute in
their faith. The curse was old and well understood. Proyas and Gothyelk, neither
of whom suffered dreams, were loath to leave, both because the couriers they’d
sent to Conphas and Chepheramunni had named Mengedda as their point of
rendezvous, and because the streams running through the ruined city afforded
the only expedient supply of water within a three-day march. Saubon also
insisted they stay, though for reasons, Kellhus knew, entirely his own. Saubon did dream. Only Skaiyelt had demanded they leave. Somehow, the very ground
of battle had become their foe. Such contests, Xinemus had remarked one night
about their fire, belonged to philosophers and priests, not warriors and
harlots. Such contests, Kellhus
had thought, simply should not be… Ever since learning the
desperate details of the Inrithi triumph, Kellhus had found himself beset with
questions, quandaries, and enigmas. Fate had been kind to Coithus Saubon, but only because the
Galeoth Prince had dared punish the Shrial Knights. By all accounts, Gotian’s
catastrophic charge against the Cishaurim had saved the Earls and Thanes of the
Middle-North. Events, in other words, had unfolded precisely as Kellhus had
predicted. Precisely. But the problem was that
he hadn’t predicted anything. He’d merely said what he’d
needed to say to maximize the probabilities of securing Saubon and destroying
Sarcellus. He’d taken a risk. It simply had to be coincidence. At least this was what he’d told
himself—at first. Fate was but one more world-born subterfuge, another lie men
used to give meaning to their abject helplessness. That was why they thought
the future a Whore, something who favoured no man over another. Something
heartbreakingly indifferent. What came before determined what came after… This was the basis of the Probability Trance. This was the
principle that made mastering circumstance, be it with word or sword, possible.
This was what made him Dunyain. One of the Conditioned. Then the earth began
spitting up bones. Wasn’t this proof that the ground answered to the tribulations of men, that it was not indifferent? And if earth—earth!—wasn’t indifferent, then what of the future? Could
what came after actually determine what came
before? What if the line Mengedda running between past and
future was neither singular nor straight, but multiple and bent, capable of
looping in ways that contradicted the Law of Before and After? Could he be the
Harbinger, as Achamian insisted? Is this why you’ve summoned me, Father? To save these children? But these were what he
called primary questions. There were so many more immediate mysteries to be
interrogated, so many more tangible threats. Such questions either belonged to
philosophers and priests, as Xinemus had said, or to Anasurimbor Moenghus. Why haven’t you contacted me, Father? The bonfire waxed
brighter, consuming a small library of scrolls the slaves had hauled from the
darkness. Even though Kellhus sat apart, he could feel his position among the caste-nobles arrayed before
him. It was like a palpable thing, as though he were a fisherman manning
far-flung nets. Every glance, every watchful stare, was noted, categorized, and
retained. Every face was deciphered. A knowing look from a
figure sitting among Proyas’s caste-nobles… Palatine Gaidekki. He’s discussed me at length with his peers, regards me as a
puzzle, arid thinks himself pessimistic as to the solution. But part of him
wonders, even yearns. A look from one of
the.Tydonni. A momentary meeting of eyes… Earl Cerjulla. He’s heard the rumours, but remains too proud of his own
battlefield deeds to concede anything to fate. He suffers
the nightmares… A passing glance from
behind Ikurei Conphas… General Martemus. He’s heard much about me, but is too preoccupied to truly
care. From among the Thunyeri,
a fiery-haired warrior, searching for someone among the crowd… Earl Goken. He’s heard almost nothing of me. Too few Thunyeri speak
different
tongues. A contemptuous glare from
among the Conriyans… Palatine Ingiaban. He discusses me with Gaidekki, argues that I’m a fraud. M31 relationship to Cnaьir is what interests him. He too has stopped sleeping. A steady, fixed look from
among Gotian’s diminished retinue… Sarcellus. li>U The First March One of what seemed a
growing number of inscrutable faces. Skin-spies, Achamian had called them. Why did he stare? Because
of the rumours, like the others? Because of the horrific toll his words had
exacted on the Shrial Knights? Gotian, Kellhus knew, struggled not to hate him… Or did he know that
Kellhus could see him and had tried to kill him? Kellhus matched the
thing’s unblinking gaze. Since his first encounter with Skeaos on the AndiamineHeights, he’d refined his understanding
of their peculiar physiognomy. Where others saw blemished or beautiful faces,
he saw eyes peering through clutched fingers. So far, he’d identified eleven of
the creatures masquerading as various powerful personages, and he had no doubt
there were more… He nodded amiably, but
Sarcellus simply continued watching, expressionless, as though unaware or
unconcerned that what he stared at was staring back… Something, Kellhus thought. They suspect something. There was a small
commotion in his periphery, and turning, Kellhus saw Earl Athjeari pressing his
way through the crowded spectators, climbing toward him. Kellhus bowed his head
appropriately as the young caste-noble approached. The man reciprocated, though
his declension fell slightly short. “Afterward,” Athjeari
said. “I need you to come with me afterward.” “Prince Saubon.” The striking,
chestnut-haired man worked his jaw. Athjeari was someone, Kellhus knew, who
understood neither melancholy nor indecision, which was partly why he thought
this errand demeaning. As much as he admired his uncle, he thought Saubon was
making too much of this impoverished prince from Atrithau. Far too much. So much pride. “My uncle wants to meet,”
the Earl said, as though explaining a lapse. Without further word, he began
pressing his way back to the amphitheatre. Kellhus looked out over the crowds
below to the Great Names. He glimpsed Saubon nervously looking away. His anguish grows. His fear deepens. For six nights now, the Galeoth
Prince had assiduously avoided him, even in those councils where they shared
seats about the same fire. Something had happened on the field, Mengedda 1M something more grievous
than losing kinsmen or sending the Shrial Knights to their doom. An
opportunity. Sarcellus, Kellhus
noticed, had left his seat on the tiers, and now stood with a small party of
Shrial Priests preparing to assist Gotian in the inaugural rites. The general
rumble of voices trailed. The Grandmaster began
with a purificatory prayer Kellhus recognized from The Tractate. Then he spoke for some time of Inri Sejenus, the
Latter Prophet, and what it meant for men to be Inrithi. “Whosoever repents the
darkness in their heart,” he quoted from the Book of Scholars, “let him raise
high the Tusk and follow.” To be Inrithi, he reminded them, was to be a
follower of Inri Sejenus. And who followed more faithfully than those who
walked in his Holy Steps? “Shimeh,” he said in a clear, far-travelling voice. “Shimeh
is near, very near, for we have travelled farther in one day with our swords
than we have in two years with our feet…” “Or our tongues!” some wit cried out. Warm
laughter. “Four nights ago,” Gotian
declared, “I sent a scroll to Maithanet, our Most Holy Shriah, Exalted Father
of our Holy War.” He paused, and all was silence save the cracking of the
bonfire. He still wore bandages about both hands, which had been burned by
dragging the fallen through fiery grasses. “Upon that scroll,” he
continued, “I wrote but one word—one word!— for my fingers still bled.” Sporadic shouts broke
from the masses. The Charge of the Shrial Knights had already become legend.
“Triumph!” he cried. “Triumph!” The Men of the Tusk
exploded in exultation, howling and wailing, some even weeping. Shadowy beneath
the stars, the mounds and debris of surrounding Mengedda shivered. But Kellhus remained
silent. He glanced at Sarcellus, who had his back partially turned toward him,
and noticed… discrepancies. Smiling, resplendent in
firelight and gold and white, Gotian waved for the masses to settle, then
called on them to join him in the TemplePrayer. Z The First March Sweet God of Gods, who walk among us,
innumerable are your holy names… Words uttered through a
thousand human throats. The air thrummed with an impossible resonance. The
ground itself spoke, or so it seemed… But Kellhus saw only Sarcellus—saw only
differences. His stance, his height and build, even the lustre of his black
hair. All imperceptibly different. A replacement. The original copy had
been killed, Kellhus realized, just as he’d hoped. The position of Sarcellus,
however, had not. His death had gone unwitnessed, and they’d simply replaced
him. Strange that a man could
be a position. for your name is Truth, which endures and
endures, for ever and ever. After completing the
purificatory rites, Gotian and Sarcellus with-drew. Stiff in their ornamental
hauberks, the Gilgallic Priests then rose to declare the Battle’Celebrant, the
man whom dread War had chosen as his vessel on the field five days previous.
The masses fell silent in anticipation. The selection of the Battle-Celebrant,
Xinemus had complained to Kellhus earlier that day, was the object of
innumerable wagers, as though it were a lottery rather than a divine
determination. An older man, his square-cut beard as white as hoarfrost,
stepped to the forefront of the others: Cumor, the High Cultist of Gilgaol. But
before he could begin, Prince Skaiyelt leapt to his feet and cried, “Wedt firlik peor kaflang dau hara mausrot!” He whirled from the Great and
Lesser Names to those massed about Kellhus, his long blond hair and beard
spilling from shoulder to shoulder. “Wedt dau hara mut keflinga! Keflinga!” Cumor sputtered something
indignant and unintelligible, while everyone else turned to Skaiyelt’s Thunyeri
for explanation. His translators, it seemed, were nowhere to be found. Mengedda “He says,” one of
Gothyelk’s men finally shouted in Sheyic from the higher tiers, “that we must
first discuss leaving this place. That we must flee.” The humid air suddenly buzzed
with competing shouts, some accusatory, others crying out assent. Skaiyelt’s
monstrous groom, Yalgrota, jumped to his feet and began beating his chest and
roaring threats. The shrunken Sranc heads about his waist danced like tassels.
Inexplicably, Skaiyelt began kicking at the ground. He crouched with his knife,
then stood, raising something against the bonfire’s glare. Hundreds gasped. He held a skull, half
choked with dirt, half crushed by some ancient blow. “Wedt,” he said slowly, “dau hara mut keflinga.” The dead surfacing like
the drowned… How, Kellhus thought, couldthis
be possible? But he needed to stay
focused on practical mysteries—not those pertaining to the ground. Skaiyelt tossed the skull
into the bonfire, glared at his fellow Great Names. The debate continued, and
one by one they acquiesced, though Chepheramunni at first refused to credit the
story. Even the Exalt-General conceded without complaint. Over the course of
the debate, some looks wandered toward Kellhus, but no one solicited his
opinion. After a short time, Proyas announced that the Holy War would leave
Mengedda and her cursed plains come morning. The Men of the Tusk
rumbled in wonder and relief. Attention was once again
yielded to aging Cumor, who, either because he was flustered or dreaded further
interruptions, dispensed with the Gilgallic rites altogether and came directly
to stand over Saubon. The other priests seemed more than a little disconcerted. “Kneel,” the old man
called out in a quavering voice. Saubon did as he was
told, but not before sputtering, “Gotian! He led the charge!” “It is you, Coithus
Saubon,” Cumor replied, his tone so soft that few, Kellhus imagined, could hear
him. “You… Many saw it. Many saw him, the
Shield-Breaker, glorious Gilgaol … He looked through your eyes!
Fought with your limbs!” “No…” ihe first March Cumor smiled, then
withdrew a circlet woven of thorns and olive sprigs from his voluminous right
sleeve. Save for the odd cough, the gathered Inrithi fell absolutely silent.
With an old man’s unsteady gentleness, he placed the circlet upon Saubon’s
head. Then stepping back, the High Cultist of Gilgaol cried, “Rise, Coithus
Saubon, Prince of Galeoth… Battle-Celebrant!” Once again the assembly
thundered in exultation. Saubon pressed himself to his feet, but slowly, like a
man wearied by a near heartbreaking run. For a moment he looked about in
disbelief, then without warning, he turned to Kellhus, his cheeks shining with
tears in the firelight. His cleanshaven face still bore cuts and bruises from five
days previous. Why? his anguished look said. I don’t deserve this… Kellhus smiled sadly, and
bowed to the precise degree jnan demanded from all men in the presence of a
Battle-Celebrant. He’d more than mastered their brute customs by now; he’d
learned the subtle flourishes that transformed the seemly into the august. He
knew their every cue. The roaring redoubled.
They’d all witnessed their exchanged look; they’d all heard the story of
Saubon’s pilgrimage to Kellhus at the ruined shrine. It happens, Father. It happens. But the thunderous
cheering suddenly faltered, trailed into the rumble of questioning voices.
Kellhus saw Ikurei Conphas standing before the bonfire not far from Saubon, his
shouts only now becoming audible. “—fools!” he railed.
“Rank idiots! You’d honour this man? You’d acclaim acts that
nearly doomed the entire Holy War?” A tide of jeers and
taunts swelled through the amphitheatre. “Coithus Saubon, Battle-Celebrant,” Conphas cried in derision, and somehow managed to
silence the rumble. ‘’Fool-Celebrant, I say! The man who nearly saw
all of you killed on these cursed fields! And trust me, this is the one place
where you don’t want to die…“ Saubon simply watched
him, dumbstruck. “You know what I mean,”
the Exalt-General said to him directly. “You know what you did was errant
folly.” Reflections of the bonfire curled like oil across his golden
breastplate. The masses had fallen
utterly silent. He had no choice, Kellhus knew, but to intervene. Mengedda Conphas is too clever to — “The craven see folly
everywhere,” a powerful voice boomed from the lower tiers. “All daring is rash
in their eyes, because they would call their cowardice ‘prudence.’” Cnaьir had
stood from his place next to Xinemus. Months had passed, and still the
Scylvendi’s penetration surprised him. Cnaьir saw the danger, Kellhus realized,
knew that Saubon would be useless if he were discredited. Conphas laughed. “So I’m
a coward, am I, Scylvendi?” His right hand happened upon the pommel of his
sword. “In a manner,” Cnaьir
said. He wore black breeches and a grey thigh-length vest—plunder from the
Kianene camp—that left both his chest and banded arms bare. Firelight shimmered
across the vest’s silk embroidery, flashed from his pale eyes. As always, the
plainsman emanated a feral intensity that made others, Kellhus noted, stiffen
in inarticulate alarm. Everything about him looked hard, like sinew one had to
saw rather than slice. “Since defeating the
People,” the Scylvendi continued, “much glory has been heaped upon your name.
Because of this, you begrudge others that same glory. The valour and wisdom of
Coithus Saubon have defeated Skauras—no mean thing, if what you said at your
Emperor’s knee was to be believed. But since this glory is not yours, you think
it false. You call it foolishness, blind lu—” . “It was blind luck!” Conphas cried. “The Gods favour the
drunk and the soft-of-head… That’s the only lesson we’ve learned.” “I cannot speak to what
your gods favour,” Cnaьir replied. “But you have learned much, very much. You
have learned the Fanim cannot withstand a determined charge by Inrithi knights,
nor can they break a determined defence by Inrithi footmen. You have learned
the strengths and shortcomings of their tactics and their weapons against a
heavily armoured foe. You have witnessed the limits of their patience. And you
have taught as well—a very important lesson. You have taught them to fear. Even now, in the hills, they run like jackals before
the wolf.” Cheers spread through the
crowds, gradually growing into another deafening roar. Stupefied, Conphas stared
at the Scylvendi, his fingers kneading his pommel. He’d been roundly defeated.
And so swiftly… The First March Mengeaaa “Time for another scar on
your arms!” someone cried, and laughter boomed through the amphitheatre. Cnaьir
graced the assembled Inrithi with a rare fierce grin. Even from this distance,
Kellhus knew the Exalt-General felt neither shame nor embarrassment: the man
smiled as though a crowd of lepers had just insulted his beauty. For Conphas,
the derision of thousands meant as little as the derision of one. The game was
all that mattered. Among those Kellhus
needed to dominate, Ikurei Conphas was an especially problematic case. Not only
did he suffer pride—almost lunatic in proportion—he possessed a pathological disregard
for the estimations of other men. Moreover, like his uncle the Emperor, he
believed that Kellhus himself was somehow connected to Skeaos—to the Cishaurim, if Achamian could be believed. Add to that a
childhood surrounded by the labyrinthine intrigues of the Imperial Precincts,
and the Exalt-General became almost as immune to Dunyain techniques as the
Scylvendi. And he planned, Kellhus
knew, something catastrophic for the Holy War… Another mystery. Another
threat. The Great Names moved on
to bicker about further things. First Proyas, using arguments he’d rehearsed,
Kellhus surmised, with Cnaьir, suggested they send a mounted force to Hinnereth
with all dispatch, not to take the city but to secure its surrounding fields
before they could be prematurely harvested and sheltered within its walls. The
same, he declared, should be done for the entire coastline. Under torment,
several Kianene captives had said that Skauras, as a contingency, had ordered
all the winter grains in Gedea harvested as soon as they became milk-ripe.
Swearing that the Imperial Fleet could supply the Holy War entire, Conphas
argued against the plan, warning that Skauras yet possessed the strength and
cunning to destroy any such force. Loath to depend on the Emperor in any way,
the other Great Names were disinclined to believe him, however, and it was
agreed: several thousand horsemen would be mustered and sent out on the morrow
under Earl Athjeari, Palatine Ingiaban, and Earl Werijen Greatheart. Then the incendiary issue
of the Ainoni host’s sloth and the constant fragmentation of the Holy War was
broached. Here masked Chepheramunni, who had to
answer to the Scarlet Spires, found a surprise ally in Proyas, who argued, with
several provisos, that they actually should continue travelling in separate contingents. When the issue
threatened to become intractable, he called on Cnaьir for support, but the
Scylvendi’s harsh assessment had little effect, and the argument dragged on. The first Men of the Tusk
continued shouting into the night, growing ever more drunk on the Sapatishah’s
sweet Eumarnan wines. And Kellhus studied them, glimpsed depths that would have
terrified them had they known. Periodically, he revisited the thing called
Sarcellus, who often gazed back, as though Kellhus were a boy with fine shanks
that a wicked Shrial Knight might love. It taunted him. But such a look was
merely a semblance, Kellhus knew, as surely as the expressions animating his own face. Still, there could be no
doubt—not any longer… They knew Kellhus could see them. I must move more quickly, Father. The Nilnameshi had it
wrong. Mysteries could be killed, if one possessed the power. Lounging beneath the
bellied crimson canvas of his pavilion, Ikurei Conphas spent the first hour
verbally entertaining various scenarios involving the Scylvendi’s murder.
Martemus had said little, and in some infuriated corner of his thoughts Conphas
suspected that the drab General not only secretly admired the barbarian but had
thor-oughly enjoyed the earlier fiasco in the amphitheatre. And yet, by and
large, this bothered Conphas little, though he couldn’t say why. Perhaps,
assured of Martemus’s actual loyalty, he cared nothing for the man’s spiritual
infidelities. Spiritual infidelities were as common as dirt. Afterward, he spent another
hour telling Martemus what was to happen at Hinnereth. This had lightened his
mood greatly. Demonstrations of his brilliance always buoyed his spirits, and
his plans for Hinnereth were nothing short of genius. How well it paid to be
friends with one’s enemies. The First March And so, feeling
magnanimous, he decided to open a little door and allow Martemus—easily the
most competent and trustworthy of all his generals—into some rather large
halls. In the coming months, he would need confidants. All Emperors needed
confidants. But of course, prudence
demanded certain assurances. Though Martemus was loyal by nature, loyalties
were, as the Ainoni were fond of saying, like wives. One must always know where
they lie—and with absolute certainty. He leaned back into his
canvas chair and peered past Martemus to the far side of the pavilion, where
the crimson Standard of the Over-Army rested in its illumined shrine. His gaze
lingered on the ancient Kyranean disc that glinted from the folds—supposedly
once the chest piece of some Great King’s harness. For some reason the figures
stamped there—golden warriors with elongated limbs—had always arrested him. So
familiar and yet so alien. “Have you ever stared at
it before, Martemus? I mean, truly stared?” For a moment the General
looked as though he might be too far into his cups, but only for a moment. The
man never truly got drunk. “The Concubine?” he asked. Conphas smiled
pleasantly. Common soldiers commonly referred to the Over-Standard as the
“Concubine” because tradition demanded it be quartered with the Exalt-General.
Conphas had always found the name particularly amusing: he’d drawn his cock
across that hallowed silk more than once… A strange feeling, to spill one’s
seed on the sacred. Quite delicious. “Yes,” he said, “the Concubine.” The General shrugged.
“What officer hasn’t?” “And how about the Tusk?
Have you ever laid eyes upon it?” Martemus raised his
brows. “Yes.” “Really?” Conphas
exclaimed. He himself had never seen the Tusk. “When was that?” “As a boy, back when
Psailas II was Shriah. My father brought me with him to Sumna to visit his
brother—my uncle—who for a time was an orderly in the Junriuma… He took me to
see it.” “Did he now? What did you
think?” The General stared into
his wine bowl, which he held poised between his wonderfully thick fingers.
“Hard to remember… Awe, I think.” Mengedda “Awe?” “I remember my ears
ringing. I shook, I know that… My uncle told me I should be afraid, that the
Tusk was connected to far bigger things.” The
General smiled, fixing Conphas with his clear brown eyes. “I asked him if he
meant a mastodon and he swatted me—right there!—in the presence of the Holiest
of Holies…” Conphas affected
amusement. “Hmm, the Holiest of Holies…” He took a long sip of his wine,
savoured the warm, almost buzzing taste. Many years had passed since he’d last
enjoyed Skauras’s private stock. He could still scarcely believe the old jackal
had been bested, and by Coithus
Saubon… He’d
meant what he’d said earlier: the Gods did favour the soft-of-head. Men like Conphas, on the
other hand, they tested. Men like themselves… “Tell me, Martemus, if you had to
die defending one or the other, the Concubine or the Tusk, which would it be?” “The Concubine,” the
General replied without a whisper of hesitation. “And why’s that?” Again the General
shrugged. “Habit.” Conphas fairly howled.
Now that was funny. Habit. What more
assurance could a man desire? Dear
man! Precious man! He paused, collected
himself for a moment, then said, “This man, Prince Kellhus of Atrithau… What do
you make of him?” Martemus scowled, then
leaned forward in his chair. Conphas had once made a game of this, leaning
forward and back, and watching the way Martemus’s pose answered his, as though
some critical distance between their faces must always be observed. In some
ways, Martemus was such a strange man. “Intelligent,” the
General said after a moment, “well spoken, and utterly impoverished. Why do you
ask?” Still hesitant, Conphas
appraised his subordinate for a moment. Martemus was unarmed, as was custom
when conferring alone with members of the Imperial Family. He wore only a plain
red smock. He cares nothing
about impressing me…
This, Conphas reminded himself, was what made his opinion so invaluable. “I think it’s time I told
you a little secret, Martemus… Do you remember Skeaos?” iou ihe Mrst March “The Emperor’s Prime
Counsel. What of him?” “He was a spy, a Cishaurim spy… My uncle, ever keen to confirm his fears, noted
that Prince Kellhus seemed peculiarly interested in Skeaos during that final
gathering of the Great Names on the Andiamine Heights. Our Emperor, as you
know, is not one to idly brood over his suspicions.” Martemus blanched with
shock. For a moment, it looked his nose might fall off his face. Conphas could
almost read his thoughts: Skeaos
aCishaurim spy? This is a little secret? “So Skeaos admitted
working for the Cishaurim?” The Exalt-General shook
his head. “He didn’t need to… He was… He was some kind of abomination—a faceless abomination!—and of a species the Imperial Saik
couldn’t detect… Which means of course he must have been Cishaurim.” “Faceless?” Conphas blinked, and for
the thousandth time saw Skeaos’s oh-so-familiar face… unclutch. “Don’t ask me
to explain. I cannot.” Fucking words. “So you think this Prince
Kellhus is a Cishaurim spy as well? A contact of some kind? “He’s something, Martemus. Just what remains to be seen.” The General’s astonished
expression suddenly hardened into something shrewd. “Like the Emperor, you’re
not one to harbour idle suspicions, Lord Exalt-General.” “True, Martemus. But
unlike my uncle, I know the wisdom of staying my hand, of letting my enemies
think I’m deceived. To observe, and to observe closely, is not to remain idle.” “But this is my point,”
Martemus said. “Surely you’ve purchased informants. Surely you’ve had the man
watched… What have you learned so far?” Surely. “Not much. He
camps with the Scylvendi, seems to share a woman with him—quite a beauty, I’m
told. He spends his days with a Schoolman named Drusas Achamian—the same Mandate fool my uncle contracted to corroborate the
Imperial Saik regarding Skeaos, though whether this is anything more than a
coincidence, I don’t know. Supposedly they talk history and philosophy. He
belongs, like Mengedda the Scylvendi, to
Proyas’s inner circle, and he wields, as fairly the entire Holy War witnessed
tonight, some kind of strange power over Saubon. Otherwise, the caste-menials
seem to think he’s a poor man’s prophet—a seer or something.“ “Not much?” Martemus
exclaimed. “From your description, he sounds like a man of power to me—frightful power, if he belongs to the Cishaurim.” Conphas smiled. “Growing
power…” He leaned forward, and sure enough, Martemus leaned back. “Would you
like to know what I think?” “Of course.” “I think he’s been sent
by the Cishaurim to infiltrate and destroy the Holy War. Saubon’s idiotic march
and that nonsense about ‘punishing the Shrial Knights’ was simply his first
attempt. Mark me, there will be another. He bewitches men,
somehow, plays the prophet…” Martemus narrowed his
eyes and shook his head. “But I’ve heard quite the opposite. They say he denies
those who make more of him than he is.” Conphas laughed. “Is
there any better way to posture as a prophet? People don’t like the smell of
presumption, Martemus. Even the pig castes have noses as keen as wolves when it
comes to those who claim to be more. Me, on the other hand, I quite like the
savoury stink of gall. I find it honest.” Martemus’s face darkened.
“Why are you telling me this?” “Always to the quick, eh,
General? Small wonder I find you so refresh-ing.” “Small wonder,” the man
repeated. Such a dry wit, Martemus.
Conphas reached for the decanter and refilled his bowl with more of the
Sapatishah’s wine. “I tell you this, Martemus, because I would have you play
general in a different sort of war. Quite against all reason, you’ve become a
man of power. If this Prince Kellhus collects followers to a purpose, if he courts the mighty, then you should prove well nigh
irresistible.” A pained expression crept
into Martemus’s face. “You want me to play disciple?” “Yes,” Conphas replied.
“I do not like the smell of this man.” “Then why not just have
him killed?” The First March But of course… How could he be so penetrating and so dense by
turns? The Exalt-General inclined
his bowl and watched the blood-dark wine roll in the bottom. For an instant,
its bouquet transported him back years, to his days as a hostage in Skauras’s
opulent court. He glanced once again to the Over-Standard behind its curtain of
incense. His sweet Concubine. “It’s strange,” Conphas
said, “but I feel young.” HApTER PlGHT Mengedda All men are greater than dead men. —AINONI PROVERB Every monumental work of the State is
measured by cubits. Every cubit is measured by the length of the
Aspect-Emperor’s arm. And the Aspect’Emperor’s arm, they say, stands beyond
measure. But 1 say the AspecuEmperor’s arm is measured by the length of a
cubit, and that all cubits are measured by the works of the State. Not even the
All stands beyond measure, for it is more than what lies within it, and “more”
is a kind of measure. Even the God has His cubits. —IMPARRHAS, PSUKALOGUES Early Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk,
the Plains of Mengedda “They celebrate my
uncle’s honour,” Earl Athjeari said as he led Kellhus through carousing mobs of
drunk Northmen. The Galeoth preferred leather wedge tents with heavy wooden
frames adorned by tusks and crude animal totems. Without the need to stake guy
ropes, they were able to arrange them board to board, canvas to canvas, in
large circular enclosures about a central fire. Athjeari led him through
enclosure after enclosure, prompted by Kellhus’s questions to explain the
various peculiarities of his people’s appearance, customs, and traditions.
Though annoyed at The First March first, the young Earl was
soon beaming with wonder and pride, struck not only by the distinctiveness and
nobility of his people, but by a new self-understanding as well. Like so many
men, he’d never truly considered who or what he was. Coithus Athjeari, Kellhus
knew, would never forget this walk. At once so easy and so difficult… Kellhus had taken the
shortest path. He’d acquired crucial background knowledge concerning Saubon’s
heritage, and he’d gained the confidence and admiration of his precocious
nephew, who hence would look on Prince Kellhus of Atrithau as a friend and
more, as someone who made him wiser—better—than
he was with other men. Eventually, they
shouldered their way into an enclosure far larger, and far drunker, than any of
the others. On the far side Kellhus glimpsed the Red Lion banner of House
Coithus rising above the shadowy congregation. Athjeari began pushing his way
toward it, cursing and berating his countrymen. But he paused when they neared
the enclosure’s centre, where a bonfire whisked sparks and smoke into the night
sky. “This will interest you,”
he said, grinning. A large clearing had been
opened before the fire, and two Galeoth, breathless and stripped to the waist,
stood facing each other in its heart, holding what appeared to be two staffs between
them. Each, Kellhus realized, had their wrists bound by leather straps to the
end of each pole, so they were held from each other. Gripping the polished
wood, they leaned each against the other, their white chests and sunburned arms
taut with veins and straining muscle. The onlookers hooped and roared. Suddenly the nearer man
pulled rather than pushed with his left, and his opponent stumbled forward.
Then the two men fairly danced around the fire, heaving, yanking, shoving,
thrusting, whatever it took to bring their opponent to the packed earth. The larger man staggered,
and for a moment looked as though he might lurch into the fire. The crowd
gasped, then cheered as he caught himself just short of the fiery column. With
a roar he jerked the smaller man into his long shadow, then drove him back,
only to suddenly falter, shaking his head fiercely. A small flame puffed from
his cropped mane, at the sight of which literally dozens doubled over with
laughter. The man Mengedda cried out, cursed. For an
instant, it appeared he might panic, but someone sent what looked like beer or
mead slapping across his scalp. More booming laughter, punctuated by cries of
foul. Athjeari chortled, turned
to Kellhus. “These two really hate each other,” he called over
the ruckus. “They want blood or burns more than silver!” “What is this?” “We call it gandoki, or ‘shadows.’ To beat your gandoch, your shadow, you must knock him to the ground.” His
laugh was relaxed and infectious, the laugh of a man utterly certain of his
place among others. “The picks,” he added, using the common derogatory term for
non-Norsirai, “they think we Galeoth are a race without subtlety—and so women
say of men! But gandoki proves that it’s not entirely true.” Then suddenly, as though
stepping through a door from nowhere, Sarcellus stood between them, wearing the
same white and gold vestments as at the amphitheatre. “Prince,” he said, bowing
his head to Kellhus. Athjeari fairly whirled.
“What are you doing here?” The Shrial Knight laughed, fixing the Earl with
large camel-lashed eyes. “The same as you, I suppose. I wished to confer with
Prince Kellhus.” “You followed us,”
Athjeari said. “Please…” the thing
replied, pretending to be offended. “I knew I’d find him here, enjoying the
largesse”—he looked sceptically at the surrounding crowds—“of the
Battle-Celebrant.” Athjeari glanced at
Kellhus, his look, his heart rate, even the draw of his breath striking a note
of scarcely concealed aversion. He thought Sarcellus vain and effete, Kellhus
realized, a particularly repellent member of a species he’d long ago learned to
despise. But then, that was likely what the original Cutias Sarcellus had been:
a pompous caste-noble. Sarcellus, the real
Sarcellus, was dead. What stood here in his stead was a beast of some kind, an
exquisitely trained animal. It had wrenched Sarcellus from his place and had
assumed all he once was. It had robbed him even of his death. No murder could be more
total. “Well then,” the young
Earl said, looking off as though distracted. Ihe First March “Allow me a few words
with the Knight-Commander,” Kellhus said. Though he scowled as he spoke,
Athjeari agreed to meet him at Saubon’s tent in a short time. “Run along,”
Sarcellus said, as the Earl impatiently shoved his way among his shouting
kinsmen. A keening shriek pealed
through the air. Kellhus saw the larger gandoki player stumble and fall beneath
the fists of several Galeoth who’d broken from the crowd. But the screaming
came from his smaller opponent. Kellhus glimpsed the man between shadowy legs,
blistered from the fire, smoking coals still embedded in his right shoulder and
arm. Others came rushing to
the larger man’s defence… A knife flashed. Blood slopped across the packed
ground. Kellhus glanced at
Sarcellus, who stood rigid, utterly absorbed by the mayhem unfolding before
them. Pupils dilated. Arrested breath. Quickened pulse… It possesses involuntary responses. Its right hand, Kellhus
noted, lingered near his groin, as though strain-ing against some overpowering
masturbatory compulsion. Its thumb stroked its forefinger. Another cry rang
out. The thing called
Sarcellus fairly trembled with ardour. These things hungered, Kellhus realized.
They ached. Of all the rude animal
impulses that coerced and battered the intellect, none possessed the subtlety
or profundity of carnal lust. In some measure, it tinctured nearly every
thought, impelled nearly every act. This was what made Serwe so invaluable.
Without realizing, every man at Xinemus’s fire—with the exception of the
Scylvendi—knew they best wooed her by pandering to Kellhus. And they could do
naught but woo her. But Sarcellus, it was
clear, ached for a different species of congress. One involving suffering and
violence. Like the Sranc, these skin-spies continually yearned to rut with
their knives. They shared the same maker, one who had harnessed the venal beast
within their slaves, sharpened it as one might a spear point. The Consult. “Galeoth,” Sarcellus
remarked with an offhand grin, “are forever cutting their own throats, forever
culling their own herd.” Mengedda The brawl had been cut
short by the ranting of Earl Anfirig. Carried hanging from arms and legs, three
bloodied men were being hurried from the fire. “They strive,‘” Kellhus
said, quoting Inri Sejenus, ’“for they know not what. So they cry villainy, and
claim others stand in their way‘…” Somehow the Consult knew
he’d been instrumental to the Emperor’s discovery of Skeaos. The question was
whether his role had been incidental or otherwise. If they suspected he could
somehow see their skin-spies, they would be forced to balance the immediate
threat of exposure against the need to know how he could see them. I must walk the linebetween,
make myself a mystery they must solve … Kellhus stared at the
thing for a bold moment. When it feigned a scowl, he said, “No, please, indulge
me… There’s something about you… About your face.” “Is that why you watched
me so in the amphitheatre?” For a heartbeat, Kellhus
opened himself to the legion within. He needed more information. He needed to
know, which meant he needed a weakness, a vulnerability… This Sarcellus is new. “Was I that indiscreet?” Kellhus said. “I apologize… I was
thinking of what you said to me that night in the Unaras at the ruined shrine…
You made quite an impression.” “And what did I say?” It acknowledges its ignorance as any man would, any man
with nothing to hide… These things are well-trained. “You don’t recall?” The imposter shrugged. “I
say many things.” With a smirk it added, “I have a beautiful voice…” Kellhus simulated a frown.
“Are you playing with me? Playing some kind of game?” The counterfeit face
clenched into a scowl. “I assure you, I’m not. Just what did I say?” “That something had
happened,” Kellhus began apprehensively, “that the endless… hunger, I think you said…” Something like a
twitch—too faint for world-born eyes—flickered across its expression. O ihe First March “Yes,” Kellhus continued.
“The endless hunger…” “What about it?” A near imperceptible
tightening of pitch, quickening of cadence. “You told me you weren’t what you
seemed. You told me you weren’t
a Shrial Knight.” Another twitch, like a
spider answering a shiver through its silk. These things can be read. “You deny this?” Kellhus
pressed. “Are you telling me you don’t remember?” The face had become as
impassive as a palm. “What else did I say?” It’s confused… Uncertain as to what to
do. “Things I could scarcely
credit at the time. You said you’d been assigned to coordinate observation of
the Mandate Schoolman, and to that end you’d seduced his lover, Esmenet. You
said that I was in great danger, that your masters thought I had some hand in
some disaster in the Emperor’s court. You said that you were prepared to help…” The creases and wrinkles
of its expression jerked into a network of hairline cracks, as though sucking
humid night air. “Did I tell you why I
confessed all this?” “Because you’d hungered
for it too… But what’s this? You really don’t remember, do you?” “I remember.” “Then what is this? Why have you become so… so coy? You seem different.” “Perhaps I’ve
reconsidered.” So much. In the span of
moments, Kellhus had confirmed his hypotheses regarding the Consult’s immediate
interests, and he’d uncovered the rudiments of what he needed to read these
creatures. But most important, he’d sown the threat of betrayal. How could
Kellhus possibly know what he knew, they would ask, unless the original
Sarcellus had actually told him? Whatever their ends, the Consult depended,
through and through, upon total secrecy. One defection could undo everything.
If they feared for the reliability of their field agents—these skin-spies—they
would be forced to restrict their autonomy and to proceed with more caution. In other words, they
would be forced to yield the one commodity Mengedda Kellhus required more
than any other: time. Time to dominate this Holy War.
Time to find Anasurimbor Moenghus. He was one of the
Conditioned, Dunyain, and he followed the shortest path. The Logos. The surrounding crowds
had settled into rumbling conversations, and both Kellhus and Sarcellus looked
to the bonfire. A towering Gesindalman, his hair bound into a war-knot, raised
the gandoki sticks high against the night sky, crying out for more challengers.
Laughing, the thing called Sarcellus seized Kellhus by the forearm and pulled
him into the raucous circle. The crowd began thundering anew. It believed me. Did it improvise? Was it
acting out of panic? Or was this its intent all along? There was no question of
refusing the challenge, not in the company of warlike men. The resulting loss
of face would be crippling. Washed by the heat of the
bonfire, they stripped, Kellhus to the linen kilt he wore beneath his blue-silk
cassock, Sarcellus to nothing, in the fashion of Nansur athletes. The Galeoth
howled in ridicule, but the thing called Sarcellus seemed oblivious. They stood
a length apart, appraising each other while two Agmundrmen bound their wrists
to the poles. The Gesindalman jerked each pole to ensure it was secure, then
without a glance at either of them, he cried, “Gaaaancioch.1” Shadow. Bare skin yellow in the
firelight, they circled each other, lightly grasping the ends of their poles.
Though still roaring, the crowds trailed into silence, fell away altogether,
until there was only one figure, Sarcellus, occupying one place… Kellhus. Sheets of muscle flexing
beneath fire-shining skin, many anchored and connected in inhuman ways. Dilated
eyes watching, studying, from a knuckled face. Steady
pulse. Tumid phallus, hardening. A mouth made of gracile fingers, moving,
speaking… “We are old, Anasurimbor,
very, very old. Age is power in this world.” He was bound to a beast,
Kellhus realized, to something, according to Achamian, begot in the bowels of
Golgotterath. An abomination of the Old Science, the Tekne… Possibilities
bloomed, like branches twining through the open air of the improbable. The First March “Very many,” it hissed,
“have thought to play the game you now play.” Losing was the simplest
solution, but weakness incited contempt, invited aggression. “We’ve had a thousand
thousand foes through the millennia, and we’ve made shrieking agonies of their
hearths, wildernesses of their nations, mantles of their skins…” But defeating this
creature could render Kellhus too much a threat. “All of them,
Anasurimbor, and you are no different.” He must strike some kind
of balance. But how? Kellhus thrust with his
right, heaved with his left, tried to draw Sarcellus off-balance. Nothing. It
was as though the poles had been harnessed to a bull. Preternatural reflexes.
And strong—very strong. Strategies revised.
Alternatives revisited. The thing called Sarcellus grinned, his phallus now
curved like a bow against his belly. To be aroused by battle or competition,
Kellhus knew, occasioned great honour among the Nansur. How strong is it? Kellhus leaned into the poles,
elbows back, as though holding a wheelbarrow, and pushed. Sarcellus adopted the same stance. Muscle strained,
knotted, gleaming as though oiled. The ash poles creaked. “Who are you?” Kellhus
cried under his breath. Sarcellus grunted, its
fists shaking, sinking to its waist, then it yanked. Kellhus skidded forward.
The instant of his imbalance, it jerked around, as though throwing a discus.
Kellhus caught himself, heaved back on both poles. Then they were dancing
around the clearing, jerking and thrusting, matching move with countermove,
each the perfect shadow of the other… Between heartbeats,
Kellhus tracked the shift and sway of its centre of balance, an abstract point
marked by the peak of its erection. He observed repetitions, recognized
patterns, tested anticipations, all the while analyzing the possibilities of
the game, the manifold lines of move and consequence. He restricted himself to
an elegant yet limited repertoire of moves, luring it into habits, reflexive
responses… “What do you want?” he cried. Then he improvised. From a near crouch, he
kicked down on the left pole while throwing up his left arm, and punching out
with his right. Its right hand slammed to the Mengedda earth, Sarcellus doubled
forward and was thrown back. For an instant it resembled a man bound to a
falling boulder… It kicked free of the
ground, trying to somersault back to its feet. Kellhus yanked the poles
backward, tried to slam it onto its stomach. Somehow it managed to pull its
left leg, knee to chest, underneath in time. Its right foot scooped into the
fire… A shower of ash and coals
went streaming into the air, not to blind Kellhus, but to obscure the two of them, he realized, from the watching
Galeoth… It jerked both arms back
and out, thrust itself forward between the poles, kicked. Kellhus blocked with
his own shin and ankle—once, twice… It means to kill me… An unfortunate accident while
playing a barbaric Galeoth game. Kellhus jerked his arms
inward and across, caught the thing’s third kick with the bisecting poles. For
a heartbeat, he held the advantage in balance. He thrust it backward, heaved it
nude into the golden flames… Perhaps if I injure… Then yanked it forward. A mistake. Unharmed,
Sarcellus landed running, barrelled Kellhus backward with inhuman strength,
slammed him into the packed Galeoth masses, bowling men over and forcing others
to scramble clear. Once, twice, Kellhus almost fell, then his back slammed
against something heavy—a tent frame. It collapsed with a crack and the wedge
tent went down, under, and they were in the darkness beyond the enclosure—where
the thing, Kellhus realized, hoped to kill. This must end! His feet caught hard
earth. Bracing his legs, grasping the poles, he dipped and wrenched upward,
wheeling Sarcellus high into the night air. The thing’s astonishment lasted
only a heartbeat, and it managed to crack one of the poles with a kick… Kellhus
slapped it to the ground like a flag. The place became a man,
slick with perspiration, breathing deep. The first of the Galeoth
sprinted over the demolished tent, calling for torches, stumbling in the sudden
darkness. They saw Sarcellus pressing himself to his hands and knees at
Kellhus’s feet. As astounded as they were, they bawled out Kellhus’s name,
acclaiming him victor. The First March What have I done, Father? As they unbound his
wrists, slapping him on the back and swearing they’d never seen the like,
Kellhus could only watch Sarcellus, who slowly pulled himself to his feet. Bones should have been
broken. But then, Kellhus now knew, it was a thing without bones, a thing of
cartilage… Like a shark. Saubon watched Athjeari
stare in horror at the bones scattered across the earthen floor. The tent was
small, far smaller than the garish pavilions used by the other Great Names.
Beneath the blue and red-dyed canvas, there was room enough only for a beaten
field cot and a small camp table, where the Galeoth Prince sat, so very deep
into his cups… Outside the revellers
howled and laughed—the fools! “But he’s here, Uncle,” the young Earl of Gaenri said. “He waits…” “Send him away!” Saubon
cried. He loved his nephew, dearly, couldn’t look at him without seeing his
beloved sister’s beautiful face. She’d protected him from Papa. She’d loved him
before she died… But had she known him? Kussalt knew — “But Uncle, you asked—” “I care not what I
asked!” “I don’t understand…
What’s happened to you?” To be known by one man
and to be hated! Saubon leapt from his seat,
seized his nephew about the shoulders, cowed him the way only one of Eryeat’s
sons could. How he wanted to cry out the truth, to confess everything to this
boy, this man with his sister’s eyes—his sister’s blood! But he wasn’t her… He
didn’t know him. And he would despise him
if he did. “I cannot! I cannot have
him see me like this! Can’t you see?” No one must know! No one! “Like what?” “This.1”
Saubon bawled, thrusting the young man back. Athjeari caught his
balance and stood dumbstruck, openly hurt. He should have been outraged, Saubon
thought. He was the Earl of Gaenri, Khengedda one of the most powerful
men in Galeoth. He should have been infuriated, not appalled… Kussalt’s
forever-murmuring lips. “I
would have you know how much 1hate-” “Just send him away!”
Saubon cried. “As you wish,” his nephew
murmured. Glancing once again at the bones prodding through the earth, he
withdrew through the leather flaps. Bones. Like so many
little tusks. No one! Not even him! Though it was late, sleep
was out of the question. It seemed to Eleazaras that he’d been asleep for
weeks, now that High Ainon and the Scarlet Spires had finally rejoined the Holy
War. For what was sleep, if not unconsciousness of the greater world? A
profound ignorance. To remedy this, Eleazaras
had set Iyokus, his Master of Spies, to work the instant their palanquins had
set ground on the Plains of Mengedda. The battlefield of five days previous
needed to be surveyed, and witnesses interviewed, to determine what tactics the
Cishaurim had used, and how the Inrithi had bested them. The various informants
and spies they’d placed throughout the Holy War also had to be contacted and
questioned, both to ascertain how things stood in general now that they marched
through heathen territory, and to pursue the matter of these new Cishaurim
spies. Faceless spies. Spies without the Mark. He awaited Iyokus outside
his pavilion, pacing by torchlight, while his secretaries and Javreh bodyguards
watched from a discreet distance. After spending weeks entombed in his
palanquin, he found himself despising enclosed spaces. Everything seemed to
bind and constrict these days. After a time, Iyokus
emerged from the darkness, a ghoul in flashing crimson. “Walk with me,” he said
to the chanv addict. “Through the encampment?” “You fear riots?” the
Grandmaster asked somewhat incredulously. “After losing so many to the Cishaurim,
I’d assumed they’d appreciate a few blasphemers in their midst.” The First March “No… I thought we might
visit the ruins instead. They say Mengedda is older than Shir…” “Ah, Iyokus the
Antiquarian,” Eleazaras laughed. “I keep forgetting…” Though he personally had
no interest in seeing the ruins—he thought antiquarianism a defect
of character proper to Mandate Schoolmen__ he felt curiously
indulgent. Besides, the dead made for good company, he supposed, when planning
one’s very survival. Instructing his
bodyguards to remain behind, he strolled with Iyokus into the darkness. “So what did you find?”
he asked. “After we illuminated the
fields,” Iyokus said, “things fell into place…” Caught from the side by passing
torchlight, his pigment-deprived eyes seemed to glow a momentary red. “Most
unsettling, seeing the work of sorcery without the Mark. I had forgotten…” “One more reason for this
outrageous risk, Iyokus: to stamp out the Psukhe…” A sorcery they couldn’t see.
A metaphysics they couldn’t comprehend… What more did they need? “Indeed,” the
linen-skinned man replied unconvincingly. “What we know is this: according to
every report, Galeoth and non-Galeoth, Prince Saubon singlehandedly repulsed
the Padirajah’s Coyauri—” “Impressive,” Eleazaras
said. “As impressive as it is
unlikely,” the ever-sceptical Master of Spies said. “But the point is moot.
What matters is that the Fanim were then chased by the Shrial Knights. That, I think, was the decisive factor.” “How so?” “The scorched turf
corresponding to Gotian’s charge doesn’t begin at Saubon’s lines along the
ravine, where one might expect, but rather some seventy paces out… I think the
Coyauri, as they fled, actually screened the Shrial Knights from the Cishaurim…
They were only a hundred or so paces away when the psukari began Scourging
them.” “It was the Scourge they
used, then?” Iyokus nodded. “I would
say so. And perhaps the Lash, as well.” “So they were Secondaries
or Tertiaries?” “Without question,” the
Master of Spies replied, “perhaps under one or two Primaries… It’s a pity we
didn’t have the foresight to post observers among the Norsirai: aside from what
you and I witnessed ten years ago, Mengedda we know next to nothing
about their Concerts. And unfortunately no one seems to know just who any of
them were—not even the higher ranking Kianene captives.“ Eleazaras nodded. “It
would be nice to know who… Even still, a dozen of them dead, Iyokus. A dozen!” The Schoolmen of the
Three Seas were called the “Few” for good reason. The Cishaurim, according to
their informants in Shimeh and Nenciphon, could field at most one hundred to
one hundred and twenty ranking psukari, very near the number of sorcerers of
rank the Scarlet Spires itself could field. When one counted in thousands, the
loss of twelve scarcely seemed significant, and Eleazaras had no doubt that
many in the Holy War, among the Shrial Knights in particular, gnashed their
teeth at the thought of how many they had lost for the sake of so few. But when
one counted, as Schoolmen did, in tens,
the loss of twelve was nothing short of catastrophic—or glorious. “An astounding victory,”
Iyokus said. He gestured to the Men of the Tusk passing them in shadowy clots:
spectators, Eleazaras imagined, returning from the Council of Great and Lesser
Names. “And from what I gather, the Men of the Tusk have only the dimmest
notion.” So much the better, Eleazaras thought. Strange, the
way cruelty and jubilation could strike such sweet chords. “This,” he said with an
air of declaration, “will be our strategy then. We conserve ourselves at all costs, allow these dogs to continue killing as many
Cishaurim as they can.” He paused to secure Iyokus’s gaze. “We must save
ourselves for Shimeh.” How many times had he,
Iyokus, and the others debated this issue? Despite the sometimes unfathomable
power of the Psukhe, it remained, they all agreed, inferior to the Anagogis.
The Scarlet Spires would win an open confrontation with the Cishaurim—there was
no doubt. But how many of them would die? What power would the Scarlet Spires
wield after destroying the Cishaurim? A
triumph which saw them reduced to the status of a Minor School wouldn’t be a
triumph at all. They must do more than
defeat the Cishaurim, they must obliterate them. No matter how lunatic his
thirst for vengeance, Eleazaras would not gut his School. The First March “A wise course,
Grandmaster,” Iyokus said. “Yet I fear the Inrithi won’t fare so well in a
second encounter.” “And why’s that?” “The Cishaurim walked,
probably to conceal themselves from Saubon’s Chorae bowmen and crossbowmen,
whom he’d positioned too far behind his forward ranks. The strange thing,
however, is that they approached without a cavalry escort…” “They walked in the open?
But I thought striking from opening waves of horsemen was their traditional
tactic…” “So the Emperor’s
specialists claimed.” “Arrogance,” Eleazaras
said. “Whenever they engage the Nansur, they face the Imperial Saik. This time
they knew we were days away, still crossing the Southron Gates.” “So they waived
precautions because they thought themselves invincible…” Iyokus looked down, as
though watching his sandalled feet and bruised toenails peep from the hem of
his shining gown. “Possible,” he finally said. “Their intent seems to have been
to decimate the Inrithi centre, nothing more, to ensure it would collapse in
the next assault. They probably thought themselves cautious…” They’d walked beyond the
camp fires and embroidered round tents of their Ainoni countrymen to the
perimeter of lost Mengedda. The ground sloped upward, breached by broad stone
foundations—the remnants of some ancient wall, Eleazaras realized. Taking care
not to soil their gowns, they gained the stony summit. Around them stretched a
great swath of debris fields, truncated walls, and on the skyline, an ancient
acropolis crowned by a gallery of cyclopean pillars standing desolate beneath
the constellation of Uroris. Something broke the back of this place, Eleazaras thought. Something breaks the back of every place ... “What news of Drusas
Achamian?” he asked. For some reason, he felt breathless. The chanv addict stared
into the night, lost in another of his annoying reveries. Who knew what
happened in that spidery and methodical soul? Finally he said, “I fear you may
be right about him…” “You fear?” Eleazaras fairly snapped. “You concluded the
interrogation of Skalateas yourself. You know what happened that night beneath
the Mengedda Emperor’s palace better
than anyone—save the principals, perhaps. The abomination recognized Achamian, ergo, Achamian is somehow connected to the
abomination. The abomination could only be a Cishaurim spy, ergo Achamian is
connected to the Cishaurim.“ Iyokus turned to him, his
face as mild as milk. “But is the connection significant?” “That is the very question we must answer.” “Indeed. And how do you
propose we answer it?” “How else? By seizing
him. By interrogating him.” Did he think the menace of these changelings didn’t
warrant such extreme measures? Eleazaras couldn’t imagine any greater threat! “Just like Skalateas?” Eleazaras thought of the
shallow grave they had left in Anserca, suppressed an uncharacteristic shudder. “Just like Skalateas.” “And that,” Iyokus said, “is precisely what I fear.” Suddenly Eleazaras
understood. “You think,” he said, “that it would be useless to ply him…” Over the centuries, the
Scarlet Spires had abducted dozens of Mandate Schoolmen, hoping to wrest from
them the secrets of the Gnosis, the sorcery of the Ancient North. Not one of
them had succumbed. Not one. “I think plying him for the Gnosis would be useless,” Iyokus said. “What I fear is that
even under torment or the Compulsions, he’ll simply insist the abomination that
replaced Skeaos was a Consult and not a Cishaurim—” “But we already know,”
Eleazaras cried, “that the man plays a tune far different from the one he
sings! Think of Geshrunni! Drusas Achamian cut off his face… And then, a little over a year later, he’s
recognized by a faceless spy in the Emperor’s dungeons?
This is no mere coincidence!” Eleazaras glared at the
man, clutched his shaking hands. He did not, he decided, like the reptilian way
Iyokus listened. “I know these arguments,”
Iyokus said. He turned to once again scrutinize the moonlit ruins, his
expression translucent and unreadable. “I simply fear there’s more to this…” “There’s always more,
Iyokus. Why else would men murder men?” HE TIRST MARCH Esmenet had tried, many
times since her daughter’s death, to attend to the void within her. She tried questioning it
away by asking the priests she bedded, but they always said the same thing,
that the God dwelt only in temples, and that she’d made a brothel of her body.
Then they would brothel her again. For a time, she tried smearing it away by
coupling with men for anything, half-coppers, bread, even a rotted onion—once.
But men could never fill, only muddy. So she turned to others
like her, watching, observing. She studied the always-laughing whores, who
somehow exulted in being guttered day for night, or the chirping slave girls,
their faces anchored forward beneath their water-urns, smiling and rolling
their eyes from side to side. She made their motions her motions, as though
certainty were a kind of dance. And for a time she discovered comfort, as
though habits of gesture and expression could drum for a deadened heart. For a time she forgot the
distance between a fact and a face. She had never tried to
love. If joy in gesture couldn’t unseat desolation, then perhaps, joy in
desperation. For five days now, they’d
camped together in the hills overlooking the Battleplain. Ranging ahead,
Achamian had found a small stream, which they’d followed into the stony
heights. They climbed into a band of pitch pine, whose massive cones rocked in
slow circles in the wind, and found a pool of translucent green. They camped
nearby, though the lack of forage for Achamian’s mule, Daybreak, forced them to
trek for an hour or so every day to gather fodder to supplement his grain. Five days. Joking and
brewing tea in the cool mornings, making love to the rush of dry wind through
the trees, eating hare and squirrel— snared by Achamian, no less!—with their
rations in the evening, touching each other’s faces with wonder in the
moonlight. And swimming, floating.
The crush of ardent heat in cool waters. How she wished it would
never end. Esmenet pulled their
sleeping mats from the tent, slapped them one after the other in the wind, then
set them across warm rock. They’d pitched their tent across the soft ground
beneath an ancient and massive pitch pine, a lone sentinel near the terminus of
a broad shelf that terraced the north and eastern faces of the hill. Mengedda This, she thought, is our place … Without visitors, without ruins, without memories, save for the animal bones they’d found curled
beneath the tree when they’d first arrived. She ducked back into the
tent, pulled Achamian’s worn leather satchel from the corner. It was musty,
slick and damp where it had lain against the grasses. Powdery white mould had
crept up the stitching. She carried it out into
the sunlight, sitting cross-legged on a soft but prickly carpet of pine
needles. She pulled out various sheaves of vellum, and weighting them down with
stones, set them out to dry. She found a small doll, human shaped, wooden, but
with a simple silken nob for a head and a small rusty knife for a right hand.
Humming an old tune from Sumna, she bounced it around, kicked its wooden legs
in a little jig. After laughing at her foolishness, she set it out in the sun
as well, crossing its legs and pressing its arms behind its head so that it
looked like a daydreaming field-slave. What would Achamian be doing with a
doll? Then she pulled out a
sheet that had been folded separate from the others. Opening it, she saw a
series of brief, vertical scribbles arrayed across it, each joined to one, two,
or several others by hastily scratched lines. Even though she couldn’t
read—she’d yet to meet a woman who could—she somehow knew this sheet was
important. She resolved to ask Achamian when he returned. After securing it under
an axe-shaped flint, she turned to the stitching, began scratching away the
mould with a twig. Achamian emerged from the
shadows of the deeper wood a short time afterward, bare to the waist, the
firewood in his arms braced against his black-furred belly. He shot her a
friendly frown as he walked past, glancing at his doll and papers. She grinned
and snorted. She adored seeing him like this: a sorcerer playing woodsman, down
to the breeches, no less. Even after all her time travelling with the Holy War,
breeches still looked outlandish, barbaric—even curiously erotic. They were
illegal in many Nansur cities. “Do you know why the
Nilnameshi think cats are more human than monkeys?” he asked, stacking his wood
against the trunk of their great pine. “No.” HU Ihe First March Mengedda He turned toward her,
slapping his palms against his breeches. “Curiosity. They think curiosity is
what defines men.” He walked up to her, grinning. “It certainly defines you.” “Curiosity has nothing to
do with it,” she replied, trying to sound cross. “Your bag smells like mouldy
cheese.” “I always thought that
was me.” “You smell like ass.” Achamian laughed, raised
devilish brows. “But I washed my beard…” She tossed pine needles
at his face, but the wind tugged them away. “And what’s that for?” she asked,
gesturing to the doll. “To lure little girls into your tent?” He sat next to her on the
ground. “That,” he said, “is a Wathi Doll…
You’d make me throw it away if I told you more.” “I see… And this,” she
continued, lifting the folded sheet. “What’s this?” His good humour
evaporated. “That’s my map.” She held the parchment
out between them, waved away a small wasp. “What’s this writing? Names?” “Individuals and
different Factions. Everyone with some bearing on the Holy War… The lines mark
their interrelationships… See,” he said, pointing to a line of vertical script
on the centre left edge, “that says, ‘Maithanet.’” “And below?” “Inrau.” Without thinking she
reached out and clutched his knee. “What about the top
corner, here,” she said, a little too quickly. “The Consult.” She listened to him
recite the names, the Emperor, the Scarlet Spires, the Cishaurim, explaining
their different intents and how he thought each might be related to the others.
He said nothing that she hadn’t heard before, but for some reason it suddenly
seemed a powerful thing scratched in ink across this cured animal hide. It
suddenly seemed horrifyingly real … A world of implacable forces.
Hidden. Violent… Chills pimpled her skin.
Achamian, she realized, didn’t
belong to her—not
truly. He never could. What was she compared with these mighty things? I can’t even read… “So why, Akka?” she found
herself saying. “Why have you stopped?” “What do you mean?” He
stared fixedly at the sheet, as though absorbed. “I know what you’re
supposed to do, Akka. In Sumna, you were
constantly out, making inquiries, courting informants. Either that or you were
waiting on some news. You were constantly spying. But not any more Not since you brought me
to your tent.“ “I thought it was only
fair,” he said breezily. “After all, you gave up—” “Don’t lie, Akka.” He sighed, and though
sitting, assumed the stooping air of slaves who carried onerous burdens. She
stared into his eyes. Clear, glistening brown. Need-nervous. Sad and wise. As
always when she was this near to him, she yearned to comb her fingers through
his beard, to probe the chin and jaw beneath. How I love
you. “It’s not you, Esmi,” he
said. “It’s him …” His gaze fell to the name
nearest ‘The Consult’ on the parchment sheet, the only one he’d yet to.
decipher for her. He didn’t need to. “Kellhus,” she said. They were silent for a
time. A sudden gust whisked through the pine, and she glimpsed bits of fluff
rolling away, up the granite slope and off into endless sky. For a moment she
feared for the sheaves of parchment, but they were safe beneath their stones,
their corners opening and closing like speechless mouths. They’d ceased speaking of
Kellhus aloud, ever since fleeing the Battleplain. Sometimes it seemed an
unspoken accord, the kind lovers used to numb shared hurts. Other times it
seemed a coincidence of aversions, like avoiding issues of fidelity or sex. But
for the most part it just seemed unnecessary, as though any words they might
use had been always already said. For a time Kellhus had
been a troubling figure, but he’d soon become intriguing, someone warm,
welcoming, and mysterious—a man who promised pleasant surprises. Then at some
point he’d become towering, someone who overshadowed all others—like a noble
and indulgent father, or a
great king breaking bread with his slaves. And now, even more so in his
absence, he’d become a shining figure. A beacon of some kind.
Something they must follow, if only because all else was so dark… What is he? she wanted to say, but looked
speechlessly to her lover instead. To her husband. They smiled at each
other, shyly, as though just remembering they weren’t strangers. They clasped
dry, sun-warm hands. Never
have I been sohappy. If only her daughter… “Come,” Achamian abruptly
said, pressing himself to his feet. “I want to show you something.” She followed him from the
matted humus onto the bare, sun-hot stone. She hissed and scampered to avoid
burning her feet, climbing to the rounded ledge. With each step, the vast
grey-green sweep of the Battleplain rose to brace the skies. Taking Achamian’s
proffered hand, she joined him on the ledge. She raised a hand to her brow,
shielding her eyes from the sun’s glare. Then she saw them… “Sweet Sejenus,” she whispered. Like the shadows of truly
mountainous clouds, they darkened the plain, great columns of them, their arms
winking like powdered diamond in the sunlight. “The Holy War marches,”
Achamian said, rigid with what could only be awe. Breathing hurt, or so it
seemed. She glimpsed cohorts of knights, hundreds, even thousands, strong, and
great files of infantrymen, as long as entire cities. She saw baggage-trains,
rows of wains no bigger than grains of sand. And she saw banner after
fluttering banner bearing the devices of a thousand Houses, each embroidered
with silken Tusks… “So many!” she exclaimed.
What terror the Fanim must feel… “More than two hundred
and fifty thousand Inrithi warriors,” Achamian said, “or so Zin claims…” For
some reason, his voice came to her as though from the deeps of some cave. It
sounded trapped and hollow. “And as many camp-followers, perhaps… No one knows
for sure.” Mengedda Thousands upon thousands.
With the ponderousness of distant things, they encompassed the nearer reaches
of the plain. They moved, she thought, like wine bleeding through wool. How could so many be bent
to one dreadful purpose? One place. One city. Shimeh. “Is it…” she found
herself gasping, “is it like something from your dreams?” He paused, and though he
neither swayed nor stumbled, Esmenet suddenly feared he was about to fall. She
reached out, clutched his elbow. “Like my dreams,” he
said. . $i ■■ ■
■■<■■■■■i ‘ ■
“■”■“ ■■ ■■ ” HApTER Nine HlNNERETH One can look into the future, or one can
look at the future. The latter is by far the more instructive. —AJENCIS, THE THIRD
ANALYTIC OF MEN If one doubts that passion and unreason
govern the fate of nations, one need only look to meetings between the Great.
Kings and emperors are unused to treating with equals, and are often
excessively relieved or repelled as a result. The Nilnameshi have a saying,
“When princes meet, they find either brothers or themselves,” which is to say,
either peace or war. —DRUSAS ACHAM1AN, THE
COMPENDIUM OF THE FIRST HOLY WAR Early Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, Momemn Song and myriad
glittering torches greeted Ikurei Xerius III as he passed through curtains of
wispy linen and into the palatial courtyard. Only in light must the Emperor be
seen. There was a rustle of fabric as the throngs fell to their knees and
pressed their powdered faces against the lawns. Only the tall Eothic Guardsmen
remained standing. With child-slaves holding the hem of his gown, Xerius walked
among the prostrated forms and savoured, as he always did, this loneliness.
This godlike loneliness. He
summons me! Me! The insolence! Hinnereth He mounted the wooden
steps and climbed into the Imperial Chariot. A call was given for all to rise. Xerius held out his white
gloved hand, idly wondering whom Ngarau, his Grand Seneschal, had chosen to
hand him the reins—an honour of great traditional significance, but beneath the
Emperor’s practical notice. Xerius trusted the judgement of his Grand Seneschal
implicitly… As he’d once trusted Skeaos. A pang of horror. How
long would that name cut like glass? Skeaos. He barely noticed the boy
who handed him the reins. Some young scion of House Kiskei? No matter. Xerius
was typically graceful even when distracted—a trait inherited from his father.
His father might have been a craven fool, but, oh, how he’d always looked the
Great Emperor. Xerius passed the reins
to his Charioteer and numbly signalled the advance. The team started at the
snap of the Captain’s whip, then began prancing forward, drawing the
gold-panelled chariot behind them. The censers affixed to the runners rattled,
trailing streamers of blue incense. Jasmine and sweet sandalwood. The Emperor
must be spared the disconcerting smells of his capital. Observed by hundreds of
painted and ingratiating faces, Xerius stared firmly forward, his stance
statuary, his look remote and haughty. Only a select few received the nod of
imperial acknowledgment: his bitch-mother, Istriya; old General Kumuleus, whose
support had assured him the Mantle after his father’s death; and of course his
favourite augur, Arithmeas. The intangible gold of Imperial favour was
something Xerius hoarded jealously, and he was shrewd in its dispensation.
Daring may be required to make the climb, but thrift was ever the key to holding the summit. Another lesson Xerius had
learned from his mother. The Empress had steeped him in the bloody history of
his predecessors, tutored him with endless examples of past disaster. This one
too trusting, that one too cruel, and so on. Surmante Skilura II, who’d kept a
bowl of molten gold at his side to fling at those who displeased him, had been
too cruel. Surmante Xatantius, on the other hand, had been too martial— conquest
should enrich, not bankrupt. Zerxei Triamarius III had been too fat—so fat he
needed slaves to brace his knees when he rode his horse. His death, Istriya had
chortled, had been as much a matter of ihe Second March aesthetic decency as
anything else. An emperor must look a God, not an overstuffed eunuch. Too much of this and too
much of that. “The world doesn’t constrain us,” the indomitable Empress had
once explained, batting her harlot eyes, “so we must constrain ourselves—like
the Gods… Discipline, sweet Xerius. We must have discipline.” Something he possessed in
abundance, or so Xerius thought. Outside the courtyard,
files of heavy cavalrymen, elite Kidruhil, positioned themselves before and
after the Imperial Chariot, and flanked by running torch-bearers, the shining
procession wound down the Andiamine Heights toward the dark and smoky troughs
of Momemn. Moving slowly so the torch-bearers could keep pace, it clattered
through the Imperial Precincts and onto the long, monumental avenue that joined
the palace compounds to the temple-complex of Cmiral. Numerous Momemnites stood
in shadowy clots along the avenue, straining for a glimpse of their divine
Emperor. Obviously word of his short pilgrimage had spread throughout the city.
Turning left and right, Xerius smiled and raised his hand in salute after
leisurely salute. So he wants this to be public… At first, he could see
little beyond the runners and their glittering torches, nor could he hear much
over the sound of hooves clopping across cobble. The farther they travelled,
however, the more congested the processional avenue became. Soon slaves and
caste-menials jostled within spitting distance of the torch-bearers, their
faces clearly illuminated, and Xerius realized that they actually jeered and
laughed each time he saluted them. For a moment he feared his heart might stop.
He clutched the shuddering runners to steady himself. That he could make such a
fool of himself! Despite the streaming
censers, the air took on the distinct odour of shit. Within moments, it
seemed, hundreds had become thousands, and as their numbers grew, so did their
gall. Soon the air shivered with the thunder of multitudes. Horrified, Xerius
watched the torchlight sort through face after unwashed face, each turned to
him, some watching in silent accusation or contempt, some sneering, others
shouting or howling in spittle-flecked rage. The procession trundled on, as yet
unimpeded, but Hinnereth the sense of bristling
pageantry had evaporated. Xerius swallowed. Cold sweat snaked between his
clothes and skin. He turned his eyes resolutely forward, to the stiff backs of
his cavalrymen. This is what he wants, he told himself. Remember, be disciplined! Officers bawled urgent
commands. The Kidruhil drew their clubs. The procession found brief
respite crossing the bridge over the Rat Canal. Xerius saw pleasure barges
anchored in the black waters, drifting in torch-illumined fogs of incense.
Rising from their cushions, caste-merchants and concubines lifted clay wafers,
blessing-tablets to be broken in his name. But their looks, Xerius could not
help but notice, turned away long before his passage was complete—to the
awaiting mobs. The unruly Momemnites
once again engulfed the procession. Women, the old and the infirm, even
children, all shouting now, all brandishing fists… Glancing down, Xerius saw a
poxed man rolling a rotted tooth on his tongue, which he spit as the Imperial
Chariot passed. It fell somewhere beneath the wheels… They truly abhor me, Xerius realized. They hate me… Me.‘ But this would change, he
reminded himself. When all was finished, when the fruits of his labour had
become manifest, they would hail him as no other emperor in living memory. They
would rejoice as trains of heathen slaves bore tribute to the Home City, as
blinded kings were dragged in chains to their Emperor’s feet. And with shielded
eyes they would gaze upon Ikurei Xerius III and they would know—know.1—that
he was indeed the Aspect-Emperor, returned from the ashes of
Kyraneas and Cenei to compel the world, to force nation and tribe to bow and
kiss his knee. I will show them! They will see! The immense plaza of
Cmiral opened before him, and the thunder of Momemn’s masses reached its
crescendo, stealing his breath, numbing him with sound and implication. The
forward Kidruhil halted, milled in momentary confusion. Xerius saw one
cavalryman’s horse rear. The Kidruhil who followed galloped ahead to secure the
flanks. All flourished their clubs, waving them in warning, striking any who
came too near. Beyond their small perimeter of gleaming armour and torchlight
the world was dark riot. Impoverished humanity, roaring fields of them, from
the temple-compounds to the left and right to the great basalt pillars of
Xothei ahead. Xerius clenched the
chariot’s forward rail until his knuckles whitened and his hands ached. All of
them… Over and over, crying that
name… Dread,
dizziness, and a sense of inner falling. Has he
incited them against me? Is this to be an assassination? He watched as his Kidruhil clubbed
first a sliver, then a wedge into the mobs. Suddenly he grinned, gritted his
teeth in fierce pleasure. This was how the Gods affirmed
themselves: with the blood of mortals! The crowd surged against the forward
Kidruhil, and the thunder seemed redoubled. Several shining horsemen stumbled
and vanished. More horsemen rushed forward. Clubs rose and fell. Swords were
drawn. The Charioteer steadied
his team, glanced nervously at him. You look an Emperor in the eye? “Go!” Xerius roared. “Into them! Go!” Laughing, he leaned from
the runners and spat upon his people, upon those who cried another’s name when
Ikurei Xerius III stood godlike in their midst. If only he could spit molten
gold! Slowly, the chariot
trundled ahead, lurching and throwing him forward as the wheels chipped over the
fallen. His stomach burned with fear, his bowels felt loose, but there was a
wildness in his thoughts, a delirium that exulted in death’s proximity. One by
one the torch-bearers were pulled under, but the Kidruhil stood fast, battling
their way ever forward, hacking their way among the masses, their swords rising
and falling, rising and falling, and it seemed to Xerius that he punished the
mongrels with his arm, that it was he who reached forward and chopped them to the ground. Laughing maniacally, the
Emperor of Nansur passed among his people, toward the growing immensity of
temple Xothei. Finally the decimated
procession reached the ranks of Eothic Guardsmen arrayed across Xothei’s
monumental steps. Deafened, afflicted by the torpor of dreams, Xerius was
guided from the chariot onto the raised wooden walkway that led to the temple’s
great gate. The Emperor must always be seen standing above mere men. He
viciously grabbed one of the captains by the arm. “Send word to the
barracks! Hack this place to silence! I want my chariot to skid across blood
when I return!” Discipline. He would
teach them. tьnnereth Then he strode toward
Xothei’s gate, stumbled for a moment on the hem of his gown, felt his heart
stop beating for fury as laughter coloured the ambient roar. He glanced for an
instant across what seemed an ocean of anger and rapture. Then, gathering his
gown, he very nearly fled up the walkway. The temple’s massive stonework
encompassed him. Shelter. The doors were ground
shut behind him. His legs folded beneath
him. A moment of hushed bewilderment. The cold floor against his knees. He
placed a trembling hand to his forehead, was surprised by the sweat that ran
between his fingers. Foolishness! What would
Conphas think? Ringing ears. Airy
darkness. Around him, that name shivered up from the stone. Maithanet. A thousand thousand voices—or so it seemed—crying like
a prayer the name that Xerius spat as a curse. Maithanet. Feeling winded, he walked
unsteadily across the antechamber, paused. Few of the great lamp wheels had
been set alight. Pale circles of light were thrown across the vast temple
floor, across the rows of faded prayer tile. Columns as thick as netia pine
soared into gloom. The hymnal galleries above were barely discernible in the
dark. During times of official worship this floor would billow with clouds of
incense, making the temple’s recesses vague and ghostly, smearing the points of
lamplight with haloes so that it seemed to the faithful that they stood at the
very juncture of this world and the Outside. But now the place was cavernous
and bare. Beneath the memory of myrrh, it smelled like a cellar. It was the
juncture of nothing—only a pocket of peace purchased by dead stone. In the distance, Xerius
could see him, kneeling in the centre of the great hemisphere of idols. There you are, he thought, feeling some
solidity return to his hollow limbs. His slippers whispered as he walked across
the floor. Unconsciously, his hands strayed across his vests and gown,
smoothing, straightening. His eyes flitted across the friezes etched into the
columns: kings, emperors, and gods, all rigid with the supernatural dignity of
figures in stone. He lyz.1HE SECOND MARCH came to a stop before the
first tier of stairs. The tallest, centre dome gaped above him. He stared for several
moments at the Shriah’s broad back. Face your Emperor you fanatic ingrate! “I’m pleased you’ve
come,” Maithanet said with his back still turned to him. The voice was rich,
enfolding. There was no deference in the tone. Jnan held Shriah and Emperor
equal. “Why this, Maithanet? Why
here?” The broad back turned.
Maithanet was wearing a plain white frock with sleeves that ended mid-arm. For
an instant he appraised Xerius with glittering eyes, then he raised his head to
the distant sound of the mob, as though it were the sound of rain prayed for
and received. Xerius could see the strong chin beneath the black of his oiled
beard. His face was broad, like that of a yeoman, and surprisingly youthful,
though nothing about the man’s manner spoke of youth. How old are you? “Listen!” Maithanet hissed, raising his hands to the resonant
sound of his name. Maithanet-Maithanet-Maithanet … “I am not a proud man,
Ikurei Xerius, but it moves me to hear them call thus.” Despite the foolish
dramatics, Xerius found himself awed by the man’s presence. The giddiness of
moments before revisited his limbs. “I haven’t the patience,
Maithanet, for games of jnan.” The Shriah paused, then
smiled winningly. He began walking down the steps. “I’ve come because of the
Holy War… I’ve come to look into your eyes.” These words further
disconcerted the Emperor. Xerius had known, before coming here, that the stakes
of this meeting could be high. “Tell me,” Maithanet
said, “have you sealed a pact with the heathen? Have you vowed to betray the
Holy War before it reaches the Sacred Land?” Could he know? “I assure you, Maithanet…
No.” “No?” “I’m injured, Shriah,
that you would—” Maithanet’s laughter was
sudden, loud, reverberant enough to fill even the hollows of great Xothei. tьnnereth Xerius fairly gasped. The
Writ of Psata-Antyu, the code governing Shrial conduct, forbade laughing aloud
as a carnal indulgence. Maithanet, he realized, was giving him a glimpse of his
depths. But for what purpose? All of this—the mobs, the demand to meet here in
Xothei, even the chanting of his name—was a demonstration of some kind,
terrifying in its premeditated lack of subtlety. I’ll crush you, Maithanet was saying. If the Holy War fails, you’ll be destroyed. “Accept my apology,
Emperor,” Maithanet said lightly. “It would seem that even a holy war may be
poisoned by”—a pained smile—“false rumours, hmm?” He tries to cow me… He knows
nothing, so he tries to cow me! Xerius remained silent, wrathful. He’d always
possessed, he thought, a greater facility for hatred than Conphas. His
precocious nephew could be vicious, savage even, but he inevitably slipped back
into that glassy remoteness that so unnerved those in his company. For Xerius,
hatred was something as enduring as it was implacable. Such a strange habit, he
suddenly realized, these momentary inquiries into his nephew’s nature. When had
Conphas become the rule he used to measure the cubits of his own heart? “Come, Ikurei Xerius,”
the Shriah of the Thousand Temples solemnly said, as though the gravity of what
would ensue might forever mark their lives. And for an brief instant, Xerius
grasped the gift of character that had hurtled this man to such heights: the
ability to impart sanctity to the moment, to touch people with awe as though it
were bread drawn from his own basket. “Come… Listen to what I
say to my people.” But over the course of
this brief exchange, the sounds of thousands chanting Maithanet’s name had
transformed, hesitantly at first, but with greater certitude with each passing
moment. Changed. Into screams. Obviously, the nameless
Captain had executed his Emperor’s instructions with blessed alacrity. Xerius
grinned his own winning grin. At last he felt a match for this obscenely
imposing man. “Do you hear, Maithanet?
Now they call out my name.” “Indeed they do,” the Shriah
said darkly. “Indeed they do.” Hmnereth Late Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, Hmnereth, on the coast of Qedea As though crowded by an
antipathy to the sea, the land folded as it approached the broken coasts of
Gedea. Since the coastal plains were narrow or nonexistent, save the alluvial
flatlands surrounding Hinnereth, it seemed the land itself had conspired to
bring the Holy War to the ancient city. As the first cohorts descended the
terraced hills, Hinnereth sprawled before them, huddled against the Meneanor, a
warren of mud and baked’brick structures enclosed by sandstone fortifications.
The mournful wail of horns pierced the salty air, rang from hill to sea, and
pronounced the city’s doom. Column after column wound down from the hills: the
turbulent swordsmen of the Middle-North, the long-skirted knights of Conriya
and High Ainon, the veteran infantrymen of the Nansurium. Hinnereth was an old
prize. Like all lands falling between great, competing civilizations, Gedea had
been a perpetual tributary, little more than an anecdote in the chronicles of
her conquerors. Hinnereth, her only city of note, had seen innumerable foreign
governors: Shigeki, Kyranean, Ceneian, Nansur, and most recently, Kianene. And
now the Men of the Tusk would cut their names onto that list. The Holy War dispersed
into several different camps around the fields and groves outside of
Hinnereth’s walls. After conferring, the Great Names sent an embassy of thanes
and barons to the gates demanding unconditional surrender. When the Fanim of
Ansacer ab Salajka, the Kianene Sapatishah of Gedea, chased them away with
arrows and ballis-tae, thousands were sent into the fields to harvest the wheat
and millet secured the week previous by the advance forces of Earl Athjea’ri,
Palatine Ingiaban, and Earl Werijen Greatheart. Thousands more were sent into
the hills to hew down trees for rams, towers, catapults, and mangonels. The
Siege of Hinnereth had begun. After a week of
preparations, the Men of the Tusk made their first assault. Clouds of arrows
fell among them. Boiling oil poured down upon their mantlets. Men fell
screaming from their ladders, or were cut down on the battlements. Fiery pitch
transformed their siege towers into soaring pyres. They bled and burned beneath
the walls of Hinnereth, and the Fanim mocked them from the heights. In the wake of the
disaster, some Great Names sent a delegation to the Scarlet Spires.
Chepheramunni had already warned Saubon and the others that the Scarlet
Schoolmen, short of Shimeh or a Cishaurim attack, had no intention of assisting
the Men of the Tusk, so the decision was made to limit their demands. They
asked for one breach in the walls, no more. Eleazaras’s refusal was scathing,
as was the condemnation of Proyas and Gotian, who had forsworn the use of
blasphemy unless absolutely necessary. Another round of
preparations followed. Some toiled in the hills, harvesting timber for more
siege engines. Others hunched in the darkness of sappers’ tunnels, dragging
stone and sharp gravel out with blistered hands. Still others raised pyres of
scrub and burned the dead. At night, they drank water carted down from the
hills, ate bread, golden-red clusters of figs, roasted quail and goose—and
cursed Hinnereth. During this time, bands
of Inrithi knights ranged south along the coasts, skirmishing with the remnants
of Skauras’s host, plundering fishing villages, and sacking those walled towns
that failed to immediately throw open their gates. Earl Athjeari struck inland,
scouring the hills in search of battle and plunder. Near a small fortress
called Dayrut, he surprised a detachment of several thousand Kianene and put
them to rout with as many hundred thanes and knights. Returning to the
fortress, he forced the locals to build a small catapult, which he then used to
lob severed Kianene heads into the fortress one at a time. One hundred and
thirty-one heads later, the terrified garrison threw open the gates and
prostrated themselves in the dust. Each of them was asked: “Do you repudiate
Fane and accept Inri Sejenus as the true voice of the manifold God?” Those who
answered no were immediately beheaded. Those who answered yes were bound with
ropes and sent back to Hinnereth, where they were sold to the slavers who
followed the Holy War. Other strongholds
likewise fell, such was the general terror of the iron warriors. The old Nansur
fortresses of Ebara and Kurrut, the half-ruined Ceneian fortress of Gunsae, the
Kianene citadel of Am-Amidai, built when the populace had been still largely
Inrithi—all of them, like so many coins swept into the mailed fist of the Holy
War. Gedea would fall, it seemed, as quickly as the Inrithi could ride. At Hinnereth, meanwhile,
the Great Names had completed their preparations for a second assault, only to
be awakened by shouts of V1AKUH astonishment. Men tumbled
from their tents and pavilions. At first, most pointed to the great flotilla of
war galleys and carracks anchored in the bay, hundreds of them, bearing the
Black Sun pennants of Nansur. But soon, they all stared in disbelief at
Hinnereth. The great forward gates of the city had been thrown open. All along
the curtain walls, tiny figures pulled down the triangular banners of Ansacer,
the infamous Black Gazelle, and raised the Black Sun of the Nansur Empire. Some cheered. Others
howled. Bands of half-naked horsemen could be seen galloping toward the
towering gates, where they were halted by phalanxes of Nansur infantrymen. For
a moment swords flashed in the distance. But it was too late.
Hinnereth had fallen, not to the Holy War, but to Emperor Ikurei Xerius III. At first, Ikurei Conphas
ignored the summons of the Council, and the daunting task of placating Saubon
and Gothyelk fell to General Martemus. With the arrival of the Nansur fleet the
previous night, he brusquely explained, the Gedean Sapatishah had seen the
hopelessness of his position, and so sent Conphas the terms of his surrender.
Martemus even produced a letter, dark with the cursive script of the Kianene,
which he claimed was in Ansacer’s own hand. The Sapatishah, he asserted, was
deeply frightened of the fervour of the Inrithi, and would surrender only to
the Nansur. In matters of mercy, Martemus said, a known enemy was always more
preferable than an unknown. It had been the first instinct of the Exalt-General,
he continued, to summon all the Great Names and present this letter for their
appraisal, but Martemus himself had reminded the Exalt-General that the
proffered capitulation of one’s enemy was always a delicate thing, the result
perhaps of passing apprehension rather than real resolution. Accordingly, the
Exalt-General had decided to be decisive rather than democratic. When the Great Names
demanded to know why, if Conphas had truly acted in the interests of the Holy
War, Hinnereth still remained closed to them, Martemus merely shrugged and
informed them that those were the terms of the Sapatishah’s surrender. Ansacer
was a tender man, he said, and feared for the safety of his people. He had,
moreover, great respect for the discipline of the Nansur. Hinnereth 19/ In the end, only Saubon
refused to accept Martemus’s explanation. Hinnereth was his by right, he
bellowed, just spoils of his victory on the Battleplain. When Conphas finally
arrived the Galeoth Prince had to be physically restrained. Afterward, Gothyelk
and Proyas reminded him that Gedea was an empty and impoverished land. Let the
Emperor gloat over his first, hollow prize, they said. The Holy War would
continue its march south. And ancient Shigek, a land of legendary wealth,
awaited them. “Stay with me, Zin,”
Proyas called out. He’d dismissed the
council only moments earlier. Now standing, he watched his people mill and make
ready to leave. They filled the smoky interior of his pavilion, some pious,
others mercenary, almost all of them proud to a fault. Gaidekki and Ingiaban
continued to argue, as they always did, over things material and immaterial.
Most of the others began filing from the chamber: Ganyatti, Kushigas, Imrothas,
several high-ranking barons, and of course, Kellhus and Cnaьir. With the
exception of the Scylvendi, they bowed one by one before vanishing through the
blue silk curtains. Proyas acknowledged each with a curt nod. Soon Xinemus was left
standing alone. Slaves scurried through the surrounding gloom, gathering plates
and sticky wine bowls, straightening rugs, and repositioning the myriad
cushions. “Something troubles you,
my Prince?” the Marshal asked. “I just have several
questions…” “About?” Proyas hesitated. Why
should a prince shrink from speaking of any man? “About Kellhus,” he said. Xinemus raised his
eyebrows. “He troubles you?” Proyas hooked a hand
behind his neck, grimaced. “In all honesty, Zin, he’s the least troubling man
I’ve ever known.” “And that’s what troubles
you.” Many things troubled him,
not the least of which was the recent disaster at Hinnereth. They’d been
outmanoeuvred by Conphas and the Emperor. Never again. He had no time and little
patience for these… personal matters. “Tell me, what do you
make of him?” “He terrifies me,”
Xinemus said without an instant’s hesitation. Proyas frowned. “How so?” The Marshal’s eyes
unfocused, as though searching for some text written within. “I’ve spilled many
bowls with him,” he said hesitantly. “I’ve broken much bread, and I cannot
count the things he’s shown me. Somehow, some way, his presence makes me… makes
me better.” Proyas looked to the
ground, to the interleaved wings embroidered across the carpet at his feet. “He
has that effect.” He could feel Xinemus
study him in his cursed way: as though he saw past the fraudulent trappings of
manhood to that sunken-chested boy who’d never left the training ground. “He’s only a man, my
Prince. He says so himself… Besides, we’re past—” “How is Achamian?” Proyas
asked abruptly. The stocky Marshal
scowled. He buried two fingers between the plaits of his beard to scratch his
chin. “I thought his name was forbidden.” “I merely ask.” Xinemus nodded warily.
“Well. Very well, in fact. He’s taken a woman, an old love of his from Sumna.” “Yes… Esmenet is it? The
one who was a whore.” “She’s good for him,” Xinemus said
defensively. “I’ve never seen him so content, so happy.” “But you sound worried.” Xinemus narrowed his eyes
an instant, then sighed heavily. “I suppose I do,” he said, looking past
Proyas. “For as long as I’ve known him, he’s been a Mandate Schoolman. But now…
I don’t know.” He glanced up, matched his Prince’s gaze. “He’s almost stopped
speaking of the Consult and his Dreams altogether… You’d approve.” “So he’s in love,” Proyas
said, shaking his head. “Love!” he exclaimed incredulously. “Are you sure?” A
grin overpowered him. Xinemus fairly cackled.
“He’s in love, all right. He’s been stumbling after his pecker for weeks now.” Proyas laughed and looked
to the ground. “So he has one of those, does he?” Akka in love. It seemed both
impossible and strangely inevitable. Men like him need love… Men unlike me. “That he does. She seems
exceedingly fond of it.” Hinnereth Proyas snorted. “He is a sorcerer after all.” Xinemus’s eyes slackened for
an instant. “That he is.” There was a moment of awkward silence. Proyas sighed
heavily. Wi any man other than Xinemus, these questions would’ve come natural
without uncertainty or reservation. How could Xinemus, his beloved Zi be so
mulish about something so obvious to other men? “Does he still teach Kellhus?”
Proyas asked. “Every day.” The Marshal
smiled wanly, as though at his own foolis ness. “That’s what this is about,
isn’t it? You want to believe Kellhus more, but—” “He was right about
Saubon!” Proyas exclaimed. “Even in the detai Zin! The details!” “And yet,” Xinemus continued, frowning at the interruption, “
openly consorts with Achamian. With a sorcerer
…” Xinemus mockingly had
spoken the word as other men spoke it: lik< thing smeared in shit. Proyas turned to the
table, poured himself a bowl of wine. It had tast so sweet of late. “So what do you think?”
he asked. “I think Kellhus simply
sees what I see in Akka, and what you
once’s;… That a man’s soul can be good apart fro—” “The Tusk says,” Proyas
snapped, ‘“Burn them, for they are Unclea Burn them! How much more clarity can
there be? Kellhus consorts w: an abomination. As do you.” The Marshal was shaking
his head. “I can’t believe that.” Proyas fixed him with his
gaze. Why did he feel so cold? “Then you cannot believe
the Tusk.” The Marshal blanched, and
for the first time the Conriyan Prince’s fear on his old sword-trainer’s
face—fear! He wanted to apologize, unsay what he’d said, but the cold was so
unyielding… So true. I simply go by the Word! If one couldn’t trust the
God’s own voice, if one refused to lister even for sentiment’s sake!—then
everything became scepticism 3 scholarly disputation. Xinemus listened to his
heart, and this was at 01 his strength and his weakness. The heart recited no
scripture. MARCH “Well then,” the Marshal
said thinly. “You needn’t worry about Kellhus any more than you worry about
me…” Proyas narrowed his eyes and nodded. There was constraint,
there was direction, there was, most illuminating of all, a summoning together. Night had fallen, and
Kellhus sat alone upon a promontory, leaning against a solitary cedar. Drawn
eastward by years of wind, the cedar’s limbs swept across the starry heavens
and forked downward. They seemed moored as though by strings to the panorama
below: the encamped Holy War, Hinnereth behind her great belts of stone, and
the Meneanor, her distant rollers silvered by moonlight. But he saw none of this,
not with his eyes… The promises and threats
of what was came murmuring, and futures were discussed. There was a world, Earwa,
enslaved by history, custom, and animal hunger, a world driven by the hammers
of what came before. There was Achamian and
all he had uttered. The Apocalypse, the lineages of Emperors and Kings, the
Houses and Schools of the Great Factions, the panoply of warring nations. And
there was sorcery, the Gnosis, and the prospect of near limitless power. There was Esmenet and
slender thighs and piercing intellect. There was Sarcellus and
the Consult and a wary truce born of enigma and hesitation. There was Saubon and
torment pitched against lust for power. There was Cnaьir and
madness and martial genius and the growing threat of what he knew. There was the Holy War
and faith and hunger. And there was Father. What would you have me do? Possible worlds blew
through him, fanning and branching into a canopy of glimpses… Nameless Schoolmen
climbing a steep, gravelly beach. A nipple pinched between fingers. A gasping
climax. A severed head thrust against the burning sun. Apparitions marching out
of morning mist. Hinnereth A dead wife. Kellhus exhaled, then breathed
deep the bittersweet pinch of cedar, earth, and war. There was revelation. Ten Atsushan Highlands Love is lust made meaningful. Hope is
hunger made human. —AJENCIS, THE THIRD
ANALYTIC OF MEN How does one learn innocence? How does one
teach ignorance? For to be them is to know
them not. And
yet they are the immovable
point from which the compass of life swings, the measure of all crime and
compassion, the rule of all wisdom and folly. They are the Absolute. —ANONYMOUS, THE 1UPROMPTA Late Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk,
Qedean interior Peace had come. Achamian had dreamed of
war, more war than anyone save a Mandate Schoolman could dream. He’d even
witnessed war between nations—the Three Seas bred quarrels as readily as did
liquor. But he’d never belonged to one. He had never marched as he marched now,
sweating beneath the Gedean sun, surrounded by thousands of iron-armoured Men,
by the lowing of oxen and the tramping of countless sandalled feet. War, in the
smoke darkening the horizon, in the braying of horns, in the great carnival of
encampment after encampment, in the blackened stone and whitened dead. War, in
past nightmares and future apprehensions. Everywhere, war. Atsushan Highlands And somehow, peace had
come. There was Kellhus, of
course. Since resolving not to
inform the Mandate of his presence, Achamian’s anguish had receded, then fallen
away altogether. How this could be mystified him for the most part. The threat
remained. Kellhus was, Achamian would remind himself from time to time, the
Harbinger. Soon the sun would rise behind the No-God and cast his dread shadow
across the Three Seas. Soon the Second Apocalypse would wrack the world. But
when he thought of these things a queer elation warmed his horror, a drunken
exhilaration. Achamian had always been incredulous of stories of men breaking
ranks in battle to charge their foe. But now he thought he understood the
impulse behind that heedless rush. Consequences lost all purchase when they
became mad. And desperation, when pressed beyond anguish, became narcotic. He was the fool who
dashed alone into the spears of thousands. For Kellhus. Achamian still taught him
during the daylong march, though now both Esmenet and Serwe accompanied them,
sometimes chatting to each other, but mostly just listening. Surrounding them,
Men of the Tusk marched in their thousands, bent beneath their packs, sweating
in the bright Gedean sun. Somehow, impossibly, Kellhus had exhausted everything
Achamian knew of the Three Seas, so they talked of the Ancient North, of
Seswatha and his world of bronze, Sranc, and Nonmen. Soon, Achamian realized
from time to time, he would have nothing left to give Kellhus—save the Gnosis. Which he could not give,
of course. But he found it hard to resist wondering what Kellhus with his
godlike intellect would make of it. Thankfully, the Gnosis was a language for
which the Prince possessed no tongue. The marches tumbled to a
halt sometime between mid-afternoon and dusk, depending on the terrain and,
most important, the availability of water. Gedea was a dry land, the Atsushan
Highlands especially so. After the brisk routine of pitching camp, they
gathered about Xinemus’s fire, though Achamian often found himself eating alone
with Esmenet, Serwe, and Xinemus’s slaves. More and more, Xinemus, Cnaьir, and
Kellhus supped with Proyas, who, under the Scylvendi’s coarse tutelage, had become a man obsessed
with strategy and planning. But usually they all found themselves about the
fire for an hour or two before retiring to their pallets or mats. And here, as everywhere
else, Kellhus shone. One night, shortly after
the Holy War had left Hinnereth, they found themselves eating a contemplative
meal of rice and lamb, which Cnaьir had secured for them the previous day.
Commenting on the luxury of eating steaming meat, Esmenet asked the whereabouts
of their provider. “With Proyas,” Xinemus
said, “discussing war.” “What could they possibly
talk about all the time?” Caught mid-swallow,
Kellhus held out a hand. “I’ve heard them,” he said, his eyes wry and
bright. “Their conversations sound something like this…“ Esmenet was laughing
already. Everyone else leaned forward eagerly. In addition to mischievous wit,
Kellhus had an uncanny gift for voices. Serwe fairly chortled with excitement. Kellhus assumed an
imperious and warlike face. He spat between his feet, then in a voice that
raised goose pimples, so near was it to Cnaьir’s own, he said: “The People do
not ride like sissies. They place one testicle to the left of the saddle, one
testicle to the right, and they do not bounce, they are so heavy.” “I would,”
Kellhus-as-Proyas replied, “be spared your impudence, Scylvendi.” Xinemus coughed a
mouthful of wine. “That is because you do
not understand the ways of war,” Kellhus-as-Cnaьir continued. “They are hairy,
and they are dark, like the cracks of unwashed wrestlers. War is where the
sandal of the world meets the scrotum of men.” “I would be spared your
blasphemy, Scylvendi.” Kellhus spat into the
fire. “You think your ways are the ways of the People, but you are wrong. You
are silly girls to us, and we would make love to your asses were they as
muscular as those of our horses.” “I would be spared your affections, Scylvendi!” “But you would live on,”
Esmenet cried out, “in the scars I cut into my arm!” Atsushan Highlands The camp fairly shrieked
with laughter. Xinemus hung his head between his knees, shuddering and
snorting. Esmenet rolled backward on her mat, screaming in her enticing and
adorable way. Zenkappa and Dinchases leaned against each other, their shoulders
jerking. Serwe had curled into a ball, and seemed to weep with joy as much as
laugh. Kellhus merely smiled, looked about as though mystified by their
hysterics. When Cnaьir arrived later
that night everyone fell silent, at once abashed and conspiratorial. Scowling,
the Scylvendi paused before the fire, looked from face to grinning face.
Achamian glanced at Serwe, was shocked by the malice in her smile. Suddenly Esmenet burst
out laughing. “You should have heard Kellhus,” she cried. “You sounded
hilarious!” The Scylvendi’s weathered
face went blank. His murderous eyes became dull with… Could it be? Then
contempt regained the heights of his expression. He spat into the fire and
strode off. His spittle hissed. Kellhus stood, apparently
stricken with remorse. “The man’s a thin-skinned
lout,” Achamian said crossly. “Mockery is a gift between friends. A gift.” The Prince whirled. “Is
it?” he cried. “Or is it an excuse?” Achamian could only
stare, dumbstruck. Kellhus had rebuked him. Kellhus. Achamian looked to the others, saw his shock
mirrored in their faces, though not his dismay. “Is it?” Kellhus
demanded. Achamian felt his face
flush, his lips tremble. There was something about Kellhus’s voice. So like
Achamian’s father’s… Who’s he to- “Forgive me, Akka,” the
Prince said, lowering his head as though stunned by his own outburst. “I punish
you for my own folly… I act twice the fool.” Achamian swallowed. Shook
his head. Forced a smile. “No… No, I apologize…”
His voice quavered. “I was too harsh.” Kellhus smiled, leaned to
place a hand on his shoulder. At his touch, Achamian’s entire side went numb.
For some reason the Prince’s smell, leather with a hint of rosewater, always
flustered him. ~.-.^inn JCUUNU 1V1ARCH “Then we’re fools
together,” Kellhus said. There was delight, and the brief, uncanny sense that
Kellhus was expecting something… “I’ve been saying that
all along,” Xinemus growled from the far side of the fire. The Marshal’s timing was
impeccable—as usual. Esmenet led the charge of nervous laughter, and they
recaptured something of their earlier cheer. Achamian found himself laughing as
well. All of them, at some
point or another, inevitably ran afoul of one another’s humour. Xinemus would
complain of Iryssas, who would harp about Esmenet, who would gripe about Serwe,
who would carp about Achamian, who would gripe about Xinemus. Too dense, too
forward, too vain, too crude, and so on. All men were caste-merchants in some
respect, haggling and trading, but without scales or touchstones to confirm the
weight or purity of their coinage. They had only guesswork. Backbiting, petty
jealousies, resentments, arguments, and third-party arbitrations simply
belonged to the market of men. But with Kellhus, it was
different. Somehow he managed to browse the market without opening his purse.
Almost from the beginning they’d recognized him as the Judge—including Xinemus,
who was the titular head of their fire. No doubt there was an uncertainty about
him, a capriciousness appropriate to his brilliance, but these were simply
departures from a profound and immovable centre. Intelligence, as penetrating
as any in near or far antiquity. Compassion, as broad as Inrau’s and yet
somehow far deeper—a benevolence born of understand‘ ing rather than forgiveness, as though he could see
through the delinquent rush of thought and passion to the still point of
innocence within each soul. And words! Analogies that seized reality and burned
it from the inside out… He possessed, Achamian
sometimes thought, what the poet Protathis claimed all men should strive for:
the hand of Triamis, the intellect of Ajencis, and the heart of Sejenus. And others thought this
as well. Every evening, after the
dinner fires burned low, men and women from every nation, it seemed, began
gathering round the perimeter of Xinemus’s camp, sometimes calling out to
Kellhus, but mostly keeping to themselves. A few in the beginning, then more
and more, until they comprised a Atsushan Highlands congregation of three
dozen or so souls. Soon Xinemus’s Attrempans were leaving large swaths of empty
pasture between their round tents and their Marshal’s pavilion. They would be
supping with strangers otherwise. For the first week or so
everyone, including Kellhus, did their best to ignore them, thinking this would
shortly drive them away. Who, they wondered, would sit unacknowledged night
after night watching others— watching strangers—take their repose? But like
little brothers with no resources of their own, they persisted. Their numbers
even multiplied. On a whim, Achamian took
a seat among them one night, and watched as they watched, hoping to understand
what it was that drew them to so demean themselves. At first, he merely saw
familiar figures illumined by firelight against a greater dark. Cnaьir sitting
cross-legged, his back as broad as an Ainoni fan and strapped with scarred
muscle. Beyond him, on the far side of the fire, Xinemus upon his campstool,
hands on his knees, his square-cut beard brushing his chest as he laughed in
response to Esmenet, who knelt beside him, muttering something wicked about
somebody, no doubt. Dinchases. Zenkappa. Iryssas. Serwe leaning back on her
mat, bouncing her knees together, innocently exposing warm and promising
shadows. And next to her, Kellhus, sitting serene and golden. Achamian glanced at those
seated throughout the surrounding darkness. He saw Men of the Tusk from every
nation and caste. Some leaned together, talking amongst themselves. But most
sat as he did, apart from their fellows, eyes sorting through the bright
figures before them as though struggling to read by fading candlelight. They
seemed… ensor-celled, like fish drawn to a flashing lure. Compelled, not so
much by the light as by the surrounding dark. “Why do you do this?” he
asked the man sitting nearest to him, a blond Tydonni with a soldier’s forearms
and a caste-noble’s clear eyes. “Can’t you see?” the man
replied, without so much as glancing in his direction. “See what?” “See him.” “You mean Prince
Kellhus?” The man turned to him,
his smile at once beatific and filled with pity. “You’re too close,” he
said. “That’s why you can’t see.” “See what?” Achamian
asked. His breath felt pinched. HK SECOND MARCH “He touched me once,” the
man inexplicably replied. “Before Asgilioch. I stumbled while marching and he
caught me by the arm. He said, ‘Doff your sandals and shod the earth.’” Achamian chortled. “An
old joke,” he explained. “You must have cursed the ground when you stumbled.” “So?” the man replied. He
was fairly trembling, Achamian realized, with indignant fury. Achamian frowned, tried
to smile, to reassure. “Well, it’s an old saying—ancient, in fact—meant to
remind people not to foist their failings on others.” “No,” the man grated,
“it’s not.” Achamian paused. “Then what does it mean?” Rather than answer, the
man had turned away, as though wilfully consigning Achamian and his question to
the oblivion of what he couldn’t see. Achamian stared at him for a thick
moment, bewildered and curiously dismayed. How could fury secure the truth? He
stood, slapped dust from his knees. “It means,” the man said
from behind him, “that we must uproot the world. That we must destroy all that
offends.” Achamian started, such
was the hatred in the man’s voice. He turned— to sneer or to scold, he wasn’t
sure which. Instead he simply stared, dumbfounded. For whatever reason, the man
couldn’t match his gaze; he scowled at the firelight instead. Achamian glanced
from him to the other faces in the darkness. Most had turned to the sound of
angry voices, but even as he watched they drifted back to Kellhus in the light.
And somehow, the Schoolman simply knew these people wouldn’t go away. I’m no different, he thought, feeling the
perplexing twinge of insights into things already known. 1 simply sit closer to the fire… Their reasons were his reasons. He knew this. Their grounds were
inchoate and innumerable: grief, temptation, remorse, confusion. They watched
out of weariness, out of clandestine hope and fear, out of fascination and
delight. But more than anything, they watched out of necessity. They watched because they
knew something was about to happen. Without warning, the fire popped, belching
a geyser of sparks, one of which floated toward Kellhus. Smiling, he glanced at
Serwe, then Atsushan Highlands reached out and pinched
the point of orange light between thumb and forefinger. Extinguished it. Several gasped in the
darkness. As the days passed, more
and more watchers gathered. The situation became doubly uncomfortable, both
because their camp had become a peculiar stage, an enclosure of light surrounded
by shadowy watchers, and because of Kellhus’s seething humour. The Prince of
Atrithau had affected everyone who frequented Xinemus’s fire, each according to
their hopes and hurts, and to see the man who’d rewritten the ground of their
understanding angry was troubling in the way of loved
ones suddenly acting contrary to all expectations. One night, for reasons
peculiar to his own brooding humour, Xinemus finally blurted: “Dammit, Kellhus!
Why don’t you just talk to them?” Stunned silence. Esmenet
reached out, clutched Achamian’s hand in the shadows between them. Only the
Scylvendi continued eating, fingering gruel into his mouth. Achamian found
himself repulsed, as though he witnessed something lewd and animal. A man too
bent to the arch of his lust. “Because,” Kellhus said
tightly, his eyes riveted upon the fire, “they make more of me than I am.” Do they? Achamian thought. He knew the others asked
themselves the same question, even though they rarely spoke of Kellhus to one
another. For some reason, a peculiar shyness afflicted them whenever the
subject of Kellhus arose, as though they harboured suspicions too foolish or
too hurtful to reveal. Achamian could only really speak of him to Esmenet, and
even then… “So,” Xinemus snapped.
More than anyone, he seemed able to pretend that Kellhus was simply another
face about their fire. “Go tell them.” Kellhus stared at the
Marshal for several unblinking moments, then nodded. Without a word, he stood
and strode off into the darkness. And so began what Achamian
came to call “The Imprompta,” the nightly talks—almost sermons—Kellhus started
giving to the Men of the Tusk. Not always, but often, he and Esmenet would join
him, watch from nearby as he answered questions, discussed innumerable things.
He told the two of them that their presence gave him heart, that they reminded
him he was no more than those to whom he spoke. He confessed a growing conceit, a
thought that terrified because he found it easier and easier to bear. “So often when I speak,”
he said, “I don’t recognize my voice.” Achamian couldn’t remember ever
clutching Esmenet’s hand so fiercely. The numbers attending
began to swell, not so fast that Achamian could notice a difference between
consecutive nights, but fast enough that several dozen had become hundreds by
the time the Holy War neared Shigek. A handful of more devoted listeners would
assemble a small wooden platform, upon which they would lay a mat between two
iron braziers. Kellhus would sit cross-legged, poised and immobile between the
shining flames. Usually he would wear a plain yellow cassock—looted, Serwe had
told Achamian, from the Sapatishah’s camp on the Plains of Mengedda. And
somehow, whether by posture, bearing, or some trick of the light, he would look
unearthly. Even glorious. One evening, for reasons
he couldn’t fully articulate, Achamian followed Kellhus and Esmenet with a
candle, his writing accoutrements, and a sheaf of parchment. The previous night
Kellhus had spoken of trust and betrayal, telling the story of a fur trapper he’d
known in the wastes north of Atrithau, a man who’d remained faithful to his
dead wife by fostering a heartbreaking devotion to his dogs. “When one love
dies,” he’d said, “one must love another.” Esmenet had openly wept. It just
seemed that such words had to be written. With Esmenet,
Achamian unrolled their mat to the left of Kellhus’s platform. Torches had been
staked across the small field. The atmosphere was sociable, though hushed by
something more than respect and not quite reverence. Achamian glimpsed more
than a few familiar faces in the crowd. Several high-ranking caste-nobles were
present, including a square-jawed man wearing a Nansur general’s blue
cloak—General Sompas or Martemus, Achamian believed. Even Proyas sat in the
dust with the others, though he seemed troubled. He looked away instead of
acknowledging Achamian’s gaze. Kellhus took his place
between the potted fires. The resulting silence seemed to hiss. For several
moments he seemed unbearably real, like the sole living man,
something raw and tumid in a world of smoky apparitions. Atsushan Highlands He smiled, and Achamian’s
chest, which had tightened like parched leather, relaxed to the point of
feeling sodden. An unaccountable relief washed through him. Breathing deeply,
he readied his quill, cursed as the first errant droplet of ink tapped onto the
page. “Akka,” Esmenet chided. As always, Kellhus
searched the faces of those before him, his eyes glinting with compassion.
After a few heartbeats his gaze settled upon one man—a Conriyan knight by the
look of his tunic and the heft of his gold rings. Otherwise he looked haggard,
as though he still slept upon the Battleplain. His beard was knotted with
forgotten plaits. “What happened?” Kellhus
asked. The nameless knight
smiled, but there was a strange and subtle incon-gruence in his expression,
something like glimpsing the difference between white eyes and yellow teeth. “Three days ago,” the man
said, “our lord heard rumour of a village some miles to the west, so we rode
out, hoping for plunder…” Kellhus nodded. “And what
did you find?” “Nothing… I mean, no
village. Our lord was wroth. He claims the others—” “What did you find?” The man blinked. Panic
flashed from the stoic weariness of his expression. “A child,” he said
hoarsely. “A dead child… We were following this trail, something worn by
goatherds, I think, cutting across this hillside, and there was just this dead
child, a girl, no more than five or six, lying in our path. Her throat had been
cut…” “What happened next?” “Nothing… I mean, we
simply ignored her, continued riding as though she were nothing more than
discarded cloth… a-a scrap of leather in the dust,” he added, his voice
breaking. He looked down to his callused palms. “Guilt and shame wrack
you by day,” Kellhus said, “the feeling that you’ve committed some mortal
crime. Nightmares wrack you by night… She speaks to you.” The man’s nod was almost
comical in its desperation. He hadn’t, Achamian realized, the nerve for war. “But why?” he cried. “I
mean, how many dead have we seen?” The Second March “But not all seeing,”
Kellhus replied, “is witness.” “I don’t understand…” “Witness is the seeing
that testifies, that judges so that it may be
judged. You saw, and you judged. A trespass had been committed, an innocent had
been murdered. You saw this.” “Yes!” the man hissed. “A little girl. A little girl!” “And now you suffer.” “But why?” he cried. “Why
should I suffer? She’s not mine. She was heathen!” “Everywhere… Everywhere
we’re surrounded by the blessed and the cursed, the sacred and the profane. But
our hearts are like hands, they grow callous to the world. And yet, like our
hands even the most callous heart will blister if overworked or chafed by
something new. For some time we may feel the pinch, but we ignore it because we
have so much work to do.” Kellhus had looked down into his right hand. Suddenly
he balled it into a fist, raised it high. “And then one strike, with a hammer or a sword, and the blister breaks, our heart is torn. And then we suffer, for we feel the ache for the blessed,
the sting of the cursed. We no longer see, we witness …” His luminous eyes settled
upon the nameless knight. Blue and wise. “This is what has
happened to you.” “Yes… Yes! B-but what
should I do?” “Rejoice.” “Rejoice? But I suffer!” “Yes, rejoice! The callused hand cannot feel the lover’s cheek.
When we witness, we testify, and when we testify we make ourselves responsible for what we see. And that—that—is what it means to belong.” Kellhus suddenly stood,
leapt from the low platform, took two breathtaking steps into their midst.
“Make no mistake,” he continued, and the air thrummed with the resonance of his
voice. “This world owns you. You belong, whether you want to or not. Why do we suffer? Why do
the wretched take their own lives? Because the world, no matter how cursed, owns us. Because we belong. “Should we celebrate
suffering?” a challenging voice called. From somewhere… Prince Kellhus smiled,
glancing into the darkness. “Then it’s no longer suffering, is it?” Atsushan Highlands The small congregation
laughed. “No,” Kellhus continued,
“that’s not what I mean. Celebrate’t meaning of suffering. Rejoice that you belong, not that you sufi Remember what the Latter Prophet
teaches us: glory comes in joy a sorrow. Joy and sorrow…” “I’s-see see the wisdom of
you-your words, Prince,” the namel knight stammered. “I truly see! But…” And somehow, Achamian
could feel his question… What is there to gain? “I’m not asking you to
see,” Kellhus said. “I’m asking you to witnes Blank face. Desolate
eyes. The nameless knight blinked, and two te silvered his cheek. Then he
smiled, and nothing, it seemed, could be glorious. “To make myself…” His
voice quavered, broke. “To m-make…” “To be one with the world
in which you dwell,” Kellhus said. “To in a covenant of your life.” The world … You
will gain the world. Achamian looked down to
his parchment, realized he’d stop writing. He turned, looked helplessly at
Esmenet. “Don’t worry,” she said.
“I remember.” Of course she did. Esmenet. The second
pillar of his peace, and by far the mightie the two. It seemed at once strange
and fitting to find something almost coi gal in the midst of the Holy War. Each
evening they would v exhausted from Kellhus’s talks or from Xinemus’s fire,
holding hands young lovers, ruminating or bickering or laughing about the eveni
events. They would pick their way through the guy ropes, and Achan would pull
the canvas aside with mock gallantry. They would touch brush as they disrobed,
then hold each other in the dark—as the together they could be more than what
they were. A whore of word and a
whore of body. The greater world had
receded into shadow. He thought of Inrau and less over the days, and pondered
the concerns of his life i Esmenet—and Kellhus—more and more. Even the threat
of the Cor and the Second Apocalypse had become something banal and rerr IME OECOND MARCH like rumours of war among
pale-skinned peoples. Seswatha’s Dreams still came as fierce as ever, but they
dissolved in the softness of her touch, in the consolation of her voice. “Hush,
Akka,” she would say, “it’s only a dream,” and like smoke, the
images—straining, groaning, spitting, and shrieking—would twist into
nothingness. For once in his life, Achamian was seized by the moment, by now… By the small hurt in her eyes when he said something
careless. By the way her hand drifted to his knee of its own accord whenever
they sat together. By the nights they lay naked in the tent, her head upon his
chest and her dark hair fanned across his shoulder and neck, speaking of those
things only they knew. “Everyone knows,” she
said one night after making love. They’d retired early, and
they could hear the others: first mock protests and uproarious laughter, then
utter quiet bound by the magic of Kellhus’s voice. The fire still burned, and
they could see it, muted and blurred across the dark canvas. “He’s a prophet,” she
said. Achamian felt something
resembling panic. “What are you saying?” She turned to study him.
Her eyes seemed to glitter with their own light. “Only what you need to hear.” “And why would I need to
hear that?” What had she said? “Because you think it.
Because you fear it… But most of all, because you need it.” We are damned, her eyes said. “I’m not amused, Esmi.” She frowned, but as
though she’d noticed nothing more than a tear in one of her new Kianene silks.
“How long has it been since you’ve contacted Atyersus? Weeks? Months?” “What is it with—” “You’re waiting, Akka.
You’re waiting to see what he becomes.” “Kellhus?” She turned her face away,
lowered her ear to his heart. “He’s a prophet.” She knew him. When
Achamian thought back, it seemed that she’d always known him. He’d even thought
her a witch when they met for the first time, not only because of the
ever-so-faint Mark of the charmed whore’s shell that she used as a
contraceptive, but because Atsushan Highlands 21i> she guessed he was a
sorcerer before he uttered scarcely five words. From the very beginning, she
seemed to have a talent for him. For Drusas Achamian. It was strange, to be
known—truly known. To be awaited rather than anticipated. To be accepted
instead of believed. To be half another’s elaborate habits. To see oneself
continually foreshadowed in another’s eyes. And it was strange to
know. Sometimes she laughed so hard she belched. And when disappointed, her
eyes dimmed like candles starved of air. She liked the feel of knives between
her toes. She loved to hold her hand slack and motionless while his cock
hardened beneath. “I do nothing,” she would whisper, “and yet you rise to me.”
She was frightened of horses. She fondled her left armpit when deep in thought.
She did not hide her face when she cried. And she could say things of such
beauty that sometimes Achamian thought his heart might stop for having listened. Details. Simple enough in
isolation, but terrifying and mysterious in their sum. A mystery that he knew… Was that not love? To
know, to trust a mystery… Once, on the night of
Ishoiya, which Conriyans celebrated with copious amounts of that foul and
flammable liquor, perrapta, Achamian asked Kellhus to describe the way he loved
Serwe. Only he, Xinemus, and Kellhus remained awake. They were all drunk. “Not the way you love
Esmenet,” the Prince replied. “And how is that? How do
I love her?” He staggered to his feet, his arms askew. He swayed before the
smoke and fire. “Like a fish loves the ocean? Like, like…” “Like a drunk loves his
cask,” Xinemus chortled. “Like my dog loves your leg!“ Achamian granted him
that, but it was Kellhus’s answer he most wanted to hear. It was always
Kellhus’s answer. “So, my Prince? How do I love Esmenet?” Somehow a note of anger
had crept into his tone. Kellhus smiled, raised
his downcast eyes. Tears scored his cheek. “Like a child,” he said. The words knocked
Achamian from his feet. He crashed to his buttocks with a grunt. The Second March “Yes,” Xinemus agreed. He
looked forward into the night, smiling… Smiling for his friend, Achamian
realized. “Like a child?” Achamian
asked, feeling curiously childlike. “Yes,” Kellhus replied.
“You ask no questions, Akka. It simply is … Without reserve.” He turned to him with the look
Achamian knew so well, the look he so often yearned for when others occupied
Kellhus’s attention. The look of friend, father, student, and teacher. The look
his heart could see. “She’s become your
ground,” Kellhus said. “Yes…” Achamian replied. She’s become my wife. Such a thought! He beamed
with a childish glee. He felt wonderfully drunk. M;y wife! But later that same
night, he somehow found himself making love to Serwe. Afterward he would
scarcely remember, but he’d awakened on a reed mat by the remains of the fire.
He’d been dreaming of the white turrets of Myclai and rumours of Mog-Pharau.
Xinemus and Kellhus were gone, and the night sky seemed impossibly deep, the
way it had looked that night he and Esmenet had slept out of doors at the
ruined shrine. Like an endless pit. Serwe knelt above him, as flawless as ivory
in the firelight, at once smiling and crying. “What’s wrong?” he
gasped. But then he realized she’d hiked his robe to his waist, and was rolling
his cock against his belly. He was already hard—insanely so, it seemed. “Serwe …” he managed to protest, but with each roll of her
palm, bolts of rapture shuddered through him. He arched against the ground,
straining to press himself into her hand. For some reason, it seemed that all
he needed, all he’d ever needed, was to feel her fingers close about the head
of his member. “No,” he moaned, digging his heels into the turf, clawing
at the grass. What was happening? She released him, and he
gasped at the kiss of cool air. He could feel his own fiery pulse… Something. He needed to
say something! This couldn’t be happening! Atsusnan rngmanus ^n But she’d slipped free
her hasas, and he trembled at the sight of her. So lithe. So smooth. White in
shadow, burnished gold in firelight. Her peach hazed with tender blond. She no
longer touched him, yet her beauty flailed at him, wrenched at his groin. He
swallowed, struggled to breathe. Then she straddled him. He glimpsed the
porcelain sway of her breasts, the hairless curve of her belly. Is she with— She encompassed him. He
cried out, cursed. “It is you!” she hissed,
sobbing, staring desperately into his eyes. “I can see you. I can see!“ He turned his head aside
in delirium, afraid he would climax too soon. This was Serwe… Sweet Sejenus,
this was Seru>e! Then he saw Esmenet,
standing desolate in the dark. Watching… He closed his eyes, grimaced, and
climaxed. “Guh… g-guh…” “I can feel you!” Serwe cried. When he opened his eyes
Esmenet was gone—if she had ever been. Serwe continued to grind against him.
The whole world had become a slurry of heat and wetness and thundering aching
thrusting beauty. He surrendered to her abandon. Somehow he awoke before
the horns and sat for a time at the entrance to his tent, watching Esmenet
sleep, feeling the pinch of dried seed on his thighs. When she awoke, he
searched her eyes, but saw nothing. Through the hard, long march of the
following day, she chastised him for drinking and nothing more. Serwe didn’t so
much as look at him. By the following evening he’d convinced himself it had
been a dream. A delicious dream. The perrapta. There could be no other
explanation. Fucking fish
liquor, he
thought, and tried to feel ruefully amused. When he told Esmenet, she laughed
and threatened to tell Kellhus. Afterward, alone, he actually wept in relief.
Never, he realized, not even the night following the madness with the Emperor
beneath the Andiamine Heights, had he felt a greater sense of doom. And he knew
he belonged to Esmi—not the world. She was his covenant.
Esmenet was his wife. The Holy War crept ever
closer to Shigek, and still he ignored the Mandate. There were excuses he could
assemble. He could ponder the Z18 Ihe Second March impossibility of making
discreet inquiries, bribes, or dissembling suggestions in an encampment of
armed fanatics. He could remind himself of what his School had done to Inrau.
But ultimately they meant nothing. He would rush the enemy
ranks. He would see his heresy through. To the end, no matter what horrors it
might hold. For the first time in a long and wandering life, Drusas Achamian
had found happiness. And peace had come. The day’s march had been
particularly trying, and Serwe sat by the fire, rubbing her toes while staring
across the flames at her love, Kellhus. If only it could always be like this… Four days previous Proyas
had sent the Scylvendi south with several hundred knights—to learn the ways
into Shigek, Kellhus had said. Four days without chancing upon his famished
glare. Four days without cringing in his iron shadow as he escorted her to
their pavilion. Four days without his dread savagery. And each of them spent
praying and praying, Let him
be killed! But this was the one
prayer Kellhus wouldn’t answer. She stared and wondered
and loved. His long blond hair flashed golden in the firelight; his bearded
features radiated good humour and understanding. He nodded as Achamian spoke to
him about something— sorcery perhaps. She paid scant attention to the
Schoolman’s words. She was too busy listening to Kellhus’s face. Never had she seen such
beauty. There was something inexplicable, something godlike and surreal, about
his appearance, as though a breathtaking elegance, an impossible grace, laid
hidden within his expressions, something that might flare at any moment and
blind her with revelation. A face that made each moment, each heartbeat… A gift. She placed a hand on the
gentle swell of her belly, and for an instant, she thought she could feel the
second heart within her—no larger than a sparrow’s—drumming through moment after
thickening moment. His child… His. So much had changed! She
was wise, far more so, she knew, than a girl of twenty summers should be. The
world had chastened her, had shown Atsushan Highlands her the impotence of
outrage. First the Gaunum sons and their cruel lusts. Then Panteruth and his
unspeakable brutalities. Then Cnaiur and his iron-willed madness. What could
the outrage of a soft-skinned concubine mean to a man such as him? Just one
more thing to be broken. She knew the futility, that the animal within would
grovel, shriek, would place soothing lips around any man’s cock for a moment of
mercy—that it would do anything, sate any hunger, to survive. She’d been
enlightened. Submission. Truth lay in submission. “You’ve surrendered,
Serwe,” Kellhus had told her. “And by surrendering, you have conquered me!” The days of nothing had
passed. The world, Kellhus said, had prepared her for him. She, Serwe hil Keyalti, was to be his sacred
consort. She would bear the sons of the Warrior-Prophet. What indignity, what
suffering, could compare with this? Certainly, she wept when the Scylvendi
struck her, clenched her teeth in fury and gagging shame when he used her. But
afterward she knew, and Kellhus had taught her that
knowing was exalted above all
other things. Cnaiur
was a totem of the old dark world, the ancient outrage made flesh. For every
god, Kellhus had told her, there was a demon. For every God… The priests, both those
of her father and those of the Gaunum, had claimed the Gods moved the souls of
men. But Serwe knew the Gods also moved as men. So often, watching Esmenet, Achamian, Xinemus,
and the others about the fire, she would be amazed that they couldn’t see,
though sometimes she suspected that, in their heart of hearts, they knew and
yet were stubborn. But then, unlike her,
they didn’t couple with a god—and his guises. They hadn’t been taught how to
forgive, how to submit, as she’d been taught, though they learned slowly. She
often glimpsed the small, sometimes lonely ways in which he instructed them. And
it was a wondrous thing, to watch a god instruct others. Even now, he
instructed them. “No,” Achamian was
asserting. “We sorcerers are distinguished by our ability, you caste-nobles by
your blood. What does it matter whether other men recognize us as such? We are
what we are.” With smiling eyes, Kellhus said, “Are you sure?” The Second March Serwe had seen this many
times. The words would be simple, but the way would wrench at their hearts. “What do you mean,”
Achamian said blankly. Kellhus shrugged. “What
if I were to tell you that I’m like you.” Xinemus’s eyes flashed to
Achamian, who laughed nervously. “Like me?” the Schoolman
asked. He licked his lips. “How so?” “I can see the Mark,
Akka… I can see the bruise of your damnation.” “You jest,” Achamian snapped,
but his voice was strange… Kellhus had turned to
Xinemus. “Do you see? A moment ago, I was no different from you. The
distinction between us didn’t exist until just—” “It still doesn’t exist,”
Achamian blurted, his voice rising. “I would have you prove this!” Kellhus studied the man,
his look careful and troubled. “How does one prove what one sees?” Xinemus, who seemed
unperturbed, chuckled. “What is it, Akka? There’s many who see your blasphemy,
but choose not to speak it. Think of the College of Luthymae…” But Achamian had jumped
to his feet, his expression bewildered, even panicked. “It’s just that… that…” Serwe’s thoughts leapt.
He knows, my love! Achamian
knows what you are! She flushed at the memory
of the sorcerer between her legs, but then reminded herself that it wasn’t Achamian whom she remembered, it was Kellhus… “You must know me Serwe,
in all nry guises.” “There is a way to prove this!” the Schoolman exclaimed. He
fixed them with a ludicrous stare, then without warning hurried off into the
darkness. Xinemus had begun
muttering some joke, but just then Esmenet sat next to Serwe, smiling and
frowning. “Has Kellhus worked him
into a frenzy again?” she asked, handing Serwe a steaming bowl of spiced tea. “Again,” Serwe said, and
grasped the proffered bowl. She tipped a glittering drop to the earth before
drinking. It tasted warm, coiled in her stomach like sun-hot silk. “Mmmm… Thank
you, Esmi.” Atsushan Highlands Esmenet nodded, turned to
Kellhus and Xinemus. The previous night, Serwe had cut Esmenet’s black hair
short—man short—so that now she resembled a beautiful boy. Almost as beautiful as me, Serwe thought. She’d never known a woman
like Esmenet before: bold, with a tongue as wicked as any man’s. She frightened
Serwe sometimes, with her ability to match the men word for word, joke for
joke. Only Kellhus could best her. But she had always been considerate. Serwe
had asked her once why she was so kind, and Esmenet had replied that the only
peace she’d found as a harlot had been caring for those more vulnerable than
her. When Serwe insisted she was neither a whore nor vulnerable, Esmenet had
smiled sadly, saying, “We’re all whores, Serchaa…” And Serwe had believed
her. How couldn’t she? It sounded so much like something Kellhus might say. Esmenet turned to look at
her. “Was the day’s march hard on you, Serchaa?” She smiled the way Serwe’s
aunt had once smiled, with warmth and concern. But then her expression suddenly
darkened, as though she’d glimpsed something disagreeable in Serwe’s face. Her eyes
became hooded. “Esmi?” Serwe said. “Is
something wrong?” Esmenet’s look became
faraway. When it returned, her handsome face wrinkled into another smile—more
sad, but just as genuine. Serwe looked nervously to
her hands, suddenly terrified that Esmenet somehow knew. In her soul’s eye, she glimpsed the Scylvendi
toiling above her in the dark. But
it wasn’t him! “The hills,” she said
quickly. “The hills are so hard… Kellhus says he’ll get me a mule.” Esmenet nodded. “Make
sure he…” She paused, frowned at the darkness. “What’s he up to now?” Achamian had returned
from the darkness, bearing a small doll about as long as a forearm. He sat the
doll down on the earth, with its back resting against the bonelike stone he’d
been using as a seat moments earlier. With the exception of the head, it was
carved from dark wood, with jointed limbs, a small rusty knife for a right
hand, and engraved with rows of tiny text. The head, however, was a silken
sack, shapeless, and no larger than a poor man’s purse. Staring at it, it
suddenly seemed V1AKUH a dreadful thing to
Serwe. The firelight gleamed across its polished surfaces and gave the illusion
that the words had been carved inches deep. The small shadow that framed it was
black as pitch against the stone and shifted uneasily with the twining glitter
of the flames. It looked like a little dead man propped before a towering fire. “Does Achamian scare you,
Serchaa?” Esmenet asked. Something wicked and mischievous glinted in her eyes. Serwe thought about that
night at the ruined shrine, when he’d sent light to the stars. She shook her
head. “No,” she replied. He was too sad to frighten. “He will after this,”
Esmenet said. “He leaves for proof,”
Xinemus jeered, “and he returns with a toy!” “This is no ‘toy,’”
Achamian muttered, annoyed. “He’s right,” Kellhus
said seriously. “It is some kind of sorcerous artifact. I can see the Mark.” Achamian looked at
Kellhus sharply, but said nothing. The fire crackled and hissed. He finished
adjusting the doll, took two steps back. Suddenly, framed by the darkness and
the shining fires of the greater encampment, he seemed less a weary scholar and
more a Mandate Schoolman. Serwe shivered. “This is called a ‘Wathi
Doll,’” he explained, “something I… I purchased from a Sansori witch a couple
of years ago… There’s a soul trapped in this doll.” Xinemus coughed wine
through his nose. “Akka,” he rasped, “I won’t tolerate—” “Humour me, Zin! Please…
Kellhus says he’s one of the Few. This is the one way for him to prove it
without damning himself—or you, Zin. Apparently for me, it’s already too late.” “What should I do?”
Kellhus asked. Achamian knelt and
fetched a twig from the ground at his feet. “I’ll simply scratch two words into
the earth, and you’ll speak them, aloud. You won’t be uttering a Cant, so you
won’t be marked by the blood-of-the-onta. No one will look at you and know you
for a sorcerer. And you’ll still be pure enough to handle Trinkets without
discomfort. You’ll just be uttering the artifacts cipher… The doll will awaken
only if you truly are one of the Few.” Atsushan Highlands “Why’s it bad that anyone
recognize Kellhus as a sorcerer?” Bloody Dinch asked. “Because he’d be damned!” Xinemus nearly shouted. “That,” Achamian
acknowledged, “and he’d quickly be dead. He’d be a sorcerer without a school, a
wizard, and the Schools don’t brook
wizards.” Achamian turned to
Esmenet; they exchanged a quick, worried look. Then he walked over to Kellhus.
Serwe could tell that a large part of him already regretted this spectacle. With the twig, Achamian
deftly scratched a line of signs in the earth before Kellhus’s sandalled feet.
Serwe assumed that they were two words, but she couldn’t read. “I’ve written
them in Kunitiric,” he said, “to spare the others any indignity.” He stepped
back, nodded slowly. Despite the brown of innumerable days spent in the sun, he
looked grey. “Speak them,” he instructed. Kellhus, his bearded face
solemn, studied the words for a moment, then in a clear voice said, “Skuni ari’sitvua…” All eyes scrutinized the
doll lying slack against the stone in the firelight. Serwe held her breath.
She’d expected that perhaps the limbs might twitch and then drawl into drunken
life, as though the doll were a puppet, something that might prance on the end
of invisible strings. But that didn’t happen. The first thing to move, rather,
was the stained, silk head—but it didn’t loll with lazy life, or even slowly
nod; instead, something moved from within.
Serwe gasped in horror, realizing that a tiny face—nose, lips, brow, and eye sockets—now strained against
the fabric… It was as though a
narcotic haze had settled upon them, the torpor of bearing witness to the
impossible. Serwe’s heart hammered. Her thoughts wheeled… But she couldn’t look
away. A human face, small enough to palm, pressed against the silk. She could
see tiny lips part in a soundless howl. And then the limbs moved—suddenly,
deftly, with none of the swaying stagger of a puppet. Whatever moved those
limbs moved them from within, with the compact elegance of a body assured of
its extremities. And with half-panicked thoughts, Serwe understood that it was
a soul, a self-moving soul… In a single, languorous
motion, it leaned The Second March forward, braced its arms
against the earth, bent its knees, then came to its feet, casting a slender
shadow across the earth, the shadow of man with a sack bound about his head. “B;y all that’s holy …” Bloody Dinch hissed in a breathless voice. The wooden man turned its
eyeless face from side to side, studied the dumbstruck giants. It raised the small,
rusty blade it possessed in lieu of a right hand. The fire popped, and it
jumped and whirled. A smoking coal bounced to a stop at its feet. Looking down,
it knelt with the blade, flicked the coal back into the fire. Achamian muttered
something unspeakable, and it collapsed in a jumble of splayed limbs. He looked
blankly at Kellhus, and in a voice as ashen as his expression, said, “So you’re
one of the Few…” Horror, Serwe thought. He
was horrified. But why? Couldn’t he see? Without warning, Xinemus
leapt to his feet. Before Achamian could even glance at him, the Marshal had
seized his arm, yanked him violently about. “Why do you do this?”
Xinemus cried, his face both pained and enraged. “You know that it’s difficult enough for me to… to… You know! And now displays such as this? Blasphemy?” Stunned, Achamian looked
at his friend aghast. “But Zin,” he cried. “This is what I am.” “Perhaps Proyas was
right,” he snapped. With a growl he thrust Achamian away, then paced off into
the darkness. Esmenet leapt from her place by Serwe and grasped one of
Achamian’s slack hands. But the sorcerer stared off into the blackness that had
encompassed the Marshal of Attrempus. Serwe could hear Esmenet’s insistent
whisper: “It’s okay, Akkal
Kellhus will speak to him. Show him his folly…” But Achamian, his face turned from those watching
about the fire, pushed at her feebly. Still bewildered, her
skin still tingling in dread, Serwe looked to Kellhus beseechingly: Please… you must make this better! Xinemus must forgive Achamian
this. They must all learn to forgive! Serwe didn’t know when
she’d begun speaking to him with her face, but she did it so often now that
many times she couldn’t sort what she’d told him from what she’d shown him.
This was part of the infinite peace between them. Nothing was hidden. Atsushan Highlands And for some reason, his
look reminded her of something he’d once said: “I must reveal myself to themslowly Serwe, slowly.
Otherwise they’ll turn against me …” Late that night, Serwe
was awakened by voices—angry voices, just outside their tent. Reflexively she
grasped for her belly. Her innards churned with fright. Dear Gods… Mercy! Please, mercy! The Scylvendi had
returned. As she knew he would.
Nothing could kill Cnaьir urs Skiotha, not so long as Serwe remained alive. Not again… please-please… She could see nothing,
but the menace of his presence already clutched at her, as though he were a
wraith, something feral and malevolent bent upon consuming her, scraping out
her heart the way Cepaloran women scrape pelts clean with sharpened oyster
shells. She began to cry, softly, secretly, so he wouldn’t hear… Any moment,
she knew, he would thrash into the tent, fill it with the stink of a man who’d
just shed his hauberk, grip her about the throat and… Pleaasse! 1 know I’m supposed to be a good
girl—I’ll be a good girl! Please! She heard his harsh
voice, low so as not to be overheard, but fierce nonetheless. “I tire of this,
Dunyain.” “Nuta’tharo hirmuta,” Kellhus replied with an impassiveness that unnerved
her—until she realized: He’s cold
because he hates him… Hates him as I do! “I will not!” the
Scylvendi spat. “Sta puth yura’gring?” “Because you ask me too!
I tire hearing you defile my tongue. I tire of being mocked. I tire of these
fools you ply. I tire of watching you defile my prize! M)> prize!” A moment of silence. Buzzing ears. “Both of us,” Kellhus
said in taut Sheyic, “have secured places of honour. Both of us have gained the
ears of the great. What more could you want?” “I want only one thing.” lib The Second March Atsushan Highlands “And together, we walk
the shortest path to—” Kellhus abruptly halted.
A hard moment passed between them. “You intend to leave,”
Kellhus said. Laughter, like a wolf’s
growl broken into fragments. “There is no need to
share the same yaksh.” Serwe gasped for air. The
scar on her arm, the swazond the plainsman had given beneath the Hethanta
Mountains, flared in sudden pain. No-no-no-no-no … “Proyas…” Kellhus said,
his voice still blank. “You intend to camp with Proyas.” Please God noooo! “I have come for my
things,” Cnaьir said. “I have come for my prize.” Never in all her violent
life had Serwe felt herself pitched upon such a precipice. The breath was
choked from her mid-sob, and she became very still. The silence shrieked. Three
heartbeats it took Kellhus to answer, and for three heartbeats her very life
hung as though from a gibbet between the voices of men. She would die for him,
she knew, and she would die without him. It seemed she’d always known this,
from the first clumsy days of her childhood. She almost gagged for fear. And then Kellhus said:
“No. Serwe stays with me.” Numb relief. Warm tears.
The hard earth beneath her had become as fluid as the sea. Serwe very nearly
swooned. And a voice that wasn’t hers spoke through her anguish and her rapture
and said: Merc}1… At lastmercy … She heard nothing of
their ensuing argument; succour and joy possessed their own thunder. But they
didn’t speak long, not with her weeping aloud. When Kellhus returned to his
place beside her, she threw herself upon him, showered him with desperate
kisses and held his strong body so tight she could scarcely breathe. And at
last, when the great weariness of the unburdened overwhelmed her and she lay
spinning on the threshold of sweet, childlike sleep, she could feel callused
yet gentle fingers slowly caressing her cheek. A God touched her.
Watched over her with divine love. Its back to canvas, the
thing called Sarcellus crouched, as still as stone. The musk of the Scylvendi’s
fury permeated the night air, sweet and sharp, heady with the promise of blood.
The sound of the woman weeping tugged at its groin. She might have been worth
its fancy, were it not for the smell of her fetus, which sickened… What passed for thought
bolted through what passed for its soul. Shigek HApTER E Shigek If all human events possess purpose, then
all human deeds possess purpose. And yet when men vie with men, the purpose of
no man comes to fruition: the result always falls somewhere in between. The
purpose of deeds, then, cannot derive from the purposes of men, because all men
vie with all men. This means the deeds of men must be willed by something other
than men. From this it follows that we are all slaves. Who then is our Master? —MEMGOWA, THE BOOK OF DIVINE ACTS What is practicality but one moment
betrayed for the next? —TRIAMIS I, JOURNALS AND DIALOGUES Late Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tu.sk,
southern Qedea Gedea didn’t so much end
as vanish. After dozens of skirmishes and petty sieges, Coithus Athjeari and
his knights raced south across the vast sandstone plateau of the Gedean
interior. They followed ravines and ridge lines, always climbing. By day they
hunted antelope for food and jackals for sport. At night they could smell the
Great Desert on the wind. The grasses faltered, gave way to dust, gravel, and
pungent-smelling scrub. After riding three full days without seeing so much as
a goatherd, they finally sighted smoke on
the southern horizon. They hastened up the slopes, only to rein their
caparisoned mounts to a sudden and panicked halt. The ground plummeted a
thousand feet or more. To either side great escarpments ramped into the hazy
distances. Before them the long waters of the River Sempis snaked across a
plain of verdant green, its back flashing opposite the sun. Shigek. The ancient Kyraneans had
called her “Chemerat,” the “Red Land,” because of the copper-coloured silt the
seasonal floods deposited across the plains. In far antiquity, she ruled an
empire that extended from Sumna to Shimeh, and her God-Kings produced works
unrivalled to this day, including the legendary Ziggurats. In near antiquity
she was famed for the subtlety of her priests, the elegance of her perfumes,
and the effectiveness of her poisons. For the Men of the Tusk, she was a land
of curses, crypts, and uneasy ruins. A place where the past
became dread, it ran so deep. Athjeari and his knights
descended the escarpments and wondered that sterile desert could so quickly
become lush fields and heavy trees. Wary of ambush, they followed the ancient
dikes, rode through one abandoned village then another. Finally they found one
old man without fear, and with some difficulty determined that Skauras and all
the Kianene had abandoned the North Bank. Hence the smoke they had seen from
the escarpment. The Sapatishah was burning every boat he could find. The young Earl of Gaenri
sent word to the Great Names. Two weeks later the first
columns of the Holy War marched unopposed into the Sempis Valley. Bands of
Inrithi spread across the floodplain, securing stores, occupying the villas and
strongholds abandoned by the Kianene. There was little bloodshed—at first. Along the river, the Men
of the Tusk saw sacred ibis and heron wading among the reeds and great flocks
of egret wheeling over the black waters. Some even glimpsed crocodiles and
hippopotamuses, beasts which, they would learn, the Shigeki revered as holy.
Away from the river, where small stands of various trees—eucalyptus and
sycamore, date palm and fan palm—perpetually screened the distances, they were
often surprised by ruined foundations, by pillars and walls bearing engravings
of nameless LJV1HE SECOND MARCH kings and their forgotten
conquests. Some of the ruins were truly colossal, the remains of palace or
temple complexes once as great, it seemed to them, as the Andiamine Heights in
Momemn or the Junrьima in Holy Sumna. Many of them wandered for a time,
pondering things that may or may not have happened. When they passed
villages, walking along earthen banks meant to capture floodwaters for the
fields, the inhabitants gathered to watch them, shushing children and holding
tight barking dogs. In the centuries following the Kianene conquest the Shigeki
had become devout Fanim, but they were an old race, tenants who had always
outlived their landlords. They could no longer recognize themselves in the
warlike images that glared from the broken walls. So beer, wine, and water were
given to slake the invader’s thirst. Onions, dates, and fresh’baked breads were
furnished to sate his hunger. And, sometimes, daughters were offered to comfort
his lust. Incredulous, the Men of the Tusk shook their heads and exclaimed that
this was a land of marvels. And some were reminded of their first youthful
visit to their father’s ancestral home, of that strange sense of returning to a place where they had never been. Shigek was oft named in The Tractate, the rumour of a distant tyrant, already ancient in
those ancient days. As a result, some among the Inrithi found themselves
troubled because the words seemed to overshoot the place. They urinated in the
river, defecated in the trees, and slapped at the mosquitoes. The ground was
old, melancholy, more fertile perhaps, but it was ground like any other ground.
Most, however, found themselves struck by awe. No matter how sacred the text,
the words merely dangled when the lands remained unseen. Each in their own way,
they realized that pilgrimage was the work of stitching the world to scripture.
They had taken their first true step. And Holy Shimeh seemed so
close. Then Cerjulla, the
Tydonni Earl of Warnute, encountered the walled town of Chiama. Fearing
starvation because of a blight the previous year, the town elders demanded
guarantees before throwing open their gates. Rather than negotiate, Cerjulla
simply ordered his men to storm the walls, which were easily overcome. Once
within, the Warnutishmen butchered everyone. Shigek Li Two days afterward, there
was another massacre at Jirux, the great river fortress opposite the South Bank
city of Ammegnotis. Apparently the Shigeki garrison left there by Skauras had
mutinied and murdered all their Kianene officers. When Uranyanka, the famed
Ainoni Palatine of Moserothu, arrived with his knights, the mutineers threw
open the gates only to be herded together and executed en masse. Heathens,
Uranyanka would later tell Chepheramunni, he could tolerate, but treacherous
heathens he could not forbear. The following morning,
Gaidekki, the tempestuous Palatine of Anplei, ordered the assault of a town
called Huterat, not too far from the Old Dynasty city of Iothiah, presumably
because his interpreter, a notorious drunkard, had mistranslated the town’s
terms of surrender. Once the gates were taken, his Conriyans ran amok through
the streets, raping and murdering without discrimination. Then, as though murder
possessed its own unholy momentum, the Holy War’s occupation of the North Bank
degenerated into wanton carnage, though for what reason, no one knew. Perhaps
it was the rumours of poisoned dates and pomegranates. Perhaps bloodshed simply
begat bloodshed. Perhaps faith’s certainty was as terrifying as it was
beautiful. What could be more true than destroying the false? Word of the Inrithi
atrocities spread among the Shigeki. Before the altar and in the streets the
Priests of Fane claimed that the Solitary God punished them for welcoming the
idolaters. The Shigeki began barricading themselves in their great, domed
tabernacles. With their wives and children they gathered wailing on the soft
carpets, crying out their sins, begging for forgiveness. The thunder of rams at
the doors would be their only answer. Then the rush of iron-eyed swordsmen. Every tabernacle across
the North Bank witnessed some kind of massacre. The Men of the Tusk hacked the
screaming penitents into silence, then they kicked over the tripods, smashed
the marmoreal altars, tore the tapestries from the walls and the grand kneeling
rugs from the floors. Anything carrying the taint of Fanimry they heaved into
colossal bonfires. Sometimes, beneath the rugs, they found the breathtaking
mosaics of the Inrithi who had originally raised the temple, and the structure
would be spared. Otherwise the great Fanim tabernacles of Shigek were burned.
Beneath monstrous towers of smoke, dogs nosed the
heaped dead and licked blood from the broad steps. In Iothiah, which had
thrown open her gates in terror, hundreds of Kerathotics, an Inrithi sect that
had managed to survive centuries of Fanim oppression, saved themselves by
singing the ancient hymns of the Thousand Temples. Men who had wailed in terror
suddenly found themselves embracing the long lost brothers of their faith. That
night the Kerathotics took to the streets, kicking down doors, murdering old
competitors, unscrupulous tax-farmers, anyone they had begrudged under the
Sapatishah’s regime. Their grudges were many. In red-walled Nagogris,
the Men of the Tusk actually began slaughtering one another. Almost as soon as
the Holy War had arrived in Shigek, the Shigeki potentates remaining in the
city sent emissaries to Ikurei Conphas, offering to surrender to the Emperor in
exchange for Imperial protection. Conphas promptly dispatched General
Numemarius and a cohort of Kidruhil. Through some unexplained blunder, however,
the gates were relinquished to a large force of Thunyeri, fierce Ingraulish and
Skagwamen for the most part, who promptly began plundering the city. The
Kidruhil attempted to intervene, and pitched battles broke out in the streets.
When General Numemarius met with Yalgrota Sranchammer under flag of truce, the
giant brained him. Disorganized by the death of their general and unnerved by
the ferocity of the blond-bearded warriors, the Kidruhil withdrew from the
city. But none suffered more
horribly than the Fanic priests. At night, around fires of heathen reliquary,
the Inrithi used them for drunken sport, slicing open their bellies, leading
them like mules by their own entrails. Some were blinded, some strangled, some
were forced to watch their wives and daughters raped. Others were flayed alive.
A great many were burned as witches. Scarcely a village could be found without
the mutilated corpse of some Fanic priest or functionary nailed to the vaulting
limbs of a eucalyptus tree. Two weeks passed, then
suddenly, as though some precise measure had been exacted, the madness lifted.
In the end, only a fraction of the Shigeki population had been killed, but no
traveller could pass more than an hour without crossing paths with the dead.
Instead of the humble boats of fishermen and traders, bloated corpses bobbed Shigek down the defiled waters
of the Sempis and fanned out across the Meneanor Sea. At long last, Shigek had
been cleansed. From the summit the
ziggurat seemed far steeper than it had from the ground below. But then so did
most things—after the fact. Cresting the last of the
treacherous steps, Kellhus turned to the surrounding vista. To the north and
west, all was cultivation. He saw diked fields, lines of sycamore and ash, and
villages that looked like mounds of shattered pottery in the distance. Several
smaller ziggurats reared in the near distance, staunch and stolid, anchoring a
network of channels and embankments that reached out to the hazy Gedean
escarpments. To the south, past the shoulders of the ziggurat Achamian had
called Palpothis, he saw stands of marsh gingkos standing like bent sentinels
amid thickets of sandbar willows. The mighty Sempis glittered in the sunlight
beyond. And to the east he saw lines of red through green—raised footpaths and
ancient roadways—passing beneath shadowy copses and between sunny fields, all
converging on Iothiah, which darkened the horizon with her walls and smoke. Shigek. Yet another
ancient land. So old and so vast, Father… Did you see it
thus? He glanced down the stair
that formed a causeway across the ziggurat’s mammoth back, saw Achamian still
labouring up the steps. Sweat darkened the armpits and collar of his white
linen tunic. “I thought you said the
ancients believed their gods lived atop these things,” Kellhus called down.
“Why do you tarry?” Achamian paused, scowled
up at the remaining distance. Gasping for breath, he struggled to smile through
his grimace. “Because the ancients believed their gods lived atop these
things…” Kellhus grinned, then
turned to study the wrecked summit. The ancient godhouse lay in shambles:
ruined walls and spilled blocks. He inspected sundered engravings and
indecipherable pictograms. The remains of gods, he imagined, and their earthly
invocations. Faith. Faith had raised
this black-stepped mountain—the beliefs of long dead men. So much, Father, and all in the name of
delusion. It scarcely seemed
possible. And yet the Holy War wasn’t so different. In some ways it was a far
greater, if more ephemeral, work. In the months since
arriving at Momemn, Kellhus had laid the foundation of his own ziggurat,
insinuating himself into the confidence of the mighty, instilling the suspicion
that he was more—far more—than the prince he claimed to be. With the reluctance
proper to wisdom and humility, he’d finally assumed the role others had thrust
upon him. Given the complexities involved, he had initially hoped to proceed
with more caution, but his encounter with Sarcellus had forced him to
accelerate his timetable, to take risks he would have otherwise avoided. Even
now, he knew, the Consult watched him, studied him, and pondered his growing
power. He had to seize the Holy War before their patience dwindled too far. He
had to make a ziggurat of these men. You saw them too, didn’t you, Father? Is
it you they hunt? Are they the reason you summoned me? Looking across the near
distance, he saw a man walking with his oxen along a raised pathway, flicking
them with his switch every third or fourth step. He saw backs bent in
neighbouring fields of millet. A half-mile away, he saw a party of Inrithi
horsemen riding in single file through yellowing wheat. Any one of them could be
a Consult spy. “Sweet Seja!” Achamian
cried as he gained the summit. What would the sorcerer
do if he learned of his secret conflict with the Consult? The Mandate couldn’t
be involved, Kellhus knew, not until he possessed power enough to parley with
them as equals. Everything came to power. “What’s this called
again?” Kellhus asked, though he forgot nothing. “The Great Ziggurat of
Xijoser,” Achamian replied, still panting. “One of the mightiest works of the
Old Dynasty… Remarkable, isn’t it?” “Yes…” Kellhus said with false forced
enthusiasm. He must feel shame. “Something troubles you?”
Achamian asked, leaning against his knees. He turned to spit over the summit’s
edge. “Serwe…” Kellhus said
with an air of admission. “Tell me, would you think her capable of being…” He
feigned a nervous swallow. Shigek Achamian looked away to
the hazy landscape, but not before Kellhus glimpsed a fleeting expression of
terror. Palms turning upward, nervous stroke of his beard, flaring heart rate… “Being what?” the sorcerer
asked with sham disinterest. Of all the souls Kellhus
had mastered, few had proven as useful as Serwe. Lust and shame were ever the
shortest paths to the hearts of world-born men. Ever since he’d sent her to
Achamian the sorcerer had compensated for his half-remembered trespass in
innumerable subtle ways. The old Conriyan proverb was true: no friend was more
generous than the one who has seduced your wife… And generosity was
precisely what he needed from Drusas Achamian. “Nothing,” Kellhus said
with a shake of his head. “All men fear their women venal, I suppose.” Some
openings must be continually worked and worried, while others must be left to
fester. Avoiding his gaze, the
Schoolman groaned and rubbed his lower back. “I’m getting too old for this,” he
said with anxious good humour. He cleared his throat and spit one final time.
“How Esmi would crow…” Esmenet. She too had a
part to play. After so many weeks of
prolonged contact, Kellhus had come to know Achamian far better than Achamian
knew himself. Those who loved the Schoolman—Xinemus and Esmenet—often thought
him weak. They softened hard words, pretended not to notice the unsteady hands
or the fragile expressions, and they spoke with an almost parental
defensiveness on his behalf. But Drusas Achamian, Kellhus knew, was stronger
than anyone, especially Drusas Achamian, suspected. Some men frittered
themselves away with incessant doubt and reflection until it seemed they had no
shape they could grasp hold of. Some men had to be hewed by the crude axe of
the world. Tested. “Tell me,” Kellhus said,
“how much must a teacher give?” He knew that Achamian had
long since stopped thinking himself his teacher, but the sorcerer was just vain
enough not to disabuse him of this impression. The most powerful flatteries
dwelt not in what was said but in the assumptions behind what was said. “That,” Achamian replied,
daring his gaze once again, “depends upon the student…” “So the student must be
known to prevent giving too little.” He must
question himself.
“Or too much.” This was an intellectual
habit of Achamian’s: noting the importance of contrary and not so obvious
things. He delighted in throwing aside the veil, in revealing the complexities
that lurked beneath simple things. In this he was almost unique: world-born
men, Kellhus had found, despised complexity as much as they cherished flattery.
Most men would rather die in deception than live in uncertainty. “Too much…” Kellhus
repeated. “You mean like Proyas?” Achamian glanced to his sandalled feet. “Yes.
Like Proyas.” “What did you teach him?” “What we call the
exoterics… Logic, History, Arithmetic—everything save the esoterics—sorcery.” “And that was too much?” The sorcerer paused in
puzzlement, suddenly unsure as to what he’d meant. “No,” he conceded after a
moment. “I guess not. I had hoped to teach him doubt,
tolerance, but the clamour of his faith was too great. Perhaps if they’d let me
finish his education… But he’s lost. Another Man of the Tusk.” Now show him ease. Kellhus snorted in a half
laugh. “Like me.” “Exactly,” the Mandate
Schoolman said, grinning in the both sly and shy way that others, Kellhus had
noted, found so endearing. “Another bloodthirsty fanatic.” Kellhus laughed Xinemus’s
laugh, then trailed, smiling. For some time he’d been mapping Achamian’s
responses to the finer nuances of his expression. Though Kellhus had never met
Inrau, he knew—with startling exactitude—the peculiarities of the young man’s
manner and expression—so well that he could prompt Achamian to thoughts of
Inrau with little more than a look or a smile. Paro Inrau. The student
Achamian had lost in Sumna. The student he’d failed. “There’s more than one
kind of fanaticism,” Kellhus said. bhigek Lit The sorcerer’s eyes
widened momentarily, then narrowed in anxious thoughts of Inrau and the events
of the previous year—things he’d rather not remember. The Mandate must become more than a hated
master, they must become an enemy. “But not all fanaticisms
are equal,” Achamian said. “How do you mean? Not
equal in principle, or not equal in consequence?” Inrau was such a
consequence, as were the countless thousands the Holy War had murdered over the
past several days. Your School, Kellhus had suggested, is no different. “The Truth,” Achamian
said. “The Truth distinguishes them. No matter what the fanaticism, Inrithi,
Consult, or even Mandate, the consequences are the same: men die or suffer. The
question is one of what they die or suffer for …” “So purpose—true
purpose—justifies suffering, even death?” “You must believe as
much, otherwise you wouldn’t be here.” Kellhus smiled as though
abashed at having been exposed. “So it all comes to Truth. If one’s purposes
are true…” “Anything can be
justified. Any torment, any murder…” Kellhus rounded his eyes
the way he knew Inrau would. “Any betrayal,” he said. Achamian stared, his
nimble face as stony as he could manage. But Kellhus saw past the dark skin,
past the sheath of fine muscle, past even the soul that toiled beneath. He saw
arcana and anguish, a yearning steeped in three thousand years of wisdom. He
saw a child beaten and bullied by a drunken father. He saw a hundred
generations of Nroni fishermen pinioned between hunger and the cruel sea. He
saw Seswatha and the madness of war without hope. He saw ancient Ketyai
tribesmen surge down mountain slopes. He saw the animal, rooting and rutting,
reaching back to time out of memory. He didn’t see what came
after; he saw what came before… “Any betrayal,” the
sorcerer repeated dully. He is close. “And your cause,” Kellhus
pressed. “The prevention of the Second Apocalypse.” “Is true. There can be no
doubt.” “So in the name of that
cause, you can commit any act, any betrayal/” Achamian’s eyes slackened
in dread, and Kellhus glimpsed a worry too fleet to become a question. The
Schoolman had become accustomed to the efficiency of their discourse: rarely
had they ever wandered from question to question as they did now. “It’s strange,” Achamian
said, “the way things spoken with assurance by one can sound so outrageous when
repeated by another…” An unanticipated turn,
but an opportunity as well. A shorter
path. “It troubles,” Kellhus
said, “because it shows that conviction is as cheap as words. Any man can
believe unto death. Any man can claim your claim.” “So you fear I’m no
different from any other fanatic.” “Wouldn’t you?” How deep does his conviction go? “You are the Harbinger, Kellhus. If you dreamed Seswatha’s
Dream as I did…” “But couldn’t Proyas say
the same of his fanaticism? Couldn’t he say, ‘If you spoke to Maithanet as I
did’?” How far would he follow
it? To the death? The sorcerer sighed and
nodded. “That’s always the dilemma, now isn’t it?” “But whose dilemma? Mine
or yours?” Would he follow it
beyond? Achamian laughed, but in
the clipped manner of men who make light of what horrifies them. “It’s the world’s dilemma, Kellhus.” “I need more than that,
Akka—more than bald assertions.” Would he follow it all the way? “I’m not sure—” “What is it you want of
me?” Kellhus exclaimed in sudden desperation. Inrau’s indecision warbled
through his voice. Inrau’s horror pulled wide his eyes. I must have it. The sorcerer stared,
horror-stricken. “Kellhus, I…” “Think of what you’re
telling me! Think, Akka, thinkl You’re saying that I’m the sign of the Second Apocalypse, that I augur mankind’s
extinction!” Shigek But of course Achamian
thought him more… “No, Kellhus… Not the
end.” “Then what am I? Just
what do you think I am?” “I think… I think you may
be…” “What, Akka? What?” “Everything has a purpose!” the Schoolman cried in exasperation. “You’ve come
to me for a reason, even if you’ve yet to embrace
it.” This, Kellhus knew, was
false. For events to have purpose, their ends had to determine their
beginnings, and this was impossible. Things were governed by their origins, not
their destinations. What came before determined what came after; his
manipulation of these world-born men was proof enough of that… If the Dunyain
had been mistaken in their theorems, their axioms remained inviolate. The Logos
had been complicated—nothing more. Even sorcery, from what he’d gleaned,
followed laws. “And what purpose is
that?” Kellhus asked. Achamian hesitated, and
though he remained utterly silent, everything from his expression to his scent
to his pulse howled in panic. He licked his lips… “I think… to save the
world.” Always it came to this.
Always the same delusion. “So I’m your cause?” Kellhus said incredulously. “I’m the Truth that justifies your fanaticism?” Achamian could only stare
in dread. Plundering the man’s expression, Kellhus watched the inferences
splash and trickle through his soul, drawn of their own weight to a single,
inexorable conclusion. Everything… B;y his own admission, he must yield everything. Even the Gnosis. How powerful have you become, Father? Without warning, Achamian
stood and started down the monumental stair. He took each step with weary
deliberation, as though counting them. The Shigeki wind tousled his shining
black hair. When Kellhus called to him, he said only, “I tire of the heights.” As Kellhus had known he
would. General Martemus had
always considered himself a practical man. He was someone who always clarified
his tasks, then methodically set about achieving his goals. He had no
birthright, no pampered childhood, to cloud his judgement. He simply saw,
appraised, and acted. The world was not so complicated, he would tell his
junior officers, so long as one remained clearheaded and ruthlessly practical.
See. Appraise. Act. He had lived his life by
this philosophy. How easily it had been defeated. The task had seemed
straightforward, if somewhat unusual, in the beginning. Watch Prince
Anasurimbor Kellhus of Atrithau, and attempt to gain his confidence. If the man
collected followers to some insidious purpose, as Conphas suspected, then a
Nansur General suffering a crisis of faith should have proven an irresistible
opportunity. It did not. Martemus had
attended at least a dozen of his evening sermons, or “imprompta,” as they were
calling them, before the man had even acknowledged him with a single word. Of course, Conphas, who
always faulted his executors before his assumptions, had held Martemus
responsible. There could be no doubt Kellhus was Cishaurim, because he was
connected to Skeaos, who was indubitably Cishaurim. There could be no doubt the
man played the prophet, not after the incident with Saubon. And there could be
no way the man knew that Martemus was bait, since
Conphas had told no one of his plan other than Martemus. Therefore, Martemus had failed, even if Martemus was too obstinate to see
this for himself. But this was merely one
of innumerable petty injustices Conphas had foisted on him over the years. Even
if Martemus had cared to take insult, which was unlikely, he was far too busy
being afraid. He wasn’t quite sure when
it happened, but at some point during the long march across Gedea, General
Martemus, as eminently practical as he was, had ceased believing that Prince
Kellhus played the prophet. This didn’t mean he
thought the man was in fact a prophet—Martemus
remained practical in that respect—only that he no longer knew what he believed… But soon he would, and
the prospect terrified him. Martemus was also an intensely loyal man, and he
treasured his position as Ikurei Conphas’s aide de camp. He often
thought he’d been bom to serve under the mer< rial
Exalt-General, to balance the man’s undeniable brilliance with in sober, more
dependable observations. The prodigy
must be reminded of practical, he would often think. No matter how delectable the
spices, c could not do without salt. But if Kellhus was in
fact… What happened to his loyalty then? Martemus pondered this
while sitting among the steaming thousa: who’d gathered to hear Prince
Kellhus’s first sermon since the madnes reaching Shigek. Before him loomed
ancient Xijoser, the Great Ziggu a mountain of corniced and polished black stone
so massive it seemed should cover his face and fall to his belly. The luxuriant
plains of Sempis Delta swept out in either direction, embellished by lesser zig
rats, waterways, reed marshes, and endless rice paddies. The sun fla white in
desert skies. Throughout the crowds,
men and women talked and laughed. Fc time Martemus watched the couple before
him share a humble repas onions and bread. Then he realized those sitting
around him were tal care to avoid his look. His uniform and blue cloak probably
frighte them, he thought, made him appear a caste-noble. He looked from ne:
bour to distracted neighbour, trying to think of something he might sa set them
at ease. But he couldn’t bring himself to utter the first word A profound loneliness
struck him. He thought of Conphas once ag Then he saw Prince
Kellhus, small and distant, descending Xijo monumental stair. Martemus smiled,
as though finding an old friend foreign market. What will he say? When he first started
attending the imprompta, Martemus assumed the talks would be either heretical
or easily dismissed. They ‘t neither. Indeed, Prince Kellhus recited the words
of the Old Prophets of Inri Sejenus as though they were his own. Nothing of
what he contradicted any of the innumerable sermons Martemus had heard < the
course of his life—though those sermons often contradicted another. It was as
though the Prince pursued further truths, the unspc implications of what all
orthodox Inrithi already believed. To listen to him, it
seemed, was to learn what one already k without knowing. The Prince of God, some
called him. He-who-sheds-light-within. His white silk robes shining in the
sunlight, Prince Kellhus paused on the ziggurat’s lower steps and looked over
the restless masses. There was something glorious about his aspect, as though
he’d descended not from the heights but from the heavens. With a flutter of
dread Martemus realized he never saw the man ascend the ziggurat, nor even step from the ruin of the
ancient godhouse upon its summit. He had just… noticed him. The General cursed
himself for a fool. “The Prophet Angeshrael,”
Prince Kellhus called, “came down from his fast on Mount Eshki.” The assembly
fell absolutely silent, so much so that Martemus could hear the breeze buffet
his ears. “Husyelt, the Tusk tells us, sent a hare to him, so he might eat at
last. Angeshrael skinned the Hunter’s gift and struck a fire so he might feast.
When he had eaten and was content, sacred Husyelt, the Holy Stalker, joined him
at his fire, for the Gods in those days had not left the world in the charge of
Men. Angeshrael, recognizing the God as the God, fell immediately to his knees
before the fire, not thinking where he would throw his face.” The Prince
suddenly grinned. “Like a young man on his wedding night, he erred in his eagerness…”
Martemus laughed with a thousand others. Somehow the sun flashed brighter. “And the God said, ‘Why
does our Prophet fall to his knees only? Are not Prophets Men like other Men?
Should they not throw their faces to the earth?’ To which Angeshrael replied,
‘I find my fire before me.’ And peerless Husyelt said, ‘The fire burns across
earth, and what fire consumes becomes earth. I am your God. Throw your face to
the earth.’” The Prince paused. “So Angeshrael, the Tusk
tells us, bowed his head into
the flames.” Despite the close, humid
air, Martemus’s skin pimpled. How many times, especially as a child, had he
stared into some fire, struck by the errant thought of plunging his face into
the flames—if only to feel what a Prophet once felt? Angeshrael. The Burnt
Prophet. He lowered his face
into fire! Fire! “Like Angeshrael,” the
Prince continued, “we find ourselves kneeling before just such a fire…” Martemus caught his
breath. Heat flared through him, or so it seemed. Shigek “Truth!” Prince Kellhus
cried, as though calling out a name that every man recognized. “The fire of
Truth. The Truth of who you are…” Somehow his voice had
divided, become a chorus. “You are frail. You are
alone. Those who would love you know you not. You lust for obscene things. You
fear even your closest brother. You understand far less
than you pretend… “You—you!—are these things. Frail, alone, unknown, lusting,
fearing, and uncomprehending. Even now you
can feel these truths burn. Even now”—he raised a hand as though to further
quiet silent men—“they consume
you.” He lowered his hand. “But
you do not throw your face to the earth. You do not…” His glittering eyes fell
upon Martemus, who felt his throat tighten, felt the small finishing-hammer of
his heart tap-tap-tap blood to his face. He sees through me. He witnesses… “But why?” the Prince asked, his timbre bruised by an old and
baffling pain. “In the anguish of this fire lies the God. And in the God lies
redemption. Each of you holds the key to your own
redemption. You already kneel before it! But still you do
not throw your face to the earth. You are
frail. You are alone. Those who love you know you not. You lust for obscene things. You fear even your closest brother. And you understand far less than you pretend!!‘ Martemus grimaced. The
words had drawn a pain from his bowels to the back of his throat and sent his
thoughts reeling in giddy recognition of something at once familiar and
estranged. Me… He speaks of me! “Is there any among you
who would deny this?” Silence. Somewhere, someone
wept. “But you do deny this!” Prince Kellhus cried, like a lover
confronted by an impossible infidelity. “All of you! You kneel, but you also cheat—cheat the fire of your own heart! You give breath to
lie after lie, clamour that this fire is not the Truth. That you are strong. That you are not alone. That those who love you do know you. That you
lust not for obscene things. That you fear
not your brother in any way. That you
understand everything.1” How many times had
Martemus lied thus? Martemus the practical man. Martemus the realistic man. How
could he be these things if he knew
so well of what
Prince Kellhus spoke? “But in the secret
moments—yes, the secret moments—these denials ring
hollow, do they not? In the secret moments you glimpse the anguish of Truth. In
the secret moments you see that your life has been a mummer’s farce. And you
weep! And you ask what is wrong! And you cry out, ‘Why cannot I be strong?’” He leapt down several
steps. “Why cannot I be strong?” Martemus’s throat
ached!—ached as though he himself had bawled these words. “Because,” the Prince
said softly, “you lie.” And Martemus thought madly: Skin and hair… He’s just a man! “You are frail because you feign strength.” The voice was disembodied now, and it whispered
secretly into a thousand flushed ears. “You are alone because you lie ceaselessly. Those who love you do not know you because you are a mummer. You lust for obscene things because you deny that you lust. You fear your brother, because you fear what he sees. You understand little because to learn you must
admit you know nothing.” How could a life be cupped into
a single palm? “Do you see the tragedy?”
the Prince implored. “The scriptures bid us to be godlike, to be more than what we are. And what are we? Frail men, with
peevish hearts, envious hearts, choked by the shroud of our own lies. Men who remain frail because they cannot confess their frailty.” And this word, frail, seemed pitched down from the heavens, from the
Outside, and for an instant, the man who’d spoken it was no longer a man but
the earthly surface of something far greater. Frail… Spoken not from the lips of a man, but from
somewhere else… And Martemus understood. I sit in the presence of the God. Horror and bliss. Chafing his eyes.
Blinding his skin. Everywhere. The presence of the God. To at last be still, to be braced by that which braced the very world,
and to see at long last how far one had plummeted. And it seemed to Martemus
that he was here for the first time, as though one
could only truly be oneself—be
here!—in the
clearing that was God. Here… Shigek ‘tkf, The impossibility of
drawing sweet air through salty lips Th of moving soul and furtive
intellect. The grace of thronging passions TK impossibility. The impossibility… The miracle of here. “Kneel with me,” a voice from nowhere said. “Take my hand and do not fear. Throw your face into the
furnace!” A place had been prepared
for these final words, words that traced the scripture of his heart. A place of
rapture. The multitude cried out,
and Martemus cried with them. Some openly wept, and Martemus wept with them.
Others reached out as though trying to clutch his image. Martemus raised two
fingers to brush his distant face. How long Prince Kellhus
spoke he couldn’t say. But he spoke of many things, and upon whatever ground
his words set foot, the world was transformed. “What does it mean, to be a warrior? Is not war the fire? The furnace?
Is not war the very truth of our frailty?” He even taught them a hymn, which, he said, had come to him in
a dream. And the song moved them the way only a song from the Outside could
move them. A hymn sung by the very Gods. For the rest of his days, Martemus
would awaken and hear that song. And afterward, when the
masses thronged about the Prince, fell to their knees and softly kissed the hem
of his white robe, he bid them to stand, reminded them that he was just a man
like other men. And at long last, when the crush of bodies delivered Martemus
to him, the surreal blue eyes regarded him gently, glanced not at all at his golden
cuirass, his blue cloak, or the insignia of his station. “I have waited for you,
General.” The excited rumble of
others grew distant, as though the two of them had been submerged. Martemus
could only stare, dumbstruck, overawed, and so gratified… “Conphas sent you. But
that has changed now, hasn’t it?” And Martemus felt a child
before his father, unable to lie, unable to speak the truth. The Prophet nodded as
though he had spoken. “What will happen to your loyalty, I wonder?” Somewhere distant, almost
too far to touch, men cried out. Martemus watched the Prophet turn his head,
reach back with a golden-haloed hand, and seize a flying arm, which bore a
fist, which gripped a long and silvery knife. Assassination, he thought without concern. The man before him
couldn’t be killed. He knew that now. The mobs pummelled the
assassin to the earth. Martemus glimpsed a bloodied, howling face. The Prophet turned back
to him. “I would not divide your
heart,” he said. “Come to me again, when you are ready.” “I’m warning you, Proyas.
Something must be done about this man.” Ikurei Conphas had said this somewhat
more emphatically than he’d intended. But then these
were emphatic times. The Conriyan Prince
reclined in his camp chair and looked at him blandly. He picked at his
trim beard with an absent hand. “What do you suggest?“ Finally. “That we convene a full
Council of the Greater and Lesser Names.” “And?” “That we bring charges
against him.” Proyas frowned. “Charges? What charges?” “Under the auspices of the Tusk. The Old
Law.” “Ah, I see. And what would you charge Prince
Kellhus with?” “With fomenting blasphemy. With pretensions
to prophecy.” Proyas nodded. “In other words,” he said scathingly, “with being
a False Prophet.” Conphas laughed
incredulously. He could remember once—long ago it now seemed—thinking he and
Proyas would become fast and famous friends over the course of the Holy War.
They were both handsome. They were close in age. And in their respective
corners of the Three Seas, they were considered prodigies of similar
promise—that was, until his obliteration of the Scylvendi at the Battle of
Kiyuth. I have no peers. “Could any charge be more
appropriate?” Conphas asked. “I agreed,” Proyas replied testily, “to discuss
ways of surprising Skauras on the South Bank, not to discuss the piety of a man
I consider to be my friend.“ Although Proyas’s
pavilion was large and richly outfitted, it was both gloomy and intolerably
hot. Unlike the others, who had traded their canvas for the marble of abandoned
villas, Proyas maintained himself as though still on the march. Only a fanatic. “You’ve heard of these
Sermons at Xijoser?” Conphas asked, thinking, Martemus, you fool… But then, that was the
problem. Martemus wasn’t a fool. Conphas could scarce imagine anyone less
foolish… That was precisely the problem. “Yes, yes,” Proyas
replied with an exasperated breath. “I’ve been invited to attend on a
number of occasions, but the field keeps me busy.“ “I imagine… Did you know
that many among the rank and file—my men, your men—refer to him as the Warrior-Prophet? The Warrior- Prophet?“ “Yes. I know this as
well…” Proyas said this with the same air of indulgent impatience as before,
but his brows knitted together, as if pinching a troubling thought. “As it stands,” Conphas
said, speaking as though at the limits of his good humour, “this is the Holy
War of the Latter Prophet… of Inri
Sejenus. But if
this fraud continues to gather followers, it will fast become the Holy War of
the Warrior-Prophet. Do you understand?” Dead prophets were useful,
because one could rule in their name. But live prophets? Cishaurim prophets? Perhaps 1 should tell him what happened
with Skeaos… Proyas shook his head in
weary dismissal. “What would you have me do, eh, Conphas? Kellhus is… unlike
other men. There’s no doubt about that. And he does have these dreams. But he
makes no claim to be a prophet. And he’s angered when others call him so.” “So what? So he must
first admit to being a False Prophet? Being a
False Prophet in fact isn’t enough?” His expression pained,
Proyas regarded him narrowly, looked him up and down as though assessing the
appropriateness of his field armour. “Why does this concern
you so, Conphas? You’re most assuredly not a pious man.” What would you have me do, Uncle? Should
1 tell him? Conphas suppressed the
urge to spit like the Scylvendi, ran his tongue over his teeth instead. He
despised indecision. “The question of my piety
is not the concern here.” Proyas drew in and
released a heavy breath. “I’ve sat long hours with the man, Conphas. Together,
we’ve read aloud from The
Chronicle of the Tusk and The Tractate, and not once, in all that time,
have I detected the merest whisper of heresy. In fact, Kellhus is perhaps the
most deeply pious man I’ve ever met. Now the fact that others have begun
calling him Prophet is disturbing, I agree. But it is not his doing. People are
weak, Conphas. Is it so surprising that they look to him and see his strength
for more than what it is?” Conphas felt sweet
disdain unfold across his face. “Even you…
He’s ensnared even you.” What kind of man? Though
he was loath to admit it, his briefing with Martemus had shook him deeply.
Somehow, over a matter of mere weeks, this Prince Kellhus had managed to reduce
his most dependable man to a babbling idiot. Truth! The frailty of men! The
furnace! What nonsense! And yet
nonsense that was seeping through the Holy War like blood through linen. This
Prince Kellhus was a wound. And if he was in fact a Cishaurim spy as dear old
Uncle Xerius feared, he could well prove mortal. Proyas was angered, and
answered disdain with disdain. “Ensnaring,” he snorted. “Of course you would see it as such. Men of ambition never
understand the pious. For them, goals must be worldly in order to be sensible.
Solutions to base hungers,” There was something
forced, Conphas decided, about these words. I’ve planted a seed at least. “There’s much to be said
for being well fed,” Conphas snapped, then turned on his heel. He’d exceeded
his daily ration of idiots. Proyas’s voice halted him
before the curtains. “One last thing,
Exalt-General.” Conphas turned, lids low,
eyebrows raised. “Yes?” “You’ve heard of the
attempt on Prince Kellhus’s life?” Shigek “You mean there’s another
sober man in this world?” Proyas smiled sourly. For
a moment, real hatred flashed in his eyes. “Prince Kellhus tells me
the man who tried to kill him was Nansur. One of your officers, in fact.” Conphas stared at the man
blankly, realizing he’d been duped. All those questions… Proyas had asked them
in order to implicate him, to see whether he had
motive. Conphas cursed himself for a fool. Fanatic or not, Nersei Proyas was
not a man to be underestimated. This is becoming a nightmare. “What?” Conphas said.
“You propose to arrest me?” “You propose to arrest
Prince Kellhus.” Conphas grinned. “You
would find it hard to arrest an army.” “I see no army,” Proyas
said. Conphas smiled. “But you
do…” Of course there was
nothing Proyas could do, even if the assassin had survived to name Conphas
directly. The Holy War needed the Empire. Even still, there was a
lesson to be learned. War was intellect. Conphas would teach this Prince
Kellhus that… His loitering Kidruhil
snapped to attention as Conphas exited the pavilion. As a precaution he’d taken
some two hundred of the heavily armoured cavalrymen as an escort. The Great
Names were scattered from Nagogris on the edge of the Great Desert to Iothiah
on the Sempis Delta, and Skauras had landed raiders on the North Bank to harry
them. Risking death or capture clearing up a matter such as this wouldn’t do.
So far, the problem of Anasurimbor Kellhus remained more theoretical than
practical. As his attendants fetched
his horse, the Exalt-General looked for Martemus, found him milling among the
troopers. Martemus had always preferred the company of common soldiers to that
of officers, something that Conphas had once thought quaint, but now found
annoying—even seditious. Martemus… What’s happened to you? Conphas mounted his black
and rode over to him. The taciturn General watched him, apparently without
apprehension. V 1V1AKCH Like a Scylvendi, Conphas
spat on the earth beneath the shod hooves of Martemus’s horse. Then he glanced
back at Proyas’s pavilion, at the embroidered eagles splayed in black across
the weathered white canvas, and at the guards who eyed him and his men
suspiciously. The Eagle and Tusk pennant of House Nersei lolled in the lazy
breeze, framed by the faint escarpments of the South Bank. He turned back to his
wayward General. “It appears,” he said in
a fierce voice that wouldn’t carry, “that you aren’t the only casualty of this
spy’s sorcery, Martemus… When you kill this Warrior-Prophet, you’ll be avenging
many, very many.” HApTER Twelve IOTHIAH ; …the ends of the earth shall be wracked by the howls
of the wicked, ■■ and the idols shall be cast down and shattered,
stone against stone. And the demons of the idolaters shall hold open their
mouths, like ■4. starving lepers, for no man living will answer their
outrageous hunger. —16:4:22 THE WITNESS OF
FANE •I Though youiose your soul, you shall win the world. .‘—MANDATE CATECHISM Late Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk,
Shigek Xinemus didn’t
particularly like the man, and had never trusted him, but he’d nonetheless been
trapped into speaking with him. The man, Therishut, a baron of dubious
reputation from Conriya’s frontier with High Ainon, had intercepted him as
Xinemus made his way from a planning session with Proyas. Upon seeing Xinemus,
the man’s thinly bearded face had brightened with his best “oh-how-fortuitous”
look. It was in Xinemus’s nature to be patient with even those he disliked, but
distrust was a different matter altogether. And yet, it was the small
indignities that the pious man must endure over all. “I seem to remember, Lord
Marshal,” Therishut said, hastening to match his pace, “that you have an
affinity for books.” Ever polite, Xinemus
nodded, and said: “An acquired taste.” “Then you must be excited
that the famed Sareotic Library, in Iothiah, was taken intact by the Galeoth.” “The Galeoth? I thought
it was the Ainoni.” “No,” Therishut replied,
drawing his lips into a strange upside-down smile. “I’ve heard that it was the
Galeoth. Men of Saubon’s own household in fact.” “Indeed,” Xinemus said,
impatiently. “Well enough then…” “I see you’re busy, Lord Marshal. No bother…
I’ll send one of my slaves to arrange an audience.” To bump into Therishut
was annoying enough, but to actually suffer through a formal visit? “I’m never too busy for a
Baron of the Land, Therishut.” “Good!” the man nearly squealed. “Well then…
Not long ago, a friend of mine—well, I should say he’s not yet my friend, but
I… I…” “He’s someone you hope to curry favour with,
Therishut?” Therishut’s face both brightened and soured. “Yes! Although that
sounds rather indelicate, don’t you think?” Xinemus said nothing, but
walked on, his eyes firmly fixed on the top of his pavilion amidst the jumble
of others in the distance. Beyond, the hills of Gedea were pale in the haze. Shigek, he thought. We’ve taken Shigek! For some strange reason, the certainty that soon,
impossibly soon, he’d set eyes on Holy Shimeh seized him. It’s happening… It was almost enough to make him be kind to
Therishut. Almost. “Well, this friend of
mine who’d just returned from the Sareotic Library asked me what ‘gnosis’ was.
And since you’re the closest thing to a scholar I know, I thought you could
help me help him. Do you know what ’gnosis’ is?” Xinemus stopped and eyed
the small man carefully. “Gnosis,” he said carefully, “is the name of the old
sorcery of the Ancient North.” “Ah yes!” Therishut exclaimed. “That makes
sense!” “What interest does your friend have in
libraries, Therishut?” “Well, you know there’s a rumour that Saubon
might sell the books to raise more money.” Xinemus hadn’t heard this
rumour, and it troubled him. “I doubt the Iothiah other Great Names would
countenance that. So what, your friend has already begun taking inventory?“ “He’s a most enterprising
soul, Lord Marshal. A good man to know if one’s interested in profits—if you
know what I mean…” “Merchant-caste dog, no
doubt,” Xinemus said matter-of-factly. “Let me give you some advice, Therishut:
heed your station.” But rather than take
offence at this, Therishut smiled wickedly. “Surely, Lord Marshal,” he said in
a tone devoid of all deference, “you of all people.” Xinemus blinked,
astonished more by his own hypocrisy than by Baron Therishut’s insolence. A man
who sups with a sorcerer castigating another for currying favour with a
merchant? Suddenly the hushed rumble of the Conriyan camp seemed to buzz in his
ears. With a fierceness that shocked him, the Marshal of Attrempus stared at
Therishut, stared at him until, flustered, the fool mumbled insincere apologies
and scurried away. As he walked the
remaining distance to his pavilion, Xinemus thought of Achamian, his dear
friend of many, many years. And he thought of his caste, and was faintly
shocked by the hollow of uneasiness that opened in his gut when he recollected
Therishut’s words: You of all
people. How many think this? Their friendship had been
strained of late, Xinemus knew. It would do them both some good if Achamian
spent several days away. In a library. Studying
blasphemy. “I don’t understand,”
Esmenet said with more than a little anger. He’s leaving me… Achamian heaved a burlap
sack of oats across his mule’s back. His mule, Daybreak, regarded her solemnly.
Beyond him, the largely deserted encampment crowded the slopes, pitched among
and between small stands of black willows and cottonwoods. She could see the
Sempis in the distance, shining like obsidian inlay beneath the punishing sun.
Whenever she glanced at the hazy South Bank, dark with vegetation, she could
feel the heathen watching. “I don’t understand,
Akka,” she repeated, plaintively this time. lHt JtUOND MARCH “But, Esmi…” “But what?” He turned to her,
obviously irritated, distracted. “It’s a library. A library!” “So?” she said hotly.
“The illiterate are not—” “No,” he snapped,
scowling. “No! Look, I need some time alone. I need time to think. To think,
Esmi, think!” The desperation in his
voice and expression shocked her into momentary silence. “About Kellhus,” she
said. The skin beneath her scalp prickled. “About Kellhus,” he
replied, turning back to his mule. He cleared his throat, spit into the dust. “He’s asked you, hasn’t
he?” Her chest tightened. Could it be? Achamian said nothing,
but there was a subtle heartlessness to his movements, and almost imperceptible
blankness to his eyes. She was learning him, she realized, like a song sung
many times. She knew him. “Asked me what?” he said
finally, tying his sleeping mat to the pack saddle. “To teach him the
Gnosis.” For the past three weeks,
since following the Conriyan column into the Sempis Valley, through the madness
of the occupation—ever since the night with the Wathi Doll—a strange rigidity
had seemed to haunt Achamian, a tension that made it impossible for him to love
or laugh for anything more than moments. But she’d assumed his argument with
Xinemus and their subsequent estrangement had been the cause. Several days earlier
she’d confronted the Marshal on the issue, telling him of his friend’s
apprehensions. Yes, Achamian had committed an outrage, she explained, but he’d
erred out of foolishness not disrespect. “He tries to forget, Zin, but he
cannot. Every morning I cradle him as he cries out. Every morning I remind him
the Apocalypse is over… He thinks Kellhus is the Harbinger.” But Xinemus, she could
tell, already knew this. He was patient in tone, word, manner—everything save
his look. His eyes had never truly listened, and she’d known something deeper
was wrong. A man like Xinemus, Achamian had told her once, risked much keeping
a sorcerer as a friend. lothiah She’d never pressed
Achamian with anything more than warm reminders, like “He worries for you, you
know.” The hurts of men were brittle, volatile things. Achamian liked to claim
that men were simple, that women need only feed, fuck, and flatter them to keep
them happy. Perhaps this was true of certain men, perhaps not, but it certainly
wasn’t true of Drusas Achamian. So she’d waited, assuming that time and habit
would return the two old friends to their old understanding. For some reason, the
notion that Kellhus, and not Xinemus, lay at the root
of his distress never occurred to her. Kellhus was holy—she harboured
absolutely no doubt about that now. He was a prophet, whether he himself
believed it or not. And sorcery was unholy… What was it Achamian had
said he would become? A god-sorcerer. Achamian continued to
fuss over his baggage. He hadn’t said anything. He didn’t need to. “But how could it be?”
she asked. Achamian paused, stared
at nothing for several heartbeats. Then he turned to her, his face blank with
hope and horror. “How could a prophet
speak blasphemy?” he said, and she knew that for him this was already an old
and embittered question. “I asked him that…” “And what did he say?” “He cursed and insisted
he wasn’t a prophet. He was offended… hurt even.” I’ve a talent for that, his tone said. A sudden desperation
welled in Esmenet’s throat. “You can’t teach him, Akka! You mustn’t teach him!
Don’t you see? You’re the
temptation. He
must resist you and the promise of power you hold. He must deny you to become
what he must become!” “Is that what you think?”
Achamian exclaimed. “That I’m King Shikol tempting Sejenus with worldly power
like in The Tractate? Maybe he’s right, Esmi, did you
ever consider that? Maybe he’s not a prophet!” Esmenet stared at him,
fearful, bewildered, but strangely exhilarated as well. How had she come so
far? How could a whore from a Sumni slum stand here, so near the world’s heart? How had her life become
scripture? For a moment, she couldn’t believe… MARCH “The question, Akka, is
what do you think?” Achamian looked to the
ground between them. “What do I think?” he repeated pensively. He raised his
eyes. Esmenet said nothing, though she felt the hardness melt from her gaze.
Achamian shrugged and sighed. “That the Three Seas couldn’t be more unprepared
for a Second Apocalypse… The Heron Spear is lost. Sranc roam half the world, in
numbers a hundred—a thousand!—times greater than in Seswatha’s day. And Men
hold only a fraction of the Trinkets.” He stared at her, and it seemed his eyes
had never been so bright. “Though the Gods have damned me, damned us, I can’t
believe they would so abandon the world…” “Kellhus,” she whispered. Achamian nodded. “They’ve
sent us more than a Harbinger… That’s what I think, or hope—I don’t know…” “But sorcery, Akka…” “Is blasphemy, I know.
But ask yourself, Esmi, why are sorcerers bias-phemers? And
why is a prophet a prophet?” Her eyes opened
horror-wide. “Because one sings the God’s song,” she replied, “and the other
speaks the God’s voice.” “Exactly,” Achamian said.
“Is it blasphemy for a prophet to utter sorcery?” Esmenet stood staring,
dumbstruck. For the God to
sing His own song…
“Akka…” He turned back to his
mule, bent to retrieve his satchel from the dust. A sudden panic welled through
her. “Please don’t leave me, Akka.” “I told you, Esmi,” he said, without turning
his face to her, “I need to think.” But we think so well together! He was wiser for her
counsel. He knew this! Now he confronted a
decision unlike any other… So why would he leave her? Was there something else?
Something more he was hiding? She glimpsed him writhing
beneath Serwe… He’s found a
younger whore,
something whispered. “Why do you do this?” she
asked, her voice far sharper than she had wished. lothiah An exasperated pause. “Do
what?” “It’s like a labyrinth
with you, Akka. You throw open gates, invite me in, but refuse to show me the
way. Why do you always hide ?” His eyes flashed with
inexplicable anger. “Me?” he laughed, turning
back to his task. “Hide, you say?” “Yes, hide. You’re so weak, Akka, and you need not be. Think of what Kellhus has
taught us!” He glanced at her, his
eyes poised between hurt and fury. “How about you? Let’s talk about your
daughter… Remember her? How long has it been since you’ve—” “That’s different! She
came before you! Before you!” Why would he say this?
Why would he try to hurt? M;y girl! My baby girl is dead! “Such fine discriminations,”
Achamian spat. “The past is never dead, Esmi.” He laughed bitterly. “It’s not
even past.” “Then where’s my
daughter, Akka?” For an instant he stood
dumbstruck. She often baffled him like this. Broken down fool! Her fingers started
shaking. Hot tears spilled across her cheeks. How could she think such things? Because of what he said… How dare he! He gaped at her, as
though somehow reading her soul. “I’m sorry, Esmi,” he said vaguely. “I
shouldn’t have mentioned… I shouldn’t have said what I said.” His voice trailed away,
and he again turned to his mule, began angrily cinching straps. “You don’t
understand what the Gnosis is to us,” he added. “More than my pulse would be
forfeit.” “Then teach me! Show me
how to understand!” This is Kellhus! We discovered him together! “Esmi… I can’t talk to
you about this. I can’t…” “But why?” “Because I know what
you’ll say!” “No, Akka,” she said,
feeling the old whorish coldness. “You don’t. You’ve no idea.” He caught the rough hemp
cord hanging from his mule’s crude bridle, momentarily fumbled it. For an
instant, everything about him, his MARCH sandals, his baggage, his
white-linen robe, seemed lonely and poor. Why did he always look so poor? She thought of Sarcellus:
bold, sleek, and perfumed. Shabby cuckold! “I’m not leaving you,
Esmi,” he said with a queer kind of finality. “I could never leave you. Not
again.” “1 see but one sleeping
mat,” she said. He tried to smile, then
turned, leading Daybreak away at an awkward gait. She watched him, her innards
churning as though she dangled over unseen heights. He followed the path
eastward, passing a row of weather-beaten round tents. He seemed so small so
quickly. It was so strange, the way bright sun could make distant figures dark… “Akka!” she cried out,
not caring who heard. “Akka!” I love you. The figure with the mule
stopped, distant and for a moment, unrecognizable. He waved. Then he
disappeared beneath a stand of black willows. Intelligent people,
Achamian had found, were typically less happy. The reason for this was simple:
they were better able to rationalize their delusions. The ability to stomach
Truth had little to do with intelligence— nothing, in fact. The intellect was
far better at arguing away truths than at finding them. Which was why he had to
flee Kellhus and Esmenet. He led his mule along a
path bounded to his right by the black expanse of the Sempis and to his left by
a line of gigantic eucalyptus trees. Save for the odd flash of warmth between
limbs, the half-canopy sheltered him from the sun. A breeze seeped through his
white linen tunic. It was peaceful, he thought, to at long last be alone… When Xinemus had told him
that certain books pertaining to the Gnosis had been found in the Sareotic
Library, he could read the subtext well enough. You should leave, his friend had said without saying. Ever since the
night with the Wathi Doll, Achamian had expected to be banished from his
friend’s fire, even if temporarily. Even more, he needed to be banished, to be forced from the company of
those who overwhelmed him… Iothiah But it cut nonetheless. No matter, he told
himself. Just another feud born of the awkwardness of their friendship. A
caste-noble and a sorcerer. “There is no friend more difficult,” one of the
poets of the Tusk had written, “than a sinner.” And Achamian was nothing
if not a sinner. Unlike some sorcerers, he
rarely pondered the fact of his damnation. For much the same reason, he
imagined, men who beat their wives didn’t ponder their fists… But there were other
reasons. In his youth, he’d been one of those students who’d delighted in
irreverence and impiousness, as though the mortal blasphemy he learned licensed
any blasphemy, large and small. He and Sancla, his cellmate in Atyersus, used
to actually read The Tractate aloud and laugh at its absurdities.
The passages dealing with the circumcision of caste-priests. And of course the
passages dealing with manural purification rites. But one passage, more than
any other, would haunt him over the years: the famous “Expect Not Admonition”
from the Book of Priests. “Listen!” Sancla had
cried from his pallet one night. ‘“And the Latter Prophet said: Piety is not
the province of money-changers. Do not give food for food, shelter for shelter,
love for love. Do not throw the Good upon the balance, but give without expectation. Give food for nothing, shelter
for nothing, love for nothing. Yield unto him who trespasses against you. For
these things alone, the wicked do not do. Expect not, and you shall find glory
everlasting.’” The older boy fixed
Achamian with his dark, always-laughing eyes— eyes that would make them lovers
for a time. “Can you believe it?” “Believe what?” Achamian
asked. He already laughed because he knew that whatever Sancla cooked up was
certain to be deliriously funny. He was simply one of those people. His death
in Aoknyssus three years later—he’d been killed by a drunken caste-noble with a
Trinket—would crush Achamian. Sancla tapped the scroll
with his forefinger, something that would have earned him a beating in the
scriptorium. “Essentially Sejenus is saying, ‘Give without expectation of
reward, and you can expect a huge reward!’” Achamian frowned. The Second March “Don’t you see?” Sancla
continued. “He’s saying that piety consists of good acts in the absence of
selfish expectation. He’s saying you give nothing—nothing!—when you expect
something in exchange… You simply don’t give.” Achamian caught his
breath. “So the Inrithi who expect to be exalted in the Outside…” “Give nothing,” Sancla
had said, laughing in disbelief. “Nothing! But we, on the other hand, dedicate
our lives to continuing Seswatha’s battle… We give everything, and we can
expect only damnation as a result. We’re the only ones, Akka!” We’re the only ones. As tempting as those
words were, as moving and as important as they’d been, Achamian had become too
much a sceptic to trust them. They were too flattering, too self-aggrandizing,
to be true. So instead, he’d thought it simply had to be enough to be a good man. And if it wasn’t
enough, then there was nothing good about those who measured good and evil. Which was likely the
case. But of course Kellhus had
changed everything. Achamian now pondered his damnation a great deal. Before, the question of
his damnation had merely seemed an excuse for self-torment. The Tusk and The Tractate couldn’t be more clear, though Achamian had read many
heretical works suggesting that the Scriptures’ manifold and manifest
contradictions proved that the prophets, olden day and latter, were simply
men—which they were. “All Heaven,” Protathis had once written, “cannot shine
through a single crack.” So there was room to doubt his damnation. Perhaps, as Sancla had
suggested, the damned were in fact the elect. Or perhaps, as Achamian was more
inclined to believe, the uncertain were the Chosen Ones. He’d often
thought the temptation to assume, to sham certainty, was the most narcotic and
destructive of all temptations. To do good without certainty was to do good
without expectation… Perhaps doubt
itself was the
key. But then of course the
question could never be answered. If genuine doubt was in fact the condition of
conditions, then only those ignorant of the answer could be redeemed. To ponder
the question of his damnation, it had always seemed, was itself a kind of
damnation. So he didn’t think of it. lothiah Zbl But now… Now there could be an answer. Every day he walked with its
possibility, talked… Prince Anasurimbor
Kellhus. It wasn’t as though he
thought Kellhus could simply tell him the answer, even if he could ever summon
the courage to ask. Nor did he think that Kellhus somehow embodied or
exemplified the answer. That would make him too small. He was not, in some
mystic Nonmen fashion, the living sign of Drusas Achamian’s fate. No. The
question of his damnation or his exaltation, Achamian knew, depended on what he himself was willing to sacrifice. He himself would answer the
question… With his actions. And as much as this
knowledge horrified him, it also filled him with an abiding and incredulous
joy. The fear it engendered was old: for some time he’d feared the fate of the
entire world depended on those selfsame actions. He’d grown numb to
consequences of deranged proportions. But the joy was something new, something
unexpected. Anasurimbor Kellhus had made salvation a real possibility. Salvation. Though you lose your
soul, the Mandate catechism began, you shall win the world. But it need not be!
Achamian knew that now! Finally he could see how desolate, how bereft of hope, his prior life had been. Esmenet had taught him how
to love. And Kellhus, Anasurimbor Kellhus, had taught him how to hope. And he would seize them,
love and hope. He would seize them, and he would hold them fast. He need only decide what
to do… “Akka,” Kellhus had said
the previous night, “I need ask you something.” Only the two of them sat
about the fire. They boiled water for some midnight tea. “Anything, Kellhus,”
Achamian replied. “What troubles you?” “I’m troubled by what I
must ask…” Never had Achamian seen
such a poignant expression, as though horror had been bent to the point where
it kissed rapture. A mad urge to shield his eyes almost overcame him. “What you must ask?” The Second March Kellhus had nodded. “Each day, Akka, I am
less my self.” Such words! Their mere
memory struck him breathless. Standing in an islet of sunlight, Achamian paused
along the trail, pressed his palms to his chest. A cloud of birds erupted into
the sky. Their shadows flickered across him, soundless. He blinked at the sun. Do 1 teach him the Gnosis? To his gut he balked at
the notion—the mere thought of surrendering the Gnosis to someone outside his
School made him blanch. He wasn’t even sure he could teach Kellhus the Gnosis, even if he desired. His
knowledge of the Gnosis was the one thing he shared with Seswatha, whose
imprint owned every movement of his slumbering soul. Will you let me! Do you see what I see? Never—never!—in the
history of their School had a sorcerer of rank betrayed the Gnosis. Only the
Gnosis had allowed the Mandate to survive. Only the Gnosis had allowed them to
carry Seswatha’s war through the millennia. Lose it, and they became no more
than a Minor School. His brothers, Achamian knew, would fight themselves to
extinction to prevent that from happening. They would hunt both of them without
relenting, and they would kill them if they could. They would not listen to
reasons… And the name, Drusas Achamian, would become a curse in the dark halls
of Atyersus. But what was this other
than greed or jealousy? The Second Apocalypse was imminent. Hadn’t the time
come to arm all the Three Seas? Hadn’t Seswatha himself bid them share their
arsenal before the shadow fell? He had… And wouldn’t this make
Achamian the most faithful of all Mandate Schoolmen? He resumed walking, as
though in a stupor. In his bones he knew that Kellhus had been sent. The peril was too great,
and the promise too breathtaking. He’d watched as Kellhus consumed a lifetime
of knowledge in the space of months. He’d listened, breathless, as Kellhus
voiced truths of thought more subtle than Ajencis, and truths of passion more profound
than Sejenus. He’d sat in the dust gaping as the man extended the geometries of
Muretetis beyond the limits Iothiah of comprehension, as he corrected the ancient logic then drafted new logics the way a child might scribble spirals with a
stick. What would the Gnosis be
to such a man? A plaything? What would he discover? What power would he wield? Glimpses of Kellhus,
striding as a god across fields of war, laying low host of Sranc, striking
dragons from the sky, closing with the resurrected No-God, with dread
Mog-Pharau… He’s
our saviour! I know it! But what if Esmenet were
right? What if Achamian were merely the test? Like old, evil Shikol in The Tractate, offering Inri Sejenus his thighbone sceptre, his
army, his harem, everything save his crown, to stop preaching… Achamian halted once
again, was bumped forward two steps by his mule, Daybreak. Stroking his snout,
he smiled in the lonely way of men with hapless animals. A breeze swept across
the shining reaches of the Sempis, hissed through the trees. He began
trembling. Prophet and sorcerer. The
Tusk called such men Shaman. The word lay like a ziggurat in his thoughts,
immovable. Shaman. No… This is madness! For two thousand years
Mandate Schoolmen had kept the Gnosis safe. Two thousand years! Who was he to
forsake such tradition? Nearby, a crowd of young
children was gathered beneath the sweep of a sycamore, chirping and jostling
like sparrows over spilled bread. And Achamian saw two young boys, no more than
four or five, making arm-waving declarations each with a hand firmly clasped in
the hand of the other. The innocence of the act struck him, and he found
himself wondering how old they would be when they saw the error of holding
hands. Or would they discover
Kellhus? A whining sound drew his
eyes upward. He nearly cried out in shock. A naked corpse had been nailed to
the rafters of the tree above, purple and marbled with black-green. After the
surprise passed he thought of kicking or cutting the man down, but then where
would he carry him? To some nearby village? The Shigeki were so terrified of
the Inrithi he’d be surprised if they looked at him, let alone touched him. The Second March A pang of remorse struck
him, and inexplicably, he thought of Esmenet. Be safe. Leading Daybreak,
Achamian continued past the children, through the sun-dappled shade and toward
Iothiah, the ancient capital of the Shigeki God-Kings, whose walls wandered
across the distance, belts of faint stone glimpsed through dark eucalyptus
limbs. Achamian walked, and wrestled with impossibilities… The past was dead. The
future, as black as a waiting grave. Achamian wiped his tears
on his shoulder. Something unimaginable was about to happen, something
historians, philosophers, and theologians would argue for thousands of years—if
years or anything else survived. And the acts of Drusas Achamian would loom so
very large. He would simply give.
Without expectation. His School. His calling.
His life… The Gnosis would be his
sacrifice. Behind her mighty curtain
walls, Iothiah was a warren of four-storey mud’brick buildings welded
continuously together. The alleyways were narrow, screened from above by
palm-leaf awnings, so that Achamian felt as though he walked through desert
tunnels. He avoided the Kerothotics: he didn’t like the look of triumph in
their eyes. But when he encountered armed Men of the Tusk he would ask them for
directions, and then pick his way through a further welter of alleys. The fact
that most of the Inrithi he encountered were Ainoni concerned him. And once or
twice, when the walls opened enough for him to spy the monuments of the city,
he thought he could sense the deep bruise of the Scarlet Spires somewhere in
the distance. But then he encountered a
troop of Norsirai horsemen—Galeoth, they said—and he was somewhat relieved.
Yes, they knew how to find the Sareotic Library. Yes, the Library was in
Galeoth hands. Achamian lied as he always lied, and told them that he was a
scholar, come to chronicle the exploits of the Holy War. As always, their eyes
brightened at the thought of finding some small mention in the annals of
written history. They instructed him to follow as best he could, claiming they
would pass the Library on their way to wherever it was they were stationed. Iothiah Noon saw him in the
shadow of the Library, more apprehensive than ever. If rumours of the
existence of Gnostic texts had reached him, wouldn’t they also have reached the
Scarlet Spires? The thought of jostling for scrolls with the red-robed
Schoolmen filled him with more than a little dread. “What do you think?” he
asked Daybreak, who snorted and nosed his palm. The idea that Gnostic
texts might have lain hidden here all this time wasn’t as preposterous as it
seemed. The Library was as old as the Thousand Temples, built and maintained by
the Sareots, an esoteric College of priests dedicated to the preservation of
knowledge. There was a time, during the Ceneian Empire, when it was law in
Iothiah for all those entering the city in possession of a book to surrender it
to the Sareots so that it might be copied. The problem, however, was that the
Sareotic College was a religious institution, and as such, it necessarily
forbade any of the Few from entering the famed Library. When, many centuries
later, the Sareots were massacred by the Fanim in the fall of Shigek, it was
rumoured that the Padirajah himself had entered the Library. From his vest, the
legend went, he pulled a slender, leather-bound copy of the kipfa’aifan, the Witness
of Fane, bent to
the shape of his breast. Holding it high in the airy gloom, he declared, “Here
lies all written truth. Here lies the one path for all souls. Burn this wicked
place.” At that instant, it was said, a single scroll spilled from the racks
and came rolling to his booted feet. When the Padirajah opened it he found a detailed
map of all Gedea, which he later used to crush the Nansur in a number of
desperate battles. The Library was spared,
but if it was closed to Schoolmen under the Sareots, it might well have ceased
to exist under the Kianene. There very well could be
Gnostic texts in this Library, Achamian knew. They’d been discovered before. If
there were any reason, aside from their dreams of the Old Wars, why the
sorcerers of the Mandate were the most scholarly of the Schoolmen, it was their
jealousy of the Gnosis. The Gnosis gave them a power far out of proportion to
the size of their School. If a School like the Scarlet Spires were to come into
its possession—who could say what might happen? Things wouldn’t fare well with
the Mandate, that much was certain. The Second March But then, all that was
about to change—now that an Anasurimbor had returned. Achamian led his mule
into the middle of a small walled courtyard. The cobble had long ago been
ground into red dust, save for the odd stones surfacing here and there like
turtle shells. The Library itself presented the square front of a Ceneian
temple, with columns soaring to brace a crumbling lintel pocked by figures that
may have once been gods or men. Two large Galeoth swordsmen reclined in the
shade against the two pillars flanking the entrance. They acknowledged him with
bored stares as he approached. “Greetings,” he called,
hoping they spoke Sheyic. “I am Drusas Istaphas, chronicler to Prince Nersei
Proyas of Conriya.” When they failed to
reply, he paused. Achamian found himself particularly unnerved by the one with
a scar that dimpled his face from his hairline to his chin. These didn’t seem
like friendly men. But then, what cheer would a warrior find guarding something
as useless as books ? Achamian cleared his throat.
“Have there been many other visitors to the Library?” “No,” the scarless man
replied, shrugging his shoulders beneath his hauberk. “Just a few
thieving merchants, is all.” The man spat something across the dust, and
Achamian realized he’d been sucking on a peach pit. “Well I can assure you
I’m not of that caste. Assuredly not…” Then, with a mixture of
curiosity and deference: “Do I have your leave to enter?” The man nodded to his
mule. “Can’t bring that thing,” he said. “Can’t have a donkey shitting in
our hallowed halls now can we?“ He smirked, and turned to his scarred
friend, who continued to stare at Achamian. He looked like a bored boy
deciding whether to poke a dead fish. After gathering several
things from his mule, Achamian rushed up the steps past the two guards. The
great doors were gilded in tarnished bronze, and one of them lay ajar enough to
admit a single man. As Achamian ducked into the gloom he heard one of the
Galeoth—the scarred one, he thought—mutter “Filthy pick.” But the old Norsirai slur
didn’t bother him. Rather, he was excited. A
sudden urge to cackle almost overcame him. Only now, it seemed, did the fact
that this was the Sareotic
Library fully
strike him. The damned Sareots, hoarding text after text for over a thousand
years. What might he lothiah find? Absolutely
anything, and not just Gnostic works, might lie hidden within. The Nine Classics, the early Dialogues of lnceruti—even the lost works of Ajencis! He passed through the
darkness of a great vaulted antechamber, across a mosaic floor that once, he
decided, had portrayed Inri Sejenus holding out haloed hands—at least before
the Fanim, who’d obviously never used this place, had defaced it. He retrieved
a candle from his saddlebag and ignited it with a secretive word. Holding the
small point of light before him, he plunged into the hallowed halls of the
Library. The Sareotic Library was
a warren of pitch-black hallways that smelled of dust and the ghost of rotting
books. Englobed by light, Achamian wandered through the blackness and filled
his arms with treasures. Never had he seen such a collection. Never had he
witnessed so many ruined thoughts. Out of the thousands of
volumes, and thousands upon thousands of scrolls, Achamian would be surprised
if more than several hundred could be salvaged. He found nothing that even
hinted at the Gnosis, but he did, nevertheless, find several things of peculiar
interest. He found one book by
Ajencis he’d never seen before, but it was written in Vaparsi, an ancient
Nilnameshi language he knew well enough only to decipher the title: The Fourth Dialogue of the Movements of the Planets as They Pertain to… something or another. But the fact that this was a
dialogue meant that it was exceedingly important. Very few of the great
Kyranean philosopher’s dialogues survived. He found a heap of clay
tablets written in the cuneiform script of ancient Shigek and draped by cobwebs
woollen with dust. He retrieved one that seemed in good shape and decided he
would try to smuggle it out, even though it might be a granary inventory for
all he knew. It would make a good gift, he thought, for Xinemus. And he found other tomes
and scrolls—curiosities mostly. An account of the Age of Warring Cities by a
historian he’d never encountered before. A strange, vellum-paged book, called
On the Temples and Their
Iniquities,
which made him wonder if the Sareots might not have had heretical leanings. And
some others. ihe second March After a time, both his
excitement at finding things intact and his outrage at finding them destroyed
flagged. He tired, and finding a stone bench in a niche, he arranged his
discoveries and his humble belongings around him as though they were totems in
a magic circle, then ate some stale bread and drank wine from his skin. He
thought of Esmenet while he ate, cursed himself for his sudden longing. He did
his best not to think of Kellhus. He replaced his
sputtering candle and decided to read. Alone withbooks,
yet again.
Suddenly he smiled. Again? No,
at last… A book was never “read.” Here, as elsewhere, language
betrayed the true nature of the activity. To say that a book was read was to
make the same mistake as the gambler who crowed about winning as though he’d
taken it by force of hand or resolve. To toss the number-sticks was to seize a
moment of helplessness, nothing more. But to open a book was by far the more
profound gamble. To open a book was not only to seize a moment of helplessness,
not only to relinquish a jealous handful of heartbeats to the unpredictable
mark of another man’s quill, it was to allow oneself to be written. For what was a book if not a long consecutive
surrender to the movements of another’s soul? Achamian could think of
no abandonment of self more profound. He read, and was moved to chuckle by
ironies a thousand years dead, and to reflect pensively on claims and hopes
that had far outlived the age of their import. He wouldn’t remember
falling asleep. There was a dragon in his
dream, old, hoary, terrible—and malevolent beyond compare. Skuthula, whose
limbs were like knotted iron, and whose black wings, when he descended, were
broad enough to‘ blot half the sky. The great fountain of luminescent fire that
vomited from Skuthula’s maw burnt the sand around his Wards to glass. And
Seswatha fell to one knee, tasted blood, but the old sorcerer’s head was thrown
back, his white hair whipped into ribbons by the wind of beating dragon-wings,
and the impossible words thundered like laughter from his incandescent mouth.
Needles of piercing light filled the sky… lothiah But the corners of this
scene were crimped, and then suddenly, as though dreams were painted across
parchment, it crumpled and was tossed into blackness… The blackness of open eyes… Gasping breath. Where was he? The Library, yes…
The candle must have gone out. But then he realized just
what had awakened him. His Wards of
Exposure, which he’d maintained ever since joining the Holy— Sweet Sejenus… The Scarlet Spires. He fumbled in the
darkness, gathered his satchel. Quickly,
quickly … He
stood in the blackness, and peered with different eyes. The chamber was long,
with low ceilings, and galleried by rows of racks and shelves. The intruders
were somewhere near, hastening between queues of mouldering knowledge, closing
on him from various points throughout the Library. Did they come for the
Gnosis? Knowledge ever found itself on the scales of greed, and no knowledge in
the Three Seas, perhaps, was as valuable as the Gnosis. But to abduct a Mandate
Schoolman in the midst of the Holy War? One would think the Scarlet Spires
would have more pressing concerns—like the Cishaurim. One would think… But what
of the skin-spies? What of the Consult? They’d known he was bound
to investigate even the rumour of a Gnostic text. And they
had known a Library would be where he felt safest. Who would risk
such treasures? Certainly not fellow Schoolmen, no matter how ill their
will… The entire thing, he
realized, was an outrageously extravagant trap—a trap that had included
Xinemus. What better way to lull an ever suspicious Mandate Schoolman than to
dangle the lure through the lips of his most trusted friend? Xinemus? No. It couldn’t be. Sweet Sejenus… This was actually happening! Achamian grabbed his
satchel and lunged through the blackness, crashed into a heavy rack of scrolls,
felt papyrus crumble in his fingers like the mud that skins the bottom of dried
puddles. He thrust his satchel into the leafy debris. Quickly, quickly. Then he stumbled back in the direction he’d come. itv Ihe Second March They were closer now.
Lights smeared the ceiling over the black shelves facing him. He backed into the small
alcove where he’d snoozed, then began uttering a series of Wards, short strings
of impossible thoughts. Light flashed from his lips. Luminescence sheeted the
air before him, like the glare of sunlight across mist. Dark muttering from
somewhere amid the teetering queues—skulking, insinuating words, like vermin
gnawing at the walls of the world. Then fierce light,
transforming, for a heartbeat, the shelves before him into a dawn horizon…
Explosion. A geyser of ash and fire. The concussion sucked the
air from his lungs. The heat cracked the stone of the surrounding walls. But
his Wards held. Achamian blinked. A
moment of relative darkness… “Yield Drusas Achamian…
You’re overmatched!” “Eleazaras?” he cried.
“How many times have you fools tried to wrest the Gnosis from us? Tried
and failed!” Shallow breath. Hammering
heart. “Eleazaras?” “You’re doomed, Achamian!
Would you doom the riches about you as well?” As precious as they were,
the words rolled and stacked about him meant nothing. Not now. “Don’t do this,
Eleazaras!” he cried in a breaking voice. The stakes! Thestakes! “It’s already—” But Achamian had
whispered secrets to his first attacker. Five lines glittered along the gorge
of blasted shelves, through smoke and wafting pages. Impact. The air cracked.
His unseen foe cried out in astonishment—they always did at the first touch of
the Gnosis. Achamian muttered more ancient words of power, more Cants. The
Bisecting Planes of Mirseor, to continuously stress an opponent’s Wards. The
Odaini Concussion Cants, to stun him, break his concentration. Then the Cirroi
Loom… Dazzling geometries leapt
through the smoke, lines and parabolas of razor light, punching through wood
and papyrus, shearing through stone. The Scarlet Schoolman screamed, tried to
run. Achamian boiled him in his skin. lothiah Darkness, save for
glowering fires scattered through the ruin. Achamian could hear the other
Schoolmen shouting to each other in shock and dismay. He could feel them
scramble among the queues, hasten to assemble a Concert. “Think on this,
Eleazaras! How many are you willing to sacrifice?” Please. Don’t be
a— The roar of flame. The
thunder of toppling shelves. Fire broke like foaming surf about his Wards. A
blinding flash, illuminating the vast chamber from corner to corner. The crack
of thunder. Achamian stumbled to his knees. His Wards groaned in his thoughts. He struck back with
Inference and Abstraction. He was a Mandate Schoolman, a Gnostic
Sorcerer-of-the-Rank, a War-Cant Master. He was as a mask held before the sun.
And his voice slapped the distances into char and ruin. The hoarded knowledge of
the Sareots was blasted and burned. Convections whipped pages into fiery
cyclones. Like leathery moths, books spiralled into the debris. Dragon’s fire
cascaded between the surviving shelves. Lightning spidered the air, crackled
across his defences. The last queues fell, and across the ruin Achamian
glimpsed his assailants: seven of them, like silk-scarlet dancers in a field of
funeral pyres: the Schoolmen of the Scarlet Spires. The glimpse of tempests
disgorging bolts of blinding white. The heads of phantom dragons dipping and
belching fire. The sweep of burning sparrows. The Great Analogies, shining and
ponderous, crashing and thundering about his Wards. And through them, the
Abstractions, glittering and instantaneous… The Seventh Quyan
Theorem. The Ellipses of Thosolankis… He yelled out the impossible words. The leftmost Scarlet
Schoolman screamed. The ghostly ramparts about him crumbled beneath an arcana
of encircling lines. The Library walls behind him exploded outward, and he was
puffed like paper into the evening sky. For a moment, Achamian
abandoned the Cants, began singing to save his Wards. Cataracts of hellfire.
The floor failed. Great ceilings of stone clapped about him like angry palms to
prayer. He fell through fire and he second March rolling, megalithic ruin.
But still he sang. He was a Scion of
Seswatha, a Disciple of Noshainrau the White. He was the slayer of Skafra,
mightiest of the Wracu. He had pitched his song against the dread heights of
Golgotterath. He had stood proud and impenitent before Mog-Pharau himself… Jarring impact. Different
footing, like the pitched deck of a ship. Shrugging slabs and heaped ruin away,
tossing thundering stone into sky. Plunging through meaning after dark meaning,
the hard matter of the world collapsing, falling away like lover’s clothing,
all in answer to his singing song. And at last the sky, so
water-cool when seen from the inferno’s heart. And there: the Nail of
Heaven, silvering the breast of a rare cloud. The Sareotic Library was
a furnace in the husk of ragged, free-standing walls. And above, the Scarlet
Magi hung as though from wires, and pummelled him with Cant after wicked Cant.
The heads of ghostly dragons reared and vomited lakes of fire. Rising and
spitting, wracking him with dazzling, bone-snapping fire. Sun after blinding
sun set upon him. On his knees, burned,
bleeding from mouth and eyes, encircled by heaped stone and text, Achamian
snarled Ward after Ward, but they cracked and shattered, were pinched away like
rotted linen. The very firmament, it seemed, echoed the implacable chorus of
the Scarlet Spires. Like angry smiths they punished the anvil. And through the madness,
Drusus Achamian glimpsed the setting sun, impossibly indifferent, framed by
clouds piled rose and orange… It was, he thought, a
good song. Forgive me, Kellhus. HApTER Thirteen Men are forever pointing at others, which, is why I always follow the knuckle and not the nail. —ONTILLAS, ON THE FOLLY OF
MEN A day with no noon, A year with no fall, Love is forever
new, Or love is not at all. ■■ —ANONYMOUS, “ODE TO THE LOSS OF
LOSSES” Late Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, Shigek There was light. “Esmi…” She stirred. What was her
dream? Yes… Swimming. The pool in the hiUs above the
Battleplain. A hand grasped her bare
shoulder. A gentle squeeze. “Esmi… You must wake up.” But she was so warm… She blinked, grimaced when she realized it was
still night. Lamplight. Someone carried a lamp. What was Akka doing? She rolled onto her back,
saw Kellhus kneeling over her, his expression grave. Frowning, she pulled her
blanket over her breasts. mt. ObCOND MARCH “Wha—” she started, but
paused to clear her throat. “What is it?” “The Library of the Sareots,” he said in a
hollow voice. “It burns.” She could only blink at the lamplight. “The Scarlet
Spires have destroyed it, Esmi.” She turned, looking for Achamian. Something about Xinemus’s
expression struck Proyas to the marrow. He looked away, ran an idle thumb over
the lip of his golden wine bowl, which lay empty on the table before him. He
stared at the glister of the eagles stamped into its side. “And just what would you
have me do, Zin?” Incredulity and impatience. “Everything in your power!” The
Marshal had informed him of Achamian’s abduction two days previous—never had
Proyas seen him so frantic with worry. At his behest, he’d issued orders for
the arrest of Therishut, a baron from the southern marches he only vaguely
remembered. Then, he’d ridden to Iothiah, where he demanded and received an
audience with Eleazaras himself. The Grandmaster had been accommodating, but he
categorically denied the Marshal’s accusations. He claimed his people had
stumbled upon a hidden cell of Cishaurim while investigating the Sareotic
Library. “We grieve the loss of two of our own,” he said solemnly. When Proyas asked, with
all due courtesy, to view the Cishaurim remains, Eleazaras said: “You can take them if you wish… Have you a sack?” You do see, his eyes had said, the futility of what you do. But Proyas had seen the futility
from the very beginning—even if they could find Therishut. Soon the Holy War
would cross the River Sempis and assault Skauras on the South Bank. The Men of
the Tusk needed the Scarlet Spires—desperately if what the Scylvendi said was
true. What was the life of one man—a blasphemer no less—compared with that
need? The God demanded sacrifices… Proyas could see the
futility—he could scarce see anything else! The difficulty was one of making
Xinemus see. “Everything in my power?”
the Prince repeated. “And what, pray tell, might that be, Zin? What power does
a Prince of Conriya hold over the Scarlet Spires?” Shigek He regretted the
impatience in his tone, but it couldn’t be helped. Xinemus continued to
stand at the ready, as though on parade. “You could call a Council…” “Yes, I could, but what
purpose would that serve?” “Purpose?” Xinemus
repeated, obviously horrified. “What purpose
would it serve?” “Yes. It may be a hard
question, but it’s honest.” “Don’t you understand?”
Xinemus exclaimed. “Achamian isn’t dead and gone! I’m not asking you to avenge him! They’ve
taken him,
Proyas. Even now, somewhere in Iothiah, they hold him. They ply him in ways you
and I cannot imagine. The Scarlet Spires! The Scarlet Spires have Achamian!” The Scarlet Spires. For
those who lived in the High Ainon’s shadow, they were the very name of dread.
Proyas breathed deep. The God had decreed his priorities… Faith makes strong. “Zin… I know how this
torments you. I know you feel responsible, but—” “You ungrateful,
arrogant, little pissant!” the Marshal exploded. He seized the corners of the
table, leaned forward over the sheaves of parchment. Spittle flecked his beard.
“Did you learn so little from him? Or was your heart flint in childhood as
well? This is Achamian, Proyas. Akka.1 The
man who doted on you! Who cherished you! The man who made you into who you are!” “Remember yourself
Marshal! I will toler—” “You will hear me out!”
Xinemus roared, pounding the table with his fist. The golden wine bowl bounced
and rolled off the edge. “As inflexible as you
are,” the Marshal grated, “you know how these things work. Remember what you
said on the Andiamine Heights? ‘The game is without beginning or end.’ I’m not
asking you to storm Eleazaras’s compound, Proyas, I’m simply asking you to play the game! Make them think you’ll stop at nothing to see Akka
safe, that you’re willing to declare open war against them if he should be
killed. If they believe you’re willing to forsake anything, even Holy Shimeh,
to recover Achamian, they will yield. They will yield!” Proyas stood, retreated
from his old sword-trainer’s furious aspect. He did know how “these things” worked. He had threatened Eleazaras with war. Kb Ihe Second March He laughed bitterly. “Are
you mad, Zin? Are you truly asking me to
put my old boyhood tutor before my God? To put a sorcerer before my God?” Xinemus released the
table, stood upright. “After all these years, you still don’t understand, do
you?” “What’s there to understand?”
Proyas cried. “How many times must we have this conversation? Achamian is
Unclean! Unclean!” A heady sense of conviction seized
him, an incontestable making certain, as though knowing
possessed its own fury. “If blasphemers kill blasphemers, then we’re saved oil
and wood.” Xinemus flinched as
though struck. “So you will do nothing.” “And neither will you, Marshal. We prepare to march against the South Bank.
The Padirajah has summoned every Sapatishah from Girgash to Eumarna. All Kian
assembles!” “Then I resign as Marshal
of Attrempus,” Xinemus declared in a stiff voice. “What is more, I repudiate
you, your father, and my oath to House Nersei. No longer shall I call myself a
Knight of Conriya.” Proyas felt a numbness
through his face and hands. This was impossible. “Think about this, Zin,” he
said breathlessly. “Everything… Your estates, your chattel, the sanctions of
your caste… Everything you have, everything
you are, will be
forfeit.” “No, Prosha,” he said,
turning for the curtains. “It’s you who surrender everything.” Then he was gone. The reed wick of his oil
lamp sputtered and fizzled. The gloom deepened. So much! The endless battles
with his peers. The heathen. The burdens—the innumerable burdens! The
never-ending fear of what might come. And Xinemus had always been there. He’d
always been the one! The one who understood, who made
clear what vexed, who shouldered what was beyond bearing… Akka. Sweet Seja… What had he
done? Nersei Proyas fell to his
knees, clutched at a knifing pang in his stomach. But the tears wouldn’t
come. I know you test me! I
know you test me! f Two bodies, one warmth. Wasn’t that what Kellhus
had said of love? Esmenet watched Xinemus
sit hesitantly, as though unsure of } welcome. He ran a heavy hand across his face. She could
see the desp ation in his eyes. “I’ve made,” he said
leadenly, “what inquiries I could.” He meant there had been
talk, the chatter of men who must m; certain sounds, preserve certain
semblances. “No! You must make more!
You can’t give up, Zin. Not after…” The pain in his eyes
completed her sentence. “The Holy War assaults
the South Bank in a matter of days, Esmi He pursed his lips. He meant the issue of
Drusas Achamian had been conveniently forj ten, as all intractable and
embarrassing matters must be. How? How cc one know Drusas Achamian, wander
through his precincts, and then away, whisked like sheets across dry skin? But
they were men. Men v dry on the outside, and wet only within. They couldn’t
commingle, ‘t their life to another in the ambiguity of fluids. Not truly. “Perhaps…” she said,
wiping tears and trying hard, very hard smile. “Perhaps Proyas is-is lonely…
Perhaps he n-needs to take his with—” “No, Esmi. No.” Hot tears. She shook her
head slowly, her face slack. No… I must do something! There must be something I can do! Xinemus looked past her
to the sunny earth, as though searchin lost words. “Why won’t you stay with
Kellhus and Serwe?” he asked. So much had changed in
such a short time. Xinemus’s camp dissolved with his station. Kellhus had taken
Serwe to join Proyas,‘s thing that had dismayed her even though she understood
his reason much as Kellhus loved Akka, all men were his province now. But she’d
begged! Grovelled! She had even tried, at the pitch of shai desperation, to
seduce him, though he would have none of it. The Holy War. The Holy
War. Everything was about the fu Holy War! Lis ihe second March What about Achamian? But Kellhus couldn’t
cross Fate. He had a far greater whore to answer to… “And if Akka comes back?”
she sobbed. “What if he comes back and can’t find me?” Though everyone had left,
her tent—Akka’s tent—hadn’t moved. She lingered
in the gap where her joy had been. Now under the command of Iryssas, the
Attrempans treated her with deference and respect. The “sorcerer’s woman” they
called her… “It’s not good for you to
stay here alone,” Xinemus said. “Iryssas will march with Proyas soon, and the
Shigeki… There could be reprisals.” “I’ll manage,” she
croaked. “I’ve spent my life alone, Zin.” Xinemus pressed himself
to his feet. He held a hand to her cheek, pinched away a tear with a gentle
thumb. “Stay safe, Esmi.” “What are you going to
do?” He glanced into the
distance behind her, perhaps at the hazy ziggurats, perhaps at nothing. “Search,” he said in a
hopeless voice. “I’ll ride with you,” she
exclaimed, jumping to her feet. I’m coming, Akka! I’m coming! Xinemus strode wordlessly
to his horse, climbed into his saddle. He drew a knife from his girdle, then
tossed it high in the air. It thudded into the bare earth between her feet. “Take it,” he said. “Be
safe, Esmi.” For the first time
Esmenet noticed Dinchases and Zenkappa in the distance, also mounted, waiting
for their former lord. They waved before falling in behind him. She fell to her
seat, burst into further sobs. She buried her face in hot arms. When she looked up, they
were gone. Helplessness. If women
were hope’s oldest companions, it was due to helplessness. Certainly women
often exercised dreadful power over a single hearth, but the world between
hearths belonged to men. And it was into this world that Achamian had
disappeared: the cold darkness between firepits. All she could do was
wait… What greater anguish could there be than waiting? Nothing etched the
shape of one’s impotence with more galling Shigek meticulousness than the
blank passage of time. Moment after moment, some dull with disbelief, others
taut with voiceless shrieks. Moment after gnashing moment. Bright with the
flare of agonized questions: Where
is he? What will I do without him? Dark with the exhaustion of hope: He’s dead. I am alone. Waiting. This was what
tradition said a woman should do. To wait at the hearth’s edge.
To peer and peer and yet always be stared down. To haggle endlessly with
nothing. To think without hope of insight. To repeat words said and words
implied. To chase hints into incantations, as though by their tumbling
precision and the sheer pitch of their pain the movements of her soul might
seize the world at some deeper level, and force it to yield. As the days passed, it
seemed she’d become a still point in the ponderous wheel of events, the only
structure to remain after the floodwaters retreated. The tents and pavilions
fell like shrouds unfurled across the dead. The vast baggage trains were
loaded. Armoured men on horse chopped to and fro from the horizon, bearing
arcane missives, onerous commands. Great columns were formed up across the
pasture, and with shouts and hymns, they passed away. Like a season. And Esmenet sat alone in
the midst of their absence. She watched the breeze tease threads free of
trampled grasses. She watched bees dart like black buzzing dots across the
bruised reaches. She felt embalmed by the silence. She was held motionless by
the false peace of passing commotion. Sitting before Achamian’s tent, her back
turned to their pathetic possessions, her every surface exposed to gaping,
sun-bright spaces, she wept—called out his name as though he might lie hidden
behind some copse of black willows, whose verdant branches waved each
independent of the other, as though beneath the tug of different skies. She could almost see him,
crouched behind that shade-black trunk. Come out, Akka… They’ve all left. It’s safe now, my love… Day. Night. Esmenet would make her
own silent inquiries, an interrogation without hope of answer. She would think
much of her dead daughter, and make forbidden comparisons between that cold
world and this one. She would walk down to the Sempis and stare at its black
waters, not knowing l.v’tj inc otuuND MARCH whether she wanted to
drink or drown. She would glimpse herself in the distance, arms waving… One body, no warmth. Day. Night. Moment by
moment. Esmenet had been a whore,
and whores knew how to wait. Patience through the long succession of lusts, her
days lined up as though words on a scroll as long as life, each whispering the
same thing. It’s safe now, my love. Come out. It is safe. Since leaving Xinemus’s
camp, Cnaiur passed his days much as before, either conferring with Proyas or
discharging his requests. Skauras had wasted little time in the weeks following
his defeat on the Battleplain. He’d ceded what land he couldn’t hold, which
included the entire North Bank of the Sempis. He burned every boat he could
find to prevent any mass crossing, raised makeshift watch towers along the
entire South Bank, and gathered the remnants of his army. Fortunately for the
Shigeki and their new Inrithi warlords, he hadn’t burned the granaries or
scorched the fields and orchards as he withdrew. In Council, Saubon claimed
this was due to the heathen’s haste, which in turn was due to their terror. But
Cnaiur knew better. There had been nothing haphazard about the Kianene
evacuation of the North Bank. They knew Hinnereth would delay the Men of the
Tusk. Even at Zirkirta, where the Scylvendi had crushed the heathen eight years
before, the Kianene had recovered quickly from their initial rout. They were a
tenacious and resourceful race. Skauras had spared the
North Bank, Cnaiur knew, because he intended to reclaim it. This wasn’t a fact
Inrithi stomachs found easy to digest. Even Proyas, who’d set aside the many
conceits of his caste and had embraced Cnaьir’s tutelage, couldn’t believe the
Kianene still posed any real threat. “Are you assured of your
victory?” Cnaiur asked one night while supping with the Prince in private. “Assured?” Proyas
replied. “But of course.” “Why?” Shigek “Because my God has
willed it.” “And Skauras? Would he
not give much the same answer?” Proyas’s eyebrows jumped up, then knitted into
a frown. “But that’s not to the point, Scylvendi. How many thousands have we
killed? How much terror have we struck into their hearts?” “Too few thousands, and
far, far too little terror.” Cnaiur explained the way the memorialists recited
verses dedicated to each of the Nansur Columns, stories that described their devices,
their arms, and their mettle in battle so that when the Tribes went on
pilgrimage or to war, they could read the Nansur battle line. “This was why the
People lost at Kiyuth,” he said. “Conphas switched his Columns’ devices, told
us a false story…” “Any fool knows how to
read his opponent’s line!” Proyas spat. Cnaiur shrugged. “Then tell me,” he
said, “what story did you read on the Battleplain?” Proyas blanched. “How in
the blazes am I supposed to know? I recognized only a handful…” “I recognized all of
them,” Cnaiur asserted. “Of all the great Kianene Houses, and there are many,
only two-thirds rode against us on the Plains of Mengedda. Of those, several
were likely token contingents, depending on how many enemies Skauras entertains
among his peers. After the massacre of the Vulgar Holy War, many among the
heathen, including the Padirajah, were no doubt contemptuous of the Holy War’s
threat…” “But now…” Proyas said. “They will not repeat
their mistake. They will strike treaties with Girgash and Nilnamesh. They will
empty every barracks, saddle every horse, arm every son… Make no mistake, even
now they ride toward Shigek in their thousands. They will answer Holy War with
Jihad.” Following this exchange,
Proyas out and out capitulated to his admonishments. At the next Council, after
the other Great Names, with the exception of Conphas, scoffed at Cnaiur and his
warnings, Proyas had captives secured in cross-river raids dragged before them.
They confirmed everything Cnaiur had predicted. For over a week, the wretches
said, Grandees from as far away as Seleukara and Nenciphon had been riding out
of the southern deserts. Some names even the Norsirai seemed to recognize:
Cinganjehoi, the far-famed Sapatishah of Eumarna, Imbeyan, MARCH the Sapatishah of Enathpaneah,
even Dunjoksha, the tyrannical Sapatishah who ruled the governorate of Amoteu
from Shimeh. It was agreed. The Holy
War had to cross the River Sempis as soon as humanly possible. “To think,” Proyas
confided to him afterward, “that I thought you no more than an effective ruse
to employ against the Emperor. Now you’re our general in all but name. You
realize that?” “I have said or offered
nothing that Conphas himself could not say or offer.” Proyas laughed. “Save
trust, Scylvendi. Save trust.” Though Cnaьir grinned, these words cut him for
some reason. What did it matter, the trust of dogs and cattle? Cnaьir had been born for
war, as much as he’d been bred for it. This, and this alone, was the one
certainty of his life. So he bent himself to the problem of assaulting the
South Bank with relish and uncommon zeal. While the Great Names directed the
construction of rafts and barges in great enough numbers to convey the entire
Holy War across the Sempis, Cnaьir supervised the Conriyan effort to find the
ideal place to land. He led his war parties on night raids against the South
Bank, even bringing cartographers to map the terrain. If one thing impressed
him about the Inrithi manner of making war, it was their use of maps. He
directed the questioning of captives, and even taught several traditional
Scylvendi techniques to Proyas’s interrogators. He questioned those, such as
Earl Athjeari, who raided the South Bank to plunder and harry, about what
they’d seen. And he held council with others, like Earl Cerjulla, General Biaxi
Sompas, and Palatine Uranyanka, who shared his task. Except for Proyas’s
councils, he neither saw nor spoke to Kellhus. The Dunyain was little more than
a rumour. Cnaьir’s days were much
the same as before. But his nights… They were far different. He never pitched his tent
on the same ground. Most evenings, after sunset or after supping with Proyas
and his caste-nobles, he rode from the Conriyan camp, past the sentries and out
into the fields. He struck his own fire, listened to the night wind roar
through the trees. Sometimes, when he could see it, he stared at the Conriyan
encampment and counted fires like an idiot child. “Always number your foemen,”
his father had f Shigek once told him, “by the
glitter of their fires.” Sometimes he gazed at the stars and wondered if they
too were his enemies. Every so often, he imagined he camped across the lonely
Steppe. The Holy Steppe. He often brooded over
Serwe and Kellhus. He found himself continually rehearsing his reasons for
abandoning her to the Dunyain. He was a warrior—a Scylvendi warrior! What need
had he, man-killing Cnaьir, of a woman? But no matter how obvious
his reasons, he still couldn’t help but think of her. The globes of her
breasts. The wandering line of her hips. So perfect. How he’d burned for her,
burned the way a warrior, a man, should! She was his prize—his proof! He remembered pretending
to sleep while listening to her sob in the darkness. He remembered the remorse,
as heavy as spring snow, pressing him breathless with its cold. What a fool
he’d been! He thought of the apologies, of the desperate pleas that might
soften her hatred, that might let her see. He thought of kissing the gentle
swell of her belly. And he thought of Anissi, the first wife of his heart,
slumbering in the nickering gloom of their faraway hearth, holding tight their
daughter, Sanathi, as though sheltering her from the terror of womanhood. And
he thought of Proyas. On the worst nights he
hugged himself in the blackness of his tent, screaming and sobbing. He beat the
earth with his fists, stabbed holes with his knife, then fucked them. He cursed
the world. He cursed the heavens. He cursed Anasurimbor Moenghus and his
monstrous son. He thought, So
be it. On the best nights he
made no camp at all, but instead rode to the nearest Shigeki village, where he
would kick in doors and glory in screams. On a whim, he avoided those doors
marked with what he imagined was lamb’s blood. But when he found all the doors
so marked, he ceased to discriminate. “Murder me!” he would roar at them. “Murder meand
it stops!” Bawling men. Shrieking
girls and silent women. He would take what compensation he could. A week passed before
Cnaьir found the Holy War’s best point of purchase on the South Bank: the
shallow tidal marshes along the southern edge of the Sempis Delta. Of course
all the Great Names, with the IHt OECOND MARCH exception of Proyas and
Conphas, balked at the news, especially after their own people returned with
descriptions of the terrain. They were knights, through and through, trained
and bred to the charge, and from all accounts, no horse could do more than
thrash its way forward through the marsh. But of course that was
the point. At a Council held in
Iothiah, Proyas bid him to explain his plan to the assembled Inrithi. He
unrolled a large map of the southern Delta across the table occupied by the
Great Names. “At Mengedda,” he
declared, “you learned the Kianene were faster. This means no matter where you
assemble to cross the Sempis, Skauras will assemble first. But at Mengedda you
also learned the strength of your footmen. And more important, you taught. These marshes are shallow. A man, even a heavily
armed man, can easily walk through them, but horses must be led. As much as you
pride your mounts, the Kianene pride theirs more. They will refuse to dismount,
and they will not send their conscripts to contest you. What could conscripts
do against men who can break a Grandee’s charge? No. Skauras will yield the
entirety of the marsh…” He jabbed a chapped
finger at the map, some distance to the south of the marsh. “He will draw back here,
to the fortress of Anwurat. He will give you all this pasture to assemble. He
will cede you both ground and your horses.” “How can you be so
certain?” Gothyelk cried. Of all the Great Names, the old Earl of Agansanor
seemed the most troubled by Cnaьir’s savage heritage—with the exception of
Conphas, of course. “Because Skauras,” Cnaьir
said evenly, “is not a fool.” Gothyelk hammered a fist
down on the table. But before Proyas could intervene, the Exalt-General stood
from his seat and said, “He’s right!” Stunned, the Great Names
turned to him. Since the debacle at Hinnereth, Conphas had largely kept his
counsel. His was no longer a welcome voice. But to hear him confirm the
Scylvendi on something as daring as this… “The dog’s right, as much
as it pains me to say it.” He looked at Cnaьir with eyes that both laughed and
hated. “He’s found our purchase on the South Bank.” Shigek Cnaьir imagined cutting
his pampered throat. After this, the Scylvendi
Chieftan’s reputation was secured. He even became something of a fashion among
certain Inrithi caste-nobility, particularly the Ainoni and their wives. Proyas
had warned him this might happen. “They will be drawn to you,” he explained,
“the way old leches are drawn to young boys.” Cnaьir found himself beset with
invitations and propositions. One woman, through sheer perseverance, even found
him at his camp. He stopped short of strangling her. As the far-flung Holy War
began gathering near Iothiah, Cnaьir troubled himself with thoughts of Skauras,
much the way he’d once troubled himself with thoughts of Conphas before the
Battle of Kiyuth. The man was obviously fearless. The story of him standing
alone paring his nails while Saubon’s Agmundrmen archers feathered the
surrounding turf had become something of a legend. And from his interrogations
of Kianene captives Cnaьir had learned other details: that he was a severe
disciplinarian, that he possessed a gift for organization, and that he
commanded the respect of even those who otherwise outranked him, such as the
Padirajah’s son, Fanayal, or his famed son-in-law, Imbeyan. Cnaьir had also,
quite inadvertently, learned much from Conphas, who occasionally recollected
incidents from his youth as a hostage of the Sapatishah. If his stories could
be believed, Skauras was an exceedingly canny and strangely mischievous man. Of all these
characteristics, it was this latter, mischievousness, that struck Cnaьir the
most. Apparently Skauras liked to drug his unwitting guest’s wine with a
variety of Ainoni and Nilnameshi narcotics—even with chanv on occasion. “All
those who drink with me,” Conphas once quoted him as claiming, “drink with
themselves as well.” When Cnaьir had first heard this story, he’d thought it
simply more proof of the way luxury drowned manly sense. But now he wasn’t so
sure. The point of the narcotics, Cnaьir realized, was to make his guests other to themselves, strangers with whom they could tip
bowls. Which meant the wily
Sapatishah not only liked to trick and deceive, he liked to show, to prove… For Skauras, the imminent
battle would be more than a contest, it would be a demonstration. The man had
underestimated the Inrithi at Mengedda, seeing only his strengths and his
opponent’s weaknesses, _^^ьic uccUBU 1V1AKCH much as Xunnurit had
underestimated Conphas at Kiyuth. He wouldn’t try to overpower the Men of the
Tusk; he was not a man to repeat his mistakes. Rather, he would try to outwit
them, to show them fools… So what would the wily
old warrior do? Cnaiur shared his
apprehensions with Proyas. “You must be sure,” he
told the Prince, “that the Scarlet Spires remains with the host at all points.” Proyas had pressed a hand
to his forehead. “Eleazaras will resist,” he said wearily. “He’s already said
he will follow only after the Holy War has crossed.
Apparently his spies have told him the Cishaurim remain in Shimeh…” Cnaiur scowled and spat.
“Then we have the advantage!” “The Scarlet Spires, I fear, conserve
themselves for the Cishaurim.” “They must accompany us,” Cnaiur insisted,
“even if they remain hidden. There must be something you can offer.” The Prince smiled
mirthlessly. “Or someone,” he said with uncommon grief. At least once daily,
Cnaiur rode to the river to view the preparations. The floodplains surrounding
Iothiah had been denuded of trees, as had the banks of the Sempis, where
thousands of barebacked Inrithi toiled over felled trunks, hacking, pounding,
binding. He could ride for miles, breathing deep the smell of sweat, pitch, and
hewn wood, before glimpsing the end of them. Hundreds hailed him as he passed,
saluting him with cries of “Scylvendi!”—as though his ancestry had become his
fame and title. Cnaiur need only peer
across the Sempis to know that Skauras awaited them on the far bank. As tiny as
mites in the distance, Fanim horsemen continuously patrolled the
shoreline—entire divisions of them. Sometimes he heard their thousand-throated
jeers across the water, sometimes the throb of their drums. As a precaution,
squadrons of Imperial war galleys were stationed in the river. The Holy War began
embarking long before dawn. Hundreds of crude barges and thousands of rafts
were first poled then paddled into the Sempis. By the time the morning sun
enamelled the waters much of the vast flotilla was underway, packed with
anxious men and horses. Shigek Cnaiur crossed with
Proyas and his immediate entourage. Xinemus was absent, which Cnaiur thought
strange, until he realized that the Marshal had his own men to watch over. But
of course Kellhus was in attendance, and the Prince stood at his side for some
time. They traded avid words, and periodically Proyas laughed with an
uneasiness that tickled to hear. Cnaiur had watched the
Dunyain’s influence grow. He’d watched as he gradually bridled all those about
Xinemus’s fire, working their hearts the way saddle makers worked leather,
tanning, gouging, shaping. He’d watched as he lured more and more Men of the
Tusk with the grain of his deceit. He’d watched him yoke thousands—thousands!—with simple words and bottomless looks. He’d watched
him minister to Serwe… He’d watched until he could bear watching no more.
Cnaiur had always known Kellhus’s capabilities, had always known the Holy War
would yield to him. But knowing and witnessing were two different things. He
cared nothing for the Inrithi. And yet, watching Kellhus’s lies spread like
cancer across an old woman’s skin, he found himself fearing for them—fearing, even as he scorned them! How they
fell over themselves, fawning, wheedling, grovelling. How they degraded
themselves, youthful fools and inveterate warriors alike. Imploring looks and
beseeching expressions. Oh, Kellhus… Oh, Kellhus … Staggering drunks! Unmanly ingrates! How easily they surrendered. And none more so than
Serwe. To watch her succumb, again and again. To see his hand drift deep
between Dunyain thighs… Fickle, treacherous,
whorish bitch! How many times must he strike her? How many times must he take
her? How many times must he stare, dumbfounded by her beauty? Cnaiur sat cross-legged
on the prow, watching the far embankment, probing the shadows beneath the
trees. He could see clots of horsemen, what seemed thousands of them, tracking
their slow drift down river. The air was dank. Nervous
voices rang across the waters: Inrithi calling to each other between crafts,
jokes mostly. Cnaiur saw far too many bare asses. “Look at the assholes!”
some wit cried out, watching the Kianene crowding the opposite bank. “I resent that!” someone
bawled from a nearby raft. “What are you? Heathen?” “Nay, I’m an asshole!” For a time, it seemed the
Sempis itself thundered with laughter. But the mood turned when one fool
stumbled into the river. Cnaiur actually saw it happen. The man hit the water
face first, and thanks to his armour, simply continued dropping until obscured
by the reflections of his horrified comrades. Jeers and catcalls thundered from
the southern shore. Proyas cursed, and soundly upbraided all those floating
within earshot. Afterward, the Prince
left Kellhus and jostled his way to Cnaiur on the prow, his eyes shining in
that peculiar way—the way they always shone after he spoke with Kellhus. The
way, in fact, everyone’s eyes shone, as though they just had awakened from a
nightmare and found their families intact. But there was more to his
manner, a too-forward camaraderie that spoke of dread. “You avoid Kellhus like
the plague, you know that?” Cnaiur snorted. Proyas watched him, his
smile fading. “Such things are difficult,” he said. His eyes darted from Cnaiur
to the heathen streaming and massing along the southern shore. “What things are
difficult?” Cnaiur asked. Proyas grimaced,
scratched the back of his head. “Kellhus told me…” “Told you what?” “About Serwe.” Cnaiur nodded, spat into
the water rolling beneath the prow. Of course the Dunyain had told him. What
better way to explain their estrangement? What better way to explain the
estrangement between any men? A woman. Serwe… His prize. His
proof. The perfect explanation.
Simple. Plausible. Certain to discourage further questions… The Dunyain explanation. A moment of silence
passed, awkward with misgivings and small misapprehensions. “Tell me, Cnaiur,” Proyas
finally said. “What do the Scylvendi believe? What are their Laws?” “What do I believe?” Shigek “Yes… Of course.” “I believe your ancestors
killed my God. I believe your race bears the blood-guilt of that crime.” His voice didn’t quaver.
His expression didn’t break. But as always, he could hear the
infernal chorus. “So you worship
vengeance…” “I worship vengeance.” “And that’s why the
Scylvendi call themselves the People of War.” “Yes. To war is to
avenge.” The proper answer. So why
the throng of questions? “To take back what has
been taken,” Proyas said, his eyes at once troubled and bright. “Like our Holy
War for Shimeh.” “No,” Cnaiur replied. “To
murder the taker.” Proyas shot him an
alarmed look, then glanced away. With an air of admission that Cnaiur found
effeminate, he said, “I like you much better, Scylvendi, when I forget who you
are.” But Cnaiur had turned
away, searching the southern banks for sight of more men who would kill him, if
they could. What Proyas remembered or forgot mattered nothing to him. He was
what he was. I am of the People! In a long drifting
column, the Inrithi flotilla entered the first of the Delta channels. Cnaiur couldn’t
help but wonder what Skauras would think when his watchers reported they’d lost
sight of the Holy War. Had he anticipated this? Or had he simply feared it?
Even now the Emperor’s warships would be taking positions along the
southernmost navigable channels. The Sapatishah would know soon enough where
the Holy War intended to land. As it happened, they were
harassed only by mosquitoes. The morning, then the afternoon, took on the
strange character of lulls before imminent battle. It was always the same. For
some reason, the air would become leaden, the moments would drop like stones,
and a restless boredom unlike any other would weigh and weigh, making necks
stiff and heads ache. Every man, no matter how terrified on the morn, would
find himself yearning for the battle, as though the
violence of its promise burdened far more than the violence of its
consummation. Night passed in discomfort and the delirium of almost sleep. They reached the salt
marshes around noon the following day: a deep-green sea of reeds reaching to
either horizon. Suddenly the torpor lifted, and Cnaiur felt a sudden frenzy
akin to that of the charge. He waded with the others through the morass,
dragging the barge as far forward as possible, hacking with his sword at the
towering papyrus. Soon he found himself one of thousands stamping forward,
levelling the reeds into a vast swampy plain. Eventually inroads were cut to
the hard ground of the South Bank. With Proyas, Kellhus, Ingiaban, and a party
of knights, Cnaiur slogged forward to see what awaited them. As always the
Dunyain’s presence made his heart itch, like the threat of a blow from unseen
quarters. To the east they glimpsed
the distant breakers of the Meneanor. Before them, to the south, the land
climbed in stony heaps, becoming a mass of iron-coloured hills. To the west
they saw a broad swath of pasture, creased like a brooding man’s forehead,
darkened by distant orchards. On a lone hill, barely distinguishable for the
haze, they could see the squat ramparts of Anwurat. Small bands of horsemen
trotted across the intervening distance, but nothing more. Skauras had yielded the
South Bank. As Cnaiur had predicted. Proyas fairly howled in celebration. “What
fools!” Ingiaban cried. “What fools!” Ignoring the torrent of
acclamation, Cnaiur glanced at Kellhus, wasn’t surprised to see him watching,
studying. Cnaiur spat and looked away, knowing full well what the Dunyain had
seen. It was too easy. The Holy War spent the
entire afternoon stumping out from the swamp. Most pitched their tents in the
failing light of dusk. Cnaiur heard the Inrithi sing, scoffed as he always
scoffed. He watched them kneel in prayer, congregate around their priests and
idols. He listened to them laugh and cavort, and he wondered that their
merriment could sound genuine rather than forced, as it should on the eve
before battle. War for them wasn’t holy. War for them was a means, not an end.
A track to their destination. Shimeh. But the darkness snuffed
their celebratory mood. To the south and to the west the entire horizon
twinkled with lights, like embers kicked Shigek across folds of blue
wool. Camp fires, innumerable thousands of them, tended by the leather-hearted
warriors of Kian. The beat of drums rolled down the hillsides. At the Council of Great
and Lesser Names, the Men of the Tusk, dazzled by the bloodless success of
their landing, acclaimed Cnaiur their King-of-Tribes—what they called their
Battlemaster. Followed by his generals and lesser officers, Ikurei Conphas
stormed from the Council in a fury. Cnaiur wordlessly accepted, too conflicted
to feel either pride or embarrassment. Slaves were given the task of stitching
his own battlefield standard, something the Inrithi held sacred. Afterward, Cnaiur found
Proyas standing alone in the darkness, staring at the countless heathen fires. “So many,” the Prince
said softly. “Eh, Battlemaster?” Proyas hitched his lips
into a smile, but Cnaiur could see him wring his hands in the moonlight. The
barbarian was struck by how young the man looked, how frail… For the first
time, it seemed, Cnaiur understood the catastrophic dimensions of what would
soon happen. Nations, faiths, and races. Where did this young man,
this boy, belong in all of this? How would he fare? , He could be my son. : “I shall overcome them,” Cnaiur said. But aftetward, as he
walked toward his solitary camp on the windy shores of the Meneanor, he fumed
over these words. Who was he to give assurances to an Inrithi prince? What did
it matter to him who died and who lived? What did it matter so long as he was
party to the killing? I am of the People! Cnaiur urs Skiotha, the
most violent of all men. Later that night, he
squatted before the churning surf and washed his broadsword in the sea,
thinking of how he’d once crouched on the misty shores of the faraway Jorua Sea
with his father, doing much the same. He listened to the thunder of distant
breakers, to the hiss of water washing through sand and gravel. He looked
across the Meneanor’s shining reaches and pondered its tracklessness. A
different kind of steppe. What was it his father
had said of the sea? Afterward, as he sat
sharpening his blade for the morrow’s worship, Kellhus stepped soundlessly from
the blackness. The wind twisted his hair into flaxen tails. Cnaьir grinned wolfishly.
For some reason he wasn’t surprised. “What brings you here, Dunyain?” Kellhus studied his face
by firelight, and for the first time Cnaьir didn’t care. know you lie. “Do you think the Holy
War will prevail?” Kellhus asked. “The great prophet,”
Cnaьir snorted. “Have others come to you with that same question?” “They have,” Kellhus
replied. Cnaьir spat into the
fire. “How fares my prize?” “Serwe is well… Why do
you avoid my question?” Cnaьir sneered, turned
back to his blade. “Why do you ask questions when you know the answer?” Kellhus said nothing, but
stood like something otherworldly against the darkness. The wind whipped smoke
about him. The sea thundered and hissed. “You think something has
broken within me,” Cnaьir continued, drawing out his whetstone to the stars.
“But you are wrong… You think I have become more erratic, more unpredictable,
and therefore more a threat to your mission…” He turned from his
broadsword and matched the Dunyain’s bottomless gaze. “But you are wrong.” Kellhus nodded, and
Cnaьir cared not at all. “When this battle comes,”
the Dunyain said, “you must instruct me… You must teach me War.” “I would sooner cut my
throat.” A gust assailed his fire,
blowing sparks over the strand. It felt good, like a woman’s fingers through
his hair. “I’ll give you Serwe,”
Kellhus said. The sword fell with a
clang to Cnaьir’s feet. For an instant, it seemed he gagged on ice. “Why,” he spat
contemptuously, “would I want your pregnant whore?” Shigek “She’s your prize,”
Kellhus said. “She bears your child.” Why did he long for her
so? She was a vain, shallow-witted waif— nothing more! Cnaьir had seen the way
Kellhus used her, the way he dressed her. He’d heard the words he bid her
speak. No tool was too small for a Dunyain, no word too plain, no blink too
brief. He’d utilized the chisel of her beauty, the hammer of her peach… Cnaьir
had seen this! So how could he
contemplate… All I have is war! The Meneanor crashed and
surged across the beaches. The wind smelled of brine. Cnaьir stared at the
Dunyain for what seemed a thousand heartbeats. Then at last he nodded, even
though he knew he relinquished the last remnant of his hold on the abomination.
After this he would have nothing but the word of a Dunyain… He would have nothing. But when he closed his
eyes he saw her, felt her soft and supple, crushed beneath his frame. She was
his prize! His proof! Tomorrow, after worship… He would take what
compensation he could. Fourteen Anwurat It is the difference in knowledge that
commands respect. This is why the true test of every student lies in the
humiliation of his master. —GOTAGGA, THE PRIMA ARCANATA The children here play with bones instead
of sticks, and whenever I see them, 1 cannot but wonder whether the humeri they
brandish are faithful or heathen. Heathen, I should think, for the bones
seem bent. —ANONYMOUS, LETTER FROM
ANWURAT Late Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk,
Shigek Reviewing the latest
intelligence reports, Ikurei Conphas let Martemus stand unacknowledged for
several moments. The canvas walls of his command pavilion had been rolled up
and bound to facilitate traffic. Officers, messengers, secretaries, and scribes
shuttled back and forth between the lamp-illumined interior and the surrounding
darkness of the Nansur encampment. Men called out and muttered in deliberation,
their faces almost uniformly blank, their eyes slack with the wary expectancy
of battle. They were Nansur, and no people had lost more sons to the Fanim.
Such a battle! And he—he! the Lion of Kiyuth!—would be little more than a
subaltern… No matter, it would be
salt for the honey, as the Ainoni were fond of saying. The bitterness that made
vengeance sweet. “When dawn breaks and the
Scylvendi dog leads us into battle,” Conphas said, still studying the documents
fanned across the table before him, “I’ve decided that you, Martemus, will be
my representative.” “Do you have any specific instructions?” the
General asked stiffly. Conphas looked up, appraised the hard-jawed man for
several condescending moments. Why had he allowed him to keep his blue
general’s cloak? He should have sold the fool to the slavers. “You think I give you
this charge because I trust you to the degree I distrust the Scylvendi… But
you’re wrong. As much as I despise the savage, as much as I intend to see him
dead, I do in fact trust him in matters of war…” And well he should, Conphas
mused. As strange as it seemed, the barbarian had been his student for quite
some time. Since the Battle of Kiyuth, if not longer… No wonder they called
Fate a whore. * “But you, Martemus,”
Conphas continued. “You I scarcely trust at all.” “Then why give me such an assignment?” No protestations of
innocence, no hurt looks or clenched fists… Only stoic curiosity. For all his
failings, Conphas realized, Martemus remained a remarkable man. It would be
such a waste. “Because you’ve
unfinished business.” Conphas handed several sheets to his secretary, then
looked down as though to study the next sheaf of parchment. “I’ve just been
told the Prince of Atrithau accompanies the Scylvendi.” He graced the General
with a dazzling smile. Martemus said nothing for a stone-faced moment. “But I
told you… He’s… he’s…” “Please,” Conphas
snapped. “How long has it been since you’ve drawn your sword, hmm? If I doubt
your loyalty, I laugh at your prowess… No. You’ll only observe.” “Then who—” But Conphas had already
waved the three men forward: the assassins dispatched by his uncle. The two,
who were obviously Nansur, weren’t all that imposing, perhaps—but the third,
the black-skinned Zeumi, drew nervous glances from even the most distracted of
Conphas’s officers. He towered a full head above the surrounding mob,
bull-chested and yellow-eyed. He wore
the red-striped tunic and iron-scale harness of an imperial auxiliary, though a
great tulwar hung across his back. A Zeumi sword-dancer. The
Emperor had been generous indeed. “These men,” Conphas
said, staring hard at the General, “will do the work…” He leaned forward,
lowering his voice so as not to be overheard. “But you, Martemus, you’ll be the one who brings me
Anasurimbor Kellhus’s head.” Was that horror he saw in
the man’s eyes.? Or was it hope? Conphas fell back into his chair. “You can use
your cloak as a sack.” The long howl of Inrithi
horns pierced the predawn gloom, and the Men of the Tusk arose certain of their
triumph. They stood on the South Bank. They had met their enemy before and had
crushed him. They would enter battle with all of their assembled might. And
most importantly, the God himself walked among them—they could see
Him in thousands of I bright eyes. Spears and lances had become, it seemed to
them, markers| of the Tusk. The air was rifled by the
commanding cries of thanes, barons, and their majordomos. Men hastened into
their gear. Horsemen streamed between the tents. Armoured men knelt in circles,
praying. Wine was passed, bread hastily broken and devoured. Bands of men
drifted to their places in the line, some singing, some watchful. Small groups
of wives and prostitutes waved hands and coloured scarfs at passing troops of
mounted warriors. Priests intoned the most profound benedictions. By the time the sun
gilded the Meneanor, the Inrithi had assembled in rank after glorious rank
across the fields. Several hundred paces away an immense arc of silvered
armour, brilliant coats, and stamping horses awaited them. From the southern
heights to the dark Sempis, the Fanim encompassed the horizon. Great divisions
of horsemen trotted across the northern pastures. Arms flashed from the walls
and turrets of Anwurat. Deep formations of spearmen darkened the shallow
embankments to the south. More horsemen massed across the southern hilltops,
following the heights to the sea. Every distance, it seemed, bristled with
heathen. The Inrithi line seethed
with the habits and hatreds of its constituent nations. The unruly Galeoth,
hurling insults and jeering reminders of Anwurat earlier slaughter. The
magnificent knights of Conriya, hollering curses through silvered war masks.
The glaring Thunyeri, swearing oaths of blood to their shield-brothers. The
disciplined Nansur, standing immobile, keen to the calls of their officers. The
Shrial Knights, eyeing the skies, their lips tight with fervent prayer. The
haughty Ainoni, anxious and impassive behind the white cosmetics of war. The
black-armoured ranks of Tydonni, taking sullen measure of the mongrels they
were about to kill. A hundred hundred banners
fluttered in the morning wind. What was this trade he
had made? War for a woman… With Kellhus at his side,
Cnaьir led a small army of officers, observers, and field messengers up turf
and gravel ramps to the summit of a small hillock dominating the central
pastures. Proyas had provided him slaves, and they hastened to prepare his
command, unloading trestles from the wains, pitching canopies, and laying mats
upon the ground. They raised his ad hoc standard: two bolts of white silk, each
banded with lateral stripes of red and flanked by horsetails that swished in
the sea-borne breeze. The Inrithi were already
calling it the “Swazond Standard.” The mark of their Battlemaster. Cnaьir rode to the
summit’s edge and stared in wonder. Beneath him, sweeping out
in either direction, the Holy War darkened the woollen distances: great squares
and mobs of infantrymen, files and lines of burnished knights. Facing them, the
heathen ranks scrawled along the hills and opposing fields, twinkling in the
morning sun. Just small enough to obscure with two fingers, the fortress of
Anwurat reared in the near distance, its walls and parapets adorned with long
saffron banners. The air thrummed with the
din of innumerable shouts. The faint peal of faraway battlehorns was
overpowered by the strident blare of those more near. Cnaьir breathed deep,
smelled sea, desert, and dank river— nothing of the absurd spectacle before
him. If he closed his eyes and covered his ears, he thought, he could pretend
he was alone… I am of the Land! MARCH He dismounted,
contemptuously thrust his reins to the Dunyain. Staring across the plains, he
searched for weaknesses in the Inrithi disposition. Beyond a mile, their
standards became little more than snags in the tatting of their ranks, so he
could only assume the farther Great Names had arrayed their formations as
discussed. The Ainoni especially, on the extreme south, looked little more than
dark fields aligned along the lower slopes of the coastal hills. He pinched his eyes,
stiffened in sudden awareness of Kellhus at his side. The man wore a white
samite robe, cinched into a tail in the Conriyan style, which is to say at the
small of his back, so that his waist and legs remained unencumbered. Beneath he
sported a corselet of Kianene manufacture—probably looted from the
Battleplain—and the pleated kilt of a Conriyan knight. His battlecap was
Nansur, open faced, without so much as a nose bar. As always, the long pommel
of his sword jutted above his left shoulder. Two crude-looking knives, their
hilts worked with Thunyeri animal devices, had been thrust into his leather
girdle. On the right breast of his robe, someone had embroidered the Red Tusk
of the Holy War. Cnaьir’s skin prickled at
the nearness of him. What was this trade he had made? Never had Cnaьir suffered
a night like the night previous. Why? he’d screamed at the Meneanor. Why had he
agreed to teach the Dunyain war? War! For Serwe? For a bauble found on the
Steppe? For nothing? He’d traded many things
over the past months. Honour for the promise of vengeance. Leather for
effeminate silks. His yaksh for a prince’s pavilion. The Utemot in their
unwashed hundreds, for the Inrithi in their hundreds of thousands… Battlemaster… King’of-Tribes! Part of him reeled in
drunken exultation at the thought. Such a host! From the river to the hills, a
distance of almost seven miles, and still the ranks ran deep! The People could
never assemble such a horde, not if they emptied every yaksh, saddled every
boy. And here he, Cnaьir urs Skiotha,
breaker-of’horses-and-men, commanded. Outland princes, earls and palatines,
thanes and barons in their thousands, even an Exalt-General answered to him! Ikurei Conphas, the hated author of Kiyuth! Anwurat What would the People
think? Would they call this glory? Or would they spit and curse his name, give
him to the torments of the aged and infirm? But wasn’t all war, all
battle, holy? Wasn’t victory the mark of the righteous? If he crushed the
Fanim, ground them beneath the heel of his boot, what would the People think of
his trade then? Would they finally say, “This man, this many-blooded man, is
truly of the land”? Or would they whisper as
they always whispered? Would they laugh as they always laughed? “Yours is the name of our shame!” What if he made a gift of
the Inrithi? What if he delivered them to destruction? What if he rode home
with Ikurei Conphas’s head in a sack? “Scylvendi,” Moenghus said from his side.
That voice! Cnaьir looked to Kellhus,
blinking. Skauras! the Dunyain’s look shouted. Skauras is our foe here! Cnaьir turned to the expectant
Inrithi behind him. He could hear them muttering. With the exception of Proyas,
each of the Great Names had sent representatives—to keep watch as much as to
dispense advice, Cnaьir imagined. He recognized many of them from the Councils
of the Great and Lesser Names: Thane Ganrikka, General Martemus, Baron
Mimaripal, others. For some reason, a great hollow opened in his belly… I must concentrate! Skauras is the foe here! He spat across the dusty
grass. Everything was at the ready. The Inrithi had assembled with a swiftness
and exactitude that heartened. Skauras had deployed precisely as Cnaьir had
expected. There was nothing more to be done, yet… More time! I need more time! But he had no time. War
had come, and he’d agreed to yield its secrets in exchange for Serwe. He’d
agreed to surrender the last shred of leverage he possessed. After this he
would have nothing to secure his vengeance. Nothing! After this, there would be
no reason for Kellhus to keep him alive. I’m a threat to him. The only man who knows his secret… So what was she, that he’d doom himself for her? What
was she, that he would trade war? me otLUND 1V1ARCH Something is wrong with me… Something-No!
Nothing! Nothing!.j “Signal the general advance,”
he barked, turning back to the field. A; chorus of excited voices erupted
behind him. Horns soon clawed at the sky. ‘t Kellhus fixed him with shining, empty eyes. But Cnaьir had already
looked away, back to the sweep of the west and to the great lines and squares
of the Holy War sprawled across it. Long rows of armoured horsemen were
beginning to trot forward, followed by deeper ranks of footmen, walking with
the speed with which one might greet a friend. Perhaps half a mile distant, the
Fanim awaited them across the depths and the heights, holding tight their
stamping thoroughbreds, hunching behind shield and spear. The pounding of their
drums rumbled down from the hills. The Dunyain loomed in his
periphery, as sharp as a mortal rebuke. What was this trade he had made? A
woman for war. Something is
wrong… Behind him, the Inrithi lords
began singing. Along the entirety of the
line, the Inrithi knights quickly outpaced the men-at-arms. Hares darted from
copses, raced across the parched turf. Shod hooves made hash of desiccated
weeds. Soon the Men of the Tusk sailed across the uneven pasture, trailing
immense skirts of dust. The sky was darkened by heathen arrows. Horses
shrieked, tumbled. Armoured men rolled across the turf and were trampled by
their kin. But the Men of J the Tusk combed the fields with thundering hooves.
Bobbing lance tips | sketched circles around the nearing wall of heathen, who
barbed the distance like a hedge of silvered thorns. Hatred clamped tooth to
tooth. War shouts became howls of ecstasy. Heart and limb hummed with rapture.
Could anything be so clear, so pure? Outstretched like great, fluid arms the
holy warriors embraced their enemy. The sermon was simple. Break. Die. Anwurat
Serwe was utterly alone.
She’d avoided the company of the priests and other women who’d gathered in
prayer at various points throughout the encampment. She’d already prayed to her
God. She’d kissed him, and had wept as he’d ridden off to join the Scylvendi. She sat before their
firepit, boiling water for the tea prescribed by Proyas’s physician-priest. Her
tanned arms and shoulders burned in the rising sun. There was sand beneath the
thin grass, and she could feel its grit chafe the soft skin behind her knees.
The pavilion billowed and snapped like a ship’s sail in the wind—a strange
song, with random crescendo and meaningless pause. She wasn’t afraid, but she
was afflicted by competing confusions. Why must he risk himself? The loss of Achamian had
filled her with pity for Esmenet and with fear for herself. Until his
disappearance it hadn’t seemed she lived in the midst of a war. It had been
more like a pilgrimage—not one where the faithful travel to visit something
sacred, but rather one where people travel to deliver something holy. To deliver
Kellhus. But if Achamian, a great sorcerer, could vanish, become a casualty, might not Kellhus vanish
also? But this thought didn’t
so much frighten her—the possibility was too unthinkable—as it confused her.
One cannot fear for a God, but one can be baffled over whether one should. Gods could die. The
Scylvendi worshipped a dead god. Does Kellhus
fear? That too, was unimaginable. She thought she heard
something—a shadow—behind her, but her water had begun to boil. She stood to
retrieve the crude kettle with clumsy sticks. How she missed Xinemus’s slaves!
She managed to set it on the turf without burning herself—a minor miracle. She
stood, sighing and rubbing her lower back, when a warm hand reached around her
and clutched her growing belly. Kellhus! Smiling, she half-turned,
pressed her cheek to his chest and hooked a hand about his neck. “What are you doing?” she
laughed—and frowned. He seemed shorter. Did he stand in a hole? ihe second March “Warring is hungry
business, Serwe. Certain appetites must be attended.” Serwe blushed and
wondered yet again that he had chosen her—her! I
bear his child. “Now?” she murmured.
“What of the battle? Don’t you worry?” His eyes laughing, he
drew her toward the entrance of their pavilion. “I worry for you.” His Inrithi retinue
chattered and cheered behind him. Different voices cried, “Look! Look!” Everywhere Cnaьir turned,
he saw glory and horror. To his right, waves of Galeoth and Tydonni galloped
across the northern pastures into masses of Kianene horsemen. Before him, thousands
of Conriyan knights raced beneath the peril of Anwurat’s heights. To his
immediate left, the Thunyeri, and beyond them, the Nansur Columns, marched
inexorably westward. Only the extreme south, obscured by curtains of dust,
remained inscrutable. His heart quickened. His
breath sharpened. Too fast!
Everything happenstoo fast! Saubon and Gothyelk
scattered the Fanim, pursued them hard through swirling grit. Proyas, flanked by
hundreds of mail-armoured knights, crashed into the bristling ranks of an immense
Shigeki phalanx. His footmen had charged into his wake, and now thronged about
Anwurat’s southern bastions, bearing mantlets and great iron-headed ladders.
Archers raked the parapets in volleys, while trains of men and oxen dragged
assorted siege engines into position. Skaiyelt and Conphas
advanced across the pasture to the south, holding their horses in reserve. A
series of earthen embankments, shallow but too sharp for charging horses,
stepped the fields before them. As Cnaьir had guessed, the Sapatishah had
massed his Shigeki conscripts along them. The position might have rendered
Skauras’s entire centre immune to attack had not Cnaьir ordered several hundred
rafts dragged from the marshes and dispersed among the Thunyeri and Nansur.
Even now, in a hail of spears and javelins, the Nansur were raising the first
of them as improvised ramps. Anwurat General Setpanares and
his tens of thousands of Ainoni knights remained hidden. Cnaьir could see the
rearmost infantry phalanxes— they were little more than the shadows of squares
at this distance—but nothing more. Already the dogs gnaw at my gut! He glanced at Kellhus.
“Since Skauras has secured his flanks using the land,” he explained, “this
battle will be one of yetrut, penetration, not one of unswaza, envelopment. Hosts, like men, prefer to face their
enemy. Circumvent or break their lines, assault them from the flank or the
rear…” He let his voice trail.
The wind had thinned the dust to near transparency across the southern hills.
Peering, he could see threads of what must be Ainoni knights withdrawing all
along their two-mile section of line. They seemed to be reforming on the
slopes. Behind them, the many bars and squares of Ainoni infantry had stalled. The Kianene still held
the heights. I should have given the Ainoni the centre! Who has
Skauras positioned there? Imbeyan? Swarjuka? “And this,” Kellhus
asked, “is how you crush your foe?” “What?” “By assaulting their
flank or rear…” Cnaьir shook his black
mane. “No. This is how you convince your foe.” “Convince?” Cnaьir snorted. “This war,” he snapped in Scylvendi, “is simply your war made honest.“ Kellhus acknowledged
nothing. “Belief… You’re saying battle is a disputation of belief… An
argument.” Cnaьir squinted, peered
once more toward the south. “The memorialists call
battle otgai wutmaga, a great quarrel. Both hosts take
the field believing they are the victors. One host must be disabused of that
belief. Attacking his flank or his rear, overawing him, bewildering him,
shocking him, killing him: these are all arguments, meant to convince your foe
he is defeated. He who believes he is defeated is defeated.” “So in battle,” Kellhus
said, “conviction makes true.” “As I said, it is
honest.” Ihe Second March Skauras! 1 must concentrate upon Skauras! Overcome by a sudden
restlessness, Cnaьir tugged at his mail harness as though plagued by a pinch.
Barking several brief commands, he dispatched a rider to General Setpanares. He
needed to know who’d beaten the Ainoni back from the hilltops—though by the
time the man returned, Cnaьir knew, the battle would likely be decided. Then he
ordered the Hornsman to remind the General to secure his flanks. Out of
expediency, they’d adopted the Nansur mode of communication, with batteries of
trumpeters stationed about the field, relaying coded numbers that corresponded
to a handful of different warnings and commands. Though the Ainoni General
struck him as solid, his King-Regent, Chepheramunni, was a rank fool. And the Ainoni were a
vain and effeminate race—something Skauras wouldn’t overlook. Cnaьir glanced at the
Nansur and the Thunyeri. The farther Columns, those adjacent to the Ainoni,
appeared to be storming up their ramps already. Closer, where he could actually
distinguish individual men, the first of the rafts were slamming into place.
Wherever they fell, several Shigeki vanished—crushed. The first of the Thunyeri
charged forward, howling… Meanwhile Proyas and his
stalwarts waded through disintegrating ranks of Shigeki. Sunlight flashed from
their threshing swords. But farther west, beyond the mud-brick village and dark
orchards to the immediate rear of the Shigeki, Cnaьir could see distant lines
of approaching horsemen: Skauras’s reserves, he imagined. He couldn’t discern
any of their devices through the haze, but their numbers looked worrisome… He
dispatched a messenger to warn the Conriyans. Everything goes to plan… Cnaьir had known the Shigeki
flanking Anwurat would collapse before the fury of Proyas’s charge. And
Skauras, he assumed, had also known: the question was one of whom the Sapatishah would send into the breach… Probably Imbeyan. Then he glanced to the
north, to the open fields, where the Fanim horsemen had fallen back before
Gothyelk and Saubon, taking high-walled Anwurat as their implacable hinge. “See
how Skauras frustrates Saubon/” he said. Anwurat Kellhus searched the
pastures and nodded. “He doesn’t contest so much as delay.” “He concedes the north.
The Galeoth and Tydonni knights possess the advantage of gaiwut, of shock. But the Kianene possess the advantages of utmurzu, cohesion, and fira, speed. Though the Fanim cannot withstand the Inrithi
charge, they are quick enough and cohesive enough to execute the malk unswaza, the defensive envelopment.” Even as he said this, he
saw streamers of hard-riding Kianene sluice around the Northmen. Kellhus nodded, his eyes
fixed on the distant drama. “When the attacker over-commits on the charge, he
risks exposing his flanks.” “Which the Inrithi
usually do. Only their superior angotma, heart, saves them.” Inrithi knights stood
their ground, suddenly beset on all sides. Some distance away, the Galeoth and
Tydonni infantry continued to trudge forward. “Their conviction,”
Kellhus said. Cnaьir nodded. “When the
memorialists counsel the Chieftains before battle, they bid them recall that in
conflict all men are bound to one another, some by chains, some by ropes, and
some by strings, all of different lengths. They call these bindings the mayutafiuri, the ligaments of war. These are just ways of
describing the strength and flexibility of a formation’s angotma. Those Kianene the People would call trutu garothut, men of the long chain. They can be thrown apart, but
they will pull themselves together. The Galeoth and Tydonni we would call trutu hirothut, men of the short chain. Left alone, such men would
battle and battle. Only disaster or utgirkoy,
attrition, can break the chains of such men.” As they watched, the
Fanim scattered before the long swords of the Norsirai knights, drawing back to
reform even farther to the west. “The leader,” Cnaьir
continued, “must continually appraise and reappraise the string, rope, and
chain of his enemy and his men.” “So the north doesn’t worry you.” “No…” Cnaьir whirled southward,
struck by an inexplicable apprehension of doom. The Ainoni knights appeared to
have retired for some reason, though too much dust still obscured the heights
to be certain. The infantry had resumed
their climb, all along the line. He dispatched messengers to Conphas, bidding
him to send his Kidruhil to the Ainoni rear. He ordered the Hornsman to signal
Gotian… “There,” he said to
Kellhus. “Do you see the Ainoni infantry advance?” “Yes… Certain formations seem to drift… to
the right.” “Without knowing, men will lean into the
shield of the man to their right, seeking protection. When the Fanim charge to
meet them, they will concentrate on those units, watch…” “Because they betray
weaknesses in discipline.” “Yes, depending on who
leads. If Conphas were directing them, I would say they drift right
purposefully, to draw the Kianene away from his less experienced formations.” “Deception.” Cnaьir clutched his
iron-plated girdle tight. A tremor had passed through his hands. Everything goes to plan! “Know what your enemy
knows,” he said, hiding his face in the distance. “The ligaments must be
defended as fiercely as they are attacked. Use knowledge of your enemy,
deception, terrain, even harangues or examples of valour to guard and guard
vigorously. Tolerate no disbelief. Fortify your host against it, and punish all
instances with torture and death.” What’s Setpanares doing? “Because it spreads,”
Kellhus said.‘ “The People,” Cnaьir
replied, “have many stories of Nansur Columns f perishing to the man… The
hearts of some men never break. But most I look to others for what
to believe…“ “And this is rout, the
loss of all conviction? What we witnessed on the Battleplain?” Cnaьir nodded. “This is
why cnamturu, vigilance, is a leader’s
greatest virtue. The field must be continually read. The signs must be judged
and rejudged. The gobozkoy must not be missed!” “The moment of decision.” Cnaьir scowled,
remembering that he’d mentioned the term in passing months ago, at the fateful
Council with the Emperor on the Andiamine Heights. “The moment of decision,” he
repeated. Anwurat He continued staring at
the coastal hills, watching the long line of faint infantry squares ascend the
distant slopes. General Setpanares had
withdrawn his horse… But why? Save the south, the Fanim
relented on every front. What plagued him so? Cnaьir glanced at
Kellhus, saw his shining eyes study the distances the way they so often
scrutinized souls. A gust cast his hair forward across his lower face. “I fear,” the Dunyain
said, “the moment has already passed.” Between her cries, Serwe
heard the peal of battlehorns. “How?” she gasped. She lay on her side, her
face buried in the cushions where Kellhus had thrust it. He plumbed her from
behind, his chest a furnace across her back, his hand holding her knee high.
How different he felt! “How what, sweet Serwe?” He pressed deep and she
moaned. “So different,” she breathed. “You feel so different.” “For you, sweet Serwe…
For you…” For her! She ground
against him, savoured his difference. “Yessss,” she hissed. He rolled onto his back,
pulling her onto him. He traced the ivory summit of her belly with his haloed
left hand, then reached down to make her cry out. With his right, he yanked her
head up by her hair, turned her so he could mutter in her ear. Never had he
used her like this! “Talk to me, sweet Serwe.
Your voice is as sweet as your peach.” “W-what?” she panted.
“What would you have me say?” He reached down, lifted
her buttocks from his hips—effortlessly, as though she were a coin. He began
thrusting, slow and deep. “Speak of me…” “Kellhhhhussss,” she
moaned. “I love you… I worship you! I do, I do, I do!” “And why, sweet Serwe?” “Because you’re the God
incarnate! Because you’ve been sent!” The Second March He fell absolutely still,
knowing he’d delivered her to the humming brink. She gasped for air upon
him, felt his heart pound against her spine and through his member, thrum like
a bowstring. Through fluttering lashes, she gazed up at the geometry of canvas
creases, watched the lines bend and refract through joyous tears. She encompassed him. To
his foundation, he was hers! The mere thought made the air between her thighs
thicken, until every draft seemed palpable, like something twitching. She cried out. Such
rapture! Such sweet rapture! Sejenus… “And the Scylvendi,” he
purred, his voice moist with promise. “Why does he despise me so?” “Because he fears you,”
she mumbled, squirming against him. “Because he knows you’ll punish him!” He began moving again,
but with infernal wariness. She squealed, clenched her teeth, marvelled at the
wonder of his difference. He even smelled
different. Like… Like… His hand closed about the
back of her neck… How she loved this game! “And why does he call me Dunyain?” “What do you mean?”
Cnaьir said to the Dunyain. “Nothing has been decided. Nothing!” He tries to deceive me! To undermine me before these
outlanders! Kellhus regarded him with
utter dispassion. “I’ve studied The
Book of Devices,
the Nansur manual describing the various personages and their signs in the
Kianene order of—” “As have I!” The illuminated pages,
anyway. Cnaьir couldn’t read. “Most of the devices lie
too far to be seen,” Kellhus continued, “but I’ve been able to infer the
identity of most…” Lies! Lies! He fears 1 grow too powerful! “How?” Cnaьir fairly
cried. Anwurat “Differing shapes. The
manual includes lists of each Sapatishah’s client Grandees… I simply counted.” Cnaьir swept out his hand
as though beating the air of flies. “Then who faces the
Ainoni?” “Overlooking the
Meneanor, Imbeyan with the Grandees of Enathpaneah. Swarjuka of Jurisada
occupies the remaining heights. Dunjoksha and the Grandees of Holy Amoteu hold
the descending ground opposite the Ainoni right and Nansur left. The Shigeki,
the centre. Even though Skauras’s standard flies from Anwurat, I believe his
Grandees, along with Ansacer and the other survivors of the Battleplain,
contest the northern pastures. Those horsemen beyond the village, the ones
about to descend upon Proyas, likely belong to Cuaxaji and the Grandees of
Khemema. Others ride with him, auxiliaries or allies of some kind… Likely the
Khirgwi. Many ride camels.” Cnaьir stared
incredulously at the man, his jaw working. “But that is impossible…” Where was Crown Prince
Fanayal and the feared Coyauri? Where was dread Cinganjehoi and the famed Ten
Thousand Grandees of Eumarna? “It’s fact,” Kellhus
said. “Only a fraction of Kian stands before us.” Cnaьir jerked his gaze
yet again to the southern hills and knew, from heart to marrow, that the
Dunyain spoke true. Suddenly he saw the field through Kianene eyes. The fleet
Grandees of Shigek and Gedea drawing the Tydonni and Galeoth ever farther west.
The Shigeki multitude dying as they should, and fleeing as everyone knew they
would. Anwurat, an immovable point threatening the Inrithi rear. Then the
southern hills… “He shows us,” Cnaьir
murmured. “Skauras shows us…” “Two armies,” Kellhus
said without hesitation. “One defending, one concealed, the same as on the
Battleplain.” Just then, Cnaьir saw the
first long threads of Kianene horsemen descend the faraway southern slopes.
Skirts of dust billowed behind them, obscuring the threads that followed. Even
from here he could see the Ainoni infantrymen bracing… Miles of them. The Nansur and Thunyeri,
meanwhile, had charged and hacked theь way past the final embankments. The
Shigeki ranks dissolved before their onslaught. Innumerable thousands already
fled westward, pursued b^ inn oecond March battle-crazed Thunyeri.
The Inrithi officers and caste-nobles behind Cnaьir and Kellhus broke into
full-throated cheers. The fools. Skauras need not fight a
battle of penetration along a single line. He had speed and cohesion, fira and utmurzu. The Shigeki were simply a ruse,
a brilliantly monstrous sacrifice—a way to scatter the Inrithi across the
broken plains. Too much conviction, the wily old Sapatishah knew, could be as
deadly as too little. A great ache filled
Cnaьir’s chest. Only Kellhus’s strong grip saved him the humiliation of falling
to his knees. Always the same… Never had he been so
conflicted. Never had he been so confused. Throughout the battle,
while the others had gawked, exclaimed, and pointed, General Martemus had
watched the Scylvendi and Prince Kellhus, straining to hear their banter. The
barbarian wore a harness of polished scale, the sleeves hacked short to reveal
his many-scarred forearms. A leather girdle set with iron plates strapped his
stomach and waist. A pointed Kianene battlecap, its silvering chipped in
innumerable places, protected his head. Long black hair whipped about his
shoulders. Martemus could’ve
recognized him from miles distant. He was Scylvendi filth. As impressive as
he’d found the man both in Council and in the field, the outrage of a
Scylvendi—a Scylvendi!—overseeing the Holy War in
battle was almost too much to bear. How could the others not see the disgusting
truth of his heritage? The man’s every scar argued his assassination! Martemus
would’ve gladly—gladly!—sacrificed his life to avenge
those the savage had butchered. Why, then, had Conphas
ordered him to murder the other man standing next to the
Scylvendi? Because, General, he’s a Cishaurim spy… But no spy could speak
such words. That’s his sorcery! Always remember— No! Not sorcery, truth! As I said, General. That is his sorcery… Anwurat Martemus watched, unmoved
by the prattle around him. But no matter how mortal his mission, he couldn’t
ignore glory in the field. No soldier could. Drawn by shouts of genuine
triumph, Martemus turned to see the heathen’s entire centre collapse. Across
miles, from Anwurat to the southern hills, Shigeki formations crumbled and
scattered westward, pursued by charging ranks of Nansur and Thunyeri footmen.
Martemus cheered with the others. For a moment, he felt only pride for his
countrymen, relief that victory had come at so slight a cost. Conphas had
conquered again! Then he glanced back at
the Scylvendi. He’d been a soldier too
long not to recognize the stink of disaster— even beneath the perfume of
apparent victory. Something had gone cata-strophically wrong… The barbarian screamed at
the Hornsman to signal the retreat. For a moment, those about Martemus could
only stare in astonishment. Then everything erupted in tumult and confusion.
The Tydonni thane, Ganrikki, accused the Scylvendi of treachery. Weapons were
drawn, brandished. The deranged barbarian kept roaring at them to peer south,
but nothing could be seen for the dust. Even still, the violence of the
Scylvendi’s protestations had unsettled many. Several began shouting for the
Hornsman, including Prince Kellhus. But the Scylvendi had had enough. He
barrelled through the astonished onlookers and leapt onto his horse. Within
heartbeats, it seemed, he was racing southeast, trailing a long banderole of
dust. Then the horns sounded,
cracking the air. Others started running to
their horses as well. Martemus turned back, looked to the three men Conphas had
given him. One, the towering black-skinned Zeumi, met his eyes, nodded, then
glanced past him to the Prince of Atrithau. They would run nowhere. Unfortunate, Martemus
thought. Running had been his first truly practical thought in a long time. For a heartbeat, Prince
Kellhus caught his look. His smile held such sorrow that Martemus nearly
gasped. Then the Prophet turned to the distances seething beneath his feet. on ihe second March Vast waves of Kianene
horsemen, their corselets flashing from their many-coloured coats, charged down
the slopes and slammed into the astonished Ainoni. The forward ranks hunched
behind their shields, struggled to brace their long spears on the incline,
while above them scimitars flashed in the morning sun. Dust swept across the
arid slopes. Horns brayed in panic. The air thundered with shouts, rumbling
hooves, and the pulse of Fanim drums. More heathen lancers crashed into and
through the Ainoni ranks. The tributary Sansori
under Prince Garsahadutha were the first to break, scattering before none other
than fierce Cinganjehoi himself, the famed Tiger of Eumarna. Within moments, it
seemed, the Grandees of Eumarna were pounding into the rear of the forward
phalanxes. Soon every phalanx on the Ainoni left, with the exception of the
elite Kishyati under Palatine Soter, was either stranded or routed. Withdrawing
in order, the Kishyati fought off charge after charge, purchasing precious time
for the Ainoni knights below. The whole world, it
seemed, was obscured by wind-drawn curtains of dust. Stiff in their elaborate
armour, the knights of Karyoti, Hinnant, and Moserothu, Antanamera, Eshkalas,
and Eshganax, thundered up the slopes, charging through the thousands who fled.
They met the Fanim in an ochre haze. Lances cracked and horses shrieked. Men
cried out to the hidden heavens. Swinging his great
two-handed mace, Uranyanka, Palatine of humid Moserothu, upended heathen after
heathen. Sepherathindor, Count-Palatine of Hinnant, led his painted knights on
a rampage, hewing men like wood. Prince Garsahadutha and his Sansori stalwarts
continued charging forward, searching for the holy standards of their kinsmen.
The Kianene horsemen broke and fled before them, and the Ainoni bellowed in
exultation. The wind began to clear
the haze. Then Garsahadutha,
several hundred paces ahead of his peers, stumbled into Crown Prince Fanayal
and his Coyauri. Skewered through the eye socket, the Sansori Prince crashed
from his saddle, and death came swirling down. Within moments, all six hundred
and forty-three knights of Sansor had been either unhorsed or killed. Unable to
see more than several paces, many of the Ainoni knights below simply charged
the Anwurat sound of battle—vanished
into the saffron fog. Others milled about their barons and palatines, waiting
for the wind. Horse archers appeared on
their flanks and to their rear. Serwe huddled, wracked by
sobs, struggling to cover herself with her blanket. “What have I done?” she
bawled. “What have I done to displease you?” A haloed hand struck her,
and she slammed against the carpets. “I love you!” she
shrieked. “Kellhuuuus!” The Warrior-Prophet
laughed. “Tell me, sweet, sweet
Serwe, what have I planned for the Holy War?” The Swazond Standard
leaned in a gust, the bolts of white billowing and snapping like sails. Martemus
had already resolved to kick the abomination to the ground—afterward… Everyone
had abandoned the hillock, save himself, Prince Kellhus, and Conphas’s three
assassins. Though more dust than
ever plumed along the southern hills, Martemus could see what had to be Ainoni
infantry fleeing the pale clouds. He’d long since lost sight of the Scylvendi
across the broken pasture. To the west of the looming disaster, he could see
the Columns of his countrymen reforming. Soon, Martemus knew, Conphas would
have them marching double-time toward the marshes. The Nansur were old hands
when it came to surviving Fanim catastrophes. Prince Kellhus sat with
his back to the four of them, his feet sole to sole and his palms flat upon his
knees. Beyond him, men climbed and toppled from fortress walls, lines of
knights galloped across dusty pastures, north-men axed hapless Shigeki to the
ground… The Prophet seemed to be…
listening. . No. Bearing witness. Not him, Martemus thought. I cannot do this. The first of the
assassins approached. Fifteen Anwurat Where the holy take men for fools, the
mad take the world. —PROTATHIS, THE GOAT’S
HEART Late Summer, 4111Year-of‘the-Tusk, Shigek A dried riverbed creased the heart of the plain, and
for a time Cnaьir raced through it, climbing out only when the course began
winding like an old man’s veins. He jerked his black to a stamping halt on the
bank. The coastal hills piled above him, their heights and seaward reaches
still skirted in chalklike dust. To the west, the remaining Ainoni phalanxes
were withdrawing down the slopes. To the east, innumerable thousands sprinted
across the broken pasture. Not far, on a small knoll, he saw a clot of
infantrymen dressed in long black leather kilts stitched with iron rings, but
without helms or weapons. Some sat, others stood, stripping off their armour.
Save those who wept, all watched the shrouded hills with a look of stunned
horror. Where were the Ainoni
knights? To the extreme east,
where the turquoise and aquamarine band of the Meneanor disappeared behind the
dun foundations of the hills, he saw a great cataract of Kianene horsemen spill
across the strand. He need not see their devices to know: Cinganjehoi and the
Grandees of Eumarna, pounding across uncontested ground… Anwurat Where were the reserves?
Gotian and his Shrial Knights, Gaidekki, Werijen Greatheart, Athjeari, and the
others? Cnaiur felt a sharp pang
in his throat. He clenched his teeth. It’s happening again… Kiyuth. Only this time he was Xunnurit. He was the arrogant mule! He pinched sweat from his
eyes, watched the Fanim gallop behind a screen of distant scrub and
stunted trees—an endless tide… The encampment. They ride for the encampment… With a yell he spurred
his horse to the east. Serwe. Masses of warring men
animated the horizon, crashing into stubborn ranks, churning in melee. The air
didn’t so much thunder as hiss with the sound of distant battle,
like a sea heard through a conch shell, Martemus thought—an angry sea. Winded,
he watched the first of Conphas’s assassins stride up behind Prince Kellhus,
raise his short-sword… There was an impossible moment—a sharp intake of breath.
The Prophet simply turned and caught the descending blade between his thumb and
forefinger. “No,” he said, then swept around, knocking the man to the turf with
an unbelievable kick. Somehow the assassin’s sword found its way into his left
hand. Still crouched, the Prophet drove it down through the assassin’s throat,
nailing him to the turf. A mere heartbeat had passed. The second Nansur
assassin rushed forward, striking. Another kick from a crouch, and the man’s
head snapped backward, his blade flew from senseless fingers. He slumped to the
earth like a cast-off robe—obviously dead. The Zeumi sword-dancer
lowered his great tulwar and laughed. “A civilized man,” he
said, his voice deep. Without warning, he sent
the tulwar whooshing through the air around him. Sunlight flashed as though
from the silvered spokes of a chariot wheel. Now standing, the Prophet
drew his strange, long-pommelled sword from his shoulder sheath. Holding it in
his right hand, he lowered its tip to the ground before his
booted feet. He flicked a clot of dirt into the sword-dancer’s eyes. The
sword-dancer stumbled back, cursing. The Prophet lunged, buried his sword point
deep into the assassin’s palate. He guided the towering corpse to the earth. He stood alone against a
vista of strife and woe, his beard and hair boiling in the wind. He turned to
Martemus, stepped over the sword-dancer’s body… Illuminated by the
morning sun. A striding vision. A walking aspect… Something too terrible.
Too bright. The General stumbled
backward, struggled to draw his sword. “Martemus,” the vision said. It reached
out and clasped the wrist of his frantic sword arm. “Prophet,” Martemus
gasped. The vision smiled,
saying: “Skauras knows the Scylvendi leads us. He’s seen the Swazond Standard…” General Martemus stared,
uncomprehending. The Warrior-Prophet
turned, nodded toward the sweeping landscape. No recognizable lines
remained. Martemus saw Proyas and his Conriyan knights first, stranded about
the mud-brick warren of the distant village. Erupting from the shadow of the
orchards, several thousand Kianene horsemen swept about their flank, led by the
triangular standard of Cuaxaji, the Sapatishah of Khemema. The Conriyans were
doomed, Martemus thought, but otherwise he didn’t understand what the
Warrior-Prophet meant… Then he glanced toward Anwurat. “Khirgwi,” the General
murmured. Thousands of them, mounted on tall loping camels, plowing into the
hastily drawn ranks of Conriyan infantry, spilling around their flanks, racing
toward the hillock, toward the Swazond Standard… Toward them. Their unnerving,
ululating war cries permeated the din. “We must flee!” he cried. “No,” the Warrior-Prophet
said. “The Swazond Standard cannot fall.” “But it will!” Martemus
exclaimed. “It already has!” The Warrior-Prophet
smiled, and his eyes glittered with something Anwurat fierce and unconquerable.
“Conviction, General Martemus…” He gripped his shoulder with a haloed hand.
“War is conviction.” Confusion and terror
ruled the hearts of the Ainoni knights. Disoriented in the dust, they hailed
one another, trying to determine some course of action. Cohorts of fleet
archers swept about them, shooting their caparisoned horses out from beneath
him. Knights cursed and hunched behind arrow-studded shields. Every time
Uranyanka, Sepherathindor, and the others charged, the Kianene scattered,
outdistanced them while sending more knights crashing into the sun-baked turf.
Many of the Ainoni lost their way and were stranded, harassed from all sides.
Kusjeter, the Count-Palatine of Gekas, blundered onto the summit of the slopes
and found himself trapped between the spiked earthworks that had defeated the
initial Ainoni charges and the ruthless lances of the Coyauri below. Time and
again he fought off the elite Kianene cavalrymen, only to be unhorsed and taken
for dead by his own men. His knights panicked, and he was trampled in their
flight. Death came swirling down… Meanwhile the Sapatishah
of Eumarna, Cinganjehoi, charged across the pastures below. Most of his
Grandees fanned northward, eager to visit ruin on the Inrithi encampment. The
Tiger himself struck westward, riding hard with his household through fields of
bolting Ainoni infantrymen. He stormed the command of General Setpanares,
overrunning it. The General himself was killed, but Chepheramunni, the
King-Regent of High Ainon, managed a miraculous escape. Far to the northwest, the
command of Cnaьir urs Skiotha, Battlemaster of the Holy War, dissolved in
confusion and accusations of treachery. The masses of Shigeki conscripts
composing Skauras’s centre had utterly folded before the combined might of the
Nansur, Thunyeri, and the flanking charge of Proyas and his Conriyan knights.
Believing the Holy War victorious, the Inrithi had dashed forward in pursuit,
abandoning their formations. The battle line broke into disordered masses
separated by glaring expanses of open pasture. Many actually fell to their
knees on the parched turf, crying out thanks to the God. Very few heard the
horns signalling a J18 Ihe Second March general retreat, largely
because very few horns carried the call. Most trumpeters had refused to believe
the command was real. Not once did the
thundering drums of the heathen falter. The Grandees of Khemema
and tens of thousands of camel-mounted Khirgwi, ferocious tribesmen from the
southern deserts, materialized out of the masses of fleeing Shigeki and charged
headlong into the scattered Men of the Tusk. Cut off from his infantry, Proyas
withdrew to the mud-brick alleys of a nearby village, crying out to both the
God and his men. Falling into shield-wall circles across the pastures, the
Thunyeri fought with stubborn astonishment, shocked to encounter an enemy whose
fury matched their own. Prince Skaiyelt desperately called for his Earls and
their knights, but they were frustrated by the embankments. One great battle had
become dozens of lesser ones—more desperate and far more dreadful. Everywhere
the Great Names looked, cohorts of Fanim rode hard across the open pasture.
Where the heathen outnumbered, they charged and overwhelmed. Where they could
not grapple, they circled and harried with deadly archery. Overcome by dismay, many
knights charged alone, only to be unhorsed by arrows and trampled into the
dust. Cnaьir rode hard, cursing
himself for losing his way among the endless alleys and avenues of the camp. He
reined to a halt in an enclosure of heavy-framed Galeoth tents, searched the
northern distances for the distinctive peaks of the round tents favoured by the
Conriyans. From nowhere it seemed, three woman dashed northward across the
enclosure, then vanished past the tents on the far side. A moment later,
another followed, black-haired, screaming something unintelligible in some
Ketyai tongue. He looked to the south, saw dozens of plumes of black smoke. The
wind faltered for a moment, and the surrounding canvas fell silent. Cnaьir glimpsed a blue
surcoat abandoned next to a smoking firepit. Someone had been stitching a red
tusk across its breast… He heard screams—thousands of them. Where was she? Anwurat He knew what was
happening, and more importantly, he knew how it would happen. The first fires had been set as a
signal to those Inrithi in the field—to convince them they were truly overthrown.
Otherwise the encampment would be closely inventoried before it was destroyed.
Even now, Kianene would be encircling the camp, loath to lose any plunder,
especially the kind that wriggled and screamed. If he didn’t find Serwe soon… He spurred off to the
northeast. Yanking his black tight
around a pavilion panelled with embroidered animal totems, he broke along a
winding corridor, saw three Kianene sitting upon their caparisoned mounts. They
turned at the sound of his approach, but at once looked away, as though
mistaking him for one of their own. They seemed to be arguing. Drawing his
broadsword, Cnaьir spurred to a gallop. He killed two on his first pass. Though
their orange-coated comrade had called out at the last instant, they hadn’t so
much as looked at him. Cnaьir reined to a halt, wheeled to make a second pass,
but the remaining Fanim fled. Cnaьir ignored him and struck due east, at last
recognizing—or so he thought—where he stood in the encampment. A skin-pimpling shriek,
no more than a hundred paces away, brought him to a momentary trot. Standing in
his stirrups, he caught fleeting glimpses of figures dashing between crowded
shelters. More screams rifled the air, breathless and very near. Suddenly a
horde of camp-followers burst sprinting from between the panoply of surrounding
tents and pavilions. Wives, whores, slaves, scribes, and priests, either crying
or blank-faced, simply rushing where everyone else seemed to rush. Some
screamed at the sight of him and scrambled either to the left or the right.
Others ignored him, either realizing he wasn’t Fanim or knowing he could only
strike so many. After a moment their numbers thinned. The young and the hale
became the old and the infirm. Cnaьir glimpsed Cumor, the aging high priest of
Gilgaol, urged forward by his adepts. He saw dozens of frantic mothers hauling
terrified children. Some distance away, a group of twenty or so bandaged
warriors—Galeoth by the look of them—had abandoned their flight and now
prepared to make a stand. They started singing… Cnaьir heard a growing
chorus of harsh and triumphant cries, the snort and rumble of horses… He reined to a halt, drew
his broadsword. ihe second March Anwurat Then he saw them,
jostling and barrelling among the tents, looking for a moment like a host wading
through crashing surf. The Kianene of Eumarna… Cnaьir looked down,
startled. A young woman, her leg slicked in blood, an infant strapped to her
back, clutched his knee, beseeching him in some unknown tongue. He raised his
boot to kick her, then unaccountably lowered it. He leaned forward and hoisted
her before him onto his saddle. She fairly shrieked tears. He wheeled his black
around and spurred after the fleeing camp-followers. He heard an arrow buzz by
his ear. His golden hair fanned in
the wind. His white samite robe billowed. “Keep down!” the Prophet
commanded. But Martemus could only
stand dumbfounded. The fields beneath seethed with dust and shadowy files of
Khirgwi. Before them, the Warrior-Prophet jerked first one shoulder back, then
the other. He ducked his head, swayed back from the waist, crouched, then
bounced upright. It was a curious dance, at once random and premeditated,
leisurely and breath-takingly quick… It wasn’t until one struck Martemus in the
thigh that he realized the Prophet danced about the path of arrows. The General fell to the
ground, clutching his leg. The whole world howled, clamoured. Through tears of pain he
glimpsed the Swazond Standard against the sun’s flashing glare. Sweet Sejenus. I’m going to die. “Run!” he cried. “You must run!” His black snorted
spittle, gasped, and screamed. Tent after tent whisked by, canvas stained and
striped, leather painted, tusks and more tusks. The nameless woman in his arms
trembled, tried vainly to look at her baby. The Kianene thundered ever closer,
galloping in files down the narrow alleys, fanning across the rare openings. He
could hear them trade shouts, cry out tactics. “Skafadi!” they cried. “Jam til Skafadi!” Soon many were pounding along parallel alleyways.
Twice he had to crush the woman and her
child against the neck of his horse as arrows hissed about them. He spurred more blood
from his black’s flanks. He heard screams, realized he’d overtaken the mass of
fleeing camp-followers. Suddenly everywhere he looked he saw frantic, hobbling
men, wailing mothers, and ashen-faced children. He jerked his mount to the
left, knowing the Kianene followed him. He was the famed Skafadi Captain who
rode witb the idolaters. Every captive he’d interrogated had heard of him. He
broke into one of the immense squares the Nansur used for drills, and his black
leapt forward with renewed fury. He drew his bow, notched a shaft, anc killed
the nearest Kianene pounding through the dust behind him. Hi: second shaft
found the neck of the horse following, and an entire clustei of Fanim toppled
in a plume of dust. “Zirkirtaaaaa!” he howled. The woman shrieked in
terror. He glanced forward, saw dozens o Fanim horsemen streaming into the
western entrance of the field. Fucking Kianene. He brought his ailing
black about and spurred toward the northen entrance, thanking the Nansur and
their slavish devotion to the compass The sky rang with distant screams and
raw-throated shouts of “Dt-ut-ut utJ” The nameless woman wept in terror. Nansur barrack tents
hedged the north like a row of filed teeth. The ga] between them bounced
nearer, nearer. The woman alternately looke< forward, then yanked her head
backward to the Kianene—as did, absurdly her black-haired infant. Strange,
Cnaьir thought, the way infants kne’t when to be calm. Suddenly Fanim horsemen
erupted through the north ern entrance as well. He swerved to the right,
galloped along the airy whit tents, searching for a way to barge between. When
he saw none, he race for the corner. More and more Kianene thundered through
the easter entrance, fanning across the field. Those behind pounded nearer.
Sever; more arrows whisked through the air about them. He wheeled his blac
about, knocked the woman face first onto the dusty turf. The babe finall
started screeching. He tossed her a knife—to cut through canvas… The air thrummed with
hooves and heathen shouts. “Run!” he barked at her.
“Run!” Veils of dust swept over
him. He turned, laughing. Drawing his broadsword,
he ducked a sweeping scimitar, then jabbed his assailant in the armpit. He
swept his sword about and shattered the blade of the next, splitting the man’s
cheek. When the fool reached up, Cnaьir punched through his silvered corselet.
Blood fountained like wine from a punctured skin. He caught the shield of the
next, swinging his sword like a mace. The man toppled backward over his horse’s
rump, somehow landed on his hands and knees. His helm bounced from his head,
between stamping hooves. Flipping his grip, Cnaьir stabbed down through the
back of his skull. He stood in his stirrups,
swung the blood from his blade into the faces of the astonished Kianene. “Who?” he roared in his
sacred tongue. He hacked at the
riderless horses barring him from his foe. One went down thrashing. Another
screamed and bucked into the knotted heathen ranks. “I am Cnaьir urs
Skiotha,” he bellowed, “most violent of all men!” His heaving black stepped
forward. “I bear your fathers and your brothers upon my arms!” Heathen eyes
flashed white from the shadows of their silvered helms. Several cried out. “Who,” Cnaьir roared, so fiercely all his skin seemed
throat, “willmurder me?” A piercing, feminine cry. Cnaьir glanced back, saw the
nameless woman swaying at the entrance of the nearest tent. She gripped the
knife he’d thrown her, gestured with it for him to follow. For an instant, it
seemed he’d always known her, that they’d been lovers for long years. He saw
sunlight flash through the far side of the tent where she’d cut open the
canvas. Then he glimpsed a shadow from above, heard something not quite… Several Kianene cried
out—a different terror. Cnaьir thrust his left
hand beneath his girdle, clutched tight his father’s Trinket. For an instant he met the
woman’s wide uncomprehending eyes, and over her shoulder, those of her baby boy
as well… Somehow he knew that now—that he was a son. Anwurat He tried to cry out. They became shadows in a
cataract of shimmering flame. One space. And the crossings were
infinite. Kellhus had been five
when he’d first set foot outside Ishual. Pragma Uan had gathered him and the
others his age, bid them all hang onto a long rope. Then without explanation he
led them down the terraces, out the Fallow Gate, and into the forest, stopping
only when he reached a grove of mighty oaks. He allowed them to wander for a
time—to sensitize themselves, Kellhus now knew. To the chattering of one
hundred and seventeen birds. To the smells of moss along bark, of humus
wheezing beneath little sandals. To the colours and the shapes: white bands of
sunlight against copper gloom, black roots. But for all this roaring
and remarkable newness, Kellhus could think of nothing save the Pragma. In
fact, he fairly trembled with anticipation. Everyone had seen Pragma Uan with
the older boys. Everyone knew he taught what the older boys called the ways of limb… Of battle. “What do you see?” the
old man finally asked, looking to the canopy above them. There were many eager
answers. Leaves. Branches. Sun. But Kellhus saw more. He
noticed the dead limbs, the scrum of competing branch and twig. He saw slender
trees, mere striplings, ailing in the shadow of giants. “Conflict,” he said. “And how is that, young
Kellhus?” Terror and exultation—the
passions of a child. “The tr-trees, Pragma,” he stammered. “They war for… for space.” “Indeed,” Pragma Uan
replied, his manner devoid of anything save confirmation. “And this, children,
is what I shall teach you. How to be a tree. How to war for space…” “But trees don’t move,”
another said. “They move,” the Pragma
replied, “but they are slow. A tree’s heart beats but once every spring, so it
must war in all directions at once. It must branch and branch
until it obscures the sky. But you, your hearts beat many, many times, you need
only war in one direction at a time. This is how men seize space.“ As old as he was, the
Pragma seemed to pop to his feet. He brandished a stick. “Come,” he said, “all of
you. Try to touch my knees.” And Kellhus rushed with the others through the
dappled sunlight. He squealed with frustration and delight each time the stick
thwacked or poked him back. He watched in wonder as the old man danced and
swirled, sent children flopping onto their rumps or rolling like badgers
through the leaves. Not one touched his legs. Not one so much as stepped into
the circle described by his stick. Pragma Uan had been a triumphant
tree. The absolute owner of one space. Wrapped in tattered brown
cloth, bearing shields of lacquered camel hides, the Khirgwi beat their
lurching camels forward, brandished their wild scimitars. The air screamed with
their ululations. Kellhus raised his
Dunyain steel. They laughed and sneered.
Desert dark faces, so certain… They came galloping
toward the circle described by his sword. Cnaьir kicked at his
saddle and the blasted hulk of his horse. He pushed himself from the ash,
blinked stinging smoke from his eyes. Ringing. Aside from smoke and the stink
of scorched meat, the whole world was ringing. He could hear nothing else. He found the burnt husks
that had been the nameless woman and her child. He retrieved his knife, holding
it gingerly by its charred grip. It burned and did not
burn, in the strange way sorcerous heat seeped into the real. He began walking
northward, passing among the sagging, curse-embroidered pavilions of the
Ainoni. Pictogram banners fluttered in the wind. Behind him, Scarlet Schoolmen
strode across the sky. Pillars of fire whooshed soundlessly. Lightning sheeted
the distances. It seemed that men should shriek. And he thought, Serwe ... Anwurat People, elated,
terrified, bewildered, crowded about him. Though their mouths opened and their
tongues flapped against their teeth, Cnaьir heard only ringing. He pressed them
aside with hollow arms, continued walking. Something ached in his
left hand. He opened it, saw his father’s Chorae. Dull even in sunlight,
cluttered with senseless script, a grimy iron eyeball. Twice it had saved him. He pressed it back
beneath his girdle. Then he heard the crack
of lightning. The ringing faded into a piercing whine—almost inaudible. He
paused, closed his eyes. Screams and shouts, this one far, that one near, very
near. They etched the distances, sweeping out to the horizon of his hearing,
finally vanishing in the ambient roar of battle and sea… After a time he found
Proyas’s elaborate pavilion occupying a small knoll. How weathered it now
looked, he thought, and sadness welled through him. Everything seemed so tired. He found the old pavilion
he’d shared with Kellhus nearby, creaking and flapping in the wind. A kettle
sat next to the blackened pit. Smoke spiralled across the ground, raced between
neighbouring tents. Cnaьir’s heart hammered.
Had she gathered with the other followers to watch the battle from the
southwestern edge of the encampment? Had the Kianene taken her? A beauty such
as hers was sure to be taken, pregnant or not. She was a plaything of princes.
An extraordinary gift! ! A prize! The sound of her voice
made him jump. A shriek… For a moment he stood
dumbfounded, unable to move. He heard a masculine voice, soft, cajoling, and
yet somehow insanely cruel… The ground dipped at
Cnaьir’s feet. He stumbled backward. One step. Two. His skin prickled to the
point of stinging. The Dunyain. “Please!” Serwe screamed.
“Pleasssse!” The Dunyain! How? Cnaьir crept forward. His
ribs seemed rock. He couldn’t breathe! The knife trembled in his hand. He reached
out, used the dagger’s shaking tip to part the canvas flap. The interior was too dark
to see at first. He glimpsed shadows, heard Seme’s hitching sobs… Then he saw her, kneeling
naked before a towering shadow. One eye swelled shut, blood pulsing from her
scalp and nose, sheeting her neck and her breasts. What? Without thinking, Cnaьir
slipped into the gloom of the pavilion. The air reeked of foul rutting. The
Dunyain whirled, as naked as Serwe, a bloody hand clamped about his engorged
member. “The Scylvendi,” Kellhus
drawled, his eyes blazing with lurid rapture. “I didn’t smell you.” Cnaьir struck at his
heart. Somehow the bloody hand flickered up, grazed his wrist. The knife dug
deep just below the Dunyain’s collar bone. Kellhus staggered back,
raised his face to the bellied canvas, and screamed what seemed a hundred
screams, a hundred voices bound to one inhuman throat. And Cnaьir saw his face open, as though the joints of his mouth were legion and
ran from his scalp to his neck. Through steepled features, he saw lidless eyes,
gums without lips… The thing struck him, and
he fell to one knee. He yanked his broadsword clear. But it had vanished
through the flap, leaping like some kind of beast. With their horses dying
beneath them, the scattered masses of Ainoni knights soon had no choice but to
stand their ground. More and more, the Kianene rode howling into their midst,
making targets of their white-painted faces in the sunny murk. Blood clotted
luxurious square-cut beards. Pictogram standards were toppled and trampled.
Dust transformed sweat into grime. Seriously wounded, Sepherathindor was
carried from the forward ranks, where he “laughed with Sarothesser,” as all
Ainoni caste-nobles strove to do when certain of death. Some, like Galgota,
Palatine of Eshganax, charged down the slopes to escape, abandoning those
kinsmen and clients who’d been unhorsed. Some, like cruel Zursodda, bled his
people with reckless counter-attacks until scarcely a mounted man remained. But
others, like hard-hearted Uranyanka, or fair Chinjosa, the Count-Palatine of
Antanamera, simply Anwurat ill awaited each heathen
onslaught. They bellowed encouragement to their men, disputed every dusty step.
Again and again the Kianene charged. Horses screamed. Lances cracked. Men
yelled and wailed. Scimitars and longswords rang across the slopes. And each
time the Fanim reeled back, astounded by these defeated men who refused to be
defeated. To the northwest, the
Khirgwi assaulted the Inrithi with relentless and sometimes deranged fury. Many
actually leapt from their taller camels to tackle dumbstruck knights from their
saddles. Kushigas, the Conriyan Palatine of Annand, was killed this way, as was
Inskarra, the Thunyeri Earl of Skagwa. Proyas was encircled, as were thousands
of Thunyeri behind their shield-walls. The Khirgwi swept about Anwurat and
descended on the fortress’s Conriyan besiegers, putting them to rout. And they
charged the rambling hillock where the Battlemaster had planted his Swazond
Standard. The Grandees of Eumarna,
meanwhile, stormed through the winding alleys and long avenues of the Inrithi
encampment, setting tent and pavilion alight, cutting down priests, dragging
screaming wives to the ground and violating them. At the sight of smoke pluming
from the distant camp, many men in Skauras’s staff fell to their knees and
wept, giving praise to the Solitary God. Several hailed the Sapatishah, kissing
the ground near his feet. Then glittering lights
filled the eastern sky. Cinganjehoi’s glorious horsemen had blundered upon the Scarlet
Spires… And catastrophe. Those who survived the
Schoolmen’s initial assault fled in their thousands, most along the broad
beaches along the Meneanor, where they were caught by Grandmaster Gotian, Earl
Cerjulla, and Earl Athjeari, leading the Holy War’s reserves. Some nine
thousand Inrithi knights descended upon them, hacking them to the sand, driving
them back into the crashing surf. Very few escaped. The Imperial Kidruhil,
meanwhile, broke the bristling collar about the knights of High Ainon. Imbeyan
and the Grandees of Enathpaneah were driven back. For the first time there was
pause in what would be called the Battle of the Slopes. The dust began to
clear… When the situation on the pastures below became clear, shouts of
exultation broke from the long and tagged lines of Ainoni knights. With the
Kidruhil, they charged as one toward the heights. To the north, the
ferocious momentum of the Khirgwi was first blunted by the miraculous stand of
Prince Kellhus of Atrithau beneath the Swazond Standard, then stopped
altogether by the flanking charges of the black-armoured Auglish and Ingraulish
knights of Earl Goken and Earl Ganbrota. Then the drums of the
Fanim fell silent. Far to the northwest, Prince Saubon and Earl Gothyelk had
finally broken the Grandees of Shigek and Gedea, whom they chased along the
banks of the Sempis. Though vastly outnumbered, Earl Finaol and his Canutish
knights charged the Padirajic Guardsmen protecting the sacred drums. Earl
Finaol himself was speared in the armpit, but his kinsmen won through, and cut
down the fleeing drummers. Soon breathless Galeoth and Tydonni footmen were
chasing women and slaves through the sprawling Kianene encampment. The great Fanim host
disintegrated. Crown Prince Fanayal and his Coyauri fled due south, pursued by
the Kidruhil along the never-ending beaches. Imbeyan surrendered the heights to
the spattered Ainoni and attempted to withdraw through the hills. But Ikurei
Conphas had anticipated him, and he was forced to flee with a handful of
householders while his Grandees bled themselves charging the hard-bitten
veterans of the Selial Column. Though General Bogras was killed by a stray
Kianene arrow, the Nansur did not break, and the Enathpaneans were cut down to
a man. The Khirgwi fled southwest, pursued by the iron men into the trackless
desert. Hundreds of Inrithi would
be lost for following the tribesmen too far. Cnaьir saw his charred
knife on the mats. Clutching a bloodstained
blanket, Serwe staggered after Kellhus, screaming like a lunatic. When Cnaьir
restrained her, she began clawing at his eyes. He pushed her to the ground. “He neeeeds me,” she
wailed. “He’s hurt!” “It wasn’t him,” Cnaьir
murmured. “You killed him! You
killed him!” “It wasn’t him!” “You’re sick! You’re
mad!” Anwurat Somehow the old rage
swamped his disbelief. He grabbed her by the arm and wrenched her
through the flaps. “I’m taking you! You’re my prize!” “You’re mad!” she
shrieked. “He’s told me everything about you! Everything!” He struck her to the
ground. “What has he said?” She wiped blood from her
lip, and for the first time didn’t seem afraid. “Why you beat me. Why your
thoughts never stray far from me, but return, always return to me in fury. He’s
told me everything.‘” Something trembled
through him. He raised his fist but his fingers would not clench. “What has he said?” “That I’m nothing but a
sign, a token. That you strike not me, but yourself!” “I will strangle you! I
will snap your neck like a cat’s! I will beat blood from your womb!” “Then do it!” she
shrieked. “Do it, and be done with it!” “You are my prize! My
prize! To do with as I please!” “No! No! I’m not your
prize! I’m your shame! He told me this!” “Shame? What shame? What
has he said?” “That you beat me for
surrendering as you surrendered! For fucking him the way you fucked his father!” She still lay on the
ground, legs askew. So beautiful. Even beaten and broken. How could anything
human be so beautiful? “What has he said?” he
asked blankly. He. The Dunyain. She was sobbing now.
Somehow the knife had appeared in her hands. She held it to her throat, and he
could see the perfect curve of her neck reflected. He glimpsed the single
swazond upon her forearm. She has killed! “You’re mad!” she wept.
“I’ll kill myself! I’ll kill myself! I’m not your prize! I’m his! HIS!” Serwe… Her fist hooked inward.
The blade parted flesh. But somehow he’d captured
her wrist. He wrenched the knife from her hand. He left her weeping
outside the Dunyain’s pavilion. He stared out over | the trackless Meneanor as
he wandered between the tents, through the J growing crowds of jubilant
Inrithi. So unnatural, he thought,
the sea… When Conphas found
Martemus, the sun was an orb smouldering in the cloudless skies of the west,
gold across pale blue—colours stamped into every man’s heart. With a small cadre
of bodyguards and officers, the Exalt-General had ridden to the hillock where
the accursed Scylvendi had established his command. On the summit, he found the
General sitting cross-legged beneath the Scylvendi’s leaning standard,
surrounded by ever widening circles of Khirgwi dead. The man stared at the
sunset as though he hoped to go blind. He had removed his helmet, and his
short, silvered hair fluttered in the breeze. The man looked at once younger,
Conphas thought, and yet more fatherly without his helmet. Conphas dismissed his
entourage, then dismounted. Without a word he strode to the General, drew his
longsword, then hacked at the Swazond Standard’s wooden pole. Once, twice… With
a crack, the wind bore the obscene banner slowly down. Satisfied, Conphas stood
over his wayward General, gazing out to the sunset as though to share in
whatever nonsense Martemus thought he saw. “He’s not dead,” Martemus said.
“Pity.” Martemus said nothing. “Do you remember,”
Conphas asked, “that time we rode across the fields of dead Scylvendi after
Kiyuth?” Martemus’s eyes flickered
to him. He nodded. “Do you recall what I said to you?” “You said war was intellect.” “Are you a casualty of that war, Martemus?” The sturdy General
frowned, pursed his lips. He shook his head. “No.” “I worry that you are, Martemus.” Martemus turned away from
the sun and studied him with pinched eyes. “I worried too… But no
longer.” “No longer… Why so, Martemus?” /‘tnwurat “I watched,” the General
said. “I saw him kill all these heathen. He killed and he killed until they
fled in terror.” Martemus turned back to the sunset. “He’s not human.” “Neither was Skeaos,”
Conphas replied. Martemus looked to his
callused palms. “I am a practical man,
Lord Exalt-General.” Conphas studied the
sun-burnished carnage, the open mouths and unclosed eyes, the hands like
good-luck monkey paws. He followed the smoke pluming from Anwurat—not so far
away. Not so far. He gazed back into
Martemus’s sun. There was such a difference, he thought, between the beauty
that illuminated, and the beauty that was illuminated. “You are at that,
Martemus. You are at that.” Skauras ab Nalajan had
dismissed his subordinates, servants, and slaves, the long train of men that
defined any station of power, and sat alone at a polished mahogany table
drinking Shigeki wine. For the first time, it seemed, he truly tasted the
sweetness of those things he had lost. Though old, the
Sapatishah-Governor was still hale. His white hair, oiled to his scalp in the
Kianene fashion, was as thick as that of any younger man. He had a
distinguished face, made severe and wise by his long moustaches and thin
braided beard. His eyes glittered dark beneath a brooding brow. He sat in a high turret
room of Anwurat’s citadel. Through the narrow window he could hear the sounds
of desperate battle below, the voices of beloved friends and followers crying
out. Though he was a pious
man, Skauras had committed many wicked acts in his life—wicked acts were ever
the inescapable accessories of power. He contemplated them with regret and
pined for a simpler life, one with fewer pleasures, surely, but with fewer
burdens as well. Certainly nothing so crushing as this… I have doomed my people … my faith. It had been a good plan,
he reflected. Give the idolaters the illusion of a single fixed line. Convince
them he would fight their battle. Draw their right into the north. Break their
line, not through punishing and futile ll-lfc JEL’UND MARCH charges, but by breaking—or appearing to—in the centre. Then crush their left
with Cinganjehoi and Fanayal. How glorious it should have been. Who could have guessed
such a plan? Who could have anticipated him? Probably Conphas. Old enemy. Old friend—if
such a man could be anyone’s friend. Skauras reached beneath
his jackal-embroidered coat and withdrew the parchment the Nansur Emperor had
sent him. For months it had pressed against his breast, and now, after the
day’s disaster, it was perhaps the only remaining hope of stopping the
idolaters. Sweat had rounded it to the curve of his body, had rendered it
cloth-soft. The word of Ikurei Xerius III, the Emperor of Nansur. Old foe. Old friend. Skauras didn’t read it.
He didn’t need to. But the idolaters—they must never read it. He placed its corner in
the brilliant teardrop of his lamp. Watched it curl and ignite. Watched the
spindly threads of smoke rise before they were yanked out the window. By the Solitary God, it
was still daylight! “And they looked up, and saw that lo, the
day had not gone, and that their shame lay open, for all to see…” The Prophet’s words. May
he grant them mercy. He let the parchment go
as fluttering wings of flame engulfed it. It thrashed feebly, like a living
thing. The finish of the table blistered and blackened beneath. A fitting mark, the
Sapatishah-Governor supposed. A hint. A small oracle to future doom. Skauras drank more wine.
Already the idolaters were ramming the door. Quick, deadly men. Are we all dead? he wondered. No. Only me. In the depths of his
final, most pious prayer to the Solitary God, he didn’t hear the fibrous
snapping of wood. Only the final crash and the sound of kindling skating across
the tiled floor told him that the time had come to draw his sword. He turned to face the
rush of strapping, battle-crazed infidels. It would be a short battle. She awoke with her head
cradled in his lap. He wiped her cheeks and brow with a wetted cloth. His eyes
glittered with tears in the lantern light. “The baby?” she gasped. Kellhus closed his eyes
and nodded. “Is fine.” She smiled and began
weeping. “Why? How have I angered you?” “It wasn’t me, Serwe.” “But it was you! I saw
you!” “No… You saw a demon. A
counterfeit with my face…” And suddenly she knew. What had been familiar became alien. What had been
inexplicable became clear. A demon visited me! A demon… She looked to him. More
hot tears spilled across her cheeks. How long could she cry? But I …He… Kellhus blinked slowly.
He took you. She gagged. She rolled
her cheek onto his thigh. Convulsions wracked her, but no vomit would come.
“I…”she sobbed. “I…” “You were faithful.” She turned to him, her
face crumpling. But it wasn’t you! “You were deceived. You
were faithful.” He wiped at her tears,
and she glimpsed blood on his cloth. They la^ silently for a time, simply
staring into each other’s eyes. She felt her stinging skin soothed, her hurts
fade into a strange buzzing ache. How long she wondered, could she stare into
those eyes? How long could her hear bask in their all-knowing sight? Forever! Yes, forever. “The Scylvendi came,” she
finally said. “He tried to take me.” “I know,” Kellhus replied. “I told him he
could.” And somehow she knew this
too. But why? He smiled glory. “Because I knew you
wouldn’t let him.” How much have they learned? In the lonely light of a
single lantern, Kellhus talked to Serwe in cooing tones, matching her rhythms,
heartbeat for heartbeat, breath for breath. With a patience no world-born man
could fathom, he slowly lured her into the trance the Dunyain called the
Whelming, to the place where voice could overwrite voice. Eliciting a long string
of automatic responses, he reviewed her interrogation at the hands of the
skin-spy. Then he gradually scraped the thing’s assault from the parchment of
her soul. Come morning, she would awaken puzzled by her cuts and bruises,
nothing more. Come morning, she would awaken cleansed. Afterward, he pressed
through the raucous and celebratory alleys of the encampment, walking toward
the Meneanor, toward the Scylvendi’s seaside camp. He ignored all those who
hailed him, adopting an air of brooding distraction that wasn’t so far from the
truth… Those who persisted shrank from his angry glare. He had one task
remaining. Of all his studies, none
had been so deep or so perilous as the Scylvendi. There was the man’s pride,
which like Proyas and the other Great Names had made him exceedingly sensitive
to relations of dominance. And there was his preternatural intelligence, his
ability not only to grasp and penetrate but to reflect on the movements of his
own soul— to ask after the origins of his own thoughts. But more than anything
there was his knowledge—his knowledge of the Dunyain.
Moenghus had yielded too much truth in his effort to escape the Utemot those
many years ago. He’d underestimated what Cnaьir would make of the fragments
he’d revealed. Through his obsessive rehearsal of the events surrounding his
father’s death, the plainsman had come to many troubling conclusions. And now,
of all world-born men, he alone knew the truth of the Dunyain. Of all
world-born men, Cnaьir urs Skiotha was awake… Anwurat Which was why he had to
die. Almost to a man, the Men
of Earwa adhered without thought or knowledge to the customs of their people. A
Conriyan didn’t shave because bare cheeks were effeminate. A Nansur didn’t wear
leggings because they were crude. A Tydonni didn’t consort with dark-skinned
peoples—or picks, as they called them—because they were polluted. For
world-born men, such customs simply were.
They gave precious food to statues of dead stone. They kissed the knees of
weaker men, They lived in terror of their wanton hearts. They each thought
themselves the absolute measure of all others. They felt shame, disgust esteem,
reverence… And they never asked why. Not so with Cnaьir. Where
others adhered out of ignorance of tht alternatives, he was continually forced
to choose, and more importantly to affirm
one thought from the infinite field of possible thoughts, one ac from the
infinite field of possible acts. Why upbraid a wife for weeping Why not strike
her instead? Why not laugh, ignore, or console? Why no weep with her? What made
one response more true than another? Was i one’s blood? Was it another’s words
of reason? Was it one’s God? Or was it, as Moenghus had claimed, one’s goal? Encircled by his people, born of them and destined
to die among them Cnaьir had chosen his blood. For thirty years he tried to
beat his thought and passions down the narrow tracks of the Utemot. But despite
his brute persistence, despite his native gifts, his fellow tribesmen could
alway smell a wrongness about him. In the intercourse between men, ever move
was constrained by others’ expectations; it was a kind of dance, an as such, it
brooked no hesitation. The Utemot glimpsed his flickerin doubts. They
understood that he tried, and they knew that whoever trie
to be of the People couldn’t be of the People. So they punished him with
whispers and guarded eyes—for more tha a hundred seasons… Thirty years of shame and
denial. Thirty years of torment and terro A lifetime of cannibal hatred… In the
end, Cnaьir had cut a trail of h own making, a solitary track of madness and
murder. He had made blood his
cleansing waters. If war was worship, the Cnaьir would be the most pious of the
Scylvendi—not simply of’t‘t People, but the greatest
among them as well. He told himself his arms were his glory. He was Cnaьir urs
Skiotha, the most violent of all men. And so he continued
telling himself, even though his every swazond marked not his honour, but the
death of Anasurimbor Moenghus. For what was madness, if not a kind of
overpowering impatience, a need to seize at once what the
world denied? Moenghus not only had to die, he had to die now—whether he was Moenghus or not. In his fury, Cnaьir had
made all the world his surrogate. And he avenged himself upon it. Despite the accuracy of
this analysis, it availed Kellhus little in his attempts to possess the Utemot
Chieftain. Always the man’s knowledge of the Dunyain barred his passage. For a
time, Kellhus even considered the possibility that Cnaьir would never succumb. Then they found Serwe‘—a
surrogate of a different kind. From the very beginning, the Scylvendi had made
her his track, his proof that he followed the ways of the People. Serwe was the
erasure of Moenghus, whose presence Kellhus’s resemblance so recalled. She was
the incantation that would undo Moenghus’s curse. And Cnaьir fell in love, not
with her, but with the idea of loving her. Because if he
loved her, he couldn’t love Anasurimbor Moenghus… Or his son. What followed had been
almost elementary. Kellhus began seducing
Serwe, knowing that he showed the barbarian his own seduction at the hands of
Moenghus some thirty years previous. Soon, she became both the erasure and the repetition of Cnaьir’s heartbreaking hate. The plainsman began
beating her, not simply to prove his Scylvendi contempt for women, but to
better beat himself. He punished her for repeating his sins, even though he at once loved her and despised
love as weakness… And so as Kellhus
intended, contradiction piled upon contradiction. World-born men, he’d
discovered, possessed a peculiar vulnerability to contradictions, particularly
those that provoked conflicting passions. Nothing, it seemed, so anchored their
hearts. Nothing so obsessed. Once Cnaьir had utterly
succumbed to the girl, Kellhus simply took her away, knowing the man would trade
anything for her return, and that he would do so without even understanding
why. Anuiurat And now the usefulness of
Cnaьir urs Skiotha was at an end. The monk climbed the sparsely grassed pate of
a dune. The wind whipped through his hair, yanked his white samite robe about
his waist. Before him, the Meneanor swept out to where the earth seemed to
spill into the great void of the night. Immediately below, he saw the
Scylvendi’s simple round tent; it had been kicked down and trampled. No fire
burned before it. For a moment Kellhus
thought he was too late, then he heard raw shouts on the wind, glimpsed a
figure amid the heaving waves. He walked through the ruined camp to the water’s
edge, felt the crunch of shells and gravel beneath his sandalled feet. Moonlight
silvered the rolling waters. Gulls cried out, hanging like kites in the night
wind. Kellhus watched the waves
batter the Scylvendi’s nude form. “There are no tracks!”
the man screamed, beating the surf with his fists. “Where are the—” Without warning, he went
rigid. Dark water swelled about him, engulfed him almost to his shoulders, then
tumbled forward in clouds of crystalline foam. He turned his head, and Kellhus
saw his weathered face, framed by long tails of sodden black hair. There was no
expression. Absolutely no expression. Cnaьir began wading to
shore; the surf broke about him, as insubstantial as smoke. “I did everything you
asked,” he called over the surrounding thunder. “I shamed my father into
battling you. I betrayed him, my tribe, my race…” The water dropped from
his massive chest to the concave plane of his stomach and groin. A wave crashed
about his white thighs, tugged upon his long phallus. Kellhus filtered out the
Meneanor’s clamour, bound his every sense to the approaching barbarian. Steady
pulse. Bloodless skin. Slack face… Dead eyes. And Kellhus realized: I cannot read this man. “I followed you across
the trackless Steppe.” The slap of bare feet
across waterlogged sand. Cnaьir paused before him, his great frame glistening
as though enamelled in the moonlight. “I loved you.” Kellhus reached back,
drew his Dunyain sword, levelled it before him. “Kneel,” he said. The Scylvendi fell to his
knees. He held out his arms, trailing fingers through the sand. He bent his
face back to the stars, exposing his throat. The Meneanor surged and seethed
behind him. Kellhus stood motionless
above him. What is this, Father? Pity? He gazed at the abject
Scylvendi warrior. From what darkness had this passion come/ “Strike!” the man cried.
The great scarred body trembled in terror and exultation. But still, Kellhus
couldn’t move. “Kill me!” Cnaьir shouted
to the bowl of the night. With uncanny swiftness he seized Kellhus’s blade,
jerked its point to his throat. “Kill! Kill!” “No,” Kellhus said. A
wave crashed, and the wind whipped cold spray across them. Leaning forward, he
gently pried his blade from the man’s heavy grip. Cnaьir’s arms snapped
about either side of his head, wrenched him to the cool sand. Kellhus remained
motionless. Whether by luck or instinct, the barbarian had yanked him within a
coin’s edge of death. The merest twitch, Kellhus knew, could break his neck. Cnaьir drew him close
enough for him to feel his humid body heat. “1 loved you!” he both whispered and screamed. Then he thrust
Kellhus backward, nearly tossing him back to his feet. Wary now, Kellhus rolled
his chin to straighten a kink from his neck. Cnaiur stared at him in hope and
horror… Kellhus sheathed his
sword. The Scylvendi swayed
backward, raising his fists to his head. He clutched handfuls of hair, wrested
them from his scalp. “But you said!” he raved,
holding out bloody shocks of hair. “You said!”
Kellhus watched, utterly unmoved. There were other uses. There were always
other uses. Anwurat The thing called
Sarcellus followed a narrow track along the embankments between fields. Despite
the uncharacteristic humidity, it was a clear night, and the moon etched the
surrounding clots of eucalytpus and sycamore in blue. He slowed as he passed
the first ruins, and guided his mount between a long gallery of columns that
jutted from a collection of grassy mounds. Beyond the columns, the Sempis lay
as still as any lake, bearing the white moon and the shadowy line of the
northern escarpments upon its mirror back. Sarcellus dismounted. This place had once
belonged to the ancient city of Girgilioth, but that mattered little to the
thing called Sarcellus. He was a creature of the moment. What mattered was that
it was a landmark, and landmarks were good places for spies to confer with
their handlers—human or otherwise. Sarcellus sat with his
back against one of the columns, lost in thoughts both predatory and
impenetrable. Cylindrical friezes of leopards standing like men soared across
the moon-pale column above. The flutter of wings stirred him from his reverie
and he looked up with his large brown eyes, reminded of different pillars. A bird the size of a
raven alighted upon his knee—a bird like any raven save for its white head. White, human head. The face twitched with
bird-nervousness, regarded Sarcellus with tiny turquoise eyes. “I smell blood,” it said
in a thin voice. Sarcellus nodded. “The
Scylvendi… He interrupted my interrogation of the girl.” “Your effectiveness?” “Is unimpaired. I heal.” A tiny blink. “Good. Then
what have you learned?” “He’s not Cishaurim.” The
thing had spoken this softly, as though to preserve tiny eardrums. A cat-curious turn of the
head. “Indeed,” the Synthese said after a moment. “Then what is he?” “Dunyain.” Tiny grimace. Small,
glistening teeth, like grains of rice, flashed between its lips. “All games end
with me, Gaortha. All games.” Sarcellus became very
still. “I play no game. This man is Dunyain. That’s what the Scylvendi
calls him. She said there’s no doubt.“ “But there’s no order called ‘Dunyain’ in
Atrithau.” “No. But then we know that he’s not a Prince
of Atrithau.” The Old Name paused, as though to cycle large human thoughts through a small bird
intellect. “Perhaps,” it eventually
said, “it’s no coincidence that this order takes its name from
ancient Kunьiric. Perhaps this man’s name, Anasurimbor, is not a
clumsy Cishaurim lie after all. Perhaps he is of the Old Seed.“ “Could the Nonmen have
trained him?” “Perhaps… But we have
spies—even in Ishterebinth. There is little that Nin-Ciljiras does that we
don’t know. Very little.” The small face cackled.
It folded and unfolded its obsidian wings. “No,” it continued, its
small brow furrowed, “this Dunyain is not a ward of the Nonmen… When the light
of ancient Kunьiri was stamped out, many stubborn embers survived. The Mandate
is just such an ember. Perhaps the Dunyain is another, just as stubborn…” The blue eyes
flickered—another blink. “But far more secretive.” Sarcellus said nothing.
Speculation on such matters was beyond his warrant, beyond his making. The tiny teeth clicked,
once, twice, as though the Old Name tested their mettle. “Yes… An ember … in the very shadow of Holy Golgotterath no less…” “He’s told the woman the
Holy War will be his.” “And he’s not Cishaurim!
Such a mystery, Gaortha! Who are the Dunyain? What do they want with the Holy
War? And how, my pretty pretty child, can this man see through your face?” “But we don’t—” “He sees enough ... Yes, more than enough…” It bent its head to the
right, blinked, then straightened. “Indulge this Prince
Kellhus for a while yet, Gaortha. With the Mandate sorcerer removed from the
game he’s become less of a threat. Indulge him… We must learn more about this
‘Dunyain.’” “But even now he grows in
power. More and more these Men call him Anwurat ‘Warrior-Prophet’ or ‘Prince
of God.’ If he continues, he will become very difficult to remove.“ “Warrior-Prophet…” The
Synthese cackled. “Very cunning, this Dunyain. He leashes these fanatics with
leather of their own making… What is his sermon, Gaortha? Does it in any way
threaten the Holy War?” “No. Not yet, Consult
Father.” “Measure him, then do as
you see fit. If it seems he might call the Holy War to kennel, you must silence
him—no matter what the cost. He is but a curiosity. The Cishaurim are our foe!” “Yes, Old Father.” Gleaming like wet marble,
the white head bobbed twice, as though in answer to some overriding instinct. A
wing dropped to Sarcellus’s knee, dipped between his shadowy thighs… Gaortha
went rigid. “Are you badly hurt, my
sweet child?” “Yessss,” the thing called
Sarcellus gasped. The small head tilted
backward. Heavy-lidded eyes watched the wingtip circle and stroke, stroke and
circle. “Ah, but imagine… Imagine a world where no womb quickens, where no soul
hopes!” Sarcellus sucked drool in
delight. Shigek Men never resemble one another so much as when asleep or
dead. —OPPARITHA, ON THE CARNAL The arrogance of the Inrithi waxed bright
in the days following Anwurat. Though the sober-minded demanded they press the
attack, the great majority clamoured for respite. They thought the Fanim
doomed, just as they thought them doomed after Mengedda. But while the Men of
the Tusk tarried, the Padirajah plotted. He would make the world his shield. —DRUSAS ACHAMIAN, THE
COMPENDIUM OF THE FIflST HOLY WAR Early Autumn, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk,
lothiah Achamian suffered dreams… Dreams drawn from the
sheath. Drizzle hazed the
distances, obscuring the Ring Mountains behind drapes of woollen grey, granting
the madness before him the span of all visible creation. Masses of Sranc,
bristling with black-bronze weapons. Ranks of Bashrag, beating the mud with
their massive hammers. And beyond them, the high ramparts of Golgotterath.
Misty barbicans above precipitous cliffs, the two great horns of the Ark
rearing into murky obscurity, curved and golden against the endless grey,
trailing skirts of unguttered water. Shigek Hoary Golgotterath,
raised about the greatest terror ever to fall from the heavens. Soon to yield… A great yawing rumbled
from the parapets out and across the dreary plains. Like a tide of spiders,
the Sranc surged forward, howling through pools, sprinting through mud. They
crashed into the phalanxes of the warlike Aorsi, the long-haired bulwark of the
North; they seethed against the shining ranks of the Kunьiri, the high tide of
Norsirai glory. The Chieftain-Princes of the High Norsirai whipped their
chariots forward and all perished before them. The standards of Ishterebinth,
last of the Nonmen Mansions, charged deep into a sea of abominations, leaving
black-blooded ruin in their wake. Great Nil’gikas stood like a point of
brilliant sunlight amid smoke and violent shadow. And Nymeric sounded the
Worldhorn, over and over, until the Sranc could hear nothing but the peal of
their doom. Seswatha, Grandmaster of
the Sohonc, raised his face to the rain and tasted sweet joy, for it was
happening, truly happening! Unholy Golgotterath, ancient Min-Uroikas, was about
to fall. He had warned them in time! Achamian would relive all
eighteen years of that delusion. Dreams drawn from the
knife’s sheath. And when he awakened, to
the sound of harsh shouts or to the patter of cold water across his face, it
would seem that one horror had merely replaced another. He would blink against
torchlight, would dully note the bite of chains, a mouth stuffed with rank
cloth, and the dark, scarlet-robed figures that surrounded him. And he would
think, before succumbing to the Dreams once again, It comes … the Apocalypse
comes… “Strange, isn’t it,
Iyokus?” “And what is that?” “That men can be rendered
so helpless so easily.” “Men and Schools…” “What are you implying?” “Nothing, Grandmaster.” actUMU MARCH “Look! He watches!” “Yes… He does that from
time to time. But he must recover more of his strength before we can begin.” Esmenet cried out when
she saw them walking their mounts across the field toward her. Kellhus and
Serwe, haggard from long and sleepless travel. Suddenly she was running across
the uneven pasture, as though drawn by a long irresistible line. Toward them.
No, not them—toward him. She flew to him, clutched
him harder than she thought her limbs capable. He smelt of dust and scented
oils. His beard and hair kissed her bare skin with soft curls. She could feel
her tears roll from her cheek to his neck in continuous lines. “Kellhus,” she sobbed.
“Oh, Kellhus… I think I’m going mad!” “No, Esmi… It is grief.” He seemed a pillar of
comfort. His square chest flattening her breasts. His long warding arms about
her back and narrow waist. He pressed her back, and
she turned to Serwe, who was also crying. They hugged, then together walked
back to the lonely tent on the slope. Kellhus led their horses. “We missed you, Esmi,” Serwe said, strangely flustered. Esmenet regarded the girl
with sorrow. Her left eye was bruised black and cherry and an angry red cut
poked from beneath her hairline. Even if Esmenet had the heart—and she had
none—she would wait for Serwe to explain rather than ask what had happened.
With such marks, asking demanded lies, and silence afforded truth. That was the
lot of women— especially when they were wanton… Aside from her face, the
girl appeared healthy, almost aglow. Beneath her hasas, her belly had swelled
in the narrow-hipped manner Esmenet could only envy. A hundred questions
assailed Esmenet. How was her back? How often did she pee? Had there been any
bleeding? Suddenly she realized how terrified the girl must be—even with
Kellhus. Esmenet could remember her own joyous terror. But then, she’d been
alone. Absolutely alone. “You must be famished!”
she exclaimed. Serwe shook her head in
feeble denial, and both Esmenet and Kellhus laughed. Serwe was always hungry—as
a pregnant woman should be. For a moment, Esmenet
felt the old sunshine flash from her eyes. “It’s so good to see you,” she said.
“I’ve mourned more than the loss of Achamian.“ Dusk had come, so she
began drawing wood—mostly bone-coloured flotsam she’d found along the river—to
throw into the fire. Kellhus sat cross-legged before the dwindling flames.
Serwe leaned her head against his shoulder, her hair nearly bleached white by
the sun, her nose red and peeling as always. “This is the same fire,”
Kellhus said. “The one we struck after first coming to Shigek.“ Esmenet paused, her arms
wrapped about her wood. “It is!” Serwe exclaimed.
She looked around the bare slopes, turned to ‘ the dark band of the river in
the near distance. “But everything’s gone… All the tents. All the people…” Esmenet fed the fire
piece by elaborate piece. She’d obsessed over her fires of late. There was no
one else to tend. She could feel Kellhus’s
gentle scrutiny. “Some hearths can’t be
rekindled,” he said. “It burns well enough,”
Esmenet murmured. She blinked tears, sniffled and wiped at her nose. “But what makes a hearth,
Esmi? Is it the fire, or the family that keeps it?“ “The family,” she finally
said. A strange blankness had overcome her. “We’re that family… You
know that.” Kellhus had bent his head sideways to look into her down turned
face. “And Achamian knows that too.“ Her legs became
strangers, and she stumbled, fell onto her rump. She began weeping yet again. “B-but I-I have to-to
stay… I-I have-have’t-to wait for him… for him to come home.“ Kellhus knelt beside her,
lifted her chin. She glimpsed a tear’s shining track across his left
cheek. “We are that home,” he
said, and somehow that was the end of it. V1ARCH Over the course of
dinner, Kellhus explained all that had happened the previous week. He was a
most extraordinary storyteller—he always had been—and for a time Esmenet found
herself lost in the Battle of Anwurat and its wrenching intricacies. Her heart
pounded in her throat when he described the burning of the encampment and the
charge of the Khirgwi, and she clapped and laughed every bit as hard as Serwe
when he described his defence of the Swazond Standard, which according to him
consisted of no more than a succession of outlandishly lucky blunders. And she
found herself wondering that such a miraculous man—a prophet! for he could be
nothing else—concerned himself with her,
Esmenet, a caste-menial whore from the slums of Sumna. “Ah, Esmi,” he said, “it
brings such peace to my heart to see you smile.” She bit her lip, laughed
through a crying face. He continued, more
seriously, to explain the events following the battle. How the heathens had
been chased into the desert. How Gotian had held Skauras’s severed head before
their victory fires. How even now the Holy War secured the South Bank. From the
Delta to the deep desert, tabernacles burned… Esmenet had seen the
smoke. They sat silently for a
while, listening to the fire gorge on her wood. As always the sky was desert
clear, and the vault of stars seemed endless. Moonlight silvered the eternal
Sempis. How many nights had she
pondered these things? Sky and sweeping landscape. Dwarfing her, terrifying her
with their monstrous indifference, reminding her that hearts were no more than
fluttering rags. Too much wind, and they were tossed into the great black. Too
little, and they fell slack. What chance did Akka
have? “I received word from
Xinemus,” Kellhus finally said. “He still searches…” “So there’s hope?” “There’s always hope,” he
said in a voice that at once encouraged and deadened her heart. “We can only
wait and see what he finds.” Esmenet couldn’t speak.
She glanced at Serwe, but the girl avoided her eyes. They think he’s deed. Shigek She knew better than to
hope. This was the world. But dead seemed such an impossible
thought. How could one think the end of thinking? Akka would— “Come,” Kellhus said, in
the quick and open manner of someone assured of his new course. He strode
around her small fire, sat with his knees in his hands next to her. With a
stick he scratched an oddly familiar sign into the bare earth before them. “In
the meantime, let’s teach you how to read.” It seemed all crying had
been wrung from her, but somehow… Esmenet looked to Kellhus
and smiled through her tears. Her voice felt small and broken. “I’ve always wanted to
read.” The seamless transition
of agonies—from Seswatha’s torture in the bowels of Dagliash two thousand years
before to now… The pain of puckered burns,
chafed wrists, joints contorted by the wrong distribution of his body’s weight.
At first Achamian didn’t realize he was awake. It merely seemed that
Mekeritrig’s face had transformed into that of Eleazaras—the inhumanly
beautiful face of the Mantraitor had become that of the Grandmaster, rutted and
whiskered. “Ah, Achamian,” Eleazaras
said, “it’s good to see you seeing—things in this world at least. For some time
we feared you wouldn’t awaken at all. You were very nearly killed, you know.
The Library was absolutely ruined… All those books ash, simply because of your
stubbornness. How the Sareots must howl in the Outside. All their poor books.” Achamian was gagged,
naked, and chained, wrists above his head and ankle to ankle, so that he hung
suspended over a great mosaic floor. The chamber was vaulted, but he couldn’t
see the ceiling’s peak, nor could he see the terminus of the walls that framed
the silk-gowned entourage before him. The surrounding spaces were lost in
gloom. Three glowering tripods provided light, and only he, hanging in the
confluence of their circles of illumination, was bright. “Ah yes…” Eleazaras
continued, watching him with a thin smile. “This place. It’s always good to
have a sense of one’s prison, no? An old Inrithi chapel, by the looks of it.
Built by the Ceneians, I suppose.” IHfc OECOND MARCH Suddenly he understood. The Scarlet Spires! I’m dead… I’m dead. Tears welled down his
cheeks. His body, beaten, numb from hanging betrayed him, and he felt the rush
of urine and bowel along his naked legs heard mud slap across the mosaic
serpents at his feet. Nooo! This can’t be happening! Eleazaras laughed, a
thin, wicked thing. “And now,” he said, his tone jnanic and droll, “some
long-dead Ceneian architect also howls.” There was uneasy laughter
from his retinue. Seized by animal panic,
Achamian writhed against his chains, hacked against the cloth in his throat.
Spasms struck and he went limp. He swung in small circles, punished by wave
after wave of pain. Esmi… “There’s much certainty here,” Eleazaras said, holding a kerchief to his
face, “don’t you think, Achamian? You know why you’ve been taken. And you also know the inevitable
outcome. We’ll ply you for the Gnosis, and you, conditioned by years of Mandate
training, will frustrate our every attempt. You’ll die in agony, your secrets
clutched close to your heart, and we’ll be left with yet another useless
Mandate corpse. This is the way that it’s supposed to happen, no?” Achamian simply stared in
blank horror, an anguished pendulum slowly swinging to and fro, to and fro… What Eleazaras said was
true. He was supposed to die for his knowl‘ edge, for the Gnosis. Think, Achamian, think!
Please^please’dear-God’you-must’think! Without the guidance of
the Nonmen Quya, the Anagogic Schools of the Three Seas had never learned how
to surpass what were called the Analogies. All their sorcery, no matter how
powerful or ingenious, arose through the power of arcane associations, through
the resonances between words and concrete events. They required
detours—dragons, lightnings, suns—to bum«. the world. They could not, like
Achamian, conjure the essence of these | things, the Burning
itself. They knew nothing of the Abstractions. Where they were poets, he
was a philosopher. They were mere bronze to his
iron, and he would show them. Achamian snorted air
through his nostrils. Through bleary eyes, he glared at the Grandmaster. Shigek I will see you burn! I will see you bum! “But here,” Eleazaras was saying, “in these tumultuous times,
the past need not be our tyrant. Here, your torment, your death, isn’t assured…
Here, nothing is for certain.” Eleazaras walked from the
others—five graceful, measured steps—and came to a stop very near to Achamian. “To prove this to you,
I’ll have your gag removed. I’ll actually let you speak, rather than ply you, as we have your fellow
Schoolmen in the past, with endless Compulsions. But I warn you, Achamian, it
will be fruitless to try to assail us.” He produced a slender hand from the
cuff of his glyph-embroidered sleeve, gestured to the mosaic floor. Achamian saw a broad
circle, painted in red, across the stylized animals of the mosaic floor: the
representation of a snake scaled by pictograms and devouring its own tail. “As you can see,”
Eleazaras said mildly, “you’re chained above a Uroborian Circle… To even begin
a Cant will invite immeasurable pain, I assure you. I’ve witnessed it before.” So had Achamian. The
Scarlet Spires, it seemed, possessed many potent poetic devices. The Grandmaster
retreated, and a lumbering eunuch appeared from the shadows. With fat but
nimble fingers, he withdrew the gag. Achamian sucked air through his mouth,
tasted the stink of his body’s earlier treachery. He hung his head forward,
spit as best he could. The Scarlet Schoolmen
watched him expectantly, even apprehensively. “Well?” Eleazaras asked. Achamian blinked, cocked
his neck against the pain. “Where are we?” he croaked. A broad smile split the
Grandmaster’s thin grey goatee. “Why, Iothiah of course.” Achamian grimaced and
nodded. He looked down to the Uroborian Circle beneath, saw his urine trickle
along the grout between mosaic tiles… It didn’t seem a matter
of courage, only a giddy instant of disconnection, a wilful ignorance of the
consequences. He said two words. Agony. Enough to shriek, to
empty bowels once again. Threads of incandescence,
winding, forking beneath his skin, as though he possessed sunlight for blood. Shriek and shriek until
it seemed that eyes must rupture, that teeth must crack, spill to mosaic floor,
clicking like porcelain against porcelain. And then back to nightmares of a far
older, and far less momentary, torment. When the shrieking
stopped, Eleazaras stared at the unconscious figure. Even chained and naked,
his shrivelled phallus prodding from black pubic hair, the man seemed…
threatening. “Stubborn,” Iyokus said,
in a tone that insolently asked, What
did youexpect? “Indeed,” Eleazaras
replied, and fumed. Delay after delay. The Gnosis would be such a lovely thing
to wrest from this quivering dog, but it would be an unexpected gift. What he needed to know is what happened that night in the Imperial
Catacombs beneath the Andiamine Heights. He needed to know what this man knew
of the Cishaurim skin-spies. The Cishaurim! Directly or indirectly,
this one Mandate dog had undone whatever advantage they’d gained at the Battle
of Mengedda. First, by killing two sorcerers of rank at the Sareotic Library,
among them Yutirames, an old and powerful ally of Eleazaras’s. Then, by
providing that fanatic Proyas with leverage. If it hadn’t been for the man’s threats
of avenging his “dear old tutor,” Eleazaras would never have allowed the
Scarlet Spires to join the Holy War on the South Bank. Six! Six sorcerers of
rank fell to Fanim bowmen armed with Chorae at the Battle of Anwurat. Ukrummu,
Calasthenes, Nai’n… Six! And this, Eleazaras knew,
was precisely what the Cishaurim wanted… To bleed them while jealously guarding
their own blood! Oh, he did covet the
Gnosis. So much that it almost proved a counterweight to that other
word—“Cishaurim.” Almost. That evening at the Sareotic Library, watching this
one man resist eight sorcerers of rank Shigek with glittering, abstract
lights, Eleazaras had envied as he’d never envied before. Such miraculous
power. Such purity of dispensation. How? he had thought. How? Fucking Mandate pigs. After he learned what he
needed about the Cishaurim, he would see this dog plied in the old way. All
things in the world were a lottery, and who knew, seizing this man might prove
an act as significant as destroying the Cishaurim—in the end. That, Eleazaras decided,
was Iyokus’s problem. He could not fathom the fact that certain rewards made
even the most desperate gambles worthwhile. He knew nothing of hope. Chanv addicts never
seemed to know anything of hope. The Sempis seemed more
than a river in the crossing. Esmenet had ridden behind
Serwe to a nearby Inrithi ferry, both terrified of floating on a beast’s back,
and amazed by the girl’s native ability to ride. She was Cepaloran, Serwe
explained. She’d been born astride a saddle. Which meant, Esmenet
thought in a moment of uncommon bitterness, with her legs spread wide. Afterward, standing in
the shade of hissing leaves, she looked across the river to the denuded North
Bank. The barrenness saddened her, reminded her of her heart and why she had to
leave. But the distance… A terrifying sense of finality seized her, a certainty
that the Sempis, whose waters she’d thought kind, was in fact ruthlessly
vindictive, and would brook no return. I can swim… I know how to swim! Kellhus clasped her about
the shoulder. “The world looks south,” he said. Returning to the Conriyan
encampment was far less difficult than she feared. Proyas had pitched camp
beyond the high walls of Ammegnotis, the only great city on the South Bank.
Because of this they found themselves part of a great stream of market-bound
traffic: bands of horsemen, wains, barefooted penitents, all crowding the side
of the road where the shade of palms was deepest. But rather than vanishing
into the crowd, •L ifugek they found themselves
beset by people, mostly Men of the Tusk but some camp-followers as well, all
begging to be touched or blessed by the Warrior-Prophet. Word of his stand
against the Khirgwi, Serwe explained, had further confirmed him in the hearts
of many people. They were fairly mobbed by the time they reached the camp. “He no longer rebukes
them,” Esmenet said, watching in astonishment. Serwe laughed. “Isn’t it
wonderful?” And it was—it was! There was Kellhus, the man who had teased her so
many times about their fire, walking among adoring masses, smiling, touching
cheeks, uttering warm and encouraging words. There was Kellhus! The Warrior-Prophet. He looked up to them,
grinned and winked. Pressed against the girl’s back in the saddle, Esmenet
could feel Serwe shiver in delight, and for an instant she experienced a pang
of savage jealousy. Why did she always lose? Why did the Gods hate her so? Why
not someone else, someone deserving? Why not Serwe? But shame followed hard
on these thoughts. Kellhus had come for her. Kellhus! This man whom others worshipped had come
out of concern for her. He does this for Achamian. For his
teacher… Proyas had posted pickets
around the outskirts of the Conriyan camp—primarily because of the furor
surrounding Kellhus, Serwe explained—and they soon found themselves walking
unmolested through long canvas alleys. Esmenet had told herself
she feared returning because it would stir too many recollections. But losing
those recollections was what she truly feared. Her refusal to leave their old
camp had been rash, desperate, pathetic… Kellhus had shown her that. But
remaining had fortified her somehow—or so it
seemed when she thought about it. There was the clutching sense of
defensiveness, the certainty that she must protect Achamian’s surroundings.
She’d even refused to touch the chipped clay bowl he’d used for his tea that
final morning. By describing his absence in such heartbreaking detail, such
things had become, it seemed to her, fetishes, charms that would secure his
return. And there was the sense of desolate pride. Everyone had fled, but she
remained—she remained! She would look across the abandoned
fields, at the firepits becoming earthen, at the paths scuffed
through the grasses, and all the world would seem a phost. Only her loss would
seem real… Only Achamian. Wasn’t there some glory, some grace in that? Now she was moving on—no
matter what Kellhus said about hearth and family. Did that mean she
was leaving Akka behind as well? She wept while Kellhus
helped her pitch Achamian’s tent, so small and threadbare, in the shadow of the
grand brocaded pavilion he shared with Serwe. But she was grateful. So very
grateful. She had assumed the first
few nights would be awkward, but she was wrong. Kellhus was too generous, and
Serwe too innocent, for her to feel anything other than welcome. From time to
time, Kellhus would make her laugh, simply to remind her, Esmenet suspected,
that she could still feel joy. Otherwise, he would either share her sorrow, or
withdraw, so she might suffer in seclusion. Serwe was… well, Serwe.
Sometimes she would seem utterly oblivious to Esmenet’s grief and act as though
nothing had changed, as though Achamian might at any moment come strolling down
the winding alley, laughing or quarrelling with Xinemus. And though Esmenet
found the thought of this offensive, she found it peculiarly comforting in
practice. It was nice to pretend. Other times, Serwe would
seem absolutely devastated, for her, for Achamian, as well as for herself. Part
of this was the pregnancy, Esmenet knew—she herself had wept and laughed like a
madwoman while carrying her daughter—but Esmenet found it particularly
difficult to bear. She would dutifully ask Serwe what was wrong, would always
he gentle, but her thoughts would fill her with shame. If Serwe said she cried
for Achamian, Esmenet would wonder why. Had they been lovers for more than one
night? If Serwe said she cried for her,
Esmenet would be indignant. What? Was she that pathetic? And if Serwe simply
seemed to wallow, Esmenet would find herself disgusted. How could anyone be so
selfish? Afterward, Esmenet would
berate herself. What would Achamian think of such bitter, spiteful thoughts?
How disappointed he’d be! “Esmi!” he’d say. “Esmi, please …” And she’d spend watch after sleepless watch
remembering all her horrid words, all her petty cruelties, and begging the Gods
for forgiveness. She didn’t mean them. How could she? On her third night, she
heard a soft tapping against her tent flap. When she pulled it aside, Serwe
pressed in, smelling of smoke, oranges, and jasmine. The half-naked girl knelt
in the gloom crying. Esmenet already knew Kellhus hadn’t returned, because
she’d been listening. He had his councils and, of course, his growing
congregation. “Serchaa?” she asked,
overcome by the motherly weariness of having to console those who suffered far
less than herself. “What is it, Serchaa?” “Please, Esmi. Please, I
beg you!” “Please what, Serchaa? What do you mean?” The girl hesitated. Her
eyes were little more than glittering points in the gloom. “Don’t steal him!” Serwe
suddenly cried. “Don’t steal him from me!” Esmenet laughed, but
softly so as not to bruise the girl’s feelings. “Steal Kellhus,” she
said. “Please, Esmi! Y-you’re
so beautiful… Almost as beautiful as me! But you’re smart too! You speak to him
the way other men speak to him! I’ve heard you!” “Serchaa… I love Akka. I love Kellhus too, but not… not the way you fear.
Please, you mustn’t fear! I couldn’t bear it if you feared me, Serchaa!”
Esmenet had thought herself sincere, but afterward, as she nestled against
Serwe’s slender back, she found herself exulting in the thought of Serwe’s
fear. She curled the girl’s blond hair between her fingers, thinking of the way
Serwe had swept it across Achamian’s chest… How easy, she wondered, would it
yank from her scalp? Why did
you lie with Akka? Why? The following morning,
Esmenet awoke stricken with remorse. Hatred, as the Sumni said, was a rapacious
houseguest, and lingered only in hearts fat with pride. Esmenet’s heart had
grown very thin. She stared at the girl in the tinted light. Serwe had rolled
in her sleep, and now lay with her angelic face turned to Esmenet. Her right
hand cupped the bulge of her stomach. She breathed quiet as a babe. How could such beauty
dwell in a slumbering face? For a time, Esmenet pondered what it was she
thought she saw. There was a peculiar sense of sneakiness, the thrill of one-sided witness so familiar to
children. This was what made Esmenet grin. But there was far more: the aura of
dormant life, the premonition of death, the wonder of seeing the unruly
carnival of Shigek human expression enclosed
in the stillness of a single point. There was a sense of truth, a recognition
that all faces held this one point in common.
This, Esmenet knew, was her face, as it was Achamian’s, or
even Kellhus’s. But more than anything, there was a glorious vulnerability. The
sleeping throat, the Nilnameshi proverb went, was easily cut. Was this not
love? To be watched while you slept… She was crying when Serwe awoke. She
watched the girl blink, focus, and frown. ‘Why?“ Serwe asked. Esmenet smiled. “Because
you’re so beautiful,” she said. “So perfect.” Serwe’s eyes flashed with joy.
She rolled onto her back, stretching her arms into the stuffy air. “1 know!” she cried, rolling her shoulders in a little jig.
She looked to Esmenet, bounced her eyebrows up and down. “Everybody wants me!”
she laughed. “Even you!” “Little bitch!” Esmenet
gasped, raising her hands as though to claw at her eyes. Kellhus was already at
the fire when they tumbled from the tent, laughing and squealing. He shook his
head—as perhaps a man should. From that day, Esmenet
found herself tending to Serwe with even greater kindness. It was so strange,
so confusing, the friendship she’d found with this girl, this pregnant child
who had taken a prophet as a lover. Even before Achamian had
left for the Library, she’d wondered what it was Kellhus saw in Serwe.
Certainly it had to be more than her beauty— which was, Esmenet often thought,
nothing short of otherworldly. Kellhus saw hearts, not skin, no matter how
smooth or marble white. And Serwe’s heart had seemed so flawed. Joyous and
open, certainly, but also vain, petulant, peevish, and wanton. But now Esmenet wondered
whether these very flaws held the secret of her heart’s perfection. For she’d
glimpsed that perfection while watching her sleep. For an instant, she’d
glimpsed what only Kellhus could see… The beauty of frailty. The splendour of
imperfection. She had witnessed, she realized. Witnessed truth. She could find
no proper words, but she felt better for it, revived somehow. That morning
Kellhus had looked at her and had nodded in a MARCH frank, admiring manner
that reminded her of Xinemus. He said nothing because nothing needed to be
said—or so it seemed. Perhaps, she thought, truth wasn’t unlike sorcery.
Perhaps those who see truth simply see each other. Later, before she left
with Serwe to scrounge through the half-abandoned bazaars of Ammegnotis,
Kellhus assisted her with her reading. Despite her protestations, he’d given
her The Chronicle of the Tusk as a primer. Simply holding the
leather-bound manuscript filled her with dread. The look of it, the smell of
it, even the rasping creak of its spine spoke of righteousness and irrevocable
judgement. The pages seemed inked in iron. Every word she sounded out possessed
an anxiousness all its own. Every bird-track column threatened the next. “I need not,” she told
Kellhus, “read the warrant of my own damnation!” “What does it say?”
Kellhus asked, ignoring her tantrum. “That I’m filth!” “What does it say, Esmi.” She returned to the
exhausting trial of wrestling sounds from marks, and words from sounds. The day was desert hot,
particularly in the city, where the stone and the mud brick soaked up the sun
and seemed to redouble its heat. Esmenet retired early that night, and for the
first time in many days, fell asleep without crying for Achamian. She awoke to what the
Nansur called “fool’s morning.” Her eyes simply fluttered open, and she found
herself alert, even though the darkness and the temperature told her the
morning lay many watches away. She frowned at the entrance to the tent, which
had been pulled open. Her bare feet jutted from her blankets. Moonlight bathed
them and the sandalled feet of a man… “Such interesting company
you keep,” Sarcellus said. Screaming never occurred to her. For a heartbeat or
two, his presence seemed as proper as it seemed impossible. He lay
beside her, his head propped on his elbow, his large brown eyes glittering with
amusement. Beneath white, gold-floriated vestments, he wore a Shrial gown with
a Tusk embroidered across its chest. He smelled of sandalwood and other ritual
incenses she couldn’t identify. “Sarcellus,” she
murmured. How long had he been watching her? Shigek “You never did tell the
sorcerer about me, did you?” “No.” He shook his head in
rueful mockery. “Naughty whore.” The sense of unreality
drained away, and the first true pang of fear struck her. “What do you want,
Sarcellus?” “You.” “Leave…” “Your prophet isn’t what
you think he is… You do know that.” Fear had become terror.
She knew full well how cruel he could be to those who fell outside the narrow
circle of his respect, but she’d always thought herself within that circle—even
after she’d left his tent. But something had happened… Somehow, she understood
she meant nothing, absolutely nothing, to the man now gazing upon her. “Leave now, Sarcellus.” The Knight-Commander
laughed. “But I need you, Esmi. I need your help…There’s gold…” “I’ll scream. I’m
warning—” “There’s life!” Sarcellus snarled. Somehow his hand had clamped
about her mouth. She didn’t need to feel the prick to know he held a knife to
her throat. “Listen, whore. You’ve
made a habit of begging at the wrong table. The sorcerer’s dead. Your prophet
will soon follow. Now I ask, where does that leave you?” He swept the covers away,
exposed her to the warm night air. She flinched, sobbed as the knifepoint
swizzled across her moonlit skin. “Eh, old whore? What will you do when your peach loses its
pucker, hmm? Whom will you bed then? How will you end, I wonder? Will you be
fucking lepers? Or will you be sucking scared little boys for scraps of bread?” She wet herself in
terror. Sarcellus breathed deep,
as though savouring the bouquet of her humiliation. His eyes laughed. “Is that understanding I smell?” Esmenet, sobbing, nodded against the iron
fingers. Sarcellus smirked, removed his hand. She shrieked, screamed until it
seemed her throat must bleed. Then Kellhus held her,
and she was drawn from the tent to the glowirm coals of the firepit. She heard
shouts, saw men crowding about them with torches, heard voices rumbling in
Conriyan. Somehow she explained what happened, shuddering and sobbing within
the frame of Kellhus’s strong arms After what seemed both heartbeats and days,
the commotion passed. People returned to what sleep remained to them. The
terror receded, replaced by the exhausted throb of embarrassment. Kellhus told
her he would complain to Gotian, but that there would be very little anyone
could do. “Sarcellus is a
Knight-Commander,” Kellhus said. And she was just a dead
sorcerer’s whore. Naughty whore. Esmenet refused Serwe’s
offer to stay with her and Kellhus in their pavilion, but accepted her offer to
wash with her laver. Afterward, Kellhus followed her to her tent. “Serwe cleaned it for
you,” he said. “She replaced your bedding.” Esmenet started crying yet again.
When had she become so weak? So pathetic? How could you leave me? Why did you leave
me? She crawled into the tent
as though diving into a burrow. She hid her face in clean woollen blankets. She
smelled sandalwood… Bearing his lantern,
Kellhus followed, sat cross-legged over her. “He’s gone, Esmenet… Sarcellus
won’t return. Not after tonight. Even if nothing happens, the questions will
embarrass him. What man doesn’t suspect other men of acting on their own
lusts?” “You don’t understand,”
she gasped. How could she tell him? All this time fearing for Achamian, even
daring to mourn him, and still… “I lied to him!” she exclaimed. “I lied to Akka!” Kellhus frowned. “What do you mean?” “After he left me in
Sumna the Consult came to me, the Consult
Kellhus! And I knew that Inrau’s death had been no suicide. I knew it! But I
never told Akka. Sweet Sejenus, / never told him! And now he’s gone, Kellhus! Gone!” “Breathe, Esmi. Breathe… What does this have to do with Sarcellus?” “I don’t know… That’s the mad part. I don’t
know!” “You were lovers,” Kellhus said, and she went
still, like a child confronted by a wolf. Kellhus had always known her secret,
since that Shigek ight at the Shrine above
Asgilioch when he’d interrupted her and Sarcellus. So why her terror now? “For a time you thought
you loved Sarcellus,” Kellhus continued. “You even judged Achamian against him…
You judged and found Achamian wanting.“ “I was a fool!” she
cried. “A fool!” How could she be such a fool? No man is your equal, love! No man! “Achamian was weak,”
Kellhus said. “But I loved him for those weaknesses! Don’t you see? That’s why I loved
him!” I loved him in truth! “And that’s why you could
never go to him… To go to him while you shared Sarcellus’s bed would be to
accuse him of those very weaknesses he couldn’t bear. So you stayed away,
fooled yourself into thinking you searched for him when you were hiding all the
while.” “How can you know these
things?” she sobbed. “But no matter how much
you lied to yourself, you knew… And that’s why you could never
tell Achamian about what happened in Sumna—no matter how much he needed to
know! Because you knew he wouldn’t understand, and you feared what he would
see…” Despicable, selfish,
hateful… Polluted. But Kellhus could see…
He’d always seen. “Don’t look at me!” she
cried. Look at me… “But I do, Esmi. I do
look. And what I see fills me with wonder.” And these narcotic words,
so warm and so close—so very close!— stilled her. Her pillow ached against her
cheek, and the hard earth beneath her mat bruised, but all was warm and all was
safe. He blew out his lantern, then quietly withdrew from her tent. The warm
memory of his fingers continued to comb her hair. Obviously famished, Serwe
had started eating early. A pot of rice boiled on the fire, which Kellhus
periodically opened and closed, adding onions, spices, and Shigeki pepper.
Ordinarily Esmenet would have cooked, but MARCH Kellhus had her reading
aloud from The Chronicle of
the Tusk,
laughing at her rare fumbles and showering her with encouragement. She was reading the
Canticles, the old “Tusk Laws,” many of which the Latter Prophet had
rescinded in The Tractate. Together they wondered that children were stoned
to death for striking their parents, or that when a man murdered some other
man’s brother, his own brother was executed. Then she read, ‘“Suffer
not a…’” She recognized the words
because of sheer repetition. Sounding out the following word, she said,
‘“whore…”’ and stopped. She glanced at Kellhus and angrily recited, ‘“Suffer
not a whore to live, for she maketh a pit of her womb…’” Her ears burned. She
squelched a sudden urge to cast the book into the flames. Kellhus gazed back,
utterly unsurprised. He’5 been waiting for me
to reach this passage. All along… “Give me the book,” he said, his tone unreadable. She
did as she was told. In a fluid, almost
thoughtless motion, he pulled his knife from the ceremonial sheath he wore
about his waist. Pinching the blade near the tip, he proceeded to scratch the
ink of the offending statement from the vellum. For several heartbeats, Esmenet
couldn’t comprehend what he was doing. She simply stared, a petrified witness. Once the column was
clean, he leaned back to survey his handiwork. “Better,” he said, as though
he’d just scraped mould from bread. He turned to pass the book back. Esmenet couldn’t bring
herself to touch it. “But… But you can’t do that!” “No?” He pressed the book into
her hands. She fairly tossed it into the dust on her far side. “That’s Scripture, Kellhus. The Tusk. The Holy Tusk!” “I know. The warrant of your damnation.”
Esmenet gawked like a fool. “But…” Kellhus scowled and shook
his head, as though astonished she could be so dense. “Just who, Esmi, do you
think I am?” Serwe‘ chirped with
laughter, even clapped her hands. “Wh-who?” Esmenet
stammered. It was the most she could manage. Other than in rare anger or jest,
she’d never heard Kelhus speak with… with such presumption. “Yes,” Kellhus repeated,
“who?” His voice seemed satin thunder.
He looked as eternal as a circle. Then Esmenet glimpsed it:
the shining gold about his hands… Without thinking, she rolled to her knees
before him, pressed her face into the dust. Please.1
Please.1 I’m nothing! Then Serwe hiccuped. Suddenly,
absurdly, it was just Kellhus before her, laughing, drawing her up from the
dust, bidding her to eat her supper. “Better?” he said as she
numbly resumed her place beside him. Her whole skin burned and prickled. He
nodded toward the open book while filling his mouth with rice. Bewildered, flustered,
she blushed and looked down. She nodded to her bowl. I knew this.1 I
always knew this! The difference was that
Kellhus now knew as well. His presence burned in her periphery. How, she
breathlessly wondered, how could she ever look into his eyes again? Throughout her entire
life she’d looked upon things and people that stood apart. She was Esmenet, and
that was her bowl, the Emperor’s silver, the Shriah’s man, the God’s ground,
and so on. She stood here, and those things there. No longer. Everything, it seemed, radiated the
warmth of his skin. The ground beneath her bare feet. The mat beneath her
buttocks. And for a mad instant, she was certain that if she raised her fingers
to her cheek, she would feel the soft curls of a flaxen beard, that if she
turned to her left, she would see Esmenet hovering motionless over her rice
bowl. Somehow, everything had
become here, and everything here had become him. Kellhus! She breathed in. Her
heart battered her breast. He scraped
the passage clean! In a single exhalation,
it seemed, a lifetime of condemnation slipped from her, and she felt shriven, truly shriven. One breath and she was absolved! She experienced a
kind of lucidity, as though her thoughts had been cleansed like water
strained through bright white cloth. She thought she should cry, but the sunlight was too sharp, the air too
clear for weeping. Everything was so certain. He
scraped the passage clean! Then she thought of Achamian. The air smelled of wine
and vomit and armpits. Torches flared through the murk, painting mud-brick
walls in oranges and blacks, illuminating slivers of the drunken warriors who
crowded the dark: a bearded jaw line here, a furrowed brow there, a glistening
eye, a bloody fist upon a pommel. Cnaьir urs Skiotha walked among them, through
the tight alleys of the Heppa, Ammegnotis’s ancient district of revels. He
shouldered his way forward, moving intently, as though he had a destination.
Laughter and light boomed through wide-thrown doors. Shigeki girls giggled,
called out in mangled Sheyic. Children hawked stolen oranges. Laughing, he
thought. All of them laughing… You’re
not of the land! “You!” he heard someone cry. Weeper! Faggot weeper! “You,” a young Galeoth man at his side said. Where had he
come from? His eyes flashed in wonder, but something about the broken light
made his face lurid. His lips looked wanton and feminine, the black hollow of
his mouth promising. “You travelled with him. You’re his first disciple! His
first!” “Who?” “Him. The
Warrior-Prophet.” You beat me, old Bannut, his father’s
brother, cried, for fucking
him theway you fucked his father!“ Cnaьir seized the man,
yanked him close. “Who?” “Prince Kellhus of
Atrithau… You’re the Scylvendi who found him on the Steppe. Who delivered him
to us!” Yes… The Dunyain. Somehow he’d forgotten about him. He glimpsed a face
blow open, like Steppe grasses in a gust. He felt a palm, warm and tender upon
his thigh. He began shaking. Shigek You’re more… More than the People! “I am of the People!” he
grated. The man wrenched
ineffectually at his wrists. “Pleease!” he hissed. “I thought… I thought…” Cnaьir tossed him to the
ground, glared at the shadowy procession of passersby. Did they laugh? I watched you that night! 1 saw the way
you looked at him! How did he find himself
on this track? Where was he riding? “What did you call me?”
he screamed at the prostrate man. He remembered running as
hard as he could, away from the black paths worn through the grasses, away from
the yaksh and his father’s all-knowing wrath. He found a clutch of sumacs and
cleared a hollow in their hidden heart. The weave of green grasses through
grey. The smell of earth, of beetles crawling through damp and dark grottoes.
The smell of solitude and secrecy, under the sky but sheltered from the wind.
He pulled the broken pieces from his belt and spread them in breathless wonder.
He reassembled them. She was so sad. And so beautiful. Impossibly beautiful. Someone. He was
forgetting to hate someone. In terror, all men throw up their hands
and turn aside their faces. Remember, Tratta, always preserve the face! For
that is where
you are. —THROSEANIS, TR1AM1S 1MPERATOR The Poet will yield up his stylus only
when the Geometer can explain how Life can at once be a point and a line. How
can all time, all creation, come to the now? Make no mistake: this moment, the
instant of this very breath, is the frail thread from which all creation hangs. That men dare to be thoughtless… —TERES ANSANSIUS, THE CITY OF MEN Early Autumn, 4111 Year-of-the-Tu.sk,
Shigek One day, returning from
the river with their laundered clothes, Esmenet overheard several Men of the
Tusk discussing the Holy War’s preparations for their continuing march. Kellhus
spent part of the afternoon with her and Serwe, explaining how the Kianene,
before retreating across the desert, had slaughtered every camel on the South
Bank, just as they’d burned every boat before retreating across the Sempis.
Since then, forays into the deserts of Khemema to the south had found every well
poisoned. Shigek “The Padirajah,” Kellhus
said, “hopes to make of the desert what Skauras hoped to make of the Sempis.” The Great Names, of
course, were undeterred. They planned to march along the coastal hills followed
by the Imperial Fleet, which would provide them with all the water they would
need. The road would be laborious—they would have to send parties of thousands
through the hills to collect the water—but it would see them safely to
Enathpaneah, to the very marches of the Sacred Land, long before the Padirajah
could possibly recover from his defeat at Anwurat. “Soon you two will be
shuffling through sand,” Kellhus said in the warm teasing manner that Esmenet
had learned to love long ago. “It’ll be hard for you, Serwe, heavy with child,
carrying our pavilion on your back.” The girl shot him a look,
at once scolding and delighted. Esmenet laughed, at the same time realizing
she’d be travelling even farther from Achamian… She wanted to ask Kellhus
if he’d heard any word from Xinemus, but she was too frightened. Besides, she
knew Kellhus would tell her as soon as any news arrived. And she knew what that
news would be. She’d glimpsed it in Kellhus’s eyes many, many times. Once again they’d
gathered about the same side of the fire to avoid the winding smoke, Kellhus in
the centre, Serwe on his right, and Esmenet on his left. They were cooking
small pieces of lamb on sticks, which the} ate with small pieces of bread and
cheese. This had become a favourite treat of theirs—one of many little things
that had kept the promise o: family. Kellhus leaned past her
to grab more bread, still teasing Serwe. “Have you ever pitched a pavilion
across sand before?” “Kell-hussss,” Serwe complained and exulted. Esmenet breathed deeply
his dry, salty smell. She couldn’t help herself “They say it takes forever” he chided, withdrawing his hand and acci dentally
brushing Esmenet’s right breast. The tingle of inadvertent
intimacy. The flush of a body suddenly thicl with a wisdom that transcended
intellect. For the remainder of the
afternoon, Esmenet found her eyes plagued b a nagging waywardness. Where before
her look had confined itself ti Kellhus’s face, it now
roamed over his entire form. It was as though her eyes had become brokers,
intermediaries between his body and her own. When she saw his chest, her
breasts tingled with the prospect of being crushed. When she glimpsed his
narrow hips and deep buttocks, her inner thighs hummed with expectant warmth.
Sometimes her palms literally itched! Of course this was
madness. Esmenet needed only to catch Serwe’s watchful eyes to recall herself. Later that night, after
Kellhus had left, the two of them stretched across their mats, their heads
almost touching, their bodies angled to either side of the fire. They often did
this when Kellhus was away. They stared endlessly into the flames, sometimes
talking, but mostly saying nothing at all, save yelping when the fire spat
coals. “Esmi?” Serwe asked in a peculiar, brooding tone. “Yes, Serchaa?” “I would, you know.” Esmenet’s heart
fluttered. “You would what?” “Share him,” the girl said. Esmenet swallowed. “No…
Never, Serwe… I told you not to worry.” “But that’s what I’m saying… I don’t fear
losing him, not any more, and not to anyone. All I want is what he
wants. He’s everything…” Esmenet lay breathless,
staring between legs of wood at the pulsing furnace of coals. “Are you saying… Are you
saying that he…” wants me… Serwe laughed softly. “Of
course not,” she said. “Of course not,” Esmenet
repeated. With an inner shrug, she shook away these mad and maddening thoughts.
What was she doing? He was Kellhus. Kellhus. She thought of Akka,
blinked two burning tears. “Never, Serwe.” Kellhus didn’t return
until the following night, when he rode into their little camp accompanied by
Proyas himself. The Conriyan Prince looked particularly travel-worn and
haggard. He was dressed in a simple blue tunic—his riding clothes, Esmenet
supposed. Only the gold-embroidered intricacy of his hems spoke to his station.
His beard, which he usually Shigek 5b I kept clipped close to his
jaw, had grown out, so that it more resembled the square-cut beards of his
caste-nobles. At first Esmenet kept her
gaze averted, worried Proyas might guess the intensity of her hatred if he
glimpsed her eyes. How couldn’t she hate him? He’d not only refused to help
Achamian, he’d refused to allow Xinemus to help as well, and had divested the
Marshal of his rank and station when he insisted. But something in his voice, a
high-born desperation, perhaps, made her watchful. He seemed uncomfortable—even
forlorn—as he took his place beside Kellhus at the fire, so much so that she
found her dislike faltering. He too had loved Achamian once. Xinemus had told
her as much. Perhaps that’s why he
suffered. Perhaps he wasn’t so unlike her. That, she knew, was what
Kellhus would say. After pouring everyone
watered wine, and serving the men the remnants of the meal she’d prepared for
herself and Serwe, Esmenet took a seat on the far side of the fire. The men discussed matters
of war as they ate, and Esmenet was struck by the contradiction between the way
Proyas deferred to Kellhus and the general reserve of his manner. Suddenly she
understood why Kellhus forbade his followers from joining their camp. Men like
Proyas, like any of the Great Names, she supposed, would be troubled by
Kellhus. Those at the centre of things were always more inflexible, always more
invested, than those at the edges. And Kellhus promised a new centre… It was easy to move from
edge to edge. The men fell silent to
finish their lamb, onions, and bread. Proyas set aside his plate, washed his
palette with a sip of wine. He glanced at Esmenet, inadvertently it seemed,
then stared off into the distance. Esmenet suddenly found the quiet
suffocating. “How fares the
Scylvendi?” she asked, uncertain of what else to say. He glanced back to her.
For an instant, his eyes lingered on her tattooed hand… “I see him but rarely,”
the handsome man replied, staring into the flames. “But I thought he
counselled…” She paused, suddenly uncertain as to the propriety of her words.
Achamian had always complained of her forward manner with caste-nobles… “Counselled me on war?”
Proyas shook his head, and for a brief instant she could see why Achamian had
loved him. It was so strange, being with those he’d once known. Somehow it made
his absence at once palpable and easier to bear. He was real. He had left
his mark. The world remembered. “After Kellhus explained
what happened at Anwurat,” the Prince continued, “the Council hailed Cnaьir as
the author of our victory. The Priests of Gilgaol even declared him
Battle-Celebrant. But he would have nothing of it…” The Prince took another
deep draught of wine. “He finds it unbearable, I think…” “As a Scylvendi among
Inrithi?” Proyas shook his head,
set his empty bowl curiously close to his right foot. “Liking us,” he said. Without further word he
stood and excused himself. He bowed to Kellhus, thanked Serwe for the wine and
her gracious company, then without so much as glancing at Esmenet, strode off
into the darkness. Serwe stared at her feet.
Kellhus seemed lost in otherworldly ruminations. Esmenet sat silently for a
time, her face burning, her limbs and thoughts itching with a peculiar hum. It
was always peculiar, even though she knew it as well as the taste of her own
mouth. Shame. Everywhere she went. It
was her characteristic stink. “I’m sorry,” she said to
the two of them. What was she doing here?
What could she offer other than humiliation? She was polluted—polluted! And
here she stayed with Kellhus? With Kellhus?
What kind of fool was she? She couldn’t change who she was, no sooner than she
could wash the tattoo from the back of her hand! The seed she could rinse away,
but not the sin! Not the sin! And he was… He was… “I’m sorry,” she sobbed.
“I’m sorry!” Esmenet fled the fire,
crawled into the solitary darkness of her tent. Of his tent! Akka’s! Kellhus came to her not
long after, and she cursed herself for hoping he would. Shigek “I wish I were dead,” she
whispered, lying face first against the ground. “So do many.” Always implacable
honesty. Could she follow where he led? Had she the strength? “I’ve only loved two
people in my life, Kellhus…” The Prince never looked away. “And they’re both
dead.” She nodded, blinked tears. “You don’t know my sins,
Kellhus. You don’t know the darknesses I harbour in my heart.” “Then tell me.” They talked long into the
night, and a strange dispassion moved her, rendering the extremities of her
life—death, loss, humiliation—curiously inert. Whore. How many men had
embraced her? How many gritty chins against her cheek? Always something to be
endured. All of them punishing her for their need. Monotony had made them seem
laughable, a long queue of the weak, the hopeful, the ashamed, the angered, the
dangerous. How easily one grunting body replaced the next, until they became
abstract things, moments of a ludicrous ceremony, spilling bowel-hot libations
upon her, smearing her with their meaningless paint. One no different from the
next. They punished her for
that as well. How old had she been,
when her father had sold her to the first of his friends? Eleven? Twelve? When
had the punishment begun? When had he first lain with her? She could remember
her mother weeping in the corner… but not much more. And her daughter… How old
had she been? She had thought her
father’s thoughts, she explained. Another mouth. Let it feed itself. The
monotony had numbed her to the horror, had made degradation a laughable thing.
To trade flashing silver for milky seed— the fools. Let Mimara be schooled in
the foolishness of men. Clumsy, rutting animals. One need only pay with a
little patience, mimic their passion, wait, and soon it would be over. In the
morning, one could buy food… Food from fools, Mimara. Can’t you see child?
Shush. Stop weeping. Look! Food from fools! “That was her name?”
Kellhus asked. “Mimara?” “Yes,” Esmenet said. Why
could she say that name now, when she could never utter it with Achamian?
Strange, the way long sorrow could silence the pang of unspeakable things. The first sobs surprised
her. Without thinking, she leaned into Kellhus, and his arms enclosed her. She
wailed and beat softly against his chest, heaved and cried. He smelled of wool
and sunburned skin. They were dead. The only ones she’d ever loved. After her
breathing settled, Kellhus pressed her back, and her hands fell slack to his
lap. Over the course of several heartbeats, she felt him harden against the
back of her wrist, as though a serpent flexed beneath wool. She neither
breathed nor moved. The air, as silent as a candle, roared… She pulled her
hands away. Why? Why would she poison
a night such as this? Kellhus shook his head, softly laughed. “Intimacy begets
intimacy, Esmi. So long as we remember ourselves, there’s no reason for shame.
All of us are frail.” She looked down to her
palms, her wrists. Smiled. “I remember… Thank you, Kellhus.” He raised his hand to her
cheek, then ducked from her little tent. She rolled to her side, squeezed her
hands palm to palm between her knees, and murmured curses until she fell
asleep. The message had arrived
by sea, the man said. He was Galeoth, and from the look of his surcoat, a
member of Saubon’s own household. Proyas weighed the ivory
scroll-case in his hand. It was small, cold to the touch, and finely worked
with tiny Tusks. Clever workmanship, Proyas thought. Innumerable tiny
representations, each figure defined by further figures, so that there was no
blank ground to throw each into relief, only tusks and more tusks. There was a
sermon, Proyas mused, even in the container of this message. But then that was
Maithanet: sermons all the way down. The Conriyan Prince thanked and dismissed
the man, then returned to his chair by his field table. It was hot and humid in
his pavilion, so much so he found himself resenting the lamps for their Shigek in added heat. He’d stripped
down to a thin, white linen tunic and had already decided that he would sleep
naked—after he investigated this letter. With his knife he
carefully broke the canister’s wax seal. He tipped it, and the small scroll
slid out, fastened by yet another seal, this one bearing the Shriah’s own mark. What could he want! Proyas brooded for a
moment on the privilege of receiving such letters from such a man. Then he
snapped the wax seal, peeled open the parchment roll. Lord Prince TNersei Proyas, May the Gods of the God shelter you, and
keep you. Your last
missive… Proyas paused, struck by
a sense of guilt and mortification. Months ago, he’d written Maithanet at
Achamian’s behest, asking about the death of a former student of his—Paro
Inrau. At the time, he hadn’t believed he would actually send it. He’d been
certain that writing the letter would make sending it impossible. What better
way to at once discharge and dispose of an obligation? Dear Maithanet, a sorcerer friend of mine wants me to ask whether you killed one of his spies … It was madness. There was no way he could send such a letter… And yet. How could he not feel a
sense of kinship to this Inrau, this other student Achamian had loved? How
could he not remember everything about the blasphemous fool, the wry smile, the
twinkling eyes, the lazy afternoons doing drills in the gardens? How could he
not pity him, a good man, a kind man,
hunting fables and wives’ tales to his everlasting damnation? Proyas had sent the
letter, thinking that at long last the matter of his Mandate tutor could be put
to rest. He’d never expected a reply—not truly. But he was a Prince, an heir
apparent, and Maithanet was the Shriah of the Thousand Temples. Letters between
such men somehow found their way, no matter how fierce the world between them. ihe second March Proyas continued reading,
holding his breath to numb the shame. Shame at having sent such a trivial
matter to the man who would cleanse the Three Seas. Shame at having written
this to a man at whose feet he’d wept. And shame for feeling shame at having
fulfilled an old teacher’s request. Lord Prince Nersei Proyas, May the Gods of the God shelter you, and
keep you. Your last missive, we are afraid, left us
deeply perplexed, until we recalled that you yourself once maintained several—How should we put it?—dubious
associations. We had been informed that the death of this young priest, Paro
lnrau, had been a suicide. The College of Luthymae, the priests charged with
the investigation of this matter, reported that this lnrau had once been a
student of Mandate sorcery, and that he had recently been seen in the company
of one Drusas Achamian, his old teacher. They believed that this Achamian had
been sent to pressure lnrau into performing various services for his School; in
short, to be a spy. They believe that, as a result, the young priest found
himself in an untenable position. Tribes 4:8: “He wearies of breath, who has no place he might breathe.” The responsibility for this young man’s
unfortunate death, we fear, lies with this blasphemer, Achamian. There is
nothing more to it. May the God have mercy on his soul. Canticles 6:22: “The earth weeps at words which know not the
Gods’ wrath.” But as your missive left us perplexed, we
fear that this missive shall leave you equally baffled. By allying the Holy War with the Scarlet Spires, we have
already asked much in the way of Compromise from pious men. But in this it has
been clear, we pray, that Necessity forced our hand. Without the Scarlet
Spires, the Holy War could not hope to prevail against the Cishaurim. “Answer not blasphemy with blasphemy,” our Prophet says, and this
verse has been oft repeated by our enemies. But in answering the charges of the
Cultic Priests, the Prophet also says: “Many are
those who are cleansed by way of iniquity. For the Light must ever follow upon
the dark, if it is to be Light, and the Holy must ever follow upon the wicked,
if it is to be Holy.” So it is that the Holy War must follow upon the Scarlet Spires, if it is to be Holy. Scholars 1:3: “Let Sun follow Night, according
to the arch of Heaven.” Now we must ask a further Compromise of
you, Lord Nersei Proyas. You must do everything in your power to assist this Mandate Schoolman. Perhaps this might not be as difficult as
we fear, since this man was once your teacher in Ab’knyssus. But we know the
depth of your piety, and unlike the greater Compromise we have forced upon you
with the Scarlet
Spires, there is no Necessity
that we can cite that might give comfort to a heart made restless by the company of sin. Hintarates 28:4: “I ask of you, is there any friend more difficult than the
friend who sins?” Assist Drusas Achamian, Proyas, though he
is a blasphemer, for in this wickedness, the Holy shall also fottow. Everything
shall be made clear, in the end. And it shall be glorious. Scholars 22:36: “For the warring heart becomes weary and will turn to sweeter
labours. And the peace of dawn’s rising shall accompany Men throughout the
toils of the day.” May the God and all His Aspects shelter you and keep you. Maithanet v. Proyas lowered the
letter to his lap. “Assist Drusas Achamian…” What could the Shriah
possibly mean? What could be at stake, for him to make such a request? And what was he to do
with such a request, now that it was too late? Now that Achamian was
gone. I killed him… And Proyas suddenly
realized that he’d used his old teacher as a marker, as a measure of his own
piety. What greater evidence could there be of righteousness than the
willingness to sacrifice a loved one? Wasn’t this the lesson of Angeshrael on
Mount Kinsureah? And what better way to sacrifice a loved one than by hating? Or delivering him to his
enemies… He thought of the whore
at Kellhus’s fire—Achamian’s lover, Esmenet… How desolate she’d seemed. How
frightened. Had he authored that look? ihe Second March She’s just a whore! And Achamian was just a
sorcerer. Just. All men were not equal.
Certainly the Gods favoured whom they would, but there was more. Actions determined the worth of any pulse. Life was the God’s
question to men, and actions were their answers. And like all answers they were
either right or wrong, blessed or cursed. Achamian had condemned himself, had
damned himself by his own actions! And so had the whore… This wasn’t the
judgement of Nersei Proyas, this was the judgement of the Tusk, of the Latter
Prophet! Inri Sejenus… Then why this shame? This
anguish? Why this relentless, heart-mauling doubt? Doubt. In a sense, that
had been Achamian’s single lesson. Geometry, logic, history, mathematics using
Nilnameshi numbers, even philosophy!—all these things were dross, Achamian
would argue, in the face of doubt. Doubt had made them, and doubt would unmake
them. Doubt, he would say, set
men free… Doubt, not truth! Beliefs were the
foundation of actions. Those who believed without doubting, he would say, acted
without thinking. And those who acted without thinking were enslaved. That was what Achamian
would say. Once, after listening to
his beloved older brother, Tirummas, describe his harrowing pilgrimage to the Sacred
Land, Proyas had told Achamian how he wished to become a Shrial Knight. “Why?” the portly
Schoolman had exclaimed. They’d been strolling
through the gardens—Proyas could remember bounding from leaf to fallen leaf
just to hear them crackle beneath his sandals. They stopped near the immense
iron oak that dominated the garden’s heart. “So I can kill heathens
on the Empire’s frontier!” Achamian tossed his hands
skyward in dismay. “Foolish boy! How many faiths are there? How many competing
beliefs? And you would murder another on the slender hope that
yours is somehow the only one?” “Yes! I have faith!” “Faith,” the Schoolman
repeated, as though recalling the name of a hated foe. “Ask yourself, Prosha…
What if the choice isn’t between certainties, between this
faith and that, but between faith and doubt?
Between renouncing the mystery and embracing it?“ “But doubt is weakness!”
Proyas cried. “Faith is strength! Strength!” Never, he was convinced, had he
felt so holy as at that moment. The sunlight seemed to shine straight through
him, to bathe his heart. “Is it? Have you looked
around you, Prosha? Pay attention, boy. Watch and tell me how many men, out of
weakness, lapse into the practice of doubt.
Listen to those around you, and tell me what you see…” He did exactly as
Achamian had asked. For several days, he watched and listened. He saw much
hesitation, but he wasn’t so foolish as to confuse that with doubt. He heard
the caste-nobles squabble and the hereditary priests complain. He eavesdropped
on the soldiers and the knights. He observed embassy after embassy posture
before his father, making claim after florid claim. He listened to the slaves
joke as they laundered, or bicker as they ate. And in the midst of innumerable
boasts, declarations, and accusations, only rarely did he hear those words
Achamian had made so familiar, so commonplace… The words Proyas himself found
so difficult! And even then, they belonged most to those Proyas considered
wise, even-handed, compassionate, and least to those he thought stupid or
malicious. “I don’t know.” Why were these words so
difficult? “Because men want to
murder,” Achamian had explained afterward. “Because men want their gold and
their glory. Because they want beliefs that answer to their fears, their hatreds, and their hungers.” Proyas could remember the
heart-pounding wonder, the exhilaration of straying… “Akka?” He took a deep,
daring breath. “Are you saying the Tusk lies.?” A look of dread. “I don’t
know…” Difficult words, so
difficult they would see Achamian banished from Aoknyssus and Proyas tutored by
Charamemas, the famed Shrial scholar. And Achamian had known this would happen…
Proyas could see that now. Why? Why would Achamian,
who was already damned, sacrifice so much for so few words? He thought he was giving me something… Something important. The Second March Drusas Achamian had loved
him. What was more, he’d loved him so deeply he’d imperilled his position, his
reputation—even his vocation, if what Xinemus had said was true. Achamian had
given without hope of reward. He wanted me to be free. And Proyas had given him
away, thinking only of rewards. The thought was too much
to bear. did it for the Holy War! For Shimeh! And now this letter—from
Maithanet. He snatched up the
parchment, scanned it once again, as though the Shriah’s manly script might
offer some answer… “Assist Drusas Achamian…” What had happened? The
Scarlet Spires he could understand, but what use could the Shriah of the
Thousand Temples have with a Schoolman? And with a Mandate Schoolman, no less… A sudden chill dropped
through him. Beneath the black walls of Momemn, Achamian had once argued that
the Holy War wasn’t what it seemed… Was this letter proof of that fact? Something had frightened,
or at least concerned, Maithanet. But what? Had he heard rumours of
Prince Kellhus? For weeks now, Proyas had meant to write the Shriah regarding
the Prince of Atrithau, but for some reason he couldn’t bring himself to put
ink to parchment. Something compelled him to wait, but whether it was hope or
fear he couldn’t determine. Kellhus simply struck him as one of those mysteries
that could only be resolved through patience. And besides, what would he say?
That the Holy War for the Latter Prophet was witnessing
the birth of a Latter Latter Prophet? As much as he was loath
to admit it, Conphas was right: the notion was simply too absurd! No. If the Holy Shriah
harboured reservations concerning Prince Kellhus, Proyas was fairly confident
he would’ve simply asked. As it was, there wasn’t so much as a hint, let alone
mention, of the Prince of Atrithau in the letter. Chances were Maithanet had no
inkling of Kellhus’s existence, let alone his growing stature. No, Proyas decided. It
must be something else… Something the Shriah thought beyond his
tolerance or his ken. Otherwise, why not explain his reasons? Could it be the Consult? “The Dreams,” Achamian
had said at Momemn. “They’ve been so forceful of late.“ “Ah, back to the
nightmares again…” “Something is happening,
Proyas. I know it. I feel it!” Never had he looked so
desperate. Could it be? No. It was too absurd.
Even if they did exist, how could the Shriah find them when the Mandate
themselves couldn’t? No… It had to be the
Scarlet Sf>ires. After all, that had been Achamian’s mission, hadn’t it?
Watch the Scarlet Spires… Proyas yanked at his hair and snarled under his
breath. Why? Why couldn’t this one
thing be pure? Why must everything holy— everything!—be riddled by tawdry and
despicable intent? He sat very still,
drawing breath after shuddering breath. He imagined drawing his sword, slashing
and hacking wildly through his chambers, howling and shrieking… Then he
collected himself to the beat of his own pulse. Nothing pure… Love
transformed into betrayal. Prayers bent into accusations. This was Maithanet’s
point, wasn’t it? The holy followed upon the wicked. Proyas had thought
himself the moral leader of the Holy War. But now he knew better. Now he knew
he was merely one more piece upon the benjuka plate. The players were perhaps
known to him—the Thousand Temples, House Ikurei, the Scarlet Spires, the
Cishaurim, and perhaps even Kellhus—but the rules, which were the most
treacherous element of any game of benjuka, were definitely not known. I don’t know. I don’t
know anything. The Holy War had only
triumphed, and yet never had he felt so desperate. So weak. I told you, old tutor. I told you… As though stirring from a
stupor, Proyas called for Algari, his old Cironji body-slave, and bid the man
to bring him his writing chest. As tired as he was, he had no choice but to
answer the Shriah now. Tomorrow the Holy War marched into the desert. For some reason, after
unlatching the small mahogany and ivory chest and running his fingers over the
quill and curled parchment, Nersei Proyas felt like a young boy once again,
about to begin his writing drills under Achamian’s hawkish but all-forgiving
eyes. He could almost feel the sorcerer’s friendly shadow, looming watchfully
over his boy-slender shoulders. “That House Nersei could
produce a boy so daft!” “That the School of Mandate could send a
tutor so blind!” Proyas
almost laughed his tutor’s world-wise laugh. And tears clotted his eyes as he
completed the first line of his baffled reply to Maithanet. … but it would seem, Your Eminence, that Drusas Achamian
is dead. Esmenet smiled, and
Kellhus saw through her olive skin, through the play of muscles over bone, all
the way to the abstract point that described her soul. She knows 1 see her, Father. The campsite bustled with
activity and rumbled with open-hearted conversation. The Holy War was about to
march across the deserts of Khemema, and Kellhus had invited all fourteen of
his senior Zaudunyani, which meant “the Tribe of Truth” in Kunьiric, to his
fire. They already knew their mission; Kellhus need only remind them of what he
promised. Beliefs alone didn’t control the actions of men. There was also desire, and these men, his apostles, must shine with that
desire. The Thanes of the Warrior-Prophet. Esmenet sat across from
him on the far side of the fire, laughing and chatting with her neighbours,
Arweal and Persommas, her face flushed with a joy she wouldn’t have dared
imagine and couldn’t yet dare admit. Kellhus winked at her, then looked to the
others, smiling, laughing, calling out… Scrutinizing. Dominating. Shigek Each was a riotous font
of significance. The downcast eyes, quickened heart, and fumbling words of
Ottma spoke to the overpowering presence of Serwe‘, who blithely gossiped at
his side. The momentary sneer the instant before Ulnarta smiled meant he still
disapproved of Tshuma because he feared the blackness of his skin. The way
Kasalla, Gayamakri, and Hilderath oriented their shoulders toward Werjau, even
while speaking to others, meant they still considered him to be first among
them. And indeed, the way Werjau tended to call across the fire more and more,
leaning forward with his palms down, while the others generally restricted
their conversation to those beside them, spoke to the assertion of unconscious
relations of dominance and submission. Werjau even thrust out his chin… “Tell me, Werjau,”
Kellhus called out. “What is it you see within your heart?” Such interventions were
inevitable. These were world-born men. “Joy,” Werjau said,
smiling. Faint deadening about the eyes. Flare in pulse. Blush reflex. He sees, and he doesn’t see. Kellhus compressed his
lips, rueful and forbearing. “And what is it I see?” This he knows… The sound of other voices
trailed into silence. Werjau lowered his eyes. “Pride,” the young
Galeoth said. “You see pride, Master.” Kellhus grinned, and the
anxiety was swept from them. “Not,” he said, “with
that face, Werjau.” All of them, including
Serwe and Esmenet, howled with laughter, and Kellhus glanced around the fire,
satisfied. He could tolerate no posturing among them. It was the utter absence
of presumption that made his company so utterly unique, that made their hearts
leap and their stomachs giddy at the prospect of seeing him. The weight of sin
was found in secrecy and condemnation. Strip these away, deny men their
deceptions and their judgements, and their self-sense of shame and
worthlessness simply vanished. They felt greater in his
presence, both pure and chosen. Pragma Meigon stared
through young Kellhus’s face, saw his fear. “They’re harmless,” he said. “What are they, Pragma?” “Exemplary defectives…
Specimens. We retain them for purposes of education.” The Pragma simulated a
smile. “For students such as you, Kellhus.” They stood deep beneath
Ishual, in a hexagonal room within the mighty galleries of the Thousand
Thousand Halls. Save for the entrance, staggered racks of knobbed and runnelled
candles covered the surrounding walls, shedding a light without shadows and as
bright and clear as the noonday sun’s. This alone made the room
extraordinary—light was otherwise forbidden in the Labyrinth—but what made the
room astonishing were the many men shackled in its sunken centre. Each of them was naked,
linen pale, and bound with greening copper straps to boards that leaned gently
backward. The boards themselves had been arranged in a broad circle, with each
man lying fixed within arm’s reach of his comrades and positioned at the edge
of the floor’s central depression, so that a boy Kellhus’s height could stand
at the lip of the surrounding floor and look the specimens directly in the
face… Had they possessed faces. Their heads were drawn
forward into open iron frames, where they were held motionless by bracketing
bars. Behind their heads, wires had been fixed to the base of each frame. These
swept forward in a radial fashion, ending in tiny silver hooks that anchored
the obscuring skin. Slick muscle gleamed in the light. To Kellhus, it looked as
though each man had thrust his head into a spider web that had peeled away his
face. Pragma Meigon had called it the Unmasking Room. “To begin,” the old man
said, “you’ll study and memorize each of their faces. Then you’ll reproduce
what you’ve seen on parchment.” He nodded to a battery of worn scrivening
tables along the southern walls. His limbs as light as
autumn leaves, Kellhus stepped forward. He heard the masticating of pasty
mouths, a chorus of voiceless grunts and gaspings. “Their larynxes have been
removed,” Pragma Meigon explained. “To assist concentration.” Kellhus paused before the
first specimen. Shigek “The face possesses
forty-four muscles,” the Pragma continued. “Operating in concert, they are
capable of signifying every permutation of passion. All those permutations,
young Kellhus, derive from the fifty-seven base and base-remove types found
here in this room.” Despite the absence of
skin, Kellhus immediately recognized horror in the flayed face of the specimen
strapped before him. Like warring flatworms, the fine muscles about his eyes
strained outward and inward at the same time. The larger, rat-sized muscles
about his lower face yanked his mouth into a perpetual fear-grin. Lidless eyes
stared. Rapid breaths hissed… “You’re wondering how he
can maintain that particular expressive configuration,” the Pragma said.
“Centuries ago we found we could limit the range of behaviours by probing the
brain with needles—with what we now call neuropuncture.” Kellhus stood transfixed.
Without warning, an attendant loomed over him, holding a narrow reed between
his teeth. He dipped the reed into the bowl of fluid he carried, then blowing,
sprayed the specimen with a fine orangish mist. He then continued on to the
next. “Neuropuncture,” the
Pragma continued, “made possible the rehabilitation of defectives for
instructional purposes. The specimen before you, for instance, always displays
fear at a base-remove of two.” “Horror?” Kellhus asked. “Precisely.” Kellhus felt the
childishness of his own horror fade in understanding. He looked to either side,
saw the specimens curving out of sight, rows of white eyes set in shining red
musculatures. They were only defectives— nothing more. He returned his gaze to
the man before him, to fear base-remove two, and committed what he saw to
memory. Then he moved on to the next gasping skein of muscles. “Good,” Pragma Meigon had
said from his periphery. “Very good.” Kellhus turned once more
to Esmenet, peeled away her face with the hooks of his gaze. She’d already made two
trips from the fire to her tent—promenades to draw his attention and covertly
gauge his interest. She periodically The Second March looked from side to side,
feigning amusement in things elsewhere to see if he watched her. Twice he let
her catch him. Each time he grinned with boyish good nature. Each time she
looked down, blushing, pupils dilated, eyes blinking rapidly, her body
radiating the musk of nascent arousal. Though Esmenet had not yet come to his
bed, part of her ached for him, even wooed him. And she knew it not. For all her native gifts,
Esmenet remained a world-born woman. And for all world-born men and women, two
souls shared the same body, face, and eyes. The animal and the intellect.
Everyone was two. Defective. One Esmenet had already
renounced Drusas Achamian. The other would soon follow. Esmenet blinked against
the turquoise sky, held a hand against the sun. No matter how many times she
witnessed it, she was dumbstruck. The Holy War. She’d paused with Kellhus
and Serwe on the summit of a rise so that Serwe could readjust her pack. Fields
of Inrithi warriors and camp-followers walked past them, toward the crumbling
cliffs of the southern escarpment. Esmenet looked from man to armoured man,
each farther than the next, past clots and through thickening screens, until
losing them in the teeming distances, where they winked in the sunlight like
metal filings. She turned, saw the sand-coloured walls of Ammegnotis behind
them, dwindling against the black and green of the river and her verdant banks. Shigek. Goodbye, Akka. Teary-eyed, she
deliberately struck out on her own, simply waving a hand when Kellhus called
out to her. She walked among
strangers, feeling the aim of hooded eyes and muttered words—as she so often
did. Some men actually accosted her, but she ignored them. One even angrily
grabbed her tattooed hand, as though to remind her of something she owed all
men. The parched grasses became thinner and thinner, leaving gravel that burned
toes and cooked air. She sweat and suffered and somehow knew it was only the
beginning. J ‘■> That evening she found
Kellhus and Serwe without much difficulty. Though they had little fuel, they
managed dinner with a small fire. The air cooled as quickly as the sun
descended, and they enjoyed their first desert dusk. The ground radiated warmth
like a stone drawn from a hearth. To the east, sterile hills ringed the
distance, obscuring the sea. To the south and west, beyond the riot of the
encampment, the horizon formed a perfect shale line that thickened into red as
it approached the sun. To the north, Shigek could still be glimpsed between the
tents, its green becoming black in the growing twilight. Serwe was already
snoozing, curled across her mat close to the little lapping tongue of their
fire. “So how was your walk?”
Kellhus asked. “I’m sorry,” she said,
shamefaced. “I—” “There’s no need to
apologize, Esmi… You walk where you choose.” She looked down, feeling
both relieved and grief-stricken. “So?” Kellhus repeated.
“How was your walk?” “Men,” she said leadenly.
“Too many men.” “And you call yourself a
harlot,” Kellhus said, grinning. Esmenet continued staring
at her dusty feet. A shy smile stole across her face. “Things change…” “Perhaps,” he said in a
manner that reminded Esmenet of an axe biting into wood. “Have you ever
wondered why the Gods hold men higher than women?” Esmenet shrugged. “We
stand in the shadow of men,” she replied, “just as men stand in the shadow of
the Gods.” “So you think you stand in the shadow of men?” She smiled. There was no
deception with Kellhus, no matter how petty. That was his wonder. “Some men, yes…” “But not many?” She laughed, caught in an
honest conceit. “Not many at all,” she admitted. Not even, she breathlessly
realized, Akka… Only you. “And what of other men?
Aren’t all men overshadowed in some respect?” HK OtCOND MARCH “Yes, I suppose…” Kellhus turned his palms
upward—a curiously disarming gesture. “So what makes you less than a man?” Esmenet laughed again,
certain he played some game. “Because everywhere I’ve been—every place I’ve heard of for that matter—women serve men. That’s simply the
way. Most women are like…” She paused, troubled by the course of her thoughts.
She glanced at Serwe, her perfect face illuminated by the wavering light of the
fire. “Like her,” Kellhus said. “Yes,” Esmenet replied,
her eyes forced to the ground by a strange defensiveness. “Like her… Most women
are simple.” “And most men?” “Well, certainly more men
than women are learned… Wise.” “And is this because men
are more than women?” Esmenet stared at him,
dumbfounded. “Or is it,” he continued,
“because men are granted more than women in this world?” She stared, her thoughts
spinning. She breathed deeply, set her palms carefully upon her knees. “You’re
saying women are… are actually equal?.” Kellhus hoisted his brows
in pained amusement. “Why,” he asked, “are men willing to exchange gold to lie
with women?” “Because they desire us…
They lust.” “And is it lawful for men
to purchase pleasure from a woman?” “No…” “So why do they?” “They can’t help
themselves,” Esmenet replied. She lifted a rueful eyebrow. “They’re men.” “So they have no control
over their desire?” She grinned in her old
way. “Witness the well-fed harlot sitting before you.” Kellhus laughed, but
softly, and in a manner that effortlessly sorted her pain from her humour. “So why,” he said, “do
men herd cattle?” “Cattle?” Esmenet
scowled. Where had all these absurd thoughts come from? “Well… to slaughter
for…” Shigek She trailed in sudden
understanding. Her skin pimpled. Once again she sat in shadow, and Kellhus
hoarded the failing sun, looking for all the world like a bronze idol. The sun
always seemed to relinquish him last… “Men,” Kellhus said,
“cannot dominate their hunger, so they dominate, domesticate, the objects of their hunger. Be it cattle…” “Or women,” she said
breathlessly. The air prickled with
understanding. “When one race,” Kellhus
continued, “is tributary to another, as the Cepalorans are to the Nansur, whose
tongue do both races speak?” “The tongue of the
conqueror.” “And whose tongue do you
speak?” She swallowed. “The
tongue of men.” With every blink, it
seemed, she saw man after man, arched over her like dogs… “You see yourself,”
Kellhus said, “as men see you. You fear growing old, because men hunger for
girls. You dress shamelessly, because men hunger for your skin. You cringe when
you speak, because men hunger for your silence. You pander. You posture. You
primp and preen. You twist your thoughts and warp your heart. You break and
remake, cut and cut and cut, all so you might answer in your conqueror’s tongue!” Never, it seemed, had she
been so motionless. The air within her throat, even the blood within her heart,
seemed absolutely still… Kellhus had become a voice falling from somewhere
between tears and firelight. “You say, ‘Let me shame
myself for you. Let me suffer you! I beg you, please!”’ And somehow, Esmenet knew
where these words must lead, so she thought of other things, like how parched
skin and cloth seemed so clean… Filth, she realized,
needed water the same as men. “And you tell yourself,”
Kellhus continued, “These tracks I will not follow!‘ Perhaps you refuse certain
perversities. Perhaps you refuse to kiss. You pretend to scruple, to
discriminate, though the world has forced you onto trackless ground. The coins!
The coins! Coins for everything, and everything for coins! For the landlord.
For the apparati, when they come for their bribes. For the vendors who feed
you. For the toughs with scabbed knuckles. And secretly, you ask yourself,
’What could be Ihe Second March unthinkable when I’m
already damned? What act lies beyond me, when I have no dignity?‘ ‘“What love lies beyond
sacrifice?’” Her face was wet. When
she drew her hand from her cheek, the whorls of her fingertips were black. “You speak the tongue of
your conquerors…” Kellhus whispered. “You say, Mimara, come with me child.” A shiver passed through
her, as though she were a drumskin … “And you take her…” “She’s dead!” some woman
cried. “She’s dead!” “To the slavers in the
harbour…” “Stop!” the woman hissed. “I say, no!” Gasping, like knives. “And you sell her.” She remembered his arms
enclosing her. She remembered following him to his pavilion. She remembered
lying at his side, weeping and weeping, while his voice made her anguish plain,
while Serwe stroked tears from her cheeks, ran cool fingers through her hair.
She remembered telling them what had happened. About the hungry summer, when
she had swallowed men for free just for their seed. About hating the little
girl—the filthy little bitch!—who wept and demanded and demanded, who ate her food,
who sent her into the streets, all because of love! About the hollow-eyed
madness. Who could understand starvation? About the slavers, their larders
growing fat because of the famine. About Mimara shrieking, her little girl
shrieking! About the poison coins… Less than a week! They had lasted less than
a week! She remembered shrieking. And she remembered
weeping as she’d never wept before, because she’d spoken, and he had heard. She remembered drifting in his confidence, in his
poetry, in his godlike knowledge of what was right and true… In his absolution. “You are forgiven,
Esmenet.” Who are you to forgive? “Mimara.” She awoke with her head
upon his arm. There was no confusion, though it seemed there should be. She
knew where she was, and though part of her quailed, part of her exulted as
well. She lay with Kellhus. I didn’t couple with him… I only wept. Her face felt bruised
from the previous evening. The night had been hot, and they’d slept without
blankets. For what seemed a long time, she lay motionless, simply savouring his
white-skinned nearness. She placed a hand upon his bare chest. He was warm and
smooth. She could feel the slow drum of his heart. Her fingers tingled, as
though she touched an iron-smith’s anvil as he hammered. She thought of the weight
of him, flushed… “Kellhus…” she said. She
looked up to the profile of his face, somehow knowing he was awake. He turned and looked at
her, his eyes smiling. She snorted in
embarrassment, then looked away. Kellhus said, “It’s
strange, isn’t it, lying so close…” “Yes,” she replied
smiling, looking up, then out and away. “Very strange.” He rolled to face her.
Esmenet heard Serwe groan and complain from his far side, still
asleep. “Shhh,” he said laughing
softly. “She loves sleep more than me.” Esmenet looked at him and
laughed, shaking her head, beaming with incredulous excitement. “This is so strange!” she
hissed. Never had her eyes felt so bright. She pressed her knees
together in nervousness. He was so close! He leaned toward her, and
her mouth slackened, her eyes became heavy-lidded. “No,” she gasped. Kellhus shot her a
friendly frown. “My loin cloth just bunched,” he said. “Oh,” she replied. They
both burst into laughter. Again she could sense the
weight of him… He was a man who dwarfed
her, as a man should. Then his hand was beneath
her hasas, sliding between her thighs, and she found herself moaning into his
sweet lips. And when he entered her, pinned her
the way the Nail of Heaven pinned the skies, tears brimmed and spilled from her
eyes, and she could only think, At last! At last he takes me! And it did not seem, it was. No one would call her
harlot any more. ffl^^ Dart III xThe Third March HApTER Eighteen Khemema To piss across water is to piss across your reflection. —KHIRGWI PROVERB Early Autumn, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, southern Shigek Sweating beneath the sun,
the Men of the Tusk struck south, winding up the staggered escarpments of the
South Bank, and onto the furnace plains of the Carathay Desert, or as the
Khirgwi called it, Ej’ulkiyah, the “Great Thirst.” The first night, they
stopped near Tamiznai, a caravan entrepot that had been sacked by the
retreating Fanim. Shortly afterward,
Athjeari, who’d been sent to reconnoitre the route to Enathpaneah, returned
from the southern waste, his men hollow-eyed with thirst and exhaustion. His
mood was black. He told the Great Names that he’d found no unpolluted wells,
and that he’d been forced to travel by night, the heat was so intense. The
heathen, he said, had retreated to the far side of Hell. The Great Names told
him of the endless trains of mules they’d brought, and of the Emperor’s fleet
that would follow them loaded with fresh Sempis water. They explained their
elaborate plans for transporting that water across the coastal hills. “You know not,” the young
Earl of Gaenri said, “the lands you risk.” The following evening, the horns of
Galeoth, Nansur, Thunyerus, Conriya, Ce Tydonn, and High Ainon pealed through
the arid air. Khemema J Pavilions were torn down
amid the shouts of soldiers and slaves. Mules were loaded and beaten into long
files. The Cultic Priests of Gilgaol cast a goshawk onto their godfire, then
released another to the evening sun. Infantrymen swung their packs from their
spears, joking and complaining about the prospect of marching through the
night. Hymns resolved and faded from the rumble of busy thousands. The air cooled, and the
first columns set across the western shoulders of Khemema’s coastal hills. The first Khirgwi came
after midnight, howling from the backs of loping camels, bearing the truth of
the Solitary God and His Prophet on the edges of sharp knives. The attacks were
both brief and vicious. They fell upon stragglers, soaked the sands with red
waters. They evaded the Inrithi pickets and swept howling into the baggage trains,
where they sliced open the precious bladders of water wherever they found them.
Sometimes, especially when they strayed onto hard gravel flats, they were
overtaken and cut down in furious melees. Otherwise, they outdistanced their
pursuers and vanished into the moonlit sands. The next day, the first
mule trains crawled through the coastal hills to the Meneanor and found a bay,
quicksilver in the sun and peppered by the red-sailed ships of the Nansur
fleet. There were hearty greetings as the first boatloads of water were dragged
ashore. Songs were raised as the onerous work of transferring the water to the
mules began. Men stripped to their waist, and many plunged into the rolling
waves to relieve themselves of the heat. And that evening, when the Holy War
stirred from suffocating tents, they were greeted by fresh Sempis water. The Holy War continued
its nocturnal march. Despite the bloodcurdling raids, many found themselves
awed by the beauty of the Carathay. There were no insects, save the odd crazed
beetle rolling its ball of dung across the sands. The Inrithi laughed at these,
called them “shit chasers.” And there were no animals, except of course the
vultures circling endlessly above. Where there was no water, there was no life,
and apart from the heavy skins draped about the shoulders of the Holy War,
there was no water in the Carathay. It was as if the sun had burnt the whole
world to sterile bone. The Men of the Tusk stood apart from the sun, stone, and
sand, and it was beautiful, like a haunting nightmare HIRU MARCH described by another. It
was beautiful because they need not suffer the consequences of what they
witnessed. On the seventh assigned
meeting between the Holy War and the Imperial Fleet, the Men of the Tusk picked
their way through dry gorges and gathered across the beaches. They looked
across the Meneanor, which was marbled by vast curls of lime and turquoise, and
saw no ships. The rising sun gilded the sea in white. They could see the
distant breakers, like lines of foaming diamonds. But no ships. They waited. Messengers
were sent back to the encampment. Saubon and Conphas soon joined them, bathed
in the sea water for a time, spent an hour arguing, and then rode back to the
Holy War. A Council was called and the Great and Lesser Names squabbled until
dusk, trying to decide what to do. Accusations were levelled against Conphas,
but were quickly dropped when the Exalt-General pointed out that his life was
as much at stake as theirs. The Holy War waited a
night and a day, and when the Emperor’s fleet still failed to arrive, they
decided to continue their march. Many theories were aired. Perhaps, Ikurei
Conphas suggested, the fleet had been beset by a squall and had decided to sail
south to the next designated meeting point to conserve time. Or perhaps, Prince
Kellhus suggested, there was a reason why the Kianene had waited so
long to contest the seas. Perhaps the camels had been slaughtered and the fleet
hidden to lure the Holy War into the Carathay. Perhaps Khemema was a
trap. Two days later, the bulk
of the Great and Lesser Names accompanied the mule trains across the hills to
the sea, and stared dumbfounded at its empty beauty. When they returned from
the hills, they no longer walked apart from the desert. Sun, stone, and sand
beckoned to them. All water was severely
rationed according to caste. Anyone caught hoarding or exceeding their ration,
it was declared, would be executed. In Council, Ikurei
Conphas unfurled maps inked by Imperial Cartographers in the days when Khemema
had belonged to the Empire, and jabbed his finger at a place called Subis. The
oasis of Subis, he insisted, was far too large for the heathens to poison. With
the water remaining, the Holy War could reach Subis intact, but only if
everything—mules, slaves, camp-followers—was left behind… Khemema 3{. “Leave behind…” Proyas
said. “How do you propose we do that?” Even though orders were
dispatched with the utmost secrecy, wo spread quickly through the drowsing
encampment. Many fled to the doom in the open desert. Some took up arms. The
rest simply waited be cut down: body-slaves, camp whores, caste-merchants, even
slavei Screams echoed over the dunes. Several riots and
mutinies broke out among the Inrithi. At first, mai refused to kill their own.
The Holy War, the Great Names explained their men, had to survive. They had to survive. In the end, countk thousands were
murdered by the grief-stricken Men of the Tusk. On priests, wives, and useful
tradesmen were spared. That night the Inrithi
marched blank-eyed through what seemed cooling oven—away from the horror behind
them, toward the promi of Subis… Men-at-arms, warhorses, and hearts had become
beasts burden. When the Khirgwi found
the fields of heaped bodies and strev belongings, they fell to their knees and
cried out in exultation to tl Solitary God. The trial of the idolaters had
begun. The enormous column of
the Holy War drifted and scattered in tl rush southward. The Khirgwi massacred
hundreds of stragglers. Sevei tribes cut to the heart of the column, wreaking
what havoc they cou before fleeing into the waste. One group of raiders
actually stumbled upi the Scarlet Spires, and were burnt into oblivion. The following morning the
Great and Lesser Names met in despei tion. Water, they knew, had to lie all
about them; the Khirgwi couldi harass them otherwise. So where were their
wells? They called forwa the more successful raiders among them—Athjeari,
Thampis, Detnamri and others—and charged them with taking the battle to the
desert trit with the goal of finding their hidden wells. Leading thousands of
Inrit knights, these men rode over the long dunes and disappeared into’t
wavering distances. With the exception of
Detnammi, the Ainoni Palatine of Eshkal; they all returned the following night,
beaten back by the ferocity of’t Khirgwi and the merciless heat of the
Carathay. No wells had been four Even if they had, Athjeari said, he had no
idea how they might found twice, so featureless was the desert. ihe ihird March Meanwhile, the water had
almost run out. With Subis nowhere in sight, the Great Names decided to put
down all horses save those belonging to caste-nobility. Several thousand
Cengemi footmen, Ketyai tributaries of the Tydonni, mutinied, demanding that all horses be slaughtered and the excess rations be
divided equally among all Men of the Tusk. Gothyelk and the other Earls of Ce
Tydonn responded with ruthless alacrity. The leaders of the mutiny were
arrested, gutted, then hung from pikes above the sand. Very little water
remained the ensuing night, and the Men of the Tusk, their skin like parchment,
overcome by irritability and fatigue, began casting away their food. They no
longer hungered. They thirsted, thirsted as they’d never
thirsted before. Hundreds of horses collapsed and were left to snort their
final breaths in the dust. A strange apathy descended upon the men. When the
Khirgwi assailed them, many simply continued to walk, not hearing or not caring
that their kinsmen perished behind them. Subis, they would think, and that name became more fraught
with hope than the name of any God. When dawn arose and they
still hadn’t reached Subis, the decision was made to continue. The world became
a hazy furnace of baked stone and dunes tanned and curved like a harlot’s
lovely skin. The distances shimmered with hallucinatory lakes, and many
perpetually ran, convinced they saw the promised oasis, promised Subis. Subis … A lover’s name. The Men of the Tusk
stumbled down long, flinty slopes, filed between sandstone outcroppings that
resembled towering mushrooms on thin stems. They climbed mountainous dunes. The village looked like a
many-chambered fossil unearthed by the wind. The deep green and sun silver of
the oasis beckoned with its impossibility… Subis. Ragged ranks surged
across the sun-hammered sands. Men charged through the abandoned village,
between date palms trailing skirts of dead fronds and acacias freighted with
weaver’s nests. They jostled, skidded across the packed dust, toppled splashing
and laughing into the glittering waters… Where they found
Detnammi. Khemema Dead, bloated, floating
in the crystal green, with all four hundred and fifty-nine of his men. The promise of Subis had
been poisoned. The Khirgwi had found a way. But the Men of the Tusk
were beyond caring. They gulped water and retched, then gulped more. Thousands
upon thousands roared down the dunes and descended upon the oasis. They pushed
and heaved at the masses before them only to find themselves engulfed. Hundreds
were crushed to death. Hundreds more actually drowned as men were shouldered
into the pool’s centre. Some time passed before the Great Names could impose
order. Thanes and knights warded men from the oasis at sword point. They were
forced to make more than a few examples. Eventually, vast relays were organized
to fill and distribute waterskins. Swimmers began removing the dead from the
pool. Bodies were heaped in the sun. The Great Names denied
Detnammi and his men funeral rites, realizing he’d struck south for Subis
instead of searching for Khirgwi wells— obviously to save himself.
Chepheramunni, the King-Regent of High Ainon, denounced the Palatine of
Eshkalas, posthumously stripped him of his rank and station. Ritual Ainoni
curses were cut into his body, which was laid out for the vultures. Meanwhile, the Men of the
Tusk drank their fill. Many retired to the shade beneath the palms, leaning
against trunks and wondering that fronds could so resemble vulture’s wings.
Their thirst slaked, they began to worry about sickness. The Cultic
physician-priests of dread Pestilence, Akkeagni, were called before the Great
Names, and they named those sicknesses associated with drinking water fouled by
the dead. Otherwise, their pharmaka and their reliquary abandoned to the
desert, they could do little more than mutter pre-emptive prayers. The God would not be
satisfied. Everyone was afflicted
somehow—chills, cramps, nausea—but thousands became severely ill, stricken by
convulsive vomiting and diarrhea. By the following morning, the worst were
doubled over with abdominal pain, their skin blotched by angry red spots. In Council, the Great
Names stared and stared at Ikurei Conphas’s maps. Enathpaneah, they knew, was
simply too far. They sent several IMC 1HIKU MARCH dozen parties to various
points on the Meneanor coast, hoping against hope they might find the Imperial
Fleet. Accusations were levelled against the Emperor, and twice Conphas and
Saubon had to be physically restrained. When the search parties returned from
the hills empty-handed, the Great Names solemnly agreed to continue their
southward march. Either way, Prince
Kellhus said, the God would see to them. The Men of the Tusk abandoned Subis
the following evening, their waterskins brimming with polluted water. Several
hundred, those too sick to walk, remained behind, waiting for the Khirgwi. Sickness spread among the
men, and those without friends or kin were abandoned. The Holy War became a
vast army of shuffling men and stumbling horses, marching across blue vistas of
sun-cracked stone and flint-strewn sand. About the Nail of Heaven, clouds of
stars wheeled above them, numbering their dead. Those too sick to keep pace
fell behind, wept in the dust like broken men, dreading the morrow’s sun as
much as the Khirgwi. “Enathpaneah,” the
walkers said to one another, for the Great Names had lied, telling them
Enathpaneah was only three days distant when it was more than six. “The God
will show us to Enathpaneah.” A name like a promise… Like Shimeh. For those afflicted by
diarrhea, the ration of water simply wasn’t enough. Already weakened, they
collapsed, panting against the cool sands. Many of the sickest died this
way—thousands of them. After two days, the water
began to run out. The thirst returned. Lips cracked, eyes grew curiously soft,
and skin tightened, became as dry as papyrus and cracked around joints. There were some, very
few, who seemed impossibly strong during this trial. Nersei Proyas was one of
the few caste-nobles who refused to water his horse while his men died. He
walked among the steadfast knights and soldiers of Conriya, giving words of
encouragement, reminding them that before all, faith was a matter of trial. Followed by two beautiful
women, Prince Kellhus also spread words of strength. They didn’t merely suffer,
he told men, they suffered for … For Shimeh. For the Truth. For
the God! And to suffer for the God was to secure glory in the Outside. Many
would be broken in this furnace, that Khemema was true, but those who
survived would know the temper of their own hearts. They would be, he claimed,
unlike other men. They would be more … The Chosen. Wherever Prince Kellhus
and his two women went, men crowded about them, begging to be touched, to be
cured, to be forgiven. Stained by dust into the colour of the desert, his face
bronzed and his flowing hair almost bleached white, he seemed the very incarnation
of sun, stone, and sand. He, and he alone, could stare into the endless
Carathay and laugh, hold out his arms to the Nail of
Heaven and give thanks for their suffering. “The God chooses!” he
would cry, “The God!” And the words he spoke
were like water. On the third night, he
halted in a vast bowl between dunes. He marked a place across the trampled
sands, and bid several of his closest adherents, his Zaudunyani, to begin
digging. When they despaired of finding anything, he commanded them to
continue. Very soon they felt moisture in the sand… Then he walked farther and
bid those rushing past to dig more holes at various places. Others he organized
into an armed perimeter. Held back by hedges of levelled spears, wondering
thousands crowded around the lip of the depression, curious to see what
happened. After several watches, some fourteen pools of dark water glittered in
the moonlight. Spring-fed wells… The waters were muddy,
but they were sweet, and unfouled by the taste of dead men. When the first of the Great
Names at last beat and hollered their way to the floor of the depression, they
found Prince Kellhus at the bottom of a pit, standing knee-deep in waters with
a dozen others, hoisting brimming skins to the groping hands above. “He showed me,” he laughed,
when they hailed them. “The God showed me!” More wells were dug at
the behest of the Great Names, and water relays were once again organized.
Since most of the Holy War had suffered severe dehydration, the Great Names
decided to linger for several days. The remaining horses were butchered and
eaten raw for lack of fuel. In the Councils, Prince Kellhus was congratulated
for his discovery, but lttt 1 H1RD MARCH little more. Many in the
Holy War, especially the caste-menials, openly hailed him as the Warrior-Prophet.
In closed meetings the Great Names argued over the Prince of Atrithau, but they
could find no consensus. The desert, Ikurei Conphas warned, had made a False
Prophet of Fane as well. Meanwhile, the Khirgwi
tribes gathered in the deep desert, thinking the Holy War, like a jackal, had
found its place to die. The following night they attacked en masse, a wild rush
of thousands spilling from the crests of dunes, confident they would ride down
more corpses than men. Though surprised, the Men of the Tusk, their flesh
revived, their faith renewed, encircled and slaughtered the desert tribesmen.
Entire tribes, who’d bled much through the endless skirmishes across Khemema,
were extinguished. The survivors withdrew to their hidden oasis homes. The last of the food gave
out. Waterskins were once again filled and heaped across strong backs. Songs
were raised across the dark, desert landscape, many of them hymns to the
Warrior-Prophet. The Holy War resumed its southward march, unconquered and
defiant. Between Mengedda, Anwurat, and the desert, they had lost almost a
third of their number, but still their great columns spanned the horizon. They crossed deep wadis,
cut by the infrequent winter rains, and climbed rolling dunes. They laughed
once again at the shit-chasers scurrying with their dung across the sands. Day
came, and they perched their canvas sheets against the punishing sun so they
might sleep through the merciless heat. As evening fell on the
second day, and the encampment once again made ready to march, many noticed
clouds across the western sky—the first clouds they’d seen, it seemed to them,
since Gedea. They were smeared across the horizon, deep purple, and they folded
around the setting sun so that it seemed the iris of an angry red eye. Without
their omen-texts, the priests could only guess at the meaning. The air still shimmered
with heat, rolled like water over the sun-baked distances. And it was
still—very still. A hush fell across the reaches of the Holy War. Men peered at
the horizon, looked nervously at the wrathful eye, realizing the clouds
belonged to the ground not the sky. And then they
understood. Sandstorm. Khemema With the sluggish
elegance of a scarf coiling in the wind, pummelling clouds of dust rolled
toward them from the west. Old Carathay could stil hate. The Great Thirst could
still punish. Skin-serrating blasts.
Gusts with a million stinging teeth. The Men o the Tusk howled to one another
without being heard. They tried to look perhaps glimpsed the shadowy figures of
others through the brown haze but were then blinded. They huddled in clots
beneath the biting wind felt the sand suck at them as it heaped around their
limbs. Theь makeshift shelters were torn away, thrashed like paper through
mountainous gusts. A new calligraphy of dunes was scrawled about them Forgotten
waterskins were buried. The sandstorm raged until
dawn, and when the winds receded, the Men of the Tusk wandered like stunned
children across a transformec land. They salvaged what they could of their
remaining baggage, founc several dead men buried beneath the sands. The Great
and Lesser Name; met in Council. They hadn’t enough shelter from the sun, they
realized to remain through the day. They must march—that much was clear. Bui
where? Most argued that they should return to the well discovered b) Prince Kellhus—as he was still called in the
Councils, as much by his owr insistence as by the loathing some had taken to
the name “Warrior-Prophet.” At least they had enough water to make it that far. But the dissenters, led
by Ikurei Conphas, insisted the well was likely lost to the sands. They pointed
to the surrounding dunes, so bright in the sun they sheared one’s eyes, and
insisted the land around the wells was certain to have been just as disfigured
if not more. If the Holy War usec its remaining water to march away from Enathpaneah, and the wells couldn’t be found,
then it was doomed. As it stood, Conphas claimed once again relying upon his
map, the Holy War was within two days march of water. If they marched now they
would suffer, certainly, but the> would survive. To the surprise of some,
Prince Kellhus agreed. “Surely,” he said, “it’s better to wager suffering to
avoid death than to wager death to avoid suffering.” The Holy War marched
toward Enathpaneah. They passed beyond the
sea of dunes and entered land like a burning plate, a flat stone expanse where
the air fairly hissed with heat. Once again the water was
strictly rationed. Men became dizzy with thirst and some began casting away
armour, weapons, and clothes, walkin] like naked madmen until they fell, their
skin blackened by thirst anc blistered by sun. The last of the horses died, and
the footmen, eve resentful that their lords tended to their mounts more
faithfully thai to their men, would curse and kick gravel at the wooden corpses
as the} passed. Old Gothyelk collapsed and was strapped to a litter made by his
sons, who shared their rations of water with him. Lord Ganyatti, the Conriyan
Palatine of Ankirioth, whose bald head looked so much like a blistered thumb jutting
from a torn glove, was bound like a sack tc his horse. When night had at last
fallen, the Holy War continued its march south, once again stumbling along the
backs of sandy dunes. The Men of the Tusk walked and walked, but the cool
desert night provided little relief. None talked. They formed an endless
procession of silent wraiths, passing across Carathay’s folds. Dusty, harrowed,
hollow-eyed, and with drunken limbs, they walked. Like a pinch of mud dropped
in water they crumbled, wandered from one another, until the Holy War became a
cloud of disconnected figures, feet scraping across gravel and dust. The morning sun was a
shrill rebuke, for still the desert had not ended. The Holy War had become an
army of ghosts. Dead and dying men lay scattered in their thousands behind it,
and as the sun rose still more fell. Some simply lost the will, and fell seated
in the dust, their thoughts and bodies buzzing with thirst and fatigue. Others
pressed themselves until their wracked bodies betrayed them. They struggled
feebly across the sand, waving their heads like worms, perhaps croaking for
help, for succour. But only death would come
swirling down. Tongues swelled in
mouths. Parchment skin went black and tightened until it split about purple
flesh, rendering the dying unrecognizable. Legs buckled, folded, refused one’s
will as surely as if one’s spine had been broken. And the sun beat them,
scorching chapped skin, cooking lips to hoary leather. There was no weeping, no
wails or astonished shouts. Brothers abandoned brothers and husbands abandoned
wives. Each man had become a solitary circle of misery that walked and walked. Khemema Gone was the promise of
sweet Sempis water. Gone was the promise of Enathpaneah… Gone was the voice of the
Warrior-Prophet. Only the trial remained,
drawing out warm, thrumming hearts into an agonized line, desert thin—desert
simple. Frail heartbeats stranded in the wastes, pounding with receding fury at
seeping, water-starved blood. Men died in the
thousands, gasping, each breath more improbable than the last, at furnace air,
sucking final moments of anguished, dreamlike life through throats of charred
wood. Heat like a cool wind. Black fingers twitching through searing sands.
Flat, waxy eyes raised to blinding sun. Whining silence and
endless loneliness. Esmenet stumbled by his
side, kicking sand and fiery gravel with feet she could no longer feel. Above
her, the sun shrieked and shrieked, but she’d long ceased worrying how light
could make sound. He carried Serwe in his
arms, and it seemed to Esmenet that she’d never witnessed anything so
triumphant. Then he stopped before a
deep and dark vista. She swayed and the
wailing sun twirled above her, but somehow he was there, beside her, bracing
her. She tried licking cracked lips, but her tongue was too swollen. She looked
to him, and he grinned, impossibly hale… He leaned back and cried
out to the hazy roll and pitch of distant green, to the wandering crease of a
flashing river. And his words resounded across the compass of the horizon. “Father! We come,
Father!” Early Autumn, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, lothiah Xinemus’s fierce scowl
silenced him, and the three men retreated into a grotto of darkness where the
wall pinched one of the compound’s structures. They dragged the warrior-slave’s
corpse with them. “I always thought these
bastards were tough,” Bloody Dinch whispered, his eyes still wild from his
kill. MARCH “They are,” Xinemus
replied softly. He scanned the gloomy courtyard below them—a puzzle-box of open
spaces, bare walls, and elaborate facades. “The Scarlet Spires purchase their
Javreh from the Sranc Pits. They are hard men, and you’d do well to remember
it.” Zenkappa smirked in the
dark and added, “You got lucky, Dinch.” “By the Prophet’s Balls!” Bloody Dinch
hissed, “I—” “Shhht!” Xinemus spat. Both Dinch and Zenkappa were good
men, fierce men, Xinemus knew, but they were bred to battle in open fields, not
to slink through shadows as they did now. And it bruised Xinemus in some
strange way that they seemed incapable of grasping the importance of what they
attempted. Achamian’s life meant little to them, he realized. He was a
sorcerer, an abomination. Achamian’s disappearance, the Marshal imagined, was a
matter of no small relief to the two of them. There was no place for
blasphemers in the company of pious men. But if they failed to
grasp the importance of their task, they were well aware of its lethality. To
skulk like thieves among armed men was harrowing enough, but in the midst of
the Scarlet Spires… Both were frightened,
Xinemus realized—thus the forced humour and empty bravado. Xinemus pointed to a
nearby building across a narrow portion of the courtyard. The bottom floor
consisted of a long row of colonnades framing the pitch-black of its hollow
interior. “Those abandoned
stables,” he said. “With any luck, they’ll be connected to those barracks.” “Empty barracks, I hope,” Dinch whispered, studying the dark
confusion of buildings. “So they look.” I’ll save you Achamian… Undo what I’ve
done. The Scarlet Spires had
taken up residence in a vast, semi-fortified complex that looked as though it
dated back to the age of Cenei—the sturdy palace of some long-dead Ceneian
Governor, Xinemus supposed. They had watched the compound for over a fortnight,
waited as the great trains of armed men, supplies, and slave-borne litters
wound from the narrow gates into Iothiah’s labyrinthine streets to join the
march across Khemema. Xinemus had no definite idea of the size of the Scarlet
Spires‘ H ■s i Khemema 4C contingent, but he
reckoned it numbered in the thousands. This meat the compound itself must be
immense, a warren of barracks, kitchen storerooms, apartments, and official
chambers. And this meant that whe the bulk of the School travelled south, those
few remaining would find difficult to defend against intruders. This was good… If in fact
Achamian was actually imprisoned here. The Scarlet Spires
wouldn’t dare take Achamian with them; Xinemi was sure of that much. The road
was no place to interrogate a Mandai sorcerer, especially when one marched with
a prince such as Proyas. Ar the fact that the Scarlet Spires had actually left
a mission here meant th; the School had
unfinished business to attend to in Iothiah. Xinemus hs wagered that Achamian
was that unfinished business. If he wasn’t here, then
he was very likely dead. He’s here! I feel it! When the three men
reached the interior of the stables, Xinemi clutched at the Trinket about his
neck as though it were holier than tl small golden Tusk that clicked at its
side. The Tears of God. Their on hope against sorcerers. Xinemus had inherited
three Trinkets when h father had died, and this was the
reason he attempted this with on Dinchases and Zenkappa. Three Trinkets for
three men about to wand into a den of abominations. But Xinemus prayed they
wouldn’t ne< them. Whatever their sins, sorcerers were men, and men slept. “Hold them in your bare
fists,” Xinemus commanded. “Remembs they must be touching your skin to afford
you any protectio Whatever you do, don’t
let it go… This place is sure to be protected 1 Wards, and if the Trinket
leaves your skin, even for a moment, we’ll 1 undone…” He ripped his own Trinket
from about his neck, and it comforted by the cold weight of
its iron, the imprint of its deep run against his palm. The stalls hadn’t been
mucked, and the stable smelled of dried hors shit and straw. After several
moments of fumbling they found a passag way that led them into the abandoned
barracks. Then their nightmarish
journey through the maze began. Tl complex was as huge as Xinemus had both
hoped and feared, and much as he was relieved by the endless series of empty rooms and cor dors, he despaired of ever finding
Achamian. Once or twice they hea Ihe Ihird March distant voices speaking
Ainoni, and they would crouch in pitch shadows or behind exotic Kianene
furniture. They passed through dusty audience halls, filled with enough
moonlight that they might wonder at the grand, geometric frescoes across the
vaulted ceilings. They skulked by sculleries and kitchens, and heard slaves
snoring in the humid dark. They crept up stairs and down halls lined by
apartments. Each door they opened seemed hinged upon a precipice: either
Achamian or certain death lay on the far side. Every instant, every breath
seemed an impossible gamble. And everywhere they
imagined the ghosts of the Scarlet Magi, holding arcane conferences, summoning
demons, or studying blasphemous tomes in the very rooms they glided past. Where were they holding
him? After some time, Xinemus
began to feel bold. Was this how a thief or a rat felt, prowling at the edges
of what others could see or know? There was exhilaration, and strangely enough,
comfort in lurking unseen in the marrow
of your enemy’s bones. Xinemus was overcome by a sudden certainty: We’re going to do this! We’re going to
save him! “We should check the
cellars…” Dinch hissed. A sheen of sweat covered his grizzled face and his grey
square-cut beard was matted. “They’d put him someplace where his screams
couldn’t be heard by visitors, wouldn’t they?” Xinemus grimaced, both at
the loudness of the old majordomo’s voice and at the truth of what he said.
Achamian had been tortured and tortured long… It was an unbearable thought. Akka… They returned to a stone
stairwell they’d passed, descended down into pitch blackness. “We need some light!”
Zenkappa exclaimed. “We won’t be able to find our hands down here!” They stumbled blindly
into a carpeted corridor, packed close enough together to smell the sweat of
one another’s fear. Xinemus despaired. This was hopeless! But then they saw a
light, and a small sphere of illuminated hallway, moving… Khemema Wo The corridor where they
found themselves was narrow with a low rounded ceiling—they could see this
now—and exceedingly long, as though it ran the greater length of the compound.
A sorcerer walked through it. The figure was thin, but
dressed in voluminous scarlet silk robes, with deep sleeves embroidered with
golden herons. His face was the clearest, because it was bathed in impossible
light. Rutted cheeks lost in the slick curls of a lavishly braided beard,
bulbous eyes, bored by the tedium of walking from place to place, all
illuminated by a teardrop of candlelight suspended a cubit before his forehead,
without any candle. Xinemus could hear
Dinch’s breath hiss through clenched teeth. The figure and the ghostly light
paused at a juncture in the corridor, as if he had stumbled across a peculiar
smell. The old face scowled for a moment, and the sorcerer seemed to peer into
the darkness at them. They stood as still as three pillars of salt. Three
heartbeats… It was as though the eyes of Death itself sought them. The man’s scowl lapsed
back into boredom, and he turned down the juncture, trailing a momentary skirt
of illuminated stonework and scrolled carpet in his wake. And then blackness.
Sanctuary. “Dear, sweet Sejenus…” Dinch gasped. “We must follow him,”
Xinemus whispered, feeling his nerves gradually calm. Witnessing the face, the
sorcerous light, now made their every step sing with peril. The only thing
keeping Dinchases and Zenkappa behind him, Xinemus knew, was a loyalty that
transcended fear of death. But here, in this place, in the bowels of a Scarlet
Spires stronghold, that loyalty was being tested as it had never been tested
before, even in the heart of their most desperate battles. Not only did they
gamble with the obscenely unholy, there were no rules here, and this, added to mortal fear, was enough to
break any man. They found the juncture
but could see no light down the other corridor, so they inched blindly forward
as they had before, following the limestone walls with their fingers. They came to a heavy
door. Xinemus could see no light seep around it. He grasped the iron latch,
hesitated. He’s
close! I’m sure of it! Xinemus pulled open the
door. From the drafts across
their humid skin they could tell the door opened upon a large chamber, but the
darkness was still impenetrable. They felt as though they were entombed in
dread night. Holding a hand before
him, Xinemus stepped into open blackness, hissed at the others to follow. A voice cracked the
silence, stilled their hearts. “But this will not do.” Then lights, blinding,
stinging bright and bewildering. Xinemus yanked free his sword. Blinked, and squinting,
focused on the figures congregated about them. A half-circle of a dozen Javreh,
fully geared for war beneath blue and red coats. Six of them with levelled
crossbows. Stunned, his thoughts
reeling in panic, Xinemus lowered his fathers great sword. We’re undone… Behind stood three of the
Scarlet Magi. The one they’d seen earlier, another much like him but with a
beard dyed in yellow henna, and a third, who from his very bearing Xinemus knew
had to be the senior. Against his crimson gown
the man was more than pale; he was devoid of pigment. A chanv addict, no doubt.
One small obscenity to heap upon all the others. About his waist he wore a
broad blue sash, and over it, a golden belt pulled low to his groin by a heavy
pendant that hung between his thighs—serpents coiled about a crow. The red’irised eyes
studied them, pained by amusement. “Tsk, tsk, tsk…” From lips as translucent as
drowned worms. Do something! I
must do something!
But for the first time in his life, Xinemus was paralyzed by terror. “Those things,” the
sorcerer-addict continued, “that you clutch to protect yourselves against us…
Those Trinkets. We can feel them, you know… Especially
when they grow near. Hard sensation to describe, really… Kind of like a stone
marble, pitting a thin sheet of cloth. The more marbles, the deeper the pit…” The flicker of
translucent eyelids. “It was almost as though we could smell you.” Xinemus managed to sound
defiant. “Where’s Drusas Achamian?” Khemema “Wrong question, my
friend. If I were you, I should rather ask, ‘What have I done?’” Xinemus felt the flare of
righteous anger. “I’m warning you, sorcerer. Surrender Achamian.” “Warn me?” Droll laughter. The man’s cheeks fluted like fish
gills. “Unless you’re speaking of inclement weather, Lord Marshal, I think
there’s very little you could warn me about. Your Prince has marched into the
wastes of Khemema. I assure you, you’re quite alone here.” “But I still bear his
writ.” “No, you don’t. You were
stripped of your rank and station. But either way, the fact is you trespass, my friend. We Schoolmen look very seriously upon
trespass, and care nothing for the writ of Princes.” Humid dread. Xinemus felt
his hackles rise. This had been a fool’s errand… But my path is righteous… The sorcerer smiled
thinly. “Tell your clients to drop their Trinkets. Of course, you may drop
yours as well, Lord Marshal… Carefully.” Xinemus glanced
apprehensively at the levelled bolts, at the stone-faced Javreh who aimed them,
and felt as though his life was held from a string. “Immediately!” the mage
snapped. * All three Trinkets thudded like
plums against the carpets. “Good… We’re fond of
collecting Chorae. It’s a good thing to know where they are…” Then the man uttered
something that turned his crimson irises into twin suns. Xinemus was thrown to his
knees by a blast of heat from behind him. He could hear shrieking… Dinch and Zenkappa
shrieking. By the time he turned,
Dinch had already fallen, a heap of writhing char and incandescent flame.
Zenkappa flailed and continued to shriek, immolated in a column of blowing
fire. He stumbled two steps into the dark corridor and collapsed onto the
floor. The shrieks trailed into the sound of sizzling grease. On his knees, Xinemus
stared at the two fires. Without knowing, he’d brought his hands up to cover
his ears. L HIRD MARCH M;y path… He felt gauntleted hands
clench him, powerful limbs pin him to his knees. He was wrenched around to face
the chanv addict. The sorcerer was very near now, near enough that the Marshal
could smell his Ainoni perfumes. “Our people tell us,” the
addict said, in a tone which suggested that untoward things were best not
mentioned in polite company, “that you’re Achamian’s closest friend—from the
days when you both tutored Proyas.” Like a man unable to
fully rouse himself from a nightmare, Xinemus simply stared, slack-faced. Tears
streamed down his broad cheeks. I’ve failed you again, Akka. “You see, Lord Marshal,
we worry that Drusas Achamian tells us lies. First we’ll see if what he’s told
you corresponds with what he’s been telling us. And then we shall see if he
values the Gnosis over his closest friend. If he values knowledge over life and love…” The translucent face
paused, as though happening across a delicious thought. “You’re a pious man,
Marshal. You already know what it means to be an instrument of the truth, no?”
Yes. He knew. To suffer. Heaps of masonry nested
in ashes.i Truncated walls, hedged
by rubble, sketching random lines against] night sky. Cracks forked like blind
branches chasing elusive sun. Spilled columns, halved by moonlight. Scorched stone. The Library of the
long-dead Sareots, ruined by the avarice of the Scarlet Schoolmen. Silent, save for the
small sound of scraping, like a bored child playing with a spoon. How long had it scuttled
like a rat through the hollows, crawled through the labyrinthine galleries hewn
by the random plunge of cement and stone? Past entombed texts, wood-blackened
and crocodile-scaled by Khemema fire, and once a lifeless
human hand. Through a tiny mine, whose only ore was the debris of knowledge.
Upward, always upward, digging, burrowing, crawling. How long? Days? Weeks? It knew very little of
time. It shrugged its way
through torn, animal-skin pages pinched by massive surfaces of stone. It heaved
aside a palm-sized brick, raised a silky face to the clouds of stars. Then it
climbed and climbed, and at last lifted its small, puppet body upon the summit
of the ruin. Raised a little knife, no
bigger than a cat’s tongue. As though to touch the
Nail of Heaven. A Wathi Doll, stolen from
a dead Sansori witch… Someone had spoken its
name. Fnathpaneah What vengeance is this! That he should
slumber while 1 endure? Blood douses no hatred, cleanses no sin. Like seed, it
spills of its own volition, and leaves naught but sorrow in its wake. —HAMISHAZA, TEMP1RAS THE KING … and my soldiers, they say, make idols
of their swords. But does not the sword make certain? Does not the sword make
plain? Does not the sword compel kindness from those who kneel in its shadow? I
need no other god. —TRIAMIS, JOURNALS AND DIALOGUES Late Autumn, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk,
Enathpaneah The first sound Proyas
heard was the rush of wind through leaves, the sound of openness. Then,
impossibly, he heard gurgling water—the sound of life. The desert… He awoke with a start,
blinked sunlight from eyes that teared in pain. It seemed a coal flared red-hot
behind his forehead. He tried to call out for Algari, his body-slave, but could
do no more than whisper. His lips stung, burned as though bleeding. “Your slave
is dead.” Enathpaneah ‘ Proyas remembered
something… A great bloodletting across sands. He turned to the sound of
the voice, saw Cnaьir crouched nearby, b over what looked to be a belt. The man
was shirtless, and Proyas no the blistered skin of his massive shoulders, the
stinging red of his scar arms. His normally sensual lips were swollen and
cracked. Behind him brook sloshed through a groove that wandered between earth
and stc The green of living things blurred the distance. “Scylvendi?” Cnaьir looked up, and for
the first time Proyas noticed his age: branching of wrinkles about his
snow-blue eyes, the first greying hair his black mane. The barbarian was, he
realized, not so much younger tl his father. “What happened?” Proyas
croaked. The Scylvendi resumed
digging at the leather wrapped about scarred knuckles. “You collapsed,” he
said. “In the desert…” “You… You saved me?” ■
Cnaьir paused without looking up. Then continued working. They drifted like reavers
come from the furnace, men hard-bitten by trials of the sun, and they fell upon
the villages and stormed the hill forts and villas of northern Enathpaneah.
Every structure they bun Every man they smote with the edge of the sword, until
none were breathing. So too, every woman and child they found hidden they pt
the sharp knife. There were no innocents.
This was the secret they carried away f the desert. All were guilty. They wandered southward,
scattered bands of wayfarers, come i the
plains of death to harrow the land as they’d been harrowed, to del suffering as
they’d suffered. The horrors of the desert were reflecte their ghastly eyes.
The cruelty of blasted lands was written into’t gaunt frames. And their swords
were their judgement. Some three hundred
thousand souls, perhaps three-fifths of’t combatants, had marched under the
Tusk into Khemema. Only hundred thousand, almost
all of them combatants, would leave. Despite these losses, with the exception
of Palatine Detnammi, none of the Great had died. Using the Inrithi
caste-nobles as compass points, Death had drawn circles, each one more narrow
than the last, taking the slaves and the camp-followers, then the indentured caste-menial
soldiers, and so on. Life had been rationed according to caste and station. Two
hundred thousand corpses marked the Holy War’s march from the oasis of Subis to
the frontier of Enathpaneah. Two hundred thousand dead, beat into black leather
by the sun. For generations the
Khirgwi would call their route saka’ilrait, “the Trail of Skulls.” The desert road had
sharpened their souls into knives. The Men of the Tusk would lay the keel of
another road, just as appalling, and far more furious. Late Autumn, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk,
lothiah How long had they plied
him? How much misery had he
endured? But no matter how they
tormented him, with crude pokers or with the subtlest of sorcerous deceits, he
could not be broken. He shrieked and shrieked, until it had seemed his howls
were a faraway thing, the torment of some stranger carried upon the wind. But
he did not break. It had nothing to do with strength. Achamian wasn’t strong.
But Seswatha… How many times had
Achamian survived the Wall of Torment in Dagliash? How many times had he bolted
from the anguish of his sleep, weeping because his wrists were free, because no
nails pierced his arms? In the ways of torture, the Scarlet Spires were mere
understudies compared with the Consult. No. Achamian wasn’t
strong. For all their merciless
cunning, what the Scarlet Magi never understood was that they plied two men, not one. Hanging naked from the chains, his face
slack against shoulder and chest, Achamian could see the foremost of his
diffuse shadows fan across the mosaic floor. And no matter how Enathpaneah violent the agonies that
shuddered through him, the shadow remained firm, untouched. It whispered to
him, whether he wailed or gagged… Whatever they do, I remain untouched. The heart of a great tree never
bums. The heart of a great tree never bums. Two men, like a circle
and its shadow. The torture, the Cants of Compulsion, the narcotics—everything
had failed because there were two men for them to compel, and the
one, Seswatha, stood far outside the circle of the present. Whatever the
affliction, no matter how obscene, his shadow whispered, But I’ve suffered more… Time passed, misery piled
upon misery, then the chanv addict, Iyokus, dragged a man before him, thrust
him to his knees just beyond the Uroborian Circle, arms bound behind his back,
naked save for his chains. A face, broken and bearded, looked up to him, seemed
to weep and laugh. “Akka!” the stranger
cried out, his mouth mealy with blood. Spittle trailed from his lips. “Bease,
Akka! Beease tell them!” There was something about
him, an irksome familiarity… “We’ve exhausted the
conventional methods,” Iyokus said, “as I suspected we would. You’ve proven
yourself as stubborn as your predecessors.” The red-irised eyes darted to the
stranger. “The time has come to break new ground…” “I can bear no more,” the
man sobbed. “No more…” The Master of Spies
pursed his bloodless lips in mock remorse. “He came hoping to save you, you
know.” Achamian peered at the
man as though he were something accidentally glimpsed—something merely there. No. It couldn’t be. He
wouldn’t permit it. “So the question is,”
Iyokus was saying, “how far does your indifference extend? Will it bear the
mutilation of loved ones?” No! “I find dramatic gestures
are more effective at the beginning, before a subject becomes too accustomed…
So I thought we would start by putting out his eyes.” He made a circling
gesture with his index finger. One of the slave-soldiers behind Xinemus grabbed
a fistful of hair, yanked his head back, then raised a shining knife. The Third March Iyokus glanced at
Achamian, then nodded to his Javreh. The man stabbed downward, almost gingerly,
as though skewering a plum from a platter. Xinemus shrieked, the pit
of his eye cramped about polished steel. Achamian gasped at the
impossibility. That so familiar and so cherished face, crinkling into a
thousand friendly frowns, splitting into a thousand rueful grins, asylum amid
so much condemnation, now, now… The Javreh lifted his
knife. “ZIN!” Achamian
screeched. But there was his hanging
shadow, smeared across mortared glass, whispering, know not this man. Iyokus was speaking.
“Achamian. Achamian! I need you to listen to me carefully, Achamian, as one
Schoolman to another. You and I both know you’ll never leave this room alive.
But your friend, here, Krijates Xinemus…” “Beaassee!” the Marshal
wailed. “Beeaaaaseee!” “I am,” Iyokus continued,
“the Master of Spies for the Scarlet Spires. No more and no less. I bear
neither you nor your friend the slightest ill will. Unlike some, I need not hate
my subjects to do what I do. You and your suffering are simply a means to an
end. If you give me what my School needs, Achamian, your friend will become
useless to me. I’ll order his chains removed, and set him free. You have my
word as a Schoolman on that…” Achamian believed him,
and would have given anything if he could. But a sorcerer two thousand years
dead looked from his eyes, watched with a horrific detachment… Iyokus studied him, his
membranous skin moist in the unsteady light. He hissed and shook his head. “Such fanatic
stubbornness! Such strength!” The red-gowned sorcerer
whirled, nodded to the slave-soldier holding Xinemus. “Nooooo!” a piteous voice
howled. A stranger convulsed in
sightless agony, soiling himself. I know not this man. Enathpaneah The nameless orange tabby
froze, crouched, his ears pricked forward, his eyes fastened on the
debris-strewn alleyway before him. Something crept through the shadows, slow
like a lizard in the cold… Suddenly it dashed across dusty sunlight. The tabby
jumped. For five years he’d
skulked the alleys and gutters of Iothiah, feeding on mice, preying on rats,
and when he could, scavenging rare scraps discarded by men. Once he’d even
eaten from the corpse of a fellow cat that some boys had thrown from a rooftop. Only recently had he
started dining on dead men. Every day, with a piety born of his blood, he
padded, crept, and prowled along the same circuit. Through the alleys behind
the Agnotum Market, where the rats nosed garbage, along the ruined wall, where
the dead weeds and thistles beckoned mice, behind the eateries on the Pannas,
across the temple ruins, then through the labyrinthine slots between the
crumbling Ceneian tenements, where sometimes a child might scratch his ears. For some time now, dead
men had started appearing along his track. And now this… Slinking around
obstacles, he crawled to the nest of shadows where the running thing had
disappeared. He wasn’t hungry. He just needed to see. Besides, he longed for
the taste of living, bleeding prey… Hunched against a
burnt-brick wall, he craned his head around a corner. He halted, absolutely
still, the world before his face murmuring through his whiskers… No heartbeat, no
whistling rat squeals that only he could hear. But something moved… He leapt at a shadowy
form, claws extended. He bore the figure down, burying claws into its back,
teeth into its soft fabric of its throat. The taste was wrong. The smell was
wrong. He felt the first cut, then the second. He wrenched at the throat,
seeking meat, the gorgeous rush of hot blood. But there was nothing. Another
cut. “> The tabby released
the thing, tried to scramble away, but his hindquarters flailed, faltered. He
yowled and shrieked, scratching at the scabbed cobble. The Third March Little doll arms closed about
the tabby’s throat. The taste of blood. Late Autumn, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk,
Caraskand Positioned on the great
land route linking the nations south of the Carathay to Shigek and Nansur,
Caraskand was an ancient and strategic way station. All those goods that
merchants were loath to trust to the capricious seas—Zeumi silks, the cinnamon,
pepper, and magnificent tapestries of Nilnamesh, Galeoth wool and fine Nansur
wine—passed through the great bazaars of Caraskand, and had done so for
thousands of years. A Shigeki outpost in the
days of the Old Dynasty, Caraskand had grown with the passing centuries, and
for brief periods between the ascendancy of greater nations, had ruled her own
small empire. Enathpaneah was a semimountainous land, sharing in both the arid
summers of the Carathay and the rain-drenched winters of Eumarna. Caraskand
sprawled across nine hills in her heart. Her great curtain walls had been
raised by Triamis I, the greatest of the Ceneian Aspect-Emperors. The vast
markets had been cleared by Emperor Boksarias when Caraskand had been one of
the wealthiest governorates in the Ceneian Empire. The hazy towers and vast
barracks of the Citadel of the Dog, which could be seen from any of the city’s
nine heights, had been raised by the warlike Xatantius, Emperor of Nansur,
who’d used Caraskand as his proxy capital for his endless wars against
Nilnamesh. And the white-marble magnificence of the Sapatishah’s Palace, which
made an acropolis of the Kneeling Heights, had been raised by Pherokar I, the fiercest
and most pious of Kian’s early Padirajahs. Although tributary,
Caraskand was a great city in the way of Momemn, Nenciphon, or even Carythusal.
And though she’d been the prize of innumerable wars, she was proud. Proud cities do not
yield. Despite the proclamations
of the Padirajah, the Holy War had somehow survived Khemema. The Men of the
Tusk were no longer a terrifying rumour from the north. Their approach could be
measured by Enathpaneah the plumes of smoke that
marred the northern horizon. Refugees crowded the gates, speaking of butchery
at the hands of inhuman men. The Holy War, they said, was the wrath of the
Solitary God, who’d sent the idolaters to punish them for their iniquities. Panic seized Caraskand,
and not even the reassurances of their glorious Sapatishah-Governor, Imbeyan
the All-Conquering, could calm the city. Hadn’t Imbeyan fled like a beaten dog
from Anwurat? Hadn’t the idolaters killed three-quarters of the Grandees of
Enathpaneah? Strange names were traded in the streets. Saubon, the blond beast
of barbaric Galeoth, who could loosen men’s bowels with a look. Conphas, the
great tactician who had crushed even the Scylvendi with genius in arms.
Athjeari, more wolf than man, who ranged the hillsides and plundered all of
hope. The Scarlet Spires, the obscene sorcerers from whom even the Cishaurim
fled. And Kellhus, the Demon who walked among them as a False Prophet, inciting
them to mad and diabolical acts. These names were repeated often, and
carefully, as are all sounds of doom, like the gongs that marked the evening
executions. But there was no talk of
submission in the streets and bazaars of Caraskand. Very few fled. A silent
consensus had grown among them: the idolaters must be resisted, that was the
Solitary God’s will. One didn’t flee God’s wrath, no more than a child fled the
raised hand of his father. To be punished was the
lot of the faithful. They crowded the
interiors of their grand tabernacles. They wept and prayed, for themselves, for
their possessions, for their city. The Holy War was coming… Late Autumn, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, lothiah They’d left him in the
chapel for some time, hanging from the chains, slowly suffocating. The tripods
had grown dim, reduced to beds of glowering coals, so that the surrounding
darkness was shaped by lines and faint surfaces of orange stone. Achamian
wasn’t aware that Iyokus had joined him until the chanv addict spoke. “You’re curious, no
doubt, to know how the Holy War fares.” Achamian didn’t move his
head from his chest. lo Ihe Ihird March “Curious?” he croaked. The linen-skinned
sorcerer was little more than a voice in his periphery. “The Padirajah, it seems,
is a very cunning man. Rather than simply assume victory, he’d made plans
beyond the Battle of Anwurat. This is the sign of intellect, you know. The
ability to plan against your hopes. He knew the Holy War
must cross the wastes of Khemema to continue its march on Shimeh.” A small cough. “Yes… I know.” “Well, there was some
question, back when the Holy War besieged Hinnereth, as to why the Padirajah
refused to give battle at sea. The Kianene fleet scarce rules the Meneanor, but
it’s far from impotent. The question was raised again when we took Shigek, then
forgotten. Everyone assumed Kascamandri thought his fleet overmatched—and why
not? For all Kian’s victories against the Empire over the centuries, very few
have been at sea… It turns out everyone assumed wrong.” “What do you mean?” “The Holy War decided to
march across Khemema using the Imperial Fleet to bear their water. It now
appears the Padirajah had anticipated this. Once the Holy War had marched far
enough into the desert that it couldn’t turn back, the Kianene fleet fell upon
the Nansur…” Iyokus grinned with
sardonic bitterness. “They used the
Cishaurim.” Achamian blinked, saw
red-sailed ships burning in the mad lights of the Psukhe. A sudden flare of
concern—he was beyond fear now—bid him raise his head and stare at the Scarlet
Schoolman. The man seemed a ghost against shimmering white silks. “The Holy War?” Achamian
croaked. “Nearly destroyed.
Innumerable dead lie across the sands of Khemema.” Esmenet? He hadn’t thought her name for a long while. In the
beginning, it had been a refuge for him, reprieve in the sweet sound of a name,
but once they brought Xinemus to their sessions, once they started using his
love as an instrument of torment, he’d stopped thinking of her. He’d withdrawn
from all love… Enathpaneah To things more profound. “It seems,” Iyokus
continued, “that my brother Schoolmen ha suffered grievously as well. Our
mission here has been recalled.” Achamian stared down at
him, unaware that tears had wet his swoll cheeks. Iyokus watched him carefully,
standing just beyond the edge the accursed Uroborian Circle. “What does that mean?”
Achamian rasped. Esmenet? M31 love… “It means your torment is at an end…” Hesitant
pause. “I would hs you know, Drusas Achamian, that I was against seizing you.
I’ve presic over the interrogation of Mandate Schoolmen before, and know them
be both tedious and futile… And distasteful… most distasteful.” Achamian
stared, said nothing, felt nothing. “You know,” Iyokus continued, “I wasn’t
surprised when the Marsha Attrempus corroborated your version of the events
beneath 1 Andiamine Heights. You truly believe that the Emperor’s adviser, Skes
was a Consult spy, don’t you?” Achamian swallowed
painfully. “I know he was. And someday soon will you.” “Perhaps. Perhaps… But
for now, my Grandmaster has decided th spies must be Cishaurim. One cannot
substitute legends for whai known.” “You substitute what you
fear for what you don’t know, Iyokus.” Iyokus regarded him narrowly, as though
surprised that one so helpl so degraded, could still say fierce things.
“Perhaps. But regardless, our ti together is at an end. Even now we make
preparations to join brethren beyond Khemema…” Hanging like a sack from
the chains, his body numb from remembe agony, Achamian looked upon the sorcerer
as though from an immovE place, from some hold deep within the beaten ship of
his body. A pi not at sea. Iyokus had become
anxious. “I know our kind isn’t
given to… religious inclinations,” he said,‘ I thought I’d extend this one
courtesy at least. Within a matter of da^ slave will be sent down to the
cellars bearing a Trinket and a knife.’ Trinket will be for you, and the knife
for your friend… You have that 1 to prepare yourself for your journey.“ ZU Ihe Third March Such strange words for a
Scarlet Schoolman. For some reason, Achamian knew this wasn’t another sadistic
game. “Will you tell this to Xinemus as well?” The translucent face
turned to him sharply, but then unaccountably softened. “I suppose I will,”
Iyokus said. “He at least might be assured a place in the Afterlife…” The sorcerer turned, then
strode pale into the blackness. A distant door opened onto an illuminated
corridor, and Achamian glimpsed the profile of Iyokus’s face. For an instant,
he looked like any other man. Achamian thought of
swaying breasts, the kiss of skin to skin in lovemaking. Survive, sweet Esmi. Survive me. Late Autumn, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, Caraskand Flushed by their
atrocities, the southward-wandering Men of the Tusk gathered about the great
walls of Caraskand. In immense trains, they filed down from the heights and
found their fury tempered by towering fortifications. The ramparts scrawled
across the surrounding hills, immense sandstone belts the colour of copper,
rising and falling across the haze of distant slopes. Unlike the walls of
Shigek’s great cities, these, the Inrithi found, were defended. Standards were planted in
rocky soil. Client nobles, who’d been flung far afield by the suffering of the
desert, found their patron lords. Makeshift tents and pavilions were raised.
Shrial and Cultic priests gathered the faithful, and long dirges were raised
for those countless thousands claimed by the desert. The Councils of the Great
and Lesser Names were held, and after long rites of benediction for their
survival of Khemema, the investiture of Caraskand was planned. Nersei Proyas rode out to
meet with Imbeyan at the Ivory Gate, so named because its immense barbican was
constructed of white limestone rather than the reddish rock of Enathpaneah’s
quarries. Through an interpreter, the Conriyan Prince demanded the Sapatishah’s
surrender and made promises regarding the release of Imbeyan’s household and
the Enathpaneah lives of the city’s
inhabitants. Dressed in magnificent coats of blue and yellow, Imbeyan laughed
and said that what the desert had started, the stubborn walls of Caraskand
would see completed. Raised upon steep slopes
for the most part, Caraskand’s walls met level ground only along their
northeastern sections, where the hills yielded to several miles of alluvial
flatland, choked with field and grove and peppered with abandoned farms and
estates—the Tertae Plain. Here, the Inrithi built their largest camps and
prepared to storm the gates. Sappers began dredging
their tunnels. Teams of oxen and men were sent into the hills to fell timber
for siege engines. Outriders were dispatched to scout and plunder the
surrounding countryside. Blistered faces healed. Desert-gnawed limbs were
thickened with hard work and the hearty spoils of Enathpaneah. The Inrithi once
again began singing their songs. Priests led processions around the vast
circuit of Caraskand’s walls, brushing the ground before them with rushes and cursing
the stone of the fortifications. From the walls, the heathens would jeer and
cast missiles, but they were little heeded. For the first time in
months, the Inrithi saw clouds, real clouds, curling through the sky like milk
in water. At night, when the Inrithi
gathered about their fires, the tales of woe and redemption in Khemema were
gradually replaced by remarks of wonder at their survival and ceaseless
speculation about Shimeh. Caraskand was a name often
mentioned in The Tractate, enough that it seemed the great
gate to the Sacred Land. Blessed Amoteu, the country of the Latter Prophet, was
very near. “After Caraskand,” they
said, “we shall cleanse Shimeh.” Shimeh. In speaking this
holy name, the fervour of the Holy War was rekindled. Masses trekked into the
hillsides to hear the sermons of the Warrior-Prophet, who many believed had
delivered the Holy War from the desert. Thousands scarred their arms with tusks
and became his Zaudunyani. In the Councils of the Great and Lesser Names, the
lords of the Holy War listened to his counsel with trepidation. The Prince of
Atrithau had joined the Holy War impoverished, but he now commanded a
contingent as great as any. ml ihe Ihird March Then, as the Men of the
Tusk prepared their first assault against Caraskand’s turrets, the skies
darkened, and it began to rain. Three hundred Tydonni were killed in a flash
flood south of the city. Dozens more when a sapper’s tunnel collapsed. Dried
stream beds became torrents. It rained and rained, so that parched leather began
to rot and mail hauberks had to be continually rolled in barrels of gravel to
defeat the rust. In many places the earth became as soft and slick as rotten
pears, and when the Inrithi attempted to bring up their great siege towers they
found them immovable. The winter rains had
come. The first man to die of
the plague was a Kianene captive. Afterward his body was launched from a
catapult over the city’s walls—as would be those who followed. Late Autumn, 4111 Year-of’the-Tusk,
lothiah Mamaradda had decided he
would kill the sorcerer first. Though he wasn’t sure why, the Javreh Captain
found the idea of killing a sorcerer thrilling to the point of
arousal. That this might have anything to do with the fact that his masters
were also sorcerers never occurred to him. He entered the chapel
briskly, clenching and unclenching the Trinket his masters had given him. The
sorcerer hung like some huntsman’s prize at the far end of the chamber, his
battered form bathed in the orange glow of the three tripods flanking him. As
Mamaradda approached he noticed that the man swayed gently to and fro, as
though in some gentle draft. Then he heard the sound of scraping, high-pitched,
like iron against glass. He paused midway beneath
the airy vaults, instinctively peered at the floor beneath the sorcerer—at the
black-red calligraphy of the Uroborian Circle. He saw something small
crouched at the edge of the Circle… A cat? Scratching to bury piss? He
swallowed, squinted. The rapid scrape-scrape -scrape whined bright in his ears,
as though someone filed his teeth with a rusty knife. What? It was a tiny man, he realized. A tiny man bent over the Uroborian
Circle, scraping at the arcane paint… A doll? Enathpaneah Mamaradda hissed in
sudden terror, clutched for his knife. The scraping stopped. The
hanging sorcerer raised his bleary, bearded face, fixed Mamaradda with
glittering eyes. A heartbeat of abject horror. The Circle is broken! There was an impossible
muttering… Sunlight sparkled from
the sorcerer’s mouth and eyes. Impossible lights, curved
like Khirgwi blades, pranced like spider’s legs around him. Geysers of dust and
shards spat from the mosaic floor. The very air seemed to crack. Mamaradda raised his arms
and howled, was blinded by a flurry of unearthly incandescence. But then the lights were
gone, and he was untouched—unharmed… He remembered the Trinket
clenched fast in his fist. Mamaradda, Shield Captain of the Javreh, laughed. The tripods spilled, as
though kicked over by shadows. A shower of coals took Mamaradda in the face.
Several found his mouth, cracked his teeth with their heat. He dropped his
Trinket, screamed over the muttering… His heart exploded in his
chest. Fire boiled outward, flaring through his orifices and his fingernails.
Mamaradda fell, little more than wet skin about char. Vengeance roamed the
halls of the compound—like a God. And he sang his song with
a beast’s blind fury, parting wall from foundation, blowing ceiling into sky,
as though the works of man were things of sand. And when he found them, cowering beneath their Analogies, he sheared through
their Wards like a rapist through a cotton shift. He beat them with hammering
lights, held their shrieking bodies as though they were curious things, the
idiot thrashing of an insect between thumb and forefinger… Death came swirling down. He felt them scramble
through the corridors, desperate to organize some kind of concerted defence. He
knew that the sound of agony and blasted stone reminded them of their deeds.
Their horror would be the horror of the guilty. Glittering death had come to redress their
trespasses. Suspended over the
carpeted floors, encompassed by hissing Wards, he blasted his own ruined halls.
He encountered a cohort of Javreh. Their frantic bolts were winked into ash by
the play of lights before him. Then they were screaming, clawing at eyes that
had become burning coals. He strode past them, leaving only smeared meat and
charred bone. He encountered a dip in the fabric of the onta, and he knew that
more awaited his approach armed with the Tears of God. He brought the building
down upon them. And he laughed more mad
words, drunk with destruction. Fiery lights shivered across his defences and he
turned, seething with dark crackling humour, and spoke to the two Scarlet Magi
who assailed him, uttered intimate truths, fatal Abstractions, and the world
about them was wracked to the pith. He clawed away their
flimsy Anagogic defences, raised them from the ruin like shrieking dolls, and
dashed them against bone-breaking stone. Seswatha was free, and he
walked the ways of the present bearing tokens of ancient doom. He would show them the
Gnosis. When the first shiver
passed through the foundations, Iyokus thought, / should’ve known. His next thought,
unaccountably, was of Eleazaras. told him ill would come of this. For the completion of
their task, Eleazaras had left him only six Schoolmen, three of them sorcerers
of rank, and some two hundred and fifty Javreh. Worse yet, they were scattered
throughout the compound. Once he might have thought this would be more than
enough to manage a Mandate sorcerer, but after the fury of the Sareotic Library
he was no longer sure… Even had they been prepared. We’re doomed. Over the long years of
his life, the chanv had rendered his passions as colourless as his skin. What
he felt now was more the memory of a passion rather than the passion itself.
The memory of fear. But there was hope yet.
The Javreh possessed at least a dozen Trinkets, and moreover, he, Heramari Iyokus, was here. Enathpaneah Like his brethren, he
envied the Mandate the Gnosis, but unlike therr he did not hate. If anything,
Iyokus respected the Mandate. He under stood the pride of secret knowledge. Sorcery was nothing if
not a great labyrinth, and for a thousand year the Scarlet Spires had charted
it, delving, always delving, mining knowl edge both dread and disastrous. And
even though they’d yet to discove the glorious precincts of the Gnosis, there
were certain branches, certaь forks, which they alone had mapped. Iyokus was a scholar of these forbid den
forks, a student of the Daimos. A Daimotic sorcerer. In their darkest
conferences, they sometimes wondered: How woulc the War-Cants of the Ancient
North fare against the Daimos? The sound of screams
percolated through the halls. The wall thrummed with the reverberations of
nearing blasts. Iyokus, who was war and calculating even in circumstances as
dreadful as these, understooc the time had come to answer that question. He threw aside the
brilliant carpets and painted the circles across th< tiles with deft, practised
strokes. Light spilled from his colourless lips as h< muttered the Daimotic
Cants. And, as the tempest approached, he at las completed his interminable
song. He dared speak the Ciphrang’s name. “Ankaryotis! Heed me!” From the safety of his
circle of symbols, Iyokus gazed in wonder at th< sheeted lights of the
Outside. He looked upon a writhing abomination scales like knives, limbs like
iron pillars… “Does it hurt?” he asked
against the thunder of its wail. “‘ What hast thou done, mortal? Ankaryotis, a fury of the deep, a Ciphrang
summoned from the Abyss “I have bound you!” Thou art damned! Dost thou not recognize
he who shall keepeth thee fa Eternity? A demon… “Either way,” Iyokus
cried, “such is my fate!” The Javreh leapt like
flaming dancers, screaming, stumbling, thrashing across the lavish Kianene
carpets. ihe ihird March Battered, naked, Achamian
walked between them. “IYOKUS!” he thundered. Sheets of falling stucco
flashed into smoke against his Wards. “IYOKUS!” Dust shivered in the air. With words, he tore the
walls before him away. He walked over empty space, across a collapsed floor.
Masonry crashed from the ceilings. He peered through the billowing clouds of
powdered brick… And was engulfed in
brilliant dragon fire. He turned to the chanv
addict, laughed. Encircled by ghostly walls, the Master of Spies crouched on a
floating fragment of floor, his pale face working to his staccato song…
Vultures brighter than sunlight swept into Achamian’s defences. Shimmering lava
exploded from beneath, washed across his Wards. Lightning danced from the
room’s four dark corners… “YOU ARE OVERMATCHED,
IYOKUS!” He struck with a Cirroi
Loom, grasping the addict’s Wards with geometries of light. Then he was falling,
borne down by a raving demon, perched upon his Wards, hammering with great
nailed fists. With each blow he coughed
blood. He crashed into heaped
debris, struck with an Odaini Concussion Cant, throwing the Ciphrang backward
through shadowy ruin. He glanced up, searching for Iyokus. He glimpsed him
scrambling through a breach in the far wall. He sung a Weara Comb, and a
thousand lines of light flashed outward. The wall collapsed, riddled with
innumerable holes, as did the ceiling beyond. Incandescent threads fanned
across Iothiah and into the night sky. He pushed himself to his
feet. “IYOKUS!” Howling, the demon once
again leapt upon him, blazing with hellish light. Achamian charred its
crocodile hide, ribboned its otherworldly flesh, smote its elephantine skull
with ponderous cudgels of stone, and it bled fire from a hundred wounds. But
still it refused to fall. It howled obscen- Enathpaneah ities that cracked rock
and rifled the ground with chasms. More floors collapsed, and they grappled
through dark cellars made bright by flickering fury. Sorcerer and demon. Unholy Ciphrang, a
tormented soul thrust into the agony of the World, harnessed by words like a
lion by strings, yoked to the task that would see it freed. Achamian endured its
unearthly violence, heaped injury after injury upon its agony. And in the end it
grovelled beneath his song, cringed like a beaten animal, then faded into the
blackness… Achamian wandered naked
through the smoking ruins, a husk animated by numb purpose. He stumbled down
slopes of debris and wondered that he’d been the catastrophe that had wrought
this devastation. He saw the mutilated corpses of those he’d burned and broken.
He spat upon them in sudden memory of his hate. The night was cool and he
savoured the kiss of air across his skin. The stone bit his bare feet. He passed blankly into
the intact structures, like a ghost returning to where memories burn brightest.
It took some time, but at last he found Xinemus, chained, huddled in his own
excrement, and weeping as he clutched arms and knees over his nakedness. For a
while Achamian simply sat next to him… “I can’t see!” the
Marshal wailed. “Sweet Sejenus, I can’t see!” He groped for, then
seized, Achamian’s cheeks. “I’m so sorry, Akka. I’m
so sorry…” But the only words
Achamian could remember were those that killed. That damned. When they finally hobbled
from the ruined compound of the Scarlet Spires into the alleys of Iothiah, the
astonished onlookers—Shigeki, armed Kerathotics, and the few Inrithi who
garrisoned the city—gaped in both wonder and horror. But they dared not ask them
anything. Nor did they follow the two men as they shuffled into the darkness of
the city. HApTER Twenty Caraskand The vulgar think the God by analogy to
man and so worship Him in the form of the Gods. The learned think the God by
analogy to principles and so worship Him in the form of Love or Truth. But the
wise think the God not at all. They know that thought, which is finite, can
only do violence to the God, who is infinite. It is enough, they say, that the
God thinks them. —MEMGOWA, THE BOOK OF
DIVINE ACTS …for the sin of the idolater is not that
he worships stone, but that he worships one stone over others. —8:9:4 THE WITNESS OF FANE Early Winter, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk,
Caraskand Immense timber and hide
siege towers trundled toward Caraskand’s western walls, driven by vast teams of
mud-splattered oxen and exhausted men. Catapults hurled stone and flaming
pitch. Inrithi archers raked the parapets. From flanking towers and the streets
beyond the wall, heathens released soaring clouds of arrows. Throughout the
packed ranks of Inrithi, men cried out, rolled in the muck clutching wounded
limbs. The towers groaned nearer, their sides sheeted in flaming tar. The men
massed on their peaks hunched behind their shields, peered through smoke,
waiting for the signal. Caraskand A horn blared through the
din. The timber bridges
slammed onto the battlements. Iron-armo knights surged across, crying “Die or
conquer!” Swinging | broadswords, they leapt into the spears and scimitars of
the Kianene the ground below, thousands more rushed forward, raising Ј
iron-hooked ladders. Stones and corpses crashed down upon tl Blistering oil
sent men screaming from the rungs. But somehow, gained the summits, heaved
themselves between the battlements anc upon the Fanim. Pitched battles were
fought against woollen’s Faithful and heathen alike toppled from the heights. The Nangaels, the
Anpleians, and the dour Gesindalmen all man to seize sections of the wall. More
and more Inrithi spilled from the ; towers or clambered over the parapets, pausing
only to glance in wo at the great city exposed below. Some charged the nearest
tower. Ot were forced to crouch behind their teardrop shields as heathen bow
began scouring the heights from nearby rooftops. Shafts flashed overh buzzing
like dragonflies. Pots of burning pitch exploded among tl Men fell shrieking,
trailing streamers of smoke. One of the siege to erupted into an inferno. The
other smoked so intensely that dozer Nangaelish knights fell from the bridge,
urged to rush blind by tl choking behind. Then Imbeyan and his
Grandees charged from the towers. Men g pled,
hacked, and roared. Denied their siege towers
and exposed to a whistling barrag missiles from the city side of the wall, the
Inrithi began falling n quickly than the ladders could replace them. Within
moment: seemed, every man boasted a dozen arrows jutting from his shieL armour.
The knights striving against Imbeyan found themselves pre back through the
screams and corpses of their kinsmen. At last Iyengar, seeing the mortal
desperation in the eyes of his knig signalled the retreat. The survivors fell
back to the ladders. Very reached the ground alive. Twice more the Inrithi
stormed the walls of Caraskand over the foil ing weeks, and twice more the
ferocity and craft of the Kianene di them back with atrocious losses. The siege wore on through
the rains and pestilence. Within days of
identifying the sickness that caste-menials called “the hollows” and
caste-nobles “hemoplexy,” the physician-priests found themselves overwhelmed
with hundreds complaining of headaches and chills. When Hepma Scaralla, the
ranking High Priest of Akkeagni, Disease, informed the Great Names that the
rumours were true, that the dread God indeed groped among them with his
hemoplectic Hand, panic seized the Holy War. Even after Gotian threatened
deserters with Shrial Censure, hundreds fled into the Enathpanean hills, such
was the terror of hemoplexy. While the healthy warred
and died beneath Caraskand’s walls, thousands remained within their sodden,
makeshift tents, vomiting spittle, burning with fever, wracked by convulsive
chills. After a day or two, eyes would dull, and aside from bouts of delirious
ranting, men would be robbed of all spirit. After four or five days, skin would
discolour—welts raised by the God’s Hand, the physician-priests explained. The
fevers would peak after the first week, then rage for another, robbing even
iron-limbed men of all remaining strength. Either it broke, or the invalid fell
into a deathlike sleep from which very few ever awakened. Throughout the
encampments the physician-priests organized lazarets for those without retinues
or comrades to care for them. The surviving priestesses of Yatwer, Anagke,
Onkis, even Gierra, as well as other cultic servants of the Hundred Gods,
attended to pallet after pallet of prostrate sick. And no matter how much
aromatic wood they burned, the stench of death and bowel gagged passersby.
Nowhere, it seemed, could a man walk without hearing delirious shrieks or
smelling hemoplectic putrescence. The stench was such that many Men of the Tusk
took to walking through the encampment holding urine-soaked rags to their
faces—as was the Ainoni custom during times of pestilence. The plague intensified,
and Disease’s Hand spared no one, not even members of the blessed castes.
Cumor, Proyas, Chepheramunni, and Skaiyelt all succumbed within days of one
another. At times, it seemed the sick outnumbered the healthy. Shrial Priests
wandered through the wretched alleyways of the encampment, stumping through mud
from tent to tent, searching for the dead. The funeral pyres burned
continuously. In one grievous night three hundred Inrithi died, among them
Imrothus, the Conriyan Palatine of Aderot. Caraskand And the miserable rains
waxed on and on, rotting canvas, hemp, and hope. Then the Earl of Gaenri
returned, bearing news of doom. Ever impatient, Athjeari
had abandoned Caraskand in the early days of the siege, charging through
Enathpaneah with his Gaenrish knights and some thousand more Kurigalders and
Agmundrmen given to him by his uncle, Prince Saubon. He stormed the old Ceneian
fortress of Bokae on the western frontier of Enathpaneah, taking it with few
losses. Then he ranged southward, crushing those local Grandees who dared take
the field against him and raiding the northern frontiers of Eumarna, where his
knights were heartened to find good, green land. For a time he besieged
the immense fortress of Misarat, but withdrew once word came that Cinganjehoi
himself had set out to relieve the fortress. Athjeari struck northeast. He
evaded the Tiger in the cedar-wooded ravines of the Betmulla Mountains, then
descended into Xerash, where he met and routed the small army of Utgarangi, the
Sapatishah of Xerash. The Sapatishah proved a compliant captive, and in
exchange for five hundred horses and intelligence, Athjeari delivered him
unharmed to his ancient capital, Gerotha, the city reviled in The Tractate as the “harlot of Xerash.” Then he rode hard for
Caraskand. What he found dismayed
him. He recounted his journey
for those Great Names fit to attend Council, moving quickly to the intelligence
offered by Utgarangi. According to the Sapatishah, the Padirajah himself, the
great Kascamandri, marched from Nenciphon with the survivors of Anwurat, the
Grandees of Chianadyni—the homeland of the Kianene—and the warlike Girgash, the
Fanim of Nilnamesh. That night Prince
Skaiyelt died, and the Thunyeri filled the showering sky with their uncanny
dirges. The following day, word arrived that Cerjulla, the Tydonni Earl of
Warnute, had also fallen, encamped about the walls of nearby Joktha. Not long
after, Sepherathindor, the Ainoni Count-Palatine of Hinnant, stopped breathing.
And according to the physician-priests, Proyas and Chepheramunni would soon
follow… A great fear seized the
surviving leaders of the Holy War. Caraskand continued to rebuke them, Akkeagni
oppressed them with misery and death, and the Padirajah
himself marched upon them with yet another heathen host. They were far from home,
among hostile lands and wicked peoples, and the God had turned his face from
them. They were desperate. And for such men
questions of why, sooner or later always became questions of who… humid, The rain drummed down
across his pavilion, filling it with ambient roar. “So just what,” Ikurei
Conphas asked, “do you want, Knight-Commander?” He frowned. “Sarcellus is it?” Though Sarcellus often
accompanied Gotian at council, Conphas had never been introduced to him—not
formally. The man’s dark hair matted his scalp, bled rainwater across what in
childhood must have been a lovely and brattish face. The white surcoat over his
hauberk was improbably clean, so much so that he looked an anachronism, a
throwback to the days when the Holy War still camped beneath Momemn. Everyone
else, Conphas included, had been reduced to rags or plundered Kianene attire. The Shrial Knight nodded
without breaking eye contact. “Merely to speak about troubling things,
Exalt’General.” “I’m always keen for
troubling news, Knight-Commander, let me assure you.” Conphas grinned, adding,
“I’m something of a masochist, or have you noticed?” Sarcellus smiled
winsomely. “The Councils have made this fact exceedingly clear, Exalt-General.” Conphas had never trusted
Shrial Knights. Too much devotion. Too much renunciation… Self-sacrifice, he’d
always thought, was more madness than foolishness. He’d come to this
conclusion in his adolescence, after perceiving just how often—and how
happily—others injured or destroyed themselves in the name of faith or
sentiment. It was as though, he realized, everyone took instructions from a
voice he couldn’t hear—a voice from nowhere. They committed suicide when
dishonoured, sold themselves into slavery to feed their children. They acted as
though the world possessed fates Caraskand •worse than death or enslavement, as though they couldn’t
live with themselves if harm befell others… Wrack his intellect as he
might, Conphas could neither fathom the sense nor imagine the sensation. Of
course there was the God, the Scriptures, and all that rubbish. That voice he could understand. The threat of eternal
damnation could wring reason out of the most ludicrous sacrifice. That voice came from somewhere. But this other voice… Hearing voices made one
mad. One need only stroll through a local agora, listen to the hermits cry,
“What? What?” to confirm that fact. And for Shrial Knights, hearing voices made
one fanatic as well. “So what’s your trouble?”
Conphas asked. “This man they call the
Warrior-Prophet.” “Prince Kellhus,” Conphas
said. He leaned forward in his
camp chair, gestured for Sarcellus to take a seat. He could smell mustiness
beneath the aromatic steam of his pavilion’s censers. The rain had trailed, and
now merely drummed fingers across the canvas slopes above. “Yes… Prince Kellhus,”
Sarcellus said, squeezing water from his hair. “What about him?” “We know tha—” “We?” The Shrial Knight blinked
in irritation. Despite his pious appearance, there was, Conphas thought,
something about his bearing, some whiff of conceit perhaps, that belied the
gold-embroidered tusk across his breast… Perhaps he’d misjudged this Sarcellus. Perhaps he’s a man of reason. “Yes,” the man continued.
“Myself, and a handful of my brothers…” “But not Gotian?” Sarcellus grimaced in a
fashion that Conphas found most agreeable. “No, not Gotian… Not yet, anyway.” Conphas nodded. “By all
means, continue…” “We know you’ve tried to
assassinate Prince Kellhus.” The Exalt-General
snorted, at once amused and offended. The man was either exceedingly bold or
insufferably impertinent. “You know, do you; “We think …” Sarcellus amended. “Whatever… What’s important ihe Ihird March is that you realize we share your sentiment. Especially after the madness of
the desert…“ Conphas frowned. He knew
what the man meant: Prince Kellhus had walked from the Carathay commanding the
worship of thousands, and the wonder of everyone, it sometimes seemed, save
himself. But Conphas would’ve expected a Shrial Knight to argue signs and
omens, not power… The desert had been madness. At first Conphas had shambled through
the sands no different from the rest, cursing that damned fool Sassotian, whom
he’d installed as General of the Imperial Fleet, and pondering, endlessly
pondering, mad scenarios that would see him saved. Then, after he burned
through the hope that fuelled these ruminations, he found himself harassed by a
peculiar disbelief. For a while, the prospect of death seemed something he
merely indulged for decorum’s sake, like the fatuous assurances caste-merchants
heaped onto their wares. “Yes, yes, you will die! I guarantee!” Please, he thought. Who do you think 1 am? Then, with the shadowy
lassitude that characterized so much of that march, his doubt flipped into
certainty, and he felt an almost intellectual wonder—the wonder of finding the
conclusion to one’s life. There was no final page, he realized, no last cubit
to the scroll. The ink simply gave out, and all was blank and desert white. So here, he thought, looking across the wind-rippled dunes, lies mylife’s
destination. This is the place that has waited for me, waited since before I was
born … But then he’d found him, Prince Kellhus, scooping up water in that sandy pit—wading while he, Ikurei Conphas, died of thirst! Of all the
deranged possibilities he’d considered, none seemed quite as mad as this: saved
by the man he’d failed to kill. What could be more galling? More ludicrous? But at the time… At the
time, his heart had caught—it still fluttered at the memory!—and for an
instant, Conphas had wondered if Martemus had been right… Perhaps there was more to this man. This Warrior-Prophet. Indeed. The desert had
been madness. Conphas fixed the Shrial
Knight with an appraising stare. “But he saved the Holy War,” he said. “Your
life… My life…” Sarcellus nodded.
“Indeed, and that, I would say, is the problem.” “How so?” Conphas snapped, even though he
knew exactly what the man meant. The Knight-Commander
shrugged. “Before the desert, Prince Kellhus was simply another zealot with
some claim to the Sight. But now Especially now with the Dread God walking
among us…” He sighed and leaned forward, his hands folded together, his
forearms against his knees. “I fear for the Holy War, Exalt-General. We fear for the Holy War. Half of our brothers acclaim
this fraud as another Inri Sejenus, as our salvation, while the other half
decry him as an anathema, as the cause of our misery.” “Why are you telling me
this?” Conphas asked mildly. “Why are you here, Knight-Commander?” Sarcellus’s grin was
crooked. “Because there’ll be mass mutinies, riots, perhaps even open warfare…
We need someone with the skill and power to minimize or forestall such
eventualities, someone who yet commands the loyalty of his men. We need someone
who can preserve the Holy War.“ “After you’ve killed
Prince Kellhus…” Conphas said derisively. He shook his head, as though
disappointed by his own lack of surprise. “He camps with his followers now, and
they guard him as though he were the Tusk. They say that in the desert a
hundred of them surrendered their water—their lives—to him and his women. And
now another hundred have stepped forward as his bodyguard, each of them sworn
to die for the Warrior-Prophet. Not even the Emperor could claim such
protection! And still you think you can kill him.” A drowsy blink, which
made Conphas certain—absurdly—that Sarcellus had beautiful sisters. “Not think,
Exalt-General… Know.” Seme’s scream was like an
animal thing, as much a grunt as a wail Esmenet bent over her, combing her
fingers through the girl’s sweaty hair Rain pulsed across the bellied ceiling
of their makeshift pavilion, and her< and there a trickle of water glittered
in the gloom, slapping against plaitec mats. For Esmenet, it seemed they
crouched in the illuminated heart of; cave, littered by musty cloth and rotting
reeds. Caraskand The Kianene woman Kellhus
had summoned cooed to Serwe in a tongue only Kellhus seemed to understand.
Esmenet found the throaty sound of the woman’s voice soothing. They stood, she
realized, in a place where differences of language and faith no longer
mattered. Serwe was about to give birth. The midwife sat cross-legged
between Serwe’s opened knees, Esmenet knelt over her anguished face, and
Kellhus stood above them, his expression watchful, wise, and sad. Esmenet
looked to him, worried. All
will be as it should be, his eyes said. But his smile did not sweep her apprehension away. There’s more, she reminded herself. More than me. How long had it been since Achamian had left her?
Not that long, perhaps, but the desert lay between them. No walk, it seemed,
could be longer. The Carathay had ravished her, fumbling with knot and clasp,
thrusting leathery hands beneath her robe, running polished fingertips across
her breasts and thighs. It had stripped her past her skin, to the wood of her
bones. It had spilled and raked her across the sand, like seashells. It had
offered her up to Kellhus. At first she’d barely
noticed the desert. She’d been too drunk, too juvenile, with joy. When Kellhus
walked with her and Serwe, she’d laughed and talked much as she always had, but
it’d seemed a pretense somehow, a way to disguise the wondrous intimacies they
now shared. She’d forgotten what it’d been like in her adolescence, before
whoring had placed nakedness and coupling beyond the circle of private, secret
things. Making love to Kellhus—and Serwe—had taken what was once brazen and made
it demure. She felt hidden and she felt whole. When Kellhus walked with
his Zaudunyani, she and Serwe marched hand in hand, discussing everything and
anything so long as it returned to him. They giggled and blushed, used jokes to
plot pleasures. They confessed resentments and fears, knowing the bed they
shared brooked no deceit. They dreamed of palaces, of armies of slaves. Like
little boys, they boasted of kings kissing the earth beneath their feet. But in all that time, she
hadn’t so much walked through as around the Carathay. Dunes, like the
tangle of tanned harem bodies. Plains hissing with sunlight. The desert had
seemed little more than a fitting ground for her love and the nearing
ascendancy of the Warrior-Prophet. Only when the water began to fail, when they
massacred the slaves and the camp-followers… Only then did she truly cross the
Great Thirst. The past crumbled, and
the future evaporated. Her every heartbeat belonged, it seemed, to a different
heart. She could remember the accumulating signs of death, wasting, as though
her body were a candle notched with the watches—a light to read by. She could
remember wondering at Serwe, who’d become a stranger in Kellhus’s arms. She
could remember wondering at the stranger who walked with her own limbs. Nothing branched in the
Carathay. Everything roamed without root or source. The death of trees: this,
she had thought, was the secret of the desert. Then Kellhus asked her to
surrender her water. Serwe.
She’ll lose the baby… His clear eyes reminded
her of who she was: Esmenet. She drew up her waterskin and extended it with
unwavering hands. She watched him pour her muddy life into a stranger’s mouth.
And when the last of it trailed like spittle, she understood—she apprehended—and with a brilliance no less ruthless than the sun. There’s more than me. Kellhus tossed her
waterskin into the dust. You are the first, his eyes said, and his look was
like water—like life. Her feet scalded by gravel. Her hair feathered by dust.
Her lips cracked by the sun. Every breath like burning wool in her throat and
chest. And then, impossibly, they came to good, green earth. To Enathpaneah.
They stumbled into a rivered valley, into the shade of strange willows. While
Serwe dozed he undressed Esmenet, carried her into the transparent waters. He
bathed her, washed the velvet dust from her skin. You are my wife, he said. You, Esmi… She blinked, and the sun
glittered through her water-beaded lashes. We crossed the desert, he said. And I, she thought, am your wife. He laughed, pawed at her
face as though embarrassed, and she caught and kissed his sun-haloed palm… The
waters that trailed from the flaxen ringlets of his hair and beard had been
brown—the colour of dried blood. J8 Ihe Third March Kellhus built a shelter
of stone and branches for Serwe. He snared rabbits, rooted for tubers, and made
fire by spinning sticks into sticks. For a time, it seemed they alone survived,
that all mankind and not just the Holy War had perished. They alone spoke. They
alone gazed and understood that they gazed. They alone loved,
across all lands and all waters, to the world’s very pale. It seemed all
passion, all knowing, was here, ringing in one penultimate note. There was no
way to explain or to fathom the sensation. It wasn’t like a flower. It wasn’t like
a child’s careless laugh. They had become the
measure… Absolute. Unconditioned. When they made love in
the river, it seemed they sanctified the sea. You, Esmenet, are my wife. Burning, submerged in
clear waters—in each other… The anchoring ache. The desert had changed
everything. “Kellhuuus!” Serwe panted
between contractions. “Kellhus, I’m afraid!” She groaned and cried out.
“Something’s wrong! Something’s wrong!” Kellhus exchanged several
words with the Kianene matron, who rinsed Serwe’s inner thighs with steaming
water, nodded and grinned. He glanced at Esmenet, then knelt beside the
prostrate girl, cupped her shining cheek. She seized his hand and pressed her
gasping mouth against it, her blond brows knitted in panic, her look desperate,
beseeching. “Kelluuussss!” “Everything,” he said,
his eyes bright with wonder, “is as it should be, Serwe.” “You,” the girl
exclaimed, gulping air. “You!” He nodded, as though
hearing far more than one enigmatic word. Smiling, he wiped tears from her
cheek with the flat of his thumb. “Me,” he whispered. For a heartbeat, Esmenet
glimpsed herself as though from afar. How could she not catch her breath? She
knelt with him, the Warrior-Prophet, over the
woman giving birth to his first child… The world had its habits.
Sometimes events would pinch, tickle, or caress—occasionally they would
batter—but somehow they always funnelled into the monotony of the
half-expected. So many dim (Jaraskand happenings! So many
moments that shed no light, that marked no turn, that signalled nothing at all,
save elemental loss. For her entire life, Esmenet had felt like a child being
led by the hand of a stranger, passing through this crowd and that, heading
somewhere she knew she shouldn’t go, but fearing too much to ask or to fight. Where are you taking me? She had never dared ask
this, not because she feared the answer, but because she feared what the answer
would make of her life. Nowhere.
Nowhere good. But now, after the
desert, after the waters of Enathpaneah, she knew the answer. Every man she’d
bedded, she had bedded for him. Every sin she’d committed, she had committed
for him. Every bowl she’d chipped. Every heart she’d bruised. Even Mimara. Even
Achamian. Without knowing, Esmenet had
lived her entire life for him—for Anasurimbor Kellhus. Grief for his compassion.
Delusion for his revelation. Sin so he might forgive. Degradation so he might
raise her high. He was the origin. He was the destination. He was the from where and the to which,
and he was here! Here! It was mad, it was
impossible, it was true. When she reflected on it,
Esmenet could only laugh in joyous wonder. How distant the holy had always
seemed, like the faces of kings and emperors on the coins she’d so coveted.
Before Kellhus, all she knew of the holy was that it somehow always found her
at the pitch of her misery and humiliation. Like her father, it came in the
small hours of the night, whispering threats, demanding submission, promising
brevity, solace, and providing only interminable horror and shame. How could she not hate
it? How could she not fear it? She’d been a whore in Sumna, and being a whore in a holy city was no mean thing.
Some of the others jokingly referred to themselves as “cutpurses at the gates
to Heaven.” They traded endless, mocking stories about the pilgrims who so
frequently wept in their arms. “All that work to see the Tusk,” old Pirasha had
once quipped, “and they end up showing it instead!” And Esmenet had laughed
with them, even though she knew those pilgrims wept because they’d failed,
because they’d sacrificed crops, savings, and the company
of loved ones to come to Sumna. No low-caste man was so foolish as to aspire to wealth or joy—the world was far too capricious.
Only redemption, only holiness, lay within their grasp. And there she was
swinging her knees in her window, like one of those mad lepers who, for no more
reason than spite, threw themselves upon the unafflicted. How distant that woman
now seemed—that whore. How near the Holy… Serwe wailed and
shrieked, her body cramped about the agony of her womb. The Kianene woman cried
out encouragement, grimaced and smiled. Serwe threw her head back into
Esmenet’s knees, puffing air, staring with crazed eyes, screaming. Esmenet
watched, breathless, her limbs numbed by wonder, her thoughts troubled that something
so miraculous could fit so seamlessly into the moment-to-moment banality of
life. “Heba serrisa!” the Kianene woman cried. “Heba serrisa!” The babe sucked its first
breath, gave voice to its first, wailing prayer. Esmenet stared at the
newborn, realizing it was the spoils of her surren-j dered water. She had
suffered so that Serwe might drink, and now there was this squalling babe, this
son of the Warrior-Prophet. There had been branches
after all… Crying, she looked down
at Serwe. “A son, Serchaa. You have a son! And he isn’t blue!” Biting her lip, Serwe
smiled, sobbed and laughed. They shared a wise and joyous look no man save
Kellhus could understand. Laughing aloud, he lifted
the screeching babe from the midwife’s arms, peered at it searchingly. It
quieted, and for a moment seemed to study Kellhus in turn, dumbfounded as only
an infant can be. He raised it beneath a glittering thread of water, rinsed the
blood and mucus from its face. When it began squalling once again, he cried out
in mock surprise, turned to Serwe with tender eyes. For an instant, just an
instant, Esmenet thought she’d heard the voice of someone hated. He lowered the child and
delivered it to Serwe, who cradled it and continued to cry. A sudden grief
overcame Esmenet, the rebuke of Caraskand another’s joy. Keeping
her face lowered, she stood, then wordlessly rushed out of the pavilion. Outside, the men of the
Hundred Pillars, Kellhus’s sacred bodyguard, stared in iron-eyed alarm, but
made no move to stop her. Even still, she wandered only a short distance among
the ad hoc shelters, knowing that some fretting adherent would harass her
otherwise. The Zaudunyani, the faithful, maintained an armed perimeter about
the encampment at all times—as much to guard against their fellow Men of the
Tusk, Kellhus had admitted, as against heathen sorties. Another thing the desert
had changed… The rain had stopped, and
the air was cool and hard with dripping things. The clouds had parted and she
could see the Nail of Heaven, like a glittering navel revealed by raised
woollen robes. If she lifted her face and stared only at the Nail, she knew she
could imagine herself anyplace: Sumna, Shigek, the desert, or even in one of
Achamian’s sorcerous Dreams. The Nail of Heaven was the one thing, she thought,
that cared nothing for where or when. Two men—Galeoth by the
look of them—trudged toward her through darkness and muck. “Truth shines,” one
of them, his face still puckered from what had to be bad desert burns, muttered
as they neared. Then they recognized her… “Truth shines,” Esmenet
replied, lowering her face. She avoided their
flustered looks as they passed. “Lady…” one of them whispered, as
though choked by wonder. More and more they acted shamefaced and servile in her
presence, as though she herself were becoming more and more. Though it made her
uncomfortable, their obeisance also thrilled her. And with the passing of the
days, it seemed to embarrass her less and please her more. It was no dream. Notes rasped from the
dark horizon. Somewhere, she knew, the Shrial Priests blew their prayer horns,
and the orthodox Inrithi knelt before their makeshift shrines. For a moment the
sound reminded her of Serwe’s cries, heard from afar. Her grief tumbled into
regret. Why couldn’t she give this moment of joy to Serwe, when in the desert
she’d willingly given her her water, when she’d very nearly given her her life?
Was it jealousy she felt? No. Jealousy pursed one’s lips into a bitter line.
She hadn’t felt bitter… ^“ti ihe Ihird March Had she? Kellhus is right… We know not what moves
us. There was
more, always more. The mud felt cool beneath
her toes—so different from furnace sands. Cries from a nearby tent
startled her. It was someone suffering the hollows, she realized. Even as she
backed away, she battled the urge to see who it might be, to offer comfort. “Pleeassse…” a thin voice
gasped. “I need… I need…” “I cannot,” she said,
staring in horror at the shadowy, leather and branch hut housing the voice.
Kellhus had cloistered the sick, allowing only the survivors of earlier
outbreaks to attend those still ailing. The Dread God, he said, communicated
the disease through lice. “I roll about in my own
excrement!” “I can’t…” “How?” the wretched voice
asked. “How?” “Please,” Esmenet softly
cried. “You must understand. It’s forbidden.” “He can’t hear you…” Kellhus. Hearing his
voice seemed an inevitable thing. She felt his arms encompass her, his silky
beard comb across her bare neck. These didn’t seem inevitable; they almost
surprised… “They hear only their own
suffering,” he explained. “Like me,” Esmenet
replied, suddenly overcome with remorse. Why had she run? “You must be strong,
Esmenet.” “Sometimes I feel strong.
Sometimes I feel new, but then…” “You are new. My Father has remade all of us. But your past
remains your past, Esmenet. Who you once were, remains who you once were.
Forgiveness between strangers takes time.” How could he do this? How
could he so effortlessly speak her heart? But she knew the answer
to that question—or so she thought. Men, Kellhus had once told
her, were like coins: they had two sides. Where one side of them saw, the other side of them was seen, and though all men were both at once, men could only
truly know the side of themselves that saw and the side of others that was
seen—they could only truly know the inner half of themselves and the outer half
of others. Caraskand At first Esmenet thought
this foolish. Was not the inner half the whole, what was only imperfectly apprehended by others? But
Kellhus bid her to think of everything she’d witnessed in others. How many
unwitting mistakes? How many flaws of character? Conceits couched in passing
remarks. Fears posed as judgements… The shortcomings of
men—their limits—were written in the eyes of those who watched them. And this
was why everyone seemed so desperate to secure the good opinion of others—why
everyone played the mummer. They knew without knowing that what they saw of
themselves was only half of who they were. And they were desperate to be whole. The measure of wisdom,
Kellhus had said, was found in the distance between these two selves. Only afterward had she
thought of Kellhus in these terms. With a kind of
surpriseless shock, she realized that not once—not once!—had she glimpsed
shortcomings in his words or actions. And this, she understood, was why he
seemed limitless, like the ground, which extended from the small circle about
her feet to the great circle about the sky. He had become her horizon. For Kellhus, there was no
distance between seeing and being seen. He alone was whole. And what was more,
he somehow stood from without and saw from within. He made whole… She bent her head back
and gazed up into his eyes. You’re here, aren’t you? You’re with me…
inside. “Yes,” Kellhus said, and
it seemed a god looked upon her. She blinked two wondrous
tears. I am your wife! Your wife! “And you must be strong,”
he said over the piteous voice of the invalid. “The God purges the Holy War,
purifies us for the march on Shimeh.” “But you said we needn’t
fear the disease.” “Not the disease—the
Great Names. Many of them are beginning to fear me… Some think the God punishes
the Holy War because of me. Others fear for their power and privilege.” Did he fear an attack, a
war within the Holy War? “Then you must speak to
them, Kellhus. You must make them see!” He shook his head. “Men
praise what flatters and mock what rebukes— you know that. Before, when it was
just the slaves and the men-at-arms, Caraskand they could afford to
overlook me. But now that their most trusted advisers and clients take the
Whelming, they’re beginning to understand the truth of their power, and with
it, their vulnerability.“ He holds me! This man holds me! “And what’s that?” “Belief.” Esmenet looked hard into
his eyes. “You and Serwe,” he
continued, “aren’t to travel unaccompanied under any circumstances. They would
use you against me if they could…” “Have things become so
desperate ?” “Not yet. But they could
very soon. So long as Caraskand continues to resist us…” Sudden, bottomless
horror. In her soul’s eye she glimpsed assassins dispatched in the black of
night, gold-adorned conspirators scowling by candlelight. “They’ll try to kill
you?” “Yes.” “Then you must kill
them!” The thoughtless ferocity
of these words shocked her. But she didn’t repent them. Kellhus laughed. “To say
such things on such a night!” he chided. Her earlier remorse came rushing back.
Serwe had given birth tonight! Kellhus had a son! And all she could do was
wallow in her own lacks and losses. Why did you leave me, Akka? An aching sob welled
through her. “Kellhus,” she murmured. “Kellhus, I feel so ashamed! I envied
her! I so envied her!” He chuckled and nuzzled her scalp. “You, Esmenet, are the
lens through which I’ll burn. You… You’re the womb of tribes and
nations, the begetting fire. You’re immortality, hope, and history. You’re more
than myth, more than scripture. You’re the mother of these things! You,
Esmenet, are the mother of more…” Breathing deep the dark,
rainy world, she clutched his arms tight against her. She’d known this, ever
since the earliest days of the desert, she’d known this. It was why she’d cast
her whore’s shell, the contraceptive charm the witches sell, across the sands. You are the begetting fire… No more would she turn aside
seed from her womb. Early Winter, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, the Meneanor coast, near lothiah TELL ME … A towering whirlwind,
joining armed earth to hoary heavens, belching dust and Sranc into the
skies. WHAT DO YOU SEE? Achamian awoke without
crying out. He lay still, searching for his breath. He blinked tears, but he did
not weep. Sunlight shone through his fretted window, illuminating the banded
crimson carpet in the room’s heart. He nestled deep into the warm sockets of
his sheets, wondering at the peace of his mornings. The luxury alone seemed
impossible. Somehow, after the destruction of the Scarlet Spires compound in
lothiah, he and Xinemus had found themselves honoured guests of Baron Shanipal,
the representative Proyas had left behind in Shigek. Apparently one of the
Baron’s client knights had found them wandering naked through the city.
Recognizing Xinemus, he’d delivered them to Shanipal, who’d brought them here—a
luxurious Kianene villa on the Meneanor coast—to convalesce. For weeks now, they’d
enjoyed the Baron’s protection and hospitality, long enough to forget their
wonder at having escaped and to begin obsessing over their losses. Survival,
Achamian was fast learning, was itself something to be survived. He coughed and kicked his
feet free of his covers. His Shigeki attendant, one of two slaves Baron
Shanipal had assigned him, appeared from behind a floral-brocaded partition.
The Baron, who was one of those odd men whose graciousness or viciousness
depended on how convincingly one catered to his eccentricities, had determined
they must live like the dead Grandees who once owned this villa. Apparently,
the Kianene slept with slaves in their rooms—like the Norsirai with their dogs. After bathing and
dressing, Achamian prowled the halls of the villa, searching for Xinemus, who
obviously hadn’t returned to his room the previous night. The Kianene had left
enough behind—mahogany-veneered furniture, soft-brushed rugs, and cerulean wall
hangings—that Achamian could almost believe he was the guest of a true Fanim
Grandee instead of an Inrithi Baron who happened to dress and live like one. ihiku MARCH He found himself cursing
the Marshal as he searched the rooms. The healthy always begrudged the sick:
being shackled by another’s incapacities was no easy thing. But the resentment
Achamian suffered was curiously ingrown, almost labyrinthine in its complexity.
With Xinemus, every day seemed more difficult than the last. In so many ways, the
Marshal was his oldest and truest friend—this alone made Achamian responsible.
The fact the man had sacrificed what he’d sacrificed, suffered what he’d
suffered, to save Achamian simply compounded this
responsibility. But Xinemus still suffered. Despite the sunlight, despite the
silk and submissive slaves, he still screamed in those basements, he still
betrayed secrets, he still cracked teeth in anguish… Every day it seemed, he
lost his eyes anew. And because of this, he didn’t simply hold Achamian
accountable, he accused… “Look at the wages of my
devotion!” he’d once shouted. “Do the sockets weep, for my cheek feels dry. Do
the lids wither, eh, Akka? Describe them to me, for I can no longer see!” “No one asked you to save
me!” Achamian had cried. How long must he repay unwanted favours? “No one asked
you for your folly!” “Esmi,” Xinemus had
replied. “Esmi asked.” No matter how hard
Achamian tried to forgive these tantrums, their poison struck deep. He often
found himself mulling the limits of his responsibility, as though they were a
matter for debate. What exactly did he owe? Sometimes he told himself that
Xinemus, the true Xinemus, had died, and that this blind tyrant was no more
than a stranger. Let him beg with the others in the gutter! Other times he
convinced himself that Xinemus needed to be abandoned, if only to scrub
him of his cursed caste-noble pride. “You hold fast what you
must relinquish,” he once told the Marshal, “and you relinquish what you must
hold fast… This cannot go on, Zin. You must remember who you are!” And yet Xinemus wasn’t
alone. Achamian had changed also— irrevocably. Not once had he wept for
his friend. He, the weeper… Nor had he cried out upon awakening from the
Dreams—not since escaping. For some reason, he just did not feel… capable. He
could remember the Caraskand sensations, the roaring
ears, the burning eyes and panged throat, but they seemed rootless, abstract,
like something read rather than known. What was strange was that
Xinemus seemed to need his tears, as though worse than
the torments, worse than blindness even, was the fact that he, and not Achamian, had become the weak one. Stranger
still, the more Xinemus seemed to need his tears, the farther they slipped from
Achamian’s grasp. Often it seemed they wrestled when they spoke, as though
Xinemus were the failing father who continually shamed himself by trying to
assert ascendency over his son. “I’m the strong one!”
he’d once bawled in a drunken stupor. “Me!” Watching, Achamian could muster no
more than breathless pity. He could mourn, he could feel, but he couldn’t weep
for his friend. Did this mean he too had been gouged of something essential? Or
had he recovered something? He felt neither strong nor decisive, and yet he
somehow knew he’d become these things. “Torment teaches,” the poet Protathis
wrote, “what love has forgotten.” Had this been the gift of the Scarlet Spires?
Had they burned some lesson into him? Or had they simply beaten him numb? Whatever the answer, he
would see them burn—especially Iyokus. He would show them the wages of his
newfound certainty. Perhaps that had been their gift. Hatred. After querying several
slaves, he found Xinemus drinking alone on one of the terraces overlooking the
sea. The morning sun promised hot skin in cool air—a sensation Achamian had
always found heartening. The crash of breakers and the smell of brine tickled
him with memories of his youth. The Meneanor swept out to the horizon, the
turquoise of the shallows dropping into bottomless blue. Drawing a deep breath, he
approached the Marshal, who reclined with a bowl in his hands, his feet kicked
upon the glazed brick railing. The previous night Shanipal had offered to pay
their way by ship to Joktha, the port city of Caraskand. Achamian intended—no, needed—to leave as soon as possible, but he couldn’t do so
without Xinemus. For some reason, he knew Xinemus would die if he left him
behind. Grief and bitterness had killed greater men. He paused, mustering his
arguments, steeling his nerves… Without warning, Xinemus exclaimed, “All this
dark!” He was drunk, Achamian
realized, noticing the pale red stains across the breast of his white linen
tunic. Dead drunk. Achamian opened his
mouth, but no words came. What could he say? That Proyas needed him? Proyas had
stripped him of his land and titles. That the Holy War needed him? He would
only be a burden—he knew that… Shimeh! He came to see — Xinemus pulled his feet
down, leaned forward in his chair. “Where do you lead, eh,
Dark? What do you mean?” Achamian stared at his
friend, studied the planes of sunlight across his bearded profile. As always,
he caught his breath at the sight of his empty eye sockets. It was as though
Xinemus would forever have knives jutting from his eyes. The Marshal pressed a
palm outward to the sun, as though reassuring himself of some fact of distance.
“Eh, Dark? Were you always like this? Were you always here?” Achamian looked down,
stricken with remorse. Say
something! But the words would not
come. What was he to say? That he had no choice but to find Esmenet? Then go! Go find
your whore! Just leave me be! Xinemus cackled,
stumbling as drunks often do from one passion to another. “Do I sound bitter, Dark?
Oh, I know you’re not so bad. You spare me the indignity of Akka’s face! And
when I piss, I need not convince myself my hands are big! To think…” At first, Achamian had
been desperate for news regarding the Holy War, so much so he could scarcely
grieve for Xinemus and his loss. For the entirety of his torment, Esmenet had
seemed unthinkable, as though some part of him had understood the vulnerability
she represented. But from the moment he recovered his senses, he could think of
no one else—save perhaps Kellhus. What he would give to hold her in his arms,
to smother her with laughter, tears, and kisses! What joy he would find in her
joy, in her weeping disbelief! He could see it all so
clearly… How it would be. “I just want to know,”
Xinemus cried in a drunk’s cajoling manner, “who
you fucking are!” Caraskand Though at first he had
only cause to fear the worst, Achamian knew she lived. According to the rumours, the Holy War had
almost perished crossing Khemema. But according to Xinemus, she travelled with Kellhus, and he could imagine no place safer. Kellhus couldn’t die, could he? He was the Harbinger, sent to save humanity from the Second Apocalypse. Yet another certainty
born of his torment. “You feel like wind!”
Xinemus cried, his voice growing more shrill. “You smell like sea!” Kellhus would save the
world. And he, Drusas Achamian, would be his counsellor, his guide. “Open your eyes, Zin!”
the Marshal cried, his voice cracking. Achamian glimpsed spittle flash in the
sunlight. “Open your fucking
eyes!” A powerful breaker exploded across the black rocks
below. Salty mist hazed the air. Xinemus dropped his wine
bowl, slapped madly at the sky, crying, -“Huhh! Huhh!” Achamian dashed forward
two steps. Paused. “Every sound,” the
Marshal gasped. “Every sound makes me cringe! Never have I suffered such fear!
Never have I suffered such fear! Please, God… Please!” “Zin,” Achamian
whispered. “I’ve been good! So
good!” “Zin!” The Marshal fell
absolutely still. “Akka?” His arms fell
inward, and he clutched at himself, as though trying to squeeze into the
darkness only he could see. “Akka, no! No!” Without thinking,
Achamian hastened to him, embraced him. “You’re the cause of
this!” Xinemus screeched into his chest. “This isyour
doing!” Achamian held tight his
sobbing friend. The broadness of Xinemus’s shoulders surprised his outstretched
arms. “We need to leave,” he
murmured. “We must find the others.” “I know,” the Marshal of
Attrempus gasped. “We must find Kellhus!” Achamian lowered his jaw
against his friend’s scalp. He wondered that his cheeks were dry. “Yes… Kellhus.” The Third March Early Winter, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, near Caraskand The hub of the abandoned
estate had been built by the ancient Ceneians. On his first visit, Conphas had
amused himself by touring the structures according to their historical
provenance, finishing with the small marble tabernacle some Kianene Grandee had
raised generations past. He despised not knowing the layout of the buildings
that housed him. It was a general’s habit, he supposed, to think of all places
as battlefields. The Inrithi caste-nobles
began arriving in the afternoon, troops of mounted men cloaked against the
interminable drizzle. Standing with Martemus in the gloom of a covered veranda,
Conphas watched them hasten across the courtyard. They’d changed so much, it
seemed, since that afternoon in his uncle’s Privy Garden. If he closed his eyes
he could still see them, scattered among the ornamental cypresses and
tamarisks, their faces hopeful and unguarded, their manner arrogant and
theatrical, their finery reflecting the peculiarities of their respective
nations. Looking back, everything about them seemed so… untested. And now, after months of war, desert, and disease,
they looked grim and hard, like those infantrymen in the Columns who
continually renewed their terms—the flint-hearted veterans that recruits
admired and young officers mortally feared. They seemed a separate people, a
new race, as though the differences that distinguished Conriyans from Galeoth,
Ainoni from Tydonni, had been hammered out of them, like impurities from steel. And of course they all
rode Kianene horses, all wore Kianene clothes… One must not overlook the
superficial; it ran too deep. Conphas glanced at
Martemus. “They look more heathen than the heathen.” “The desert made the
Kianene,” the General said, shrugging, “and it has remade us.” Conphas regarded the man
thoughtfully, troubled for some reason. “No doubt you’re right.” Martemus fixed him with a
bland stare. “Will you tell me what this is about? Why summon the Great and
Lesser Names secretly?” The Exalt’General turned
to the black, rain-curtained hills of Enathpaneah. “To save the Holy War, of
course.” Caraskand 4M “I thought we cared only
for the Empire.” Once again Conphas
scrutinized his subordinate, trying to decipher the man more than the remark.
Since the debacle with Prince Kellhus, he continuously found himself wanting to
suspect the General of treachery. He begrudged Martemus much for what had
happened in Shigek. But not, strangely enough, his company. “The Empire and the Holy
War travel the same road, Martemus.” Though soon—he found himself thinking,
they would part ways. It would be so very tragic… First Caraskand, then Prince Kellhus.
The Holy War must wait. Order must be observed in all things. v Martemus had not so much as blinked. “And if—” “Come,” Conphas
interrupted. “Time to tease the lions.” The Exalt-General had instructed his
attendants—after the desert he’d been forced to enlist soldiers to do the work
of slaves—to take the Inrithi caste-nobles to a large indoor riding room
adjacent to the stables. Conphas and Martemus found them spread in clots
throughout the airy gloom, warming themselves over the orange glow of coal
braziers, muttering in the low voices of sodden men—some fifty or sixty of them
all told. For an instant, no one noticed their arrival, and Conphas stood
motionless beneath the arched entranceway, studying them, from their eyes,
which seemed desert bright in the grey light, to the straw clinging to their
wet boots. How much, he idly wondered, would the Padirajah pay for this room?
The voices trailed as more and more men noticed his presence. “Where’s the
Anasurimbor?” Palatine Gaidekki called out, his look a; sharp and as cynical as
always. Conphas grinned. “Oh, he’s
here, Palatine. In theme if not in body.” “More than Prince Kellhus is missing,” Earl
Gothyelk said. “So i: Saubon, Athjeari… Proyas is sick, of course, but I see
none of Kellhus’ more ardent defenders here…” “A felicitous
coincidence, I am sure…” “I thought this was about
Caraskand,” Palatine Uranyanka said. “But of course! Caraskand resists us.
We’re here to ask why.” “So why does she resist us?”
Gotian asked, his tone contemptuous. Not for the first time Conphas realized
that they despised him—almos to a man. All men hate their betters. He opened his arms and
walked into their midst. “Why?” he called out, glaring at them, challenging
them. “This is the question, isn’t it? Why do the rains keep falling, rotting
our feet, our tents, our hearts? Why does the hemoplexy strike us
down indiscriminately? Why do so many of us die thrashing in our own bowel?” He
laughed as though in astonishment. “And all this after the desert! As if the Carathay weren’t woe enough! So
why? Need we ask old Cumor to consult
his omen-texts?” “No,” Gotian said
tightly. “It is plain. The anger of the God burns against us.” Conphas inwardly smiled.
Sarcellus had insisted the so-called Warrior-Prophet would be dead within days.
But whether he succeeded or not— and Conphas suspected not—they would need
allies following the attempt. No one knew precisely how many “Zaudunyani”
Prince Kellhus commanded, but they numbered in the tens of thousands at least…
The more the Men of the Tusk suffered, it seemed, the more they turned to the
fiend. But then, as the saying
went, no dog so loved its master as when it was beaten. Conphas glared at the
assembled lords, pausing in the best oratorical fashion. “Who could disagree?
The anger of the God does burn against us. And well it
should…” He swept his gaze across
them. “Given that we harbour
and abet a False Prophet.” Howls erupted from among
them, more in protest than in assent. But Conphas had expected as much. At this
juncture, the important thing was to get these fools talking. Their bigotries would do the rest. Twenty-one Caraskand And We will give over all of them, slain,
to the Children of Eanna; you shall hamstring their horses and burn their
chariots with fire. You shall bathe your feet in the blood of the wicked. —TRIBES 21:13, THE
CHRONICLE OF THE TUSK Winter, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, Caraskand Coithus Saubon bound
through the rain, skidded across a section of slop, leapt a small ravine, and
climbed the far side. He raised his face to the grey sky and laughed. It’s mine! By the Gods it will be mine! Realizing that this
moment demanded a certain modicum of jnan, composure at the very least, he
reduced his gait, walking briskly through the clusters of ad hoc shelters. When
finally he spied Proyas’s pavilion near a copse of rain-dreary sycamores, he hastened
toward it. King! Yes 1 shall be King! The Galeoth Prince halted
before the pavilion, puzzled by the absence of guards. Proyas was somewhat
soft-hearted with his men—perhaps he’d bid them stay within, out of the fucking
rain. All around, muddy ground sizzled with waters. The turf was moated with
flooded ruts and puddles. The rain drummed across the sagging canvas before
him. King of Caraskand! The Third March Caraskand “Proyas!” he shouted
through the ambient roar. He could feel the rain at long last soak through the
heavy felt beneath his hauberk. It felt like a warm kiss against his skin.
“Proyas! Blast you man, I need to talk! I know you’re in there!” At length he heard a
muffled voice cursing from within. When the flap was at last pulled aside, Saubon
was taken aback. Proyas stood before him, thin, haggard, a dark wool blanket
wrapped about his shivering frame. “They said you’d
recovered,” Saubon said, embarrassed. “Of course I’m recovered,
you idiot. I stand.” “Where are your guards?
Your physician?” A gravelly cough wracked
the ailing Prince. He cleared his throat, blew strings of sputum from his
mouth. “Sent them all away,” he said, wiping his lip with a sleeve. “Needed to
sleep,” he added, raising a pained brow. Saubon roared with
laughter, almost grabbed the man in his mailed arms. “You won’t be able to
sleep now, my pious friend!” “Saubon. Prince. Please,
to the point if you will. I’m grievously sick.” “I’ve come to ask a
question, Proyas… One question only.” “Ask it then.” Saubon suddenly calmed,
became very serious. “If I deliver Caraskand,
will you support my bid to be its King?” “What do you mean
‘deliver’?” “I mean throw open its
gates to the Holy War,” the Galeoth Prince replied, fixing him with a
penetrating, blue-eyed stare. Proyas’s whole bearing
seemed transformed. The pallor fell from his face. His dark eyes became lucid
and attentive. “You’re serious about this.” Saubon cackled like a
greedy old man. “Never have I been so serious.” The Conriyan Prince
scrutinized him for several moments, as though gauging the alternatives. “I like not this game
you—” “Just answer the
question, damn you! Will you support my bid to be crowned King of Caraskand?” Proyas was silent for a
moment, but then slowly nodded. “Yes… You deliver Caraskand, and I assure you,
you’ll be its King.” Saubon raised his face
and his arms to the menacing sky and howled out his battle cry. The rains
plummeted upon him, rinsed him in soothing cold, fell between his lips and
teeth and tasted of honey. He’d tumbled in the breakers of circumstance, so
violently that mere months ago he’d thought he would die. Then he’d met
Kellhus, the Warrior-Prophet, the man who’d set him onto the path toward his
own heart, and he’d survived calamities that could break ten lesser men. And
now this, the lifelong moment come at last. It seemed a giddy, impossible
thing. It seemed a gift. Rain, so heartbreakingly
sweet after Khemema. Beads pattered against his forehead, cheeks, and closed
eyes. He shook water from his matted hair. King… I will be King at long last. “Where,” Proyas asked,
“have all these hard silences come from?” Cnaьir regarded him from
the pavilion’s gloomy heart. The Conriyan Prince, he realized, hadn’t been idle
during his convalescence. He’d been thinking. “I don’t understand,” Cnaьir
said. “But you do, Scylvendi…
Something happened to you at Anwurat. I need to know what.“ Proyas was still
sick—grievously so, it appeared. He sat bundled beneath wool blankets in a camp
chair, his normally hale face drawn and pale. In any other man, Cnaьir would
have found such weakness disgusting, but Proyas wasn’t any other man. Over the
months the young prince had come to command something troubling within him, a
respect not fit for a fellow Scylvendi, let alone an outlander. Even sick he
seemed regal. He’s just another lnrithi dog! “Nothing happened at
Anwurat,” Cnaьir said. “What do you mean, nothing? Why did you run? Why did you disappear?” Cnaьir scowled. What was
he supposed to say? That he went mad? He’d spent many sleepless
nights trying to wring sense from Anwurat. He could remember the battle
slipping from his grasp. He could remember murdering a Kellhus who wasn’t
Kellhus. He could remember sitting L The Third March on the strand, watching
the Meneanor hammer the shore with fists of foaming white. He could remember a
thousand different things, but they all seemed stolen, like stories told by a
childhood friend. Cnaьir had lived the
greater part of his life with madness. He heard the way his brothers spoke, he
understood how they thought, but despite endless recriminations, despite years
of roaring shame, he couldn’t make those words and thoughts his own. His was a
fractious and mutinous soul. Always one thought, one hunger, too many! But no
matter how far his soul wandered from the tracks of the proper, he’d always
borne witness to its treachery—he’d always known the measure of his depravity. His confu‘ sion had
been that of one who watches the madness of another. How? he would cry. How could these thoughts be mine? He had always owned his
madness. But at Anwurat, that had
changed. The watcher within had collapsed, and for the first time his madness
had owned him. For weeks he’d been little more than a corpse bound to a
maddened horse. How his soul had galloped! “What does it matter to
you, my comings and goings?” Cnaьir fairly cried. He hooked his thumbs in his
iron-plated girdle. “I am not your client.” Proyas’s expression
darkened. “No… But you stand high among my advisers.” He looked up, his eyes
hesitant. “Especially since Xinemus…” Cnaьir grimaced. “You
make too mu—” “You saved me in the
desert,” Proyas said. Cnaьir quashed the sudden
yearning that filled him. For some reason, he missed the desert—far more so than the Steppe. What was it?
Was it the anonymity of footsteps, the impossibility of leaving track or trail?
Was it respect? The Carathay had killed far more than he… Or had his heart
recognized itself in her desolation? So many cursed questions! Shut up! Shut— “Of course I saved you,”
Cnaьir said. “What prestige I hold, remember, I hold through you.” Almost
instantly lie regretted the remark. He had meant it as a dismissal, but it had
sounded like an admission. For a moment, Proyas
looked as though he might cry out in frustration. He lowered his face instead,
studied the mats beneath his bare white feet. When he looked up, his expression
was at once plaintive and challenging. Caraskand “Did you know that
Conphas recently called a secret council discuss Kellhus?” Cnaьir shook his head.
“No.” Proyas was watching him very closely. “So you and Kellhus still don’t
speak.” “No.” Cnaьir blinked,
glimpsed an image of the Dьnyain, his f; cracking open as he screamed. A
memory? When had it happened? “And why’s that, Scylvendi?” Cnaьir struggled to hide
his sneer. “Because of the woman.” “You mean Serwe?” He could remember Serwe
shrieking, covered in blood. Had’t happened at Anwurat as well? Had it happened
at all? She was my mistake. What had possessed him to
take her that day he and Kellhus had kil the Munuati? What had possessed him to
take a woman—a woman!— the trail? Was it her beauty? She
was a prize—there could be no dc about that. Lesser chieftains would have
flaunted her at every oppo nity, would have entertained offers just to see how
many cattle she cc fetch, all the while knowing she was beyond bartering. But
still, it was Moenghus he hunted! Moenghus! No. The
answer was plain: he’d taken her because of Kelll Hadn’t he? She was my proof. Before finding her, he’d
spent weeks alone with the man—weeks al with a Dunyain. Now, after watching the inhuman fiend devour h after
Inrithi heart, it scarcely seemed possible he’d survived. The bott less
scrutiny. The narcotic voice. The demonic truths… How couL not take Serwe after
enduring such an ordeal? Besides beautiful, she simple, honest, passionate—everything
Kellhus wasn’t. He warred ag; a spider. How could he not crave the company of
flies? Yes… That was it! He’d
taken her as a landmark, as a reminder of i was human. He
should’ve known she’d become a battleground inste; He used her to drive me mad! “You must pardon my
scepticism,” Proyas was saying. “Many mei strange when it comes to women… But
you?” Cnaitir bristled. What was he saying? The Third March Proyas looked down to the
sheafs on the table next to him, their corners curling in the wet. He absently
tried to straighten one with thumb and forefinger. “All this madness with
Kellhus has set me thinking,” he said. “Especially about you. By the thousands they flock to him, they abase
themselves before him. By the thousands … And yet you, the one man who
knows him best, can’t abide his company. Why is that, Cnaьir?” “As I said, because of
the woman. He stole my prize.” “You loved her?” Men, the memorialists
said, often strike their sons to bruise their fathers. But then why did they
strike their wives? Their lovers? Why had he beaten Serwe?
To bruise Kellhus? To injure a Dunyain? Where Kellhus caressed,
Cnaьir had slapped. Where Kellhus whispered, Cnaьir had screamed. The more the
Dunyain compelled love, the more he exacted terror, and without any true
understanding of what he did. At the time, she had simply deserved his fury. Wayward bitch! he would
think. How could you? How
could you? Did he love her? Could
he? Perhaps in a world
without Moenghus… Cnaьir spat across the
Prince’s matted floor. “I owned her! She was mine!“ “And this is all?” Proyas
asked. “This is the sum of your grudge against Kellhus?” The sum of his grudge…
Cnaьir nearly cackled aloud. There was no sum for what he felt. “I find your silence
unnerving,” Proyas said. Cnaьir spat once again.
“And I find your interrogation offensive. You presume too much, Proyas.” The drawn yet handsome
face flinched. “Perhaps,” the Prince said, sighing deeply. “Perhaps not…
Nevertheless, Cnaьir, I would have your answer. I must know the truth!” The truth? What would
these dogs make of the truth? How would Proyas react? He eats you, and you know it not. And when he’s done, there
will be only bones… “And what truth would
that be?” Cnaьir snapped. “Whether Kellhus is truly an Inrithi Prophet? You
think that is a question I can answer?” Caraskand Proyas had leaned forward
in agitation; he now collapsed back in his chair. “No,” he gasped, drawing
a hand to his forehead. “I merely hoped that…” He trailed, shaking his head
wearily. “But none of this is to the point. I called you here to discuss other
matters.” Cnaьir watched the man
closely, found himself troubled by the evasiveness of his eyes. Conphas has approached him… They plan to
move against Kellhus. Why
should he continue lying for the Dunyain? He no longer believed the man would
honour their pact… So just what did he believe? “Saubon has come to me,”
Proyas continued. “He’s exchanged missives—and now even hostages—with a Kianene
officer named Kepfet ab Tanaj. Apparently, Kepfet and his fellows hate Imbeyan
so fiercely they’re prepared to sacrifice anything just to see him dead.” “Caraskand,” Cnaьir said. “He offers
Caraskand.” “A section of her walls, to be more precise.
To the west, near a small postern gate.” “So you want my counsel?
Even after Anwurat?” Proyas shook his head. “I want more than your counsel,
Scylvendi. You’re always saying we Inrithi carve up honour the way others carve
up stags, and this is no different. We have suffered much. Whoever breaks
Caraskand will be immortalized…” “And you are too sick.” The Conriyan Prince
snorted. “First you spit at my feet, now you call out my infirmities… Sometimes
I wonder whether you earned those scars murdering manners instead of men!”
Cnaьir felt like spitting, but refrained. “I earned these scars murdering
fools.” Proyas started laughing
but finished hacking phlegm from his lungs. He leaned back and blew strings of
mucus into a spittoon set in the shadows behind his chair. Its brass rim
gleamed in the uncertain light. “Why me?” Cnaьir asked. “Why not Gaidekki or
Ingiaban?” Proyas groaned and shuddered beneath his blankets. He leaned
forward, elbows on knees, and clutched his head. Clearing his throat, he raised
his face to Cnaьir. Two tears, relics of his coughing fit, fell across his
cheek. The Third March “Because you’re”—he
swallowed—“more capable.” Cnaьir stiffened, felt a
snarl twitch across his lips. He
means moredisposable! “I know you think that I
lie,” Proyas said quickly. “But I don’t. If Xinemus were still… still…” He
blinked, shook his head. “I would’ve asked him.” Cnaьir studied him
closely. “You fear this may be a trap… That Saubon might be deceived.” Proyas chewed at the
inside of his cheek, nodded. “An entire city for the life of one man? No hatred
could be so great.” Cnaьir did not bother
contradicting him. There was a hate that
eclipsed the hater, a hunger that encompassed the very ground of appetite. Bent low, his broadsword
before him, Cnaьir urs Skiotha stole across the heights of the wall toward the
postern gate, thinking of Kellhus, Moenghus, and murder. Need me… I must find some way to make him need me! Yes… The madness was
lifting. Cnaьir paused, pressed
his armoured back against the wet stone. Saubon crowded close behind him,
followed by some fifty other hand-picked men. Drawing long even breaths, Cnaьir
tried to calm the anxiousness of his limbs. He glanced across the great weave
of moonlit structures below. It was strange, seeing the city that had bitterly
denied them so exposed, almost like lifting the skirts of a sleeping woman. A heavy hand fell upon
his shoulder, and Cnaьir turned to see Saubon in the gloom, his hard, grinning
face framed by his mail hood. Moonlight rimmed his battle helm. Though he
respected the Galeoth Prince’s prowess on the field, Cnaьir neither liked nor
trusted him. The man had, after all, kennelled with the Dunyain’s other dogs. “She looks almost
wanton…” Saubon whispered, nodding toward the city below. He looked back, his
eyes bright. “Do you still doubt me?” “I never doubted you.
Only your faith in this Kepfet.” The Galeoth Prince’s grin
broadened. “Truth shines,” he said. Cnaьir squashed the urge
to sneer. “So do pigs’ teeth.” Caraskand He spat across the
ancient stonework. There was no escaping the Dunyain—not any more. It sometimes
seemed the abomination spoke from every mouth, watched from all eyes. And it
was only getting worse. Something… There must be something 1 can do! But what? Their pact to
murder Moenghus was a farce. The Dunyain honoured nothing for its own sake. For
them only the ends mattered, and everything else, from warlike nations to shy
glances, was a tool—something to be used. And Cnaьir possessed nothing of
use—not any more. He’d squandered his every advantage. He couldn’t even offer
his reputation among the Great Names, not after the degradation of Anwurat… No.
There was nothing Kellhus needed from him. Nothing except… Cnaьir actually
gasped aloud. Except my
silence. In his periphery, he
glimpsed Saubon turn to him in alarm. “What’s wrong?” Cnaьir glanced at him
contemptuously. “Nothing,” he said. The madness was lifting. Cursing in Galeoth,
Saubon started past him, crawling beneath the pitted battlements. Cnaitir
followed, his breath rasping over-loud in his ears. Rainwater had pooled
through the joints between flagstones, reflecting moonlight. He splashed
through them, his fingers aching with cold. The farther they crept along the
parapet, the more the balance of vulnerability seemed to shift. Before
Caraskand had seemed exposed, but now, as the towers of the postern gate loomed
nearer, they seemed the vulnerable ones. Torches glittered along the tower’s
crest. They paused before an
iron-strapped door, looked to one another apprehensively, as though realizing
this would be the definitive test of Kepfet and his unlikely hatred. Saubon
looked almost terrified in the pallid light. Cnaьir scowled and yanked on the
iron handle. It grated open. The Galeoth Prince
hissed, laughed as though amused by his momentary doubt. Whispering “Die or
conquer!” he slipped around the masonry into the black maw. Cnaьir glanced one
last time at Caraskand’s moonlit expanse, then followed, his heart thundering. Moving in dark, deadly
files, they spilled through the corridors and down the stairwells. As Proyas
had bidden him, Cnaьir stayed close tc The Third March Caraskand Saubon, jostling behind
him through narrow hallways. He knew the layout of the gate must be simple, but
tension and urgency made it seem a maze. Saubon’s outstretched
hand stopped him in the blackness, pulled him to the chapped wall. The Galeoth
Prince had halted before a door. Threads of golden light traced its outline in
the dark. Cnaьir’s skin prickled at the sound of muted shouts. “The God,” Saubon
whispered, “has given me this place, Scylvendi. Caraskand will be mine!” Cnaьir peered at him in
the darkness. “How do you know?” “I know!” The Dunyain had told him.
Cnaьir was certain of it. “You brought Kepfet to
Kellhus… Didn’t you?” He let the Dunyain read his face. Saubon grinned and
snorted. Without answering, he turned his back to Cnaьir, rapped the door with
the pommel of his sword. Wood scraped against
stone—the sound of someone pushing back a chair. There was a muffled laugh,
voices speaking Kianene. If the Norsirai sounded like grunting pigs, Cnaьir
thought, the Kianene sounded like honking geese. Saubon swung his
broadsword around, gripping it like a dagger and raising it high. For a mad
instant, he resembled a boy preparing to spear fish in a stream. The door
jerked open; a human face surfaced… Saubon snatched the man’s
braided goatee, stabbed downward with his sword. The Kianene was dead before he
clanked to the ground. Howling, the Galeoth Prince leapt into airy light beyond
the door. Cnaьir tumbled after him
with the others, found himself in a narrow, candle’lit room. A great wheeled
spool loomed before him, wrought in ancient wood, wrapped by chains that
dropped from chutes in the fluted ceiling. Beyond, he glimpsed several
red-jacketed Kianene soldiers scrambling for their weapons. Two simply sat
dumbstruck, one with bread in hand, at a rough-hewn table set in the far
corner. Saubon hacked into their
midst. One fell shrieking, clutching his face. Cnaьir leapt into the
fray, crying out in Scylvendi. He hammered the sword from the slack, panicked
hand of the heathen guardsman before him: a stoop-shouldered adolescent
sporting no more than wisps of a goatee. Cnaьir crouched
and hacked at the legs of a second guardsman rushing his flank. The man
toppled, and Cnaьir whirled back to the boy, only to see him vanish through a
far door. A Galeoth knight he didn’t recognize speared the man he’d felled. Nearby, Saubon hacked at
two Kianene, brandishing his sword like a pipe, grunting obscenities with each
swing. He’d lost his helm; blood matted his shaggy blond hair. Cnaьir charged
to his side. With his first blow, he cracked the round, yellow and black shield
of the nearest guardsman. The heathen skidded on blood, and as his arms
reflexively opened, Cnaьir punched his sword through the man’s ring harness.
His scream was a convulsive, gurgling thing. Glancing to his left, he saw
Saubon shear off his foeman’s lower jaw. Hot blood sprayed across Cnaьir’s
face. The heathen stumbled, flailed. Saubon silenced him with a blow that
almost severed his head. “Raise the gate!” the
Galeoth Prince roared. “Raise the gate!” Inrithi warriors, mostly ruddy-faced
Galeoth, now packed the room. Several fell upon the wooden wheels. The sound of
chains grating across stone drowned out their excited muttering. The air reeked
of pierced entrails. Saubon’s captains and thanes
had assembled about him. “Hortha! Fire the signal! Mearji, storm the second
tower! You must take it, son! You must make your ancestors proud!” The radiant
blue eyes found Cnaьir. Despite the blood threading his face, there was a
majesty to his look, a paternal confidence that chilled Cnaьir’s heart. Coithus
Saubon was already king, and he belonged to Kellhus. “Secure the murder room,”
the Galeoth Prince said. “Take as many men as you need…” His eyes swept across
all those assembled. “Caraskand falls, my brothers! By the God, Caraskand falls!” Cheers resounded through
the room, fading into hoarse shouts and the sound of boots making muck of the
glossy pools of red across the floor. “Die or conquer!” men cried. “Die or
conquer!” After crowding through a
far hallway, Cnaьir barged through a likely door and found the murder room,
though the gloom was so deep it took several moments for his eyes to adjust.
Not far, a single point of candlelight sputtered in circles. He could hear the
portcullis creaking up into the ancient machinery of the chamber. He could
smell the humid cold of The Third March outside, feel air wash
upward from his feet. He was standing upon a large grate, he realized, set over
the passage between the two gates. Things and surfaces resolved from the gloom:
wood stacked against the walls; rows of amphorae, no doubt filled with oil to
pour through the grate; two ovens no higher than his knee, each stocked with
kindling, furnished with bellows, and bearing iron pots for cooking the oil… Then he saw the Kianene
boy he’d disarmed earlier, huddled against the far wall, his brown eyes as wide
as silver talents. For a heartbeat, Cnaьir couldn’t look away. The sound of
screams and shouts echoed through unseen corridors. “P’pouada’t‘fada,” the adolescent sobbed. “Os-osmah… Pipiri osmah!” Cnaьir swallowed. From nowhere it seemed, a
Galeoth thane—someone Cnaьir didn’t recognize—strode past him toward the boy,
his sword raised. Just then, light glittered up from the passage below, and
through the grate at his feet, Cnaьir saw a band of torch-bearing Galeoth rush
toward the outer doors of the postern gate. He glanced up, saw the thane swing
his sword downward as though clubbing an unwanted whelp. The boy had raised
warding hands. The blade glanced from his wrist and struck along the bone of
his forearm, slicing back a shank of meat the size of a fish. The boy screamed. The doors burst open
beneath. Exultant cries pealed through the room, followed by cold air and
shining torchlight. The first of the thousands Saubon had concealed on the
broken slopes beneath the gate began rushing through the passageway beneath.
The thane hacked at the adolescent, once, twice… The screams stopped. Squares of light raced
across the thane’s blood-spattered form. The blue-eyed man gazed in wonder at
the spectacle beneath. He glanced at Cnaьir, grinned, and pawed at his teary
cheeks. “Truth shines!” he
convulsively cried. “Truth shines!” His eyes shouted glory. Without thinking, Cnaьir
dropped his sword and seized him, almost hoisted him from his feet. For a
heartbeat, they grappled. Then Cnaьir smashed his forehead into the thane’s
face. The man’s broadsword fell from senseless fingers. His head lolled
backward. Cnaьir slammed his forehead down again, felt teeth snap. Shouts and clamour
reverberated up Caraskand 4( through the iron grate.
With each rushing torch lattices of shadow swe] up and over them. Again, bone
hammering against bone, face breakir beneath face. The bridge of the man’s nose
collapsed, then his left cheel Again and again, smashing his face into slurry. 1 am stronger! The twitching thing
slouched to the ground, drained across the Me of the Tusk. Cnaьir stood, his chest
heaving, blood streaming in rivulets across th iron scales of his harness. The
very world seemed to move, so great wa the rush of arms and men beneath him. Yes, the madness was
lifting. Horns pealed across the
great city. War horns. There was no rain in the
morning, but a thin fog wearied the distances drained Caraskand’s reaches of
contrast and colour, rendering the fa quarters ghostlike. Though overcast, one
could feel the sun burninj behind the clouds. The Fanim, both native
Enathpaneans and Kianene, crowded ontc roofs and strained to see what was
happening. As they watched a growing pall of smoke rise from the eastern
quarters of the city, women claspec crying children tight, ashen-faced men
scored their forearms with fingernails, and old mothers wailed into the sky.
Below them, Kianene horsemen beat their way through the tight streets, riding
down their own people, struggling to answer the call of the Sapatishah’s drums
and make their way to the towering fortress in the city’s northwest, the
Citadel of the Dog. And then, after a time, the terrified watchers could
actually see, in those distant streets where the angles allowed them, the Men
of the Tusk—small, wicked shadows through the smoke. Iron-draped figures rushed
through the streets, swords rose and fell, and tiny, hapless forms collapsed
beneath them. Some of the onlookers were so terror-stricken they became sick.
Some rushed down into the congested streets to join in the mad, hopeless
attempt to escape. Others remained, and watched the approaching columns of
smoke. They prayed to the Solitary God, tore at their beards and their clothes,
and thought panicked thoughts about everything they were about to lose. The Third March Saubon had gathered his
men and struck through the streets toward the mighty Gate of Horns. The massive
barbican fell after fierce fighting, but the Galeoth had found themselves
sorely pressed by those Fanim horsemen the Sapatishah’s officers had been able
to muster. In the narrow streets, clots of men joined in dozens of small,
pitched battles. Even with the constant string of reinforcements arriving from
the postern gate, the Galeoth found themselves stubbornly giving ground. But the mighty Gate of
Horns was finally thrown open, and Athjeari with his Gaenrish knights pounded
into the city on their stolen horses, followed by rank after rank of Conriyans,
invincible and inhuman behind their godlike masks. In their wake, their Prince,
the ailing Nersei Proyas, was borne into Caraskand on a litter. The Kianene were routed
by this new onslaught, and their last chance to save their city was lost.
Organized resistance crumbled and became confined to small pockets scattered
throughout Caraskand. The Inrithi broke into roaming bands and began to pillage
the city. Houses were ransacked.
Entire families were put to the sharp knife. Black-skinned Nilnameshi slave
girls were dragged sobbing from their hiding places by the hair, violated, and
then put to the sword. Tapestries were torn from the walls, rolled, or tied
into sacks into which plates, statu-ary, and other articles of gold and silver
were swept. The Men of the Tusk rifled through ancient Caraskand, leaving
behind them scattered clothes and broken chests, death and fire. In some places
the scattered looters were slaughtered and chased away by armed bands of
Kianene, or held at bay until some thane or baron rallied enough men to close with
the heathen. The hard battles were
fought across Caraskand’s great market squares and through the more magnificent
of the buildings. Only the Great Names were able to hold enough men together to
batter open the tall doors and then fight their way down the long, carpeted
corridors. But in these places, the spoils were the greatest—cool cellars
filled with Eumarnan and Jurisadi wines, golden reliquary behind fretted
shrines, alabaster and jade statues of lions and desert wolves, intricate
plaques of clear chalcedony. Their coarse shouts echoed beneath airy domes.
They tracked blood and filth across broad, white-tiled floors. Men sheathed
their weapons and fumbled with their breeches, strolling into the marmoreal
recesses of some dead Grandee’s harem. Caraskand The doors of the great
tabernacles were battered down, and the Men of the Tusk waded among masses of
kneeling Fanim, hacking and clubbing until the tiled floors were matted with
the dead and dying. They smashed down the doors of the adjoining compounds,
wandered into the dim, carpeted interiors. Soft shadows and strange scents
greeted them. Light rained down through tiny windows of coloured glass. At
first they were fearful. These were the dens of the Unholy, where the monstrous
Cishaurim worked their abominations. They walked quietly, numbed by their
dread. But eventually the drunkenness of the screaming streets would return to
them. Someone would reach out and spill a book from an ivory lectern, and when
nothing happened the aura of foreboding would dissolve, replaced by sudden,
righteous fury. They would laugh, cry out the names of Inri Sejenus and the
Gods as they plundered the inner sanctums of the False Prophet. They tortured
Fanic priests for their secrets. They set glorious, many-pillared tabernacles
of Caraskand aflame. The Men of the Tusk cast
the bodies from the rooftops. They rifled the pockets of the dead, tugging
rings from grey fingers, or just sawing at the knuckles to save time. Shrieking
children were torn from their mothers, tossed across rooms and caught on sword
point. The mothers were beaten and raped while their gutted husbands wailed
about their entrails. The Inrithi were like wild-eyed beasts, drunk with
howling murder. Moved by the God’s own fury, they utterly destroyed all in the city,
both men and women, young and old, oxen, sheep, and asses, with the edge of the
sharp sword. The anger of the God
burned bright against the people of Caraskand. Sunlight broke across the
city, cold and brilliant against a dark horizon. Wings outstretched, the Old
Name floated on hot western winds. Caraskand pitched and yawed beneath him, a
vista of flat-roofed structures, encrusting hillsides, enveloping distances in
mud-brick confusion, opening about broad agoras and monumental complexes. Fires burned in the east,
screening the far quarters. He soared around mountainous plumes. He saw Caraskandi
crowding the rooftop gardens of the merchant quarter, howling in disbelief. He
saw packs of armed Inrithi ranging through abandoned
streets, dispersing into buildings. He saw the first of the domed tabernacles
burning. From so far, they looked like bowls upended over firepits. He saw
horsemen charging across the great market squares, and phalanxes of footmen
battling down broad avenues toward the hazy blue ramparts of the Citadel of the
Dog. And he saw the man who
called himself Dunyain, fleeing across ramshackle rooftops, running like the
wind, pursued by the jump and tumble of Gaorta and the others. He watched the
man leap and pirouette onto a third floor, sprint, then vault beyond the far
edge of the adjacent two-storey structure. He landed in a crouch amid a clot of
Kianene footmen, then bounced away, taking four lives with him. The soldiers
had scarcely drawn their swords when Gaorta and his brothers descended upon
them. What was this man? Who
were the Dunyain? These were questions that
needed to be answered. According to Gaorta, the man’s Zaudunyani, his “tribe of
truth,” numbered in the tens of thousands. It was only a matter of weeks,
Gaorta insisted, before the Holy War succumbed to him entirely. But the
questions these facts raised were overmatched by the perils. Nothing could
interfere with the Holy War’s mission. Shimeh must be taken. The Cishaurim must
be destroyed! Despite the questions,
the man’s existence could no longer be toler-ated. He had to die, and for
reasons that transcended their war against the Cishaurim. More troubling than
his preternatural abilities, more troubling than even his slow conquest of the
Holy War, was the man’s name. An Anasurimbor had returned—an Anasurimborl And though Golgotterath had long scoffed at the
Mandate and their prattle regarding the Celmomian Prophecy, how could they
afford to take chances? They were so near! So close! Soon the Children would
gather, and they would rain ruin upon this despicable world! The End of Ends
was coming… One did not gamble with such things. They would kill this Anasurimbor Kellhus, then
they would seize the others, the Scylvendi and the women, to learn
what they needed to know. The Dunyain’s distant
figure dashed into some kind of compound— disappeared. The Synthese
craned its small human neck, banked against the sweeping sky, watched
his slaves disappear after him. Caraskand Good. Gaorta and his
brothers were closing .. ■ The Warrior-Prophet… The
Old Name had already decided he would couple with his corpse. The percussive slap of
sandals, the rhythmic pant of tireless, animal lungs, the slap of fabric about
hooking arms. They’re too fast! Kellhus ran. As fleet as
memories, chambers rushed past him, each possessing the spare elegance of
desert peoples. Behind him, Sarcellus and the others fanned through the
surrounding corridors. Kellhus kicked through a door, rolled down a stone
stair, came to his feet in the gloom. They followed, mere heartbeats behind. He
heard steel whisk against wood—a sheath. He ducked right and rolled. A knife
flashed to his left, chipped dim stone, clattered to the floor. Kellhus plunged
down another stair, into pitch blackness. He blundered through a brittle wooden
door, felt the air bloom into emptiness about him, smelled stale cistern
waters. The skin-spies hesitated. Ail eyes need light. Kellhus spun about the
room, his every surface alive, reading the warp and weft of drafts, the crunch
and rasp of his sandals scuffing stone, the flutter of his clothing. His
outstretched fingers touched table, chair, brick oven, a hundred different
surfaces in a handful of instants. He fell into stance in the room’s far
corner. Drew his sword. Motionless. Somewhere in the pitch, a
wood splinter snapped. He could feel them slip
through the entrance, one after the other. They spread across the far wall,
their hearts thudding in competing rhythms. Kellhus could smell their musk roll
through the room. “I’ve tasted both of your
peaches,” the one called Sarcellus said—to mask the sounds of the others,
Kellhus realized. “I tasted them long and hard—did you know that? I made them
squeal…” “You lie!” Kellhus cried
in mimicry of desperate fury. He heard the skin-spies pause, then close on the corner
where he’d thrown his voice. “Both were sweet,”
Sarcellus called, “and so very juicy… The man, they say, ripens the peach.” Ihe Ihird March Kellhus had punched his
sword point through the ear of the creature that glided before him, lowered it
as soundlessly as he could to the ground. “Eh, Dunyain?” Sarcellus
asked. “That makes you twice the cuckold!” One bumped into a chair. Kellhus leapt, gutted it,
rolled under the table as it squealed and shrieked. “He plays us!” one cried.
“Vnza, pophara tokuk!” “Smell him!” the thing called Sarcellus
shouted. “Cut anything that smells his smell!” The disembowelled
creature flopped and flailed, screaming in demonic voices—as Kellhus had hoped.
He ducked from under the table, backed to the wall to the left of the entrance.
He pulled free his samite robe, tossed it onto the back of a chair he couldn’t
see—but remembered… Kellhus stood motionless.
The drafts came to him, murmuring. He could feel their bestial heartbeats,
taste the feral heat of their bodies. Two leapt at his robe before him. Swords
swooped and cracked into the chair. Lunging, he skewered the one to the left in
the throat, only to have his blade wrenched from him as the creature toppled
backward. Kellhus leaned back and to the left, felt steel whip the air. He
caught an arm, exploded the elbow, blocked the knife-bearing fist that hooked
about. He reached into its throat and jerked out its windpipe. He jumped backward.
Sarcellus’s sword whistled through the blackness. Twisting into a handstand,
Kellhus caught the back of a chair and vaulted to a crouch at the far edge of
the trestle table. The gutted skin-spy
thrashed immediately below him. Even still, he heard the thing called Sarcellus
bound out of the cellar. Flee… For several moments
Kellhus remained still, drawing long deep breaths. Inhuman screaming resounded
through the blackness. It sounded like something—many somethings—burning alive. How are such creatures possible? What do
you know of them, Father? Retrieving
his long-pommelled sword, Kellhus struck off the living skin-spy’s head. Sudden
silence. He wrapped it, still streaming blood, in his slashed robe. Then he climbed back
toward slaughter and daylight. Caraskand 4/ The great black fortress
the Men of the Tusk called the Citadel of the Dog dominated the easternmost of
Caraskand’s nine hills. They called her such because the way her inner and
outer curtain walls enclosed the towering central keep vaguely resembled a dog
curled about his master’s leg. The Fanim simply called her “Il’huda.” “the Bulwark.” Raised by the great Xatantius,
the most warlike of the early Nansur emperors, the Citadel of the Dog reflected
the scale and ingenuity of a people who’d managed to flourish in the shadow of
the Scylvendi: round towers, massive barbicans, offset inner and outer gates.
The fortress’s defences were tiered, so that each concentric ring overshadowed
the next. And her outer walls were shelled in a glossy, well-nigh impenetrable,
basalt. Knowing that the
fortress—which the Nansur called “Insarum,” her original name—was the key to
the city, Ikurei Conphas had assailed it almost immediately, hoping to storm
the walls before Imbeyan could organize any concerted defence. The men of the
Selial Column gained the southern heights only to be thrown back after horrifying
losses. Soon the Galeoth were on the steep slopes with them, and then the
Tydonni: Saubon and Gothyelk were not so foolish as to leave such a prize to
the Exalt-General. Siege engines constructed to assail Caraskand’s curtain
walls were drawn up. Mangonels hurled burning tar over the fortifications.
Trebuchets rained granite boulders and Fanim bodies. Tall, iron-hooked ladders
were pressed against the walls, and the Kianene hefted rocks and boiling oil
over the battlements to crush and burn those that climbed them. Protected by
hide mantlets, an iron-headed battering ram was brought under the immense
barbican and beneath a hail of fire and missiles began hammering at the gate.
Clouds of arrows reached into the sky. Saubon himself was carried down with a
Kianene arrow in his thigh. Sheer numbers and
ferocity gained the Warnutishmen of Ce Tydonn the western wall. Tall, bearded
knights, clients of the dead Earl Cerjulla, hacked through the crowds of
heathen who swarmed up to dislodge them. They were pelted by archers from the
inner compound, but the arrows, if they could punch through the heavy mail,
were merely embedded in the thick layers of felt beneath. Many roared and
fought with several shafts jutting from their backs. The dead and dying were The Third March thrown headlong from the
walls to crash onto the rocks or the men teeming below. The Tydonni planted
their feet and refused to give ground, while behind them, more of their
cousins, Agansi under Gothyelk’s youngest son, Gurnyau, gained the summit. Under
the direction of the wounded Saubon, the longbowmen of Agmundr raked the
heights of the inner wall, forcing the Enathpanean and Kianene archers to
shelter behind crenellations. Someone raised the Mark of Agansanor, the Black
Stag, upon one of the outer towers. A great shout was raised by the Inrithi
encircling the heights. Then came a light more
blinding than the sun. Men cried out, point‘ ing to mad, saffron-robed figures
hanging between the towers of the black keep. Eyeless Cishaurim, each with two
snakes wrapped about their throats. Threads of unholy
incandescence waved across the outer wall like ropes in water. Stone cracked
beneath the flashing heat. Hauberks were welded to skin. The Tydonni crouched
beneath their great tear-shaped shields, leaning against the light, shouting in
horror and outrage before being swept away. The Agmundrmen fired vainly at the
floating abominations. Teams of Chorae Crossbowmen watched bolt after bolt
whistle wide because of the range. The tall knights of Ce
Tydonn were decimated. Many, seeing the hopelessness of their plight,
brandished their longswords, howled curses until the end. Others ran. Those who
could scrambled down the ladders. Several warriors leapt from the battlements,
their beards and hair aflame. An unholy torrent consumed Gothyelk’s Standard. Then the lights flickered
out. For a moment all was
silent save for those left screaming upon the heights. Then the Kianene upon
the walls burst into cheers. They rushed across the stolen summits, cast those
Tydonni still living from the wall, including Gothyelk’s youngest son, Gurnyau.
Mad with grief, the old Earl had to be dragged away. The Men of the Tusk
withdrew in turmoil. Riders were dispatched, charged with finding the Scarlet
Spires, who’d yet to enter Caraskand. They bore but one message: “Cishaurim
defend the Citadel of the Dog.” Caraskand Still bearing his trophy,
Kellhus strode out onto the terrace of an abandoned palatial compound. He
passed through a small garden of winter blooms and sculpted shrubs. The body of
a dead woman, her gown hiked over her head, lay motionless between two
junipers. Stepping over her, Kellhus walked out across the shining marble to
the terrace balustrade. The breeze carried a bouquet of foul and sweet
odours—the smell of precious things burning. The Citadel of the Dog
dominated the near distance, black and hazy, rising mountainous from the welter
of walls and roofs crowding the valley below. He glimpsed tiny Kianene soldiers
rushing along the heights, their silvered helms winking as they passed between
battlements. He saw Inrithi bodies dumped from the walls. To the north and to the
south, Caraskand continued to die. Peering through screens of smoke, he studied
the riot of distant buildings, glimpsed dozens of miniature dramas: pitched
battles, petty atrocities, bodies being stripped, women wailing, even a child
jumping from a rooftop. A sudden shriek drew his eyes downward, and he saw a
band of black-armoured Thunyeri rushing through the enclosed garden of the
compound immediately below the terrace. He quickly lost sight of them. Harsh
laughter wafted up through the breeze. He looked past the
Citadel, south to the hills beyond Caraskand’s far-wandering walls. To Shimeh. I grow; near, Father. Very near. He swung the bloody sack
he’d made of his robe from his shoulder, and the thing’s severed head tumbled
across the marmoreal floor. He studied its face, which seemed little more than
a tangle of snakes with human-skin. A lidless eye gleamed in the shadows
beneath. Kellhus already knew these creatures weren’t sorcerous artifacts; he’d
learned enough from Achamian to conclude they were worldly weapons, fashioned
by the ancient Inchoroi the way swords were fashioned by Men. But with their
faces undone, this fact seemed all the more remarkable. Weapons. And the Consult
had finally wielded them. Wars within wars. It has finally come to this. Kellhus had already
encountered several of his Zaudunyani. Even now his instructions were spreading
through the city. Serwe and Esmenet would be evacuated from the camp. Soon his
Hundred Pillars would be tit ihe ihird March securing this nameless
merchant palace. The Zaudunyani he’d charged with watching the skin-spies he’d
so far identified were being sought. If he could organize before the chaos
ended… The Holy War must be
purged. Just then, light flared
across the Citadel. A crack boomed over the city, like thunder rising out from
the ground. A chorus of unsettling disharmonies reverberated in its wake. More
flashes of light, and Kellhus saw sheets of masonry crash down the Citadel’s
foundations. Debris tumbled down the hillside. Hanging in the air, the
sorcerers of the Scarlet Spires had formed a great semicircle about the
Citadel’s immense barbican. Through a dark hail of arrows, glittering fire
washed over the turrets, and even from this distance Kellhus could see burning
Fanim leap into the baileys. Lightning leapt from phantom clouds, exploding
stonework and limbs alike. Flocks of incandescent sparrows swarmed over the
battlements, plummeting into face after howling face. Despite the destruction,
one Scarlet Schoolman, then another, and then another still, plunged to the
rooftops below, struck into salt by heathen Chorae. His eye drawn by a blinding
flash, Kellhus saw one sorcerer crash into the hillside, where he broke and
tumbled like a thing of stone. Hellish lights scourged the ramparts. Tower tops
exploded in flame. All living things were consumed. The song of the Scarlet
Schoolmen trailed. The thunder rumbled into the distances. For several heartbeats,
all Caraskand stood still. The fortress walls steamed with the smoke of burning
flesh. Several of the sorcerers strode forward. Achamian had told Kellhus once
that no sorcerer truly flew, but rather walked a surface that wasn’t a
surface—the ground’s echo in the sky. The Schoolmen advanced through the
curtains of smoke until they dangled over the narrow baileys of the inner keep.
Kellhus glimpsed the outline of their ghostly Wards. They seemed to be waiting…
or searching. Suddenly, from various
points across the Citadel, seven lines of piercing blue swept across smoke and
sky, intersecting on the centremost Schoolman… Cishaurim, Kellhus realized. Cishaurim shelter in the Citadel. The ring of crimson
figures, mere specks in the distance, answered Caraskand their hidden foe. Kellhus
raised a hand against the brilliance. The air shivered with concussions. A
western tower buckled beneath the weight of fire, then ponderously toppled.
Breaking over the outer curtain wall, it plunged to slopes below, where it collapsed
into an avalanche of rubble and pluming dust. Kellhus watched,
wondering at the spectacle and at the promise of deeper dimensions of
understanding. Sorcery was the only unconquered knowledge, the last remaining
bastion of world-born secrets. He was one of the Few—as Achamian had both
feared and hoped. What kind of power would he wield? And his father, who was
Cishaurim, what kind of power did he already
wield? The Scarlet Schoolmen
pummelled the Citadel without pause or remorse. There was no sign of the
Cishaurim who’d attacked moments earlier. Smoke and dust billowed and plumed,
encompassing the black-walled heights. Sorcerous lights flashed through what
clear air remained; otherwise they flickered and pulsed as though through veils
of black gossamer. Uncanny hymns ached in
Kellhus’s ears. How could such things be said? How could words come before? Another tower collapsed
in the south, crashing upon its foundations, swelling into a black cloud-that
rolled down over the surrounding tenements. Watching Men of the Tusk flee
through the streets, Kellhus glimpsed a figure in yellow silks soar free of the
surging eclipse, arms to his side, sandalled feet pointing downward. The
Inrithi warriors scattered beneath him. A surviving Cishaurim. Kellhus watched the
figure glide low over the stepped rooftops, dip into avenues. For a moment he
thought the man might escape— smoke and dust had all but engulfed the Scarlet
Schoolmen. Then he realized… The Cishaurim was turning
in his direction. Rather than continuing south,
the figure hooked westward, using what structures he could to cover his passage
from the far-seeing Schoolmen. Kellhus tracked his progress as he zigzagged
through the streets, averaging the mean of his sudden turns to determine his
true The Third March trajectory. As
improbable—as impossible—as it seemed, there could be no doubt: the man was
coming toward him. Could it be? Father? Kellhus backed away from
the balustrade, bent to rewrap the skin-spy’s severed head in his ruined robe.
Then he gripped one of two Chorae his Zaudunyani had given him… According to
Achamian, it offered immunity to the Psukhe as much as it did sorcery. The Cishaurim was
climbing the slopes to the terrace, kicking loose leaves as he skimmed the odd
tree-top. Birds burst into the air in his wake. Kellhus could see the black
pits of his eyes, the two distended snakes about his neck, one looking forward,
the other scanning the Citadel’s continuing destruction. A dragon’s howl gouged
the distances, followed by another thunderclap. The marble tingled beneath his
feet. More clouds of black bloomed about the Citadel… Father? This cannot be! The Cishaurim glided low
over the compound where Kellhus had seen the Thunyeri a short time earlier,
then swooped upward. Kellhus actually heard the flutter of his silken robes. He leapt backward,
drawing his sword. The sorcerer-priest sailed over the balustrade, his hands
pressed together, fingertip to fingertip. “Anasurimbor Kellhus!”
the descending figure called. Meeting his reflection,
the Cishaurim came to a jarring halt. Flecks of debris chattered across the
polished marble. Kellhus stood motionless,
holding tight his Chorae. He’s too young— “I am Hifanat ab
Tunukri,” the eyeless man said breathlessly, “a Dionorate of the tribe
Indara-Kishauri… I bear a message from your Father. He says, ‘You walk the
Shortest Path. Soon you will grasp the Thousandfold Thought.’” Father? Sheathing his sword,
Kellhus opened himself to every outward sign the man offered. He saw
desperation and purpose. Purpose
above all… “How did you find me?” “We see you. All of us.”
Behind the man, the smoke rising from the Citadel opened like a great velvet
rose. Caraskand “Us?” “All of us who serve him—the Possessors of the Third Sight.” Him… Father. He controlled a faction within the Cishaurim… “I must,” Kellhus said
emphatically, “know what he intends.” “He told me nothing… Even
if he had, there wouldn’t be time.” Though battle stress and
the absence of eyes complicated his reading, Kellhus could see the man spoke
sincerely. But why, after summoning him from so far, would his father now leave
him in the dark? He knows the Pragma have sent me as an assassin… He needs to be certain of me first. “I must warn you,”
Hifanat was saying. “The Padirajah himself comes with the South. Even now his
outriders ponder the smoke they see on the horizon.” There had been rumours of
the Padirajah’s march… Could he be so close? Contingencies, probabilities, and
alternatives lanced through Kellhus’s intellect—to no avail. The Padirajah
coming. The Consult attacking. The Great Names plotting… “Too much happens… You
must tell my father!” “There’s no—” The snake watching the
Citadel abruptly reared and hissed. Kellhus glimpsed three Scarlet Schoolmen
striding across the empty sky. Though threadbare, their crimson gowns flashed
in the sunlight. “The Whores come,” the
eyeless man said. “You must kill me.” In a single motion
Kellhus drew his blade. Though the man seemed oblivious, the closer asp reared
as though drawn back by a string. “The Logos,” Hifanat said,
his voice quavering, “is without beginning or end.” Kellhus beheaded the
Cishaurim. The body slumped to the side; the head lopped backward. Halved, one
of the snakes flailed against the floor. Still whole, the other wormed swiftly
into the garden. Rising where the Citadel
of the Dog had been, a great black pillar of smoke loomed over the sacked city,
reaching, it seemed, to the very heavens. Every quarter of
Caraskand burned now, from the “Bowl”—so named because of its position between
five of Caraskand’s nine hills—to the Old i he ihird March City, marked by the
gravelly fragments of the Kyranean wall that had once enclosed ancient
Caraskand. Columns of smoke hazed and plumed the distances—none so great as the
tower of ash that dominated the southeast. From a hilltop far to the
south, Kascamandri ab Tepherokar, the High Padirajah of Kian and all the
Cleansed Lands, watched the smoke with tears in his otherwise hard eyes. When
his scouts had first come to him with news of the disaster, Kascamandri had refused
to believe it, insisting that Imbeyan, his always resourceful and ferocious
son-in-law, simply signalled them. But there was no denying his eyes.
Caraskand, a city that rivalled white-walled Seleukara, had fallen to the
cursed idolaters. He had arrived too late. “What we cannot deliver,”
he told his shining Grandees, “we must avenge.” Even as Kascamandri
wondered what he would tell his daughter, a troop of Shrial Knights caught
Imbeyan and his retinue trying to flee the city. That evening Gotian directed
his fellow Great Names to set their booted feet upon the man’s cheek, saying,
“Cherish the power the God has given us over our enemies.” It was an ancient
ritual, first practised in the days of the Tusk. Afterward, they hung the
Sapatishah from a tree. “Kellhus!” Esmenet cried,
running through a gallery of black marble pilasters. Never had she set foot in
a structure as vast or luxurious. “Kellhus!” He turned from the
warriors who congregated around him, smiled with the wry, touching camaraderie
that always sent a pang from her throat to her heart. Such a wild, reckless
love! She flew to him. His arms
wrapped her shoulders, enveloped her in an almost narcotic sense of security.
He seemed so strong, the one immovable thing… The day had been one of
doubt and horror—both for her and Serwe. Their joy at Caraskand’s fall had been
swiftly knocked from them. First, they’d heard news of the assassination
attempt. Devils, several wild-eyed Caraskand Zaudunyani had claimed,
had set upon Kellhus in the city. Not long after, men of the Hundred Pillars
had come to evacuate the camp. No one, not even Werjau or Gayamakri, seemed to
know whether Kellhus still lived. Then they’d witnessed horror after horror
racing through the ransacked city. Unspeakable things. Women. Children… She’d
been forced to leave Serwe in the courtyard. The girl was inconsolable. “They said you’d been
attacked by demons!” she cried into his chest. “No,” he chuckled. “Not
demons.” “What happens?” Kellhus gently pushed her
back. “We’ve endured much,” he said, stroking her cheek. He seemed to be
watching more than looking… She understood the implied question: How strong are you? “Kellhus?” “The trial is about to
begin, Esmi. The true trial.” A horror like no other
shuddered through her. Not you! she inwardly cried. Never you! He had sounded afraid. Winter, 4111 Year-of-the-TusJc, the Bay of Trantis Even though the wind
still buffeted the sails in fits and starts, the bay was preternaturally calm.
One could balance a Chorae on an upturned shield, the Amortanea was so steady. “What is it?” Xinemus
asked, turning his face to and fro in the sunlight. “What is it everyone sees?” Achamian glanced to his
friend, then back to the wrecked shore. A gull cried out, as
gulls always do, in mock agony. Throughout his life
moments like this would visit him—moments of quiet wonder. He thought of them
as “visitations” because they always seemed to arise of their own volition. A
pause would descend upon him, a sense of detachment, sometimes warm, sometimes
cold, and he would think, How
is it I live this life? For the span of several heartbeats, the nearest things—the feel of
wind through the hairs of his arm, the pose of Esmenet’s shoulders as she
fussed over their meagre belongings—would seem very far. And the world, from the
taste of his teeth to the unseen tou Ihe Ihird March horizon, would seem
scarcely possible. How? he would silently murmur. How could this be? Aside from the wonder,
there was never any answer. Ajencis had called this
experience umresthei om
aumreton, “possessing
in dispossession.” In his most famed work, The Third Analytic of Men, he claimed it to be the heart of
wisdom, the most reliable mark of an enlightened soul. The same as true
possession required loss and recovery, true existence, he argued, required umresthei om aumreton. Otherwise one simply stumbled through a dream… “Ships,” Achamian said to
Xinemus. “Burnt ships.” The great irony, of
course, was that umresthei om
aumreton
rendered everything dreamlike—or nightmarish, as the case might be. The lifeless heights of
Khemema’s coastal hills walled the circumfer‘ ence of the bay. Beneath tiered
escarpments, a series of narrow beaches rimmed the shoreline. The sands were
linen white, but for as far as the eye could see, a rind of blackened debris marred
the slopes, like the salt ringing the armpits of a field-slave’s tunic.
Everywhere, Achamian saw ships and the remains of ships, all gutted by fire.
There were hundreds of them, covered in legions of red-throated gulls. Shouts echoed across the
deck of the Amortanea. The Captain, a Nansur named
Meьmaras, had called anchor. Some ways from the shore,
several half-burned derelicts conferred on a sandbar—triremes by the look of
them. Beyond them, a dozen or so prows reared from the water, their iron rams
browning with rust, their bright-painted eyes chapped and peeling. The majority
of ships packed the strand, beached like diseased whales, obviously cast up by
some forgotten storm. A few were little more than blackened ribs about a keel.
Others were entire hulks, stumped on their side or overturned entirely.
Batteries of broken oars jutted skyward. Seaweed hung in hairy ropes from the
bulwarks. And everywhere Achamian looked he saw gulls, swinging through the air
above, squabbling over lesser wreckage, and crowding the upturned bellies of
ship after harrowed ship. “This is where the
Kianene destroyed the Imperial Fleet,” Achamian explained. “Where the Padirajah
nearly destroyed the Holy War…” He remembered Iyokus describing the disaster
while he’d hung helpless in the Caraskand cellars of the Scarlet
Spires’ compound. That was when he’d stopped fearing for himself and had
started fearing for Esmenet. Kellhus.
Kellhus has kept her safe. “The Bay of Trantis,”
Xinemus said sombrely. By now, the whole world knew of this place. The Battle
of Trantis had been the greatest naval defeat in the Empire’s history. After
luring the Men of the Tusk deep into the desert, the Padirajah had attacked
their only source of water, the Imperial Fleet. Though no one knew exactly what
had happened, it was generally accepted that Kascamandri had managed to secrete
a great number of Cishaurim aboard his own fleet. According to rumour, the
Kianene had returned from the battle short only two galleys, both of which
they’d lost to a squall. “What do you see?”
Xinemus pressed. “What does it look like?” “The Cishaurim burned
everything,” Achamian replied. He paused, almost
overcome by a visceral reluctance to say anything ‘ more. It seemed
blasphemous, somehow, rendering a thing like this in words—a sacrilege. But
then such was the case whenever one described ’ another’s loss. There was no
way around words. “There’s charred ships
everywhere… They look like seals, sunning on the shore. And there’s
gulls—thousands of gulls… What we call gopas in Nron. You know, the ones that look like they’ve
had their throats cut. Ill-mannered brutes they are.” Just then, the Amortanea’s Captain, Meьmaras, walked from his men to join them
on the railing. From their first meeting in Iothiah, Achamian had found himself
liking the man. He was what the Nansur called a tesper-ari, a private contractor who’d once commanded a war
galley. His hair was short and patrician-silver, and his face, though leathered
by the sea, possessed a thoughtful delicacy. He was clean-shaven, of course,
which made him seem boyish. But then all Nansur seemed boyish. “It’s out of our way, I
know,” the man explained. “But I had to see for myself.” “You lost someone,”
Achamian said, noting his swollen eyes. The Captain nodded,
looked nervously to the charred hollows strewn across the beach. “My brother.” “You’re certain he’s
dead?” A party of gulls
screeched overhead. An embassy, offering terms. oZ The Third March “Others,” Meьmaras said,
“acquaintances of mine who’ve gone ashore, say that bones and dried carcasses
litter the strand for miles— north and south. As catastrophic as the Kianene
attack was, thousands perhaps tens of thousands, survived because General
Sassotian had moored so close to shore… Don’t you smell it?” he asked, glancing
at Xinemus. “The dust… like bitter chalk. We stand at the edge of the Great
Carathay.” The Captain turned to
Achamian, held his gaze with firm brown eyes. “No one survived.” Achamian stiffened,
struck by what was now an old fear. Despite the desert air, a clamminess crept
over his skin. “The Holy War survived,” he said. The Captain frowned, as
though put off by something in Achamian’s tone. He opened his mouth in retort,
but then paused, his eyes suddenly thoughtful. “You fear you’ve lost
someone as well.” He glanced yet again at Xinemus. “No,” Achamian said. She’s alive! Kellhus has saved her! Meьmaras sighed, looked
away in pity and embarrassment. “I wish you luck,” he said to the lapping
waters. “I truly do. But this Holy War…” He fell into cryptic silence. “What about the Holy
War?” Achamian asked. “I’m an old sailor. I’ve
seen enough voyages blown off course, enough vessels founder, to know the God
gives no guarantees, no matter who the captain or what the cargo.” He looked
back to Achamian. “There’s only one thing certain about this Holy War: there’s
never been a greater bloodletting.” Achamian knew different,
but refrained from saying as much. He resumed his study of the obliterated
fleet, suddenly resenting the Captain’s company. “Why would you say that?”
Xinemus asked. As always when he spoke, he turned his face from side to side.
For some reason, Achamian found the sight of this increasingly difficult to
bear. “What have you heard?” Meьmaras shrugged.
“Craziness, for the most part. There’s talk of hemoplexy, of disastrous
defeats, of the Padirajah marshalling all his remaining strength.” Caraskand “Pfah,” Xinemus spat with
uncharacteristic bitterness. “Everyone knows as much.“ Achamian now heard dread
in Xinemus’s every word. It was as though something horrific loomed in the
blackness, something he feared might recognize the sound of his voice. As the
weeks passed it was becoming more and more apparent: the Scarlet Spires had
taken more than his eyes; they had taken the light and devilry that had once
filled them as well. With the Cants of Compulsion, Iyokus had moved Xinemus’s
soul in perverse ways, had forced him to betray both dignity and love. Achamian
had tried to explain that it wasn’t he who’d
thought those thoughts, who’d uttered those words, but it didn’t matter. As
Kellhus said, men couldn’t see what moved them. The frailties Xinemus had
witnessed were his frailties. Confronted by the true dimensions of wickedness,
he’d held his own infirmity accountable. “And then,” the Captain
continued, apparently untroubled by Xinemus’s cholic, “there’s the stories of
the new prophet.” Achamian jerked his head
about so fast he wrenched his neck. “What about him?” he asked carefully. “Who
told you this?” It simply had to be Kellhus. And if Kellhus survived… Please, Esmi. Please be safe! “The carrack we exchanged
berths with in Iothiah,” Meьmaras said. “Her captain had just returned from
Joktha. He said the Men of the Tusk are turning to someone called Kelah, a
miracle worker who can wring water from desert sand.” Achamian found his hand
pressed against his chest. His heart hammered. “Akka?” Xinemus murmured. “It’s him, Zin… It has to
be him.” “You know him?” Meьmaras
asked with an incredulous grin. Gossip was a kind of gold among seamen. But Achamian couldn’t
speak. He clung to the wooden rail instead, battling a sudden, queerly euphoric
dizziness. Esmenet was alive. She lives! But his relief, he
realized, went even deeper… His heart leapt at the thought of Kellhus as well. “Easy!” the Captain
cried, seizing Achamian by the shoulders. Achamian stared at the
man dully. He’d nearly swooned… Kellhus. What was it the
man stirred within him? To be more than what he was? But who, if not a
sorcerer, knew the taste of those things that transcended men? If sorcerers
sneered at men of faith, they did so because faith had rendered them pariahs,
and because faith, it seemed to them, knew nothing of the very transcendence it
claimed to monopolize. Why submit when one could yoke? “Here,” Meьmaras was
saying. “Sit for a moment.” Achamian fended away the
man’s fatherly hands. “I’m okay,” he gasped. Esmenet and Kellhus. They
lived! The woman who could save his heart, and the man who could save the
world… He felt different,
stronger hands brace his shoulders. Xinemus. “Leave him be,” he heard
the Marshal saying. “This voyage has been but a fraction of our journey.” “Zin!” he exclaimed. He
wanted to chortle, but the pang in his throat forbade it. The Captain retreated,
whether out of compassion or embarrassment, Achamian would never know. “She lives,” Xinemus
said. “Think of her joy!” For some reason, these
words struck the breath from him. That Xinemus, who suffered more than he could
imagine, had set aside his hurt to… His hurt. Achamian
swallowed, tried to squeeze away an image of Iyokus, his red’irised eyes slack
with indolent regret. He reached out, clutched
his friend’s hand. They squeezed, each according to his desperation. “There will be fire when
I return, Zin.” He swept his dry eyes
across the wrecked warships of the Imperial Fleet. Suddenly they looked more a
transition and less an end—like the carapaces of monstrous beetles. The red-throated gulls
kept jealous watch. “Fire,” he said. HApTER Twenty-two Caraskand For all things there is a toll. We pay in breaths, and our
purse is soon empty. —SONGS 57:3, THE CHRONICLE
OF THE TUSK Like many old tyrants, I dote upon my grandchildren. I delight in their
tantrums, their squealing laughter, their peculiar fancies. 1 wilfully spoil
them with honey sticks. And I find myself wondering at their blessed ignorance
of the world and its million grinning teeth. Should 1, like my grandfather,
knock such childishness from them? Or should I indulge their delusions? Even now, as death’s shadowy pickets gather about me, I ask, Why should innocence answer to the world? Perhaps
the world should answer to innocence… Yes, I rather like that. I tire of bearing the blame. —STAJANAS II, RUMINATIONS Winter, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, Caraskand The following morning a
pall of smoke lay over Caraskand. The city quilted the distance, pocked here
and there by great, gutted structures. The dead lay everywhere, piled beneath
smoking tabernacles, sprawled through sacked palaces, scattered across the
reaches of Caraskand’s famed bazaars. Cats lapped blood from the grouting. Crows
pecked at sightless eyes. The Third March A single horn echoed
mournfully across the rooftops. Still groggy from the previous day’s debauch,
the Men of the Tusk stirred, anticipating a day of repentance and sombre
celebration. But from various quarters of the city more horns blared out,
sounding the call to arms. Iron-mailed knights clacked down streets, crying out
frantic alarums. Those who climbed the
southern walls saw divisions of many-coloured horsemen spilling across ridge
lines and down sparsely wooded hills. At long last, Kascamandri I, the
Padirajah of Kian, had taken the field against the Inrithi. The Great Names
desperately tried to muster their thanes and barons, but with their men
scattered throughout the city, it was hopeless. Gothyelk, still distraught over
the loss of his youngest, Gurnyau, couldn’t be roused, and the Tydonni refused
to leave the city without the beloved Earl of Agansanor. With the recent death
of Prince Skaiyelt, the long-haired Thunyeri had disintegrated into clannish mobs,
and, unaccountably, had renewed their bloody sack of the city. And the Ainoni
Palatines, with Chepheramunni on his death bed, had fallen to feuding amongst
themselves. The horns called and called, but far too few answered. The Fanim horsemen
descended so quickly that most of the Holy War’s siege camps had to be
abandoned, along with the war engines and the food supplies amassed within
them. Retreating knights set several of the camps ablaze to prevent them from
falling into the heathen’s hands. Hundreds of those too sick to flee the camps
were left to be massacred. Those bands of Inrithi knights who dared contest the
Padirajah’s advance were quickly thrown back or overrun, encompassed by waves
of ululating horsemen. By mid-morning the Great Names frantically recalled
those remaining outside Caraskand and bent themselves to defending the vast
circuit of the city’s walls. Celebration had turned to
terror and disbelief. They were imprisoned in a city that had already been
besieged for weeks. The Great Names ordered hasty surveys of the remaining food
stores. They despaired after learning that Imbeyan had burned the city’s
granaries when he realized he’d lost Caraskand. And of course, the vast
storerooms of the city’s final redoubt, the Citadel of the Dog, had been
destroyed by the Scarlet Spires. The broken fortress burned still, a beacon on
Caraskand’s easternmost hill. Caraskand Seated upon a lavish
settee, surrounded by his counsellors and his many children, Kascamandri ab
Tepherokar watched from the terrace of a hillside villa as the great horns of
his army inexorably closed about Caraskand. Propped against his whale-like
belly, his lovely girls peppered him with questions about what happened. For
months he’d followed the Holy War from the fleshpot sanctuaries of the Korasha,
the exalted White-Sun Palace in Nenciphon. He’d trusted the sagacity and
warlike temper of his subordinates. And he’d scorned the idolatrous Inrithi,
thinking them barbarous and hapless in the ways of war. No longer. To redress his negligence,
he’d raised a host worthy of his jihadic fathers: the survivors of Anwurat,
some sixty thousand strong, under the peerless Cinganjehoi, who had set aside
his enmity to his Padirajah; the Grandees of Chianadyni, the Kianene homeland,
with some forty thousand horsemen under Kascamandri’s own ruthless and
brilliant son, Fanayal; and Kascamandri’s old tributary, King Pilasakanda of
Girgash, whose vassal Hetmen marched with thirty thousand black-skinned Fanim
and one hundred mastodons from pagan Nilnamesh. These last, in particular,
caused the Padirajah to take pride, for the lumbering beasts made his daughters
gape and giggle. As evening fell, the
Padirajah ordered an assault on Caraskand’s walls, hoping to use the disarray
of the idolaters to his advantage. Ladders made by Inrithi carpenters were
drawn up, as well as the single siege tower they’d captured intact, and there
was fierce fighting along the walls around the Ivory Gates. The mastodons were
yoked to a mighty iron-headed ram made by the Men of the Tusk, and soon
drumming thunder and elephant screams could be heard above the roar of battling
men. But the iron men refused to yield the heights, and the Kianene and
Girgashi suffered horrendous losses—including some fourteen mastodons, burned
alive by flaming pitch. Kascamandri’s youngest daughter, beautiful Sirol, wept. When the sun finally set,
the Men of the Tusk greeted the darkness with both relief and horror. For they
were saved and they were doomed. ihird march The deep, staccato
thunder of drums. With Cnaьir standing
behind him, Proyas leaned against a limestone battlement on the summit of the
Gate of Horns, peering through an embrasure at the muddy plains below. Kianene
teemed across the landscape, dragging Inrithi wares and shelters to immense bonfires,
pitching bright pavilions, reinforcing palisades and earthworks. Bands of
silver-helmed horsemen patrolled the ridge lines, galloped through orchards or
across fields between byres. The Inrithi had chosen
the same plains to launch their assaults: the burned hulk of a siege tower
stood no more than a stone’s throw from where Proyas had positioned himself. He
squeezed shut his burning eyes. This
can’t be happening! Not this! First the euphoria—the
rapture!—of Caraskand’s fall. Then the Padirajah, who’d for so long been little
more than a rumour of terrible power to the south, had materialized in the
hills above the city. At first Proyas could only think that someone had made a
catastrophic mistake, that everything would resolve itself once the chaos of
the city’s ransacking passed. Those silk-cowled divisions couldn’t be Kianene
horsemen… The heathen had been mortally wounded at Anwurat—undone! The Holy War
had taken mighty Caraskand, the great gate of Xerash and Amoteu, and now stood
poised to march into the Sacred Lands! They were so close … So close that Shimeh, he
was certain, could see Caraskand’s smoke on the horizon. But the horsemen had been Kianene. Riding beneath the White Padirajic
Lion, they streamed about the great circuit of the city’s walls, burning the
impoverished Inrithi camps, slaughtering the sick, and riding down those
foolish enough to resist their advance. Kascamandri had come; both the God—and
hope—had forsaken them. “How many do you
estimate?” Proyas asked the Scylvendi, who stood, his scarred arms folded
across his scale harness. “Does it matter?” the barbarian replied. Unnerved by the man’s
turquoise gaze, Proyas turned back to the smoke-grey vista. Yesterday, while
the dimensions of the disaster slowly unfolded, he’d found himself asking why
over and over again. Like a wronged child, his thoughts had stamped about the
fact of his piety. Who among the Great Names had toiled as he’d toiled? Who’d
burned Caraskand more sacrifices, intoned
more prayers? But now he no longer dared ask these questions. Thoughts of Achamian and
Xinemus had seen to that. “It is you,” the Marshal of Attrempus had said, “who surrender every‘ thing…“ But in the God’s name!
For the God’s glory! “Of course it matters,”
Proyas hissed. He knew the Scylvendi would bristle at his tone, but he neither
worried nor cared. “We must find some way out!“ “Exactly,” Cnaьir said,
apparently unperturbed. “We must find some way out… No matter how large the
Padirajah’s host.” Scowling, Proyas turned
back to the embrasure. He was in no mood to be corrected. “What of Conphas?” he
asked. “Is there any chance he lies about the food?” The barbarian shrugged
his massive shoulders. “The Nansur are good counters.” “And they’re good liars
as well!” Proyas exclaimed. Why couldn’t the man just answer his questions? “Do
you think Conphas tells the truth?” Cnaьir spat across the
ancient stonework. “We’ll have to wait… See if he stays fat while we grow
thin.” Curse the man! How could he bait him at such a time, in such
straits? “You are besieged,” the
Scylvendi warrior continued, “within the very city you have spent weeks
starving. Even if Conphas does hoard food, it would not be of consequence. You
have only one alternative, and one alternative only. The Scarlet Spires must be
roused, now, before the Padirajah can assemble his Cishaurim. The Holy War must
take to the field.” “You think I disagree?”
Proyas cried. “I’ve already petitioned Eleazaras—and do you know what he says?
He says, ‘The Scarlet Spires have already suffered too many needless losses…’
Needless losses! What? Some dozen or so dead at Anwurat—if that! A handful more
in the desert—not bad compared to a hundred thousand faithful souls lost! And what? Five or so struck by Chorae
yesterday—heaven forfend! Killed while destroying the only remaining stores of
food in Caraskand… All wars should be so bloodless!” Ihe Third March Proyas paused, realized
he was panting. He felt crazed and confused, as though he suffered some residue
of the fevers. The great, age-worn stones of the barbican seemed to wheel about
him. If only, he thought madly, Triamis had built these walls with bread! The Scylvendi watched him
without passion. “Then you are doomed,” he said. Proyas raised his hands
to his face, scratched his cheeks. It can’t be!
Something… I’m missing
something! “We’re cursed,” he
murmured. “They’re right… The God does punish us!” “What are you saying?” “That maybe Conphas and
the others are right about him!” The brutal face hardened into a scowl. “Him?” “Kellhus,” Proyas
exclaimed. He clutched trembling hands, ground one palm against the other. I falter… 1 fail! Proyas had read many
accounts of other men floundering in times of crisis, and absurdly, he realized
that this—this!—was his moment of weakness. But contrary
to his expectation, there was no strength to be drawn from this knowledge. If
anything, knowing he faltered threatened to hasten his collapse. He was too
sick… Too tired. “They rail against him,”
he explained, his voice raw. “First Conphas, but now even Gothyelk and Gotian.”
Proyas released a shuddering breath. “They claim he’s a False Prophet.” “This is no rumour?
They’ve told you this themselves?” Proyas nodded. “With my support, they think
they can openly move against him.” “You would risk a war within these walls? Inrithi against Inrithi?” Proyas
swallowed, struggled to shore up his gaze. “If that’s what the God demands of
me.” “And how does one know
what your God demands?” Proyas stared at the Scylvendi in horror. “I just…” A pang welled
against the back of his throat. Hot tears flooded across his cheek. He inwardly
cursed, opened his mouth again, sobbed instead of spoke… Please God! Caraskand It had been too long. The
burden had been too great. Everything! Every day, every word a battle! And the
sacrifices—they had cut too deep. The desert, even the hemoplexy, had been
nothing. But Achamian—ah, that was something! And Xinemus, whom he’d abandoned.
The two men he respected most in the world, given up in the name of Holy War…
And still it wasn’t enough! Nothing… Never good enough! “Tell me, Cnaьir,” he
croaked. A strange tooth-baring smile seized his face, and he sobbed again. He
covered his eyes and cheeks with his hands, crumpled against the parapet.
“Please!” he cried to the stone. “Cnaьir… You must tell me what to do!” Now it was the Scylvendi
who looked horrified. “Go to Kellhus,” the
barbarian said. “But I warn you”—he raised a mighty, battle-scarred
fist—“secure your heart. Seal it tight!” He lowered his chin and glared, the
way a wolf might… “Go, Proyas. Go ask the
man yourself.” Like something carved out
of living rock, the bed rose from a black dais set in the chamber’s heart. The
veils, which usually trailed between the bed’s five stone posts, had been
pinned to the emerald and gold canopy. Lying with one leg kicked free of the
sheets, Kellhus stroked Esmenet’s cheek, saw past her flushed skin, beyond her
beating heart, following the telltale markers all the way to her womb. Our blood, Father… In a world of maladroit and bovine souls, nothing
could be more precious. The House of
Anasurimbor. The Dunyain not only saw
deep, they saw far. Even if the Holy War survived Caraskand, even if Shimeh was
reconquered, the wars were only beginning… Achamian had taught him that much. And in the end, only sons
could conquer death. Was this why you summoned me? Do you
die? “What is it?” Esmenet
asked, drawing sheets up to her breast. Kellhus had jerked
forward, sitting cross-legged upon the bed. He peered across the candle-lit
gloom, tracking the muffled sounds of some commotion beyond the doors. What does he— The Third March Caraskand Without warning, the
double doors burst open, and Kellhus saw] Proyas, still weak from his
convalescence, struggling with two of the Hundred Pillars. “Kellhus!” the Conriyan
Prince barked. “Tell your dogs to kennel, or by the God there’ll be blood!” At a word, the bodyguards
released him, assumed positions at either side of the door. The man stood, his
chest heaving, his eyes searching through the shadows of the lavish bedchamber.
Kellhus encircled him with his senses… The man shouted desperation from every
pore, but the wildness of his passion made the specifics difficult to
ascertain. He feared the Holy War was lost, as did all men, and that Kellhus
was somehow to blame—as did many. He needs to know what I am. “What happens, Proyas?
What ails you, that you’d commit such an outrage?” But the Prince’s eyes had
found Esmenet, rigid with shock. Kellhus instantly saw the peril. He searches for excuses. An interior porch had
been raised about the doors; Proyas took an unsteady step toward the railing.
“What’s she doing?” He blinked in confusion. “Why’s she in your bed?” He doesn’t want to understand. “She’s my wife… What
business—” “Wife?” Proyas exclaimed.
He raised a half-opened hand to his brow. “She’s your wife?” He’s heard the stories… But all this time he’s afforded me his doubt. “The desert, Proyas. The
desert marked us all.” He shook his head. “Fie
on the desert,” he murmured, then looked up in sudden fury. “Fie on the desert!
She’s… She’s… Akka loved her! Akka! Don’t you recall ? Your friend …” Kellhus lowered his eyes
in penitent sadness. “We thought he would want this.” “Want? Want his best
friend fucking the wo—” “Who,” Esmenet spat, “are
you to speak of Akka to me!” “What do you say?” Proyas
said, blanching. “What do you mean?” His lips pursed; his eyes slackened. His
right hand fell to his chest. Horror had opened a still
point in the throng of his passions—an opportunity… “But you already know,”
Kellhus said. “Of all people, you’ve no right to judge.“ The Conriyan Prince
flinched. “What do you mean?” Now… Offer him truce. Show him
understanding. Make stark his tres‘ passes… “Please,” Kellhus said,
reaching out with word, tone, and every nuance of expression. “You let your
despair rule you… And me, I succumb to ill manners. Proyas! You’re among my
dearest friends…” He cast aside the sheets, swung his feet to the floor. “Come,
let us drink and talk.” But Proyas had fastened
on his earlier comment—as Kellhus had intended. “I would know why I’ve no right
to judge. What’s that supposed to mean, ‘dear friend’?” Kellhus drew his lips
into a pained line. “It means that you,
Proyas, not we, have betrayed Achamian.” The handsome face
slackened in horror. His pulse drummed. I must move
carefully. “No,” Proyas said. Kellhus closed his eyes
as though in disappointment. “Yes. You accuse us because you hold yourself
accountable.” “Accountable? Accountable
for what?” He snorted like a frightened adolescent. “I did nothing.” “But you did everything,
Proyas. You needed the Scarlet Spires, and the Scarlet Spires needed Achamian.”
; “No one knows what happened to Achamian!” “But you know… I can see this knowledge within you.” The
Conriyan Prince stumbled backward. “You see nothing!” So close… “Of course I do, Proyas.
How, after all this time, could you still doubt?” But as he watched,
something happened: an unforeseen flare of recognition, a cascade of
inferences, too quick to silence. That word… “Doubt?” Proyas fairly
cried. “How could I not doubt? The Holy War stands upon the precipice,
Kellhus!“ Kellhus smiled the way
Xinemus had once smiled at things both touching and foolish. The Third March “The God tries us, Proyas. He’s yet to pass sentence! Tell me, how
can there be trial without doubt?” “He tries us…” Proyas
repeated, his face blank. “Of course,?‘ Kellhus said plaintively. ”Simply open your heart
and you’ll see!“ “Open my…” Proyas
trailed, his eyes brimming with incredulous dread. “He told me!” he abruptly
whispered. “This is what he meant!” The yearning in his look, the ache that had
warred against his misgivings, suddenly collapsed into suspicion and disbelief. Someone has warned him… The Scylvendi? Has
he wandered so far? “Proyas…” I should have killed him. “And how about you, Kellhus?” Proyas spat. “Do you doubt? Does the great
Warrior’Prophet fear for the future?” Kellhus looked to
Esmenet, saw that she wept. He reached out and clasped her cold hands. “No,” he said. I do not fear. Proyas was already
backing out the double doors, into the brighter light of the antechamber. “You
will.” For over a thousand years
Caraskand’s great limestone walls had stared across the broken countryside of
Enathpaneah. When Triamis I, perhaps the greatest of the Aspect-Emperors, had
raised them, his detractors in Imperial Cenei had scoffed at the expenditure,
claiming that he who conquers all foes has no need of walls. Triamis, the
chroniclers write, had dismissed them by saying, “No man can conquer the
future.” And indeed, over the ensuing centuries Caraskand’s “Triamic Walls,” as
they were called, would blunt the rush of history many times, if not redirect
it altogether. And sometimes, they would cage it. Day after day, it seemed,
Inrithi horns blared from the high towers, calling the Men of the Tusk to the
ramparts, for the Padirajah threw his people at Triamis’s mighty fortifications
with reckless fury, each time convinced the strength of the starving idolaters
would fail. Haggard Caraskand and hungry, Galeoth,
Conriyans, and Tydonni manned the war engines abandoned by Caraskand’s
erstwhile defenders, casting pots of flaming pitch from mangonels, great iron
bolts from ballistae. Thunyeri, Nansur, and Ainoni gathered on the walls,
crowding beneath the battlements and huddling beneath shields to avoid volleys
of arrows that at times darkened the sun. And day after day, it seemed, they
beat the heathen back. Even as they cursed them,
the Kianene could only marvel at their desperate fury. Twice young Athjeari led
daring sorties across the rutted plain, once seizing the sappers’ trenches and
collapsing their tunnels, once charging over slovenly earthworks and sacking an
isolated encampment. All the world could see they were doomed, and yet they
fought as though they knew it not. But they knew—as only men
stalked by famine could know. The hemoplexy, or the
hollows, was running its course. Many, such as Chepheramunni, the King-Regent
of High Ainon, lingered on death’s marches, while others, such as Zursodda,
Palatine-Governor of Koraphea, or Cynnea, Earl of Agmundr, finally succumbed.
The funeral pyres still burned, but more and more they took casualties, and not
the sick, as their fuel. As the flames consumed the Earl of Agmundr, his famed
longbow-men launched burning arrows over the walls, and the Kianene wondered at
the madness of the idolaters. Cynnea would be among the last of the great
Inrithi lords to perish in the grip of the Disease. But even as the plague
waned, the threat of starvation waxed. Dread Famine, Bukris, the God who
devoured men and vomited up skin and bones, walked the streets and halls of
Caraskand. Throughout the city, men
began hunting cats, dogs, and finally even rats for sustenance. Poorer
caste-nobles had taken to opening veins in their mounts. The horses themselves
quickly consumed what thatched roofs could be found. Many bands began holding
lotteries to see who would butcher their horse. Those without horses scratched
through the dirt, looking for tubers. They boiled grapevines and even thistles
to quiet the nagging madness of their bellies. Leather—from saddles, jerkins, or
elsewhere—was also boiled and consumed. When the horns sounded the harnesses of
many would swing like skirts, having lost their straps and buckles to some
steaming pot. Gaunt men roamed the streets, looking for ihe Ihird March anything to eat, their
faces blank, their movements sluggish, as though they walked through sand.
Rumours circulated of men feasting on the bloated corpses of the Kianene, or
committing murder in the dead of night to quiet their mad hunger. In the wake of Famine,
foul Disease returned, preying on the weak. Men, particularly among the
caste-menials, began losing teeth to scurvy. Dysentery punished others with
cramps and bloody diarrhea. In many quarters, one could find warriors wandering
without their breeches, wallowing, as some are wont to do, in their
degradation. During this time, the
furor surrounding Kellhus, Prince of Atrithau, and the tensions between those
who acclaimed him and those who condemned him, escalated. In Council, Conphas,
Gothyelk, and even Gotian relentlessly denounced him, claiming he was a False
Prophet, a cancer that must be excised from the Holy War. Who could doubt the
God punished them? The Holy War, they insisted, could have only one Prophet,
and his name was Inri Sejenus. Proyas, who’d once eloquently defended Kellhus,
withdrew from all such debates, and refused to say anything. Only Saubon still
spoke in his favour, though he did so halfheartedly, not wishing to alienate
those whose approval he needed to secure his claim to Caraskand. Despite this, none dared
move against the so-called Warrior-Prophet. His followers, the Zaudunyani,
numbered in the tens of thousands, though they were less numerous among the
upper castes. Many still remembered the Miracle of Water in the desert, how
Kellhus had saved the Holy War, including those miscreants who now called him
anathema. Strife and riot broke out, and for the first time Inrithi swords shed
Inrithi blood. Knights repudiated their lords. Brothers forsook brothers.
Countrymen turned upon one another. Only Gotian and Conphas, it seemed, were
able to command the loyalty of their men. Nevertheless, when the
horns sounded, the Inrithi forgot their differences. They roused themselves
from the torpor of disease and sickness, and they battled with a fervour only
those truly wracked by the God could know. And to the heathens who assailed
them, it seemed dead men defended the walls. Safe about their fires, the
Kianene whispered tales of wights and damned souls, of a Holy War that had
already perished, but fought on, such was its hate. Caraskand Caraskand, it seemed,
named not a city, but misery’s own precinct. Her very walls—walls raised by
Triamis the Great—seemed to groan. The luxury of the place
reminded Serwe of her indolent days as a concubine in House Gaunum. Through the
open colonnade on the far side of the room she could see Caraskand wander
across the hills beneath the sky. She was reclined on a green couch, her arms
drawn out of her gown’s shoulders so that it hung from the gorgeous sash about
her waist. Her pink son squirmed against her naked chest, and she had just
begun feeding when she heard the latch drawn. She had expected it to be one of
the Kianene house slaves, so she gasped in surprise and delight when she felt
the Warrior-Prophet’s hand about her bare neck. The other brushed her bare
breast as he reached to draw a gentle finger along the infant’s chubby back. “What are you doing here
?” she asked, as she raised her lips through his beard to give him a kiss. “Much happens,” he said
gently. “I wanted to know you were safe… Where’s Esmi?“ It always seemed so
strange to hear him ask such simple questions. It reminded her that the God was
still a man. “Kellhus,” she asked pensively, “what’s your father’s name?” “Moenghus.” Serwe furrowed her brow.
“I thought his name was… Aethel, or something like that.” “Aethelarius,” the
Warrior-Prophet said. “In Atrithau, Kings take a great ancestor’s name when
they ascend the throne. Moenghus is his true name.“ “Then,” she said, running
fingers over the fuzz of the infant’s pale scalp, “that’s what his name will be
when he’s anointed: Moenghus.” This wasn’t an assertion. In the
Warrior-Prophet’s presence all declarations became questions. Kellhus grinned. “That’s
what we shall name our child.” “What kind of man is your
father, my Prophet?” “A most mysteriouSjone,
Serwe.” Serwe laughed softly.
“Does he know that he fathered the voice of the God?“ I he Ihird March Kellhus pursed his lips
in mock concentration. “Perhaps.” Serwe, who’d grown accustomed to cryptic
conversations such as thь smiled. She blinked at the tears in her eyes. With
her child warm agai her breast, and the breath of the Prophet warmer still
across her neck, thi World seemed a closed circle, as though woe had been
exiled from joy a long last. No longer taxed by cruel and distant things, the
hearth no‘ answered to the heart. A sudden pang of guilt
struck her. “I know that you grieve,” she said “So many suffer…” He lowered his face. Said
nothing. “But I’ve never been so
happy,” she continued. “So whole… Is that sin? To find rapture where others
suffer?” “Not for you, Serwe. Not
for you.” Serwe gasped and looked
down at her suckling babe. “Moenghus is hungry,” she
laughed. Glad to have concluded
their long search, Rash and Wrigga paused along the crest of the wall. Dropping
his shield, Rash sat with his back to the parapet, while Wrigga stood, leaning
against the stonework, staring through an embrasure at the fires of the enemy
across the Tertae Plain. Neither man paid heed to the shadowy figure crouched
beneath the battlements farther down. “I saw the child,” Wrigga
said, still staring into the dark. “Did you?” Rash asked
with genuine interest. “Where?” “Before the lower gates
of the Fama Palace. The Anointing was public… You didn’t know, did you?” “Because no one tells me
anything!” Wrigga resumed his
scrutiny of the night. “Surprisingly dark, I thought.” “What?” “The child. The child
seemed so dark.” Rash snorted. “Birth
hair… It’ll soon fall out. I swear my second daughter had sideburns!” Friendly laughter.
“Someday, when all this is over, I’ll come and woo your hairy daughters.” “Please… Start with my
hairy wife!” Caraskand More laughter, choked by
a sudden realization. “Oh ho! So that’s how you got your nickname!” “Saucy bastard!” Rash
cried. “No, my skin’s just—” “The child’s name,” a
voice grated from the darkness. “What is it?” Both men started, turned
to the towering spectre of the Scylvendi. They’d seen the man before—few Men of
the Tusk hadn’t—but neither had ever found themselves so close to the
barbarian. Even in moonlight, his aspect was unnerving. The wild black hair.
The fuming brow above eyes like chips of ice. The powerful shoulders, faintly
stooped, as though bent by the preternatural strength of his back. The lean,
adolescent waist. And the arms, thatched by scars both ritual and incidental,
strapped by unfatted muscle. He seemed a thing of stone, ancient and famished. “Wh-what’s this?” Rash
stammered. “The name!” Cnaьir
snarled. “What did they name it?” “Moenghus!” Wrigga
blurted. “They anointed him by the name, Moenghus…” The air of menace
suddenly vanished. The barbarian became curiously blank, motionless to the
point where he seemed inanimate. His manic eyes looked through them, to places
far and forbidding. A taut moment passed,
then without a word, the Scylvendi turned and walked into the darkness. Sighing, the two men
looked to each other for what seemed a long time, then just to be certain, they
resumed their fabricated conversation. As they’d been
instructed. Some other way, Father. There must be. No one came to the
Citadel of the Dog, not even the most desperate of the rat eaters. Standing high upon the
crest of a ruined wall, Kellhus gazed across the dark expanse of Caraskand with
her thousand points of smouldering light. Beyond the walls, particularly across
the plains to the north, he could see the innumerable fires of the Padirajah’s
army. The path, Father… Where’s the path? No matter how many times
he submitted to the rigours of the Probability Trance, all the lines were
extinguished, either by disaster or by The Third March the weight of excessive
permutations. The variables were too many, the possibilities too precipitous. Over the past weeks he’d
exerted whatever influence he’d possessed, hoping to circumvent what now seemed
more and more inevitable. Of the Great Names, only Saubon still openly
supported him. Though Proyas had so far refused to join Conphas’s coalition of
caste-nobles, the Conriyan Prince continued to rebuff Kellhus’s every overture.
Among the lesser Men of the Tusk, the divisions between the Zaudunyani and the
Orthodox, as they were now calling themselves, were deepening. And the threat
of further, more determined attacks by the Consult made it impossible for him
to move freely among them—as he must to secure those he already possessed and
to conquer those he did not. Meanwhile, the Holy War
died. You told me mine was the Shortest Path … He’d relived his brief
encounter with the Cishaurim messenger a thousand times, analyzing, evaluating,
weighing alternate interpretations—all for naught. Every step was darkness now,
no matter what his father said. Every word was risk. In so many ways, it
seemed, he was no different from these world-born men… What is the Thousandfold Thought? He heard the rattle of
rock against rock, then a small cascade of gravel and grit. He peered through
the shadows amassed about the ruin’s roots. The blasted walls formed a roofless
labyrinth beyond the Nail of Heaven’s pale reach. A darker shadow clambered
across heaped debris. He glimpsed a round face in starlight… He called down. “Esmenet?
How did you find me?” Her grin was pure
mischief, though Kellhus could see the concern beneath. She’s never loved another as she loves
me. Not even Achamian. “Werjau told me,” she
said, picking her way up and along the truncated wall. “Ah, yes,” Kellhus said,
understanding immediately. “He fears women.” Esmenet wobbled for a
moment, threw out her arms. She caught herself, but not before Kellhus found
himself puzzled by a sudden shortness of breath. The fall would have been fatal. Caraskand “No…” She concentrated
for a moment, her tongue between her lips. Then she danced up the remaining
length. “He fears me!” She threw herself into his arms, laughing. They held
each other tight on the dark and windy heights, surrounded by a city
and a world—by Caraskand and the Three Seas. She knows…She knows I struggle. “We all fear you,”
Kellhus said, wondering at the clamminess of his skin. She comes to comfort. “You tell such delicious
lies,” she murmured, raising her lips to his. They arrived shortly
after dusk, the nine Nascenti, the senior disciples of the Warrior-Prophet. A
grand teak-and-mahogany table, no higher than their knees, had been pulled onto
the terrace of the merchant palace Kellhus had taken as their base and refuge
in Caraskand. Standing unnoticed in the shadows of the garden, Esmenet watched
them as they knelt or sat cross-legged upon the cushions set about the table.
These days worry lined the faces of most everyone, but the nine of them seemed
particularly upset. The Nascenti spent their time in the city, organizing the
Zaudunyani, consecrating new Judges, and laying the foundation of the
Ministrate. They knew better than most, she imagined, the straits of the Holy
War. Raised about the northern
face of the Heights of the Bull, the terrace overlooked a greater part of the
city. The labyrinthine streets and byways of the Bowl, which formed the heart
of Caraskand, ascended into the distance, hanging from the surrounding heights
like a cloth draped between five stumps. The ruined shell of the Citadel reared
to the east, the wandering lines of her blasted walls etched in moonlight. To
the northwest, the Sapatishah’s Palace sprawled across the Kneeling Heights,
which were low enough to afford glimpses of lamp-lit figures over rose marble
walls. The night sky was rutted by black clouds, but the Nail of Heaven was
clear, brilliant, sparkling from the dark depths of the firmament. A sudden hush fell across
the Nascenti; as one they lowered their chins to their breast. Turning, Esmenet
saw Kellhus stride from the The Third March L^araskana golden interior of the
adjacent apartments. He cast a fan of shadows before him as he walked past a
row of flaming braziers. Two bare-chested Kianene boys flanked him, bearing
censers that boiled with steely blue smoke. Serwe followed in his train, along
with several men in hauberks and battle helms. Esmenet cursed herself
for catching her breath. How could he make her heart pound so? Glancing down,
she realized she’d folded her right hand over the tattoo marring the back of
her left. Those days are over. She stepped from the
garden and greeted him at the head of the table. He smiled, and holding the
fingers of her left hand, seated her to his immediate right. His white silk
robe swayed in the breeze that touched them all, and for some reason, the Twin
Scimitars embroidered about its hems and cuffs did not seem incongruous in the
least. Someone, Serwe likely, had knotted his hair into a Galeoth war braid.
His beard, which he now wore plaited and square-cut like the Ainoni, gleamed
bronze in the light of nearby braziers. As always, the long pommel of his sword
jutted high over his left shoulder. Enshoiya, the Zaudunyani now called it:
Certainty. His eyes twinkled beneath
heavy brows. When he smiled, nets of wrinkles flexed about the corners of his
eyes and mouth—a gift of the desert sun. “You,” he said, “are
branches of me.” His voice was deep and many-timbred, and somehow seemed to
speak from her breast. “Of all peoples only you know what comes before. Only
you, the Thanes of the Warrior-Prophet, know what moves you.” While he briefed the
Nascenti on those matters he and she had already discussed, Esmenet found
herself thinking about Xinemus’s camp, about the differences between those
gatherings and these. Mere months had passed, and yet it seemed she’d lived an
entire life in the interim. She frowned at the strangeness of it: Xinemus
holding court, calling out in mirth and mischief; Achamian squeezing her hand
too tightly, as he sometimes did, searching for her eyes too often; and Kellhus
with Serwe… still little more than a promise, though it seemed Esmenet had
loved him even then—secretly. For some strange reason,
she was overcome by a sudden yen to see the Marshal’s wry Captain, Bloody
Dench. She remembered her final glimpse of him, as he waited with
Zenkappa for Xinemus to rejoin them, his short-cropped hair silver in the
Shigeki sun. How black those days now seemed. How heartless and cruel. What had happened to
Dinchases? And Xinemus… Had he found Achamian? She suffered a moment of
gaping horror… Kellhus’s melodic voice retrieved her. “If anything should
happen,” he was saying, “you shall hearken to Esmenet as you hearken to
me…“ For I’m his vessel. The words triggered an
exchange of worried looks. Esmenet could read the sentiment well enough: what
could the Master mean, placing a woman before his Holy Thanes? Even after all
this time, they still struggled with the darkness of their origins. They had
not utterly embraced him, as she had… Old bigotries die hard, she thought with more than a
little resentment. “But Master,” Werjau, the boldest among them, said, “you
speak as though you might be taken from us!” A heartbeat passed before
she realized her mistake: what worried them was what his words implied, not the prospect of subordinating themselves to his Consort. Kellhus was silent for a
long moment. He looked gravely from face to face. “War is upon us,” he said
finally, “from both without and within.” Even though she and
Kellhus had already discussed the danger he spoke of, chills pimpled her skin.
Cries erupted around the table. Esmenet felt Serwe’s hands clasp about her own.
She turned to reassure the girl, only to realize that Serwe had reached to
reassure her. just listen, the girl’s beautiful eyes said.
The lunatic dimensions of Serwe’s belief had always baffled and troubled
Esmenet. The girl’s conviction was more than monu mental—it seemed continuous
with the ground, it was so immovable. She let me into her bed, Esmenet thought. For love of him. “Who assails us?”
Gayamakri was crying. “Conphas,” Werjau spat.
“Who else? He’s been working against u since Shigek…“ “Then we must strike!”
white-haired Kasaumki shouted. “The Hoi War must be cleansed before the siege
can be broken! Cleansed!” H1KD MARCH “Errant madness!”
Hilderuth barked. “We must negotiate… You must go to them, Master.” Kellhus silenced them
with little more than a look. It frightened her,
sometimes, the way he effortlessly commanded these men. But then it could be no
other way. Where others blundered from moment to moment, scarcely understanding
their own wants, hurts, or hopes, let alone those of others, Kellhus caught
each instant—each soul—like a fly. His world, Esmenet had realized, was one
without surfaces, one where everything—from word and expression to war and
nation—was smoky glass, something to be peered through… He was the
Warrior-Prophet… Truth. And Truth commanded all things. She quashed a sudden urge
to hug herself in joy and astonishment. She was here—here!—at the right hand of the most glorious soul to have
walked the world. To kiss Truth. To take Truth between her thighs, to feel him
press deep into her womb. It was more than a boon, more than a gift… “She smiles,” Werjau
exclaimed. “How can she smile at a time such as this?” Esmenet glanced at the
burly Galeoth, flushing in embarrassment. “Because,” Kellhus said indulgently,
“she sees what you cannot, Werjau.” But Esmenet wasn’t so
sure… She simply daydreamed, didn’t she? Werjau had simply caught her mooning
over Kellhus like an addled juvenile… But then, why did the
ground thrum so? And the stars… What did she
see? Something… Something without compare. Her skin tingled. The
Thanes of the Warrior-Prophet watched her, and she looked through their faces,
glimpsed their yearning hearts. To think! So many deluded souls, living
illusory lives in unreal worlds! So many! It both boggled her and broke her
heart. And at the same time, it
was her triumph. Something absolute. Her heart fluttered,
pinioned by Kellhus’s shining gaze. She felt at once smoke and naked
flesh—something seen through and something desired. Caraskand There’s more than me… More than this—yes! “Tell us, Esmi,” Kellhus
hissed through Senve’s mouth. “Tell us what you see!” There’s more than them. “We must take the knife to
them,” she said, speaking as she knew her Master would have her speak. “We must
show them the demons in their midst.“ So much more! The Warrior-Prophet
smiled with her own lips. “We must kill them,” her
voice said. The thing called
Sarcellus hurried through the dark streets toward the hill where the
Exalt-General and his Columns had quartered. The letter Conphas had sent was
simple: Come quickly. Danger
stalks us. The
man had neglected to sign the letter, but then he didn’t need to. His
meticulous handwriting was unmistakable. Sarcellus turned down a
narrow street that smelled of unwashed Men and animal grease. More derelict
Inrithi, he realized. As the Holy War starved, more and more Men of the Tusk
had turned to an animal existence, hunting rats, eating things that should not
be eaten, and begging… The starving wretches
came to their feet as he walked between them. They congregated about him,
holding out filthy palms, tugging at his sleeves. “Mercy…” they moaned and
muttered. “Merceeee.” Sarcellus thrust them back, made his way forward. He
struck several of the more insistent. Not that he begrudged them, for they’d
often proved useful when the hunger grew too great. No one missed beggars. Besides, they were apt
reminders of what Men were in truth. Pale hands reached from
looted silks. Piteous cries seethed through the gloom. Then, in the gravelly
voice of a drunkard, a rag-draped man before him said, “Truth shines.” “Excuse me?” Sarcellus
snapped, coming to a halt. He seized the speaker by
the shoulders, jerked his head up. Though bitten, the man’s face hadn’t been
battered into submission—far from it. His eyes looked hard as iron. This,
Sarcellus realized, was a man who battered. Ihe Ihird March “Truth,” the man said,
“does not die.” “What’s this?” Sarcellus
asked, releasing the warrior. “Robbery?” The iron-eyed man shook
his head. “Ah,” Sarcellus said,
suddenly understanding. “You belong to him What is it you call yourselves?” “Zaudunyani.” The man
smiled, and for a moment, it seemed the most terrifying smile Sarcellus had
ever witnessed: pale lips pressed into a thin, passionless line. Then Sarcellus remembered
the purpose of his fashioning. How could he forget what he was? His phallus
hardened against his breeches… “Slaves of the
Warrior-Prophet,” he said, sneering. “Tell me, do you know what I am?” “Dead,” someone said from
behind. Sarcellus laughed,
sweeping his gaze over the necks he would break. Oh, rapture! How he would
shoot hot across his thigh! He was certain of it! Yes! With so many! This time… But his humour vanished
when his look returned to the man with the iron eyes. The face beneath his face
twitched into a vestigial frown… They’re
not af— Something rained down
from above… Suddenly he found himself drenched. Oil! They’d doused him in oil!
He looked from side to side, blowing fluid from his lips, shaking it from his
fingertips. His would-be assassins, he saw, had been doused as well. “Fools!” he exclaimed.
“Burn me, and you burn too!” At the last instant, Sarcellus heard the bowstring
twang, the flaming arrow zip through the air. He jerked to the side. The shaft
struck the iron-eyed man. Flame leapt up his soiled robes, twined about his
cowl. But rather than fall, the
man lunged, his eyes fixed upon Sarcellus, his arms closing in an embrace. The shaft
snapped between them. Burning breast met burning breast. Flame consumed them both.
The thing called Sarcellus howled, shrieked with its entire face. It stared in
horror at the iron eyes, now wreathed in blazing fire… “Truth…” the man
whispered. Caraskand Ikurei Conphas. How like
a child he looked, his naked form half-twisted in sheets, his face tipped
gently back, as though he peered into some distant sky in his dreams. General
Martemus stood in the shadows, gazing down at the sleeping form of his Exalt-General,
silently rehearsing the command that had brought him here—knife in hand. “Tonight, Martemus, I will reach out my hand…” It was unlike any he’d ever been given. Martemus had spent most
of his life following commands, and though he’d unstintingly tried to execute
each and every one, even those that proved disastrous, their origins had always
haunted him. No matter how tormented or august the channels, the commands he
followed had always come from somewhere, from someplace within a beaten
and debauched world: peevish officers, spiteful apparati, vainglorious
generals… As a result, he had often thought that thought, so catastrophic for a
man who’d been
bred to serve: I am greater
than what 1 obey.
But the
command he followed this night… “Tonight, Martemus…” It came from nowhere
within the circle of this world. “I will
take a life.” To answer such a command,
he’d decided, was more than merely akin to worship—it was worship made flesh.
All meaningful things, it now seemed to him, were but forms of prayer. Lessons
of the Warrior-Prophet. Martemus raised the
silvery blade to a shaft of moonlight, and for a shining moment it seemed to fit Conphas’s throat. In his soul’s eye, he saw the
Imperial Heir dead, beautiful lips perched open in the memory of a final
breath, glassy eyes staring far, far into the Outside. He saw blood pooled in
folded linen sheets, like water between the petals of a lotus. The General
glanced about the luxurious bedchamber, at the dim frescoes prancing along the
walls, at the dark carpets swimming across the floor. Would it seem a simpler
place, he wondered, when they found his corpse in blooded sheets? Commands. Through them a
voice could become an army, a breath could become blood. Think of how long you’ve wanted this! U8 The Third March| Dread and exhilaration. You’re a practical man. Strike and be
done with it! Conphas groaned, shifted
like a naked virgin beneath the sheets. His eyes fluttered open. Stared at him
in dull incomprehension. Flickered to the accusatory knife. “Martemus?” the young man
gasped. “Truth,” the General
grated, striking downward. But there was a flash,
and though his arm continued arcing downward, his hand tumbled outward, the
knife slipping from nerveless fingers. Dumbstruck, he raised his arm, stared in
horror at the stump of his wrist. Blood spilled along the back of his forearm,
dribbled like piss from his elbow. He whirled to the
shadows, saw the glistening demon, its skin puckered by hell’fire, its face
impossibly extended, clawing the air like a crab… “Fucking Dunyain,” it
growled. Something passed through
Martemus’s neck. Something sharp… Martemus’s head bounced
from the side of the mattress into the shadows, a living expression still
flexing across its face. Too horrified to cry out, Conphas scrambled through
the tangled sheets, away from the figure th.. had killed his General. The form
backed into the blackness of a far corne: but for an instant Conphas glimpsed
something naked and nightmarish something impossible. “Who?” he cried. “Silence!” a familiar voice
hissed. “It’s me!” “Sarcellus?” The horror slackened
somewhat. But the bewilderment remained… Martemus dead? “This is a nightmare!”
Conphas exclaimed. “I still sleep!” “You don’t sleep, I assure you. Though you
came close to never awakening…” “What happens?” Conphas
cried. Despite hollow legs, he strode around the far mahogany post of his bed,
stood naked over the crumpled form of his General. The man still wore his field
uniform. “Martemus?” Uaraskand “Belonged to him,” the voice from the dark corner said. “Prince Kellhus,” Conphas
said in dawning recognition. Suddenly he understood all that he needed to know:
a battle had just been fought— and won. He grinned in relief—and wondrous
admiration. The man had used Martemus! Martemus! And here 1 thought I’d won the battle for
his soul! “I need a lantern,” he
snapped, recovering his imperious mien. What was that smell? “Strike no light!” the
disembodied voice cried. “They attacked me tonight as well.“ Conphas scowled. Saviour
or not, Sarcellus had no business barking commands at his betters. “As you can see,” he said
graciously, so as not to imply ingratitude, “my most trusted General is dead. I
will have light.” He turned to call for his guards… “Don’t be a fool! We must
act fast, otherwise the Holy War is doomed!“ Conphas paused, looked to
the corner concealing the Shrial Knight, his head tilted in morbid curiosity.
“They burned you, didn’t they?” He took two steps toward the shadows. “You
smell of pork.” There was a rattle, like
that of a bolting beast, and something slick barrelled across the bedchamber,
disappeared out the balcony… Roaring for his guards,
Conphas raced after him, waving past the gossamer sheers. Though he saw nothing
in the Caraskand night, he noticed the spray of Martemus’s blood across his
arms. He heard his guards explode into the room behind him, grinned at their
shouts of dismay. “General Martemus,” he
called, stepping out of the chill air into their astonished presence, “was a
traitor. Bring his body to the engines. See that it’s cast to the heathens,
where it belongs. Then send for General Sompas.” The truce had ended. “And the General’s head,”
his towering Captain, Triaxeras, asked in an unsteady voice, “do you wish that
cast to the heathens as well?” “No,” Ikurei Conphas
said, slipping into a robe held out by one of his haeturi. He laughed at the
absurdity of the man’s head, which lay like a • ‘■ The General neve, leaves m,
side, Tnah. Ґ<)uknQw Fustaras was a zealous
soldier. As a Proadjunct in the third maniple of the Selial Column, he was what
others in the Imperial Army called a “Threesie,” someone who’d signed a third
indenture—a third fourteen-year term—rather than taking his Imperial Pension.
Though often the bane of junior officers, Threesies like Fustaras were prized
by their generals, so much so they were often issued more shares than their
titular superiors. Everyone knew Threesies formed the stubborn heart of any
Column. They were the men who saw things through. Which was why, Fustaras
supposed, General Sompas had chosen him and several of his fellows for this
mission. “When children go astray,” the man had said, “they must be beaten.” Dressed, like most Men of
the Tusk, in looted Kianene robes, Fustaras and his band prowled the street
commonly known as the Galleries—so named, Fustaras supposed, because of the
innumerable, tenement-lined alleyways that wound about it. Located in the southeast
quarter of the Bowl, it was a notorious gathering place for the Zaudunyani—the
cursed heretics. Many would crowd the tenement rooftops and call out prayers to
the nearby Heights of the Bull, where that obscene fraud, Prince Kellhus of
Atrithau, continued to cower. Others would listen to deranged enthusiasts—they
called them Judges—preach from the mouth of various alleyways. Following his
instructions to the letter, Fustaras halted and accosted a Judge where the
heretics were most concentrated. “Tell me, friend,” he asked in an amiable
manner. “What do they say of Truth?” The emaciated man turned,
his pate gleaming pink through a froth of wild, white hair. Without hesitation,
he replied, “That it shines.” As though reaching for
coppers to toss to beggars, Fustaras clasped the ash club hanging beneath his
cloak. “Are you sure?” he asked, his demeanour at once casual and dangerous. He
hefted the polished haft. “Perhaps it bleeds.” The man’s sparkling gaze
darted from Fustaras’s eyes to the club, then back. “That too,” he said in the
rigid manner of someone resolved to Caraskand master their quailing
heart. He pitched his voice so those nearby could hear. “If not, then why the
Holy War?” This particular heretic,
Fustaras decided, was too clever by a half. He hoisted the club high, then
struck. The man fell to one knee. Blood trickled across his right temple and
cheek; he raised two glistening fingers to Fustaras, as though to say, See… Fustaras struck him
again. The Judge fell to the cracked cobble. Shouts echoed through the street,
and Fustaras glimpsed half-starved men running from all directions. Clubs
bared, his troop closed in formation about him. Even so, he found himself
reconsidering the merits of the General’s plan… There were so many. How could
there be so many? Then he remembered he was
a Threesie. He wiped the flecks of
blood from his face with a stained sleeve. “To all those who heed the so-called
Warrior-Prophet,” he cried. “Know that we, the Orthodox, will doom you as you
have doomed—” Something exploded
against his jaw. He pitched backward, clutching his face, stumbled over the
inert form of the Judge. He rolled across the hard ground, felt blood pulse
over his fingertips. A rock… Someone had thrown a rock! His ears ringing, clamour
roaring about him, he pressed himself to one knee, then found his feet.
Clutching his jaw, he stood, looked around… and saw his men being cut down.
Terror bolted through him. But
the general said— A wild-eyed Thunyeri with
three shrivelled Sranc heads jangling between his thighs reached out and seized
him by the throat. For an instant, the man looked scarcely human, he was so
tall and so thin. “Ream thuning praussa!” the flaxen-haired barbarian roared, swinging him
about. Fustaras glimpsed armed shadows behind, felt his cry gagged into a cough
by the thumb crushing his windpipe. “Fraas kaumrut!” There was an instant
where he could actually feel the cold of the iron spear tip against the small
of his back. A sensation, like sucking deep icy air. Howling faces. The hot rush
of blood. jM Caraskand A wheezing, huffing
animal ruled its black heart, mewling in pain and fury. The thing called
Sarcellus shuffled through the ruined precincts of some nameless tabernacle.
For three days it had skulked through the dark places of the city, unable to
close its face for pain. Now, kicking through a clutch of blackened human
skulls, it thought of the snow that whistled across the Plains of Agongorea, of
white expanses bruised black by pitch. It could remember leaping through the
cool cool drifts, soothed rather than bitten by the icy winds. It could
remember blood jetting across pristine white, fading into lines of rose. But the snow was so very
far—as far as Holy Golgotterath!—and the fire, it flared as near as his
blistered skin. The fire still burned! Curse’him,‘Curse’hirri’Curse’hirn’Curse’hirn!
Let me gnaw his tongue! Fuck his wounds! “Do you suffer, Gaorta?” It jerked like a cat,
peered through the cramped digits of its outer face. As still and glossy black
as a statue of diorite, the Synthese regarded him from the summit of several
heaped and charred bodies. Its face looked white and wet and inscrutable in the
gloom, like something carved from a potato. The shell of the Old
Father… Aurang, Great General of the World‘ Breaker, ancient Prince of the
Inchoroi. “It hurts, Old Father! How it hurts!” “Savour it, Gaorta, for
it’s but a taste of what is to come.” The thing called
Sarcellus snuffled and blubbered, rolled its inner and outer faces beneath the
merciless stars. “No,” it moaned, beating petulant fingers through the
debris at its feet. “Nooo!” “Yes,” the tiny lips
said. “The Holy War is doomed… You have failed. You, Gaorta.” Wild terror lanced
through its cringing thoughts: it knew what failure meant, but it couldn’t
move. There was only obedience before the Architect, the Maker. “But it wasn’t me! It was
them! The Cishaurim command the
Padirajah! It was their—” “Fault, Gaorta?” the Old Father said. “The very poison we
would suck from this world?” The thing called
Sarcellus raised its hands in desperate warding. All the monstrous and
monumental glory of the Consult seemed to crash down upon him. “I’m sorry,
please!” The tiny eyes closed, but
whether in weariness or in contemplation, the thing called Sarcellus could not
tell. When they opened, they were as blue as cataracts. “One more task, Gaorta.
One more task in the name of spite.” It fell to its belly
before the Synthese, writhed and grovelled in agony. “Anything!” it gasped.
“Anything! I would cut out any heart! Pluck any eye! I would drag the whole
world to oblivion!” “The Holy War is doomed.
We must deal with the Cishaurim some other way…” Again, the eyes clicked shut.
“You must ensure this Kellhus dies with the Men of the Tusk. He must not
escape.” And the thing called
Sarcellus forgot about snow. Vengeance! Vengeance would balm his blasted skin! “Now,” the palm-sized expression grated, and Gaorta had
the sense of vast power, ancient and hoary, forced through a reed throat. Here
and there, small showers of dust trailed down the broken walls. “Close your face.” Gaorta obeyed as he must,
screamed as he must. Proyas’s missive crumpled
in his right hand, Cnaьir strode through a carpeted corridor belonging to the
humble but strategically located villa where the Conriyan had chosen to sequester
his household—or what remained of it. He paused before entering the bright
square of the courtyard, stooping beneath the florid double-arched vaults
peculiar to Kianene architecture. A dried orange peel, no longer than his
thumb, lay curled in the dust encircling the black marble base of the left
pilaster. Without thinking, he scooped it into his mouth, winced at the
bitterness. Every day he grew more
hungry. M^ son! How could he so name my son? He found Proyas awaiting
him near one of three brackish pools at the centre of the courtyard, loitering
with two men he didn’t recognize: an imperial officer and a Shrial Knight.
Mid-morning clouds formed a ponderous procession across the sky, drawing their
shadows across the sun-bright confusion of
the hills that loomed over the courtyard’s shadi porticos, particularly to the
south and west. Caraskand. The city that
had become their tomb. He does
this to gall me. To remind me of the object of my hate! Proyas caught sight of him
first. “Cnaьir, good—” “I don’t read,” he growled, tossing the
crumpled sheaf at the Prince’s feet. “If you wish to confer with me, send word,
not scratches.” Proyas’s expression
darkened. “But of course,” he said tightly. He nodded to the two strangers, as
though trying to salvage some rigid semblance of jnanic decorum. “These men
have made a claim—of sorts— in a bid to secure my support. I would have you
confirm it.” Struck by a sudden
horror, Cnaьir stared at the imperial officer, recognizing the insignia stamped
into the collar of his cuirass. And of course, there was the blue mantle… The man frowned,
exchanged a smiling, significant look with his companion. “He grows lean in wits as
well,” the officer said in a voice Cnaьir recognized all too well.
He suddenly remembered it floating across the corpses of his kinsmen—at
the Battle of Kiyuth. Ikurei Conphas… The Exalt-General stood
before him! But how could he fail to recognize him? But the madness lifts! It lifts! Cnaьir blinked, saw
himself seated upon Conphas’s chest, carving off his nose the way a child might
draw in the mud. “What does he want.?” he barked at Proyas. He glanced at the
Shrial Knight, realizing he’d seen the man before as well, though he couldn’t
recall his name. A small, golden Tusk hung about the Knight-Commander’s neck,
cupped in the folds of his white surcoat. Conphas answered in
Proyas’s stead. “What I want, you barbaric lout, is the truth.” “The truth?” “Lord Sarcellus,” Proyas
said, “claims to have news of Atrithau.” Cnaьir stared at the man,
for the first time noticing the bandages about his hands and the odd network of
angry red lines across his sumptuous face. “Atrithau? But how is that
possible?” “Three men have come
forward,” Sarcellus said, “out of the piety of their hearts. They swear that a
man—a veteran of the northern caravans Caraskand who perished in the
desert—told them there was no way Prince Kellhus could be who he claims to be.“
The Shrial Knight smiled in a peculiar fashion—obviously the burns, or whatever
marred his face, were quite painful. ”Apparently the scandal of Atrithau,“
Sarcellus continued inexorably, ”is that its King, Aethelarius, has no live heirs. The House of Morghund is about to flicker
out—forever, they say. And this means that Anasurimbor Kellhus is a pretender.“ The faint throb of
Kianene drums filled the silence. Cnaьir turned back to Proyas. “You said they
want your support… For what?” “Just answer the blasted
question!” Conphas exclaimed. Ignoring the
Exalt-General, Cnaьir and Proyas exchanged a look of honesty and admission. Despite
their quarrels, such looks had become frighteningly common over the course of
the past weeks. “With my support,” Proyas
said, “they think they can prosecute Kellhus without inciting war within these
cursed walls.” “Prosecute Kellhus?” “Yes… As a False Prophet,
according to the Law of the Tusk.” Cnaьir scowled. “And why
do you need my word?” “Because I trust you.” Cnaьir swallowed. (Jutland dogs! someone raged. Kine! For some reason a look of
alarm flickered across Conphas’s face. “Apparently the illustrious
Prince of Conriya,” Sarcellus said, “will have no truck with hearsay…” “Not,” Proyas snapped,
“on a matter as ill-omened as this!” Working his jaw, Cnaьir
glared at the Shrial Knight, wondering what could cause such a strange
disposition of burns across a man’s face. He thought of the Battle of Anwurat,
of the relish with which he’d driven his knife into Kellhus’s chest—or the
thing that had looked like him. He thought of Serwe‘ gasping beneath him, and a
pang watered his eyes. Only she knew his heart. Only she understood when he
awoke weeping… Serwe, first wife of his
heart. I will have her! someone within him wept. She belongs to me! So beautiful… My proof-Suddenly everything seemed to slump, as though the world
itself had been soaked in numbness and lead. And he realized—without anguish, int imiku MARCH without heartbreak—that
Anasurimbor Moenghus was beyond him. Despite all his hate, all his
tooth-gnashing fury, the blood trail he followed ended here… In a city. We’re dead. All of us… If Caraskand was to be
their tomb, he would see certain blood spilled first. But Moenghus.‘ someone
cried. Moenghus must die! And yet he could no longer
recall the hated face. He saw only a mewling infant… “What you say is true,”
he finally said. He turned to Proyas, held his astonished, brown-eyed gaze. It
seemed he could taste the orange peel anew, so bitter were the words. “The man you call Prince
Kellhus is an imposter… A prince of nothing.” Never, it seemed, had his
heart felt so flaccid and cold. The many-pillared
audience hall of the Sapatishah’s Palace was as immense as old King Eryeat’s
dank gallery in Moraor, the ancient Hall of Kings in Oswenta, and yet the glory
of the Warrior-Prophet made it seem the hearth room of a hovel. Seated upon
Imbeyan’s throne of ivory and bone, Saubon watched his approach with
trepidation. Cupped in gigantic bowls of iron, the King-Fires crackled in his
periphery. Even after all this time they seemed to offend the surrounding
magnificence—the imposition of a crude and backward people. But still, he was King!
King of Caraskand. Draped in white samite,
the man who’d once been Prince Kellhus paused beneath him, standing on the
round crimson rug the Kianene had used for obeisance. He did not kneel, nor did
he seem to blink. “Why have you summoned
me?” “To warn you… You must
flee. The Council convenes shortly…” “But the Padirajah
commands the approaches, rules the countryside. Besides, I cannot abandon those
who follow me. I cannot abandon you.” “But you must! They will
condemn you. Even Proyas!” “And you, Coithus Saubon?
Will you condemn me?” “No… Never!” “But you’ve already given
them your guarantees.” “Who said this? What liar
dares—” “You. You say this.” “But… But you must understand!” “I understand. They’ve
ransomed your city. All you need do is pay.” “No! It’s not that way. It’s not!” “Then what way is it?” “It… It… It is what it is!” “For all of your life,
Saubon, you’ve ached for this, the trappings of a tyrant—the effects of old
Eryeat, your father. Tell me, to whom did you run, Saubon, after your father
beat you? Who dabbed your cuts with fleece? Was it to your mother? Or was it to
Kussalt, your groom? ”No one beat me! He… He…“ “Kussalt, then. Tell me,
Saubon, what was more difficult? Losing him on the Plains of Mengedda, or
learning of his lifelong hate?” “Silence!” “All your long life, no
one has known you.” “Silence!” “All your long life
you’ve suffered, you’ve questioned—” “No! No! Silence!” “—and you’ve punished
those who would love you.” Saubon slapped burly hands about his ears. “Cease! I
command it!” ■ “As you punished Kussalt, as you punish—” “Silence-silence-silence! They told me you would do this!
They warned me!“ “Indeed. They warned you
against the truth. Against wandering into the nets of the
Warrior-Prophet.“ “How can you know this?”
Saubon cried, overcome by incredulous woe. “How?” “Because it’s Truth.” “Then fie on it! Fie on the truth!” “And what of your
immortal soul?” “Then let it be damned!”
he roared, leaping to his feet. “I embrace it— embrace it all! Damnation in
this life! Damnation in all
others! Torment
heaped upon torment! I would bear all to be King for a day! I would see you
broken and blooded if that meant I could own this throne! I would see the God’s own eyes plucked out!” The Third March This last scream pealed
through the hollow recesses of the audience hall, returned to him in a haunting
shiver: pluck-plucked-out-out… He fell to his knees
before his throne, felt the heat of his King-Fires bite tear-soaked skin. There
was shouting, the clank of armour and weaponry. Guards had come rushing… But of the
Warrior-Prophet there was no sign. “He-he’s not real,”
Saubon mumbled to the hollows of his court. “He doesn’t exist!” But the gold-ringed fists
kept falling. They would never stop. He’d spent days seated upon
the terrace, lost in whatever worlds he searched in his trances. At sunrise and
sunset, Esmenet would go to him and leave a bowl of water as he’d directed. She
brought him food as well, though he’d asked her not to. She would stare at his
broad, motionless back, at his hair waving in the breeze, at the dying sun upon
his face, and she would feel like a little girl kneeling before an idol,
offering tribute to something monstrous and insatiable: salted fish, dried
prunes and figs, unleavened bread—enough to cause a small riot in the lower
city. He touched none of it. Then one dawn she went
out to him, and he wasn’t there. After a desperate rush
through the galleries of the palace, she found him in their apartments, unkempt
and rakish, joking with Serwe, who had just arisen. “Esmi-Esmi-Esmi,” the
swollen-eyed girl pouted. “Could you bring me little Moenghus?” Too relieved to feel
exasperated, Esmenet ducked into the adjoining nursery and plucked the
black-haired babe from his cradle. Though his dumbfounded stare made her smile,
she found the winter blue of his eyes unnerving. “I was just saying,”
Kellhus said as she delivered the child to Serwe, “that the Great Names have
summoned me…” He reached out a haloed hand. “They want to parley.” He mentioned nothing, of
course, about his meditation. He never did. Esmenet took his hand,
sat beside him on their bed, only just understanding the implications of what
he had said. “Parley?” she suddenly
cried. “Kellhus, they summon you to condemn you!“ “Kellhus?” Serwe asked.
“What does she mean?” “That this parley is a trap,” Esmenet exclaimed. She stared hard at Kellhus. “You
know this!” “What can you mean?”
Serwe exclaimed. “Everyone loves Kellhus… Everyone knows now.“ “No, Serwe. Many hate
him—very many. Very many want him dead!” Serwe laughed in the oblivious way of
which only she seemed capable. “Esmenet…” she said,
shaking her head as though at a beloved fool. She boosted little Moenghus
into the air. “Auntie Esmi forgets,” she cooed to the infant. “Yeeesss. She
forgets who your father is!” Esmenet watched
dumbstruck. Sometimes she wanted nothing more than to wring the girl’s
neck. How? How could he love such a simpering fool? “Esmi…” Kellhus said
abruptly. The warning in his voice chilled her heart. She turned to him, shouted
Forgive me! with her eyes. But at the same time, she
couldn’t relent, not now, not after what she had found. “Tell her, Kellhus!
Tell her what’s about to happen!” Not again.
Not again! “Listen to me, Esmi.
There’s no other way. The Zaudunyani and the Orthodox cannot go to war.” “Not even for you?” she
cried. “This Holy War, this city, is but a pittance compared to you! Don’t you
see, Kellhus?” Her desperation swelled into sudden anguish and desolation, and
she angrily wiped at her tears. This was too important for selfish grief! But I’ve lost so many! “Don’t you see how
precious you are? Think of what Akka said! What if you’re the world’s only
hope?” He cupped her cheek,
brushed her eyebrow with his thumb, which he held warm against her temple. “Sometimes, Esmi, we must
cross death to reach our destination.” She thought of King Shikol in The Tractate, the demented Xerashi King who’d commanded the Latter
Prophet’s execution. She thought of his gilded thighbone, the instmment of
judgement, which to this day remained the most potent symbol of evil in
Inrithidom. Was this what Inri Sejenus had said to his nameless lover? That
loss could somehow secure glory? HE 1HIRD MARCH But this is madness! “The Shortest Path,” she
said, horrified by the teary-eyed contemptu-ousness of her tone. But the blond-bearded
face smiled. “Yes,” the
Warrior-Prophet said. “The Logos.” “Anasurimbor Kellhus,”
Gotian intoned in his powerful voice, “I hereby denounce you as a False
Prophet, and as a pretender to the warrior-caste. It is the judgement of the
Council of Great and Lesser Names that you be scourged in the manner decreed by
Scripture.” Serwe heard a wail pierce
the thunderous outcry, and only afterward realized that it was her own.
Moenghus sobbed in her arms, and she reflexively began rocking him, though she
was too frightened to coo reassurances. The Hundred Pillars had drawn their
swords, and now thronged to either side of them, trading fierce glares with the
Shrial Knights. “You judge no one!” someone was bellowing. “The Warrior-Prophet alone
speaks the judgement of the Gods! It is you who’ve been found wanting! You who
shall be punished!” “False! False! — ” It seemed a thousand
half-starved faces cried a thousand hungry things. Accusations. Curses.
Laments. The air was flushed by humid cries. Hundreds had gathered within the
ruined shell of the Citadel of the Dog to hear the Warrior-Prophet answer the
charges of the Great and Lesser Names. Hot in the sun, the black ruins towered
about them: walls uncon-summated by vaults, foundations obscured by heaped
wreckage, the side of a fallen tower bare and rounded against the debris, like
the flanks of a whale breaching the surface of a choppy sea. The Men of the
Tusk had congregated across every pitched slope and beneath every monolithic
remnant. Fist-waving faces packed every pocket of clear ground. Instinctively pulling her
baby tight to her breast, Serwe glanced around in terror. Esmi was right… We shouldn’t have come! She looked up to Kellhus, and
wasn’t surprised by the divine calm with which he observed the masses. Even
here, he seemed the godlike nail which fastened what happened to what should happen. He’ll make them see! Caraskand But the roar was
redoubled, and reverberated through her body. Several men had drawn their knives,
as though the sound of fury were grounds enough for murderous riot. So much hatred. Even the Great Names,
gathered in the clear centre of the fortress’s courtyard, looked apprehensive.
They gazed blank-faced at the thundering mobs, almost as though they were
counting. Already several fights had broken out; she could see the flash of
steel and flailing monkey limbs amidst the packed mobs—believers beset by
unbelievers. A starved fanatic with a
knife managed to slip past the Hundred Pillars, rushed the Warrior-Prophet… … who pinched the knife
from his hand as though he were a child, clasped his throat with one hand and
lifted him from the ground, like a gasping dog. The pocked grounds
gradually quieted as more and more turned their horrified eyes to the Warrior-Prophet
and his thrashing burden—until shortly only the would-be assassin could be
heard, gagging. Serwe’s skin pimpled in dread. Why do they do this? Why do they dare his wrath? Kellhus tossed the man to
the ground, where he lay inert, a heap of slack limbs. “What is it that you
fear?” the Warrior-Prophet asked. His tone was both plaintive and imperious—not
the overbearing manner of a King certain of his sanction, but the despotic
voice of Truth. Gotian shouldered his way
passed the interceding onlookers. “The wrath of the God,” he cried, “who
punishes us for harbouring an abomination!” “No.” His flashing eyes
found them from among the masses: Saubon, Proyas, Conphas, and the others. “You
fear that as my power waxes, yours will wane. You do what you do not in the
name of the God, but in the name of avarice. You wouldn’t tolerate even the God
to possess your Holy War. And yet, in each of your hearts there is an itch, an
anguished question that I alone can see: What if he truly is the Prophet? What doom awaits us
then?” “SILENCE.1”
Conphas roared, spittle flying from his contorted lips. “And you, Conphas? What
is it that you hide?” “His words are spears!”
Conphas cried to the others. “His very voice is an outrage!” int 1H1KU MARCH “But I ask only your question: What if you are wrong?” Even Conphas was
dumbstruck by the force of these words. It was as though the
Warrior-Prophet had made this demand in the God’s own voice. “You turn to fury in the
absence of certainty,” he continued sadly. “I only ask you this: What moves
your soul/ What moves you to condemn me/ Is it indeed the God? The God strides
with certainty, with glory, through the hearts of men! Does
the God so stride through you/ Does
theGod so stride through you?” Silence. The poignant
hush of dread, as though they were a congregation of debauched children
suddenly confronted by the rebuke of their godlike father. Serwe felt tears
flood her cheeks. They see! They at last see! But then a Shrial Knight,
the one named Sarcellus, whose face alone remained pious and devoid of
hesitation, answered the Warrior-Prophet in a loud, clear voice. ‘“All things both sacred
and vile,’” the Knight-Commander said, quoting the Tusk, ‘“speak to the hearts
of Men, and they are bewildered, and holding out their hands to darkness, they name it light.’” The Warrior-Prophet
stared at him sharply, and quoted in turn: ‘“Hearken Truth, for it strides
fiercely among you, and will not be denied.’” Possessed of beatific
calm, Sarcellus answered: ‘“Fear him, for he is the deceiver, the Lie made
Flesh, come among you to foul the waters of your heart.’” And the Warrior-Prophet
smiled sadly. “Lie made flesh, Sarcellus/” Serwe watched his eyes search the
crowds, then settle on the nearby Scylvendi. “Lie made flesh,” he repeated,
staring into the fiend’s embattled face. “The hunt need not end… Remember this
when you recall the secret of battle. You still command the ears of the Great.” “False Prophet,” Sarcellus continued. “Prince
of nothing.” As if these words had been a sign, the Shrial Knights
rushed the Hundred Pillars, and there was the clash of fierce arms. Someone
shrieked, and one of the Knights fell to his knees, grasping in his left hand
the gushing stump where his right hand should have been. Another shriek, and
then yet another, and then the starving mobs, as though sobered from a drunken
stupor by the sight of blood, surged forward. Caraskand Serwe screamed, clawed at
the Warrior-Prophet’s white sleeve, grasped her baby with fierce desperation.
This isn’t happening… But it was hopeless.
After several moments of howling butchery, the Shrial Knights were upon them.
With nightmarish horror she watched the Warrior-Prophet catch a blade in his
palms, break it, and then touch the neck of his assailant. The man crumpled.
Another he caught by the arm, which suddenly went limp as sackcloth, and then
drove his fist through his face, as though the man’s head were a melon. Somewhere impossibly far
away, she heard Gotian roar at his men, thunder at them to stop. She saw a manic-faced
Knight rush her, sword raised to the sun, but then he was on the ground,
fumbling with a fountain of blood that had bloomed from his side, and then a
rough arm was about her, tiger-striped by scars and impossibly strong. The Scylvendi? The
Scylvendi had saved her? At last bridled by their
Grandmaster, the Shrial Knights relented, and stood back. They were lean and
wolfish beneath their hauberks. The Tusks they bore on their stained and
tattered surcoats looked threadbare and wicked. It seemed the whole world
had erupted in a chorus of howling throats. Gotian stepped from the
sweaty thunder beyond his men, and after glancing a dark moment at
Cnaiur, he turned to the Warrior-Prophet. His once aristocratic face
looked haggard and bitter, the look of a man who had been harrowed by a
hateful world. “Yield, Anasurimbor
Kellhus,” he said hoarsely. “You will be scourged according to Scripture.” Serwe thrashed against
the plainsman until he released her. He stared at her with savage horror, and
she felt only hate—bone-snapping hate. She stumbled, to Kellhus’s side, and
buried her face and her child against his robes. “Yield!” she sobbed. “My lord and master you must yield! Do
not die in this place! You must not die!” She could feel her
Prophet’s tender eyes upon her, his divine embrace encompass her. She looked up
into his face and saw love in his shining, god-remote eyes. The love of the God
for her! For Serwe, first wife and lover of the
Warrior-Prophet. For the girl who was nothing… inc iniKU 1V1ARCH Glittering tears branched
across her cheeks. “I love you!” she cried. “I love you and you cannot die!” She looked down at the
squalling babe between them. “Our son!” she sobbed. “Our son needs the God!” She felt rough hands pull
her back, and an ache such as she’d never suffered as they pulled her from his
embrace. My heart! They tear
me from my heart! “He’s the God!” she
shrieked. “Can’t you see? He’s the
God!” She struggled against the
man who held her, but he was too strong. “The God!” The man who held her
spoke: “According to Scripture?” It was Sarcellus. “According to Scripture,”
the Grandmaster replied, but there was now pity in his voice. “But she has a newborn
child!” another cried—the Scylvendi… What did he mean? She looked to him, but
he was a dark shadow against the congregation of warlike men, spliced by tears
and sunlight. “It matters not,” Gotian
replied, his voice hardening with mad resolve. “My child!” Was there
desperation, pain in the Scylvendi’s voice? No… not your child. Kellhus? What happened? “Then take it.” Curt, as
though seeking to snuff further mortification. Someone pulled her
wailing son from her arms. Another heart gone. Another ache. No… Moenghus? What’s happening? Serwe shrieked, until it
seemed her eyes must shimmer into flame, her face crumble into dust. The flash of sunlight
across a knife. Sarcellus’s knife. Sounds. Celebratory and horrified. Serwe felt her life spill
across her breasts. She worked her lips to speak to him, that godlike man so
near, to say something final, but there was no sound, no breath. She raised her
hands and beads of dark wine fell from her outstretched fingers… My Prophet, my love, how could this be? I know not, sweet Serwe… And as sky and the
howling faces beneath darkened, she remembered his words, once spoken. Caraskand “You are innocence, sweet Serwe, the one heart I need
not teach ” Last
flare of sunlight, drowsy, as though glimpsed by a child stirring from dreams
beneath an airy tree. Innocence, Serwe. The limb-vaulted canopy, growing
darker, warm-woollen like a shroud. ]‘t[o more sun. You are the mercy you seek. But my baby,
my — Twenty-three Caraskand For Men, no circle is ever closed. We
walk ever in spirals. —DRUSAS ACHAMIAN, THE
COMPENDIUM OF THE FIRST HOLY WAR Bring he who has spoken prophecy to the
judgement of the priests, and if his prophecy is judged true, acclaim him, for
he is clean, and if his prophecy is judged false, bind him to the corpse of his
wife, and hang him one cubit above the earth, for he is unclean, an anathema
unto the Gods. —WARRANTS 7:48, THE CHRONICLE
OF THE TUSK Late Winter, 4112 Year-of-the-Tusk,
Caraskand It was as though someone
had struck the back of his knees with a staff. Eleazaras stumbled forward, but
was steadied by the strong arms of Lord Chinjosa, Count-Palatine of Antanamera. No…No. “Do you know what this
means/” Chinjosa hissed. Eleazaras pushed the
Palatine away and took two more drunken steps toward Chepheramunni’s body. The
gloom of his sickroom was alleviated by a cluster of candles at the head of his
bed. The bed itself was lavish, set between four marble columns that braced the
low vaults of the ceiling. But it reeked of feces, blood, and pestilence. Caraskand dli Chepheramunni’s head lay
beneath the congregated candles, but his face… It was nowhere to be
seen. Where his face should have been lay what resembled an overturned spider,
its legs clutched in death about its abdomen. What had been Chepheramunni’s
face lay unspooled across the knuckles and shins of the steepled limbs.
Eleazaras saw familiar fragments: a lone nostril, the haired ridge of an
eyebrow. Beneath he glimpsed lidless eyes and the shine of human teeth, bared
and lipless. And just as that fool
Skalateas had claimed, nowhere could he sense the bruise of sorcery. Chepheramunni—a Cishaurim
skin-spy. Impossible. The Grandmaster of the
Scarlet Spires coughed, blinked back uncharacteristic tears. This was too much.
The very air seemed nightmarish with mad implication. The ground tipped beneath
his feet. Once again, he felt Chinjosa steady him. “Grandmaster! What does
this mean?” That we’re doomed.
That I’ve led my School to its destruction. A string of catastrophes. The disastrous losses at the
battle of Anwurat. General Setpanares killed. Fifteen sorcerers of rank dead
between the desert and the plague. And the disaster at Iothiah, which had
claimed the lives of two others. The Holy War besieged and starving. And now this… To find
their hated enemy here, standing with him upon the summit. How much did the
Cishaurim know? “We’re doomed,” Eleazaras muttered. “No, Grandmaster,”
Chinjosa replied, his own deep voice still tight with horror. Eleazaras turned to him.
Chinjosa was a large, burly man geared for war in his ring-mail hauberk, over
which he wore an open Kianene coat of red silk. The white cosmetics made his
strong-featured face stark against his black, square-cut beard. Chinjosa had
proven himself indomitable in battle, an able commander, and in Iyokus’s
absence, a shrewd adviser. “We would be doomed had this abomination led us into battle.
Perhaps the Gods have favoured us with their afflictions.” Eleazaras stared numbly
into Chinjosa’s face, struck by a further terrifying thought. “You are who you
are, Chinjosa?” The Palatine of
Antanamera, the province that had so often proven itself the spine of High
Ainon, looked at him sternly. “It is me,
Grandmaster.” Eleazaras studied the
caste-noble, and it seemed as though the man’s simple, warlike strength pulled
him back from the brink of despair. Chinjosa was right. This wasn’t yet another
catastrophe; it was a… blessing of a sort. But if Chepheramunni could be
replaced… There must be others. “No one is to know of
this, Chinjosa. No one.” The Palatine nodded in the dim
light. // only that Mandate ingrate had broken! “Remove its head,”
Eleazaras said, his voice terse with growing outrage, “then throw the carcass
onto the pyre.” Achamian and Xinemus
walked the ways of twilight, between light and dark, where only shadows are
known. There was no food in this place, no life-giving water, and their bodies,
which they carried across their backs the way one might carry a corpse,
suffered horribly. The twilight way. The
shadow way. From the port city of Joktha to Caraskand. When they passed near the
camps of the enemy, they could feel the Cishaurim’s plucked eyes—brilliant,
pure, like a lamplight before a silvered mirror—search for them from beyond the
horizon. Many times Achamian felt that otherworldly light throw shadows from
their shadows. Many times Achamian thought they were doomed. But always those
eyes turned away their inhuman scrutiny, either deceived or… Achamian could not
say why. Gaining the walls, they
revealed themselves beneath a small postern gate. It was night, and torches
glittered between the battlements above. With Xinemus slumped against him,
Achamian called to the astonished guards: “Open the gates! I am Drusas
Achamian, a Mandate Schoolman, and this is Krijates Xinemus, the Marshal of
Attrempus… We have come to share your plight!” Caraskand “This city is both doomed
and damned,” someone shouted down. “Who seeks entry to such a place? Who but
madmen or traitors?” Achamian paused before
answering, struck by the bleak conviction of the man’s tone. The Men of the
Tusk, he realized, had lost all hope. “Those who would attend
their loved ones,” he said. “Even unto death.” After a pause, the outer
doors burst open and a troop of hollow-cheeked Tydonni seized them. At long
last they found themselves inside the horror of Caraskand. The temple-complex of
Csokis, Esmenet had heard some say, was as old as the Great Ziggurat of Xijoser
in Shigek. It occupied the heart of the Bowl, and from the limestone-paved
reaches of its central campus, the Kalaul, all five of the surrounding heights
could be seen. In the centre of the campus rose a great tree, an ancient
eucalyptus that Men had called Umiaki since time immemorial. Esmenet wept in
its cavernous shadow, staring up at the hanging forms of Kellhus and Serwe. The
infant Moenghus dozed in her arms—oblivious. “Please… Please wake up,
Kellhus, please!” Before roaring mobs,
Incheiri Gotian had stripped Kellhus of his clothing, then whipped him with
cedar branches until he’d bled from a hundred places. Afterward, they bound his
bleeding body to Serwe’s nude corpse, ankle to ankle, wrist to wrist, face to
face. Then they lashed the two of them, limbs outstretched, to a great bronze
ring, which they hoisted and chained—upside down no less—to the winding girth
of Umiaki’s lowest and mightiest limb. Esmenet had wailed her voice to nothing. Now they spun in slow
circles, their golden hair mingling in the breeze, their arms and legs sweeping
out like those of dancers. Esmenet glimpsed ashen breasts crushed against a
shining ribcage, armpit hair twisted into horns, then Serwe’s slender back
rolled into view, almost mannish because of the deep line of her spine. She
glimpsed her sex, bared between outspread legs, pressed against the confusion
of Kellhus’s genitalia… Serwe… Her face
blackening as the blood settled, her limbs and torso carved in grey marble, as
perfect in form as any artifice. And Kellhus… i>30 The Third March His face sheened in
sweat, his muscular back gleaming white between lines of angry red. His eyes
swollen shut. “But you said!” Esmenet
wailed. “You said Truth can’t die!” Serwe dead. Kellhus
dying. No matter how long she looked, no matter how deep her reason, no matter
how shrill her threats… Around and around, the
dying and the dead. A mad pendulum. Holding Moenghus close,
Esmenet curled across the waxy mat of leaves. They smelled bitter where her
body bruised them. “Remember when you recall the secret of
battle…” The Inrithi fell silent
as he passed, their eyes following him as they followed kings. Cnaьir knew well
the effect his presence worked on other men. Even beneath starred skies, he
needed no gold, no herald or banner, to announce the fact of his station. He
wore his glory on the skin of his arms. He was Cnaьir urs Skiotha,
breaker-of-horses-and-men; others need only look to fear him. “The hunt need not end …” Shut up! Shut up! The Kalaul, the broad
central campus of Csokis, teemed with piteous and despicable humanity. Along
the terminus of the campus, Inrithi crowded the monumental steps of temples
that looked, to Cnaьir’s eyes, as ancient as any he’d seen in Shigek or Nansur.
Others skulked beneath the pillared facades of dormitories and half-ruined
cloisters. Across the outskirts, Inrithi sat upon mats and muttered to one
another. Some even tended small fires, burning aromatic resins and
woods—oblations, no doubt, for their Warrior-Prophet. The crowds thickened as
he neared the great tree in the Kalaul’s heart. He saw men wearing only shirts,
their hindquarters smeared with shit. He saw others whose stomachs seemed
pinned to their spines. He encountered one bare-chested fool who leapt up and
down shaking cupped hands over his head like a rattle. When Cnaьir shouldered
the imbecile aside, something like pebbles scattered across the paving stones.
He heard the madman wailing about teeth in his wake. “… the secret of battle…” Lies! More lies! Heedless of the threats
and curses that greeted his passage, Cnaьir continued battling forward,
pressing through what seemed a malodorous sea of heads, elbows, and shoulders.
He paused only when he could clearly view the mighty tree that men called
Umiaki. Like an immense, upturned root, it rose black and leafless into the
night sky, shrouding its precincts in impenetrable darkness. “You still command the ears of the
Great…” No matter how hard Cnaьir
peered, he could see nothing of the Dunyain—or Serwe. “Does he still breathe?”
he cried. “Does his heart still beat?” The Inrithi massed about
him turned to one another, shared looks of anxious bewilderment. No one
replied. Dog-eyed drunks. He plowed through them in
disgust, yanking men aside to move forward. Finally he reached the perimeter of
Shrial Knights, one of whom pressed a palm to his chest to hold him back.
Cnaьir scowled until the man withdrew his hand, then peered yet again into the
darkness beneath Umiaki. He could see nothing. For a time, he pondered
cutting his way to the tree. Then a procession of Shrial Knights bearing
torches passed on the far side of Umiaki, and for a fleeting moment Cnaьir
glimpsed his sprawled silhouette—or was it hers?—against the glittering lights. The forward ranks of
Inrithi began shouting, some in rapture, others in derision. Through the
uproar, Cnaьir heard a velvety voice, spoken in timbres only his heart could
hear. “It’s good that you’ve come… Proper.” Cnaьir stared in horror
at the figure across the ring. Then the string of torches marched on, and darkness
reclaimed the ground beneath Umiaki. The surrounding clamour subsided,
fractured into individual shouts. “All men,” the voice said, “should know their work.” “I come to watch you suffer!” Cnaьir cried. “I come
to watch you die!” In his periphery, he glimpsed men turning to him in alarm.
“But why? Why would you want
such a thing?”
“Because you betrayed me!” “How.? How
have 1 betrayed you?” The Third March “You need only speak! You’re Dunyain!” “You make too much of me… More even then
these Inrithi.” “Because I know! 1 alone know what you are! I alone can destroy you!” He
laughed as only a many-blooded Chieftain of the Utemot could, then gestured to
the darkness beneath Umiaki. “Witness…” “And my father? The hunt need not end—you
know this.” Cnaьir stood breathless,
as motionless as a horse-laming stone hidden among the Steppe grasses. “I’ve made a trade,” he
said evenly. “I’ve yielded to the greater hate.” “Have you?” “Yes! Yes! Look at her!
Look at what you’ve done to her!” “What I’ve done,
Scylvendi? Or what you’ve done?” “She’s dead. My Serwe! My
Serwe is dead! My prize!” “Oh, yes… What will they whisper, now that your proof has
passed? How will they measure?” “They killed her because
of you!” Laughter, full and
easy-hearted, like that of a favourite uncle just into his cups. “Spoken like a true Son of
the Steppe!” “You mock me?” A heavy hand seized his
shoulder. “Enough!” someone was shouting. “Stow your madness! Cease speaking
that foul tongue!” In a single motion,
Cnaьir snatched the hand and twisted it about, wrenching tendon and bone. He
effortlessly wheeled the fool who’d grabbed him from his place among the
others. He struck the cow-faced ingrate to the ground. “Mock? Who would dare mock a murderer?” “You!” Cnaьir screamed at
the tree. He reached out neck-breaking arms. “You killed her!” “No, Scylvendi. You did… When you sold
me.” “To save my son!” And Cnaьir saw her, limp
and horrified in Sarcellus’s arms, blood spouting across her gown, her eyes
drowning in darkness… The darkness! How many eyes had he watched it consume? He heard a babe bawling
from the black. “They were supposed to
kill the whore!” Cnaьir screamed. Several Inrithi were
shouting at him now. He felt a blow glance his cheek, glimpsed the flash of
steel. He grabbed a man about the head, drove his thumbs into his eyes.
Something sharp pricked his thigh. Fists pounded against his back. Something—a
club or a pommel—cracked against his temple; he released the man, reeling
backward. He glimpsed black Umiaki, and heard the Dunyain laughing, laughing as
the Utemot had laughed. “Weeper!” “You!” he roared, beating
down men with stone-fisted blows. “YOU!” Suddenly the clutching,
cutting mob scrambled back from a brawling figure to his right. Several cried
out in apology. Cnaьir glanced at the man, who stood almost as tall as he,
though not so broad. “Have you lost your wits,
Scylvendi? It’s me! Me!” “You murdered Serwe.” And suddenly, the
stranger became Coithus Saubon, dressed in a penitent’s shabby robes. What kind
of devilry? “Cnaьir,” the Galeoth
Prince exclaimed, “who are you speaking to?” “You…” the darkness cackled. “Scylvendi?” Cnaьir shook free of the
man’s firm grip. “This is a fool’s vigil,” he grated. He spat, then turned to
fight his way free of the stink. Esmi… His heart leapt at the thought. I’m coming, my sweet. I’m so very close! <■ It seemed he
could smell the musky orange of her scent. It seemed he could hear her gasps
hot against his cheek, feel her grind against his loins, desperately, as though
to smother a perilous fire. It seemed he could see her throwing back her hair—a
glimpse of sultry eyes and parted lips. So very close! The Tydonni—five
Numaineiri knights and a motley of men-at-arms—escorted them through the dark
streets. The Tydonni had been courteous enough, given the circumstances of
their arrival, but until someone in authority vouched for the two of them, the
knights refused to Ihe Third March say much of anything.
Achamian saw other Men of the Tusk on their route, most of them as wretched as
the guards upon the gate. Whether sitting in windows, or leaning with others
against the pilasters, they stared, their faces pale and blank, their eyes
impossibly bright, as though housing the fires that wasted their frames. Achamian had seen such
looks before. On the Fields of Eleneot, after the death of Anasurimbor
Celmomas. In great Tryse, watching the fall of the Shinoth Gate. On the Plains
of Mengedda, awaiting the approach of dread Tsurumah. The look of horror and
fury, of Men who could only exact and never overcome. The look of Apocalypse. Whenever Achamian matched
their gazes, no threat or challenge was exchanged, only the thoughtless
understanding of exhausted brothers. Something—demon or reptile—crawled into
the skulls of those who endured the unendurable, and when it looked out their
eyes, as it inevitably did, it could recognize itself in others. He belonged,
Achamian realized. Not just here in Caraskand with those he loved, but here
with the Holy War. He belonged with these men—even
unto death. We share the same doom. Moving slowly for
Xinemus’s sake, they trudged between two heights whose names Achamian didn’t
know, and into an area one of the Numaineiri had called the Bowl—where Proyas
and his household were supposedly quartered. They passed through a veritable
labyrinth of streets and alleyways, and more than once the knights had to ask
passersby for directions. Despite everything—the prospect of finding Kellhus
and Esmenet, of seeing Proyas after so many bitter months—Achamian found
himself pondering the carelessness of his declaration beneath Caraskand’s walls: “1 am Drusas Achamian, a Mandate Schoolman…” How long had it been
since he’d last spoken those words aloud? A Mandate Schoolman… Was that what he was? And
if so, why did he shy from the thought of contacting Atyersus? In all
likelihood, they’d learned of his abduction. They were certain to have
informants he knew nothing about among the Conriyan contingent at least. He
imagined they assumed him dead. So why not contact them?
The threat of the Second Apocalypse hadn’t dwindled during his captivity. And
the Dreams, they wracked him as they ever did… Because I’m no longer one of them. For all the ferocity with
which he’d defended the Gnosis—to the point of sacrificing Xinemus!—he’d
forsaken the Mandate. He’d forsaken them, he realized, even before his
abduction by the Scarlet Spires. He’d forsaken them for Kellhus… I was going to teach him the Gnosis. Even to think this stole
his breath, reminded him that so much more than Esmenet awaited him within
these walls. The old mysteries surrounding Maithanet. The threat of the Consult
and their skin-spies. The promise and enigma of Anasurimbor Kellhus. The
premonitions of the Second Apocalypse! But even as his skin
pimpled with dread, something balked within him, something old and obdurate, as
callous as crocodiles. Let the
mysteries rot!
he found himself thinking. Let the world crash about us! For he was Drusas Achamian, a man like any other,
and he would have his lover, his wife— his Esmenet. Like so many things in the
aftermath of Iothiah, the rest seemed childish, like tropes in an over-read
book. I know you live. 1 know it! At long last, their small
troop came to a pause before the faceless walls of some compound. Xinemus at
his side, Achamian watched while two of the Numaineiri knights fell to arguing
with the guards posted before the compound’s gate. He turned at the sound of
his friend’s voice. “Akka,” Xinemus said,
scowling in his queer, eyeless fashion. “When we walked as shadows…“ The Marshal hesitated,
and for a moment Achamian feared ar onslaught of recriminations. Before
Iothiah, the notion of using sorcery tc slip past the enemy would have been
unthinkable for Xinemus. And yei he’d acquiesced with scarcely a complaint when
Achamian had suggested the possibility in Joktha. Did he repent? Or had he,
like Achamian, beer gouged of his previous cares as well? “I’m blind,” Xinemus
continued. “Blind as blind could be, Akka! Am yet I saw them… The Cishaurim. I saw them seeing!” VIAKUH Achamian pursed his lips,
troubled by the fear-to-hope tone of the Marshal’s voice. “You did see,” he said carefully, “in a manner… There’s many
ways of seeing. And all of us
possess eyes that never breach skin. Men are wrong to think nothing lies
between blindness and sight.“ “And the Cishaurim?”
Xinemus pressed. “Is that… Is that how they__” “The Cishaurim are
masters of this interval. They blind themselves they say, to better see
the World Between. According to some, it’s the key to their metaphysics.“ “So…” Xinemus began,
unable to contain the passion in his voice. “Not now, Zin,” Achamian said,
watching the most senior of the Tydonni knights, a choleric thane called
Anmergal, stride toward them from the compound gate. “Some other time…” In broken but workable
Sheyic, Anmergal stated that Proyas’s people had agreed to take them—despite
their better judgement. “No one steals into Caraskand,” he explained. “Only out.” Then, heedless
of any reply they might make, he barged past them, yelling out to his troops.
At the same time, men-at-arms, dressed as Kianene but bearing the Black Eagle
of House Nersei on their shields, appeared from the darkness. Within moments,
Achamian and Xinemus found themselves ushered into the compound. They were greeted by an
emaciated steward dressed in the threadbare yet lustrous white and black livery
of Proyas’s House. Soldiers in tow, the man led them down a carpeted hallway.
They passed a Kianene woman— a slave, no doubt—kneeling in the doorway of an
adjoining chamber, and Achamian found himself shocked, not by her obvious
terror, but by the fact that she was the first Kianene he’d seen since entering
Caraskand… No wonder the city seemed a tomb. They rounded a corner and
found themselves in a tall antechamber. Set between two corpulent
pillars—Nilnameshi by the look of them—a door of greening bronze lay partially
ajar. The steward ducked his head in. Nodding to someone unseen, he pressed the
door open and, after a nervous glance at Xinemus, gestured for them to follow.
Achamian cursed the knot in his gut… Then found himself
staring at Nersei Proyas. Though more haggard and
far thinner—his linen tunic hung from shoulders like sword pommels—the Crown
Prince of Conriya still looked Caraskand much the same. The shock
of curly black hair, which his mother had both cursed and adored. The trim
beard etching a jaw that, though not as youthful as it once was, remained set
in the old way. The nimble brow. And of course the lucid brown eyes, which were
deep enough, it seemed, to contain any admixture of passion, no matter how
contradictory. “What is it?” Xinemus
asked. “What happens?” “Proyas…” Achamian said.
He cleared his throat. “It’s Proyas, Zin.” The Conriyan Prince
stared at Xinemus, his face expressionless. He advanced two steps from a
lavishly worked table in what must have been his bedchamber. As though from a
stupor, he said, “What happened?” Achamian said nothing,
struck dumb by a rush of unexpected passions. He felt his face grow hot with
fury. Xinemus stood beside him, absolutely motionless. “Speak up,” Proyas
commanded, his voice ringing with desperation. “What happened?” “The Scarlet Spires took
his eyes,” Achamian said evenly. “As a… As a way to—” Without warning, the
young Prince flew to Xinemus, clutched him in a wild embrace, not cheek to
cheek as between men, but as a child might, with his forehead pressed against
the Marshal’s collar. He shuddered with sobs. Xinemus clutched the back of his
head with thick fingers, crushed his beard against his scalp. A moment of fierce
silence passed. “Zin,” Proyas hissed.
“Please forgive me! Please, I beg
of you!” “Shhh… It’s enough to
feel your embrace… To hear your voice.” “But Zin! Your eyes! Your
eyes!” “Shush, now… Akka will
fix me. You’ll see.” Achamian flinched at the
words. Hope was never so poison as when it deluded loved ones. Gasping, Proyas pressed
his cheek against the Marshal’s shoulder. His glittering look found Achamian,
and for a moment they gazed unblinking each at the other. “You too, Old Teacher,”
the young man croaked. “Can you find it ir your heart to forgive?” Though Achamian heard the
words clearly, they seemed to reach hirr as though from a great distance, their
speaker too distant to truly matter No, he realized, he
couldn’t forgive, not because his heart had hardened, but because it had
receded. He saw the boy, Prosha, whom he’d once loved, but he saw a stranger as
well, a man who walked questionable and competing paths. A man of faith. A murderous fanatic. How could he think these
men were his brothers? With his face as blank as
he could manage, Achamian said, “I’m a teacher no longer.” Proyas squeezed shut his
eyes. They were hooded in the old way when he opened them. Whatever hardships
the Holy War had endured, Proyas the Judge had survived. “Where are they?”
Achamian asked. The circles were so much clearer now. Aside from Xinemus, only
Esmenet and Kellhus possessed any claim to his heart. In the whole world, only
they mattered. Proyas visibly stiffened,
pressed himself from Xinemus’s breast. “Hasn’t anyone told you?” “No one would tell us
anything,” Xinemus said. “They feared we were spies.” Achamian couldn’t
breathe. “Esmenet?” he gasped. The Prince swallowed, a
stricken look upon his face. “No… Esmenet is safe.” He
ran a hand through his cropped hair, both anxious and ominous. Somewhere, a wick sizzled
in a guttering candle. “And Kellhus?” Xinemus
asked. “What about him?” “You must understand.
Much, very much, has happened.” Xinemus pawed the air
before him, as though needing to touch those he spoke to. “What are you saying,
Proyas?” “I’m saying Kellhus is dead.” Of all Caraskand, only
the great bazaar carried any memory of the Steppe, and even then it was only
the bones of such a memory: its flatness purchased by masons, its openness
enclosed by dark-windowed facades. No grasses grew between the paving stones. “Swazond,” he had said. “The man you have killed is gone from
the world, Serwe. He exists only here, a scar upon your arm. It is the mark of Caraskand his absence, of all the ways his soul will not move, and of all
the acts he will not commit. A mark of the weight you now bear.“ And she had replied, “I
don’t understand…” Such a dear fool, that
girl. So innocent. Cnaьir lay against the
ribbed belly of a dead horse, surrounded by ever-widening circles of Kianene
dead—victims of the city’s glorious sack three weeks before. “I will bear you,” he
said to the blackness. And never, it seemed, had he uttered a mightier oath.
“You will not want, so long as my back is strong.” Traditional words,
uttered by the groom as the memorialist braided his hair in marriage. He raised the knife to
his throat. Bound to a circle,
swinging from the limb of a dark tree. Bound to Serwe. Cold and lifeless against
him. Serwe. Spinning in slow circles. A fly crawled across her
cheek, paused before a breathless nostril. He puffed air across her dead skin,
and the fly was gone. Must keep
her clean. Her eyes half-open,
papyrus-dry. Serwe! Breathe girl, breathe! I command
it! I come before you. I come before! Bound skin-to-skin to
Serwe. What have I… What? What? A convulsion of some kind. No… No! I must
focus. I must assess… Unblinking eyes, staring
down black cheeks, out to the stars. There’s no circumstance beyond… No circumstance beyond… Logos. I’m one of the Conditioned! From his shins to his
cheek, he could feel her, radiating a cold as deep as her bones. Breathe! Breathe! Dry… And so still! So
impossibly still! The Third March Father, please! Please make her breathe! I… I can walk no farther. Face so dark, mottled
like something from the sea… How had she ever smiled? Focus! What happens? All is in disarray. And they’ve killed
her. They’ve murdered my wife. I gave her to them. What did you say? gave her to them. Why? Why would you do this? For you… For them. Something dropped within
him, and he tumbled into sleep, cold water rinsing bruised and broken skin. Dreams followed. Dark
tunnels, weary earth. A ridge, curved like a
sleeping woman’s hip, against the night sky. And upon it two
silhouettes, black against clouds of stars, impossibly bright. The figure of a man
seated, shoulders crouched like an ape, legs crossed like a priest. And a tree with branches
that swept up and out, forking across the bowl of the night. And about the Nail of
Heaven, the stars revolved, like clouds hurried across winter skies. And Kellhus stared at the
figure, stared at the tree, but he could not move. The firmament cycled, as
though night after night passed without day. Framed by the wheeling
heavens, the figure spoke, a million throats in his throat, a million mouths in
his mouth… WHAT DO YOU SEE? The silhouette stood,
hands clasped like a monk, legs bent like a beast. TELL ME… Whole worlds wailed in
terror. The Warrior-Prophet
awoke, his skin tingling against a dead woman’s cheek… More convulsions. Caraskand Ml Father!.What happens to me? Pang upon pang, wresting
away his face, beating it into a stranger’s. You weep. The Zaudunyani on the
Heights of the Bull immediately recognized him as a friend of the
Warrior-Prophet, and Achamian found himself in a bright reception hall blinking
at ivory plaques set in glossy black marble. After several moments, an Ainoni
caste-noble called Gayamakri—one of the Nascenti, the others said—arrived and
escorted him down dark halls. When Achamian asked him about the white-clad
warriors he saw posted throughout the palace, the man yammered on about riots
and the evil machinations of the Orthodox. But Achamian only had ears for his
leaping heart… At long last they paused
before two grand doors—cherrywood beneath bronze fretting—and Achamian found
himself thinking of jokes he could use to make her laugh… “From a sorcerer’s tent to a caste-noble’s suite… Hmm.” He could almost hear her laughter,
almost see her eyes, wanton with love and devilry. “So what will it be the next time I die? The Andiamine
Heights?” “She likely sleeps,” Gayamakri
said apologetically. “Things have been especially hard on her.” Jokes… What could he be
thinking? She would need him, fiercely if what Proyas had said was true. Serwe
dead and Kellhus dying. The Holy War starving… She would need him to hold her.
How he would hold her! Without warning Gayamakri whirled, clutched his hands.
“Please!” he hissed. “You must save him! You must!” The man fell to his knees,
held him with white-knuckled fervour. “You were his teacher!” “I-I’ll do what I can,”
Achamian stammered. “On that I give you my word.“ Tears branched across the
man’s cheeks into his beard. He pressed his forehead to Achamian’s hands.
“Thank you! Thank you!” At a loss for words,
Achamian pulled the Nascenti to his feet. The man fussed with his yellow and
white robes, pathetically, as though just remembering a lifetime obsession with
jnan. The Third March Caraskand “You’ll remember?” he
gasped. “Of course,” Achamian
replied. “But first I must confer with Esmenet. Alone… Do you understand?” Gayamakri nodded. He backed
away three steps, then turned and fled down the hall. He stood before the tall
doors, breathing. Esmi. He would hold her while
she sobbed. He would speak his every thought, tell her what she’d meant to him
through his captivity. He would tell her that he, a Mandate Schoolman, would
take her as his wife—Ins wife! And her eyes would weep wonder… He almost
laughed with joy. At last.‘ Rather than knocking, he
pressed through the doors the way a husband might. Gloom and the scent of
vanilla and balsam greeted him. Only six scattered candles illuminated the
suite, which was broad with vaulted ceilings and decked with a luxurious array
of carpets, screens, and hangings. Set upon a raised dais, a great pentagonal
bed dominated the room’s heart, its sheets and blankets knotted as though by
passion. To the left, the panelled walls opened onto what looked like a private
garden. Outside the sky was bright with stars. A sorcerer’s tent indeed! He stepped from the lane
of light thrown by the doors, peering into the suite’s deeper reaches. The bed
was empty; he could see that through the gauze. The doors rattled shut behind
him, giving him a start. Where was she? Then his eyes found her
on the far side of the room, curled up on a small couch with her back to the
doors—to him. Her hair looked longer, almost purple in the gloom. Her loose
gown had fallen, revealing a slender shoulder, both brown and pale. His arousal
was immediate, both joyous and desperate. How many times had he
kissed that skin? Kissing. That was how he
would awaken her, crying while kissing her naked shoulder. She would stir,
think he was a dream. “No… It
can’t be you. You’re dead.” Then he would take her, with slow, fierce
tenderness, wrack her with voluptuous rapture. And she would know that at long last
her heart had returned. I’ve come back for you Esmi… From death
and agony. He
descended the landing before the doors, only to halt when she suddenly bolted
upright. She looked about in alarm, then stared at him with swollen and
incredulous eyes. For an instant, she
seemed a stranger to him; he saw her with the same youthful and ardent eyes
that had discovered her in Sumna so many years ago. Coltish beauty. Freckled
cheeks. Full lips and perfect teeth. There was a breathless moment between
them. “Esmi…” he whispered,
unable to say anything else. He’d forgotten how beautiful… For a heartbeat she
radiated abject horror, as though she looked upon a wraith. But then,
miraculously it seemed, she flew to him, her small bare feet winglike with
desperation. Then they were together,
recklessly clutching one another. She felt so small, so slender in his arms! “Oh Akka!” she sobbed,
“You were dead! Dead!” “No-no-no, my sweet,” he
murmured, and let loose a shuddering breath. “Akka, Akka, oh Akka!” He ran a shaking hand
across the back of her head. Her hair felt like silk against his palm, soothing
silk. And her smell—incense soft and woman musky. “Shush, Esmi,” he whispered.
“Everything will be all right. We’re together again!” Please let me kiss you. But she cried louder.
“You must save him, Achamian! You
must save him!” Small confusions,
stirring like vermin. “Save him? Esmi… What do
you mean?” His arms slackened. She thrust herself from his embrace, stumbled
back in terror, as though remembering some horrible truth. “Kellhus,” she said, her
lips trembling. Achamian beat at the
whining fear that flared through him. “What do you mean, Esmi?” He could feel the blood
drop from his face. “Don’t you see! They’re killing him!” “Kellhus? Yes… Of course
I’ll do everything 1 can to save him! But please, Esmi! Let me hold you! I need to hold you!” • Dtt ihe Ihird March “You must save him
Achamian! You can’t let them
kill him!” Flare
of dread, undeniable this time. No.
Must be reasonable. She‘: suffered as much as I have. She’s just not as strong. “I won’t let anyone do
anything to him. I swear it. But just… please…‘ Esmi… What have you done? Her face collapsed about
some impossible fact. She sobbed. “He’s…| H-he’s…” Curious sensation—as
though submerged in water with lungs emptied! of air. “Yes, Esmi… He’s the
Warrior-Prophet. I too believe! I’ll do every-| thing I can to save him.” “No, Achamian…” Her face was now dead, in
the way of those who must carve distances, | cut wide what was once close. Don’t say it! Please don’t say it!( He looked about the
extravagant room, gesturing with his hands. He tried to laugh, then said,
“S-some sorcerer’s tent, eh?” A sob knifed the back of his throat. “Wha-what
will it be the next time I die? The Andi… Th-the Andiamine…” He tried to smile. “Akka,” she whispered. “I
carry his child.” Whore after all. Achamian passed between
the congregated Inrithi, between the signal fires of the Shrial Knights, little
more than a shadow thrown by an otherworldly sun. He remembered the screams and
crashing walls of Iothiah. He remembered blasting hallways through stone and
burnt brick. Oh, he knew the might of his song, the thunder of his
world-breaking voice! And he knew the bitter
rapture of vengeance. A great tree soared into
the night sky, a hoary old eucalyptus, too ancient not to be named. His first
thought was to set it alight, to transform it into a blazing beacon of his
wrath—a funeral pyre for the betrayer, the seducer! But he could sense the
absences that encircled the man, the three Chorae the Men of the Tusk had bound
to his bronze ring. And he could see that he suffered… Achamian crept beneath
the tree, onto the mat of fallen leaves. He Caraskand clutched his knees and
rocked to and fro in the darkness. There she was, an impossible fact made
flesh. Serwe dead. And there he was, hanging
with her, limb to limb, breast to breast… Kellhus… Naked, slowly rolling as though the ring unravelled
the long string of his life. How could such things
come to pass? Achamian ceased rocking
and sat still. He listened to the hemp creak in the breeze. He smelled
eucalyptus and death. His body calmed, became the cold vessel of his fury and
heartbreak. Beyond the Shrial Knights
encircling the tree, thousands packed the surrounding campus, singing hymns and
dirges for their Warrior-Prophet. The cry of a flute pierced the din,
wandering, trailing, rising in grief-stricken crescendos, calling out the same
godless prayer, the howl, almost animal in its intensity… Achamian hugged himself
in the darkness. How could such things… Thumb and forefinger
pressed hard against his eyes. Shivering. Cold. Heart like rags bundled about
cold stone. He lifted his face,
raised chin and brow to his hate. Tears streamed down his cheeks. “How? How could you
betray me like this? You… You! The two people—the only two! You kn-knew how
empty my life had been. You knew! I c-can’t understand… I try and I try but I
can’t understand! How could
you do this to me!” Images boiled through his
thoughts… Esmenet gasping beneath the hot plunge of Kellhus’s hips. The
brushing of breathless lips. Her startled cry. Her climax. The two of them,
naked and entwined beneath blankets, staring at the light of a single candle,
and Kellhus asking: “How did
you bear that man? How did you ever bring yourself to lie with a sorcerer?” “He fed me. He was a warm plump pillow with gold in his
pockets… But he
wasn’t you, my love. No one is
you.” His mouth was wrenched
open by a soft inarticulate cry… How. Why. Then savagery. “I could break you, Kellhus. See you burn! Burn until your eyes burst! Dog! Treacherous dog! I’ll see you shriek until you gag
on your The Third March own heart, until your
limbs snap for agony! I can do
it! I can burn
hosts with my song! I can pack the anguish of a thousand men into your skin! With tongue and teeth, I can peel you to nothing! Grind your corpse to chalk!“ He began weeping. The
dark world about him buzzed and burned. “Damn you…” he gasped. He
couldn’t breathe… Where was the air to breathe? He rolled his head, like
a boy whose anger had been stripped hollow by hurt… He beat an awkward fist
against the dead leaves. “Damn-yoU’damn-you’damn-you…” He looked around numbly,
and wiped at his face with a half-hearted sleeve. Sniffled and tasted the salt
of tears in the back of his throat… “You’ve made a whore of
her, Kellhus… You’ve made a whore of my Esmi…” They swayed round in
shadowy circles. The sound of laughter carried on the night wind. The dark tree
seemed to exhale an endless, ambient breath. “Achamian…” Kellhus whispered. The words winded him,
struck him dumb with horror. No… He’s not allowed to speak… “He said you would come.” Spoken from a dead woman’s cheek. Kellhus stared as though
from the surface of a coin, his dark eyes glittering, his face pressed against
Serwe’s, whose head had drawn back in rigor, gaping mouth filled with dusty
teeth. For a moment, it seemed that he lay spread-eagle across a mirror, and
that Serwe was no more than his reflection. Achamian shuddered. What have they done to you? Impossibly, the ring had
ceased its ponderous revolutions. “I see them, Achamian. They walk among us, hidden in ways
you cannot see The Consult. His hackles stirred. Cold
sweat set his skin afire. “The
No-God returns, Akka… I’ve seen him! He is as you said. Tsurumah. Mog-Pharau…” “Lies!” Achamian cried.
“Lies to spare you my wrath!” “M31 N’ascend… Tell them to show you what lies in the
garden.” Caraskand 54/ “What? What lies in the
garden?” But the shining eyes were
closed. A grievous howl echoed
across the Kabul, chilling blood and drawing men with torches to the blackness
beneath Umiaki. The ring continued its endless roll. Dawn light streamed over
the balcony and through the gauze, etching the bedchamber in radiant surfaces
and pockets of black shadow. Stirring in his bed, Proyas scowled at the light, raised
an arm against it. For several heartbeats, he lay utterly still, trying to
swallow away the pain at the back of his throat—the last residue of the
hemoplexy. Then the shame and remorse of the previous evening came flooding back. Achamian and Xinemus had
returned. Akka and Zin… Both of them irrevocably transformed. Because of me. A cold morning breeze
tossed through the sheers. Proyas huddled, hoarding whatever warmth his
blankets offered. He tried to doze, but found himself fencing with worry and
dismay instead. In his boyhood, he’d cherished the luxurious laziness of such
mornings. He drifted through legends and fancies, dreaming of all the great
things he was destined to accomplish. He studied the shadows thrown by the
morning sun and wondered at the way they crept across the walls. On cold
mornings like this one, he wrapped his blankets about him, savouring them the
way the elderly savoured hot baths. The warmth had never stopped shori of his
bones as it did now. Some time passed before
Proyas realized someone watched him. At first he simply blinked, too astonished
to move or shout. Both the decor and the design of the compound were
Nilnameshi. Aside frorr extravagantly detailed imagery, the chamber possessed
low ceiling propped with fat and fluted columns imported, no doubt, from
Invishi o Sappathurai. Almost invisible for the morning glare, a figure
recline* against one of the columns flanking the balcony… Proyas shot forward
from the covers. “Achamian?” i H1K1J MARCH Several heartbeats passed
before his eyes adjusted enough to recognize the man. “What are you doing,
Achamian? What do you want?” “Esmenet,” the sorcerer said. “Kellhus has
taken her as his wife… Pjy you know that?” Proyas gaped at the
Schoolman, robbed of his outrage by something in his voice: a queer
kind of drunkenness, a recklessness, but born of loss instead of drink. “I knew,” he admitted,
squinting at Achamian’s figure. “But I thought that…” He trailed and swallowed.
“Kellhus will soon be dead.” He immediately felt a
fool: it sounded like he offered compensation. “Esmenet is lost to me,”
Achamian said. The sorcerer’s expression was little more than a shadow against
the glare, but somehow Proyas could see its exhausted resolve. “But how could you say
that? You don’t—” “Where’s Xinemus?” the Schoolman interrupted.
Proyas raised his eyebrows, gestured with a leftward tilt of his head. “One
wall over,” he said. “The next room.” Achamian pursed his lips. “Did he tell
you?” “About his eyes?” Proyas
looked to the outline of his feet beneath the vermilion covers. “No. I hadn’t
the courage to ask. I assumed that the Spires…” “Because of me, Proyas.
They blinded him as a way to coerce me.” The message was obvious. It’s not your fault, he was saying. Proyas raised a hand as
though to pinch more sleep from his eyes. He wiped away tears instead. Damn you, Akka… I don’t need your
protection! “For the Gnosis?” he
asked. “Was that what they wanted?” Krijates Xinemus, a
Marshal of Conriya, blinded for blasphemy’s sake. “In part… They also
thought I had information regarding the Cishaurim.” “Cishaurim?” Achamian snorted. “The
Scarlet Spires are terrified, did you know that? Terrified of what they cannot
see.” “It stands to reason: all
they do is hide. Eleazaras still refuses to take the field, even though I’m
told they’ve begun boiling their books out of hunger.” Caraskand “I doubt they stray far
from their latrines,” Achamian said, the old twinkle surfacing through the
exhaustion of his voice, “the rot they read.“ Proyas laughed, and an
almost forgotten sense of comfort stole over him. This, he realized, was how
they’d once talked, their cares and worries directed outward rather than at
each other. But instead of taking heart at the realization, Proyas suffered
only more dismay, understanding that what trust and camaraderie had once given
them, only dread and exhaustion could now deliver. A long silence passed
between them, fuelled by the sudden collapse of their good humour. Proyas found
his gaze wandering to the trains of priapic revellers, brown-skinned and
half-nude, that marched across the painted walls, their arms filled with
various bounty. With every passing heartbeat it seemed the silence buzzed
louder. Then Achamian said,
“Kellhus cannot die.” Proyas pursed his lips.
“But of course,” he said numbly. “I say he must die, so you say he must live.” He glanced, not without
nervousness, at his nearby work table. The parchment sat in plain view, its
raised corners translucent in the sun: Maithanet’s letter. “This has nothing to do
with you, Proyas. I am past you.” The tone as much as the
words chilled Proyas to the pith. “Then why are you here?” “Because of all the Great
Names, only you can understand.” “Understand,” Proyas
repeated, feeling the old impatience rekindle in his heart. “Understand what?
No, let me guess… Only I can understand the significance of the name
‘Anasurimbor.’ Only I can understand the peril—” “Enough!” Achamian
shouted. “Can’t you see that when you make light of these matters you make light of me? When have I ever scoffed at the Tusk? When have I
ever mocked the Latter Prophet? When?” Proyas caught his retort,
which had been all the harsher for the truth of what Achamian said. “Kellhus,” he said, “has
already been judged.” “Have care, Proyas.
Remember King Shikol.” For the Inrithi, the name
“Shikol,” the Xerashi King who had condemned Inri Sejenus, was synonymous with
hatred and tragic HE 1HIRD MARCH presumption. The thought
that his own name might someday possess the same poison caused Proyas no small
terror. “Shikol was wrong… I am right!” It all came down to
Truth. “I wonder,” Achamian
said, “what Shikol would say…” “What?” Proyas exclaimed.
“So the great sceptic thinks a new prophet walks among us? Come, Akka… It’s too
absurd!” These are Conphas’s words… Another unkind thought. Achamian paused, but
whether out of care or hesitation Proyas couldn’t tell. “I’m not sure what he is…
All I know is that he’s too important to die.” Sitting rigid in his bed,
Proyas peered against the sun, struggling to see his old teacher. Aside from
his outline against the blue pillar, the most he could discern were the five
lines of white that streaked the black of his beard. Proyas sighed loudly
through his nostrils, looked down to his thumbs. “I thought much the same
not so long ago,” he admitted. “I worried that what Conphas and the others said
was true, that he was the reason the anger of the God burned against us. But
I’d shared too many cups with the man not to… not to realize he’s more than
simply remarkable… “But then…” From nowhere, it seemed,
a great cloud crawled before the sun, and a dim chill fell across the room. For
the first time, Proyas could see his old teacher clearly: the haggard face, the
forlorn eyes and meditative brow, the blue smock and woollen travel robes,
soiled black about the knees… So poor. Why did Achamian
always look so poor? “Then what?” the
Schoolman asked, apparently unconcerned with his sudden visibility. Proyas heaved another
sigh, glanced once again at the parchment upon his table. Distant thunder
rumbled in on the wind, which whisked through the black cedars below. “Well,” he continued,
“first there was the Scylvendi… His hatred of Kellhus. I thought to myself,
‘How could this man, this man who knows Kellhus better than any other, despise
him so?’” Caraskand “Serwe‘,” Achamian said.
“Kellhus once told me the barbarian loved Serwe.” “Cnaьir said much the
same when I first asked him… But there was something, something about his
manner, that made me think there was more. He’s such a fierce and melancholy
man. And complicated—very complicated.” “His skin is too thin,”
Achamian said. “But I suppose it scars well.” A sour smirk was the most
Proyas could afford. “There’s more to Cnaьir urs Skiotha than you know, Akka.
Mark me. In some ways, he’s as extraordinary as Kellhus. Be thankful he’s our
pet, and not the Padirajah’s.” “Your point, Proyas?” The Conriyan Prince
frowned. “The point is that I questioned him about Kellhus again, shortly after
we found ourselves besieged…” “And?” “And he told me to go ask
Kellhus himself. That was when…” He hesitated, groping in vain for some
delicate way to continue. More thunder piled through the balcony doorways. “That was when I found
Esmenet in his bed.” Achamian closed his eyes
for a moment. When he opened them, his gaze was steady. “And your misgivings
became genuine doubts… I’m touched.” Proyas chose to ignore
the sarcasm. “After that, I no longer
dismissed Conphas’s arguments out of hand. I mulled things over for a time, at
once anguished by all that happened— that happens still!—and terrified that if
I sided with Conphas and the others, I would be striking sparks over tinder.” “You feared war between
the Orthodox and the Zaudunyani.” “And I fear it still!”
Proyas fairly cried. “Though it scarcely seems to matter with the Padirajah
waiting with his desert wolves.” How could it all come to
this? Such a pass! “So what decided you?” “The Scylvendi,” Proyas
said with a shrug. “Conphas brought forward witnesses who claimed to know a man
from the northern caravans, a man who, before he died in the desert, claimed
that Atrithau had no princes.” The Third March “Hearsay,” Achamian said.
“Worthless… You know that. It was probably a ploy on Conphas’s part. Dead men
have a habit of telling the most convenient tales.” “Which is what I thought,
until the Scylvendi confirmed the story.” Achamian leaned forward,
his brow knotted in angry shock. “Confirmed? What do you mean?” “He called Kellhus a
prince of nothing.” The Schoolman sat rigid
for a time, his eyes lost in the space between them. He knew the penalties for
transgressing caste. All men did. The caste-nobles of the Three Seas cherished
their ancestor scrolls for more than spiritual or sentimental reasons. “He could be lying,”
Achamian mused. “As a way to regain possession of Serwe, maybe?” “He could be… Given the
way he reacted to her execution—” “Serwe executed!” the
sorcerer exclaimed. “How could such a thing happen? Proyas? How could you let such a thing happen? She was just—” “Ask Gotian!” Proyas
blurted. “Trying them according to the Tusk was his idea—his! He thought it
would legitimize the affair, make it seem less like… less—” “Like what it was?”
Achamian cried. “A conspiracy of frightened caste-nobles trying to protect
their power and privilege?” “That depends,” Proyas
replied stiffly, “on whom you ask… Either way, we needed to forestall war. And
so far—” “Heaven forfend,”
Achamian snapped, “that men murder men for faith.” “And heaven forfend that
fools perish for their folly. And heaven forfend that mothers miscarry, that
children put out their eyes. Heaven forfend that anything horrible happen! I
couldn’t agree with you more, Akka…” He smiled sarcastically. To think he’d
almost missed the blasphemous old bastard! “But back to the point. I
did not condemn Kellhus out of hand, old tutor. Many things—many!—compelled me
to vote with the others. Prophet or not, Anasurimbor Kellhus is dead.” Achamian had been
watching him, his face emptied of expression. “Who said he was a prophet?” “Enough, Akka, please…
You just said he was too important to die.” Caraskand “He is, Proyas! He is! He’s our only hope!” Proyas rubbed more sleep
from the corner of his eyes. He let go a long, exasperated breath. “So? The Second
Apocalypse, is it? Is Kellhus the second coming of Seswatha?” He shook his
head. “Please… Please tell—” “He’s more!” the
Schoolman cried with alarming passion. “Far more than Seswatha, as he must be…
The Heron Spear is lost, destroyed when the Scylvendi sacked ancient Cenei. If
the Consult were to succeed a second time, if the No-God were to walk again…”
Achamian stared, his eyes rounded in horror. “Men would have no hope.” Proyas had endured many
of these small rants since his childhood. What made them so uncanny, and at the
same time so intolerable, was the way Achamian spoke: as though he recounted rather
than conjectured. Just then the morning sun flashed anew between a crease in
the accumulating clouds. The thunder, however, continued to rumble across
wretched Caraskand. “Akka…” The Schoolman silenced
him with an outstretched hand. “You once asked me, Proyas, whether I had more
than Dreams to warrant my fears. Do you remember?” All too well. It was the
same night Achamian had asked him to write to Maithanet. “I remember, yes.” Without warning, Achamian
stood and stepped out onto the balcony. He vanished into the morning glare only
to reappear moments afterward, hoisting something dark in his hands. By some coincidence, the
sun vanished the moment Proyas reached out to shield his eyes. He stared at the soil-
and blood-stained bundle. A pungent odour slowly filled the room. “Look at it!” Achamian
commanded, brandishing it. “Look! Then send your quickest riders out to the
Great Names!” Proyas recoiled, clutched
at the covers about his knees. Suddenly he realized what it seemed he’d known
all along: Achamian wouldn’t relent. And of course not: he was a Mandate
Schoolman. il-lfc 1HIRU MARCH Maithanet… Most Holy Shriah. Is this what
you would have me do? h jtl Certainty
in doubt. That was what was holy! That! “Save your warrant for the others,”
Proyas muttered. With a flourish h kicked free the sheets and strode naked to
the nearby table. The floor wa cold enough to ache. Shivers chattered across
his skin.i He snatched Maithanet’s
missive, held it out to the scowling sorcererj “Read it,” he murmured. Lightning
threaded the sky beyond the ruine Citadel of the Dog. Achamian set down his
reeking bundle, grasped the parchment, scanned it. Proyas noticed the black
crescents under his fingernails. Instead of looking up in stunned shock as
Proyas had expected, the sorcerer frowned and squinted at the sheet. He even
held it to what light remained. The room trembled to the crack of thunder. “Maithanet?” the sorcerer
asked, his eyes still rivetted to the Shriah’s flawless script. Proyas knew the
line he pondered. The impossible always left the deepest marks on the soul. Assist Drusas Achamian, though he is a
blasphemer, for in this wickedness, the Holy shall also follow … Achamian set the sheet
upon his lap, though he still pinched the corner with his thumb and forefinger.
The two men shared a thoughtful gaze… Confusion and relief warred in his old
teacher’s eyes. “Aside from my sword, my
harness, and my ancestors,” Proyas said, “that letter is the only thing I
brought across the desert. The only thing I saved.” “Call them,” Achamian
said. “Summon the others to Council.” Gone was the golden morning. Rain poured
from black skies. HApTER Twenty-four Caraskand They strike down the weak and call it
justice. They ungird their loins and call it reparation. They hark like dogs and
call it reason. —ONTILLAS, ON THE FOLLY OF
MEN Late Winter, 4112 Year-of-the-Tusk, Caraskand Rain fell in windswept
skirts of grey. It sizzled across the rooftops and the streets. It gurgled
through the gutters, rinsing away flakes of dried blood. It pattered against
the still-skinned skulls of the dead. It both kissed the uppermost twigs of
ancient Umiaki and plummeted through his darkest hollows. A million beads of
water. Converging at the forks between branches, twining into strings,
threading the darkness with lines of glittering white. Soon rivulets spiralled
down the hemp rope and dropped like marbles along the bronze ring, whence they
branched across skin, both living and dead. Across the Kalaul,
thousands ran for cover, shielding themselves with wool cloaks and mantles.
Others wailed, held out their hands, beseeching, wondering what the rains
omened. The lightning blinded them. The waters bit their cheeks. And the
thunder muttered secrets they could not fathom. They held out their
hands, beseeching. ihe Ihird March His sleep was fitful,
haunted by dreams of Dunyain words and Dunyain deeds. You, the abomination said, sti’Ii command the ears of the Great. Serwe slumped in Sarcellus’s
arms, showering blood. Remember
the secret of battle—remember! Cnaьir woke to rain and
whispers. The secret of
battle… The ears of the Great. Not finding Proyas at his
compound, he rode with all due haste to the Sapatishah’s Palace on the Kneeling
Heights, where the Prince’s terrified steward had said he could be found. The
rain had started to trail by the time he reached the first echelons of
residences about the base of the heights. Momentary sunlight cast fingers of
brilliance across the otherwise dark city. As he urged his famished mount
upward, Cnaьir cast a look over his shoulder, saw the sun battle through clouds
of mountainous black. From height to height, across the confusion of the Bowl
all the way to the dark and hazy line of the Triamic Walls, pools of rainwater
flashed white, like a thousand coins of silver. He dismounted in the
anarchy of the palace’s outer campus. Every heartbeat, it seemed, saw another
band of armed riders clack through the gates. With the exception of the Galeoth
guardsmen and several near-skeletal Kianene slaves, everyone carried either the
mark or the air of caste-nobility. Cnaьir recognized many from previous
Councils, though for some reason, none dared to hail him. He followed the
Inrithi into the shadows of the Entry Hall, where he fairly collided with a
crimson-clad Gaidekki. The Palatine halted,
stared at him agog. “Sweet Sejenus!” he
exclaimed. “Are you well? Was there more fighting on the walls?” Cnaьir looked down to his
chest: red had soaked the white of his tunic almost to his iron-plated girdle. “Your throat’s been cut!”
Gaidekki said wondrously. “Where’s Proyas?” Cnaьir
snapped. “With the other dead,”
the Palatine said darkly, gesturing to the files of men disappearing into the
palace’s frescoed inner sanctums. L^araskana Cnaьir found himself
following a band of wild-tempered Thunyeri led by Yalgrota Sranchammer, his
flaxen braids adorned with iron nails bent like tusks and the shrunken heads of
heathen. At one point, the giant jerked his head about and glared at him.
Cnaьir matched his gaze, his soul boiling with thoughts of murder. “Ushurrutga!” the man
snorted and turned away, smiling at the guttura laughter of his compatriots. Cnaьir spat on the walls,
then stared wildly about. Wherever hi looked, it seemed, he saw men glance
away. Ail 0/ them! All of them! Somewhere, he could hear
the tribesmen of the Utemot whisper .. Weeper… The vaulted corridor
ended in bronze doors, which had been proppei open with two busts kicked face
down onto the carpets. Old Sapatishah carved in diorite, Cnaьir imagined, or
relics of the Nansur occupatior Through the doors, he found himself in a great
chamber, shoulderin his way through a crowd of milling caste-nobles. The air
hummed wit reverberating voices. Faggot weeper! The room was circular,
and far more ancient in construction than tin greater palace—Kyranean or
Shigeki, perhaps. A table carved of whi looked like white gypsum dominated the
central floor, which w; covered by a magnificent rug of copper and gold
embroidery. Ju beyond the rug’s outer fringe, a series of concentric tiers rose
in tr fashion of amphitheatres, providing an unobstructed view of the tab
below. Constructed of monumental blocks, the encircling wall soar* above the
back tier, set with sconces and adorned with the distinctiv streamer-like
tapestries favoured by the Kianene. A pointed dome corbelled stone loomed
overhead, hanging, it seemed, without tl luxury of mortar or vaults. A series
of wells about its base providi light, diffuse and white, while high above the
central table heathi banners swayed in unseen drafts. Cnaьir found Proyas
standing near the table, his head bent in conce tration as he listened to a
stocky man in blue and grey. The man’s rot were soiled about the knees, and
compared with the rakish frames of the about him, he looked almost obscenely
fat. Someone shouted from’t The Third March tiers, and the man turned
to the sound, revealing the five white lines that marred his unplaited beard.
Cnaiur stared incredulously. It was the sorcerer. The
dead sorcerer… What happened here? “Proyas!” he shouted, for
some reason loath to come any closer. “We must speak!” The Conriyan Prince
looked about, and upon locating him, scowled much as Gaidekki had. The
sorcerer, however, continued speaking, and Cnaiur found himself waved away with
a harried gesture. “Proyas!” he barked, but the
Prince spared him only a furious glance. Fool.1 Cnaiur
thought. The siege could be broken! He knew what they must do! The secret of battle. He
remembered… He found a spot on the
tiers with the other Lesser Names and their retinues, and watched the Great
Names settle into their usual bickering. The hunger in Caraskand had reached
such straits that even the great among the Inrithi had been reduced to eating
rats and drinking the blood of their horses. The leaders of the Holy War had
grown hollow-cheeked and gaunt, and the hauberks of many, particularly those
who’d been fat, hung loosely from their frames, so they resembled juveniles
playing in their father’s armour. They looked at once foolish and tragic,
possessed of the shambling pageantry of dying rulers. As Caraskand’s titular
king, Saubon sat in a large black-lacquered seat at the head of the table. He
leaned forward, gripping the arms of his chair, as though preparing to exercise
a pre-eminence no one else recognized. To his right reclined Conphas, who
looked about with the lolling impatience of someone forced to treat lessers as
equals. To his left sat Prince Skaiyelt’s surviving brother, Hulwarga the
Limper, who’d represented Thunyerus ever since Skaiyelt had succumbed to the
hemoplexy. Next to Hulwarga sat Gothyelk, the grizzled Earl of Agansanor, his
wiry beard as unkempt as usual, his combative look more menacing. To his left
sat Proyas, his manner both wary and thoughtful. Though he spoke to the
sorcerer, who sat on a smaller seat immediately next to him, his eyes continued
to search the faces of those about the table. And lastly, positioned between
Proyas and Conphas, sat the decorous Palatine of Caraskand Antanamera, Chinjosa,
whom according to rumour the Scarlet Spires had installed as interim King-Regent
in the wake of Chepheramunni’s demise—also to the hemoplexy. “Where’s Gotian?” Proyas
demanded of the others. “Perhaps,” Ikurei Conphas said with droll sarcasm, “the
Grandmaster learned it was a sorcerer you’d summoned us to hear. Shrial Knights,
I fear, tend to be rather Shrial …” Proyas called out to
Sarcellus, who sat on the lowest tier, clad ankle to wrist in the white Shrial
vestments he typically wore to Council. Bowing low to the Great Names, the
Knight-Commander professed ignorance as to his Grandmaster’s whereabouts.
Cnaiur looked down at his right forearm while he spoke, not so much listening
to as memorizing the hateful timbre of the man’s voice. He watched the veins
and scars ripple as he clenched and unclenched his fist. When he blinked, he saw
the knife gashing Serwe’s throat, the shining, spilling red… Cnaiur scarcely heard the
procedural arguments that followed: something regarding the legalities of
continuing without the Holy Shriah’s representative. Instead, he watched
Sarcellus. Ignoring the Great Names and their debate, the dog was engrossed in
counsel with some other Shrial Knight. The spidery network of red lines still
marred his sensuous face, though much fainter than when Cnaiur had last seen
the man with Proyas and Conphas. His expression appeared calm, but his large
brown eyes seemed troubled and distant, as though he pondered matters that
rendered this spectacle irrelevant. What was it the Dunyain had said? Lie made
flesh. Cnaiur was hungry, very
hungry—he hadn’t eaten a true meal for several days now—and the gnawing in his
belly lent a curious edge to everything he witnessed, as though his soul no
longer had the luxury of fat thoughts and fat impressions. The taste of his
horse’s blood was fresh upon his lips. For a mad moment, he found himself
wondering what Sarcellus’s blood would taste like. Would it taste like lies?
Did lies have a taste? Everything since Serwe’s
murder seemed unclear, and no matter how hard Cnaiur tried, he could not
separate his days from his nights. Everything overflowed,
spilled into everything else. Everything had been fouled—fouled! And the
Dunyain wouldn’t shut up! And then this morning,
for no reason whatsoever, he’d simply understood. He’d remembered the secret of
battle… / told him! I showed
him thesecret! And the cryptic words
that Kellhus had spoken on the ruined heights of the Citadel became plain as
lead. The hunt need not end! He understood the
Dьnyain’s plan—or part of it… If only Proyas would have listened! Suddenly the shouting
about the table trailed, as did the rumbling along the tiers. An astonished
hush fell across the ancient chamber, and Cnaьir saw the sorcerer, Achamian,
standing at Proyas’s side, glaring at the others with the grim fearlessness of
an exhausted man. “Since my presence so
offends you,” he said in a loud clear voice, “I will not mince words. You have
all made a ghastly mistake, a mistake which must be undone, for the sake of the Holy War, and for the
sake of the World.” He paused to appraise their scowling faces. “You must free
Anasurimbor Kellhus.” Cries of outrage and
reproach exploded from those about the table and those along the tiers alike.
Cnaьir watched, rivetted to his seat, to his martial posture. He did not, it
seemed, need to speak to Proyas after all. “LISTEN to him!” the Conriyan Prince screeched over the warring
voices. Astonished by the savagery of this outburst, the entire room seemed to
catch its breath. But Cnaьir was already breathless. He seeks to free him! But did this mean they
also knew the Dunyain’s plan? In the Councils of the Holy War, Proyas had
always played the sober foil for the excessive passions of the other Great
Names. To hear the man scream in this way was a dismaying thing. The other
Great Names fell silent, like children chastised not by their father but by
what they’d made their father do. “This is no travesty,”
Proyas continued. “This is no joke meant to gall or offend. More, far more,
than our lives depend on what decision we make here today. I ask you to decide
with me, as does any man with arguments to make. But I demand—7 demand!—that you listen before L^araskand making that decision! And
this demand, I think, is no real demand at all, since listening without bias,
without bigotry, is simply what all wise men do.“ Cnaьir glanced across the
chamber, noted that Sarcellus watched the drama as intently as any of the
others. He even angrily waved at his retinue to fall silent. Standing before the great
Inrithi lords, the sorcerer looked haggard and impoverished in his soiled gear,
and he appeared hesitant, as though only now realizing how far he’d strayed
from his element. But with his girth and unbroken health, he looked a king in
the trappings of a beggar. The Men of the Tusk, on the other hand, looked like
wraiths decked in the trappings of kings. “You’ve asked,” Achamian
called out, “why the God punishes the Holy War. What cancer pollutes us? What
disease of spirit has stirred the God’s wrath against us? But there are many
cancers. For the faithful, Schoolmen such as myself are one such cancer. But
the Shriah himself has sanctioned our presence among you. So you looked
elsewhere, and found the man many call the ‘Warrior-Prophet,’ and you asked
yourself, ‘What if this man is false? Would that not be enough for the God’s
anger to burn against us? A False Prophet?’” He paused, and Cnaьir could see
that he swallowed behind pursed lips. “I haven’t come to tell you whether
Prince Kellhus is truly a Prophet, nor even whether he’s a prince of anything
at all. I’ve come, rather, to warn you of a different cancer… One that you’ve
overlooked, though indeed some of you know of its presence. There are spies
among us, my lords…”—a collective murmur momentarily filled the
chamber—“abominations that wear false faces of skin.” The sorcerer bent beneath
the table, hoisted a fouled sack of some kind. In a single motion, he unfurled
it across the table. Something like silvery eels about a blackened cabbage
rolled onto the polished surface, came to rest against an impossible
reflection. A severed head? Lie made flesh… A cacophony of
exclamations reverberated beneath the chamber’s dome. “—Deceit! Blasphemous deceit! —” “—is madness! We cannot—” “—but what could it—” The Third March Surrounded by astonished
cries and brandished fists, Cnaьir watched Sarcellus stand, then press his way
through the clamour toward the exit. Once again, Cnaiur glimpsed the inflamed
lines that marred the Knight-Commander’s face… Suddenly he realized he’d seen
the pattern before… But where? Where? Anwurat … Serwe bloodied and screaming. Kellhus naked, his
groin smeared red, his face jerking open like fingers about a coal… A Kellhus
who was not Kellhus. Overcome by a trembling,
wolfish hunger, Cnaiur stood and hurried to follow. At last he fathomed
everything the Dunyain had said to him the day he was denounced by the Great
Names—the day of Serwe’s death. The memory of Kellhus’s voice pierced the
thunder of the assembled Inrithi… Lie made flesh. A name. Sarcellus’s name. Sinerses fell to his
knees just beyond the raised threshold of the entryway, then pressed his head
to the faux-carpet carved into the stone. The Kianene, like most other peoples,
considered certain thresholds sacred, but rather than anoint them on the
appropriate days as did the Ainoni, they adorned them with elaborately carved
renditions of reed’Woven rugs. It was, Hanamanu Eleazaras had decided, a worthy
custom. The passage from place to place, he thought, should be marked in stone.
Notice needed to be served. “Grandmaster!” Sinerses
gasped, throwing back his head. “I bear word from Lord Chinjosa!” Eleazaras had expected
the man, but not his agitation. His skin crawling, he looked to his secretaries
and ordered them from the room with a vague wave. Like most men of power in
Caraskand, Eleazaras had found himself very interested in the specifics of his
dwindling supplies. Everything it seemed, had
conspired against him these past months. Caraskand’s slow starvation had
reached such a pitch that even sorcerers of rank went hungry—the most desperate
had started boiling the leather binding and vellum pages of those texts that
had survived the desert. The ^arasKana most glorious School in
the Three Seas had been reduced to eating their books! The Scarlet Spires
suffered with the rest of the Holy War, so much so that they now discussed
meeting with the Great Names and declaring that henceforth the Scarlet Spires
would war openly with the Inrithi— something that had been unthinkable mere
weeks ago. Wagers beget wagers, each
typically more desperate than the last. In order to preserve his first wager,
Eleazaras now must make a second, one that would expose the Scarlet Spires to
the deadly Trinkets of the Padirajah’s Thesji Bowmen, who’d so decimated the
Imperial Saik, the Emperor’s own School, during the Jihads. And this, he knew, could
very well weaken the Scarlet Spires beyond any hope of overcoming the Cishaurim. Chorae! Accursed things.
The Tears of the God cared nothing for those who brandished them, Inrithi or
Fanim, so long as they weren’t sorcerers. Apparently one didn’t need to
interpret the God correctly to wield Him. Wager upon wager.
Desperation upon desperation. The situation had become so dire, things had been
stretched so tight, that any news, Eleazaras realized, could break the back of
his School. The more pinched the note, the more the string could snap. Even the words of this
slave-soldier kneeling at his feet could signal their doom. Eleazaras fought for his
breath. “What have you learned, Captain?” “Proyas has brought the Mandate Schoolman to
the Council,” the man said. Eleazaras felt his skin
pimple. Ever since hearing of their mission’s destruction in Iothiah, he’d
found himself dreading the Mandati’s return… “You mean Drusas
Achamian?” He’s come to exact vengeance. “Yes, Grandmaster. He’s—” “Has he come alone? Are there
any others?” Please, please … Achamian on his own, they could
easily manage. A corps of Mandate sorcerers, however, could prove ruinous. Too
many had died already. No more! We can afford to lose no more! “No. He seems to be
alone, but—” “Does he bring charges
against us? Does he malign our exalted School? “He speaks of skin-spies,
Grandmaster! Skin-spies!” Eleazaras stared
uncomprehending. “He says they walk among
us,” Sinerses continued. “He says they’re everywhere! He even brought one of their heads in a sack—so
hideous Master! That such a thing—but-but I forget myself! Lord Chinjosa himsel
sent me… He seeks instruction. The Mandate sorcerer is demanding the Great
Names free the Warrior-Prophet…” Prince Kellhus? Eleazaras
blinked, still struggling to make sense of the man’s blather… Yes! Yes! His friend! They were friends
before… The Mandate fiend was his teacher. “Free?” Eleazaras managed
to say with some semblance of reserve. “Wh-what are his grounds?” Sinerses’s eyes bulged
from his half-starved face. “The skin-spies … He claims this Warrior-Prophet
is the only one who can see them.” The Warrior-Prophet.
Since marching from the desert, they’d watched the man with growing
trepidation—especially when it became apparent how many of their Javreh were secretly
taking the Whelming and becoming Zaudunyani. When Ikurei Conphas had come to
him promising to destroy the man, Eleazaras had commanded Chinjosa to support
the Exalt-General in all ways. Though he still fretted over the possibility of
war between the Orthodox and the Zaudunyani, he’d thought the matter of
Anasurimbor Kellhus’s fate, at least, had been sealed. “What do you mean?” “He argues that since
only this Prophet can see them, he must be released so that the Holy War might
be cleansed. Only this way, he claims, will the God turn his anger from us.” As an old master at jnan,
Eleazaras was loath to allow his true passions to surface in the presence of
his slaves, but these past days… had been very hard. The face he showed
Sinerses was bewildered—he seemed an old man who’d grown very afraid of the
world. “Muster as many men as
you can,” he said distantly. “Immediately!” Sinerses fled. Spies… Everywhere spies!
And if he couldn’t find them… If he couldn’t find them… L^araskana DOD The Grandmaster of the
Scarlet Spires would speak to this Warrior-Prophet—to this holy man who could
see what was hidden in their midst. Throughout his life, Eleazaras, a sorcerer
who could peer into the world’s smokiest recesses, had wondered what it was the
Holy thought they saw. Now he knew. Malice. It hungered, the thing
called Sarcellus. For blood. For fucking things living and dead. But more than
anything it hungered for consummation. All of it, from its anus to the sham it
called its soul, was bent to the ends of its creators. Everything was twisted
to the promise of climax, to the jet of hot salt. But the Architects had
been shrewd, so heartlessly astute, when they laid its foundations. So few
things—the rarest of circumstances!—could deliver that release. Killing the woman,
the Dunyain’s wife, had been such a moment. The mere recollection was enough to
make its phallus arch against its breeches, gasp like a fish… And now that the Mandate
sorcerer—accursed Chigra!—had returned seeking to deliver the Dunyain… The
promise! The fury! It had known instantly what it must do. As it strode from
the Sapatishah’s Palace, the air swam with its yearning, the sun shimmered with
its hate. Although subtle beyond
reason, the thing called Sarcellus walked a far simpler world than that walked
by men. There was no war of competing passions, no need for discipline or
denial. It lusted only to execute the will of its authors. In appeasing its
hunger, it appeased the good. So it had been forged.
Such was the cunning of its manufacture. The Warrior-Prophet must
die. There were no interfering passions, no fear, no remorse, no competing
lusts. It would kill Anasurimbor Kellhus before he could be saved, and in so
doing… Find ecstasy. Cnaьir need only see the
route Sarcellus took down the Kneeling Heights to know where the dog was
headed. The man rode into the Bowl, which meant he rode to the temple-complex
where Gotian and the Shrial Ihe Ihird March Knights were
stationed—and where the Dunyain and Serwe hung from black-limbed Umiaki. Cnaьir spat, then
hollered for his horse. By the time he clattered
free of the outer campus, he could no longer find the man. He barrelled
downward, through the welter of structures that crowded the slopes below the
Sapatishah’s Palace. Despite his mount’s perilous condition, he whipped it to a
gallop. They raced past spiked garden walls, along abandoned shop fronts, and
beneath looming tenements, turned only where the streets seemed to descend.
Csokis, he remembered, lay near the bottom of the Bowl. The very air seemed to buzz
with omens. Over and over, like a
shard of glass in his stomach, images of Kellhus cycled through his thoughts.
It seemed he could feel the man’s hand clamped about his neck, holding him,
impossibly, over the precipice in the Hethanta Mountains. For a panicked
moment, he even found it difficult to breathe, to swallow. The sensation passed
only when he ran his fingertips along the clotted gash about his throat—his
most recent swazond. How? How can he afflict me so? But then that was
Moenghus’s lesson. The Dunyain made disciples of all men, whether they revered
him or no. One need only breathe. Even my hate! Cnaьir thought. Even
my hate he uses to his advantage! Though his heart rankled at this, it rankled far more
at the thought of losing Moenghus. Kellhus had spoken true those long months
past in the Utemot camp: his heart had only one quarry, and it could not be fed
on surrogates. He was bound to the Dunyain as the Dunyain was bound to Serwe’s
corpse—bound by the cutting ropes of an unconquerable hate. Any shame. Any indignity.
He would bear any injury, commit any atrocity, to whet his vengeance. He would
see the whole world burn before he would surrender his hate. Hate! That was the
obsessive heart of his strength. Not his blade. Not his frame. His neck-breaking,
wife-striking, shield-cracking hate! Hatred had secured him the White Yaksh.
Hatred had banded his body with the Holy Scars. Hatred had preserved him from
the Dunyain when they crossed the Steppe. Hatred had inured him to the claims
these outlanders made on his heart. Hatred, and hatred alone, had kept him
sane. Of course the Dunyain had
known this. After Moenghus, Cnaьir
had fled to the codes of the People, thinking they could preserve his heart.
Having been cheated of them, they’d seemed all the more precious, akin to water
in times of great thirst. For years he’d whipped himself down the tracks
followed by his tribesmen— whipped himself bloody! To be a man, the
memorialists said, was to take and not to be taken, to enslave and not to be
enslaved. So he would be first among warriors, the most violent of all men! For
this was the most paramount of the Unwritten Laws: a man—a true man!—conquered,
and did not suffer himself to be used. Hence the torment of his
pact with Kellhus. All this time Cnaьir had jealously guarded his heart and
soul, spitting upon the fiend’s every word, never thinking that the man could
rule him by manipulating the circumstances about him. The Dunyain had unmanned him no differently than he
had these Inrithi fools. Moenghus! He named him Moenghus.1 M} son! What better way to gall
him? What better way to gull? He had been used. Even now, thinking these very
thoughts, the Dunyain used him! But it did not matter… There were no codes.
There was no honour. The world between men was as trackless as the Steppe—as
the desert! There were no men… Only beasts, clawing, craving,
mewling, braying. Gnawing at the world with their hungers. Beaten like bears
into dancing to this absurd custom or that. All these thousands, these Men of
the Tusk, killed and died in the name of delusion. Save hunger, nothing
commanded the world. This was the secret of
the Dunyain. This was their monstrosity. This was their fascination. Ever since Moenghus had
abandoned him, Cnaьir had thought himself the traitor. Always one thought too
many, always one lust, one hunger! But now he knew that the treachery dwelt in
the chorus of condemning voices, the recriminations that howled out from
nowhere, calling him names, such hateful names! She was my proof! Liars! Fools! He would
make them see! Any shame. Any indignity.
He would strangle infants in their cribs. He would kneel beneath the fall of
hot seed. He would see his hate through! L^araskand There was no honour. Only
wrath and destruction. Only hate. The hunt need not end!■« The abandoned tenements
fell away, and Cnaiur found himself ‘, galloping across one of Caraskand’s
bazaars. Corpses, little more than sodden bundles of skin, bone, and fabric,
flashed beneath. Halfway across the grim expanse, he spied the obelisks of Csokis
rising above a low scarp of buildings. After passing through a complex of
several mud-brick storehouses, decrepit to the point of collapse, he found an
avenue he recognized and whipped his horse along a row of what looked like
fire-gutted residences. After a sharp right, his mount was forced by momentum
to leap an overturned piss basin, a great stone bowl that must have belonged to
a nearby launderer. He felt before he heard his Eumarnan white throw a shoe.
The horse screamed, faltered, then limped to a halt—apparently lamed.I Cursing the thing, he
leapt to the ground and began sprinting,! knowing there was no way for him to
overtake the Knight-Commander now. Beyond the first turn, however, the white
Kalaul miraculously yawned wide before him, criss-crossed by the water-soaked
joints between paving stones and darkened by crowds of starving thousands. At first, he didn’t know
whether he should be dismayed or heartened by the sight of so many Inrithi.
Most of them, he imagined, would be Zaudunyani, which might prevent Sarcellus
from killing the Dunyain outright—if that was what the man in fact intended to
do. Thrusting his way between startled onlookers, Cnaiur gazed across the
crowds, searching in vain for the Shrial Knight. He saw the tree, Umiaki, in the
distance, dark and hunched against a hazy band of colonnades and temple
facades. The sudden certainty that the Dunyain was dead struck him breathless. It’s over. It seemed he’d never
suffered such a harrowing thought. He frantically peered across the distances.
The unobscured sun was boiling steam from the damp masses. He looked to the men
crowding about him, and felt a sudden, dizzying relief. Many chanted or sang.
Others simply looked to the branches reaching skyward. All seemed anxious with
hunger, but nothing more. He lives still, or there would be a riot… Cnaiur barged his way
forward, was shocked to find the half-starved Inrithi scrambling from his path.
He heard voices cry out “Scylvendi!” not in salute as they had at
Anwurat, but as a curse or a prayer. Soon a great train of men followed him,
some jeering, others crying out in exultation. Every face, it seemed, turned to
his passage. A broad lane opened before him, reaching nearly all the way to the
black tree. “Scylvendi!” the Men of the Tusk shouted. “Scylvendi!” As before, Shrial Knights guarded the tree, only now
arrayed in ranks some three or four men deep—a battle line, in effect. Mounted
patrols waded through the near distance. Alone among the Inrithi, the Knights
of the Tusk had refused to don Kianene garments, so they looked threadbare in
their tattered gold and white surcoats. Their helms and chainmail, however,
still gleamed in the sunlight. As he approached them,
Cnaiur spied Sarcellus standing with Gotian amid a clot of other Shrial officers.
The forward Shrial Knights recognized him, and granted him a wide if suspicious
berth as he strode toward Sarcellus and the Grandmaster. The two men seemed to
be arguing. Umiaki reared behind them, branching dark across sea-blue skies.
Glancing across the great mat of leaves, Cnaiur glimpsed the ring hanging
beneath Umiaki’s chapped bowers. He saw Serwe and the Dunyain slowly spinning,
like two sides of a coin. How can she be dead! “Because of you,” the Dunyain whispered. “Weeper …” “But why this moment?”
Cnaiur heard the Grandmaster cry over the growing thunder of the masses. “Because!” Cnaiur boomed
in his mightiest battlefield voice. “He bears a grudge no man can fathom!” Despite the added censers
the Great Names had summoned, Achamian found himself gagging at the stench of
the thing. He explained how the limbs folded into a sheath, even propping the
rotted head to demonstrate the way two limbs fit about a viscous eye socket.
Save the odd exclamation of disgust, the assembled caste-nobles watched in mute
horror. At some point, a slave had offered him an orange-scented kerchief. When
he The Third March could tolerate no more,
he pressed it to his face, and gestured for the hideous thing’s removal. For several moments,
astonished silence ruled the ancient council chamber. The censers hissed and
steamed, fogging the nightmarish air. Smeared across the table, the thing’s
residue, which resembled black mould, continued to reek. “So this,” Conphas
finally said, “is the reason we must free the Deceiver?” Achamian stared at the
man, sensing some kind of verbal trap. He’d known from the start that Conphas
would be his primary adversary. Proyas had warned him, saying he’d never
encountered anyone as formidable in the ways of jnan. Rather than answer,
Achamian decided to draw him out, to reveal his role in these weighty matters. I must discredit him. “The time for playing
your peers for fools is at an end, Ikurei.” The Exalt-General leaned back in
his chair. He drew lazy fingertips across the Imperial Suns stamped on the
cuirass of his field armour, as though to remind Achamian of the Chorae that
lay hidden beneath. It was a gesture as good as any sneer. “You make it sound,”
Proyas said, “as though he already knows about these things.” “He does.” “The sorcerer refers to
ancient history,” Conphas replied. He’d been wearing his blue general’s cloak
in the traditional Nansur fashion, thrown forward over his left shoulder. He
now cast it back with a brisk motion, letting it trail across the copper
carpet. “Some time ago, back when the Holy War still camped about Momemn’s
walls, my uncle discovered that his Prime Counsel was in truth one of these…
things.” “Skeaos?” Proyas
exclaimed. “Are you saying Skeaos was one of these skin-spies?” “None other. Since he
proved improbably difficult to restrain for someone so aged, my uncle summoned
his Imperial Saik. When they insisted no sorcery was involved, I was sent to
fetch the good blasphemer, Achamian here, to confirm their assessment. Things
became…” He paused, then actually had the temerity to wink at Achamian. “Messy.” “So?” Gothyelk cried in his gruff manner.
“Was there any sorcery?” “No,” Achamian replied.
“And that’s the very thing that makes them so deadly. If they were sorcerous
artifacts, they’d be quickly uncovered. As it stands, they’re impossible to detect… And this,” he said, turning to glare at
the Exalt-General, “is precisely what these things have to do with Anasurimbor
Kellhus… ”Only he can see them.“ Several shouts rang
beneath the corbelled dome. “How do you know this?” Hulwarga asked. Achamian stiffened, once
again seeing Kellhus and Serwe swaying beneath the black tree. “He told me.” “Told you?” Gothyelk
growled. “When? When?” “But what are they?” Chinjosa said. “He’s right,” Saubon
exclaimed. “This! This is the cancer that pollutes us! It’s as I said all
along: the Warrior-Prophet has come to cleanse us!” “You move too fast,”
Conphas snapped. “You gloss over the most important questions!” “Indeed!” Proyas said.
“Such as why, when you knew these things were among us, you said nothing to the
Council!” “Please,” the Exalt-General replied, his brows knitted in
derision. “What was I to do? For all we know, several of these creatures sit
among us this very moment…” He looked to the rapt faces, mostly bearded, rising
around them. “Among you on the tiers,” he called with a sweep of his hand. “Or
even about this very table…” A concerned rumble broke across the room. “So tell me,” Conphas
continued, “given the sorcerer’s own estimation of these things, whom could I
trust? You heard what he said: they’re impossible to detect. I did all that I
could in fact do…” He turned his sly eyes to Achamian, though he continued
speaking to his fellow Great Names. “I watched, carefully, and when I at last
knew who the lead agent was, I acted.” Achamian bolted erect in
his chair. He opened his mouth to protest, but it was too late. “Who?” Chinjosa,
Gothyelk, and Hulwarga cried out in near unison. Conphas shrugged. “Why,
the man who calls himself the Warrior-Prophet… Who else?” oil Ihe Ihird March A single jeer pealed
through the air, only to be shouted down by a chorus of rebukes. “Nonsense!” Achamian
cried. “This is rank foolishness!” The Exalt-General’s
eyebrows popped up, as though amazed that something so obvious could be
overlooked. “But you just said that only he could see these abominations, did
you not?” “Yes, but—” “Then tell us, how does he see them?” Caught unawares, Achamian
could only stare at the man. Never, it seemed, had he come to loathe someone so
quickly. “Well, the answer,”
Conphas said, “seems plain enough to me. He sees them because he knows who they are.” Exclamations rang out. Flummoxed, Achamian
looked up across the raucous tiers, glancing from face to bearded face.
Suddenly he realized that what Conphas had said moments earlier was true. Even now, skin-spies watched him—he was certain of
it! The Consult watched him… And laughed. He found himself
clutching the table’s edge. “So how,” Saubon was
crying, “did he know I would prevail on the Plains of Mengedda? How did he know
where to find water in desert sands? How does he know the truth in men’s
hearts?” “Because he’s the
Warrior-Prophet!” someone bellowed from the tiers. “Truth-Bearer!
Light-Bringer! The Salvation of—” “Blasphemy!” Gothyelk
roared, beating the table twice with his great fist. “He is False! False! There can be no more Prophets! Sejenus is the true
voice of God! The only—” “How can you say that?”
Saubon said, as though mourning a wayward brother. “How many times—” “He’s ensorcelled you!”
Conphas shouted in the tones of a High Imperial Officer. “Bewitched you all!”
When the uproar abated somewhat, he continued, projecting his voice with the
same ringing forceful-ness. “As I said earlier, we’ve forgotten the single most
important question! Who? Who are these abominations that hound us, that skulk
unseen in our most secret councils?” “Just as I said,”
Chinjosa seconded. “Who?” Ikurei Conphas looked
pointedly at Achamian, daring him to answer… “Eh, Schoolman?” He’d been outmatched,
Achamian realized. Conphas knew his answer, knew how the others would scoff and
dismiss. The Consult was the stuff of children’s tales and Mandate madmen. He
stared wordlessly at the Exalt-General, struggling to mask his dismay with
contempt. Even with proof, they could undo him with mere words. Even with
proof, they refused to believe! The man’s eyes mocked him, seemed to say, You make it too easy… Conphas abruptly turned to the others. “But you’ve
already answered my question, haven’t you? When you said these things aren’t
the issue of sorcery—or at least any sorcery that Schoolmen can see!” “Cishaurim,” Saubon said.
“You’re saying these things are Cishaurim.” In his periphery, Achamian could
see Proyas glaring at him in alarm. Why don’t you speak? But an exhaustion had
welled through him, a numbing sense of defeat. In his soul’s eye, he saw
Esmenet beseeching him, her gaze alien with heartbreaking thoughts, treacherous
desires… How could this happen? “What else could they be?” Conphas
asked, the very voice of sober reason. “You saw it.” “Aye,” Chinjosa said, his
eyes strangely hesitant. “They belong to the Eyeless Ones. The Snakeheads!
There can be no other explanation.” “Indeed,” Conphas said,
his voice resonating with oratorical gravity. “The man the Zaudunyani call the
Warrior-Prophet, the liar who came to us claiming the privileges of a prince,
is an agent of the Cishaurim, sent to corrupt us, to sow dissension among us,
to destroy the Holy War!” “And he’s succeeded” Gothyelk cried out in dismay. “On all points!” Denials and lamentations
shivered through the air. But doom, Achamian knew, had drawn its circle far
beyond Caraskand’s walls. I must find
some way… “If Kellhus…” Proyas
shouted, commanding the room with rarity of his voice. “If Kellhus is a
Cishaurim agent, then why did
he save us in the desert?“ Achamian turned to his
former student, heartened… “To save his own skin,”
the Exalt-General snapped impatiently. “Why else? As much as you distrust my
wiles, Proyas, you must believe me on this. Anasurimbor Kellhus is a Cishaurim
spy. We’ve been watching ihe Ihird March him ever since Momemn,
ever since his wandering eye revealed Skeaos to my uncle.“ “What do you mean?”
Achamian blurted. The Exalt-General looked
to him contemptuously. “How do you think my uncle, the glorious Emperor of these
lands, identified Skeaos as a spy? He saw your Warrior-Prophet exchanging
glances far out of proportion to their acquaintance.” “He’s not,” Achamian
found himself shouting, “my Warrior-Prophet!” He looked about,
blinking, as shocked by his outburst as the others around the table. AM this time! He could
see them from the very beginning… And yet, the man had said
nothing. Throughout the march, throughout their endless discussions of the past
and the present, Kellhus had
known about the
skin-spies. Heedless of the
caste-nobles’ scrutiny, Achamian gasped for breath, clutched his chest. Dread
pimpled his skin. Suddenly, so many of Kellhus’s questions, especially those
regarding the Consult and the No-God, made a different kind of sense… He was working me! Using me for my knowledge! Trying to
understand what it was he saw! And he saw Esmenet’s soft
lips parting about those words, those impossible words… “I carry his child.” How? How could she betray
him? He could remember those
nights lying side by side in the darkness of his poor tent, feeling her slender
back against his chest, and smiling at the press of her toes, which she always
pushed between his calves when they were frigid. Ten little toes, each as cold
as a raindrop. He could remember the wan yet breathless wonder that would seep
through him. How could such a beauty choose him? How could this woman—this
world!—feel safe in his wretched arms? The air would be warm with their
exhalations, while beyond the stained canvas, across a thousand silent miles, everything
would become strange and chill. And he would clutch her, as though they both
plummeted… And he would curse
himself, thinking, Don’t be a
fool! She’s here! Sheswore you’d never be
alone! Caraskand But he was. He was alone. He blinked absurd tears
from his eyes. Even his mule, Daybreak, was dead… He looked to the Great
Names, who watched him from about the table. He felt no shame. The Scarlet
Spires had carved that from him— or so it seemed. Only desolation, doubt, and
hatred. He did it! He took her! Achamian remembered
Nautzera, in what seemed another lifetime, asking him if the life of Inrau, his
student, was worth the Apocalypse. He’d conceded then, had admitted that no
man, no love, was worth such a risk. And here, he’d conceded once again. He would
save the man who had halved his heart, because his heart was not worth the
world, not worth the Second Apocalypse. Was it? Was it? Achamian had slept only a
short while the previous night, dozing while Proyas slumbered. And for the
first time since becoming a sorcerer of rank within the Mandate, there had been
no Dreams of the Old Wars. He had dreamed, rather, of Kellhus and Esmenet
gasping and laughing in sweaty sheets. Sitting speechless before
the Great Names, Drusas Achamian realized that he held his Heart in. one hand
and Apocalypse in the other. And as he hefted them in his soul, it seemed that
he couldn’t tell which was the heavier. It was no different for
these men. The Holy War suffered,
and someone must die. Even if it meant the World. They were only one small
pocket of confrontation amid a thousand of such pockets scrawling across the
Kalaul. But they were, Cnaьir knew, the centre all the same. Dozens of Shrial
Knights milled about them, their faces blank and guarded, their eyes wide with
looks of worried concentration. Something was about to
happen. “But he must die,
Grandmaster!” Sarcellus cried. “Kill him and save the Holy War!” /0 Ihe Jhird March Gotian glanced nervously
at Cnaьir before looking back to his Knight-Commander. He ran thick fingers
through his short, greying hair. Cnaьir had always thought the Shrial
Grandmaster a decisive man, but he seemed old and unsure now—even cowed in some
strange way by his subordinate’s zeal. All the Men of the Tusk had suffered,
some more than others, and some in different ways than others. Gotian, it
seemed, bore his scars on his spirit. “I appreciate your concern, Sarcellus,
but it has been agreed that—” “But that’s just my point, Grandmaster! This
sorcerer offers the Great Names reasons to spare the Deceiver. He gives them
incentives. Contrived stories of evil spies that only the Deceiver can see!” “What do you mean,”
Cnaьir snapped, “that only he can see them?” Sarcellus turned
to him in a manner that smelled wary, though nothing about him appeared troubled. “This is what the
sorcerer argues,” he said in a sneering tone. “Perhaps he does,” Cnaьir
replied, “but I followed you from the council chamber. The sorcerer had said
only that there were spies in our midst, nothing more.” “Are you suggesting,” Gotian
asked sharply, “that my Knight-Commander is lying?” “No,” Cnaьir replied with
a shrug. He felt the deadly calm settle about him. “I merely ask how he knows
what he did not hear.” “You’re a heathen dog,
Scylvendi,” Sarcellus declared. “A heathen! By what’s right and holy, you
should be rotting with the Kianene of Caraskand, not calling the word of a
Shrial Knight into question.” With a feral grin, Cnaьir
spat between Sarcellus’s booted feet. Over the man’s shoulder, he saw the great
tree, glimpsed Serwe’s willowy corpse bound upside down to the Dьnyain—like
dead nailed to dead. Let it be
now. A series of cries erupted
from the nearby crowds. Distracted, Gotian commanded both Cnaьir and Sarcellus
to lower their hands from their pommels. Neither man complied. Sarcellus glanced to
Gotian, who peered across the crowd, then back to Cnaьir. “You know not what
you do, Scylvendi…” His face flexed, twitched like a dying insect.
“You know not what you do.” Cnaьir stared in horror,
hearing the madness of Anwurat in the surrounding roar. Caraskand j Lie made flesh… Shouts added to shouts,
until the air fairly hissed with cries and howls. Following Gotian’s gaze,
Cnaьir turned and glimpsed a cohort of scale-armoured men in blue and scarlet
coats through the screen of Shrial Knights: a few at first, clearing away
throngs of Inrithi, then hundreds more, forming almost cheek to jowl opposite
Gotian’s men. So far no blades had been drawn. Gotian hurried along his
ranks, shouting orders, bellowing to the barracks for reinforcements. Swords were drawn,
flourished so they flashed in the sun. More of the strange warriors approached,
a deep phalanx of them shoving their way through the crowds of gaunt Inrithi.
They were ]avreh, Cnaьir realized, the
slave-soldiers of the Scarlet Spires. What was happening here? The masses surged about
several brawls. Swords rang and clattered— off to the left. Gotian’s cries
pierced the din. Bewildered, the ranks of Shrial Knights immediately before
Cnaьir suddenly broke, rolled back by Javreh with brandished broadswords. United by shock, both
Cnaьir and Sarcellus drew their swords. But the slave-soldiers
halted before them, making way for the sudden appearance of a dozen emaciated
slaves bearing a silk- and gauze-draped palanquin with an intricately carved,
black-lacquered frame. In one rehearsed motion, the cadaverous men lowered the
litter to the ground. A sudden hush fell over
the crowds, so absolute Cnaьir thought he could hear the wind rattle and click
through Umiaki behind him. Somewhere in the distance, some wretch shrieked,
either wounded or dying. Dressed in voluminous
crimson gowns, an old man stepped from the shrouded litter, looking about with
imperious contempt. The breeze wafted through his silky white beard. His eyes
glittered dark from beneath painted brows. “I am Eleazaras,” he
declared in a resonant patrician’s voice, “Grandmaster of the Scarlet Spires.”
He glanced over the dumbstruck crowds, then levelled his hawkish eyes on
Gotian. “The one who calls
himself the Warrior-Prophet. You will cut him down and deliver him to me.” The Third March L^araskand “Well, it seems the
matter is settled,” Ikurei Conphas said, his solemn tone belied by the hyena
laughing in his gaze. “Akka?” Proyas whispered.
Achamian looked to him, bewildered. For a moment, the Prince had sounded
twelve… It was strange the way
memory cared nothing for the form of the past. Perhaps this was why those dying
of old age were so often incredulous. Through memory, the past assailed the
present, not in queues arranged by calender and chronicle, but as a hungry mob
of yesterdays. Yesterday Esmenet had
loved him. Just yesterday she’d begged him not to leave her, not to go to the
Sareotic Library. For the rest of his life, he realized, it would always be
yesterday. He looked to the
entryway, his attention caught by movement in his periphery. It was Xinemus…
One of Proyas’s men—Iryssas, he realized— led him across the threshold, then up
into the packed tiers. He was dressed in full panoply, wearing the shin-length
skirt of a Conriyan knight and a harness of silvered ring-mail beneath a
Kianene vest. His beard was oiled and braided, and fell in a fan of ringlets
across his upper chest. Compared with the half-wasted Men of the Tusk, he
looked robust, majestic, at once exotic and familiar, like an Inrithi prince
from faraway Nilnamesh. The Marshal stumbled
twice passing through his fellow caste-nobles, and Achamian could see torment
on his blinded face—torment and a curious, almost heartbreaking stubbornness. A
determination to resume his place among the mighty. Achamian swallowed at the
knife in his throat. Zzn… Breathless, he watched
the Marshal settle between Gaidekki and Ingiaban, then turn his face to open
air, staring out as though the Great Names sat before him rather than below.
Achamian remembered the indolent nights he’d spent at Xinemus’s coastal villa
in Conriya. He remembered drinking anpoi, eating wild hen stuffed with oysters,
and their endless talk of things ancient and dead. And suddenly Achamian
understood what he had to do… He had to tell a story. Esmenet had loved him
just yesterday. But then so too had the world ended! “I’ve suffered,” he
called abruptly, and it seemed he heard his voice through Xinemus’s ears. It
sounded strong. “I have suffered,” he
repeated, pushing himself to his feet. “All of us have suffered. The time for
politics and posturing has passed. ‘Those who speak truth,’ the Latter Prophet
tells us, ‘have naught to fear, though they should perish for it…’” He could feel their eyes:
sceptical, curious, and indignant. “It surprises you, doesn’t it, hearing a
sorcerer, one of the Unclean, quoting Scripture. I imagine it even offends some
of you. Nevertheless, I shall speak the truth.” “So you lied to us
before?” Conphas said with the semblance of sombre tact. Always a true son of
House Ikurei. “No more than you,”
Achamian said, “nor any other man in these chambers. For all of us parse and
ration our words, pitch them to the ears of the listener. All of us play
jnan—that cursed game! Even though men die, we play it… And few, Exalt-General,
know it better than you!” Somehow, he’d found that
tone or note that stilled tongues and stirred hearts to listen—that voice, he
realized, that Kellhus so effortlessly mastered. “Men think us Mandate
Schoolmen drunk on legend, deranged by history. All the Three Seas laugh at us.
And why not, when we weep and tug on our beards at the tales you tell your
children at night? But this— this.1—isn’t the Three Seas. This is
Caraskand, where the Holy War lies trapped and starving, besieged by the fury
of the Padirajah. In all likelihood, these are the last days of your life!
Think on it! The hunger, the desperation, the terror flailing at your bowel,
the horror bolting through your heart!” “That’s enough!” an
ashen-faced Gothyelk cried. “No!” Achamian boomed. “It isn’t enough! For what
you suffer now, I’ve suffered my entire life—day and night! Doom! Doom lies
upon you, darkening your thoughts, weighing your steps. Even now, your heart
quickens. Your breath grows tight… ”But you’ve still much, much to learn! “Thousands of years ago,
before Men had crossed the Great Kayarsus, before even The Chronicle of the Tusk was written, the Nonmen ruled The Third March these lands. And like us,
they warred amongst themselves, for honour, for riches, and yes, even for
faith. But the greatest of their wars they fought, not against themselves, or
even against our ancestors—though we would prove to be their ruin. The greatest
of their wars they fought against the Inchoroi, a race of monstrosities. A race
who exulted in the subtleties of the flesh, forging perversities from life the
way we forge swords from iron. Sranc, Bashrag, even Wracu, dragons, are relics
of their ancient wars against the Nonmen. “Led by the great
Cu’jara-Cinmoi, the Nonmen Kings battled them across the plains and through the
high and deep places of the earth. After ordeal and grievous sacrifice, they
beat the Inchoroi back to their first and final stronghold, a place the Nonmen
called Min-Uroikas, the ‘Pit of Obscenities.’ I’ll not recount the horrors of
that place. Suffice to say the Inchoroi were overthrown, extinguished—or so it
was thought. And the Nonmen cast a glamour about Min-Uroikas so that it would
remain forever hidden. Then, exhausted and mortally weakened, they retired to
the remnants of their ruined world, a triumphant, yet broken, race. “Centuries later the Men
of Eanna descended the Kayarsus, howling multitudes of them, led by their
Chieftain-Kings—our fathers of yore. You know their names, for they’re
enumerated in The Chronicle of
the Tusk:
Shelgal, Mamayma, Nomur, Inshull… They swept the dwindling Nonmen before them,
sealing up their great mansions and driving them into the sea. For an age,
knowledge of the Inchoroi and Min-Uroikas passed from all souls. Only the Nonmen
of Injor-Niyas remembered, and they dared not leave their mountain fastnesses. “But as the years passed,
the enmity between our races waned. Treaties were forged between the remaining
Nonmen and the Norsirai of Tryse and Sauglish. Knowledge and goods were
exchanged, and Men learned for the first time of the Inchoroi and their wars
against the Nonmen. Then under the heirs of Nincaeru-Telesser, a Nonman
sorcerer named Cet’ingira—whom you know as Mekeritrig from The Sagas—revealed the location of Min-Uroikas to Shaeonanra,
the Grandvizier of the ancient Gnostic School of Mangaecca. The glamour about
the wicked stronghold was broken, and the Schoolmen of the Mangaecca reclaimed
Min-Uroikas—to the woe of us all. Caraskand “They called it
Anochirwa, ‘Hornsreaching,’ though to the Men who warred against them, it came
to be called Golgotterath… A name we use to frighten our children still, though
it is we who should be frightened.” He paused, searching from face to face. “I say this because the
Nonmen, even though they destroyed the Inchoroi, could not undo Min-Uroikas,
for it wasn’t—isn’t—of this world. The Mangaecca ransacked the place,
discovering much that the Nonmen had overlooked, including terrible armaments
never brought to fruition. And much as a man who dwells in a palace comes to
think himself a prince, so the Mangaecca came to think themselves the
successors of the Inchoroi. They became enamoured of their inhuman ways, and
they fell upon their obscene and degenerate craft, the Tekne, with the curiosity
of monkeys. And most importantly—most tragically!—they discovered Mog-Pharau…” “The No-God,” Proyas said
quietly. Achamian nodded.
“Tsurumah, Mursiris, World-Breaker, and a thousand other hated names… It took
them centuries, but just over two thousand years ago, when the High Kings of
Kyraneas exacted tribute from these lands, and perhaps raised this very council
hall, they finally succeeded in awakening Him… The No-God… Near all the world
crashed into screams and blood ere his fall.” He smiled and looked at
them, blinked tears across his cheeks. “What I’ve seen in my Dreams,” he said
softly. “The horrors I have seen…” He shook his head,
stepped forward as though stumbling clear of some trance. “Who among you forgets
the Plains of Mengedda? Many of you, I know, suffered nightmares, dreams of
dying in ancient battles. And all of you saw the bones and bronze arms vomited
from that cursed ground. Those things happened, I assure you, for a reason. They are the echoes of terrible deeds, the spoor of
dread and catastrophe. If any of you doubt the existence or the power of the
No-God, then I bid you only recall that ground, which broke for the mere
witness of His passing! “Now everything I’ve told
you is fact, recorded in annals of both Men and Nonmen. But this isn’t, as you
might think, a story of doom averted—not in the least! For though Mog-Pharau
was struck down on the Plains of Mengedda, his accursed attendants recovered
his remains. The Third March And this, great lords, is
why we Mandate Schoolmen haunt your courts and wander your halls. This is why
we bear your taunts and bite our tongues! For two thousand years the Consult
has continued its wicked study, for two thousand years they’ve laboured to
resurrect the No-God. Think us mad, call us fools, but it’s your wives, your
children, we seek to protect. The Three Seas is our charge! “This is why I come to
you now. Heed me, for I know of what I speak! “These creatures, these
skin-spies, that infiltrate your ranks have no relation to the Cishaurim. By
calling them such, you simply do what all men do when assailed by the Unknown:
you drag it into the circle of what you know. You clothe new enemies in the
trappings of old. But these things hail from far outside your circle, from time
out of memory! Think of what we saw moments ago! These skin-spies are beyond
your craft or ken, beyond that even of the Cishaurim, whom you fear and hate. “They are agents of the
Consult, and their mere existence omens disaster! Only deep mastery of the
Tekne could bring such obscenities to life, a mastery that promises the
Resurrection of Mog-Pharau is nigh… “Need I tell you what
that means? “We Mandate Schoolmen, as
you know, dream of the ancient world’s end. And of all those dreams, there’s
one we suffer more than any other: the death of Celmomas, High-King of Kuniuri,
on the Fields of Eleneot.” He paused, realized that he panted for breath. “Anasurimbor Celmomas,” he said. There was an anxious
rustle through the chamber. He heard someone muttering in Ainoni. “And in this dream,” he
continued, pressing his tone nearer to its crescendo, “Celmomas speaks, as the
dying sometimes do, a great prophecy. Do not to grieve, he says, for an
Anasurimbor shall return at the end of the world… “An Anasurimbor!” he cried, as though that name held the secret of
all reason. His voice resounded through the chamber, echoed across the ancient
stonework. “An Anasurimbor shall
return at the end of the world. And
he has ■■■ He hangs dying even as we speak! Anasurimbor Kellhus,
the man you’ve condemned, is what we in
the Mandate call the Harbinger, the living sign of the end of days. He is our
only hope!“ Achamian swept his gaze
from the table to the tiers, lowered his opened palms. “So you, the Lords of the Holy War, must ask yourself, what’s
the wager you would make? You who think yourselves doomed, and your wives and
children safe… Are you so certain this man is merely what you think? And whence comes this certainty? From
wisdom? Or from desperation? ”Are you willing to risk the very world to see your bigotries through?“ The silence that
closed about his voice was leaden. It was as though a wall of stone faces and
glass eyes regarded him. For a long moment no one dared speak, and with
startled wonder, Achamian realized he had actually reached them. For once they’d
listened with their hearts! They
believe! Then Ikurei Conphas began
stamping his foot and slapping his thigh, calling, “Hussaa! Hu-hu’hussaaa!” Another on the tiers, General Sompas, joined him… “Hussaa! Hu-hu-hussaaa!” A mockery of the
traditional Nansur cheer. The laughter was hesitant at first, but within
moments, it boomed through the chamber. The Lords of the Holy War had made
their wager. His crimson gown
shimmering in the sunlight, the Grandmaster of the Scarlet Spires took two
steps toward them. “You will deliver him,” he repeated darkly. “Sarcellus!” Incheiri
Gotian roared, brandishing a Chorae in his left hand. “Kill him! Kill the False
Prophet!” But Cnaьir was already
sprinting toward the tree. He whirled, falling into stance several paces before
the Knight of the Tusk. Arrythtng… Any indignity. Any price! Sarcellus lowered his
sword, opened his arms as though in fellowship. Beyond him, the masses surged
and howled across the reaches of the Kalaul. The air hummed with their growing
thunder. Smiling, the Knight-Commander stepped closer, pausing at the extreme
limit of any sudden lunge. ‘We worship the same God,
you and I.“ The Third March The breeze had calmed,
and the sun’s heat leapt into its wake. It seemed to Cnaьir that he could smell
rotting flesh—rotting flesh mingled with the bitter spit of eucalyptus leaves. Serwe… “This,” Cnaьir said
calmly, “is the sum of my worship.” Rest my sweet, for I shall bear you… He clutched his tunic
about its blood-clotted collar, tore it to his waist. He raised his broadsword
straight before him. I shall avenge. Beyond the
Knight-Commander, Gotian exchanged shouts with the crimson-gowned Grandmaster.
The Javreh, the slave-soldiers of the Scarlet Spires, threw themselves against
the ranks of Shrial Knights, who’d linked arms in an effort to hold them—and
the surrounding fields of shrieking and bellowing Inrithi—at bay. The
surrounding temples and cloisters of Csokis reared in the distance, impassive
in the haze. The Five Heights loomed against the surrounding sky. And Cnaьir grinned as
only a Chieftain of the Utemot could grin. The neck of the world, it seemed,
lay pressed against the point of his sword. I shall butcher. All hungered here. All
starved. Everything, Cnaьir
realized, had transpired according to the Dunyain’s mad gambit. What difference
did it make whether he perished now, hanging from this tree, or several days
hence, when the Padirajah at last overcame the walls? So he’d given himself to
his captors, knowing that no man was so innocent as the accused who exposed his
accusers. Knowing that if he
survived… The secret of battle! Sarcellus swept his
longsword in a series of blinding exercises. His arms snapped out and down,
like bolts thrown from siege engines. There was something inhuman to his
movements. Cnaьir neither flinched
nor moved. He was a Son of the People, a prodigy born of desolate earth, sent
to kill, to reave. He was a savage from dark northern plains, with thunder in
his heart and murder in his eyes… He was Cnaьir urs Skiotha, most violent of
all men. He shrugged his bronzed
limbs and planted his feet. “You will fear,”
Sarcellus said, “before this is over.” Caraskand “I cut you once,” Cnaьir
grated. He could clearly see the
threads of inflamed red branching across his face now. They were creases, he
realized. Creases he’d seen open before… “I know why you loved
her,” the Shrial Knight snarled. “Such a peach! I think I’ll chase the dogs
from her corpse—after—and love her again…” Cnaьir stared, unmoved.
Howls rifled the air. Upraised fists hammered the distances—thousands of them. Just the space of breaths
between them now. Breaths. Their blades cut open
space. Kissed. Circled. Kissed again. Whirling geometries, shocking the air
with the staccato ring of steel. Leap. Crouch. Lunge… With bestial grace, the
Scylvendi pounded the abomination, pressing him back. But the Shrial Knight’s
sword was sorcery—it dazzled the air. Cnaьir fell back,
gathered his breath, shook sweat from his mane. “My flesh,” Sarcellus
whispered, “has been folded more times than the steel of your sword.” He
laughed as though utterly unwinded. “Men are dogs and kine… But my kind, we’re
wolves in the forest, lions on the plain. We’re sharks in the sea…” Emptiness always laughed. Cnaьir charged the
creature, his sword pummelling the space between them. Feint, then a
breathtaking sweep. The Shrial Knight leapt, batted away the thunder of his
steel. Iron honed to the absence
of surface, sketching circles and points in the air, reaching, probing… They locked hilts. Leaned
against each other. Cnaьir heaved, but the man seemed immovable. “Such talent!” Sarcellus
cried. Concussion in his face.
How? Cnaьir stumbled across leaves and hot stone, rolled to his feet. He
glimpsed Umiaki, clutching the sun with a tree’s crone fingers. Then Sarcellus’s
blade was everywhere, cutting, hammering down his guard. A string of
desperations saved his life. He leapt clear. The famished mobs
yammered and shrieked. The very ground thrummed beneath his sandals. Exhaustion and stings,
the weight of old wounds. The Third March Their blades scissored,
winced apart, brushed sweaty skin, then circled round the sun. Like teeth they
clacked and gnashed. Lathered in sweat. Each
breath a knife in his chest. Pressed to the bowers of
Umiaki, he glimpsed Serwe sagging against the Dunyain, her face black and bent
back, her teeth leering from shrunken lips. The surrounding riot thinned. The
boundaries between him, the ground, and the black tree crumbled. Something
filled him, swept him forward, unleashed his corded arms. And he howled, the
very mouth of the Steppe, his sword raping
the air between… One. Two. Three… Blows
that could have halved bulls. Sarcellus faltered,
stumbled—saved himself with an inhuman leap. Back, pirouetting through the air.
Landing in a crouch. The smile was gone. His black mane ribboned
by sweat, his chest heaving over the hollow of his belly, Cnaьir raised his
arms to the tumultuous mobs. “Who?” he screamed. “Who will take the knife to my heart?” Again he fell upon the
Shrial Knight, battered him back from the shadows of Umiaki, from the leaves
curled about palmed water. But even as the man’s style crumbled beneath his
frothing attack, it revealed something beautiful in its precision—as beautiful
as it was unconquerable. Suddenly, Sarcellus was swatting his blade as though
it were a game. The man’s longsword became a glittering wind, scoring his
cheek, clipping his shin… Cnaьir fell back, wailed
rabid frustration, bellowed defiance. A sword tip sheared
through his thigh. He skidded in blood, fell forward, bare throat exposed…
Stone bruised his bones. Grit gouged his skin. No… A powerful voice pierced
the roar of the Holy War. “Sarcellus!” It was Gotian. He’d
broken with Eleazaras, and was warily approaching his zealous Knight-Commander.
The crowds abruptly grew subdued. “Sarcellus…” The
Grandmaster’s eyes were slack with disbelief. “Where…”—a hesitant
swallow—“where did you learn to fight so?” The Knight of the Tusk
whirled, his face the very mask of reverent subservience. Sarcellus suddenly
convulsed, coughed blood through grated teeth. Cnaiur guided his thrashing body
to the ground with h,s sword. Tfcen %n reach
of the dumbstruck Grandmaster, he hacked off as head wab ITngle stroke. He
gathered the thick maul of black ha, in his hand ased the severed head high.
Like bowels from a split belly as fac, axed, opened like a harem of limbs.
Gotian fell to his knees. Eleazara: stumbled back into his slaves. The mob’s
thunder-horror, exultauon-broke across the Scylvendi. The riot of revelation.
He tossed the hoary thing at the sorcerer’s feet. HApTER Twenty-five CaraskandI What is the meaning of a deluded life? —AJENCIS, THE THIRD ANALYTIC OF MEN Late Winter, 4112 Year-of-the-Tusfc, Caraskand Crying out to one another
in eager terror, the Nascenti cut the Warrior-Prophet from his dead wife. A
hush, it seemed, had settled across the whole of Caraskand. He knew he should be weak
unto death, but something inexplicable moved him. He rolled from Serwe, braced
his arms against his knees, then waving his frantic disciples away, stood
impossibly erect. Hands wrapped him in a shroud of white linen. He stumbled
clear of Umiaki’s gloom, lifted his face to sun and sky. He could feel awe
shiver through the masses—awe of him. He raised his palms to the great hollows
of the earth, and it seemed he embraced all the Three Seas. I think I see, Father… Cries of rapture and
disbelief rang across the packed reaches of the Kalaul. Several paces away
Cnaьir stood dumbstruck, as did Eleazaras a length behind him. Incheiri Gotian
staggered forward, fell to his knees and wept. Kellhus smiled with boundless
compassion. Everywhere he looked, he saw men kneeling… Yes… The Thousandfold Thought. And it seemed there was
nothing, no dwarfing frame, that could restrict him to this place, to any
place… He was all things, and all things were his… He was one of the
Conditioned. Dunyain. He was the
Warrior-Prophet. Tears roared down his
cheeks. With a haloed hand, he reached beneath his breast, firmly wrested the
heart from his ribs. He thrust it high to the thunder of their adulation. Beads
of blood seemed to crack the stone at his feet… He glimpsed Sarcellus’s
uncoiled face. see … “They said!” he cried in
a booming voice, and the howling chorus trailed into silence. “They said that 1 was
False, that I caused the anger of the God to burn against us!“ He looked into their
wasted faces, answered their fevered eyes. He brandished Serwe’s
burning heart. “But I say that
we—WE!—are that anger!” Kascamandri, the
indomitable Padirajah of Kian, sent a message to the Men of the Tusk, whom he
knew were doomed. The message was an offer—an extremely gracious one, the
Padirajah thought. If the Holy War relented, yielded Caraskand and forswore
their idolatrous worship of False Gods, they would be spared and given lands. They
would be made Grandees of Kian as befitted their rank among the idolatrous
nations. Kascamandri was not so
foolish as to think this offer would be accepted outright, but he knew
something of desperation, knew that in the competition of hungers, piety often
lost in the end. Besides, news that the Holy War had been defeated, not by the
swords of the Prophet Fane but by his words, would shake the wicked Thousand
Temples to the core. The reply came in the
form of a dozen almost skeletal Inrithi knights, dressed in simple cotton
tunics and wearing only knives. After disputing the knives, which the idolaters
refused to relinquish, Kascamandri’s Ushers received them with all jnanic
courtesy and brought them directly to the great Padirajah, his children, and
the ornamental Grandees of his court. The Third March There was a moment of
astonished silence, for the Kianene could scarce believe the bearded wretches
before them could author so much woe. Then, before the first ritual
declaration, the twelve men cried out, “Satephikos
kana ta yerishi ankapharas!” in unison, then drew their knives and cut their own throats. Horrified, Kascamandri
clasped his two youngest daughters tight in his elephantine arms. They sobbed
and cried out, while his older children, especially his boys, chirped in
excited tones. He turned to his dumbstruck interpreter… “Th-they said,” the
ashen-faced man stammered, ‘“the Warrior-Prophet shall… shall come before you …’” He gazed helplessly at his Padirajah’s
gold-slippered feet. When he demanded to know
just who this Warrior-Prophet was, no one could answer him. Only when little
Sirol began crying anew did he cease ranting. Dismissing his slaves, he rushed
her to the incense-fogged chambers of his pavilion, promising sweets and other
beautiful things. The following morning the
Men of the Tusk filed from the Ivory Gate onto the greening Tertae Plain. War
horns pealed from hill to hill. Thousand-throated songs drifted on the breeze.
No longer would the Holy War endure hunger and disease. No longer would it
suffer itself to be besieged. It would march. The tattered columns
wound from the gates onto the fields. Stricken with illness, Gothyelk was too
weakened to battle, so his middle son, Gonrain, rode in his stead. The Great
Names had agreed to give the Tydonni the right flank, so the Earl of Agansanor
could watch his son from Caraskand’s walls. Then came Ikurei Conphas, flanked
by the Sacred Suns of his Imperial Columns. Nersei Proyas followed, at the head
of the once magnificent knights of Conriya. And after him came Hulwarga the
Limper, whose Thunyeri looked more like savage wraiths than men. Then rode
Chinjosa, the Count-Palatine of Antanamera, who’d been appointed King-Regent of
High Ainon after Chepheramunni’s death. The great army the Scarlet Spires had
brought from High Ainon was but a ruined shadow of what it had once been,
though those who remained possessed bitter strength. King Saubon was the last
to issue from Caraskand’s great Ivory Gate, leading trains of wild-eyed
Galeoth. (^arasKana Worried that a
precipitous attack would simply drive the idolaters back to the shelter of
Caraskand’s walls, Kascamandri let the Inrithi form unmolested across the
fields. The Men of the Tusk mustered between byres and before abandoned
farmsteads, their lines somewhat over a mile in length. The weak stood next to
the strong, hauberks rusted, jerkins rotted. Strapless harnesses swung from
emaciated frames. The arms of some, it seemed, were no thicker than their
swords. Knights wearing Enathpanean vests, cassocks, and khalats milled on
horses that looked like starved nags. Even those few noncombatants who’d
survived— women and priests for the most part—stood among them. Everyone had
come to the Fields of Tertae—all those with strength to bear arms. Everyone had
come to conquer or to perish. They formed long, haggard ranks, singing hymns,
beating blades against shoulder and shield. Some one hundred thousand
Inrithi had stumbled from the Carathay, and less than fifty thousand now ranged
across the plain. Another twenty thousand remained within Caraskand, too weak
to do more than cheer. Many had dragged themselves from their sickbeds and now
crowded the Triamic Walls, especially about the Ivory Gate. Some cried out
encouragement and prayers, while others wept, tormented by the collision of
hope and hopelessness. But on wall and field
alike, everyone looked anxiously to the centre of the battle line, hoping for a
glimpse of the new banner that graced the threadbare standards of the Holy War.
There! through budding grove or across rolling pasture, flaring in the breeze:
black on white, a ring bisected by the figure of a man, the Circumfix of the
Warrior-Prophet. The glory of it scarcely seemed possible… War horns sounded the
advance, and the grim ranks began marching forward, into distances screened by
orchards and copses of ash and sycamore. Kascamandri had ordered his host to
draw up more than two miles distant, where rolling plain broadened between the
city and the surrounding hills, knowing it would be difficult for the Inrithi
to cover the intervening distance without exposing their flanks or opening gaps
in their line. Songs keened over the
throbbing of Fanim drums. The deep war chants of the Thunyeri, which had once
filled the forests of their homeland with the sound of doom. The keening hymns
of the Ainoni, The Third March whose cultivated ears
savoured the dissonance of human voices. The dirges of the Galeoth and the
Tydonni, solemn and foreboding. They sang, the Men of the Tusk, overcome with
strange passions: joy that knew no laughter, terror that knew no fear. They
sang and they marched, walking with the grace of almost-broken men. Hundreds collapsed, faint
for the lack of food. Their kinsmen hauled them to their feet, dragged them
forward through the muck of fallow fields. First blood was shed to
the north, nearest the Triamic Walls. The Tydonni under Thane Unswolka of
Numaineiri sighted waves of Fanim cresting the hillocks before them, their
black-braided goatees bouncing to the rhythm of their trotting horses. The Numaineiri,
their faces painted red to terrify their foes, braced their great kite shields
with gaunt shoulders. Their archers loosed thin volleys at the advancing Fanim,
only to be answered by dark clouds of arrows fired from horseback. Led by
Ansacer, the exiled Sapatishah of Gedea, the dispossessed Grandees of Shigek
and Enathpaneah charged with fury into the tall warriors of Ce Tydonn. Near the centre, opposite
the Circumfix, screaming mastodons lumbered forward, their howdahs packed with
black-faced Girgashi wearing blue turbans and bearing shields of red-lacquered
cowhide. But daring outriders, Anpliean knights under Palatine Gaidekki, had
raced forward, setting dead winter grasses and thickets aflame. Oily smoke
tumbled skyward, pulled to the southeast by the wind. Several mastodons
panicked, causing uproar among King Pilaskanda’s Hetmen. But most crashed
through the smoke and stamped trumpeting into the Inrithi’s midst. Soon little
could be seen. Smoke and chaos enveloped the Mark of the Circumfix. Everywhere along the line
Fanim horsemen crested rises, burst from citrus groves, or galloped clear of
drifting smoke—magnificent divisions of them. Great Cinganjehoi, leading the
proud Grandees of Eumarna and Jurisada, swept into the walking lines of Ainoni:
Kishyati and Moserothu under Palatines Soter and Uranyanka. Farther to the
south, the Grandees of Chianadyni assembled along the summits of the rising
hills, awaiting King Saubon and his marching ranks of Galeoth. Wearing
wide-sleeved khalats and Nilnameshi chainmail, they charged down the slopes,
riding thoroughbreds raised on the hard frontiers of the Great Salt. Crown i^araskana Prince Fanayal and his
Coyauri struck Earl Anfirig’s blue-tattooed Gesindalmen, then swept into the
confused lines of the Agmundrmen under Saubon’s personal command. Along Caraskand’s walls
the infirm cried and howled to their kinsmen, struggling to see what happened.
But through the thundering drums, over the ululating war cries of the heathen,
they could hear their brothers sing. Smoke obscured the centre, but nearer the
walls they saw the Tydonni stand firm before flurries of Fanim horsemen,
fighting with grim and preternatural determination. Suddenly Earl Werijen
Greatheart and the knights of Plaideol broke forward, riding what few nags they
possessed, and shattered the astonished Kianene. Then far to the south, someone
sighted Athjeari and the inveterate knights of Gaenri streaming down dark
slopes, crashing into the rear of the Chianadyni. Saubon had sent his young
nephew to counter any flanking manoeuvres in the hills. After breaking and
pursuing the division of cavalry Kascamandri had sent for this very purpose,
the brash Earl of Gaenri found himself auspiciously positioned in the heathen’s
rear. The Fanim fell back in
disarray, while before them, all across the Fields of Tertae, the singing
Inrithi resumed their forward march. Many upon the walls limped eastward,
toward the Gate of Horns, where they could see the first Men of the Tusk fight
clear the smoke of the centre and press onward in the wake of retreating
Girgashi horsemen. Then they saw it, the Circumfix, fluttering white and
unsullied in the wind… As though driven by
inevitability, the iron men marched forward. When the heathen charged, they
grabbed at bridles and were trampled. They punched spears deep into the
haunches of Fanim horses. They fended hacking swords, pulled heathen shrieking
to the ground, where they knifed them in the armpit, face, or groin. They
shrugged off piercing arrows. When the heathen relented, some Men of the Tusk,
the madness of battle upon them, hurled their helms at the fleeing horsemen.
Time and again the Kianene charged, broke, then withdrew, while the iron men
trudged on, through the olive trees, across the fallow fields. They would walk
with the God—whether he favoured them or no. But the Kianene were a
proud, warlike people, and the host the Padirajah had assembled was great both
in number and in heart. Though dismayed, the pious Warriors of the Solitary God
were not undone. The Third March Kascamandri himself took
to the field, hoisted by his slaves upon the back of a massive horse.
Outdistancing the Inrithi, division after division of Fanim horsemen reformed
on the outskirts of the Padirajah’s camp. Men cast about for sign of the Cishaurim.
Then King Pilaskanda, the Padirajah’s tributary and friend, loosed the last of
the mastodons upon the black-armoured Thunyeri. The beasts stormed into
the Auglishmen under Earl Goken the Red. Men were gored on great winding tusks,
tossed and broken by trunks, split like sacks of fruit beneath colossal
stamping feet. From the armoured howdahs strapped to the animals’ backs,
Girgashi sent arrows into the faces of those shouting below. Then the giant
Yalgrota felled one singlehanded, hammering the beast’s head with a mighty
cudgel. The flint-hearted Auglishmen rallied, hewing the trumpeting beasts with
axe and sword. Some mastodons toppled, pulled down by a hundred wounds; others
panicked before the fire Prince Hulwarga brought against them and began rampaging
through the Girgashi horsemen crowded in their rear. Across the Tertae Plain,
waves of Kianene cavalrymen descended upon the advancing Inrithi. Those
watching from the Gate of Horns saw the Padirajah’s White Tiger close with the
Circumfix. They saw the standards of Gaidekki and Ingiaban falter while those
of the Nansur crept forward. The stout-hearted infantrymen of the Selial Column
hacked their way into the Padirajah’s camp. Then the drums of the heathen went
silent, and all the world seemed awash in Inrithi voices raised in triumph and
song. Cinganjehoi fled the field. The giant Cojirani, the bloodthirsty Grandee
of Mizrai, was slain by Proyas, the Prince of Conriya. Kascamandri, the
glorious Padirajah of Kian, fell jawless and dying at the sandalled feet of the
Warrior-Prophet. His jowled head was mounted upon the standard of the
Circumfix. But his precious children escaped, spirited away by slippery
Fanayal, the oldest of his sons. Pinioned between the
advancing Inrithi and the fallen camp, the Grandees of Chianadyni and Girgash
charged and charged, but the Galeoth and Ainoni shrugged away their desperation
and closed with them. The Men of the Tusk wept as they butchered the despairing
heathen, for never had they known such dark glory. Garaskan And in the wake of the
battle, some climbed the mastodon c held their swords out to the glare of the
sun, and understood thi did not know. The Holy War had been
absolved. Forgiven. The surviving Grandees
were strung from many-boughed syc and in the evening light they hung, like
drowned men floating i the deep. And though years would pass, none would dare
toucl They would sag from the nails that fixed them, collapse into hear, the
base of their trees. And to anyone who listened, they would ■ a
revelation… The secret of battle. Indomitable conviction.
Unconquerable belief. Early Spring, 4112, Year’of’the-Tusk, Akssersia Woollen cloak and furs
raised against the rain, Aengelas rode, pЈ long file of horsemen plodding
across the Plains of Gal through ending curtains of falling grey. They followed
a wide trail of trs grasses. Now and anon someone would find the untrammelled
foe of a child, small and innocent, dimpling the mud. Men Aengeli known his
entire life—strong men—wept aloud at the sight. They called themselves the
Werigda, and they searched for missing wives and children. Two days before they
had returned tc camp, warriors flushed with success in the ways of small war,
an found destruction and slaughter instead of their loved ones. Inve fighters
became panicked husbands and fathers, sprinting throug wreckage crying names.
But when they realized their families had taken and not killed, they became
warriors again. And they’d ri driven by love and terror. By mid-morning, colossal
stoneworks resolved from the sheets o and reared above them: the moss- and
lichen-crowded ruins of M once the capital of Akssersia and the greatest city
of the Ancient Is save Tryse. Aengelas knew nothing of the Old Wars,
or of ancieni proud Akssersia, but he understood his people were descendants o
Apocalypse. They dwelt among the unearthed bones of greater thin; The Third March Caraskand They followed the track
over mounds, beneath headless pillars, and along walls spilling into gravel.
The Sranc they followed, Aengelas knew, were neither Kig’krinaki nor Xoagi’i,
the clans that had been their rivals since time immemorial. They followed a
different, more wicked clan— one never before encountered. Some of them were
even horsed—something unheard of for the Sranc. They passed through dead
Myclai in silence, deaf to her rebuke for the unruined. By evening the rains had
stopped, but deepening cold was added to their horror, and their shivers became
shudders. That night they found a firepit, and Aengelas, poking through the
black ash with his knife, retrieved a small pile of little bones. Children’s
bones. The Werigda gnashed their teeth and howled at the dark heavens. There could be no sleep
that night, so they rode on. The plains seemed a heart-stopping hollow, a great
funerary shroud, exposed at all points to abyssal portent, to impossibly cruel
designs. What had they done? How had they angered the man-pummelling Gods? Had
the Stag-Flame burned too low? Had the sacrificial calves been diseased? Two more days of wet,
shivering fury. Two more days of trembling horror. Aengelas would see the
tracks of barefoot women and children, and he would remember their burnt homes,
the bodies of the tribe’s adolescents strewn amidst the wreckage, desecrated in
unspeakable ways. And he would remember his wife’s frightened eyes before he’d
left with the others to raid the Xoagi’i. He would remember her words of
premonition. “Do not leave us, Aenga… The Great Ruiner
hunts for us. I’ve seen him in my dreams‘.” Another firepit, more
small bones. But this time the ashes were warm. The very ground seemed to
whisper with the screams of their loved ones. They were near. But both
they and their horses, Aengelas told them, were too weary for the grim work of
battle. Many were dismayed by these words. Whose child would the Sranc eat,
they cried, while they tossed on the hard ground? All of them, Aengelas said,
if the Werigda failed to win the morrow’s battle. They must sleep. That night anguished
cries awakened him. Pale, callused hands dragged him from his mat, and he drove
his knife through the belly of his assailant. The thunder of hooves crashed
around him, and he was struck face first into
the turf. He struggled to his knees, crying out ti men, but the gibbering
shadows were upon him. His arms were wreni behind him and cruelly bound. He was
stripped of his clothes. With the other survivors,
Aengelas was driven through the n pulled by a leather thong cut into his lips.
He wept as he ran, knowir was lost. No more would he make love to Valrissa, his
wife. No i would he tease his sons as they sat about the evening fire. Over and
through the agony of his face, he asked: What have we done to deserveWhat have we done? By the wicked glare of
torchlight he saw the Sranc, with their ne shoulders and dog-deep chests,
surfacing from the night as though the depths of the Sea. Inhumanly beautiful
faces, as white as pol bone; armour of lacquered human skin; necklaces of human
teeth the shrunken faces of men stitched into their round shields. He sm their
sweet stench—like feces and rotted fruit. He heard the nightm clacking of their
laughter, and from somewhere in the night, the sr of the Werigda’s horses as
they were slaughtered. And periodically he saw
the Nonmen, tall upon their silk-black si What Valrissa had dreamed, he
realized, was true: the Great R hunted them! But why? They reached the Sranc
encampment in the grey light of da‘ string of naked, brutalized men. A great
chorus of wails greeted th women crying names, children howling “Da! Daal” The Sranc led into the midst of their huddled loved
ones, and in an act of curious n cut them loose. Aengelas flew to Valrissa and
his only remaining Wracked by sobs he hugged both of them, clutched at their
bent I And for an instant he felt hope in the pale warmth of degraded boc “Where’s Ileni?” he
hissed. But his wife could only
cry “Aenga! Aengaaa!” The respite, however, was
short-lived. Those men who couldn‘ their families, who either knelt alone in
the frozen mud or raced sc ing and searching for faces now dead, were
butchered. Then those and children without husbands were also hacked to
silence, unti those who had been reunited remained. Under the dark eyes of
the Nonmen, the Sranc then began b< the survivors into two rows, until the
Werigda were drawn ir I The Third March threads across snow and
dead winter grasses, husbands opposite their wives and children. Leashed to an iron spike
hammered into the ground, Aengelas cringed from the cold and threw himself over
and over against the braided thongs that held him from his wife and son. He
spat and raged at the passing Sranc. He tried to summon heartening words, words
that might let his family endure, that might grace them with dignity for what
was about to come. But he could only weep their names, and curse himself for
not strangling them earlier, for not saving them from what was about to happen. And then, for the first
time, he heard the question—even though it was not spoken. An uncanny silence fell
across the Werigda, and Aengelas understood that all of them had heard the
impossible voice… The question had resounded through the souls of all his
suffering people. Then he saw… it. An abomination walking through dawn twilight. It was half-again taller
than a man, with long, folded wings curved like scythes over its powerful
frame. Save where it was mottled by black, cancerous spots, its skin was
translucent, and sheathed about a great flared skull shaped like an oyster set
on edge. And within the gaping jaws of that skull was fused another, more manlike, so that an almost human face grinned
from its watery features. The Sranc howled with
rapture as it passed, and jerked at their groups as they fell to their knees.
The mounted Nonmen lowered their shining scalps. It studied the rows of hapless
humans, and then its great black eyes fell upon Aengelas. Valrissa sobbed, a
mere length away. You… We sense the old fire in you,
manling… “I am Werigda!” Aengelas
roared. Do you know what uie are? “The Great Ruiner,”
Aengelas gasped. Noooo, it cooed, as though his mistake had aroused a
delicious shiver. We are not
He… We are His servant. Save my Brother, we are the last of those who descended
from the void… “The Great Ruiner!”
Aengelas cried. The abomination had
walked ever closer throughout this exchange, until it loomed over his wife and
child. Valrissa clutched Bengulla to her bosom, held out a tragic warding hand
against the hoary figure. Will you tell us, manling? Tell us what
we need to know? “But I don’t know!”
Aengelas cried. “I know nothing of what you asl Effortlessly, the
Xurjranc snapped Valrissa’s tether, and hoisted 1 before him, held her as
though she were a doll. Bengulla shriek “Mama! Mama!” Once again the question
thundered through Aengelas’s soul. He we tore at the turf. “1 don’t know! I don’t
know!” Beneath the monstrosity’s
claws, Valrissa went very still, like a i caught in the jaws of a wolf. Her
terrified eyes turned from Aengelas,; rolled upwards beneath their lids, as
though trying to peer at the fig behind her. “Valrissa!” Aengelas
screamed. “Valrissssaa!” Holding her by the throat, the
thing languorously picked her clotr away, like the skin of a rotten peach. As
her breasts fell free, round-w1 with soft-pink nipples, a sheet of
sunlight flickered across the hori: and illuminated her lithe curves… But the
hunger that held her f behind remained shadowy—like glistening smoke. Animal violence overcame
Aengelas, and he strained at his le gagged inarticulate fury. And a husky voice in his
soul said: We are a race of
lovers, manlin
“Beaaassee!” Aengelas wept. “I don’t knoooowww…” The thing’s free hand traced a
thread of blood between her be across the plane of her shuddering belly.
Valrissa’s eyes retume Aengelas, thick with something impossible. She moaned
and partec hanging legs to greet the abomination’s hand. A race of lovers… “I don’t know! I don’t! I
don’t! Beaase stop! Beaasse!” The thing screeched like a thousand falcons as it
plunged into Glass thunder. Shivering sky. She bent back her head, her face
conti in pain and bliss. She convulsed and groaned, arched to meet the ture’s
thrusts. And when she climaxed, Aengelas crumpled, graspe head between his
hands, beat his face against the turf. The cold felt good against his broken
lips. With an inhuman, dragon
gasp, the thing pressed its bruised pr up across her stomach and washed her
sunlit breasts with pun The Third March black seed. Another
thunderous screech, woven by the thin human wail of a woman. And again it asked the
question. I don’t know… These things make you weak, it said, tossing her like a sack
to cold grasses. With a look, it gave her to the Sranc—to their licentious
fury. Once again, it asked the question. The abomination then gave
his weeping son—sweet, innocent Bengulla—to the Sranc, and once again asked the
question. I don’t know what you mean … And when the Sranc made a
womb of Aengelas himself, it asked— with each raper’s thrust, it asked… Until the gagging shrieks
of his wife and child became the question. Until his own deranged howls became
the question… His wife and child were
dead. Sacks of penetrated flesh with faces that he loved, and still… they did
things. Always, the same mad,
incomprehensible question. Who are the Dunyain? X,
warrior prophet
======================
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DO
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FROM THE AUTHOR.
--------------------------------------------
Book
Information:
Genre:
Epic Fantasy
Author:
R. Scott Bakker
Name:
Warrior-Prophet
Series:
Book Two of The Prince of Nothing
====================== Warrior-Prophet
Book Two of The
Prince of Nothing
By R. Scott Bakker What Has Come Before The First Apocalypse
destroyed the great Norsirai nations of the North. Only the South, the Ketyai
nations of the ThreeSeas, survived the onslaught of the No-God,
Mog-Pharau, and his Consult of generals and magi- The years passed, and the Men
of the ThreeSeas forgot, as Men inevitably do, the
horrors endured by their fathers. Empires rose and empires
fell: Kyraneas, Shir, Cenei. The Latter Prophet, Inri Sejenus, reinterpreted
the Tusk, the holiest of artifacts, and within a few centuries the faith of
Inrithism, organized and administered by the Thousand Temples and its spiritual
leader, the Shriah, came to dominate the entire ThreeSeas.
The great sorcerous Schools, such as the Scarlet Spires, the Imperial Saik, and
the Mysunsai, arose in response to the Inrithi persecution of the Few, those
possessing the ability to see and work sorcery. Using Chorae, ancient artifacts
that render their bearers immune to sorcery, the Inrithi warred against the
Schools, attempting, unsuccessfully, to purify the ThreeSeas.
Then Fane, the Prophet of the Solitary God, united the Kianene, the desert
peoples of the southwestern ThreeSeas, and declared war against the Tusk and the ThousandTemples. After centuries and several
jihads, the Fanim and their eyeless sorcerer-priests, the Cishaurim, conquered
nearly all the western ThreeSeas, including the holy city of Shimeh, the birthplace of Inri Sejenus. Only
the moribund remnants of the Nansur Empire continued to resist them. Now war and strife rule
the South. The two great faiths of Inrithism and Fanimry continually skirmish,
though trade and pilgrimage are tolerated when commercially convenient. The
great families and nations vie for military and mercantile dominance. The minor
and major Schools squabble and plot, particularly against the upstart
Cishaurim, whose sorcery, the Psukhe, the Schoolmen cannot distinguish from the
God’s own world. And the Thousand Temples pursue earthly ambitions under the
leadership of corrupt and ineffectual Shriahs. The First Apocalypse has
become little more than legend. Th Consult, which had survived the death of
Mog-Pharau, has dwindled into myth, something old wives tell small children.
After two thousand years, only the Schoolmen of the Mandate, who relive the
Apocalyps each night through the eyes of their ancient founder, Seswatha,
recall the horror and the prophecies of the No-God’s return. Though the mighty
and the learned consider them fools, their possession of the Gnosis, the
sorcery of the Ancient North, commands respect and mortal envy. Driven by
nightmares, they wander the labyrinths of power, scouring the ThreeSeas
for signs of their ancient and implacable foe—the Consult. And as always, they find
nothing. The Holy War is the name
of the great host called by Maithanet, the leader of the Thousand Temples, to
liberate Shimeh from the heathen Fanim of Kian. Word of Maithanet’s call
spreads across the ThreeSeas, and faithful from all the great Inrithi
nations—Galeoth, Thunyerus, Ce Tydonn, Conriya, High Ainon and their
tributaries—travel to the city of Momemn,
the capital of the Nansur Empire, to become Men of the Tusk. Almost from the outset,
the gathering host is mired in politics and controversy. First, Maithanet
somehow convinces the Scarlet Spires, the most powerful of the sorcerous
Schools, to join his Holy War. Despite the outrage this provokes—sorcery is
anathema to the Inrithi—the Men of the Tusk realize they need the Scarlet
Spires to counter the heathen Cishaurim, the sorcerer-priests of the Fanim. The
Holy War would be doomed without one of the Major Schools. The question is why
the Scarlet Schoolmen would agree to such a perilous arrangement. Unknown to
most, Eleazaras, the Grandmaster of the Scarlet Spires, has waged a long and
secret war against the Cishaurim, who for no apparent reason assassinated his
predecessor, Sasheoka, ten years previous. Second, Ikurei Xerius
III, the Emperor of Nansur, hatches an intricate plot to usurp the Holy War for
his own ends. Much of what is now heathen Kian once belonged to the Nansur, and
recovering the Empire’s lost provinces is Xerius’s most fervent desire. Since
the Holy War gathers in the Nansur Empire, it can march only if provisioned by
the Emperor, hing he refuses to do
until every leader of the Holy War signs his 10re>a
written oath to cede all lands conquered to him. Of course, the first
caste-nobles to arrive repudiate the Indenture, and letnate ensues. As the Holy
War’s numbers swell into the hundreds of sands, however, the titular leaders of
the host begin to grow restless, e they war in the God’s name, they think
themselves invincible, and result see little reason to share the glory with
those yet to arrive. A Tonriyan noble named Nersei Calmemunis comes to an
accommodation ith the Emperor, and convinces his fellows to sign the Imperial
Indenture. Once provisioned, most of those gathered march, even though their
lords and a greater part of the Holy War have yet to arrive. Because the host
consists primarily of lordless rabble, it comes to be called the Vulgar Holy War. Despite Maithanet’s
attempts to bring the makeshift host to heel, it continues marching southward,
and passes into heathen lands, where— precisely as the Emperor had planned—the
Fanim destroy it utterly. Xerius knows that in
military terms the loss of the Vulgar Holy War is insignificant, since the
rabble that largely constituted it would have proven more a liability than an
advantage in battle. In political terms, however, the Vulgar Holy War’s
destruction is invaluable, because it has shown Maithanet and the Men of the
Tusk the true mettle of their adversary. The Fanim, as the Nansur well know,
are not to be trifled with, even with the God’s favour. Only an outstanding
general, Xerius claims, can assure the Holy War’s victory—a man like his
nephew, Ikurei Conphas, who after his recent victory over the dread Scylvendi
at the Battle of Kiyuth has been hailed as the greatest tactician of his age.
The leaders of the Holy War need only sign the Imperial Indenture and Conphas’s
preternatural skill and insight will be theirs. Maithanet, it seems, now
finds himself in a dilemma. As Shriah, he can compel the Emperor to provision
the Holy War, but he cannot compel him to send Ikurei Conphas, his only living
heir. In the midst of this controversy arrive the first truly great Inrithi
potentates of the Holy War: Prince Nersei Proyas of Conriya, Prince Coithus
Saubon of Galeoth, Earl Hoga Gothyelk of Ce Tydonn, and King-Regent
Chepheramunni of High Ainon. The Holy War amasses new strength, though it
remains in effect a hostage, bound by the scarcity of food to the walls of
Momemn and the Emperor’s
granaries. To a man, the caste-nobles repudiate Xerius’s Indenture and demand
that he provision them. The Men of the Tusk begin raiding the surrounding
countryside. In retaliation, the Emperor calls in elements of the Imperial
Army. Pitched battles are fought. In an effort to forestall
disaster Maithanet calls a Council of Great and Lesser Names, and all the
leaders of the Holy War gather in the Emperor’s palace, the AndiamineHeights,
to make their arguments. Here Nersei Proyas shocks the assembly by offering a
many-scarred Scylvendi Chieftain, a veteran of past wars against the Fanim, as
a surrogate for the famed Ikurei Conphas. The Scylvendi, Cnaьir urs Skiotha,
shares hard words with both the Emperor and his nephew, and the leaders of the
Holy War are impressed. The Shriah’s Envoy, however, remains undecided: the
Scylvendi are as apostate as the Fanim, after all. Only the wise words of
Prince Anasurimbor Kellhus of Atrithau settle the matter. The Envoy reads the
decree demanding that the Emperor, under pain of Shrial Censure, provision the
Men of the Tusk. The Holy War will march. Drusas Achamian is a sorcerer sent by the School of Mandate to investigate Maithanet and his
Holy War. Though he no longer believes in his School’s ancient mission, he
travels to Sumna, where the Thousand Temples is based, in the hopes of learning
more about the mysterious Shriah, whom the Mandate fears could be an agent of
the Consult. In the course of his probe, he resumes an old love affair with a
harlot named Esmenet, and despite his misgivings, he recruits a former student
of his, a Shrial Priest named Inrau, to report on Maithanet’s activities.
During this time, his nightmares of the Apocalypse intensify, particularly
those involving the so-called “Celmomian Prophecy,” which foretells the return
of a descendant of Anasurimbor Celmomas before the Second Apocalypse. Then Inrau dies under
mysterious circumstances. Overcome by guilt and heartbroken by Esmenet’s
refusal to cease taking custom, Achamian flees Sumna and travels to Momemn,
where the Holy War gathers under the Emperor’s covetous and uneasy eyes. A
powerful rival of the Mandate, a School called the Scarlet Spires, has joined the
Holy War to prosecute their long contest with the sorcerer-priests of the
Cishaurim, who residein Shimeh. Nautzera, Achamian’s Mandate handler, has ordered him to
observe them and the Holy War. When he reaches the encampment, Achamian joins
the fire of Xinemus, an old friend of his from Conriya. Pursuing his
investigation of Inrau’s death, Achamian convinces Xinemus to take him to see
another old student of his, Prince Nersei Proyas of Conriya, who’s become a
confidant of the enigmatic Shriah. When Proyas scoffs at his suspicions and
repudiates him as a blasphemer, Achamian implores him to write Maithanet
regarding the circumstances of Inrau’s death. Embittered, Achamian leaves his
old student’s pavilion certain his meagre request will go unfulfilled. Then a man hailing from
the distant north arrives—a man calling himself Anasurimbor Kellhus. Battered by his recurrent dreams of the
Apocalypse, Achamian finds himself fearing the worst: the Second Apocalypse. Is
Kellhus’s arrival a mere coincidence, or is he the Harbinger foretold in the
Celmomian Prophecy? Achamian questions the man, only to find himself utterly
disarmed by his humour, honesty, and intellect. They talk history and
philosophy long into the night, and before retiring, Kellhus asks Achamian to
be his teacher. Inexplicably awed and affected by the stranger, Achamian
agrees. But he finds himself in a
dilemma. The reappearance of an Anasurimbor is something the School of Mandate
simply has to know: few discoveries could be more significant. But he fears
what his brother Schoolmen will do: a lifetime of dreaming horrors, he knows,
has made them cruel and pitiless. And he blames them, moreover, for the death
of Inrau. Before he can resolve
this dilemma, Achamian is summoned by the Emperor’s nephew, Ikurei Conphas, to
the ImperialPalace in Momemn, where the Emperor
wants him to assess a highly placed adviser of his—an old man called Skeaos—for
the Mark of sorcery. The Emperor himself, Ikurei Xerius III, brings Achamian to
Skeaos, demanding to know whether the old man bears the blasphemous taint of
sorcery. Achamian sees nothing amiss. Skeaos, however, sees
something in Achamian. He begins writhing against his chains, speaking a tongue
from Achamian’s ancient dreams. Impossibly, the old man breaks free, killing
several before being burned by the Emperor’s sorcerers. Dumbfounded, Achamian
confronts the howling Skeaos, only to watch
horrified as his face peels apart and opens into scorched limbs ... The abomination before
him, he realizes, is a Consult
spy, one that
can mimic and replace others without bearing sorcery’s telltale Mark. A
skin-spy. Achamian flees the palace without warning the Emperor and his court,
knowing they would think his conviction nonsense. For them, Skeaos can only be
an artifact of the heathen Cishaurim, whose art also bears no Mark. Senseless
to his surroundings, Achamian wanders back to Xinemus’s camp, so absorbed by
his horror that he fails to see or hear Esmenet, who has come to rejoin him at
long last. The mysteries surrounding
Maithanet. The coming of Anasurimbor Kellhus. The discovery of the first
Consult spy in generations… How can he doubt it any longer? The Second
Apocalypse is about to begin. Alone in his humble tent,
he weeps, overcome by loneliness, dread, and remorse. Esmenet is a Sumni
prostitute who mourns both her life and her daughter. When Achamian arrives on
his mission to learn more about Maithanet, she readily takes him in. During
this time, she continues to take and service her customers, knowing full well
the pain this causes Achamian. But she really has no choice: sooner or later,
she realizes, Achamian will be called away. And yet she falls ever deeper in
love with the hapless sorcerer, in part because of the respect he accords her and
in part because of the worldly nature of his work. Though her sex has condemned
her to sit half’naked in her window, the world beyond has always been her
passion. The intrigues of the Great Factions, the machinations of the Consult:
these are the things that quicken her soul! Then disaster strikes:
Achamian’s informant, Inrau, is murdered, and the bereaved Schoolman is forced
to travel to Momemn. Esmenet begs him to take her with him, but he refuses, and
she finds herself once again marooned in her old life. Not long after, a
threatening stranger comes to her room, demanding to know everything about
Achamian. Twisting her desire against her, the man ravishes her, and Esmenet
finds herself answering all his questions. Come morning he vanishes as suddenly
as he appears, leaving only pools of black seed to mark his passing. Horrified, Esmenet flees
Sumna, determined to find Achamian and tell him what happened. In her bones she
knows the stranger is somehow connected to the Consult. On her way to Momemn
she pauses in a village, hoping to find someone to repair her broken sandal.
When the villagers recognize the whore’s tattoo on her hand they begin stoning
her—the punishment the Tusk demands of prostitutes. Only the sudden appearance
of a Shrial Knight named Sarcellus saves her, and she has the satisfaction of
watching her tormentors humbled. Sarcellus takes her the rest of the way to
Momemn, and Esmenet finds herself growing more and more infatuated with his
wealth and aristocratic manner. He seems so free of the melancholy and
indecision that plague Achamian. Once they reach the Holy
War, Esmenet stays with Sarcellus, even though she knows Achamian is only miles
away. As the Shrial Knight continually reminds her, Schoolmen such as Achamian
are forbidden to take wives. If she were to run to him, he says, it would be
only a matter of time before he abandoned her again. Weeks pass, and she finds
herself esteeming Sarcellus less and pining for Achamian more and more.
Finally, on the night before the Holy War is to march, she sets off in search
of the portly sorcerer, determined to tell him everything that has happened.
After a harrowing search she finally locates Xinemus’s camp, only to find
herself too ashamed to make her presence known. She hides in the darkness
instead, waiting for Achamian to appear, and wondering at the strange
collection of men and women about the fire. When dawn arrives without any sign
of Achamian, Esmenet wanders across the abandoned site, only to see him
trudging toward her. She holds out her arms to him, weeping with joy and
sorrow… And he simply walks past
her as though she were a stranger. Heartbroken, she flees,
determined to make her own way in the Holy War. Cnaiur urs Skiotha is a Chieftain of the Utemot, a
tribe of Scylvendi, who are feared across the ThreeSeas
for their skill and ferocity in war. Because of the events surrounding the
death of his father, Skiotha, thirty years previous, Cnaiur is despised by his
own people, though none dare challenge him because of his savage strength and
his cunning in war. Word arrives that the Emperor’s nephew, Ikurei Conphas, has
invaded the Holy Steppe, and Cnaьir
rides with the Utemot to join the Scylvendi horde on the distant Imperial
frontier. Knowing Conphas’s reputation, Cnaьir senses a trap, but his warnings
go unheeded by Xunnurit, the chieftain elected King-of-Tribes for the coming
battle. Cnaьir can only watch as the disaster unfolds. Escaping the horde’s
destruction, Cnaьir returns to the pastures of the Utemot more anguished than
ever. He flees the whispers and the looks of his fellow tribesmen and rides to
the graves of his ancestors, where he finds a grievously wounded man sitting
upon his dead father’s barrow, surrounded by circles of dead Sranc. Warily
approaching, Cnaьir night-marishly realizes that he recognizes the man—or almost recognizes him. He resembles
Anasurimbor Moenghus in almost every respect, save that he is too young… Moenghus had been
captured thirty years previous, when Cnaьir was little more than a stripling,
and given to Cnaьir’s father as a slave. He claimed to be Dunyain, a people
possessed of an extraordinary wisdom, and Cnaьir spent many hours with him,
speaking of things forbidden to Scylvendi warriors. What happened afterward—the
seduction, the murder of Skiotha, and Moenghus’s subsequent escape—has
tormented Cnaьir ever since. Though he once loved the man, he now hates him
with a deranged intensity. If only he could kill Moenghus, he believes, his
heart could be made whole. Now, impossibly, this
double has come to him, travelling the same path as the original. Realizing the stranger
could make possible his vengeance, Cnaьir takes him captive. The man, who calls
himself Anasurimbor Kellhus, claims to be Moenghus’s son. The Dunyain, he says,
have sent him to assassinate his father in a faraway city called Shimeh. But as
much as Cnaьir wants to believe this story, he’s wary and troubled. After years
of obsessively pondering Moenghus, he’s come to understand that the Dunyain are
gifted with preternatural skills and intelligence. Their sole purpose, he now
knows, is domination, though where others use force and fear, the Dunyan use
deceit and love. The story Kellhus has
told him, Cnaьir realizes, is precisely the story a Dunyain seeking escape and
safe passage across Scylvendi lands would provide. Nevertheless, he makes a
bargain with the man, agreeing toaccompany him on his quest. The two strike out across
the Steppe, locked in a shadowy war of word and passion. Time and again Cnaьir
finds himself drawn into Kellhus’s insidious nets, only to recall himself at
the last moment. Only his hatred of Moenghus and knowledge of the Dunyain
preserve him. Near the Imperial
frontier they encounter a party of hostile Scylvendi raiders. Kellhus’s
unearthly skill in battle both astounds and terrifies Cnaьir. In the battle’s
aftermath they find a captive concubine, a woman named Serwe‘, cowering among
the raiders’ chattel. Struck by her beauty, Cnaьir takes her as his prize, and
through her he learns of Maithanet’s Holy War for Shimeh, the city where
Moenghus supposedly dwells… Can this be a coincidence? Coincidence or not, the
Holy War forces Cnaьir to reconsider his original plan to travel around the
Empire, where his Scylvendi heritage will mean almost certain death. With the
Fanim rulers of Shimeh girding for war, the only possible way they can reach
the holy city is to become Men of the Tusk. They have no choice, he realizes,
but to join the Holy War, which according to Serwe, gathers about the city of Momemn in the heart of
the Empire—the one place he cannot go. Now that they have safely crossed the
Steppe, Cnaьir is convinced Kellhus will kill him: the Dunyain brook no
liabilities. Descending the mountains
into the Empire, Cnaьir confronts Kellhus, who claims he has use of him still.
While Serwe watches in horror, the two men battle on the mountainous heights,
and though Cnaьir is able to surprise Kellhus, the man easily overpowers him,
holding him by the throat over a precipice. To prove his intent to keep their
bargain, he spares Cnaьir’s life. After so many years among world-born men,
Kellhus claims, Moenghus will be far too powerful for him to face alone. They
will need an army, he says, and unlike Cnaьir he knows nothing of war. Despite his misgivings,
Cnaьir believes him, and they resume their journey. As the days pass, Cnaьir
watches Serwe become more and more infatuated with Kellhus. Though troubled by
this, he refuses to admit as much, reminding himself that warriors care nothing
for women, particularly those taken as the spoils of battle. What does it
matter that she belongs to Kellhus during the day? She is Cnaьir’s at night. After a desperate journey
and pursuit through the heart of the Empire, they at last find their way to
Momemn and the Holy War, where they are taken before one of the Holy War’s
leaders, a Conriyan Prince named Nersei Proyas. In keeping with their plan,
Cnaiur claims to be the last of the Utemot, travelling with Anasurimbor Kellhus,
a Prince of the northern city of Atrithau,
who has dreamt of the Holy War from afar. Proyas, however, is far more
interested in Cnaьir’s knowledge of the Fanim and their way of battle.
Obviously impressed by what he has to say, the Conriyan Prince takes Cnaiur and
his companions under his protection. Soon afterward, Proyas takes Cnaiur and
Kellhus to a meeting of the Holy War’s leaders and the Emperor, where the fate
of the Holy War is to be decided. Ikurei Xerius III has refused to provision
the Men of the Tusk unless they swear to return all the lands they wrest from
the Fanim to the Empire. The Shriah, Maithanet, can force the Emperor to
provision them, but he fears the Holy War lacks the leadership to overcome the
Fanim. The Emperor offers his brilliant nephew, Ikurei Conphas, flush from his
spectacular victory over the Scylvendi at Kiyuth, but only—once again—if the
leaders of the Holy War pledge to surrender their future conquests. In a daring
gambit, Proyas offers Cnaiur in Conphas’s stead. A vicious war
of words ensues, and Cnaiur manages to best the precocious Imperial Nephew. The
Shriah’s representative orders the Emperor to provision the Men of the Tusk.
The Holy War will march. In a mere matter of days,
Cnaiur has gone from a fugitive to a leader of the greatest host ever assembled
in the ThreeSeas. What does it mean for a Scylvendi
to treat with outland princes, with peoples he is sworn to destroy? What must
he surrender to see his vengeance through? That night, he watches
Serwe surrender to Kellhus body and soul, and he wonders at the horror he has
delivered to the Holy War. What will Anasurimbor Kellhus—a Dunyain—make of
these Men of the Tusk? No matter, he tells himself, the Holy War marches to
distant Shimeh—to Moenghus and the promise of blood. Anasurimbor Kellhus is a monk sent by his order, the
Dunyain, to search for his father, Anasurimbor Moenghus. Since discovering the
secret redoubt of the Kunьiric High Kings during the Apocalypse some two
thousand years previous, the Dunyainhave concealed
themselves, breeding for reflex and intellect, and continually training in the
ways of limb, thought, and face—all for the sake of reason, the sacred Logos.
In the effort to transform themselves into the perfect expression of the Logos,
the Dunyain have bent their entire existence to mastering the irrationalities
that determine human thought: history, custom, and passion. In this way, they
believe, they will eventually grasp what they call the Absolute, and so become
true self-moving souls. But their glorious
isolation is at an end. After thirty years of exile, one of their number,
Anasurimbor Moenghus, has reappeared in their dreams, demanding they send to
him his son. Knowing only that his father dwells in a distant city called
Shimeh, Kellhus undertakes an arduous journey through lands long abandoned by
men. While wintering with a trapper named Leweth, he discovers he can read the
man’s thoughts through the nuances of his expression. World-born men, he
realizes, are little more than children in comparison with the Dunyain.
Experimenting, he finds that he can exact anything from Leweth—any love, any
sacrifice—with mere words. So what of his father, who has spent thirty years
among such men? What is the extent of Anasurimbor Moenghus’s power? When a band of inhuman
Sranc discovers Leweth’s steading, the two men are forced to flee. Leweth is
wounded, and Kellhus leaves him for the Sranc, feeling no remorse. The Sranc
overtake him, and after driving them away, he battles their leader, a deranged
Nonman, who nearly undoes him with sorcery.
Kellhus flees, wracked by questions without answers: sorcery, he’d been taught,
was nothing more than superstition. Could the Dunyain have been wrong? What
other facts had they overlooked or suppressed? Eventually he finds
refuge in the ancient city of Atrithau,
where, using his Dunyain abilities, he assembles an expedition to traverse the
Sranc-infested plains of Suskara. After a harrowing trek, he crosses the
frontier only to be captured by a mad Scylvendi Chieftain named Cnaiur urs
Skiotha—a man who both knows and hates his father, Moenghus. Though his knowledge of
the Dunyain renders Cnaiur immune to direct manipulation, Kellhus quickly
realizes he can turn the man’s thirst for vengeance to his advantage. Claiming
to be an assassin sent to murder Moenghus, he asks the Scylvendi to join him on
his quest. Overpowered by his hatred, Cnaьir reluctantly agrees, and the two
men set out across the Jьinati Steppe. Time and again, Kellhus tries to secure
the trust he needs to possess the man, but the barbarian continually rebuffs
him. His hatred and penetration are too great. Then, near the Imperial
frontier, they find a concubine named Serwe, who informs them of a Holy War
gathering about Momemn—a Holy War for Shimeh.
The fact that his father has summoned him to Shimeh at the same time, Kellhus
realizes, can be no coincidence. But what could Moenghus be planning? They cross the mountains
into the Empire, and Kellhus watches Cnaьir struggle with the growing
conviction that he’s outlived his usefulness. Thinking that murdering Kellhus
is as close as he’ll ever come to murdering Moenghus, Cnaьir attacks him, only
to be defeated. To prove that he still needs him, Kellhus spares his life. He
must, Kellhus knows, dominate the Holy War, but he as yet knows nothing of
warfare. The variables are too many. Though his knowledge of
Moenghus and the Dьnyain renders him a liability, Cnaьir’s skill in war makes
him invaluable. To secure this knowledge, Kellhus starts seducing Serwe, using
her and her beauty as detours to the barbarian’s tormented heart. Once in the Empire, they
stumble across a patrol of Imperial cavalry-men; their journey to Momemn
quickly becomes a desperate race. When they finally reach the encamped Holy War
they find themselves before Nersei Proyas, the Crown Prince of Conriya. To
secure a position of honour among the Men of the Tusk, Kellhus lies, and claims
to be a Prince of Atrithau. To lay the groundwork for his future domination, he
claims to have suffered dreams of the Holy War—implying, without saying as
much, that they were godsent. Since Proyas is more concerned with Cnaьir and
how he can use the barbarian’s knowledge of battle to thwart the Emperor, these
declarations are accepted without any real scrutiny. Only the Mandate Schoolman
accompanying Proyas, Drusas Achamian, seems troubled by him—especially by his
name. The following evening,
Kellhus dines with the sorcerer, disarming him with humour, flattering him with
questions. He learns of the Apocalypse and the Consult and many other sundry
things, and though he knows Achamian harbours some terror regarding the name
“Anasurimbor,” heasks the melancholy man to become his teacher. The Dunyain, Kellhus has
come to realize, have been mistaken about many things, the existence of sorcery
among them. There is so much he must know before he confronts his father… A final gathering is
called to settle the issue between the lords of the Holy War, who want to
march, and the Emperor, who refuses to provision them. With Cnaьir at his side,
Kellhus charts the souls of all those present, calculating the ways he might
bring them under his thrall. Among the Emperor’s advisers, however, he observes
an expression he cannot read. The man, he realizes, possesses a false face. While Ikurei Conphas and the Inrithi caste-nobles
bicker, Kellhus studies the man, and determines that his name is Skeaos by
reading the lips of his interlocutors. Could this Skeaos be an agent of his
father? Before he can draw any
conclusions, however, his scrutiny is noticed by the Emperor himself, who has
the adviser seized. Though the entire Holy War celebrates the Emperor’s defeat,
Kellhus is more perplexed than ever. Never has he undertaken a study so deep. That night he consummates
his relationship with Serwe, continuing the patient work of undoing Cnaьir—as
all Men of the Tusk must be undone. Somewhere, a shadowy faction lurks behind
faces of false skin. Far to the south in Shimeh, Anasurimbor Moenghus awaits
the coming storm. One Anserca Ignorance is trust. —ANCIENT KUNIURIC PROVERB hate Spring, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, south
of Momemn Drusas Achamian sat
cross-legged in the darkness of his tent, a silhouette rocking slowly to and
fro, muttering dark words. Light spilled from his mouth. Though the
moon-shining length of the MeneanorSea lay between him and
Atyersus, he walked the ancient halls of his School— walked among sleepers. The dimensionless
geometry of dreams never ceased to startle Achamian. There was something
monstrous about a world where nothing was remote, where distances dissolved
into a froth of words and competing passions. Something no knowledge could
overcome. Pitched from nightmare to
nightmare, Achamian at last found the sleeping man he sought: Nautzera in his
dream, seated on blood-muddied turf, cradling a dead king on his lap. “Our King
is dead!” Nautzera cried in Seswatha’s voice. “Anasurimbor Celmomas is dead!” An unearthly roar
hammered his ears. Achamian whirled, raising his hands against a titanic
shadow. Wracu… Dragon. Billowing gusts staggered
those standing, waved the arms of those Anserca fallen. Cries of dismay
and horror rifled the air, then a cataract of boiling gold engulfed Nautzera
and the High King’s attendants. There was no time for screams. Teeth cracked.
Bodies tumbled like coals from a kicked fire. Achamian turned and saw
Nautzera amid a field of smoking husks. Shielded by his Wards, the sorcerer
laid the dead king on the ground, whispering words Achamian could not hear but
had dreamed innumerable times: “Turn your soul’s eye from this world, dear
friend… Turn so that your heart might be broken no more.” With the force of a
toppled tower, the dragon thundered to earth, his descent yanking smoke and ash
into towering veils. Portcullis jaws clacked shut. Wings like war-galley sails
stretched out. The light of burning corpses shimmered across iridescent scales
of black. “Our Lord,” the dragon grated, “hath tasted thy King’s passing, and he saith, ‘It is done.’” Nautzera stood before the
golden-horned abomination. “Not while I draw breath, Skafra!” he cried. “Never!” Laughter, like the
wheezing of a thousand consumptive men. The Great Dragon reared his bull-chest
above the sorcerer, revealing a necklace of steaming human heads. “Thou art overthrown, sorcerer. Thy tribe
hath perished, dashed like a potter’s vessel by our fury. The earth is sown
with thy nation’s blood, and soon thine enemies will compass thee with bent bow
and whetted bronze. Wilt thou not repent thy folly? Wilt thou not abase thyself
before our Lord?” “As do you, mighty
Skafra? As the exalted Tyrant of Cloud and Mountain abases himself?” Membranes flickered
across the dragon’s quicksilver eyes. A blink. “I am not a God.” Nautzera smiled grimly.
Seswatha said, “Neither is your lord.” Great stamping limbs and
the gnashing of iron teeth. A cry from furnace lungs, as deep as an ocean’s
moan and as piercing as an infant’s shriek. Uncowed by the dragon’s
thrashing bulk, Nautzera suddenly turned to Achamian, his face bewildered. “Who are you?” “One who shares your
dreams…” For a moment they were
like two men drowning, two souls kicking for sharp air… Then darkness. The
silent nowhere that housed men’s souls. Nautzera… his 1. A place of pure voice. Achamian! That dream…It plagues me so of
late. Where are you? We feared you dead. Concern? Nautzera
betraying concern for him, the one Schoolman he despised above all others? But
then Seswatha’s Dreams had a way of sweeping aside petty enmities. With the Holy War, Achamian replied. The contest with the Emperor has been resolved. The
Holy War marches on Kian. Images accompanied these words: Proyas addressing rapt mobs of
armoured Conriyans; the endless trains of armed lords and their households; the
many-coloured banners of a thousand thanes and barons; a distant glimpse of the
Nansur Columns, marching through vineyard and grove in perfect formation… So it begins, Nautzera said decisively. And Maithanet? Were you able to learn anything more of
him? thought Proyas might assist me, but I was
wrong. He belongs to the Thousand Temples… To Maithanet. What is it with your students, Achamian?
Why do they all turn to our rivals, hmm? The ease with which Nautzera had
recovered his sarcasm both stung and curiously relieved Achamian. The grand old
sorcerer would need his wits for what followed. I have seen them, Nautzera. A flash of Skeaos’s naked body,
chained and flailing like a holy shaker in the dust. Seen whom? The Consult. I’ve seen them. 1 know how
they’ve eluded us for all these longyears.
A face
unclenching, like a miser’s fist from a golden ensolarь. Are you drunk? They’re here, Nautzera. Among us. They’ve
always been. Pause. What are you saying? The Consult still plies the ThreeSeas. The Consult… Yes! Witness. {vlore
images flashed, reconstructions of the madness that had occurred in the bowels
of the AndiamineHeights. The hellish face unfolding,
again and again. Without sorcery, Nautzera. Do you
understand? The onta was unmarked! We cannot see these skin-spies for what they
are… Even though Inrau’s death
had intensified his hatred of Nautzera, Achamian had called him because he was
a fanatic, the only man extreme enough in temper to soberly appraise the
extremity of his revelation. The Telcne, Nautzera said, and for the first time
Achamian heard fear in the man’s voice. The Old Science… It must be! The others must dreamthis, Achamian! Send this dream to the others! But… But what? There’s more? Far more. An Anasurimbor
had returned, a living descendent of the dead king Nautzera had just dreamed. Nothing of significance, Achamian replied. Why had he said this? Why conceal
Anasurimbor Kellhus from the Mandate? Why protect— Good. 1 can scarce digest this as it is…
Our ancient foe discovered at last! And behind faces of skin! If they could
penetrate the sequestered heights of the Imperial Court, they could penetrate
nearly any faction, Achamian. Any faction!
Send this dream to the entire Quorum! All Atyersus trembles this night. Daybreak seemed bold, and
Achamian found himself wondering whether mornings always seemed such when
greeted by a thousand spear points. Sunlight swept out from the edge of the
purple earth, illuminating hillsides and tree lines with crisp morning
brilliance. The Sogian Way,
an old coastal road that predated the Ceneian Empire, shot straight to the
southwest, bending only to the rise and fall of the distant hills. A long line
of armed men trudged along it, knotted by baggage trains and flanked by
companies of mounted knights. Where the sun touched them, it stretched their
shadows far across the surrounding pasture. The sight filled Achamian
with wonder. For so many years the
concern of his days had been dwarfed by the horror of his nights. What he’d
witnessed through Seswatha’s eyes possessed no waking
measure. Certainly the daylight world could still injure, could still kill, but
it all seemed to happen at the scale of rats. Until now. Men of the Tusk, as far
as the eye could see, scattered across the countryside, clustered about the
road like ants on an apple peel. There a band of outriders following a faraway
ridge line. Here a broken wain stranded amid streaming thickets of spears.
Horsemen galloping through flowering groves. Local youths hollering from the
tops of young birches. Such a sight! And it comprised only a fraction of their
true might. Shortly after leaving
Momemn, the Holy War had splintered into disparate armies, each under one of
the Great Names. According to Xinemus, this had been motivated in part by
prudence—divided they could better forage if the Emperor fell short on his
promise of provisions—and in part by stubbornness: the Inrithi lords simply
could not agree on the best route to Asgilioch. Proyas had struck for the
coast, intending to follow the Sogian
Way south to its terminus before turning west for
Asgilioch. The other Great Names—Gothyelk with his Tydonni, Saubon and his
Galeoth, Chepheramunni and the Ainoni, and Skaiyelt with his Thunyeri—had
struck across the fields, vineyards, and orchards of the densely populated
Kyranae Plain, thinking Proyas used a circle to travel in a straight line. With
the ancient roads of Cenei little more than ruined tracks strewn across their
homelands, they had no idea how much time the long way could save so long as it
were paved. At their present pace,
Xinemus claimed, the Conriyan contingent would reach Asgilioch days before the
others. And though Achamian worried—How could they win a war when simple
marches defeated them?—Xinemus seemed convinced this was a good thing. Not only
would it win glory for his nation and his prince, it would teach the others an
important lesson. “Even the Scylvendi know roads are fucking better!” the
Marshal had exclaimed. Achamian plodded with his
mule along the road’s verge, surrounded by creaking wains. From the first day
of the Holy War’s march, he had taken to skulking in the baggage trains. If the
columns of marching soldiery seemed like great rolling barracks, then the
baggage trains seemed like great rolling barns. The smell of livestock, so like
that of Anserca I wet dogs. The groan and squeal of
ungreased axles. The muttering of ham-fisted, ham-hearted men, punctuated now
and again by the crack of whips. He studied his feet—the
pulp of trampled grasses had stained his toes green. For the first time, the
question of why he shadowed the baggage trains struck him. Seswatha had always
ridden at the right hand of kings, princes, and generals. So why didn’t he do
the same? Though Proyas maintained his veneer of indifference, Achamian knew he
would accept his company—if only for Xinemus’s sake. What student did not
secretly crave their old teacher’s presence in uncertain times? So why did he march with
the baggage? Was it habit? He was an aging spy, after all, and nothing
concealed so well as humility in humble circumstances. Or was it nostalgia? For
some reason, marching as he did reminded him of following his father to the
boats as a child, his head thick with sleep, the sand cold, the sea dark and
morning-warm. Always the same glance to the east, where cold grey promised a
punishing sun. Always the heavy breath as he resigned himself to the
inevitable, to the hardship become ritual that men called work. But what comfort could
such memories offer? Drudgery didn’t soothe; it numbed. Then Achamian realized:
he marched with the beasts and baggage, not out of habit or nostalgia, but out
of aversion. I’m hiding, he thought. Hiding from him… From Anasurimbor Kellhus. Achamian slowed, tugged
his mule from the verge into the surrounding meadow. The dew-cold grasses made
his feet ache. The wains continued to trundle by, an endless file. Hiding… More and more, it seemed,
he caught himself doing things for obscure reasons. Retiring early, not because
he was exhausted from the day’s march—as he told himself—but because he feared
the scrutiny of Xinemus, Kellhus, and the others. Staring at Serwe, not because
she reminded him of Esmi—as he told himself—but because the way she stared at
Kellhus worried him—as though she knew something… And now this. Am I going mad? Several times now, he’d
found himself cackling aloud for no apparent reason. Once or twice he’d raised
a hand to his cheek to discover he’d been weeping. Each time he’d simply
mumbled away his shock: few things are more familiar, he supposed, than finding
oneself a stranger. Besides what else could he do? Rediscovering the Consult
was cause enough to go mad about the edges, certainly. But to suspect—no, to know—that the Second Apocalypse was beginning… And to be alone with such knowledge! How could someone like
him bear such a weight? The solution, of course, was to share the burden—to
tell the Mandate about Kellhus. Before, Achamian had
merely feared that Kellhus augured the
resurrection of the No-God. He’d omitted him from his reports because he’d
known exactly what Nautzera and the others would have done. They would have
seized him, then, like jackals with a boiled bone, they would have gnawed and
gnawed until he cracked. But the incident beneath the AndiamineHeights
had… had… Things had changed.
Changed irrevocably. For so many years the
Consult had been little more than an empty posit, an oppressive abstraction.
What was it Inrau had called them? A father’s sin… But now—now!—they were as real as a knife’s edge. And Achamian no
longer feared that Kellhus augured the Apocalypse, he knew. Knowing was so much
worse. So why continue
concealing the man? An Anasurimbor had returned. The Celmomian
Prophecy had been fulfilled! Within the space of days, the ThreeSeas
had assumed the same bloated dimensions as the world he suffered night after
night. And yet he said nothing—nothing! Why? Some men, Achamian had
observed, utterly refused to acknowledge things such as illness or infidelity,
as though facts required acceptance to become real. Was this what he was doing?
Did he think that keeping Kellhus a secret made the man less real somehow? That
the end of the world could be prevented by covering his eyes? It was too much. Too
much. The Mandate simply had to know, no matter what the
consequences. / must tell them… Tonight, 1 must tell them. “Xinemus,” a familiar
voice said from behind, “told me I’d find you with the baggage.“ “He did, did he?”
Achamian replied, surprised by the levity of his tone. Kellhus smiled down at
him. “He said you preferred stepping in fresh shit over old.“ Achamian shrugged, did
his best to purge the phantoms from the small corners of his expression. “Keeps
my toes warm… Where’s your Scylvendi friend?” “He rides with Proyas and
Ingiaban.” “Ah. So you’ve decided to
slum with the likes of me.” He glanced down at the Northerner’s sandalled feet.
“To the point of walking no less…” Caste-nobles didn’t march, they rode.
Kellhus was a prince, though like Xinemus, he made it easy for others to forget
his rank. Kellhus winked. “I
thought I’d let my ass ride me for a change.” Achamian laughed, feeling
as though he’d been holding his breath and could only now exhale. Since that
first evening outside Momemn, Kellhus had made him feel this way—as though he
could breathe easy. When he’d mentioned this to Xinemus, the Marshal had shrugged
and said,
“Everyone farts, sooner or
later.” “Besides,” Kellhus
continued, “you promised you’d instruct me.” “I did, did I?” “You did.” Kellhus reached out and
clasped the rope that swayed from his mule’s crude bridle. Achamian looked at
him quizzically. “What are you doing?” “I’m your student,”
Kellhus said, checking the bindings on the mule’s baggage. “Surely in your
youth you led your master’s mule.” Achamian answered with a
dubious smile. Kellhus ran a hand along
the trunk of the beast’s neck. “What’s his name?“ he asked. For some reason the
banality of the question shocked Achamian—to the point of horror. No one—no
man, anyway—had cared to ask before. Not even Xinemus. Kellhus frowned at his
hesitation. “What’s troubling you, Achamian?” You… He looked away, across
the streaming queues of armed Inrithi. His ears both burned and roared. He
reads me like any scroll. “Is it so easy?” Achamian
asked. “So easy to see?” “What does it matter?” “It matters,” he said,
blinking tears and turning to face Kellhus once again. So 1 weep! something desolate within him cried. So 1 weep! “Ajencis,” he continued,
“once wrote that all men are frauds. Some, the wise, fool only others. Others,
the foolish, fool only themselves. And a rare few fool both others and themselves—they
are the rulers of Men But what about men like me, Kellhus? What about men who
fool no one?” And 1 call myself a spy! Kellhus shrugged.
“Perhaps they are less than fools and more than wise.“ “Perhaps,” Achamian
replied, struggling to appear thoughtful. “So what troubles you?” You… “Daybreak,” Achamian
said, reaching out to scratch his mule’s snout. “His name is Daybreak.” For a Mandate Schoolman,
no name was more lucky. Teaching always quickened
something within Achamian. Like the black teas of Nilnamesh, it sometimes made
his skin tingle and his soul race. There was the simple vanity of knowing, of
course, the pride of seeing farther than another. And there was the joy of
watching young eyes pop open in realization, of seeing someone see. To be a teacher was to be a student anew, to relive
the intoxication of insight, and to be a prophet, to sketch the world down to
its very foundation—not simply to tease sight from blindness, but to demand that another see. And then there was the trust that was the counterpart of this demand, so reckless
that it terrified Achamian whenever he considered it. The madness of one man
saying to another, “Please,
judge me…” To be a teacher was to be
a father. But none of this was true
of teaching Kellhus. Over the ensuing days, as the Conriyan host marched ever
farther south, they walked together, discussing everything imaginable, from the
flora and fauna of the ThreeSeas to the philosophers,
poets, and kings of Near and Far Antiquity. Anserca Rather than follow any
curriculum, which would have been impractical iven the circumstances,
Achamian adopted the Ajencian mode, and let Kellhus indulge his
curiosity. He simply answered questions. And told stories. Kellhus’s questions,
however, were more than perceptive—so much so that Achamian’s respect for his
intellect soon became awe. No matter what the issue, be it political,
philosophical, or poetic, the Prince unerringly struck upon the matter’s heart.
When Achamian outlined the positions of the great Kunьiric thinker, Ingoswitu,
Kellhus, following query upon query, actually arrived at the criticisms of
Ajencis, though he claimed to have never read the ancient Kyranean’s work. When
Achamian described the Ceneian Empire’s disarray at the end of the third
millennium, Kellhus pressed him with questions—many of which Achamian couldn’t
answer— regarding trade, currency, and social structure. Within moments he was
offering explanations and interpretations as fine as any Achamian had read. “How?” Achamian blurted
on one occasion. “How what?” Kellhus
replied. “How is it that… that you
see these things? No matter how deep I peer…” “Ah,” Kellhus laughed.
“You’re starting to sound like my father’s tutors.” He regarded Achamian in a
manner that was at once submissive and strangely indulgent, as though he
conceded something to an overbearing yet favoured son. The sunlight teased
golden threads from his hair and beard. “It’s simply a gift I have,” he said.
“Nothing more.” But such a gift! It was
more than what the ancients called noschi—
genius. There was something about the way
Kellhus thought, an elusive mobility Achamian had never before encountered.
Something that made him seem, at times, a man from a different age. Most, by and large, were
born narrow, and cared to see only that which flattered them. Almost without
exception, they assumed their hatreds and yearnings to be correct, no matter
what the contradictions, simply because they felt correct. Almost all men prized the familiar path over
the true. That was the glory of the student, to step from the well-worn path
and risk knowledge that oppressed, that horrified. Even still, Achamian, like
all teachers, spent as much time uprooting prejudices as implanting truths. All
souls were stubborn in the end. inc. I1KS1 IV1AKLH Not so with Kellhus.
Nothing was dismissed outright. Any possibility could be considered.
It was as though his soul moved over something trackless. Only the truth led
him to conclusions. Question after question,
all posed with precision, exploring this or that theme with gentle
relentlessness, so thoroughly that Achamian was astonished by how much he
himself knew. It was as though, prompted by Kellhus’s patient interrogation,
he’d undertaken an expedition through a life he’d largely forgotten. Kellhus
would ask about Memgowa, the antique Zeumi sage who had recently become the
rage among literate Inrithi caste-nobles, and Achamian would remember reading
his Celestial Aphorisms by candlelight at Xinemus’s
coastal villa, savouring the exotic turn of his Zeumi sensibilities while
listening to the wind scour the orchards outside the shuttered window, the
plums thudding like iron spheres against the earth. Kellhus would question his
interpretation of the Scholastic Wars, and Achamian would remember arguing with
his own teacher, Simas, on the black parapets of Atyersus, thinking himself a
prodigy, and cursing the inflexibility of old men. How he had hated those
heights that day! Question after question.
Nothing repeated. No ground covered twice. And with each answer, it seemed to
Achamian that he exchanged guesses for true insight, and abstractions for
recovered moments of his life. Kellhus, he realized, was a student who taught
even as he learned, and Achamian had never known another like him. Not Inrau,
not even Proyas. The more he answered the man, the more Kellhus seemed to hold
the answer to his own life. Who am l! he would often think, listening to Kellhus’s
melodious voice. What do you
see? And then there were the
questions regarding the Old Wars. Like most Mandate Schoolmen, Achamian found
it easy to mention the Apocalypse and difficult to discuss it—very difficult.
There was the pain of reliving the horror, of course. To speak of the
Apocalypse was to wrestle heartbreak into words—an impossible task. And there
was shame as well, as though he indulged some humiliating obsession. Too many
men had laughed. But with Kellhus the
difficulty was compounded by the fact of the man’s blood. He was an Anasurimbor. How does one describe the end of Anserca the world to its
unwitting messenger? At times, Achamian feared he might gag on the irony. And
always he would think: M;y School!
Why do I betray my School? “Tell me of the No-God,”
Kellhus said one afternoon. As often happened when
they crossed flat pasture, the long lines had broken from the road, and men
fanned across the grasses. Some even doffed their sandals and boots and danced,
as though finding second wind in unburdened feet. Achamian, who’d been laughing
at their antics, was caught entirely off guard. Now he shuddered. Not so
very long ago that name—the No-God— had referred to something distant and dead. “You hail from Atrithau,”
Achamian replied, “and you want me to tell you of the No-God?” Kellhus shrugged. “We
read The Sagas, as you do. Our bards sing their
innumerable lays, as do yours. But you… You’ve seen these things.” No, Achamian wanted to say, Seswatha has seen these things. Sesuiatha. Instead he studied the
distance, gathering his thoughts. He clutched his hands, which felt as light as
balsa. You’ve seen these things. You… “He has, as you likely
know, many names. The Men of ancient Kunьiri called him Mog’Pharau, from which we derive ‘No-God.’ In ancient Kyraneas,
he was simply called Tsurumah, the ‘Hated One.’ The Nonmen of
Ishoriol called him—with the peculiar poetry that belongs to all their names—Cara-Sincurimoi, the ‘Angel of Endless Hunger’… He is well named.
Never has the world known a greater evil… A greater peril.” “What is he, then? An
unclean spirit?” “No. Many demons have
walked this world. If the rumours about the Scarlet Spires are true, some walk
this world still. No, he is more and he is less…” Achamian fell silent. “Perhaps,” the Prince of
Atrithau ventured, “we shouldn’t speak—” “I’ve seen him, Kellhus. As much as any man can, I’ve seen him…
Not far from here, at a place called the Plains of Mengedda, the shattered
hosts of Kyraneas and her allies hoisted their pennants anew, determined to die
grappling the Foe. That was two thousand years ago.” Achamian laughed
bitterly, lowering his face. “I’d forgotten…” Kellhus watched him
intently. “Forgotten what?” “That the Holy War would
be crossing the Plains of Mengedda. That I would soon trod earth that had
witnessed the No-God’s death…” He looked to the southern hills. Soon the Unaras
Spur, which marked the ends of the Inrithi world, would resolve from the
horizon. And on the far side… “How could I’ve
forgotten?” “There’s so much to
remember,” Kellhus said. “Too much.” “Which means too much has
been forgotten,” Achamian snapped, unwilling to absolve
himself of this oversight. I
need my wits! The very world… “You are too…” Kellhus
began, then trailed. “Too what? Too harsh? You
don’t understand what it was like! Every infant stillborn for eleven years—for eleven years, Kellhus! Ever since the No-God’s awakening, every womb
a grave… And you could feel him— no matter where you were. He
was an ever-present horror in every heart. You need only look to the horizon,
and you would know his direction. He was a shadow,
an intimation of doom… “The High North had been
laid waste—I need not recite that woe. Mehtsonc, the mighty capital of
Kyraneas, had been overthrown the month before. Every hearthstone had been
cracked. Every idol had been smashed. Every wife violated. All the great
nations had fallen… So little remained, Kellhus! So few survived! “With their vassals and
allies from the south, the Kyraneans awaited the Foe. Seswatha stood at the
right hand of the Kyranean Great King, Anaxophus V. They’d become fast friends
years before, when Celmomas had summoned all the lords of Earwa to his Ordeal,
the doomed Holy War meant to destroy the Consult before they could awaken
Tsurumah. Together they watched his approach…” Tsuramah… Achamian abruptly
stopped, turning to the north. “Imagine,” he said, opening his arms to the sky.
“The day wasn’t unlike this, though the air smelled of wild blossoms… Imagine!
A great shroud of thunderheads, as broad as the horizon and as black as crow,
boiling across this sky, spilling toward us like hot
blood over glass. I remember threads of lightning flashing among the hills. And
beneath the eaves of the storm, great cohorts of Anserca Scylvendi galloping to
the east and the west, intent on enveloping our flanks. And behind them, loping
as fast as dogs, legions upon legions of Sranc, howling… howling …“ Kellhus placed a friendly
hand upon his shoulder. “You needn’t tell me this,“ he said. Achamian stared at him
blankly, blinking tears from his eyes. “No. I need to tell you this, Kellhus. I need you to know. For
this, more than anything else, is who I am… Do you understand?” His eyes shining, Kellhus
nodded. “The dark swept over us,”
Achamian continued, “swallowed the sun. The Scylvendi struck first: mounted
skirmishers harried our lines with archery, while divisions of bronze-armoured
lancers swept into our flanks. When the screen of skirmishers thinned and
withdrew, it seemed all the world had become Sranc. Masses of them, draped in
human skins, bounding through the grasses, over hummocks. The Kyraneans lowered
their spears and drew up their great shields. “There are no words,
Kellhus, for the dread and determination that moved us. We fought with reckless
abandon, intent only on spitting our dying breath against the Foe. We sang no
hymns, intoned no prayers— we’d forsworn these things. Instead, we sang our own
dirges, bitter laments for our people, our race. We knew that after we passed
only the toll we exacted from our foe would survive to sing for us! “Then from nowhere, it
seemed, dragons dropped from the clouds. Dragons, Kellhus! Wracu. Ancient Skafra, his hide scarred
from a thousand battles; magnificent Skuthula, Skogma, Ghoset; all those who’d
survived the arrows and sorceries of the High North. The Magi of Kyraneas and
Shigek stepped into the sky and closed with the beasts.” Achamian stared into the
vacant distance, overcome by images. “Just south of here,” he
said, shaking his head. “Two thousand years ago.” “What happened next?” Achamian stared at
Kellhus. “The impossible. I… no, Seswatha … Seswatha himself struck down
Skafra. Skuthula the Black was driven away, grievously wounded. The Kyraneans
and their allies stood like breakers against a heaving sea, throwing back wave
after black-hearted wave. For a moment, we almost dared rejoice. Almost…” Anserca “Then he came,” Kellhus
said. Achamian nodded, swallowed.
“Then he came… Mog-Pharau. In tk much, the poet of The Sagas speaks true. The Scylvendi withdrew th Sranc
relented. A great rasping chatter passed through them, swellin into
an impossible, keening roar. The Bashrag began beating the ground with their
hammers. A churning blackness resolved on the horizon -great whirlwind, like a black umbilicus joining earth
and cloud. And everyone knew. Everyone simply knew. “The No’God was coming.
Mog-Pharau walked, and the world thundered. The Sranc began shrieking. Many
cast themselves to the ground scratching at their eyes, gouging… I remember
having difficulty breathing… I had joined Anakka—Anaxophus—in his chariot, and
I remember him gripping my shoulders. I remember him crying something I
couldn’t hear… Our horses reared in their harnesses, screaming. Men about us
fell to their knees, clutching their ears. Great clouds of dust rolled over
us…” And then the voice,
spoken through the throats of a hundred thousand Sranc. WHAT DO YOU SEE? / don’t understand… I MUST KNOW WHAT YOU
SEE Death. Wretched death! TELL ME Even you cannot hide from what you don’t
know! Even you! WHAT AM I? “Doomed,” Seswatha
whispered to the thunder. He clutched the Kyranean Great King by the shoulder.
“Now, Anaxophus! Strike now/” I CANNOTS- A thread of silver light,
swaying across the spiralling heights, flashing across the Carapace. A crack
that made ears bleed. Everywhere, raining debris. The anguished wail of
innumerable inhuman throats. The whirlwind undone,
like the smoke of a snuffed candle, spinning into oblivion. Seswatha fell to his
knees, weeping, crying out in grief and exultation. The impossible! The impossible! Beside him, Anaxophus dropped the Heron Spear,
placed an arm about him. “Are y°u y> Achamian?“ Achamian? Who was
Achamian? “Come,” Kellhus said.
“Stand up.” A stranger’s firm hands.
Where was Anaxophus? “Achamian?” frgain. It’s happening again. “Y-yes?” “What is the Heron
Spear?” Achamian didn’t answer.
He couldn’t. Rather, he walked silently for a long while, brooding over the
moments before his tale had overwhelmed him, over the hideous loss of self and
now—which seemed species of the same thing. Then he thought of Kellhus, who
walked discreetly by his side. The overthrow of the No-God was a tale often
referred to and rarely told by Mandate Schoolmen—in fact, Achamian couldn’t
remember ever telling it, not even to Xinemus.
And yet he had yielded it to Kellhus thoughtlessly—even demanded that he hear
it. Why? He’s doing something to me. Stupefied, Achamian found
himself staring at the man with the candour of a sleepy child. Who are you? Kellhus responded without
embarrassment—such a thing seemed too small for him. He smiled, as though
Achamian were in fact a child, an innocent incapable of wishing him ill. The
look reminded Achamian of Inrau, who’d so often seen him for what he wasn’t: a
good man. Achamian looked away, his
throat aching. Must 1 give you
up, too? A student like no other. A handful of soldiers had
started a hymn to the Latter Prophet, and the surrounding rumble of talk and
laughter trailed into deep-throated song. Without warning, Kellhus stopped and
knelt in the grasses. “What are you doing?”
Achamian asked, more sharply than he would have wished. “Removing my sandals,”
the Prince of Atrithau said. “Come, let’s bare our feet with the others.” Not sing with the others.
Not rejoice with them. Just walk. Lessons, Achamian would
later realize. While Achamian taught, Kellhus continually gave lessons. He was
almost certain of it, even though ° The First March he had no inkling as to
what those lessons might be. Intimations of trust perhaps, of
openness, possibly. Somehow, through the course of teaching Kellhus, Achamian
had become a student of a different kind. And all he knew for sure was that his
education was incomplete. But as the days passed,
this revelation simply complicated his anguish One night he prepared the Cants
of Calling no less than three times, only to have them collapse into mumbled
curses and recriminations. The Mandate, his School—his brothers—must be told! An Anasurimbor had returned! The
Celmomian Prophecy was more than some backwater of Seswatha’s Dreams. Many saw
it as their culmination, as the very reason Seswatha had passed from life into
his disciples’ nightmares. The Great Warning. And yet he, Drusas Achamian,
hesitated—no, more than hesitated, wagered. Sweet Sejenus… He wagered his School, his race, his world, on a man he’d known no more than a fortnight. Such madness! He played
number-sticks with the end of the world! One man, frail and foolish—who was
Drusas Achamian to take such risks? By what right had he shouldered such a
burden? What right? One more day, he told himself, pulling on his
beard and his hair. Onemore day… Kellhus found him in the
general exodus from the camp the morning after this resolution, and despite the
man’s good humour, hours passed before Achamian relented and began answering
his questions. Too many things assailed him. Unspoken things. “You worry about our
fortunes,” Kellhus finally said, his look solemn. “You fear that the Holy War
won’t succeed…” Of course Achamian feared
for the Holy War. He’d witnessed too many defeats—in his dreams, anyway. But
despite the thousands of armed men walking in his periphery, the Holy War was
far from his thoughts. Even so, he pretended otherwise. He nodded without
looking, as though making a painful admission. More unvoiced reproaches. More
self-flagellation. With other men, small deceptions seemed both natural and
necessary, but with Kellhus they… they itched. “Seswatha…” Achamian
began, hesitating. “Seswatha was little more than a boy when the first wars
against Golgotterath were waged. In those early days, not even the wisest of
the ancients understood what was at stake. And how could they? They were
Norsirai, and the world was their /‘tnserca A minion. Their barbaric kinsmen had been subdued. The
Sranc had driven into the
mountains. Not even the Scylvendi dared their ath- Their poetry, their sorcery,
and their craft were sought across all of parwa, even by the Nonmen
who had once tutored them. Foreign emis- aries wept at the beauty
of their cities. In courts as far away as Kyraneas nd Shir men adopted their
manner, their cuisine, their style of dress… “They were the very
measure of their time—like us. Everything was less, and they were always more.
Even after Shauriatas, the Grandmaster of the Mangaecca—the
Consult—awakened the No-God, no one truly believed the end had come. Each
heartbreak seemed more impossible than the last. Even the Fall of Kunьiri, the
mightiest of their nations, barely shook the conviction that somehow, some way,
the High North would prevail. Only as disaster piled upon disaster did they
come to understand…” Shielding his eyes he
looked into the Prince’s face. “Glory doesn’t vouchsafe glory. The unthinkable
can always come to pass.” The end is coming… I must decide. Kellhus nodded, squinting
against the sun. “Everything has its measure,” he said. “Every man…” He looked
directly at Achamian. “Every decision.” For an instant Achamian
feared his heart might stop. A coincidence… It has to be! Without warning, Kellhus
bent and retrieved a small stone. He stared at the slope for several moments,
as though searching for something, a bird or a hare, to kill. Then he threw it,
the sleeve of his silk cassock snapping like leather. The stone whistled
through the air, then skipped along the edge of a chapped-stone shelf. A rock
teetered forward, then plummeted, cracking against steeper faces, releasing
whole skirts of gravel, dust, and debris. Shouts of warning echoed from below. “Did
you intend that?” Achamian asked, his breath tight. Kellhus shook his head.
“No…” He shot Achamian a quizzical look. “But then that was your point, wasn’t
it? The unforeseen, the catastrophic, follows hard upon all our actions.” Achamian wasn’t so sure
he’d even had a point. “And decisions,” he said, as though speaking through a
stranger’s mouth. “Yes,” Kellhus replied. “Decisions.” That night Achamian
prepared the Cants of Calling even though h knew he’d be unable to utter the first word. What right have you? he cri to himself. What right? You who are so small … Kellhus was the Harbing The
Messenger. Soon, Achamian knew, the horror of his nights wonM burst across the
waking world. Soon the great cities—Momemn Carythusal, Aoknyssus—would burn.
Achamian had seen them burn before, many times. They would fall as their
ancient sisters had fallen-Tryse, Mehtsonc, Myclai. Screaming. Wailing to
smoke-shrouded skies They would be the new names of woe. What right? What could
justify such a decision? “Who are you, Kellhus?” he murmured in the solitary
darkness of his tent. “I risk everything for you… Everything!” So why? Because there was something… something about him. Something that bid Achamian to
wait. A sense of impossible becoming… But what? What was he becoming? And was
it enough? Enough to warrant betraying his
School? Enough to throw the number-sticks of Apocalypse? Could anything be enough? Other than the truth. The
truth was always enough, wasn’t it? He looked at me and he knew. Throwing the stone, Achamian
realized, had been another lesson. Another clue. But for what? That disaster
would follow if he made the wrong decision? That disaster would follow no
matter what his decision? There was no end, it
seemed, to his torment. HADTER TWo Anserca Duty measures the distance between the
animal and the divine. —EKYANNUS I, 44 EPISTLES The days and weeks before battle are a strange thing. All the contingents, the Conriyans, the
Galeoth, the
Nansur, the Thunyeri, the
Tydonni, the Ainoni, and the Scarlet Spires, marched to the fortress of Asgilioch, to the Southron Gates and the heathen frontier. And though many bent their thoughts
to Skauras, the heathen Sapatishah who would contest us, he was still woven of the same cloth as a thousand other
abstract
concerns. One could still
confuse war with everyday living… —DRUSAS ACHAMIAN,
COMPENDIUM OF THE FIRST HOLY WAR Late Spring, 4111
Year-of-the-Tusk, the province
of Anserca For the first few days of
the march, everything had been confusion, especially at sunset, when the Inrithi
scattered across field and hillside to make camp. Unable to find Xinemus and
too tired to care, Achamian had even pitched his tent among strangers a couple
of nights. As the Conriyan host grew accustomed to itself as a host, however,
collective habit, combined with the gravity of fealty and familiarity, ensured
that the camp took more or less the same shape every evening. Soon Ihe rmsT March Anserca Li Achamian found himself
sharing food and banter, not only with Xinerrtus and his senior officers, Iryssas,
Dinchases, and Zenkappa, but with Kellhus Serwe, and Cnaьir as well. Proyas
visited them twice—difficult evenings for Achamian—but usually the Crown Prince
would summon Xinemus Kellhus, and Cnaьir to the Royal Pavilion, either for
temple or for evening councils with the other great lords of the Conriyan
contingent. As a result, Achamian
often found himself stranded with Iryssas, Dinchases, and Zenkappa. They made
for awkward company, especially with a timid beauty such as Serwe in their
midst. But Achamian soon began to appreciate these nights—particularly after
spending his days marching with Kellhus. There would be the shyness of men
meeting in the absence of their traditional brokers, then the rush of affable
discourse, as though surprised and delighted they spoke the same language. It
reminded him of the relief he and his childhood friends had felt whenever their
older brothers had been called to the boats or the beaches. The fellowship of
overshadowed souls was something Achamian could understand. Since leaving
Momemn, it seemed the only moments of peace he found were with these men, even
though they thought him damned. One night, Xinemus took
Kellhus and Serwe to join Proyas in celebration of Venicata, an Inrithi holy
day. Iryssas and the others departed soon after to join their men, and for the
first time Achamian found himself alone with the Scylvendi, Cnaьir urs Skiotha,
the Last of the Utemot. Even after several nights
of sharing the same fire, the Scylvendi barbarian unnerved him. Sometimes, glimpsing
him in his periphery, Achamian would involuntarily catch his breath. Like
Kellhus, Cnaьir was a wraith from his dreams, a figure from a far more
treacherous ground. Add to this his many-scarred arms and the Chorae he kept
stuffed beneath his iron-plated girdle… But there were so many
questions he needed to ask. Regarding Kellhus, mostly, but also regarding the
Sranc clans to the north of his tribal lands. He even wanted to ask the man
about Serwe—the way she doted on Kellhus yet followed Cnaьir to sleep had been
noticed by all. On those nights the three retired early, Achamian could see the
gossip in the looks exchanged by Iryssas and the others—though they had yet to
share their speculations. When he’d asked Kellhus about her, the man had simply
shrugged and said, “She’s his prize.” For a time, Achamian and
Cnaьir simply did their best to ignore each other. Shouts and cries echoed
through the darkness, and shadowy clots of revellers filed along the
unbounded edges of their firelight. Some stared—gawked even—but for
the most part left them alone. After scowling at a
boisterous party of Conriyan knights, Achamian finally turned to Cnaьir and
said, “I guess we’re the heathens, eh, Scylvendi?“ An uncomfortable silence
followed while Cnaьir continued gnawing at the bone he held. Achamian sipped
his wine, thought of excuses he might use to withdraw to his tent. What did one
say to a Scylvendi? “So you teach him,”
Cnaьir suddenly said, spitting gristle into the fire. His eyes glittered from
the shadow of his heavy brow, studying the flames. “Yes,” Achamian replied. “Has he told you why?” Achamian shrugged. “He
seeks knowledge of the ThreeSeas… Why do you ask?“ But the Scylvendi was
already standing, wiping greasy fingers against his breeches, then stretching
his giant, sinuous frame. Without a word he strode off into the darkness,
leaving Achamian baffled. Short of speaking, the man hadn’t acknowledged him in
any way. Achamian resolved to
mention the incident to Kellhus when he returned, but he quickly forgot the
matter. Against the greater scheme of his fears, bad manners and enigmatic
questions were of little consequence. Achamian typically
pitched his humble wedge tent beneath the weathered slopes of Xinemus’s
pavilion. Without exception, he would spend hours lying awake, his thoughts
either choked by recriminations regarding Kellhus or smothered by the deranged
enormity of his circumstances. And when these things passed into numbness, he
would fret over Esmenet or worry about the Holy War. Too soon, it seemed, it
would wander into Fanim lands—into battle. The nightmares were
becoming more unbearable. Scarcely a night passed where he didn’t awaken long
before the cockcrow horns, thrashing at his blankets or clawing his face,
crying out to ancient comrades. Few Mandate Schoolmen enjoyed anything
resembling peaceful slumber. Esmenet had once joked that he slept “like an old
hound chasing rabbits.” “Try an old rabbit,” he’d replied, “fleeing
hounds.” -iksi iVIARCH But sleep—or the
absolute, oblivious heart of it anyway—began to elude him altogether, until it
seemed he simply shuffled from one clamour to another. He would crawl from his
tent into the predawn darkness hugging himself to still the tremors, and he
would simply stand as the blackness resolved into a cold, colourless version of
the vista he’d seen the previous evening, watching the sun’s golden rim surface
in the east, like a coal burning through painted paper. And it would seem he
stood upon the very lip of the world, that if it tipped by the slightest
measure, he would be cast into an endless black. So alone, he would think. He would imagine Esmenet sleeping in
theь room in Sumna, one slender leg kicked from the covers, banded by threads
of light as the same sun boiled through the cracks of her shutters. And he
would pray that she was safe—pray to the Gods who’d damned them both. One sun keeps us warm. One sun lets us
see. One… Then
he would think of Anasurimbor Kellhus—thoughts of anticipation and dread. One evening, while
listening to others argue about the Fanim, Achamian suddenly realized there was
no reason to suffer his fears alone: he could tell Xinemus. Achamian glanced across
the fire at his old friend, who was arguing battles that had yet to be fought. “Certainly Cnaьir knows
the heathen!” the Marshal was protesting. “I never said otherwise. But until he
sees us on the field, until he sees the might ofConriya, neither I—nor our Prince, I suspect—will take his
word as scripture!” Could he tell him? The
morning after the madness beneath the Emperor’s palace had also been the
morning the Holy War began its march. Everything had been confusion. Even
still, Xinemus had made Achamian his priority, fairly interrogating him on the
details of the previous night. Achamian had started with the truth, or a hollowed
out version of it anyway, saying that the Emperor had required independent
verification of certain claims made by his Imperial Saik. But what followed was
pure fantasy—some story about finding the ciphers to an ensorcelled map.
Achamian could no longer remember. Anserca At the time, the lies had
simply… happened. The events of that night nd the revelations that followed
had been too immediate and far too atastrophic in their
implications. Even now, two weeks later, Achamian felt overmatched by their
dread significance. Back then, he could only flounder. Stories, on the
other hand, were something he could make sense of, something he could
speak. But how could he explain
this to Xinemus? To the one man who believed. Who trusted. Achamian watched and waited,
glancing from face to illuminated face. He’d purposely unrolled his mat on the
smoky side of the fire, hoping for a measure of solitude while he ate. Now it
seemed that providence had placed him here, affording him a furtive glimpse of
the whole. There was Xinemus, of
course, seated knees out and back upright like a Zeumi warlord, the hard set of
his mouth betrayed by the laughter in his eyes and the crumbs in his square-cut
beard. To his left, his cousin, Iryssas, rocked to and fro upon the trunk of a
felled tree, so much like a big-pawed puppy in his exuberance, bullying as much
as the patience of the others would allow. Sitting to his left, Dinchases, or
“Bloody Dinch,” held out his wine bowl for the slaves to refill, the X-shaped
scar on his forehead inked black by the shadows. Zenkappa, as usual, sat by his
side, his ebony skin shining in the firelight. For some reason, his manner and
tone never ceased to remind Achamian of a mischievous wink. Kellhus sat
cross-legged nearby, wearing a plain white tunic, and looking for all the world
like a portrait plundered from some temple—at once meditative and attentive,
remote and absorbed. Serwe leaned against him, her eyes shining beneath drowsy
lids, a blanket pulled across her thighs. As always, the flawlessness of her
face arrested, and the curves of her figure tugged. Close to her, but back
farther from the fire, Cnaьir crouched in the shadows, gazing at the flames and
tearing mouthful after mouthful of bread. Even eating he looked ready to break
necks. Such a strange tribe. His tribe. Could they feel it? he
wondered. Could they feel the end coming? He had to share what he knew. If not
with the Mandate, then with someone. He had to share or he would go mad. If
only Esmi had come with… No. That way lay more pain. The First March He set down his bowl,
stood, and before he realized it, found himself sitting next to his old friend,
Krijates Xinemus, the Marshal of Attrempus. “Zin…” “What is it, Akka?” “I must speak with you,”
he said in a hushed voice. “There’s… there’s…” Kellhus seemed
distracted. Even still, Achamian couldn’t shake the sense of being observed. “That night,” he
continued, “that last night beneath Momemn’s walls. Do you remember Ikurei
Conphas coming for me, escorting me to the Emperor’s palace?” “How could I forget. I
was worried sick!” Achamian hesitated,
glimpsed images of an old man—the Emperor’s Prime Counsel—convulsing against
chains. Glimpses of a face unclutching like hands and flexing outward,
reaching… A face that grasped, that seized. Xinemus studied him by
firelight, frowned. “What’s wrong, Akka?” “I’m a Schoolman, Zin,
bound by oath and duty the same as y—” “Lord Cousin!” Iryssas
called over the flame. “You must listen to this! Tell him, Kellhus!” “Please, Cousin,” Xinemus replied sharply. “Can’t you—” “Pfah. Just listen to
him! We’re trying to understand what this means.” Xinemus began scolding
the man, but it was already too late. Kellhus was speaking. “It’s just a parable,”
the Prince of Atrithau said. “Something I learned while among the Scylvendi… It
goes like this: A slender young bull and his harem of cows are shocked to
discover that their owner has purchased another bull, far deeper of chest, far
thicker of horn, and far more violent of temper. Even still, when the owner’s
sons drive the mighty newcomer to pasture, the young bull lowers his horns,
begins snorting and stamping. ‘No!’ his cows cry. ‘Please, don’t risk your life
for us!’ ‘Risk my life?’ the young bull exclaims. ‘I’m just making sure he
knows I’m a bull!’” A heartbeat of silence, then an explosion of laughter. “A Scylvendi parable?” Xinemus cried out, laughing. “Are you—” “This is my opinion!”
Iryssas called through the uproar. “My interpretation! Listen! It means that
our dignity—no, our honour—is worth more than anything, more
than even our wives!” Anserca “It means nothing,”
Xinemus said, wiping tears from his eyes. “It’s a joke, nothing more.” “It is a parable of
courage,” Cnaьir grated, and everyone fell silent— shocked, Achamian supposed,
that the taciturn barbarian had actually spoken. The man spat into the fire.
“It is a fable that old men tell boys in order to shame them, to teach them
that gestures are meaningless, that only death is real.” Looks were exchanged
about the fire. Only Zenkappa dared laugh aloud. Achamian leaned forward.
“What do you say, Kellhus? What do you think it means?” Kellhus shrugged,
apparently surprised he held the answer so many had missed. He matched
Achamian’s gaze with friendly, yet utterly implacable, eyes. “It means that
young bulls sometimes make good cows…” More gales of laughter,
but Achamian could manage no more than a smile. Why was he so angry? “No,” he
called out. “What do you think it really
means?” Kellhus paused, clasped
Serwe’s right hand and looked from face to shining face. Achamian glanced at
Serwe, only to look away. She was watching him—intently. “It means,” Kellhus said
in a solemn and strangely touching voice, “that there are many kinds of
courage, and many degrees of honour.” He had a way of speaking that seemed to
hush all else, even the surrounding Holy War. “It means that these
things—courage, honour, even love—are problems,
not absolutes. Questions.” Iryssas shook his head
vigorously. He was one of those dull-witted men who continually confused ardour
with insight. Watching him argue with Kellhus had become something of a sport. “Courage, honour,
love—these are problems? Then what are the solutions? Cowardice and depravity?” “Iryssas…” Xinemus said
half-heartedly. “Cousin.” “No,” Kellhus replied.
“Cowardice and depravity are problems as well. As for the solutions? You, Iryssas—you’re a solution. In fact, we’re all solutions. Every life lived sketches a different
answer, a different way…” “So are all solutions
equal?” Achamian blurted. The bitterness of his tone startled him. The First March “A philosopher’s
question,” Kellhus replied, and his smile swept away all awkwardness. “No. Of
course not. Some lives are better lived than others—there can be no doubt. Why
do you think we sing the lays we do? Why do you think we revere our scriptures?
Or ponder the life of the Latter Prophet?” Examples, Achamian
realized. Examples of lives that enlightened, that solved … He knew this but couldn’t bring himself to say it.
He was, after all, a sorcerer, an example of a life that solved nothing.
Without a word, he rolled to his feet and strode into the darkness, not caring
what the others thought. Suddenly, he needed darkness, solitude… Shelter from Kellhus. He was kneeling to duck
into his tent when he realized that Xinemus had yet to hear his confession,
that he was still alone with what he knew. Probably for the best. Skin-spies in their
midst. Kellhus the Harbinger of the world’s end. Xinemus would just think him
mad. A woman’s voice brought
him up short. “I see the way you look at him.” Him—Kellhus. Achamian glanced over his shoulder, saw
Serwe’s willowy silhouette framed by the fire. “And how’s that?” he
asked. She was angry—her tone had betrayed that much. Was she jealous? During
the day, while he and Kellhus wandered the column, she walked with Xinemus’s
slaves. “You needn’t fear,” she
said. Achamian swallowed at the
sour taste in his mouth. Earlier, Xinemus had passed perrapta around instead of wine—wretched drink. “Fear what?” “Loving him.” Achamian licked his lips,
cursed his racing heart. “You dislike me, don’t
you?” Even in the gloom of long
shadows, she seemed too beautiful to be real, like something that had stepped
between the cracks of the world— something wild and white-skinned. For the
first time, Achamian realized how much he desired her. “Only…” She hesitated,
studied the flattened grasses at her feet. She raised her face and for the
briefest of instants looked at him with Esmenet’s eyes. “Only because you
refuse to see,” she murmured. Anserca See what? Achamian wanted to cry. But she’d fled. “Akka?” Kellhus called in
the fading dark. “I heard someone weeping.” “It’s nothing,” Achamian
croaked, his face still buried in his hands. At some point—he was no longer
sure when—he’d crawled from his tent and huddled over the embers of their dying
fire. Now dawn was coming. “Is it the Dreams?” Achamian rubbed his face,
heaved cool air into his lungs. Tell him! “Y-yes… The Dreams.
That’s it, the Dreams.” He could feel the man
stare down at him, but lacked the heart to look up. He flinched when Kellhus
placed a hand on his shoulder, but didn’t pull away. “But it isn’t the Dreams,
is it, Akka? It’s something else… Something more. Hot tears parsed his
cheeks, matted his beard. He said nothing. “You haven’t slept this
night… You haven’t slept in many nights, have you?” Achamian looked over the
surrounding encampment, across the canvas-congested slopes and fields. Against
a sky like cold iron, the pennants hung dead from their poles. Then he looked to
Kellhus. “I see his blood in your face, and it fills me with both hope and
horror.” The Prince of Atrithau
frowned. “So this is about me… I feared as much.” Achamian swallowed, and
without truly deciding to, threw the number-sticks. “Yes,” he said. “But it’s
not so simple.” “Why? What do you mean?” “Among the many dreams my
brother Schoolmen and I suffer, there’s one in particular that troubles us. It
has to do with Anasflrimbor Celmomas II, the High King of Kunьiri—with his
death on the Fields of Eleneot in the year 2146.” Achamian breathed deeply,
rubbed angrily at his eyes. “You see, Celmomas was the first great foe of the
Consult, and the first and most glorious victim of the No-God. The first! He died in my arms, Kellhus. He
was my most hated, most cherished friend and he died in my arms!“ He scowled,
waved his hands in confusion. ”I m-mean I mean in S-Seswatha’s arms…“ “And this is what pains
you? That I—” “You don’t understand!
J-just listen… He, Celmomas, spoke to me__ to Seswatha—before he
died. He spoke to all of us—“ Achamian shook his head, cackled, pulled fingers
through his beard. ”In fact he keeps speaking, night after fucking
night, dying time and again—and always for the first time! And-and he says…“ Achamian looked up,
suddenly unashamed of his tears. If he couldn’t bare his soul before this
man—so like Ajencis, so like lnrau!—then who? “He says that an
Anasurimbor—an Anasurimbor, Kellhus!—will return at the end
of the world.” Kellhus’s expression,
normally so blessedly devoid of conflict, darkened. “What are you saying, Akka?” “Don’t you see?” Achamian
whispered. “You’re the one, Kellhus. The Harbinger! The fact
you’re here means that it’s starting all over again…” Sweet Sejenus. “The Second Apocalypse,
Kellhus… I’m talking about the Second Apocalypse. You are the sign!” Kellhus’s hand slipped
from his shoulder. “But that doesn’t make sense, Akka. The fact I’m here means
nothing. Nothing. Now I’m here, and before I was
in Atrithau. And if my bloodline reaches as far back as you say, then an
Anasurimbor has always been ‘here,’ wherever that might
be…” The Prince of Atrithau’s
eyes lost their focus, wrestled with unseen things. For a moment, the glamour
of absolute self-possession faltered, and he looked like any man overwhelmed by
a precipitous turn of circumstance. “It’s just a…” He paused,
as if lacking the breath to continue. “A coincidence,” Achamian
said, pressing himself to his feet. For some reason, he yearned to reach out,
steady him with his embrace. “That’s what I thought… I admit I was shocked when
I first met you, but I never thought… It was just too mad! But then…” “Then what?” “I found them. I found
the Consult… The night you and the others celebrated Proyas’s victory over the
Emperor, I was summoned to the Anserca Jl AndiamineHeights—by no less than Ikurei Conphas—and
brought to the Imperial Catacombs. Apparently they’d found a spy in their
midst, one that convinced the Emperor that sorcery simply had to be involved. But there was no sorcery, and the man
they showed me was no ordinary spy…“ “How so?” “For one, he called me
Chigra, which is Seswatha’s name in aghurzoi,
the perverted speech of the Sranc. Somehow he could see Seswatha’s trace within
me… For another, he…” Achamian pursed his lips and shook his head. “He had no face. He was an abomination of the flesh, Kellhus! A spy
that can mimic the form of any man without sorcery or sorcery’s Mark. Perfect
spies! “Somehow, somewhere, the
Consult murdered the Emperor’s Prime Counsel and had him replaced. These, these things could be anywhere! Here in the Holy War, in the
courts of the Great Factions… For all we know they could be Kings!” OrShriah… “But how does that make
me the Harbinger?” “Because it means the
Consult has mastered the Old Science. Sranc, Bashrags, Dragons, all the
abominations of the Inchoroi, are artifacts of the Tekne, the Old Science,
created long, long ago, when the Nonmen still ruled Earwa. It was thought
destroyed when the Inchoroi were annihilated by Cu’jara-Cinmoi—before the Tusk
was even written, Kellhus! But these, these skin-spies are new. New artifacts of the Old Science. And if the Consult
has rediscovered the Old Science, there’s a chance they know how to resurrect
Mog-Pharau…” And that name stole his
breath, winded him like a blow to the chest. “The No-God,” Kellhus
said. Achamian nodded, swallowing
as though his throat were sore. “Yes, the No-God…” “And now that an
Anasurimbor has returned…” “That chance has become a
near certainty.” Kellhus studied him for a
stern moment, his expression utterly inscrutable. “So what will you do?” “My mission,” Achamian
said, “is to observe the Holy War. But I’ve a decision to make… One that claws
my heart every waking moment.” “Which is?” The First March Achamian tried hard to
weather his student’s glare, but there seemed to be something in his eyes,
something incomparable—terrifying even. “I haven’t told them about you,
Kellhus. I haven’t told my brothers that the Celmomian Prophecy has been
fulfilled. And so long as I don’t tell them, I betray them, Seswatha,
myself”—he cackled again—“maybe even the world…” “But why then?” Kellhus
asked. “Why haven’t you told them?” Achamian took a deep
breath. “Because when I do, they’ll come for you, Kellhus.” “Perhaps they should.” “You don’t know my
brothers.” Crouching naked in the
pre-dawn gloom of the tent he shared with Kellhus, Cnaьir urs Skiotha peered at
Serwe’s sleeping face and used the tip of his knife to hook and draw away
obscuring threads of her hair. The veil parted, he set aside the knife and ran
two callused fingers along her cheek. She twitched and sighed, nestled deeper
in her blanket. So beautiful. So like his forgotten wife. Cnaьir watched her, as
motionless and awake as she was motionless and asleep. All the while, he
listened to the voices outside: Kellhus and the sorcerer, speaking nonsense. In some ways it seemed a
miracle. Not only had he traversed the length of the Empire, he’d spat at the
feet of the Emperor, humiliated Ikurei Conphas before his peers, and attained
the rights and privileges of an Inrithi Prince. Now he rode as a general in the
greatest host he’d ever witnessed. A host that could crush cities, strike down
nations, murder whole peoples. A host for memorialists’ songs. A Holy War. And it was bent on
storming Shimeh, the stronghold of the Cishaurim. The Cishaurim! Anasurimbor Moenghus was
Cishaurim. Despite the deranged
scale of its ambition, the Dunyain’s plan seemed to be working. In his dreams,
Cnaьir had always come across Moenghus alone. Sometimes there would be words,
sometimes not. There would always be bleeding. But now those dreams seemed
little more than juvenile fantasies. Kellhus was right. After thirty years,
Moenghus would be Anserca far more than someone who
could be cut down in some alley; he would be a potentate. His would be an
empire. And how could it be any other way? He was Dunyain. Like his son, Kellhus. Who could say how far
Moenghus’s power reached? Certainly it encompassed the Cishaurim and the
Kianene—the question was only one of degree. But was that power with them now,
in the Holy War? Did it include Kellhus? Send them a son. What
better way could a Dunyain overthrow his enemies? Already in their councils
with Proyas, the Inrithi caste-nobles fell instantly silent at the sound of
Kellhus’s voice. Already they watched him when they thought him preoccupied,
whispered when they thought he couldn’t hear. And as pompous as they were, they
deferred to him, not the way men accede to
rank or station, but the way men yield to those who possess something they
need. Somehow Kellhus had convinced them he stood outside the circle of the
commonplace, outside even the extraordinary. It was more than just his claim to
have dreamt of the Holy War from afar, more than the nefarious ways he spoke to
them, as though he were a father playing upon the well-known conceits of his
children. It was what he said as well, the truths. “But the God favours, the
righteous!” Ingiaban, the Palatine of Kethantei, had cried one night at
council. At Cnaьir’s insistence, they’d been discussing various strategies the
Sapatishah of Shigek, Skauras, might use to undo them. “Sejenus himself—” “And you,” Kellhus
interrupted, “are you righteous?” The air in the Royal
Pavilion became tense with a strange, aimless expectation. “We are the righteous,
yes,” the Palatine of Kethantei replied. “If not, then what in Juru’s name are
we doing here?” “Indeed,” Kellhus said.
“What are we doing here?” Cnaьir glimpsed Lord
Gaidekki turning to Xinemus—a worried glance. Wary, Ingiaban purchased
time by sipping his anpoi. “Raising arms against the heathen. What else?” “So we raise arms against
the heathen because we’re righteous?” The First March “And because they’re
wicked.” Kellhus smiled with stern
compassion. ‘“He who’s righteous is he who’s not found wanting in the ways of
the God…’ Isn’t this what Sejenus himself writes?” “Yes. Of course.” “And who finds men wanting in the ways of the God? Other men?” The Palatine of Kethantei
paled. “No,” he said. “Only the God and his Prophets.” “So we’re not righteous,
then?” “Yes… I mean, no…”
Baffled, Ingiaban looked to Kellhus, a horrible frankness revealed in his face.
“I mean… I no longer know what I mean!” Concessions. Always
exacting concessions. Accumulating them. “Then you understand,”
Kellhus said, his voice now deep and preternatural^ resonant, a voice that
seemingly spoke from everywhere. “A man can never judge himself righteous, Lord
Palatine, he can only hope. And it’s this that gives meaning
to our actions. In raising arms against the heathen, we’re not the priest
before the altar, we’re the victim. It means nothing to offer up
another to the God, so we make offerings of ourselves. Make no mistake, all of
you… We wager our souls. We leap into the black. This pilgrimage is our
sacrifice. Only afterward will we know whether we’ve been found wanting.” The mutter of startled,
even wondrous assent. “Well said, Kellhus,”
Proyas had declared. “Well said.” All men see from where
they stand, and somehow Kellhus saw farther than any other man. He stood upon a
different ground, greater, as though he occupied the heights of every soul. And
though none of the Inrithi noblemen dared speak this intimation, they felt
it—all of them. Cnaьir could see it in the cast of their eyes, hear it in the
timbre of their voices: the first shadows of awe. The wonder that made men
small. Cnaьir knew these
secretive passions all too well. To watch Kellhus ply these men was to witness
the shameful record of his own undoing at the hands of Moenghus. Sometimes the
urge to cry out in warning almost overpowered him. Sometimes Kellhus seemed
such an abomination that the gulf between Scylvendi and Inrithi threatened to
disappear—particu- Anserca larly where Proyas was
concerned. Moenghus had preyed upon the same vulnerabilities, the same
conceits… If Cnaьir shared these things with these men, how different could he
be? Sometimes crimes seemed
crimes, no matter how ludicrous the victim. But only sometimes. For
the most part Cnaьir merely watched with a numb kind of incredulity. He no
longer heard Kellhus speak so much as observed him cut and carve, whittle and
hew, as though the man had somehow shattered the glass of language and
fashioned knives from the pieces. This word to anger so that word might open.
This look to embarrass so that smile might reassure. This insight to remind so
that truth might injure, heal, or astonish. How easy it must have
been for Moenghus! One stripling lad. One chieftain’s wife. Images, stark and dry, of
the Steppe assailed him. The other women tearing at his mother’s hair, clawing
at her face, clubbing her with rocks, stabbing her with sticks. Mother.1
A bawling infant hoisted from her yaksh, tossed into the all-cleansing fire—his
blond-haired half-brother. The stone faces of the men turning away from his
look… How could he let it
happen again? How could he stand by and watch? How could— Still crouching next to
Serwe, Cnaьir looked down, shocked to see that he’d been stabbing the ground
with his knife. The bone-white reeds of the mat were snapped and severed about
a small pit of black. He shook his black mane,
breathed as though punishing air. Always these thoughts—always! Remorse? For outlanders?
Concern for mewling peacocks? Especially Proyas! “So long as what comes
before remains shrouded,” Kellhus had said on their trek across the Jьinati
Steppe, “so long as men are already deceived, what does it matter?” And what
did it matter, making fools of fools? What mattered was whether the man made a
fool of him; this—this!—was the sharp edge upon which his every thought
should bleed. Did the Dunyain speak true? Was he truly his father’s assassin? I walk with the whirlwind! He could never forget. He
had only his hatred to preserve him. And Serwe? The First March The voices from outside
had trailed into silence. He could hear that weeping fool of a sorcerer
clearing his nose outside. Then Kellhus pressed through the flap into the dim
interior. His eyes flashed from Serwe to the knife to Cnaьir’s face. “You heard,” he said in
flawless Scylvendi. Even after all this time, hearing him speak thus made
Cnaьir’s skin prickle. “This is a camp of war,”
he replied. “Many heard.” “No, they slept.” Cnaьir knew the futility
of debate—he knew the Dunyain—so he said nothing, rooted through his scattered
belongings for his breeches. Serwe complained and
kicked at her blankets. “Do you recall that first
time we spoke in your yaksh?” Kellhus asked. “Of course,” Cnaьir
replied, pulling on his breeches. “I curse that day with every waking breath.” “That witch stone you
threw to me…” “You mean my father’s
Chorae?” “Yes. Do you still have
it?” Cnaьir peered at him
through the gloom. “But you know I do.” “And how would I know?” “You know.” Cnaьir dressed in silence
while Kellhus roused Serwe. “But the horrnns,” she complained, burying her head. “I haven’t heard
the horns…” Cnaьir laughed abruptly,
deep and full-throated. “Treacherous work,” he
said, now speaking in Sheyic. “And what’s that?”
Kellhus replied—more for Serwe’s benefit than anything, Cnaьir realized. The
Dunyain knew what he meant. He always knew. “Killing sorcerers.” Just then, the horns
sounded. Late Spring, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, the AndiamineHeights Xerius stood from the
baths, walked up the marble steps to where the slaves waited with towels and
scented oils. And for the first time in Anserca days he could feel it
move him—harmony, the providence of auspicious deities… He looked up with mild
surprise when the Empress, his mother, appeared from the dark recesses of the
chamber. “Tell me Mother,” he said
without looking at her extravagant figure, “do you simply happen upon me at
inopportune moments?” He turned to her as the slaves gently towelled his groin.
“Or is this too something you measure?” The Empress bowed her
head slightly, as though she were Shriah, an equal. “I’ve brought you a gift,
Xerius,” she said, gesturing to the dark-haired girl at her side. With a
flourish, her eunuch, the giant Pisulathas, opened the girl’s robe and drew it
away. Beneath, she was as white-skinned as a Galeoth—as naked as the Emperor,
and almost as splendid. Gifts from Mother—they
underscored the treachery of gifts from those who were not one’s tributaries.
Such gifts weren’t gifts at all, in fact. Such gifts always demanded exchange. Xerius couldn’t remember
when Istriya had started bringing these men and women to him—these surrogates.
She had the eye of a whore, his mother—he would grant her that. She knew,
unerringly, what would please him. “You are a venal witch, Mother,” he said,
admiring the terrified girl. “Was there ever a son so fortunate as me?” But Istriya said only,
“Skeaos is dead.” Xerius looked at her
momentarily, then returned his attention to the slaves, who’d begun rubbing him
with oil. “Something is dead,” he replied, suppressing
a shudder. “We know not what.” “And why wasn’t I told?” “I knew you’d hear of it
soon enough.” He sat upon the chair brought for him, and his body slaves began
combing his hair with more oils, filing his nails. “You always do,” he added. “The Cishaurim,” Istriya
said after a pause. “But of course.” “Then they know. The
Cishaurim know of your plans.” “It’s of little
consequence. They knew already.” “Have you become such a
vulgar fool, Xerius? I thought that after this you would be ready to
reconsider.” “Reconsider what,
Mother?” “This mad pact you have
made with the heathen. What else?” “Silence, Mother.” Xerius
glanced nervously at the girl, but it was plain that she didn’t speak a word of
Sheyic. “This isn’t to be uttered aloud. Ever again. Do you hear me?” “But the Cishaurim, Xerius! Think of it! At your bosom all these years,
wearing the face of Skeaos! The Emperor’s only confidant! That
vile tongue clucking poison for counsel. All these years, Xerius! Sharing the hearth of your ambitions with an
obscenity!” Xerius had thought of
this—had been able to think of little else these past days. At night he dreamed
of faces—faces like fists. Of Gaenkelti, who had died so… absurdly. And then there was the question, the question that struck with such force it never
failed to jar him from the tedium of his routines. Are there others? Others like it… “You lecture the
educated, Mother. You know that in all things there’s a balance to be struck.
An exchange of vulnerabilities for advantages. You taught me this.” But the Empress didn’t
relent. The old bitch never relented. “The Cishaurim have had
your heart in their clutches, Xerius.
Through you they have supped on the very
marrow of the Empire. And you would let this—an offence like no other—go
unpunished now, when the Gods have delivered to
you the instrument of your vengeance? You’d still pull the Holy War up short?
If you spare Shimeh, Xerius, you spare the
Cishaurim.” “Silence!” His scream pealed throughout the chamber. Istriya
laughed fiercely. “My naked son,” she said. “My poor… naked… son.” Xerius leapt to his feet,
shouldered past the circle of his slaves, his look wounded, quizzical. “This isn’t like you,
Mother. You were never one to cower before damnation. Is it because you grow
old, hmm? Tell me, what’s it like to stand upon the precipice? To feel your
womb wither, to watch the eyes of your lovers grow shy with hidden disgust…” He’d struck from impulse
and found vanity—the only way he knew to injure his mother. But there was no bruise
in her reply. “There comes a time, Xerius, when you care nothing for your
spectators. The spectacles of beauty are Anserca like the baubles of
ceremony—for the young, the stupid. The act, Xerius. The act makes mere
ornament of all things. You’ll see.“ “Then why the cosmetics,
Mother? Why have your body slaves truss you up like an old whore to the feast?” She looked at him
blankly. “Such a monstrous son…” she whispered. “As monstrous as his
mother,” Xerius added, laughing cruelly. “Tell me… Now that your
debauched life is nearly spent, are you filled with regret Mother?” Istriya looked away,
across the steaming bath waters. “Regret is inevitable, Xerius.” These words struck him.
“Perhaps… perhaps it is,” he replied, moved for some reason to sudden pity.
There had been a time when he and his mother had been… close. But Istriya could
be intimate with only those she possessed. She no longer possessed him. The thought of this
touched Xerius. To lose such a godlike son… “Always these savage
exchanges, eh, Mother? I do repent them. I would have you
know that much.” He looked at her pensively, chewed his bottom lip. “But speak
of Shimeh again and I will put your platitude to the test. You will regret… Do you understand this?” “I understand, Xerius.” There was malice in her
eyes when she met his gaze, but Xerius ignored it. A concession, any
concession, was a triumph when dealing with the Empress. Xerius studied the young
girl instead, her taut breasts upswept like swallow’s wings, her soft weave of
pubic hair. Aroused, he held out his hand and she came to him, reluctantly. He
led her to a nearby couch and reclined, stretched out before her. “Do you know
what to do child?” he asked. She opened her lithe
legs, straddled him. Tears streamed down her cheeks. Trembling, she lowered
upon his member… Xerius gasped. It was
like sinking into a warm, unbroken peach. If the world harboured obscene things
like the Cishaurim, it harboured also such sweet fruits. The old Empress turned to
leave. “Will you not stay,
Mother?” Xerius called, his voice thick. “Watch your son enjoy this gift of
yours?” Istriya hesitated. “No,
Xerius.” “But you will, Mother. The Emperor is difficult to please. You must
instruct her.” There was a pause, filled
only by the girl’s whimper. “But certainly, my son,”
Istriya said at length, and walked grandly over to the couch. The rigid girl
flinched when she grasped her hand and drew it down to Xerius’s scrotum. “Gently,
child,” she cooed. “Shushh. No weeping…” Xerius groaned and arched
into her, laughed when she chirped in pain. He gazed into his mother’s painted
face suspended over the girl’s shoulder, whiter even than the porcelain,
Galeoth skin, and he burned with that old, illicit thrill. He
felt a child again, careless. All was as it should be. The Gods were auspicious
indeed… “Tell me, Xerius,” his
mother said huskily, “how was it that you discovered Skeaos?” HApTER Three ASGILIOCH The proposition “I am the centre” need never be uttered. It is the
assumption upon which all certainty and all doubt turns. —AJENCIS, THE THIRD
ANALYTIC OF MEN See your enemies content and your lovers melancholy. —AINONI PROVERB Early Summer, 4111 Year-o/-the-Tusk, the fortress of Asgilioch For the first time in
living memory, an earthquake struck the Unaras Spur and the InunaraHighlands.
Hundreds of miles away the great bustling markets of Gielgath fell silent as
wares swung on their hooks and mortar chipped down shivering walls. Mules kicked,
their eyes rolling in fear. Dogs howled. But in Asgilioch, the
southern bulwark of the peoples of the Kyranae Plains since time immemorial,
men were knocked to their knees, walls swayed like palm fronds, and the ancient
citadel of Ruom, which had survived the Kings of Shigek, the dragons of
Tsurumah, and no less than three Fanim Jihads, collapsed in a mighty column of
dust. As the survivors pulled bodies from the debris, they found themselves
grieving the stone more than the flesh. “Hard-hearted Ruom!” they cried out in
disbelief. “The High Bull of Asgilioch has fallen!” For many in the Empire, Ruom was a totem.
Not since the days of Ingusharotep II, the ancient God-King of Shigek, had the
citadel of Asgilioch been destroyed—the last time the South ever conquered the
peoples of the Kyranae Plains. The first Men of the
Tusk, a troop of hard-riding Galeoth horsemen under Coithus Saubon’s nephew,
Athjeari, arrived four days following. To their dismay, they found Asgilioch in
partial ruin, and her battered garrison convinced of the Holy War’s doom.
Nersei Proyas and his Conriyans arrived the day after, to be followed two days
after that by Ikurei Conphas and his Imperial Columns, as well as the Shrial
Knights under Incheiri Gotian. Where Proyas had taken the Sogian Way along the southern coast, then
marched cross-country through the Inunara Highlands, Conphas and Gotian had
taken the so-called “Forbidden
Road”—built by the Nansur to allow the quick
deployment of their Columns between the Fanim and Scylvendi frontiers. Of those
Great Names who struck through the heart of the province, Coithus Saubon and
his Galeoth were the first to arrive—almost a full week after Conphas. Gothyelk
and his Tydonni appeared shortly after, followed by Skaiyelt and his grim Thunyeri. Of the Ainoni nothing was
known, save that from the outset their host, perhaps hampered by its ponderous
size or by the Scarlet Spires and their vast baggage trains, had trouble making
half the daily distance of the other contingents. So the greater portion of the
Holy War made camp on the barren slopes beneath Asgilioch’s ramparts and
waited, trading rumours and premonitions of disaster. To the sentries posted on
Asgilioch’s walls, they looked like a migrating nation—like something from the
Tusk. When it became apparent
that days, perhaps weeks, might pass before the Ainoni joined them, Nersei
Proyas called a Council of the Great and Lesser Names. Given the size of the
assembly, they were forced to gather in Asgilioch’s inner bailey, beneath the
debris heaped about Ruom’s broken foundations. The Great Names took their
places about a salvaged trestle table, while the others, dressed in the finery
of a dozen nations, sat across the rubble slopes, making an amphitheatre of the
ruin. They fairly shimmered in the bright sunlight. They spent most of the
morning observing the proper rituals and sacrifices: this was the first full
Council since marching from Momemn. The Asgilioch. afternoon they spent
quarrelling, for the most part debating whether Ruom’s destruction portended
catastrophe or nothing at all. Saubon claimed that the Holy War should break
camp immediately, seize the passes of the Southron Gates, and march into Gedea.
“This place oppresses us!” he cried, gesturing to the tiers of ruin. “We
slumber and stir in the shadow of dread!” Ruom, he insisted, was a Nansur
superstition—a “shibboleth of the perfumed and the weak-hearted.” The longer
the Holy War loitered beneath its ruin, the more it would become their
superstition. If many saw sense in
these arguments, many others saw madness. Without the Scarlet Spires, Ikurei
Conphas reminded the Galeoth Prince, the Holy War would be at the mercy of the
Cishaurim. “According to my uncle’s spies, Skauras has assembled all the
Grandees of Shigek and awaits us in Gedea. Who’s to say the Cishaurim aren’t
waiting with him?” Proyas and his Scylvendi adviser, Cnaьir urs Skiotha,
agreed: to march without the Ainoni was errant foolishness. But no amount of
argument, it seemed, could sway Saubon and his confederates. The sun smouldered over
the western turrets, and they’d agreed on nothing save the obvious, such as
dispatching riders to locate the Ainoni, or sending Athjeari into Gedea to
gather intelligence. Otherwise it seemed certain the Holy War, so recently
reunited, would fracture once again. Proyas had fallen silent, his face buried
in his hands. Only Conphas continued to argue with Saubon, if trading
embittered insults could be called such. Then Anasurimbor Kellhus,
the impoverished Prince of Atrithau, stood from his place among those watching
and cried, “You mistake the meaning of what you see, all of you! The loss of
Ruom is no accident, but neither is it a curse!” Saubon laughed, shouting,
“Ruom is a talisman against the heathen, is it not?” “Yes,” the Prince of Atrithau
replied. “So long as the citadel stood, we could turn back. But now… Don’t you
see? Just beyond these mountains, men congregate in the tabernacles of the
False Prophet. We stand upon the heathen’s shore. The heathen’s shore!” He paused, looked at each
Great Name in turn. “Without Ruom there’s no
turning back… The God has burned our ships.” Afterward it was decided:
the Holy War would await the Ainoni and the Scarlet Spires. Far from Asgilioch, in
the centremost chamber of his great tent, Eleazaras, Grandmaster of the Scarlet
Spires, reclined in his chair, the one luxury he’d allowed himself for this mad
journey. Beneath him, his body slaves washed his feet in steaming water. Three
tripods illuminated the surrounding gloom. Smoke curled through the interior,
casting shadows that resembled water-stained script along the bellied canvas. The journey hadn’t been
as hard as he’d feared—thus far. Nevertheless, evenings such as this always
seemed to occasion an almost shameful relief. At first he’d thought it was his
age: more than twenty years had passed since his last journey abroad. Weary
bones, he would think, watching his people labouring in evening light hoisting
tent and pavilion to the very horizon. Weary old bones. But when he recalled
those years spent hiking from mission to mission, city to city, he realized
that what he suffered now had nothing to do with weariness. He could remember
lying beside his fire beneath the stars, no grand pavilion overhead, no silk
pillows kissing his cheek, only hard ground and the humming exhaustion that
comes when a traveller falls completely still. That had been weariness. But this? Borne on litters,
surrounded by dozens of bare-chested slaves… The relief he experienced
every evening, he realized, had nothing to do with fatigue, and everything to
do with standing still… Which was to say, with Shimeh. Great decisions, he
reflected, were measured by their finality as much as by their consequences.
Sometimes he could feel it like a palpable thing: the path not taken, that fork
in history where the Scarlet Spires repudiated Maithanet’s outrageous offer and
watched the Holy War from afar. It didn’t exist and yet it lingered, the way a
night of passion might linger in the entreating look of a slave. He saw it
everywhere: in nervous silences, in exchanged glances, in lyokus’s unrelenting
cynicism, in General Setpanares’s scowl. And it seemed to mock him with
promise—just as the path he now walked mocked him with threat. Asgilioch ^ To join a Holy War!
Eleazaras dealt in unrealities; it was his trade. But the unreality of this,
the Scarlet Spires here, was well nigh indigestible. The
thought of it spawned ironies, not the ironies that cultured men— the Ainoni in
particular—savoured, but rather the ironies that reproduced themselves
endlessly, that reduced all determination to shaking indecision. Add to this the
accumulation of complications: the House Ikurei plotting with the heathen; the
Mandate playing some arcane Gnostic game every single Spires
agent in Sumna uncovered and executed—even though they seemed secure enough before the Scarlet Spires set foot in the Empire. Even
Maithanet, the Great Shriah of the Thousand Temples, worked some dark angle. Small wonder Shimeh
oppressed him. Small wonder each night seemed a respite. Eleazaras sighed as
Myaza, his new favourite, kneaded his right foot with warmed oil. No matter, he told himself. Regret is the opiate of fools. He leaned his head back,
watched the girl work through his eyelashes. “Myaza,” he said softly, grinning
at her modest smile. “Mmmyassssaaa…” “Hanamanu Eleazarassss,” she sighed in turn—daring wench! The other slaves
gasped in shock, then broke into giggles. Such a bad girl! Eleazaras thought. He leaned forward to scoop her
into his arms. But the sight of a black-gowned Usher kneeling on the carpets
halted him. Someone wished to see
him—obviously. Probably General Setpanares with more complaints about the
host’s sloth—which were really complaints about the Scarlet Spires’ sloth. So
the Ainoni would be the last to reach Asgilioch. What did it matter? Let them
wait. “What is it?” he snapped. The young man raised his
face. “A petitioner has come, Grandmaster.” “At this hour? Who?” The Usher hesitated. “A
magi of the MysunsaiSchool, Grandmaster. One
Skalateas.” Mysunsai? Whores—all of
them. “What does he want?” Eleazaras asked. Something churned in his
gut. More complications. “He wouldn’t say
specifically,” the Usher replied. “He says only that he’s ridden hard from
Momemn to speak with you on a matter of great urgency.” L “Panderer,” Eleazaras
spat. “Whore. Delay him momentarily, then him in.” After the man withdrew,
Eleazaras had his body slaves dry his feer and bind his sandals. He
then dismissed them. As the last slav hastened out, the man called Skalateas
was escorted in by two armoured Javreh. “Leave us,” Eleazaras
said to the warrior-slaves. They bowed low, then also withdrew. From his seat, he studied
the mercenary, who was clean shaven in the Nansur fashion, dressed in the
humble garments of a traveller: leggings, a plain brown smock, and leather
sandals. He seemed to tremble, as well he should. He stood before no less than
the Grandmasti of the Scarlet Spires. “This is most
impertinent, my mercenary brother,” Eleazaras said. “There are channels for
this kind of transaction.” “Begging your pardon,
Grandmaster, but there are no channels for what I have to… to trade.” In a rush
he added, “I’m-I’m a Whitewash Peralogue of the Mysunsai Order, Grandmaster,
contracted to the Imperial Family as an Auditor. The Emperor uses me, from time
to time, to confirm certain determinations made by his Imperial Saik…”
Eleazaras digested this, decided to be accommodating. “Continue.” “Sh-should we, ah… ah…” “Should we what?” “Should we discuss the fee 7* A caste-menial, of
course—suthenti. No appreciation of the game. But jnan, as the Ainoni were fond
of saying, brooked no consent. If one man played, everyone played. Rather than reply,
Eleazaras studied his long, painted nails, polished them absently against his
breast. He looked up as though caught in a small indiscretion, then studied the
fool like one burdened by determinations of life and death. The conjunction of
silence and scrutiny nearly undid the man. He clasped his shaking hands before
him. “F-forgive m-my
eagerness, Grandmaster,” Skalateas stammered, falling to his knees. “So often
are knowledge and greed… spurs to each other.” Asgilwch 4/ W done. The man was not
utterly devoid of wit. “Spurs indeed,” Eleazaras
said. “But perhaps you should let me decide which rides which.” “Of course, Grandmaster…
But…” “But nothing, whore. Out
with it.” “Of course, Grandmaster,”
he said again. “It’s the Fanim sorcerer-priests—the Cishaurim… Th-they have a
new kind oi spy.” The dramatics were
forgotten. Eleazaras leaned forward. “Tell me more.” “F-forgive me,
Grandmaster,” the man blurted. “B-but I would be paid before speaking any
further!” A fool after all. Time
was ever the scholar’s most precious commodity. Whore or not, the man should
have known that. Eleazaras sighed, then spoke the first impossible word. His
mouth and eyes burned as bright as phosphor. “No!” Skalateas cried. “Please! I’ll speak! There’s no
need…” Eleazaras paused, though
his arcane muttering continued to echo, as though thrown by walls not found in
this world. The silence, when it did come, felt absolute. “On-on the eve b-before
the Holy War marched from Momemn,” the man began, “I was summoned to the
Catacombs to observe what was supposed to be, they said, the interrogation of a
spy. Apparently the Emperor’s Prime Counsel—” “Skeaos?” Eleazaras
exclaimed. “A spy?” The Mysunsai hesitated,
licked his lips. “Not Skeaos… Someone masquerading as him. Or something…” Eleazaras nodded. “You
have my attention, Skalateas.” “The Emperor himself was
present at the interrogation. He demanded, quite stridently, that I contradict
the findings of the Saik, that I tell him sorcery was involved… The Prime
Counsel was—as you know—an old man, and yet he’d apparently killed or maimed
several members of the Eothic Guard during his arrest—with his bare hands, they said. The Emperor was, well… overwrought.” “So what did you see,
Auditor? Did you see the Mark?” “No. Nothing. He was
unbruised. There was no sorcery whatsoever involved. But when I said as much to
the Emperor, he accused me of HE TIRST MARCH conspiring with the Saik
to overthrow him. Then the Mandate Schoolman arrived—escorted by Ikurei Conphas
no—“ “Mandate Schoolman?”
Eleazaras said. “You mean Drusas Achamian?” Skalateas swallowed. “You
know him? We Mysunsai no longer bother with the Mandate. Does your Eminence
maint—” “Do you wish to sell
knowledge, Skalateas, or trade it?” The Mysunsai smiled
nervously. “Sell it, of course.” “So then what happened
next?” “The Mandati confirmed my
determination, and the Emperor accused him of lying as well. As I said, the
Emperor was… was…” “Overwrought.” “Yes. Even more so at
this point. But the Mandati, Achamian, also seemed agitated. They argued—” “Argued?” For some reason
that didn’t surprise Eleazaras. “About what?” The Mysunsai shook his
head. “I can’t remember. Something about fear, I think. Then the Prime Counsel
began speaking to the Mandati—in some language
I’ve never heard. He recognized him.” “Recognized? Are you
sure?” “Utterly… Skeaos, or
whatever it was, recognized Drusas Achamian. Then he—it—began shaking. We just stood gaping. Then it wrenched
its chains from the wall… Freed itself!” “Did Drusas Achamian
assist him?” “No. He was as horrified
as the rest of us—if not more so. In the uproar, it killed two or three
men—I’ve never seen anything move so fast! That was when the Saik intervened,
burned him… Now that I think about it, burned him over the Mandati’s
objections. The man was wroth.” “Achamian tried to
intercede?” “To the point of
sheltering the Prime Counsel with his own body.” “You’re certain about
that?” “Absolutely. I’ll never
forget because that was when the Prime Counsel’s face… That was when his face… unpeeled.” “Unpeeled…” “Or unfolded… Its face
just… just opened, like fingers but… I know of no other way to
describe it.” “Like fingers?” AsgiLwch This can’t be! He lies! “You doubt me. You
mustn’t, your Eminence! This spy was a double, a mimic without the Mark! And that means he must be an artifact of the Psukhe.
The Cishaurim. It means they have spies you cannot see.” Numbness spilled like
water from Eleazaras’s chest to his limbs. I’ve ivagered m^ School. “But their Art is too
crude…” Skalateas looked
curiously heartened. “Nevertheless, it’s the only explanation. They’ve found
some way of creating perfect spies… Think! How long have they
owned the Emperor’s ear? The Emperor! Who knows how many…” He paused,
apparently wary of speaking too close to the heart of the matter. “But this is
why I rode so hard to find you. To warn you. Eleazaras’s mouth had
become very dry. He tried to swallow. “You must stay with us, of course, so
that we can… interview you, further.” The man’s face had become
the very picture of dread. “I’m af-afraid that won’t be possible, y-your
Eminence. I’m expected back at the Imperial
Court.” Eleazaras clasped his
hands to conceal the tremors. “You work for the Scarlet Spires, now, Skalateas.
Your contract with House Ikurei is dissolved.” “Ah, y-your Eminence, as
much as I abase myself before your glory and power—I am your slave!—I fear that
Mysunsai contracts cannot be dissolved by fiat. N-not even yours. S-so if I
c-could coll-collect my-my…” “Ah yes, your fee.”
Eleazaras stared hard at the Mysunsai, smiled with deceptive mildness. Poor
fool. To think he’d underestimated the value of his information.
This was worth far more than gold. Far more. The Mysunsai’s face had
gone blank. “I suppose I could delay my departure.” “You sup—” At that point, Eleazaras
almost died. The man had started his Cant the instant of Eleazaras’s reply,
purchasing a heartbeat’s advantage— almost enough. Lightning cut the air,
skipped and thundered across the Grandmaster’s reflexive Wards. Momentarily
blinded, Eleazaras tipped back in his chair and tumbled across
the carpeted ground. He was singing before he found his knees. The air danced with hammering
lights. Flurries of burning sparrows The fool cried out,
sputtered as best he could, trying to reinforce his Wards. But for Hanumanu
Eleazaras, the Grandmaster of the Scarlet Spires, he was little more than a
child’s riddle, easily solved. Bird after fiery bird swept into him. Immolation
after immolation, battering his Wards to ruin. Then chains flashed from corners
of empty air, piercing limbs and shoulders, crossing as though looped between a
child’s fingers, until the man hung suspended. Threaded. Skalateas screamed. Javreh charged into the
room, weapons drawn, only to halt, horror-stricken, before the spectacle of the
Mysunsai. Eleazaras barked at them to leave. He glimpsed his Master of
Spies, Iyokus, fighting his way past the retreating warrior-slaves. The chanv
addict fairly tumbled across the carpets, his red-irised eyes wide, his bruised
lips agog. Eleazaras couldn’t recall seeing such passion in the man’s
expression—at least not since the Cishaurim’s fateful attack ten years before… Their declaration of war. “Eli!” Iyokus cried,
staring at Skalateas’s impaled and writhing form. “What’s this?” The Grandmaster absently
stamped at a small fire burning on the carpets. “A gift to you, old friend.
Another enigma for you to interpret. Another threat…” “Threat?” the man cried.
“What’s the meaning of this, Eli? What’s happened here?” Eleazaras studied the
screaming Mysunsai—a scholar distracted by his work. What do I do? “That Mandate Schoolman,”
Eleazaras snapped, turning to Iyokus. “Where’s he now?” “Marching with Proyas—or
so I assume… Eli? Tell me—” “Drusas Achamian must be
brought to me,” Eleazaras continued. “Brought to me or killed.” Iyokus’s expression
darkened. AsgiUoch “Something like that
requires time… planning… He’s a Mandate
Schoolman, Eli!
Not to mention the risk of reprisals… What, do we war against both the
Cishaurim and the Mandate? Either way, nothing will be done until I know what’s going on. It is my
right!” Eleazaras studied the
man, matched his unsettling gaze. For perhaps the first time he felt comforted
rather than chilled by his translucent skin. Iyokus? h has to be you, doesn’t it? “This must seem,” he
said, “irrational…” “Indeed. Mai even.” “Trust me, old friend.
It’s not. Need makes all things rational.” “Why this evasion?” Iyokus
cried. “Patience…” Eleazaras
replied, gathering with his wind the dignity which behooved a Grandmaster. This
was an occasion for control. Calculation. “First you must humour my madness,
Iyokus… And then let me recount the grounds that
make it sane. First you must let me handle your face.” “And why’s that?” the man
asked. Astonishment. From what seemed a
distant place, Skalateas wailed. “I must know that there
are bones beneath… Proper bones.” For the first time since
leaving Momemn, Achamian found himself alone with the evening fire. Proyas was
hosting a temple fete for the other Great Names, and everyone save the sorcerer
and the slaves had been invited. So Achamian had decided to host a celebration
of his own. He drank to the sun, which leaned against the shoulders of the
Unaras Spur, to Asgilioch and her broken towers, and to the encamped Holy War,
her innumerable fires glittering in the dusk. He drank until his head drooped
before the flames, until his thoughts became a slurry of arguments, pleas, and
regrets. Telling Kellhus about his
dilemma, he now knew, had been rash. Two weeks had passed
since his confession. During this time, the Conriyan contingent had abandoned
the stone of the Sogian Way
for the scrub and sandy slopes of the Inunara Highlands. He had walked with
Kellhus much as before, answering his questions, pondering his remarks—and
wondering, always wondering, at the heart and intellect Asguioch of the man. On the
surface, everything was the same, save the lack of a road to follow.
But beneath, everything had changed. He’d thought sharing
would ease his burden, that honesty would absolve his shame. How could he be
such a fool, thinking that the secrecy of his dilemma had caused his
anguish, rather than the dilemma? If anything, secrecy had been a balm. Now
every time he and Kellhus exchanged glances, Achamian saw his anguish reflected
and reproduced until at times it seemed he couldn’t breathe. Far from lessening
his burden, he’d doubled it. “What,” Kellhus had
subsequently asked, “will the Mandate do if you tell them?” “Take you to Atyersus.
Confine you. Interrogate you… Now that they know the Consult runs amok, they’ll
do anything to exercise the semblance of control. For that reason alone, they’d
never let you go.” “Then you mustn’t tell
them, Akka!” There had been an anger and an anxiousness to these words, a cross
desperation that reminded him of Inrau. “And the Second
Apocalypse. What about that?” “But are you sure? Sure enough to
wager an entire life?” A life for the world. Or the world for a life. “You don’t understand!
The stakes, Kellhus! Think of what’s at
stake!” “How,” Kellhus had
replied, “can I think of anything else?” The Cultic priestesses of
Yatwer, Achamian had once heard, always dragged two victims—usually spring lambs—to the sacrificial
altar, one to pass under the knife, the
other to witness the sacred passage. In this way, every beast thrown upon
the altar always knew, in its dim way, what was about to happen. For the
Yatwerians, ritual wasn’t enough: the transfer- mation of casual
slaughter into true sacrifice required recognition. One lamb for ten bulls, a
priestess had told him once, as though she possessed the calculus to measure
such things. One lamb for ten bulls.
At the time, Achamian had laughed. Now he understood. Before the dilemma had
overwhelmed in a harried, flinching way, like some secret perversion. But now
that Kellhus knew, it simply overwhelmed. Before
Achamian could find respite, from time to time, in the man’s remarkable
company. He could pretend to be a simple teacher. But now, the dilemma had become
something between them, something always there whether Achamian averted his eyes or not. There was
no more pretending, no more “forgetting.” Only the knife of inaction. And wine. Sweet unwatered
wine. When they’d arrived at
half-ruined Asgilioch, Achamian began, more out of desperation than anything
else, teaching Kellhus algebra, geometry, and logic. What better way to impose
clarity on soul-bruising confusion, certainty on rib-gnawing doubt? While the
others watched from nearby, laughing, scratching their heads, or in the
Scylvendi’s case, glowering, Achamian and Kellhus spent hours scratching proofs
across the bare earth. Within days the Prince of Atrithau was improvising new
axioms, discovering theorems and formulae that Achamian had never imagined
possible, let alone encountered in the classic texts. Kellhus even proved to
him—proved!—that the logic of Ajencis as laid out in The Sylhgistics was preceded by a more basic logic, one which used relations between entire sentences
rather than subjects and predicates. Two thousand years of comprehension and
insight overturned by the strokes of a stick across dust! “How?” he’d cried. “How?” Kellhus shrugged. “This
is simply what I see.” He’s here, Achamian had thought absurdly, but he doesn’t stand beside me… If all men saw from where they
stood, then Kellhus stood somewhere else—that much was undeniable. But did he
stand beyond the pale of Drusas Achamian’s judgement? Ah, the question. More
drink was required. Achamian rooted through
his satchel, his only fireside companion, and withdrew the map he’d sketched—so
long ago it now seemed—while journeying from Sumna to Momemn. He held it to the
firelight, blinked several bleary times. All of them, every name scratched in black,
was connected, except for ANASURIMBOR KELLHUS Relations. Like
arithmetic or logic it all came down to relations. Achamian had inked those
relations he knew without a doubt, such as the link between the Consult and the
Emperor, and even those he simply Asgilioch X) assumed or feared, such
as that between Maithanet and Inrau. Ink lines-one for the Consult infiltration
of the Imperial Court,
another for Inrau’s murder, another for the Scarlet Spires’ war against the
Cishaurim another for the Holy War’s reconquest of Shimeh, and so on. Ink lines
for relations. A thin skeleton of black. But where did Kellhus fit? Where? Achamian suddenly
cackled, resisted the urge to throw the parchment into the fire. Smoke. Wasn’t
that what relations were in truth? Not ink, but smoke. Hard to see and
impossible to grasp. And wasn’t that the problem? The problem with everything? The thought of smoke
brought Achamian to his feet. He swayed for a moment, then bent to retrieve his
satchel. Again he debated tossing the map into the flames, but thought better
of it—he was a veteran of many drunken blunders—and stuffed the parchment back
with his things. With his satchel and
Xinemus’s wineskin slung over opposite shoulders, he stumbled off into the
darkness, laughing to himself and thinking, Yes, smoke… 1 need smoke. Hashish. Why not? The world was
about to end. Galeoth roar, first in
Sheyic, then in his native tongue. “Wossen het As the sun set behind the
Unaras Spur, each point of firelight became a circle of illumination, until the
encampment became gold coins scattered across black cloth. Among the first to
arrive, the Conriyans had pitched their pavilions on the heights immediately
below Asgilioch and its ready supply of water. As a result Achamian travelled
down, always down, into what seemed an ever darker and more raucous underworld. He walked and stumbled,
exploring the shadowy arteries between pavilions. He passed many others: groups
carousing from camp to camp, drunks searching for latrines, slaves on errands,
even a Gilgallic priest chanting and swinging the carcass of a hawk from a
leather string. From time to time he slowed, stared at the ruddy faces crowded
about each fire, laughed at their antics or pondered their scowls. He watched
them strut and posture, beat their breasts and bellow at the mountains. Soon
they would descend upon the heathen. Soon they would close with their hated
foe. “The God has burned our ships!” Achamian heard one bare-chested Periodically he paused to
search the darkness behind him. Old habit. After a time he found
himself weary and nearly out of wine. He’d trusted Fate, Anagke, to take him to
the camp-followers; she was, after all, called “the Whore.” But as with
everything else, she’d led him astray— the fucking whore. He began daring the
light to find directions. “Wrong way, friend,” an
older man missing his front teeth told him at one camp. “Only mules rutting
here. Oxen and mules.” “Good…” Achamian said,
clutching his groin in the familiar Tydonni manner, “at least the proportions
will be right.” The old man and his comrades burst into laughter. Achamian
winked and tipped back his wineskin. “Then that way,” some wit
called from the fire, pointing to the darkness beyond. “I hope your ass has
deep pockets!” Achamian coughed wine
from his nose, then spent several moments bent over, hacking. The general
merriment this caused won him a place by their fire. An inveterate traveller,
Achamian was accustomed to the company of warlike strangers, and for a time he
enjoyed their companionship, their wine, and his own anonymity. But when their
questions became too pointed, he thanked them and took his leave. Drawn by the throb of
drums, Achamian crossed a portion of the camp that seemed deserted, then quite
without warning found himself in the precincts of the camp-followers. Suddenly
all the activity seemed concentrated between the fires. With every step he
bumped some shoulder, pressed some back. In some places, he pressed through
crowds in almost total darkness, with only heads, shoulders, and the odd face frosted
by the Nail of Heaven’s pale light. In others, torches had been hammered into
the earth, either for musicians, merchants, or leather-panelled brothels.
Several avenues even boasted hanging lanterns. He saw young Men of the Tusk—no
more than boys, really—vomiting from too much drink. He saw ten-year-old girls
drawing thick-waisted warriors behind curtained canopies. He even glimpsed a
boy wearing smeared cosmetics, who watched with fearful promise as man after
man passed. He saw craftsmen manning stalls, walked past more than a few
impromptu smithies. Beneath the rambling canopies of an opium den, he saw men
twitch as though beset by flies. He
passed the gilded pavilions of the Cults: Gilgaol Yatwer, Momas, Ajokli, even
elusive Onkis, who’d been Inrau’s passion as well as innumerable others. He
waved away the ever-present beggars and laughed at the adepts who pressed clay
blessing-tablets into his hands. For tracts of his journey, Achamian saw no
tents at all, only rough shelters improvised from sticks, twine, and painted
leather, or in some cases, a simple mat. While wandering one alley, Achamian
saw no less than a dozen couples, male and female or male and male, rutting in
plain view. Once he paused to watch an improbably beautiful Norsirai girl gasp
between the exertions of two men, only to be accosted by a black-toothed man
with a stick, demanding coin. Afterward he watched an ancient, tattooed hermit
try to force himself on a fat drab. He saw black-skinned Zeumi harlots dancing
in their strange, puppet-limbed manner and dressed in gaudy gowns of false
silk—caricatures of the ornate elegance that so characterized their faraway
land. The first woman found him
more than the other way around. As he walked through a particularly gloomy
alley between canvas shanties, he heard a rattle, then felt small hands groping
for his groin from behind. When he turned and embraced her, she seemed shapely
enough, though he could see little of her face in the dark. She was already
rubbing his manhood through his robe, murmuring, “Jusht a copper, Lord. Jusht a
copper for your sheed…” He could sense her sour smile. “Two coppersh for my
peach. Do you want my peach ?” Almost despite himself,
he leaned into her whisking hands—gasped. Then a file of torch-bearing
cavalrymen—Imperial Kidruhil—rumbled by, and he glimpsed her face: vacant eyes
and ulcerated lips… He pressed her back,
fumbling for his purse. He fished out a copper, meant to hand it to her, but
fumbled it onto the ground instead. She fell to her knees, started combing the
blackness, grunting… Achamian fled. A short time after, he found himself
prowling the darkness, watching a group of prostitutes about their fire. They
sang and clapped while a wanton, flat-chested Ketyai woman pranced around the
flames, wearing only a blanket that reached her hips. This was a common custom,
Achamian knew. They would each take turns, dancing lewdly and calling out into
the surrounding blackness, declaring their wares and their station. Asgilwch He reviewed the women
from the shelter of darkness first, so as to avoid the embarrassment of
choosing in their presence. The girl who danced didn’t appeal to him—too much
of a horse’s mien. But the young ]slorsirai girl, who rolled her pretty face to
the song like a child… She sat on the ground with her knees haphazardly before
her, the firelight chancing upon her inner thighs. When he finally walked
into their midst, they began shouting like slavers at auction, offering
promises and praise that became mockery the instant he took the Galeoth girl by
the hand. Despite the drink, he felt so nervous he could barely breathe. She
looked so beautiful. So soft and unspoiled. Picking a candle from a
small row of votives, she pulled him into the blackness, led him to the last in
a row of crude shelters. She shed her blanket and crawled beneath the stained
leather. Achamian stood above her, panting, wanting to breathe deep the pale
glory of her naked form. The far wall of her shelter, however, consisted of
little more than rags knotted into ropes. Through it, he could see hundreds of
people pressing in this direction and that through a shadowy thoroughfare. “You want fuck me, yes?”
she said as though nothing could be amiss. “Oh, yes,” he mumbled.
Where had his breath gone? Sweet Sejenus. “Fuck me many time? Eh,
Baswutt?” He laughed nervously.
Peered through the rag curtain once again. Two men were cursing at each other,
scuffling near enough to make Achamian flinch. “Many times,” he replied,
knowing this to be the polite way to discuss price. “How many do you think?” “Think four… Four silver
times.” Silver? Obviously she’d
confused his embarrassment for inexperience. Even still, what was money on a
night like this? He celebrated, didn’t he? He shrugged, saying, “An
old man like me?” In this particular
language, the man was forced to deride his own prowess in order to strike a
fair bargain. If he was poor, he complained of being old, infirm, and so on.
Arrogant men, Esmenet had told him once, usually fared poorly in these
negotiations—which, of course, was the point. Harlots hated nothing more than
men who arrived already believing the flattering
lies they would tell them. Esmi called them the simustarapari, or “those-who-spit-twice.” The Galeoth girl studied
him with nebulous eyes: she’d started petting herself in the gloom. “You so
strong,” she said, suddenly thick-tongued. “Like Baswutt… Strong! Two silver times think?” Achamian laughed, tried
hard not to watch her fingers. The ground had started a slow spin. For an
instant she looked pale and skinny in the dark, like an abused slave. The mat
beneath her looked rough enough to cut her skin… He’d drunk too much. Not too much! Just enough… The ground steadied. He
swallowed, nodded his agreement, then pulled the two coins from his purse.
“What does ‘Baswutt’ mean?” he asked, slipping the silver into her small,
waiting palm. “Hmmm?” she replied,
smiling triumphantly. She stashed the two white-shining talents with startling
swiftness—What would she buy? he wondered—then looked back at him with large
questioning eyes. “What does that mean?” he repeated, more slowly. “Baswutt…”
She frowned, then giggled. “For ‘big bear’…” She was full-breasted,
mature, but something about her manner reminded him of a little girl. The
guileless smile. The rolling eyes and bouncing chin. The knees opening and
closing like butterfly wings. Achamian half-expected a scolding mother to come
barging between them. Was that part of the pantomime as well? Like the
shameless banter? His heart hammered. He knelt where her toys
should have been, between her legs. She squirmed and writhed, as though the
threat of his mere presence would make her climax. “Fuck me, Baswutt,” she
gasped. “Emmmbaswutt… Fuck-me-fuck-me-fuck-me… Mmmm, pleassseee…” He swayed, caught
himself, chuckled. He began hitching up his robe, glanced nervously at the
shadowy stream of passersby through the curtain. They walked so close he could
spit on their shins. He tried to ignore the
smell. His smell. “Oooh, such big bear,” she cooed, stroking his cock. Suddenly, his
apprehension melted away, and some deranged part of him actually exulted in the
thought of others watching. Let them watch! Let them leam! Asgmocn Always the teacher… Cackling, he seized her
narrow hips, pulled her across his thighs. How he’d yearned for this moment! To
have licence with a stranger It seemed there could be nothing
so sweet as a fresh peach! He was trembling! Trembling! She moaned silver, cried
gold. Faces turned in the passing crowd. Through the knotted rags, Achamian saw
Esmenet. “Esmi!” Achamian
hollered, barrelling through arms and shoulders. The Galeoth girl was crying
out something behind him—some gibberish. He glimpsed Esmenet
again, hurrying along a row of torches that fronted the canopies of a Yatwerian
lazaret. A tall man, sporting the matted braids of a Thunyeri warrior, held her
arm, but she seemed to be leading. “Esmi!” he cried, jumping
to be seen above the screens of people. She didn’t turn. “Esmi! Stop!” Why would she run? Had
she seen him with the drab? For that matter, what
would she be doing here? “Dammit, Esmenet! It’s
me! Me!” Did she glance back? It
was too dark to tell… For a heartbeat, he
debated using sorcery: he could blind the entire quarter if he wished. But.as
always, he could sense the small points of death scattered throughout the surrounding
crowds: Men of the Tusk, bearing their hereditary Chorae… He redoubled his efforts,
began lunging through the mobs. Someone struck him, hard enough to leave his
ears ringing, but he didn’t care. “Esmi!” He glimpsed her pulling
the Thunyeri into an even darker byway. He stumbled free of what seemed the
last thicket of people, then sprinted to the mouth of the alley. He hesitated
before plunging into the blackness, struck by a sudden premonition of disaster.
Esmenet here? In the Holy War? There was no way. A trap. A thought like a
knife. The ground had resumed
spinning. If the Consult could
fashion a Skeaos, couldn’t they fashion an Esmenet as well? If they knew about
Inrau, then they almost certainly knew about her… What
better way to gull a heartsick Schoolman than to… A skin-spy? Do I chase a skin-spy? In his soul’s eye, he saw
Geshrunni’s corpse pulled from the River Sayut. Murdered. Desecrated. Sweet Sejenus, they took his face. Could the same have happened… “Esmi!” he cried,
charging into the darkness. “Esmi! Essmmь!” Miraculously, she paused
with her escort in the light of a single torch, either alarmed by his cries or… Achamian staggered to a
stop before her, utterly dumbstruck. He reeled. It wasn’t her—the brown eyes were smaller, the cheeks too high.
Almost, but no… Almost Esmenet. “Another madman,” the
woman snorted to her companion. “I-I thought…” Achamian
murmured. “I thought you were someone else.” “Poor girl,” she sneered,
turning her back. “No, wait! Please…” “Please, what?” Achamian blinked at his
tears. She looked so… so close. “I need you,” he whispered. “I
need your… your comfort.” Without warning, the
Thunyeri seized him by the throat, hammered him in the gut. “Kundrout!” the man bellowed. “Parasafau ferautin kun dattas!” Winded, Achamian coughed and
clawed at the man’s massive forearm. Panic. Then gravel and rock—ground—slammed
against his chest and cheek. Concussion. Bright blackness. Someone screaming.
The taste of blood. A dim image of the wild-haired warrior spitting on him. He convulsed, rolled to
his side. Sobbed, then pressed himself to his knees. Through tears he saw their
retreating backs disappear in thickets of people. “Esmi!” he bawled.
“Esmenet, please!” Such an old-fashioned
name. “Esssmmьь!” Come back… Then he felt the touch.
Heard the voice. “Still fetching sticks, I
see… Tired old dog.” Asguiocn Glimpses of menace by
torchlight. Her slender arms bracing
him, they stumbled through a gallery of darkling faces. She smelled of camphor
and the oil of sesame—like a Fanim merchant. Could that be her smell? “Sweet Seja, Akka, you’re
a mess.” “Esmi?” “Yes… It’s me, Akka. Me.” “Your face…” “Some Galeoth ingrate.”
Bitter laugh. “That’s the way it is with Men of the Tusk and their whores. If
you can’t fuck them, beat them.” “Oh, Esmi…” “Once the swelling starts
I’ll look a caste-noble virgin compared to you. Did you hear me scream when
he-he kicked you in the face? What were you doing?” “I’m-I’m not sure…
L-looking for you…” “Shush, Akka… Shhhhh… Not
here. After.” “J-just say it… M-my
name. Just say it!” “Drusas Achamian… Akka.” And he wept, so hard that
at first he didn’t realize she wept with him. Perhaps driven by the
same impulse, they retreated into the blackness behind a dark pavilion, fell to
their knees and embraced. “It’s really you…”
Achamian murmured, seeing twin moons reflected in her wet eyes. She laughed and sobbed.
“Really me…” His lips burned with the
salt of mingled tears. He pulled her left breast free of her hasas, began
circling her nipple with his thumb. “Why did you leave Sumna?” “I was afraid,” she
whispered, kissing his forehead and cheeks. “Why am I always afraid?“ “Because you breathe.” A passionate kiss. Hands
fumbling in the blackness, tugging, clutching. The ground spun. He leaned back,
and she hooked burning thighs about his waist. Then he was inside, and she
gasped. They sat motionless for several
heartbeats, throbbing together exch shallow breaths.“gerner, exchanging “Never again,” Achamian
said. “Promise?” She wiped at her face. Sniffled He began slowly rocking her.
“Promise man, Nailing… “she moaned. For
a time, they seemed one being, dancing about n »ay,n8
from theMmebreatHe8s ^ Ј “I’ve already been
robbed,” she said, trying to smile «IW I h things left. Not far from here.“But I have a few “Will you stay with me?”
he asked with tearful earnestness. “Can you-He watched her swallow, blink. itTti can. He laughed, pushed
himself to his feet. “Then let’s get your things ” her hand into his waiting They walked slowly, like
lovers strolling through a bazaar. Penodically Achamian would stare into her
eyes and laugh in disbelief.* J thought you were gone,“ he said once. “But I’ve always been
here.” Rather than ask what she r Just let this night last. Please… ive me this one mght Asgilioch w rhe Holy War. The
unspoken regions between them were well-marked, and for the moment, they
steered each other clear of painful boundaries. They paused to watch a
mummer dip a leather rope into a basket filled ith scorpions. When he pulled it
clear, it seethed with chitinous limbs, pincers, and stabbing tails. This, the
man proclaimed, was the famed Scorpion Braid, which the Kings of Nilnamesh
still used to punish mortal crimes. When the audience encircled him, anxious
for a closer look, he raised the Braid high for everyone to see, then suddenly
began swinging it over their heads. Women screamed, men ducked or raised their
hands, but not a single scorpion flew from the rope. The rope, the mummer cried
over the commotion, was soaked in a poison that seized the scorpions’ jaws.
Without the antidote, he said, they would remain locked to the leather until
they died. For much of the
demonstration, Achamian watched and delighted in Esmenet’s expression, all the
while wondering that she could seem so new. He found himself discovering things
he’d never before noticed. The dusting of freckles across her nose and cheeks.
The extraordinary white of her eyes. The smattering of auburn through her
luxurious black hair. The athletic slope of her back and shoulders. Everything
about her, it seemed, possessed a bewitching novelty. I must always see her like .this. As the stranger I love… Each time their glances
met, they laughed as though celebrating a fortuitous reunion. But they always
looked away, as though knowing their momentary bliss wouldn’t bear examination.
Then something, a flicker of anxiousness perhaps, passed between them, and they
ceased looking at each other altogether. A sudden hollow opened in the heart of
Achamian’s elation. He clutched her hand for reassurance, but she left her
fingers slack. After several moments,
Esmenet tugged him to a stop in the light of several bright burning pots. She
stared into his face, expressionless save for the hard set of her jaw. “Something’s different,”
she said. “Before, you could always pretend. Even when Inrau died. But now…
something’s different. What’s happened?” He shied from answering
her. It was too soon. “I’m a Mandate
Schoolman,” he said lamely. “What can I say? We all suffer…” She fixed him with a
canny scowl. “Knowledge,” she said. “You all suffer knowledge… If you suffer
more, it means you’ve learned more… Is that it? Have you learned more?” Achamian stared straight
ahead, said nothing. It was too soon! She looked past him,
sorted through the shadowy crowds. “Would you like to hear what’s happened to
me?” “Leave it be, Esmi.” She flinched, turned
away, blinking. She pulled her hand free and resumed walking. “Esmi…” he said,
following her. “You know,” she said, “it
hasn’t been bad, save the odd beating. Plenty of custom. Plenty of—” “That’s enough, Esmi.” She laughed, acted as if
she were engaged in a different, more frank conversation. “I’ve even lain with lords… Caste-nobles, Akka! Imagine. Even their cocks are
bigger—Did you know that? I wouldn’t know about the Ainoni—they seem to prefer
boys. And the Conriyans, they flock about the Galeoth sluts—all that milk-white
skin, you know. But the Columns, the Nansur, they like their peaches homegrown,
though they rarely stray from the military brothels. And the Thunyeri! They can
scarce bridle their seed when my knees flop open! Brutes though, especially
when they’re drunk. Stingy bastards, too. Oh, and the Galeoth— there’s a treat.
They complain I’m too skinny, but they love my skin. If it weren’t for the
guilt and anger afterward, they’d be my favourites. They’re not accustomed to
whores… Not enough old cities in their country, I think. Not enough barter…” She studied Achamian, her
look both bitter and shrewd. He walked, his eyes welded forward. “Custom has been good,”
she said, looking away. The old rage had returned, the one that had driven him
from her arms months before. He clenched his fists, saw himself shaking her,
striking her. Fucking whore! he wanted to scream. Why tell him this? Why
tell him what he couldn’t bear to hear? Especially when she had her own things
to answer for… Asgilioch Why did you leave Sumna? How long have
you been hiding from me? How long? But before he could say
anything, she veered from the armed throngs and walked toward a fire surrounded
by painted faces—more harlots. “Esmi!” a dark-haired
woman called out in a brusque, even mannish, voice. “Who’s your—” She paused,
getting a better look, then laughed. “Who’s your hapless friend?” She was
stout-limbed and thick-waisted, but without being fat—the kind of woman, Esmi
had told him once, prized by certain Norsirai men. Achamian immediately
recognized her as someone who confused ill manners with daring. Esmenet halted, hesitated
long enough to make Achamian frown. “This is Akka.” The drab’s heavy eyebrows
popped up. “The infamous Drusas Achamian?” the woman said. “The Schoolman?” Achamian looked to
Esmenet. Who was this woman? “This is Yasellas,” Esmenet said, speaking the woman’s name as though
it explained everything. “Yassi.” Yasellas’s appraising
stare remained fixed on Achamian. “So what are you doing here, Akka?” He shrugged, saying, “I
follow the Holy War.” “The same as us!”
Yasellas exclaimed. “Though you might say we march for a different Tusk…” The
other prostitutes burst out laughing— like men. “And the little prophet,”
another said, her voice hoarse. “Good for only one sermon…” All the women howled,
with the exception of Yassi, who only smiled. More jokes followed, but
Esmenet was already pulling him into the darkness, toward what must have been
her shelter. “All of us camp in
bands,” she said, pre-empting any questions or observations. “We watch out for
one another.” “So I gathered…” “This is mine,” she said,
kneeling before the greased canvas flaps of a low wedge tent not so unlike his
own. Achamian found himself relieved: without a word she crawled into the
blackness. Achamian followed. Within, there was barely
enough room to sit upright. Beneath the incense, the air smelled of rutting—if
only because Achamian couldn’t stop imagining her with
her men. She disrobed in the routine manner of a harlot, and he studied her
lithe, small-breasted silhouette. She looked so frail in the remains of the
firelight, so small and desolate. The thought of her pinioned here, night after
night, beneath man after man… must make this right! “Do you have a candle?”
he asked. “Some… But we’ll be
burned.” Fire was the perennial fear of those raised in cities. “No,” he replied. “Never
with me…” She withdrew a candle
from a bundle in the corner, and Achamian ignited it with a word. In Sumna,
she’d always marvelled at such tricks. Now, she simply regarded him with a kind
of resigned wariness. They both blinked in the
light. She drew a stained blanket across her lap, stared vacantly at the snarl
of coverings between them. He swallowed.“Esmi? Why tell me… all that.” “Because I had to know,” she replied, looking
down at her hands. “Know what? What makes my hands shake? What makes my eyes
dart in terror?” Her shoulders hitched in
the gloom; Achamian realized she was sobbing. “You pretended I wasn’t
there,” she whispered. “I what?” “That last night at
Momemn… I came to you. I watched your camp, your friends, only hidden because I
was too afraid that I would… that I would… But you weren’t there, Akka! So I
waited and waited. Then I saw… I saw you … I
wept with joy, Akka! Wept! I stood there, right before you, weeping! I held out
my arms, and you… and you…” The anguished light in her eyes dulled, flickered
out. She finished in a different voice—far colder. “You pretended I wasn’t
there.” What was she talking
about? Achamian pressed palms to his forehead, wrestled with the urge to lash
out—to punish. She stood close enough to touch—after all this time!—and yet she
receded… He needed to understand. “Esmi?” he said slowly,
trying to collect his wine-addled wits. “What are you—” Asgilioch “What was it, Akka?” she
asked, rigid and cool. “Was I too polluted, too defiled? Too much a filthy
whore?” “No, Esmi, I—” “Too bruised a peach?” “Esmenet, listen to—” She laughed bitterly. “So
you’re going to take me to your tent, you say? Add me to the bushel—” He seized her by the
shoulders, crying, “You speak of bushels to me? You?“ But he immediately
repented, seeing his own savagery reflected in her terrified expression. She
had even flinched, as though expecting a blow. He noticed, as though for the
first time, the bruising about her left eye. Who did this? Not me. Not me… “Look at us,” he said,
releasing her and carefully drawing back his hands. Both beaten. Both outcasts. “Look at us,” she
mumbled, tears spilling down her cheeks. “I can explain, Esmi…
Everything.” She nodded, rubbed her
shoulders where he’d grabbed her. Female voices chimed in unison outside—they
had started singing like the other harlots, promising soft thighs for hard
silver. Firelight glittered through the open flaps, like gold through dark
waters. “That night you’re
talking about… Sweet Sejenus, Esmi, if I didn’t see you, it wasn’t because I
was ashamed of you! How could I be? How could
anyone—let alone a sorcerer!—be ashamed of a woman such as
you?” She bit her lip, smiled
through more tears. “Then why?” Achamian rolled to his
side and laid next to her, his eyes searching the dark canvas above. “Because I found them, Esmi—that very night… I found the Consult.” “I remember nothing after
that,” he concluded. “I know 1 walked through the night, all the way from the
Imperial Precincts to Xinemus’s camp, but I remember none of it…” The words had splashed
from him, an inarticulate rush, painting the horrific events that transpired
that night beneath the AndiamineHeights. The
unprecedented summons. The meeting with Ikurei Xerius III. The MARCH interrogation of Skeaos,
his Prime Counsel. The face-that-was-not-a-face unclenching like a woman’s
long-fingered fist. The dreadful conspiracy of skin. He told her about
everything except Kellhus… Esmenet had curled into
his arms to listen. Now she perched her chin on his chest. “Did the Emperor believe
you?” “No… I imagine he thinks
the Cishaurim were responsible. Men prefer new loves and old enemies.” “And Atyersus? What of
the Mandate?” “Excited and dismayed in
equal measure, or so I imagine…” He licked his lips. “I’m not sure. I haven’t
contacted them since first reporting to Nautzera. They probably think I’m dead
by now… Murdered because of what I know.” “Then they haven’t
contacted you…” “That’s not the way it works, remember?” “Yes, yes…” she replied,
rolling her eyes and smirking. “How does it go? With the Cants of Calling, you
need to know both the here, the individual, and the there, the location, to initiate
contact. Since you march, they have no idea where you are…” “Exactly,” he said,
bracing himself for the inevitable question to follow. Her eyes probed his,
compassionate yet guarded. “So then why haven’t you contacted them?” Achamian shuddered. He ran
shaking fingers through her hair. “I’m so glad you’re here,” he murmured. “So
glad you’re safe…” “Akka, what is it? You’re frightening me…” He closed his eyes,
breathed deep. “I met someone. Someone whose coming was foretold two thousand
years ago…” He opened his eyes, and she was still there. “An Anasurimbor.” “But that means…” Esmenet
frowned, stared into his chest. “You cried out that name in your sleep once,
woke me…” She looked up, peered into his face. “I remember asking you what it
meant, ‘Anasurimbor,’ and you said… you said…” “I don’t remember.” “You said that it named
the last ruling dynasty of ancient Kunьiri, and…” Her expression slackened in
horror. “This isn’t funny, Akka. You’re really scaring me!” Asgilioch She feared, Achamian
realized, because she believed… He gasped, blinked hot tears. Tears of joy. She really believes…All along she’s
believed! “No, Akka!” Esmenet
cried, clutching his chest. “This can’t be happening!“ How could life be so
perverse? That a Mandate Schoolman could celebrate the world’s
end. With Esmenet pressed
naked against him, he explained why he thought Kellhus, without any doubt, had
to be the Harbinger. She listened without comment, watched him with a fearful
expectancy. “Don’t you see?” he said,
as much to the surrounding darkness as to her. “If I tell Nautzera and the
others, they will take him… No matter whose
protection he enjoys.” “Will they kill him?” Achamian blinked away
disturbing images of past interrogations. “They’ll break him, murder who he
is…” “Even still,” she said.
“Akka, you must surrender him.” There was no hesitation, no pause, only cold
eyes and remorseless judgement. For women, it seemed, the scales of threat and
love brooked no counterweights. “But this is a life, Esmi.” “Exactly,” she replied.
“A life… What difference does it make, the life of one man? So many die, Akka.”
The hard logic of a hard world. “It depends on the man, doesn’t it?” This gave her pause. “I
suppose it does,” she said. “So what kind of man is he? What kind of man is
worth risking Apocalypse?” Despite her sarcasm, he
could tell she feared his answer. Certainty despised complications, and she
needed to be certain. She
thinks she savesme, he realized. She needs me to be wrong for my sake … “He’s…” Achamian
swallowed. “He’s unlike any other man.” “How so?” A prostitute’s scepticism. “It’s difficult to
explain.” He hesitated, pondering his time with Kellhus. So many insights. So
many instants of awe. “You know how it feels when you stand on someone else’s
ground—on their property?” V1AKLH “I suppose… Like a
trespasser or a guest.” “Somehow that’s the way he makes you feel.
Like a guest.” An expression of distaste. “I’m not sure I like the sound of
that.” “Then it’s not how it sounds.” Achamian
breathed deeply, groped for the proper words. “There’s many… many grounds
between men. Some are mutual, and some are not. When you and I speak of the
Consult, for instance, you stand upon my ground, just as I stand upon your
ground when you discuss your… your life. But with Kellhus, it makes no
difference what you discuss or where you stand; somehow the ground beneath your
feet belongs to him. I’m always his guest—always! Even when I teach
him, Esmi!” “You teach him? You’ve
taken him as your student?” Achamian frowned. She
made it sound like a betrayal. “Just the exoterics,” he
said with a shrug, “the world. Not the esoterics. He’s not one of the Few…”
Almost as an afterthought, he added, “Thank the God.” “Why do you say that?” “Because of his
intellect, Esmi! You’ve no idea! I’ve never met such a subtle soul, neither in
life nor in book… Not even Ajencis, Esmi! Ajencis! If Kellhus possessed the ability to work sorcery,
he’d be… he’d be…” Achamian caught his breath. “What?” “Another Seswatha… More
than Seswatha…” “Then I like him even less. He sounds dangerous,
Akka. Let Nautzera and the others know. If they seize him, so be it. At least
you can wash your hands of this madness!” Fresh tears welled in his
eyes. “But…” “Akka,” she pressed,
“this burden isn’t yours to bear!” “But it is!” Esmenet pushed herself
from his chest, propping herself with an arm to lean over him. Her hair draped
over her left shoulder, an impenetrable black in the candlelight. She seemed
watchful, hesitant. “Is it? I think you say
this because of Inrau…” Cold clasped his heart.
Inrau. Sweet boy. Son. “And why not?” he cried
with sudden ferocity. “They killed him!” “But they sent you! They sent you to Sumna to turn Inrau, and that’s Asgilioch what you did, even though
you knew exactly what would happen… You told me this before you even contacted
him!“ “So what are you saying?
That I killed Inrau?” “I’m saying that’s what you think. You think you killed him.” Oh, Achamian, her tone said, please… “And what if I do? Does
that mean I should relent a second time? Let those fools in Atyersus doom
another man that I—” “No, Achamian. It means
you’re not doing this—any of this!—to save this-this Anasurimbor Kellhus.
You’re doing it to punish yourself.” He stared, dumbstruck.
Was that what she thought? “You say this,” Achamian
breathed, “because you know me so well…” He reached out, traced the pale edge
of her breast with a finger. “And Kellhus so little.” “No man is that
remarkable… I’m a whore, remember?” “We’ll see,” he said,
tugging her down. They kissed, long and deep. “We,” she repeated,
laughing as though both hurt and astounded. “It really is ‘we’ now, isn’t it?” With a shy, even scared,
smile, she helped him pull free his weathered robes. “When I can’t find you,”
he said, “or even when you turn away, I feel… I feel hollow, as though my heart’s a thing of smoke… Isn’t that we
? She pressed him against
the mat, straddled him. “I recognize it,” she
replied, tears now streaming down her cheeks. “So it must be…” One lamb, Achamian thought, for ten bulls. Recognition. He hardened against her,
ached to know her again. As always, the images flickered, each as sharp as
glass. Bloodied faces. The clash of bronze arms. Men consumed in billowing
sorceries. Dragons with teeth of iron… But she raised her hips, and with a
single encompassing thrust, sheared away both past and future, sparing only the
glorious pang of the present. He cried out. She began grinding
against him, not with the expertise of a harlot hoping to abbreviate her
labour, but with the clumsy selfishness of a lover seeking surcease—a lover or
a wife. Tonight she would take, and that, Achamian knew, was as much as any
whore could give. Wearing a harlot’s face,
it sat in the blackness, its ears pricked to the sounds of their
lovemaking—glistening sounds—a mere arm’s length away. And it thought of the
weaknesses of the flesh, of all the needs
that it was immune to, that made it powerful, deadly. The air was suffused with
their groaning scent, the heady perfume of unwashed bodies slapping in the
night. It was not an unpleasant smell. Too devoid of fear perhaps. The sound and smell of
animals, aching animals. But it knew something of their ache. Perhaps it knew
far more. Appetite was direction, and its architects had given it direction—such exquisite hungers! Ah yes, the
architects weren’t fools. There was ecstasy in a
face. Rapture in deceit. Climax in the kill… And certainty in the dark. Four Asgilioch No decision is so fine as to not bind us
to its consequences. No consequence is so unexpected as to
absolve us of our decisions. Not even death. —XIUS, THE TRl/CIAN DRAMAS It seems a strange thing to recall these events, like
waking to find I had narrowly missed a fatal fall in the darkness. Whenever I
think back, I’m filled with wonder that I still live, and with horror that I
still travel by night. —DRUSAS ACHAM1AN, THE
COMPENDIUM OF THE FIRST HOLY WAR Early Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, the
fortress of Asgilioch Achamian and Esmenet
awoke in each other’s arms, sheepish with memories of the previous night. They
held each other tight to quell their fears, then as the surrounding encampment
slowly rumbled to life, they made love with quiet urgency. Afterward, Esmenet
fell silent, looked away each time Achamian searched for her eyes. At first, he
found himself baffled and angered by this sudden change of demeanour, but then
he realized she was afraid. Last night she’d shared his tent. Today, she would
share his friends, his daily discourse—his life. “Don’t worry,” he said,
catching her eyes as she fussed with her hasas. “I’m far more particular when
it comes to my friends.” A frown crowded out the
terror in her eyes. “More particular than what?” He winked. “Than when it
comes to my women.” She looked down, smiling and shaking her head. He heard her
mutter some kind of curse. As he clambered from the tent she pinched his
buttocks hard enough to make him howl. Wrapping an arm around
her waist, Achamian led Esmenet to Xinemus, who stood chatting with Bloody
Dinch. When he introduced her, Xinemus merely offered her a perfunctory
greeting, then pointed to a faint swath of smoke across the eastern horizon.
The Fanim, he explained, had infiltrated the mountains and had struck across
the highlands. Apparently a large village, a place called Tusam, had been taken
unawares during the night and burned to the ground. Proyas wanted to survey the
devastation first-hand—with his ranking officers. The Marshal then left
them, bawling orders to his men. Achamian and Esmenet retreated to the fire,
where they sat wordlessly, watching long riles of Attrempan horsemen pass into
the deeper byways of the encampment. He could sense her apprehension, the
certainty that she would shame him, but he could find no more words to amuse or
comfort her. He could only watch as she watched, feeling excluded in the manner
of slaves and cripples. Then Kellhus joined them,
peering as Xinemus had at the eastern horizon. “So it starts,” he said. “What starts?” Achamian
asked. “The bloodshed.” With something of a
bashful air, Achamian introduced Esmenet. He inwardly winced at the coldness of
her tone and expression—at the bruising still visible on her cheek. But
Kellhus, if he noticed, seemed unconcerned. “Someone new,” he said,
smiling warmly. “Neither bearded nor haggard.” “Yet…” Achamian added. “1 don’t get haggard,”
Esmenet said in mock protest. They laughed, and
afterward Esmenet’s hostility seemed to wane. Asgilioch Serwe arrived shortly
afterward, still wrapped in her blanket. From the first, she seemed to regard
Esmenet with something between wonder and terror—more so the latter
after seeing Esmenet talk rather than simply listen to the men. Achamian found
this troubling, but remained certain they would become friends, if only to find
respite from the masculine clamour that characterized their nights by the fire. For some reason, he found
the camp oppressive and sitting still impossible, so he suggested a trek into
the mountains. Kellhus immediately agreed, saying that he’d yet to see the Holy
War from afar. “Nothing is understood,” he said, “until glimpsed from the
heights.” Serwe, who’d so often been abandoned throughout the day, was almost
embarrassingly delighted to join them. Esmenet seemed happy simply to hold
Achamian’s hand. The stout mountains of
the Unaras Spur loomed large against azure skies, curving like a row of ancient
molars toward the horizon. They searched all morning for a vantage that would
let them see the Holy War entire, but the jumbled slopes confounded them, and
the farther they walked, the more it seemed they could see only the outskirts
of the vast encampment, hazed by the smoke of innumerable fires. They
encountered several mounted patrols, who .warned them of Fanim scouting
parties. A band of Conriyan horsemen commanded by one of Xinemus’s kinsmen
insisted on providing an armed escort, but Kellhus ordered them away, invoking
his status as an Inrithi Prince. When Esmenet asked
whether this was wise given the danger, Kellhus said only, “We walk with a
Mandate Schoolman.” True enough, she
supposed, but all this renewed talk of the heathen had unnerved her, reminded her
the Holy War didn’t march against abstractions. She found herself glancing to
the east more and more often, as though expecting the heights they climbed to
reveal the smouldering remains of Tusam. How long had it been
since she’d last sat in her window in Sumna? How long had she’d been walking? Walking. The city whores
called those who followed the Columns peneditari,
the “long-walkers,” a word that often became pembeditari, the “scratchers,” because
many believed camp-whores carried various infestations. Depending on who was
asked, peneditari were either as worldly and thus as admirable as caste-noble
courtesans, or as polluted and thus as despicable as the beggar-whores who laid
with lepers. The truth, Esmenet would discover, lay somewhere in between. She certainly felt like a
peneditari. Never had she walked so much or so far. Even the nights, which
she’d spent on her back or her knees, it seemed she’d walked, following a great
army of capricious cocks and accusing eyes. Never had she pleasured so many men.
Their ghosts still toiled upon her when she awoke in the morning. She would
gather her things, join the march, and it would feel as though she fled rather
than followed. Even still, she’d found
time to wonder, to learn. She studied the changing character of the lands they
passed through. She watched her skin darken, her stomach flatten, her legs
harden with muscle. She learned a smattering of Galeoth, enough to shock and
delight her patrons. She taught herself how to swim by watching children
thrashing in a canal. To be encompassed by cool water. To float! To be cleansed
all at once. But every night was the
same. The slap of pale loins, the crush of sunburned arms, the threats, the
arguments, even the jokes she and the other whores shared about the fire—these
things, it seemed, were flattening her, pounding her into a shape
she could never fit into her previous life. As never before, she dreamed of
faces, leering and whiskered. Then, just the previous
night, she had heard someone shouting her name. She whirled, surprised perhaps,
but incredulous as well, thinking she’d misheard. Then she saw Achamian,
obviously drunk, scuffling with a hulking Thunyeri. She tried to flee, but
she couldn’t move. She could only watch, breathless, as the warrior threw him
to the ground. She screamed when the boot came down, but she still couldn’t
move. Only when he pulled himself sobbing to his knees, cried out her name. She ran to him—What
choice did she have? In all the world, he had only her—only her! The outrage she’d thought she would feel was nowhere
to be found. Instead, his touch, his smell, had exacted an almost perilous
vulnerability, a sense of submission unlike any she’d ever known—and it was good. Sweet Sejenus, was it good! Like the small circle Asgilioch of a child’s embrace, or
the taste of peppered meat after a long hunger. It was like floating in cool,
cleansing water. No burdens, only flashing
sunlight and slow-waving limbs, the smell of green… Now she was no longer
peneditari; she was what the Galeoth called “im hustwarra,” a camp-wife. Now, at long last, she belonged to
Drusas Achamian. At long last she was clean. I could go to temple, she thought. Esmenet had told him
nothing of Sarcellus, nothing of that mad night in Sumna, nothing of what she
suspected regarding Inrau. To speak of one, it seemed, would compel her to
speak of the others. Instead, she said she’d left Sumna out of love for him,
and that she’d joined the camp-followers after he’d repudiated her outside
Momemn. What could she do? Risk everything now that they’d found each other? Besides, she had left Sumna for him; she had joined the camp-followers because of him. Silence did
not contradict truth. Perhaps, if he’d been the
same Achamian who had left her in Sumna… Achamian had always been…
weak, but it was a weakness born of honesty. Where other men became silent and
remote, he spoke, and this gave him a curious kind of strength, one which set
him apart from nearly every man Esmenet had known, and many women. But he was
different now. More desperate. In Sumna, she’d often
accused him of resembling the madmen in the Ecosium Market who continually
howled about iniquity and doom. Whenever they passed one, she’d say, “Look,
another of your friends,” just as he’d say, “Look, another one of your
customers” when they glimpsed some dreadfully obese man. Now, she wouldn’t
dare. Achamian was still Achamian, but he’d acquired the same hollow, spent
look of those madmen, the same stooped eyes, as though he perpetually watched
some horror that walked between what everyone else could see. What he said terrified
her, of course—How couldn’t she believe him?—but what terrified her more was
the way he said it: the rambling, the
erratic laughter, the spiteful vehemence, the bottomless remorse. He was going mad. She
knew this in her bones. But it wasn’t, she understood, the discovery of the
Consult, nor even the certainty of the Second Apocalypse, that
was breaking him, it was this man… this Anasurimbor Kellhus. Such a stubborn fool! Why
wouldn’t he yield him to the Mandate? If Achamian weren’t already a sorcerer,
she’d say he’d been bewitched. No arguments would sway him. Nothing! According to Achamian,
women had no instinct for principle. For them everything was embodied… How had
he put it? Oh yes, that existence
preceded essence
for women. By nature, the tracks travelled by their souls ran parallel to those
demanded by principle. The feminine soul was more yielding, more compassionate,
more nurturing than the masculine. Consequently, principle became more
difficult for them to see, like a staff in a thicket, which was why women were
more likely to confuse selfishness for propriety—which, apparently, was what
she was doing. But for men, whose inclinations ranged so far and so violently,
principle was an ever-present burden, a yoke they either toiled under or cast
off altogether. Unlike women, men could always see what they should do, because it differed so drastically from what they
wanted. At first, Esmenet had
almost believed him. How else could she explain his willingness to risk their
love? But then she realized it
was the principle that galled
her, not some
dim-witted feminine confusion of hope and piety. Had she not given herself to
him? Had she not relinquished her life, her talent? Had she not finally
relented? And what was she asking
him to relinquish in return? A man he’d known but a few weeks—a stranger! A
man, moreover, that according to his own principles, he should surrender. “Perhaps yours is the womanish soul!”
she’d wanted to cry. But for some reason, she couldn’t. If men must spare women
the world, then women must spare men the truth—as though each forever remained
alternate halves of the same defenceless child. Esmenet paused for
breath, watched Achamian and Kellhus exchange some comment—something inaudible and
humorous. Achamian laughed aloud. / must show him. Somehow 1 must show him! Even when one floated,
there was always a current… Always something to fight. Asgilwch /y Serwe walked at her side,
every so often casting nervous glances her way. Esmenet said nothing, though
she knew the girl wanted to talk. She seemed harmless enough, given the
circumstances. She was one of those rare women who could never be deflowered,
never be despoiled. Had she been a fellow whore in Sumna, Esmenet would have
secretly despised her. She would have resented her beauty, her youth, her blond
hair, and her pale skin, but more than anything she would have resented her
perpetual vulnerability. “Akka has—” the girl
blurted. She blushed, looked down to her feet. “Achamian’s been teaching
Kellhus wondrous things—wondrous things!” Even her endearing
accent. Resentment was ever the secret liquor of harlots. Staring at nothing on the
southern horizon, Esmenet said, “He has, has he?” Perhaps that was the
problem. Achamian had offered Kellhus the sanctuary of his instruction before he learned of the Consult skin-spies, which was to
say, before he knew with certainty the man was the Harbinger—if he was in fact
the Harbinger. Perhaps that was the obscure principle Achamian referred to, the
bond… Kellhus was his student, like Proyas orInrau. The thought made Esmenet
want to spit. Without warning, Serwe
sprinted ahead, leaping over hummocks and through braces of weeds.
“The flowers!” she cried. “They’re so beautiful!” Esmenet joined Achamian
and Kellhus where they stood watching her. Several paces away,
the girl kneeled before a bush freighted with extraordinary turquoise
blooms. “Ah,” Achamian said,
moving to join her, “pemembis… Have you never seen them before
?” “Never,” Serwe gasped. Esmenet thought she
could smell lilac. “Never?” Achamian said,
plucking a flower of his own. He glanced back at Esmenet, winked. “You mean
you’ve never heard the legends?” Esmenet waited next to
Kellhus as Achamian related his story: something about an empress and her
bloodthirsty paramours. Several uncomfortable moments passed. The man was tall,
even for a Norsirai, and he possessed those muscular, long-armed proportions
that would have ihe first March sparked uncouth
speculation among her old friends in Sumna. His eyes were striking blue,
possessed of a clarity that recalled Achamian’s stories of ancient northern
kings. And there was something about his manner, a grace that didn’t seem
quite… earthly. “So you lived among the
Scylvendi?” she finally said. Kellhus glanced at her as
though at a distraction, then looked back to Serwe and Achamian. “For a time,
yes.” “Tell me something about
them.” “Such as…” She shrugged. “Tell me
about their scars… Are they trophies?” Kellhus smiled, shook his
head. “No.” “Then what are they?” “That’s not an easy
question to answer… The Scylvendi believe only in actions, though they’d never
say such. For them, only what men do is
real. All else is smoke. They even call life ‘syurtpьitha,’ or ‘the smoke that moves.’ For them a man’s life
isn’t a thing, something that can be owned or
exchanged, but rather a line or a track of actions. A man’s line can be braided
into one’s own, as in the case of one’s fellow tribesmen; herded, as in the
case of slaves; or it can be stopped, as in the case of killing or murder.
Since this latter is the action which ends
action, the Scylvendi see it as the most significant, the most real, of all
actions. The cornerstone of honour. “But the scars, or
swazond, don’t celebrate the taking of life, as every-one in
the ThreeSeas seems to assume. They mark the…
intersection, you might say, between competing lines of action, the point where
one life yields its momentum to another. The fact that Cnaьir, for instance,
bears the scars of many means that he walks with the momentum of many. His swazond are far more than his trophies,
they’re the record of his reality. Seen through Scylvendi eyes, he’s the single
stone that has become an avalanche.” Esmenet stared in wonder.
“But I thought the Scylvendi were uncouth… barbarians. Surely such beliefs are
too subtle!” Kellhus laughed. “All
beliefs are too subtle.” He held her with shining blue eyes. “And ‘barbarity,’
I fear, is simply a word for unfamiliarity that threatens.” Unsettled, Esmenet looked
to the grasses thronging about her sandalled feet. She glanced at Achamian, saw
him watching her from Asgilioch where he and Serwe
crouched. He smiled knowingly, then continued expounding on the bobbing
flowers. He knew this would happen. Then, from nowhere,
Kellhus said, “So you were a whore.” She looked up in shock,
reflexively covered the tattoo on the back of her left hand. “And what if I
was?” Kellhus shrugged. “Tell
me something…” “Such as?” she snapped. “What was it like, lying
with men you didn’t know?” She wanted to be outraged, but there was a compelling innocence
to his manner, a candour that left her baffled—and willing. “Nice… sometimes,” she
said. “Other times, unbearable. But one must feed to be fed. That’s simply the
way of things.” “No,” Kellhus replied. “I
asked you to tell me what it was like …” She cleared her throat,
looked away in embarrassment. She saw Achamian brush Serwe’s fingers,
suppressed a pang of jealousy. She laughed nervously. “Such a strange
question…” “Have you never asked
it?” “No… I mean yes, of course,
but…” “So what was your
answer?” She paused, flustered,
frightened, and curiously thrilled. “Sometimes, after a heavy
rain, the street beneath my window would be rutted by the wains, and I would… I
would watch them—the wheels creaking through the ruts—and I would think, that’s what my life is like…” “A track worn by others.” Esmenet nodded, blinked
away two tears. “And other times?” “Whores are mummers—you
must understand that. We perform …” She hesitated, searched his
eyes as though they held the proper words. “I know the Tusk says we degrade
ourselves, that we abuse the divinity of our sex… and sometimes it feels that
way. But not always… Often, very often, I have these men upon me, these men who
gasp like fish, thinking they’ve mastered me, notched me, and I feel pity for them—for them, not me. I become more… more thief than whore. Fooling, duping, watching myself as
though reflected across silver… It feels like… like…” HE riRST MARCH “Like being free,”
Kellhus said. Esmenet both smiled and
frowned, troubled by the intimacy of the details she’d revealed, shocked by the
poetry of her own insight, and somehow curiously relieved, as though she’d
discharged a great burden. She almost trembled. And Kellhus seemed so… near. “Yes…” She tried to
swallow away the quaver in her voice. “But how—” “So we’ve learned about
holy pemembis,” Achamian said, joining them with Serwe‘. “What have you
learned?” He shot Esmenet a significant glance. “What it’s like to be who
we are,” Kellhus said. Sometimes, though not often,
Achamian would scan the distances and simply know that he’d walked the same or similar path two
thousand years before. He would freeze, as though glimpsing a lion in the
brush, and just look about in witless astonishment. It was a recognition that
baffled, a knowing that could not be. Seswatha had walked these
same hills once, fleeing besieged Asgilioch, searching with a hundred other
refugees for a way through the mountains, for a way to escape dread Tsuramah.
Achamian found himself glancing over his shoulder, always northward, expecting
to see black clouds massing on the horizon. He found himself clutching wounds
he didn’t have, blinking away images of a battle he hadn’t fought: the Kyranean
defeat at Mehsarunath. He found himself walking as though an automaton, gouged
of all hope, of all aspiration save survival. At some point Seswatha
had abandoned the others to wander alone among the windswept rocks. Somewhere,
not far, he’d found a small, shaded grotto, where he curled like a dog, hugging
his knees, shrieking, wailing, imploring death… When morning came, he had
cursed the Gods for drawing breath. Achamian found himself
glancing at Kellhus, his hands shaking, his every thought turmoil. Concerned, Esmenet asked
him what was wrong. “Nothing,” he muttered
brusquely. She smiled, squeezed his
hand as though she trusted him. But she knew. Twice he caught her casting
terrified glances at the Prince of Atrithau. As the afternoon waxed,
Achamian slowly recollected himself. The farther they wandered from Seswatha’s
footsteps, it seemed, the more he could pretend. Without realizing, he’d led
the others too far to return to the Holy War before dark, so he suggested they
find a place to camp. The mountain faces
mellowed against violet clouds. As evening approached, they spied a stand of
blooming ironwoods perched on a squat promontory. They hiked toward them,
climbing the furrowed skirts of the mountain. Kellhus noticed the ruins first:
the heaped remains of an old Inrithi chapel. “Some kind of shrine?”
Achamian asked no one in particular as they waded across scrub and grasses
toward the foundations. The stand, he realized, was in fact an overgrown grove.
The ironwoods stood in rows, their dark limbs knitted in purple and white,
waving in the warm evening breeze. They picked their way
through blocks of stone, then clambered over the heaped walls, where they found
a mosaic floor depicting Inri Sejenus, his head buried in debris, his two
haloed hands outstretched. For a time all four of them simply milled about,
exploring, trampling paths through the thronging weeds, wondering, Achamian
supposed, at all that had been forgotten. “No ash,” Kellhus noted,
after kicking at sandy earth. “It’s as though the place simply fell in upon
itself.” “So beautiful,” Serwe
said. “How could anyone let this happen?” “After Gedea was lost to the Fanim,” Achamian
explained, “the Nansur abandoned these lands… Too vulnerable to raids, I
suppose… Ruins like this probably dot the entire range.” They gathered dead scrub,
and Achamian ignited their fire with a sorcerous word, realizing only afterward
that he’d set the Latter Prophet’s stomach aflame. Seated upon blocks on either
side of the image, they continued talking, the firelight brightening in
proportion to the gathering dark. They drank unwatered
wine, ate bread, leeks, and salted pork. Achamian translated those passages of
text visible across the mosaic. ME TIRST MARCH “The Marrucees,” he said,
studying a stylized seal written in High Sheyic. “This place once belonged to
the Marrucees, an old College of the Thousand Temples… If I remember aright,
they were destroyed when the Fanim took Shimeh… That means this place was
abandoned long before thefallofGedea.” Kellhus followed up with
several questions regarding the Colleges—of course. Since Esmenet knew the
ecclesiastical labyrinths of the Thousand Temples far better than he, Achamian
let her answer. She had, after all, bedded priests from every college, sect,
and cult imaginable… Fucked them. He studied the pinch of
sandal straps across his feet as he listened. He needed new ones, he realized.
A profound sorrow seized him then, the hapless sorrow of a man persecuted by
even the smallest of things. Where would he find sandals in the midst of this
madness/ He excused himself,
wandered into the collapsed byways beyond the fire. He sat for a time at the
ruin’s edge, where the debris tumbled into the grove. All was black beneath the
ironwoods, but their blooming crowns seemed otherworldly in the moonlight,
slowly rocking to and fro in the breeze. The bittersweet scent reminded him of
Xinemus’s orchards. “Moping again?” he heard
Esmenet say from behind him. He turned and saw her
standing in gloom, painted in the same pale tones as the surrounding ruin. He
wondered that night could make stone resemble skin and skin resemble stone.
Then she was in his arms, kissing him, tugging at his linen robes. He pressed
her backward, leaned her onto a cracked altar, his hands roaming across her
thighs and buttocks. She groped for his cock, clutched it with both hands. They
joined fires. Afterward, brushing away
grit from skin and clothes, they grinned knowing, shy grins. “So what do you think?”
Achamian asked. Esmenet made a noise,
something between a laugh and a sigh. “Nothing,” she said.
“Nothing as tender, as wanton or delicious. Nothing as enchanted as this
place…” “I meant Kellhus.” A flash of anger. “Is
there nothing else you think about?” Asgilwch 8D His throat tightened.
“How can I?” She became remote and
impenetrable. Serwe’s laughter chimed across the ruins, and he found himself
wondering what Kellhus had said. “He is remarkable,” Esmenet murmured, refusing to look at
him. So what should I do? Achamian wanted to cry. Instead, he remained
silent, tried to throttle the roar of inner voices. “We do have each other,”
she suddenly said. “Don’t we, Akka?” “Of course we do. But
what does—” “What does anything
matter, so long as we have each other?” Always interrupting… “Sweet Sejenus, woman, he’s the Harbinger.” “But we could flee! From
the Mandate. From him. We could hide, just the two of
us!” “But Esmi… The burden—” “Isn’t ours!” she hissed.
“Why should we suffer it? Let’s run away!
Please, Akka! Leave all this madness behind!” “This is foolishness,
Esmenet. There’s no hiding from the end of the world! Even if we could, I’d be
a sorcerer without a school—a wizard, Esmi. Better to be a witch! They
would hunt me. All of them, not just the Mandate. The
Schools tolerate no wizards…” He laughed bitterly. “We wouldn’t even survive to
be killed.” “But this is the first time,” she said, her voice breaking. “The first time I’ve
ever…” Something—the desolate
stoop of her shoulders, perhaps, or the way she pressed her hands together,
wrist to wrist—moved Achamian to hold her. But a panicked cry halted him.
Serwe. “Kellhus bids you come
quickly!” she called from the dark. “There’s torches in the distance! Riders!” Achamian scowled. “Who’d
be fool enough to ride mountain slopes at night?” Esmenet didn’t answer.
She didn’t need to… Fanim. Esmenet cursed herself
for a fool as they picked their way through the dark. Kellhus had kicked out
their fire, transforming the mosaic of the OD1HE TIRST MARCH Latter Prophet into a
constellation of scattered coals. They hastened across it, joined him on the
grasses beyond the heaped debris. “Look,” the Prince of
Atrithau said, pointing down the slopes. If Achamian’s words had
winded her, then what she saw robbed her of all remaining breath. Strings of
torches wound through the darkness below, following the mighty ramps of earth
that composed the only approach to the ruined shrine. Hundreds of glittering
points. Heathen, come to gut them. Or worse… “They’ll be upon us
soon,” Kellhus said. Esmenet struggled with a
sudden, panting terror. Anything could happen—even with men such as Achamian
and Kellhus! The world was exceedingly cruel. “Perhaps if we hide…” “They know we’re here,”
Kellhus muttered. “Our fire. They followed our fire.” “Then we must see,”
Achamian said. Shocked by his tone,
Esmenet glanced in his direction, only to find herself stumbling backward in
terror. White light flashed from his eyes and mouth, and words seemed to rumble
down like thunder from the mountain faces. Then a line appeared from the earth
between his outstretched arms, so brilliant she raised hands against its glare.
It flashed upward, more perfect than any geometer’s rule, taller than the
brooding Unaras, striking through and illuminating clouds, on into the endless
black… The Bar of Heaven! she thought—a Cant from his
stories of the First Apocalypse. Shadows leapt across the
far precipices. The tumbling landscape winked into existence as though exposed
by a lightning flash. And Esmenet saw armoured horsemen, an entire column of
them, shouting in alarm and struggling with their horses. She glimpsed
astonished faces… “Hold!” Kellhus shouted.
“Hold!” The light went out.
Blackness. “They’re Galeoth,”
Kellhus said, placing a firm hand on her shoulder. “Men of the Tusk.” Esmenet blinked, clutched
her breast. For among the riders, she’d seen Sarcellus. A resonant voice shouted
across the darkness: “We search for the Prince of Atrithau! Anasurimbor
Kellhus!” The many-coloured tones
were unknitted, combed into individual threads: sincerity, worry, outrage,
hope… And Kellhus knew there was no danger. He’s come for my counsel. “Prince Saubon!” Kellhus
called. “Come! The faithful are always welcome at our fire!” “And sorcerers?” another
voice cried. “Are blasphemers welcome as well?“ The indignation and
sarcasm were plain, but the undertones defeated him. Who spoke? A Nansur, from
Massentia perhaps, though his accent was strangely difficult to place. A
hereditary caste-noble, with rank enough to ride with a prince… One of the
Emperor’s generals? “Indeed they are,”
Kellhus called back, “when they serve the faithful!” “Forgive my friend!” Saubon shouted,
laughing. “I fear he brought only one pair of breeches!” Hearty Galeoth cheer
resounded across the slopes: laughter, catcalls, friendly jeers. “What do they want?”
Achamian asked in low tones. Even in the gloom, Kellhus could see the lines of recent
pain through his present apprehension—remnants of some argument with Esmenet.
About him. “Who knows?” Kellhus
said. “At the Council, Saubon was first among those urging the others to march
without the Ainoni and the Scarlet Spires. Perhaps with Proyas afield, he seeks
further mischief…” Achamian shook his head.
“He argued that the destruction of Rudm threatened to demoralize the Men of the
Tusk,” the sorcerer amended. “Xinemus told me that you were the one who silenced him… By reinterpreting the
portent of the earthquake.” “You think he seeks
reprisal?” Kellhus asked. But it was too late. More
and more horsemen were rumbling to a stop in the moonlight, dismounting,
stretching weary limbs. Saubon and his entourage trotted toward them, flanked
by torch-bearers. The Galeoth Prince reined his caparisoned charger to a halt,
his eyes hidden in the shadows of his brow. L Kellhus lowered his head
to the degree required by jnan—a bow between princes. “We tracked you all
afternoon,” Saubon said, jumping from his saddle. He stood almost as tall as
Kellhus, though slightly broader through the chest and shoulders. Like his men,
he was geared for battle, wearing not only his chain hauberk, but his helm and
gauntlets as well. A hasty Tusk had been stitched beneath the Red Lion
embroidered across his surcoat— the mark of the Galeoth Royal House. “And who is ‘we’?”
Kellhus asked, peering at the man’s fellow riders. Saubon made several
introductions, starting with his grizzled groom, Kussalt, but Kellhus spared
them little more than a cursory glance. The lone Shrial Knight, whom the Prince
introduced as Cutias Sarcellus, dominated his attention… Another one. Another Skeaos… “At last,” Sarcellus
said. His large eyes glittered through the fingers of his fraudulent face. “The
renowned Prince of Atrithau.” He bowed lower than his
rank demanded. What does this mean, Father? So many variables. After stationing pickets
and dispersing his men about the edges of the grove, Saubon, along with his
groom and the Shrial Knight, joined their fire in the ruined chapel’s heart.
Following the custom of the southern courts, the Galeoth Prince avoided all
talk of his purpose, scrupulously awaiting what practitioners of jnan called
the memponti, the “fortuitous turn” that would
of its own accord lead to weightier matters. Saubon, Kellhus knew, thought the
ways of his own people rude. With every breath he waged war with who he was. But it was the Shrial
Knight, Sarcellus, who commanded Kellhus’s attention—and not just because of
his missing face. Achamian had smoothed the shock from his expression, yet an
apprehensive fury animated his eyes each time he looked at the Knight of the
Tusk. Achamian not only recognized Sarcellus, Kellhus realized, he hated him.
The Dunyain monk could fairly hear movements of Achamian’s soul: the
seething resentment for some past slight, the wincing memories of being struck,
the remorse… Asgilioch In Sumna, Kellhus realized, recalling to the last detail
Achamian’s every reference to his previous mission. Something happened between himand Sarcellus in Sumna. Something involving Inrau… Despite his hatred, the
sorcerer obviously had no inkling that Sarcellus was another Skeaos… Another
Consult skin-spy. And neither did Esmenet,
though her reaction far eclipsed Achamian’s. Shame. The fear of discovery. The
treacherous hope… Shethinks he’s come to take her… Take her from Achamian. She’d been the thing’s
lover. But these mysteries paled
before the greater question: What was it doing here? Not just in the Holy War,
but here, this night, riding at Saubon’s
side… “How did you find us?”
Achamian was asking. Saubon ran fingers
through his close-cropped hair. “My friend, Sarcellus,
here. He has an uncanny ability to track…” He turned to the Knight-Commander.
“How did you say you learned?” “As a youth,” Sarcellus
lied, “on my father’s western estates”—he pursed his lusty lips, as though
restraining a smile—“tracking Scylvendi…” “Tracking Scylvendi,” Saubon repeated, as though to say, Only in the Nansurium… “I was ready to turn back at dusk, but he insisted
you were near.” Saubon opened his hands and shrugged. Silence. Esmenet sat rigid,
covering her tattooed hand the way others might avoid smiling to conceal bad
teeth. Achamian glanced at Kellhus, expecting him to brush away the awkwardness.
Serwe, sensing the undercurrent of anxiety, clutched his thigh. The faceless
beast stared into its bowl of wine. Ordinarily, Kellhus
would’ve said something. But for the moment he could provide little more than
rote responses. His eyes watched, but they didn’t focus. His expression merely
mirrored those surrounding him. Self had vanished into place, a place of opening, where permutation after
permutation was hunted to its merciless conclusion. Consequence and effect.
Events like concentric ripples unfolding across the black waters of the future…
Each word, each look, a stone. There was great peril
here. The principles of this encounter had to be grasped. Only the Logos could
illuminate the path… Only the Logos. “I followed your smell,”
Sarcellus was saying. He stared directly at Achamian, his eyes glittering with
something incomprehensible. Humour? The joke, Kellhus
decided, was that this was no joke: the thing had tracked them like a dog. He
needed to be exceedingly wary of these creatures. As of yet, he had no idea of
their capabilities. Do you
know of thesethings, Father? Everything had
transformed since he’d taken Drusas Achamian as his teacher. The ground of this
world, he now knew, had concealed many, many secrets from his brethren. The
Logos remained true, but its ways were far more devious, and far more
spectacular, than the Dunyain had ever conceived. And the Absolute… the End of
Ends was more distant than they’d ever imagined. So many obstacles. So many
forks in the path… Despite his initial scepticism,
Kellhus had come to believe much of what Achamian had claimed over the course
of their discussions. He believed the stories of the First Apocalypse. He
believed the faceless thing before him was an artifact of the Consult. But the
Celmomian Prophecy? The coming of a Second Apocalypse? Such things were absurd.
By defi‘ nition, the future couldn’t anticipate the present. What came after
couldn’t come before… Could it? There was so much that
must await his father… So many questions. His ignorance had already culminated
in near disaster. The mere exchange of glances in the Emperor’s PrivyGarden
had triggered several small catastrophes, including the events beneath the AndiamineHeights, which had convinced Achamian
that Kellhus was in fact the Harbinger. If the man decided to tell his School
that an Anasurimbor had returned… There was great peril here. Drusas Achamian had to
remain ignorant—that much was certain. If he knew that Kellhus could see the very skin-spies that so terrified him, he
wouldn’t hesitate to contact his masters in Atyersus. So much depended on him
remaining estranged from his School—isolated. Which meant Kellhus must confront
these things on his own. “My groom,” Saubon was saying to the Shrial Knight,
“swears nothing short of sorcery led you to this place… Kussalt fancies himself
quite the tracker.” j’tsgiuocn Did the Consult somehow
know he’d revealed Skeaos in the Emperor’s court? The Emperor had seen him
studying his Prime Counsel, and more importantly, he’d remembered. Several times
now, Kellhus had seen Imperial spies watching from a discreet distance,
following. It was possible the Consult knew how Skeaos had been uncovered,
perhaps even probable. If they did know, then
this Sarcellus could very well be a probe. They would need to discover whether
Skeaos’s unmasking had been an accident of the Emperor’s paranoia, or whether
this stranger from Atrithau had somehow seen through his face. They would watch him, ask discreet questions, and
when this provided no answers, they would make contact… Wouldn’t they? But there was also
Achamian to consider. Doubtless the Consult would keep close watch on Mandate
Schoolmen, the only individuals who believed they still existed. Sarcellus and
Achamian had made contact before, both directly, as evident from the sorcerer’s
reaction, and indirectly via Esmenet, who obviously had been seduced at some
point in the past. They were using her for some reason… Perhaps they were
testing her, sounding her capacity for deceit
and treachery. She’d told Achamian nothing of Sarcellus; that much was
apparent. The study is so deep, Father. A thousand possibilities,
galloping across the trackless steppe of what was to come. A hundred scenarios
flashing through his soul, some branching and branching, terminally deflected
from his objectives, others flaring out in disaster… Direct confrontation.
Accusations levelled before the Great Names. Acclaim for revealing the horror
within. Mandate involvement. Open war with the Consult… Unworkable. The Mandate
couldn’t be involved until they could be dominated. War against the Consult
couldn’t be risked. Not yet. Indirect confrontation.
Forays into the night. Throats cut. Attempted reprisals. A hidden war gradually
revealed… Also unworkable. If Sarcellus and the others were murdered, the
Consult would know someone could see them. When they learned the details of
Skeaos’s discovery, if they hadn’t already, they would realize it was Kellhus,
and indirect confrontation would become open war. HE riRST MARCH Inaction. Watchful
enemies. Appraisal. Sterile probes. Second guessing. Responses delayed by the
need to know. Worry in the shadow of growing power… Workable. Even if they
learned the details surrounding Skeaos’s discovery, the Consult would only have
suspicions. If what Achamian claimed was
true, they weren’t so crude as to blot out potential threats without first understanding them. Confrontation was inevitable. The outcome
depended only on how much time he had to prepare… He was one of the
Conditioned, Dunyain. Circumstances would yield. The mission must— “Kellhus,” Serwe was saying. “The Prince has asked you a
question.” Kellhus blinked, smiled
as though at his own foolishness. Without exception, everyone about the fire
stared at him, some concerned, some puzzled. “I’m-I’m sorry,” he
stammered. “I…” He glanced nervously from watcher to watcher, exhaled, as
though reconciling himself to his principles, no matter how embarrassing.
“Sometimes I… I see things…” Silence. “Me too,” Sarcellus said
scathingly. “Though usually when my eyes are open.” Had he closed his eyes?
He had no recollection of it. If so, it would be a troubling lapse. Not since— “Idiot,” Saubon snapped, turning to the Shrial Knight.
“Fool! We sit about the man’s fire and you insult him?” “The Knight-Commander has
caused no offence,” Kellhus said. “You forget, Prince, that he’s as much priest
as warrior, and we’ve asked him to share a fire with a sorcerer… It’s like
asking a midwife to break bread with a leper, isn’t it?” A moment of nervous
laughter, over-loud and over-brief. “No doubt,” Kellhus added, “he’s simply out
of temper.” “No doubt,” Sarcellus
repeated. A mocking smile, bottomless, like all his expressions. What does it want? “Which begs the
question,” Kellhus continued, effortlessly grasping the “fortuitous turn” that
had so far eluded Prince Saubon. “What brings a Shrial Knight to a sorcerer’s
fire?” “I was sent by Gotian,”
Sarcellus said, “my Grandmaster…” He glanced at Saubon, who watched stonefaced.
“The Shrial Knights have Asgilwch sworn to be among the first
who set foot upon heathen ground, and Prince Saubon proposes—“ But Saubon interrupted,
blurting, “I would speak to you of this alone, Prince Kellhus.” What would you have me do, Father? So many possibilities.
Incalculable possibilities. Kellhus followed Saubon
through the dark lanes of the ironwood grove. They paused at the edge of the
cliff and looked out over the moonlit reaches of the Inunara Highlands. Clear
of the hissing leaves, the wind buffeted them. The long fall below was littered
with fallen trees. Dead roots reached skyward. Some of the fallen still
brandished great sockets of earth, like dusty fists raised against the
survivors. “You do see things, don’t you?” Saubon finally said. “I mean,
you dreamed of this Holy War from Atrithau.” Kellhus enclosed him in
the circle of his senses. Heart rate. Blush reflex. The orbital muscles ringing
his eyes… He fears me. “Why do you ask?” “Because Proyas is a
stubborn fool. Because those first to plate are those first to feast!” The Prince of Galeoth was
both daring and impatient. Though he appreciated subtlety, he preferred bold
strokes in the end. “You wish to march
immediately,” Kellhus said. Saubon grimaced in the
dark. “I would be in Gedea now,” he snapped, “if it weren’t for you!” He spoke of the recent
Council, where Kellhus’s reinterpretation of Ruom’s destruction had amputated
his arguments. But his resentment, Kellhus could see, was hollow. Though
ruthless and mercenary, Coithus Saubon was not petty. “Then why come to me
now?” “Because what you said…
about the God burning our ships… It had the ring of truth.” He was a watcher of men,
Kellhus realized, someone who continually measured. His whole life he’d thought
himself a shrewd judge of character, prided himself on his honesty, his ability
to punish flattery and reward criticism. But with
Kellhus… He had no yardstick, no carpenter’s string. He’s told himself I’m a seer of some kind. But he fears
I’m more… “And that’s what you
seek? The truth?” Though mercenary, Saubon
did possess a kind of practical piety. For him faith was a game—a very serious
game. Where other men begged and called it “prayer,” he negotiated, haggled. By
coming here, he thought he was giving the Gods their due… He’s terrified of making a mistake. The Whore has given him
but one chance. “I need to know what you
see!” the man cried. “I’ve fought many campaigns—all of them for my wretched
father! I’m no fool when it comes to the field of war. I don’t think I’d march
into a Fanim tra—” “But recall what Cnaьir
said at Council,” Kellhus interrupted. “The Fanim fight from horseback. They’d
bring the trap to you. And remember the Cishaur—” “Pfah! My nephew scouts
Gedea as we speak, sends me messages daily. There’s no Fanim host lurking in
the shadow of these mountains. These skirmishers that Proyas chases are meant
to fool us, delay us while the heathen gathers his might. Skauras is canny
enough to know when he’s overmatched. He’s retreated to Shigek, barricaded
himself in his cities on the Sempis, where he awaits the Padirajah and the Grandees
of Kian. He’s ceded Gedea to whoever has the courage to seize it!” The Galeoth Prince
clearly believed what he said, but could he be believed? His argument seemed sober enough. And
Proyas himself had expressed nothing but respect for the man’s martial acumen.
Saubon had even fought Ikurei Conphas to a standstill just a few years
previous… Cataracts of possibility.
There was opportunity here… And perhaps Sarcellus need not be confronted to be
destroyed. But still. I know so little of war. Too little… “So you hope.” Kellhus said. “Skauras could—” “So I know!” “Then what does it
matter, whether I sanction you or not? Truth is truth, regardless of who speaks
it…” Desperation. “I ask only
for your counsel, for what you see… Nothing more.” f’tsgiuocn Slackness about the eyes.
Shortness of breath. Deadened timbre. Another lie. “But I see many things…”
Kellhus said. “Then tell me!” Kellhus shook his head.
“Only rarely do I glimpse the future. The hearts of men… that is what they…” He paused, glanced nervously down the
sheer drop, to the bleach-bone trees scattered and broken below. “That is what
I’m moved to see.” Saubon had become
guarded. “Then tell me… What do you see in my heart?” Expose him. Strip him of every lie, every
pretense. When the shame passes… Kellhus held the man’s
eyes for a forlorn instant. … he will think it proper to stand naked before me. “A man and a child,”
Kellhus said, weaving deeper harmonics into his voice, transforming it into
something palpable. “I see a man and a child… The man is harrowed by the
distance between the trappings of power and the impotence of his birthright. He
would force what fate has denied him, and so, day by day lives in the midst of
what he does not possess. Avarice, Saubon… Not for gold, but for witness. Greed for the testimony of men—for them to look and
say ‘Here, here is a King by his own hand!’” Kellhus stared into the
giddy void at his feet, his eyes glassy with the tumult of inner mysteries… Saubon watched with
horror. “And the child? You said there was a child!” “Cringes still beneath a
father’s hand. Awakens in the night and cries out, not for witness, but to be known… No one knows him. No one loves.” Kellhus turned to him,
his eyes shining with insight and unearthly compassion. “I could go on…” “No-no,” Saubon
stammered, as though waking from a trance. “Cease. That’s enough…” But what was enough?
Saubon yearned for pretexts; what would he give in return? When the variables
were so many, everything was risk. Everything. What if 1 choose wrong, Father? “Did you hear that?”
Kellhus cried, turning to Saubon in sudden terror The Galeoth Prince jumped
back from the cliff’s edge. “Hear what?” Truth begat truth, even
when it was a lie. Kellhus swayed,
staggered. Saubon leapt forward, pulled him from the long fall. “March,” Kellhus gasped, close enough to kiss. “The Whore will be kind to you… But you must make certain the Shrial
Knights are…” He opened his eyes in stunned wonder—as though to say, This couldn’t be theirmessage! Some destinations
couldn’t be grasped in advance. Some paths had to be walked to be known.
Risked. “You must make certain
the Shrial Knights are punished.” With Kellhus and Saubon
gone, Esmenet sat silently, staring into the fire, studying the mosaic image of
the Latter Prophet reaching out beneath their feet. She pulled her toes from
the circle of a haloed hand. It seemed sacrilege that they should trod upon
him… But then what did she
care? She was damned. Never had that seemed more obvious than now. Sarcellus here! Affliction upon
affliction. Why did the Gods hate her so? Why were they so cruel? Resplendent in his
silvered mail and white surcoat, Sarcellus chatted amiably with Serwe about
Kellhus, asking where he came from, how they first met, and so on. Serwe basked
in his attention; it was plain from her answers that she more than adored the
Prince of Atrithau. She spoke as though she didn’t exist outside her bond to
him. Achamian watched, though for some reason it seemed he didn’t listen. Oh, Akka… Why do 1 know I’m going to lose you? Not fear, know. Such was the cruelty of this world! Murmuring excuses,
Esmenet stood, then with slow, measured steps, fled from the fire. Enfolded by darkness, she
stopped, plopped down on the ruined stump of a pillar. The sounds of Saubon’s
men permeated the night: the rhythmic thwack of axes,
deep-throated shouts, ribald laughter. Beneath the dark trees, warhorses
snorted, stamped the earth. What have I done? What if Akka finds out? Looking back the way
she’d come, she was shocked to discover she could still see Achamian, dusty
orange before the fire. She smiled at the hapless look of him, at the five
white streaks of his beard. He seemed to be talking to Serwe… Where had Sarcellus gone? “It must be difficult
being a woman in such a place,” a voice called from behind her. Esmenet jumped to her
feet and whirled, her heart racing both with dismay and alarm. She saw
Sarcellus strolling toward her. Of course… “So many pigs,” he
continued, “and only one trough.” Esmenet swallowed, stood
rigid. She made no reply. “I’ve seen you before
too,” he said, playing games with their pretense about the fire. “Haven’t I?”
He waved a mocking finger. Deep breath. “No. I’m
sure you haven’t.” “But yes… Yes! You’re a…
harlot.” He smiled winningly. “A whore.” Esmenet glanced around.
“1 have no idea what you’re talking about.” “Sorcerers and whores… It
seems oddly appropriate, I suppose. With so many men licking your crotch, I
imagine it serves to keep one with a magic tongue.” She struck him, or tried
to. Somehow he caught her hand. “Sarcellus,” she
whispered. “Sarcellus, please…” She felt a fingertip
trace an impossible line along her inner thigh. “Like I said,” he
muttered in a tone her body recognized. “One trough.“ She glanced back toward
the fire, saw Achamian peering after her with a frown. Of course he could see
only blackness, such was the treachery of fire, which illuminated small circles
by darkening the entire world. But what Achamian could or could not see did not
matter. “No, Sarcellus,” she hissed. “Not…” … here “… while I live. Do you
understand?” She could feel the heat
of him. No-no-no-no… A different, more
resonant voice called out. “Is there a problem?” Whirling, she saw Prince
Kellhus stride from the shadows of the nearby grove. “N-no. Nothing,” Esmenet
gasped, stunned to find her arm free. “Lord Sarcellus startled me, nothing
more.” “She spooks easily,”
Sarcellus said. “But then most women do.” “You think so?” Kellhus
replied, approaching until even Sarcellus had to look up. Kellhus stared at the
man, his manner mild, even bemused, but there was an implacable constancy to
his look that made Esmenet’s heart race, that urged her limbs to run. Had he
been listening? Had he heard? “Perhaps you’re right,”
Sarcellus said in an offhand manner. “Most men spook easy too.” There was a moment of
uncomfortable silence. Something clawed at Esmenet to fill it, but she could
find no breath to speak. “I’ll leave you two,
then,” Sarcellus declared. With a shallow bow, he turned and strode back to the
fire. Alone with Kellhus,
Esmenet sighed in relief. The hands that had throttled her heart but moments
before had vanished. She looked up to Kellhus, glimpsed the Nail of Heaven over
his left shoulder. He seemed an apparition of gold and shadow. “Thank you,” she
whispered. “You loved him, didn’t you?” Her ears burned. For some
reason, saying no never occurred to her. One just didn’t lie to Prince
Anasurimbor Kellhus. Instead, she said, “Please don’t tell Akka.” Kellhus smiled, though
his eyes seemed profoundly sad. He reached out, as though to touch her cheek,
then dropped his hand. “Come,” he said. “Night waxes.” Clutching hands with the
palm-to-palm urgency of young lovers, Esmenet and Achamian searched through the
scrub and grasses for good sleeping ground. They found a flat area near the
edge of the grove, not far from the cliff, and rolled out their mats. They laid
down, groaning and puffing like an old man and woman. The ironwood nearest them
had died some time ago, and it twined across the sky above them, like a thing
of alabaster. Through smooth-forking branches, Esmenet studied the f’tsguiocn yy constellations, oppressed
by the thought of Sarcellus and the angry memory of Achamian’s earlier words… There’s no hiding from the end of the
world! How could she be such a
fool? A harlot who would place herself upon his scales? He was a Mandate Schoolman. Every night he
lost loves greater than she could imagine, let alone be. She’d heard his cries. The frantic babbling in
unknown tongues. The eyes lost in ancient hallucinations. She knew this! How many
times had she held him in the humid dark? Achamian loved her, sure,
but Seswatha loved the dead. “Did I ever tell you,”
she said, flinching from these thoughts, “that my mother read the stars?” “Dangerous,” he replied,
“especially in the Nansurium. Didn’t she know the penalties?” The prohibitions against
astrology were as severe as those against witchcraft. The future was too
valuable to be shared with caste-menials. “Better
to be a whore, Esmi,”
her mother would say. “Stones are
nothing more than far-flung fists. Better to be beaten than to be burned…” How old had she been?
Eleven? “She knew, which was why
she refused to teach me…” “She was wise.” Meditative silence.
Esmenet struggled with an unaccountable anger. “Do you think they speak
our future, Akka? The stars?” A momentary pause. “No.” “Why?” “The Nonmen believe the
sky is endlessly empty, an infinite void…” “Empty? How could that
be?” “Even more, they think
the stars are faraway suns.” Esmenet wanted to laugh,
but then, as though suddenly seeing through
her reflection across waters, she saw the plate of heaven dissolve into
impossible depths, emptiness heaped upon emptiness, hollow upon hollow, with
stars—no suns!—hanging like points of dust in a shaft of light. She caught her
breath. Somehow the sky had become a vast, yawning pit. Without thinking, she
clenched the grasses, as though she stood upon a ledge rather than lay across
the ground. “How could they believe
such a thing?” she asked. “The sun moves in circles about the world. The stars
move in circles about the Nail.” The riKSI MARCH thought struck her that
the Nail of Heaven itself might be another world, one with a thousand thousand
suns. Such a sky that would be! Achamian shrugged.
“Supposedly that’s what the Inchoroi told them. That they sailed here from
stars that were suns.” “And you believe them,
the Nonmen? That’s why you don’t think the stars weave our fate ?” “I believe them.” “But you still believe
the future is written…” The air became hard between them, the surrounding
grasses as sharp as wire. “You believe Kellhus is the Harbinger.” She realized she’d been
speaking of Kellhus all along. Prince Kellhus. A heartbeat of silence.
The sound of laughter over ruined walls— Kellhus and Serwe‘. “Yes,” Achamian said. Esmenet held her breath.
“What if he’s more? More than the Harbinger…” Achamian rolled onto his
side, propped his head on his palm. For the first time, Esmenet saw the tears
coursing down his cheeks. He’d been crying all along, she realized. All along. He suffers… More than I can ever know. “You understand,” he
said. “You see why he torments me, don’t you?” Her skin recalled the
path of Sarcellus’s finger along her inner thigh. She shuddered, thought she
heard Serwe moaning in the dark, gasping… “I asked you,” Kellhus had said, “to tell me what it was like.” She no longer wanted to
run. “The Mandate cannot know,
Akka… We must bear this burden alone.” Achamian pursed trembling
lips. Swallowed. “We?” Esmenet looked back to
the stars. One more language she could not read. “We.” Five The Plains of Mengedda Why must I conquer, you ask? War makes
clear. Life or Death. Freedom or Bondage. War strikes the sediment from the
waterof life. —TRIAMIS I, JOURNALS AND
DIALOGUES Early Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk,
near the Plains of Mengedda Cnaьir had known
something was amiss long before sighting the fields of trampled pasture and
dead firepits: too little smoke on the horizon, and too few scavenging birds in
the sky. When he mentioned this to Proyas, the Prince had blanched, as though
he’d confirmed a festering concern. When they crested the last of the hills and
saw that only the Conriyans and the Nansur remained beneath Asgilioch’s walls,
Proyas had fallen into an apoplectic fury, fairly shrieking curses as he
whipped his horse down the slopes. Cnaьir, Xinemus, and the
other Conriyan caste-nobles comprising their party chased him all the way to
Conphas’s headquarters, where the Exalt-General explained, in his infuriatingly
glib way, that the morning of the day previous, Coithus Saubon had decided to
make the most of Proyas’s absence. The Shrial Knights, of course, couldn’t lay
hoof or boot in the tracks of another when it came to heathen land, and as for
Gothyelk, Skaiyelt, and their barbaric kinsmen, how could they be The flams of Mengedda expected to distinguish
fools from wise men, what with all that hair in their eyes? “Didn’t you argue with
them?” Proyas had cried. “Didn’t you reason?” “Saubon wasn’t interested
in reason,” Conphas replied, speaking, as he always did, as though
intellectually filing his nails. “He was listening to a louder
voice—apparently.” “The God?” Proyas asked. Conphas laughed. “I was
going to say ‘greed,’ but, yes, I suppose ‘the God’ will do. He said your
friend, the Prince of Atrithau, had a vision…” He glanced at Cnaьir. “You mean Kellhus?”
Proyas cried. “Kellhus told him to march?” “So the man said,”
Conphas replied. Such is the
madness of the world, his tone added, though his eyes suggested something far different. There was a moment of
communal hesitation. Over the past weeks, the Dunyain’s name had gathered much
weight among the Inrithi, as though it were a rock they held at arm’s length.
Cnaьir could see it in their faces: the look of beggars with gold sewn into
their hems—or of drunkards with over-shy daughters… What, Cnaьir wondered,
would happen when the rock became too heavy? Afterward, when Proyas
confronted the Dunyain at Xinemus’s camp, Cnaьir could only think, He makes mistakes! “What did you do?” Proyas
asked the fiend, his voice quavering with rage. Everyone, Serwe,
Dinchases, even that babbling sorcerer and his shrew whore, sat stunned about
the evening fire. No one spoke to Kellhus that way… No one. Cnaьir almost cackled
aloud. “What would you have me
say?” the Dunyain asked. “What happened?” Proyas
cried. “Saubon came to us in the
hills,” Achamian said quickly, “while you were in Tus—” “Silence!” the Prince
cried, without so much as glancing at the Schoolman. “I have asked you—” “You’re not my better!”
Kellhus thundered. All of them, Cnaьir included, jumped—and not merely in
surprise. There was something in his tone. Something preternatural. The Dunyain had leapt to
his feet, and though a length away, somehow seemed to loom over the Conriyan
Prince. Proyas actually stepped backward. He looked as though he had remembered
something unspoken between them. “You’re my peer, Proyas. Do not presume to be more.” From where Cnaьir stood,
the ochre walls and turrets of squat Asgilioch framed the head and shoulders of
the two men. Kellhus, his trim beard and long hair shining gold in the evening
sun, stood a full head taller than the swarthy Conriyan Prince, but both men
emanated grace and potency in equal measure. Proyas had recovered his angry
glare. “What I presume, Kellhus, is to be party to all decisions of moment
regarding the Holy War.” “I made no decision. You
know that. I told Saubon only…” For a fleeting moment, a strange, almost
lunatic vulnerability animated his expression. His lips parted. He seemed to
look through the Conriyan Prince. “Only what?” The Dunyain’s eyes
refocused, his stance hardened—everything about him… converged somehow, as though he were somehow more here than anyone else. As though he stood among ghosts. He speaks in hidden cues, Cnaьir reminded himself. He wars against allof
us! “Only what I see,”
Kellhus said. “And just what is it you
see?” The words sounded forced. “Do you wish to know,
Nersei Proyas? Do you really want me to tell you?” Now Proyas hesitated. His
eyes flickered to those surrounding, fell upon Cnaьir for a heartbeat, no more.
Without expression he said, “You’ve doomed us.” Then turning on his heel, he
strode in the direction of his quarters. Afterward, in the stuffy
confines of their pavilion, Cnaьir set upon the Dunyain in Scylvendi, demanding
to know what had really happened. Serwe huddled in her watchful little corner,
like a puppy beaten by two masters. “I said what I said to
secure our position,” Kellhus asserted, his voice passionless, bottomless—the
way it always was when he affected to reveal his “true self.” J he I lains oj Mengedda 1U “And this is how you
secure our position? By alienating our patron? By sending half the Holy War to
its destruction? Trust me, Dunyain, I have fought the Fanim; this Holy War,
this… this migration, or whatever it is, has precious
little chance of overcoming them as it is—let alone conquering Shimeh! And you
would cut it in half? By the Dead God, you do need me to teach you war, don’t you?” Kellhus, of course, was
unmoved. “Alienating Proyas is to our advantage. He judges men harshly, holds
all in suspicion. He opens himself only when he’s moved to regret. And he will
regret. As for Saubon, I told him only what he wanted to hear. Every man yearns
to hear their flattering delusions confirmed. Every man. This is why they
support—willingly—so many parasitic castes, such as augurs, priests, memorial—” “Read my face, dog!”
Cnaьir grated. “You will not convince me this is a success!” Pause. Shining eyes
blinking, watching. The intimation of a horrifying scrutiny. “No,” Kellhus said, “I
suppose not.” More lies. “I didn’t,” the monk
continued, “anticipate the others—Gothyelk and Skaiyelt—would follow his lead.
With just the Galeoth and the Shrial Knights, I deemed the risk acceptable. The
Holy War could survive their loss, and given what you’ve said regarding the
liabilities of unwieldy hosts, I though it might even profit. But without the
Tydonni…” “Lies! You would have
stopped them otherwise! You could have stopped them if you wished.” Kellhus shrugged.
“Perhaps. But Saubon left us the very night he found us in the hills. He roused
his men when he returned, and set out before dawn yesterday. Both Gothyelk and
Skaiyelt had already followed him into the Southron Gates by the time we
returned. It was too late.” “You believed him, didn’t
you? You believed all that tripe about Skauras fleeing Gedea. You still
believe!” “Saubon believed it. I
merely think it probable.” “As you said,” Cnaьir
snarled with as much spite as he could muster, “every man yearns to hear their
flattering delusions confirmed.” Another pause. “First I require one
Great Name,” Kellhus said, “then the others will follow. If Gedea falls, then
Prince Coithus Saubon will turn to me before making any decision of moment. We
need this Holy War, Scylvendi. I deemed it worth the risk.” Such a fool! Cnaьir
regarded Kellhus, even though he knew his expression would betray nothing, and
his own, everything. He considered lecturing him on the treacherous ways of the
Fanim, who invariably used feints and false informants, and who invariably
gulled fools like Coithus Saubon. But then he glimpsed Serwe glaring at him
from her corner, her eyes brimming with hatred, accusation, and terror. This is always the way, something within him said—something exhausted. And suddenly he realized
that he’d actually believed the Dunyain, believed that he had made a mistake. And yet it was often like
this: believing and not believing. It reminded him of listening to old Haurut,
the Utemot memorialist who’d taught him his verses as a child. One moment
Cnaьir would be sweeping across the Steppe with a hero like the great Uthgai,
the next he would be staring at a broken old man, drunk on gishrut, stumbling
on phrases a thousand years old. When one believed, one’s soul was moved. When one didn’t, everything else moved. “Not everything I say,”
the Dunyain said, “can be a lie, Scylvendi. So why do you insist on thinking I
deceive you in all things?” “Because that way,”
Cnaьir grated, “you deceive me in nothing.” Riding on the flank to
avoid the dust, Cnaьir glanced at Proyas and his entourage of caste-nobles and
servants. Despite the lustre of their armour and dress, they looked grim. They
had negotiated the Southron Gates through the Unaras, and at long last they
rode across heathen land, across Gedea. But their
mood was neither jubilant nor assured. Two days ago, Proyas had sent several
advance parties of horsemen to search for Saubon, the Galeoth Prince. This
morning, outriders belonging to Lord Ingiaban had found one of those parties
dead. Gedea, at least in the
shadow of the Unaras, was a broken land, a jumble of gravel slopes and stunted
promontories. Save for clutches of hardy cedars, the green
of spring was growing tawny beneath the summer sun. The sky was a plate of
turquoise, featureless, sere—so different from the cloudy depths of Nansur
skies. Vultures and jackdaws
screeched into the air at their approach. With a curse, Proyas reined to a
halt. “So what does this mean?” he asked Cnaьir. “That Skauras has somehow
positioned himself behind Saubon and the others? Have the
Fanim encircled them?” Cnaьir raised a hand against the sun. “Perhaps…” The
bodies had been stripped where they’d fallen: some sixty or seventy dead men,
bloating in the hot sun, scattered like things dropped in flight. Without
warning, Cnaьir spurred ahead, forcing the Prince and his entourage to gallop
after him. “Sodhoras was my cousin,”
Proyas snapped, reining to a violent halt beside him. “My father will be
furious!” “Another cousin,” Lord Ingiaban said darkly. He referred to
Calmemunis and the Vulgar Holy War. Cnaьir sniffed the air,
contemplated the smell of rot. He’d almost forgotten what it was like: the
scribbling flies, the swelling bellies, the eyes like painted cloth. He’d
almost forgotten how holy. War… The very earth seemed to tingle. Proyas dismounted and
knelt over one of the dead. He waved away flies with his gauntlets. Turning to
Cnaьir, he asked, “How about you? Do you still believe him?” He looked away, as
though embarrassed by the honesty of his tone. Him… Kellhus. “He…” Cnaьir paused, spat
when he should have shrugged. “He sees things.” Proyas snorted. “Your
manner does little to reassure me.” He stood, casting his shadow across the
dead Conriyan, slapping the dust from the ornamental skirt he wore over his
mail leggings. “This is always the way of it, I suppose.” “What do you mean, my
Prince?” Xinemus asked. “We think things will be
more glorious than they are, that they’ll unfold according to our hopes, our
expectations…” He unstopped his waterskin, took too long a drink. “The Nansur
actually have a word for it,” he continued. “We ‘idealize.’” The Plains of Mengedda 1U/ Statements such as this,
Cnaьir had decided, partially explained the awe and adoration Proyas roused in
his men, including those who were names in their own right, such as Gaidekki
and Ingiaban. The admixture of honesty and insight… Kellhus did much the
same. Didn’t he? “So what do you think?”
Proyas was asking. “What happened here?” He’d clambered back onto his horse. “Hard to tell,” Cnaьir
replied, glancing once again over the dead. “Pfah,” Lord Gaidekki
snorted. “Sodhoras was no fool. He was overwhelmed by numbers.” Cnaьir disagreed, but
rather than dispute the man, he jerked his horse about and spurred toward the
ridge. The soil was sandy, the turf shallow-rooted; his mount—a sleek, Conriyan
black—stumbled several times before reaching the crest. Here he paused, leaning
against his saddle’s cantle to relieve a vagrant pain in his back. Before him,
the far side sloped gradually down, lending the entire ridge the appearance of
a titanic shoulder blade. To the immediate north, the bald heights of the
Unaras Spur gathered in the haze. Cnaьir followed the crest
a short distance, studying the scuffed ground and counting the dead. Seventeen
more, stripped like the others, their arms askew, their mouths teeming with
flies. The sound of Proyas arguing with his Palatines wafted up from below. Proyas was no fool, but
his fervour made him impatient. Despite hours of listening to Cnaьir describe
the resources and methods of the Kianene, he as yet possessed no clear
understanding of their foe. His countrymen, on the other hand, possessed no
understanding whatsoever. And when men who knew little argued with men who knew
nothing, tempers were certain to be thrown out of joint. Since the earliest days
of the march, Cnaьir had harboured severe doubts regarding the Holy War and its
churlish nobles. So far, nearly every measure he’d suggested in council had
been either summarily rejected or openly scoffed at—the yapping fools! In so many ways, the Holy
War was the antithesis of a Scylvendi horde. The People brooked few if any
followers. No pampering slaves, no priests or augurs, and certainly no women,
which could always be had when one ranged enemy country. They carried little
baggage over what a warrior and his mount could bear,
even on the longest campaigns. If they exhausted their amicut and could secure no forage, they either let blood
from their mounts or went hungry. Their horses, though small, unbecoming, and
relatively slow, were bred to the land, not to the stable. The horse he now
rode—a gift from Proyas—not only required grain over and above fodder, but
enough to feed three men! Madness. The only thing Cnaьir had
not protested was the very thing the
dog-eyed idiots ceaselessly clucked and fretted over: the breakup of the Holy
War into separate contingents. What was it with these Inrithi? Did brothers bed
their sisters? Did they beat their children about the head? The larger the
host, the slower the march. The slower the march, the more supplies the host
consumed. It was that simple! The problem wasn’t that the Holy War had divided.
It simply had no choice: Gedea, by all accounts, was a lean country, scarcely
cultivated and sparsely populated. The problem was that it had done so without planning, without advance intelligence of what to expect,
without agreed-upon routes or secure communications. But how to make them
understand? And understand they must: the Holy War’s survival depended on it. Everything depended on it… Cnaьir spat across the dust,
listened to them bicker, watched them gesticulate. Murdering Anasurimbor
Moenghus was all that mattered. It was the weight that drew all lines plumb. Any indignity ... Anything! “Lord Ingiaban,” Cnaьir
called down, startling them into silence. “Ride back to the main column and
return with at least a hundred of your men. The Fanim are fond of surprising
those who come to dispense with the dead.” When none of the milling
nobles moved, Cnaьir cursed and urged his horse back down the slope. Proyas
scowled as he approached, but said nothing. He tests me. “I care not if you think
me impertinent,” Cnaьir said. “I speak only of what must be done.” “I’ll go,” Xinemus
offered, already drawing his horse around. The Flams of Mengedda 1UV “No,” Cnaьir said. “Lord
Ingiaban goes.” Ingiaban grunted, ran
fingers over the blue sparrows embroidered across his surcoat—the sign of his
House. He glared at Cnaьir. “Of all the dogs who’ve dared piss on my leg,” he
said, “you’re the first to aim higher than my knee.” Several guffaws broke from
the others, and the Count-Palatine of Kethantei grinned bitterly. “But before I
change my leggings, Scylvendi, please tell me why you choose to piss on me.” Cnaьir wasn’t amused.
“Because your household is the closest. Because the life of your Prince is at
stake.” The lantern-jawed Palatine paled. “Do as he bids!” Xinemus
cried. “Watch yourself,
Marshal,” Ingiaban snarled. “Playing benjuka with our Prince doesn’t make you
my better.” “Which means, Zin,” Lord
Gaidekki quipped, “that you must piss no higher than his waist.” Another burst of
laughter. Ingiaban ruefully shook his head. He paused before riding off,
dipping his square-bearded chin to Scylvendi, but whether in conciliation or
warning the Scylvendi couldn’t tell. An uncomfortable pause
followed. The shadow of a vulture flickered across the group, and Proyas
glanced skyward. “So, Cnaьir,” he said, blinking away the sun, “what happened
here? Were they overwhelmed by numbers?” Cnaьir scowled. “They
were outwitted, not outnumbered.” “How do you mean?” Proyas
asked. “Your cousin was a fool.
He was accustomed to riding with his men in file, as horsemen must when using a
road. They wound into this depression and began climbing the slope, some three
or four abreast. The Kianene waited for them above, holding their horses to the
ground.” “They were ambushed…”
Proyas raised a hand to better peer along the ridge line. “Do you think the
heathen simply happened on them?” Cnaьir shrugged.
“Perhaps. Perhaps not. Since Sodhoras thought himself an outrider, he obviously
saw no need to deploy scouts of his own. The Fanim are more canny. They could
have tracked him for some time without his knowledge, judged that sooner or
later he would come here…” He brought his horse about and pointed to the group
of bloating dead who littered the centre of the ridge line. They looked oddly peaceful, like
eunuchs snoozing in the sun after bathing. “But this is moot. The Fanim
attacked when the first men crested the ridge, Sodhoras among them—” “How in hell,” Lord
Gaidekki blurted, “could you know wheth—” “Because the horsemen below broke ranks to
rush to their lord’s defence, only to find the Fanim arrayed along the entire
ridge line. Though it looks harmless, that slope is treacherous. Sand and
gravel. Many were slain by arrows at close range as their horses floundered.
Those few who gained the summit caused the Fanim quite some grief—I saw far
more blood than bodies up there—but were eventually overwhelmed. The rest, some
twenty or so more sober but hopelessly courageous men, realized the futility of
saving their lord, and pulled back—there—perhaps intending to draw the Fanim
down and exact some revenge.” Cnaьir glanced at
Gaidekki, daring the brash Palatine to
contradict him. But the man studied the disposition of the dead, like the
others. “The Kianene,” Cnaьir
continued, “remained on the crest… They taunted the survivors, I think, by
desecrating Sodhoras’s corpse— someone was disembowelled. Then they tried to
reduce your kinfolk with archery. Those Inrithi who fought them on the crest
must have unnerved them, because they were taking no chances. Their arrows must
have possessed little effect, even at that short range. At some point they
began shooting their horses—something the Kianene are typically loath to do.
This is something to remember… Once Sodhoras’s men were unhorsed, the Kianene
simply rode them down.” War. The hairs rose on
the nape of his neck… “They stripped the
bodies,” he added, “then rode off to the southwest.” Cnaьir wiped his palms
across his thighs. The fools believed him—that much was plain from their
stunned silence. Before this place had been a rebuke and a dread omen,
but now… Mystery made things titanic. Knowledge made small. “Sweet Sejenus!” Gaidekki
suddenly exclaimed. “He reads the dead like scripture!” Proyas frowned at the
man. “No blasphemy… Please, Lord Palatine.” He scratched his trim beard, his
gaze wandering yet again over the dead. He seemed to be nodding. He fixed
Cnaьir with a canny look. “How many?” The Plains of Mengedda 1 i “Fanim?” The Scylvendi
shrugged. “Sixty, maybe seventy, lightly armoured horsemen. No more.” “And Saubon? Does this
mean he’s encircled?” Cnaьir matched his gaze.
“When one wars on foot against horse, one is always encircled.” “So the bastard may still
live,” Proyas said, his breathlessness betrayed by a faint quaver in his voice.
The Holy War could survive the loss of one nation, but three? Saubon had
gambled more than his own life on this rash gambit—far more—which was why
Proyas, over Conphas’s protestations, had ordered his people to march. Perhaps
four nations could prevail where three could not. “For all we know,”
Xinemus said, “the Galeoth bastard may be right. He could be fanning across
Gedea as we speak, chasing Skauras’s skirmishers to the sea.” “No,” Cnaьir said. “His
peril is great… Skauras has assembled in Gedea. He awaits you
with all his might.” “And how could you know
that?” Gaidekki cried. “Because the Fanim who killed your kinsman took a great
risk.” Proyas nodded, his eyes at once narrow and apprehensive. “They attacked
a larger and more heavily armed force… Which means they were following
orders—strict orders—to prevent any communication between isolated
contingents.” Cnaьir lowered his head
in deference—not to the man, but to the truth. At long last, Nersei Proyas was
beginning to understand. Skauras had been watching, studying the Holy War since
long before it had left Momemn’s walls. He knew its weaknesses… Knowledge. It
all came down to knowledge. Moenghus had taught him
that. “War is intellect,” the
Scylvendi chieftain said. “So long as you and your people insist on waging it
with your hearts, you are doomed.” “Akirea im Vail” a thousand Galeoth throats boomed. “Akirea im Val pa Mahal” Glory to the God. Glory to the
God of Gods. Startled from his
reverie, Coithus Saubon looked down over the great, haphazard column that was
his army, searching for some sign of / ihe Hrst March Kussalt, his groom, who’d
ridden out to meet the scouts. He gnawed at his callused knuckles, as he always
did when he was anxious. Please, he thought. Please… But there was no sign. Pulling helm and coif
from his head, he ran his fingers through his short, autumn-blond hair,
squeezing out the sweat that kept nagging his eyes. He sat astride his horse,
alone on a promontory overlooking a small but fast-running river not marked on
any of his crude maps. Thankfully, the river was fordable, though not without
difficulty. It had already claimed four wains and one life, as well as several
precious hours; the valley was growing more and more congested as men and
supplies gathered behind the ford. On the far side, warriors and followers
alike shook water from their limbs, then fanned out, some following the banks
to refill water-skins or, Saubon noted darkly, even to fish. Others trudged
onward, their faces bovine with weariness, their packs swinging from pikes and
spears. To the south, the
towering ridges that had everywhere obscured his view folded into the river
vale, revealing the hazy contours of what was to come. There, beyond the failing
hills, he could see it: a broad plain, blue with distance, reaching as far as
the horizon. The Plains of Mengedda. The great Battleplain of legend. His chest tightened. He
thought of his older cousin, Tharschilka, whose bones mouldered with those of
Calmemunis and the Vulgar Holy War among those distant grasses. He thought of
Prince Kellhus… I
own this land…It belongs to me!
It must! They’d marched for an
entire week, through the passes of the Southron Gates, then along a ruined
Ceneian road which had inexplicably ended in a ravine. Here he and Gothyelk—the
stubborn old bastard!—had quarrelled to the point of fisticuffs over which way
they should continue. The jewel of Gedea, if it could be called such, was the
city of Hinnereth to the southeast on the MeneanorCoast. Saubon wanted the city for
himself, certainly, but the Holy War needed
it to secure their flank as they continued south. For the great Hoga Gothyelk,
however, Gedea was something to be crossed, not conquered. The fool spoke as
though the lands between the Holy War and Shimeh were nothing more than strides
on a sprinter’s track. They’d bellowed at each other deep into the night, with
Gotian trying time and again to find some common ground, and The Plains of Mengedda Skaiyelt nodding off in
his corner, pretending now and then to listen to his interpreter. In the end,
they resolved to go their separate ways. Gotian, who like all Nansur
caste-nobles had a thorough military education, elected to continue on to
Hinnereth—he was no fool, at least. No one knew what Skaiyelt intended until
the following day, when he struck southward with Gothyelk and his Tydonni. Good riddance, Saubon had
thought. At the time, he’d still
believed that Skauras had yielded Gedea. “March,” the Prince of
Atrithau had said that night in the mountains. “The Whore will be kind to you. Just make certain the Shrial Knights are punished.” Never in his life had
Saubon obsessed so long over so few words. They’d seemed straightforward enough
at the time. But like those eerie, ancient Nonmen statues that looked
benevolent or malicious, divine or demonic, depending upon where one stood,
their meaning transformed with every passing day. Had Prince Kellhus in fact
confirmed his beliefs? The Gods had given their assurances, certainly, and like
the misers they were, they’d named their terms. But they’d said nothing about Skauras yielding Gedea. If anything, they had suggested the opposite… Battle. They suggested battle. How else
was he to punish the Shrial Knights? “Akirea im Val! Akirea im Val!” Saubon glanced down for
an instant, then resumed probing the southern horizon—the Battleplain. Flat,
dark, and blue, it looked more an ocean than a great table of earth, like
something that could swallow nations whole. Skauras hadn’t
relinquished Gedea. He could feel it, like lead in his belly and bones. This
realization, coming as it did hard on the heels of his feud with Gothyelk, had
filled Saubon with terror—so much so that he’d refused to countenance it at
first. He possessed the assurances of the Gods—the Gods.1 What did
it matter whether he marched with Gothyelk and his Tydonni or no? The Whore would be kind to him. Gedea would be his! So he told himself. Then from nowhere, an
inner voice had whispered, Perhaps
PrinceKellhus is a fraud … lit ihe first March The Plains of Mengedda Such was the madness of
things—the perversity!—that one thought one slight twitch of the soul, could
overturn so much. Where before he need only collect the future like a tax
farmer, now he threw number-sticks against the great black—for the lives of
thousands, no less! Perhaps, for the entire Holy War. One thought… So frail was
the balance between soul and world. Dread overcame him, threatened him with
despair. At night, he wept in the secrecy of his tent. Was this not always the
way? Hadn’t the Gods always taunted, frustrated, and humiliated him? First the
fact of his birth—to be the first soul in the body of the seventh son! Then his father, who’d punished him beyond all
reason, beat him for possessing his fire, his cunning! Then the wars against
the Nansurium a few years previous… Mere miles! So close he could see the smear
of Momemn’s smoke on the horizon! Only to be afflicted by Ikurei Conphas—to be
bested by a stripling! And now this… Why? Why cheat himl Hadn’t he given? Hadn’t he observed their petty
statutes, slaked their obscene thirst for blood? Then yesterday, both
Athjeari and Wanhail, whom Saubon had charged with scouting and securing the
country in advance of the main body, had sighted large parties of heathen
horsemen. “Many-coloured, with
thin, flowing coats,” Wanhail, the Earl of Kurigald, had said at evening
council. Despite their similar age and stature, Wanhail always struck Saubon as
one of those men flung far from their natural station by the happenstance of
birth: a tavern clown in the trappings of a caste-noble. “Worse than the
Ainoni, even… Like a troop of fucking dancers!” There was a chorus of
laughter. “But fast,” Athjeari had
added, his gaze fixed upon the fire. “Very
fast.” When he looked to the others, his expression was stern, his long-lashed
eyes sober. “When we gave chase, they outstripped us with ease…” He paused so
the assembled earls and thanes could digest the significance of this. “And
their archery! I’ve never seen the like. Somehow they can draw and release
while they ride—fire backward at their pursuers!” The assembled warlords
were unimpressed: Inrithi caste-nobles, Norsirai or Ketyai, thought archery
base and unmanly. Regarding the sightings themselves, the
preponderance of opinion was that they meant little. “Of course they shadow
us!” Wanhail argued. “The only surprise is that we haven’t seen the
bung-bangers before now.” Even Gotian agreed, though with somewhat more
decorum. “If Skauras wished to contest Gedea,” he said, “then he would have
defended the passes, no?” Only Athjeari dissented. Afterward, he pulled Saubon
aside and fairly hissed, “Something’s amiss, Uncle.” Something was amiss, though Saubon had said nothing at the time.
He’d learned long ago the virtue of suspending judgement in the company of his
commanders—especially in situations where his authority was uncertain. Even
though he could count on many men, mostly relatives or veterans of his previous
campaigns, he was really only the titular head of the Galeoth contingent—a fact
brought home by the number of caste-nobles who continually gambolled through
the hills, hunting or hawking. The deference owed by earls to a lackland prince
was largely ceremonial; his every command, it seemed, had to run a gauntlet of
pride and whimsy. So he pretended to
deliberate, concealed the certainty that weighed so heavy against him.
Concealed the truth. They were alone, some
forty or fifty thousand Galeoth and under nine thousand Shrial Knights, not to
mention the uncounted thousands who followed, stranded in hostile country,
wandering into the clutches of a ruthless, cunning, and determined foe.
Gothyelk and his Tydonni were lost. Proyas and Conphas remained camped about
Asgilioch. They were vastly outnumbered, if the estimates of Skauras’s strength
provided by Conphas could be trusted—and Gotian insisted they could. They had
no real discipline, no real leader. And they had no sorcerers. No Scarlet Spires. But he said the Whore would be kind… He said! Saubon puzzled at the
chorus of voices that continued to reverberate from below. “Akirea im Vail” Usually a patchwork of shouts, chants, and hymns
characterized the march. Something had incited them. Once again, Saubon peered
through the dust and massed men, searching for some sign of his groom. It had
to be Kussalt… Please… There! Riding with a
small party of horsemen. Saubon released a deep, shuddering breath, watched
them pass through a screen of cheering The First March I he riams uj men-at-arms—Agmundrmen by
the look of their teardrop shields—-before climbing the gravel incline to join
him. His relief quickly evaporated. They bore lances, he realized. Lances
capped with severed heads. “Akirea im Val pa Valsa!” Saubon clenched a fist,
beat it against a mail-covered thigh. With thumb and forefinger, he pinched a
glimpse of Prince Kellhus from his eyes. No one knows you… Lances! They bore lances…
A traditional token, used by Galeoth knights to warn their commanders of
imminent battle. “From Athjeari?” he
called out as Kussalt’s horse gained the crest. The old groom scowled, as
though to say, Who else! Everything about the man was
dull: his mail, his ancient, dented battlecap, even the Red Lion on Blue of his
surcoat, which marked him as a member of the House Coithus. Dull and dangerous.
Kussalt cared nothing for his appearance, and this made him appear all the more
formidable. There was much violence in that grizzled face. The only man Saubon
had ever met with eyes as implacable as Kussalt’s had been Prince Kellhus. “What does he say?”
Saubon cried. The old groom tossed the
lance before reining to a halt. Saubon snatched it—almost too late. He found
himself face to face with a severed head planted on its tip. Dark skin blanched
and bloodless. The braids of its goatee swaying. A Kianene noble, possessing
the leathery look of dead things left overlong in the sun. Even still, it
seemed to gaze at him, slack and heavy-lidded, like a man about to spill his
seed. His foe. “War and apples,” Kussalt
said. “He said, ‘War and apples.’” “Apples” was common slang for decapitated
heads among the Galeoth. In days of yore, a tutor had once told Saubon, the
Galeoth had stewed and stuffed them, like the Thunyeri. The others rumbled to the
summit, hailing him. Gotian with his second, Sarcellus. Anfirig, the Earl of
Gesindal, with his groom. Several thanes—representatives of different
households. And four or five beardless adolescents ready to courier messages.
With the exception of Kussalt and Gotian, everyone carried a look somewhere
between desperation and exasperation. The ensuing argument was
as bitter as any Saubon had endured since parting ways with Gothyelk.
Apparently Athjeari and Wanhail had been fighting running battles since early
morning. Athjeari in particular, Kussalt said, was convinced that Skauras assembled
nearby, most likely on the Plains of Mengedda. “He thinks the Sapatishah is
trying to slow us with his pickets, keep us from reaching the Battleplain until
he’s prepared.” But Gotian disagreed, insisting that Skauras had prepared long
ago, that he was actually trying to bait
them. “He knows your people are rash, that the promise of battle will bring
them running.” When Anfirig and the others began protesting, the Grandmaster
screeched, “Don’t you see? Don’t you see?” over and over until everyone, including Saubon, fell silent. “He wants to engage you
as soon as possible on favourable ground! As soon as possible.1“ “So?” Anfirig asked
contemptously. Whether directly or indirectly, Gotian was always lecturing them
on the cunning and ferocity of the Fanim. As a result, many of the Galeoth
thought he feared the heathen— thought he was craven—when what he truly feared,
Saubon knew, was the reckless humour of his Norsirai allies. “So, perhaps he knows
something we don’t! Something that necessitates closing with us quickly!” The words struck Saubon
breathless. “If Gedea is a broken country,” he said numbly, “then the
Battleplain would be the quickest means of crossing it…” He glanced at Gotian,
who nodded cautiously. “What does—” Anfirig
started. “Think!” Saubon
exclaimed. “Think, Anfi, think! Gothyelk! If Gothyelk wishes to cross Gedea as
quickly as possible, what path
would he take?“ The Earl of Gesindal was
no fool, but then neither was he a prodigy. He lowered his greying, leonine
head in concentration, then said, “You’re saying he’s close, that the Tydonni
and Thunyeri have been marching parallel to us this entire time, making for the
Battleplain, as we do…” When he looked up, his eyes were bright with grudging
admiration. As a close mead-friend of his oldest brother, Anfirig, Saubon knew,
had always looked on him as the boy he’d so roundly teased in his youth. L “You’re saying the
Sapatishah is trying to prevent us from joining Gothyelk!” “Exactly,” Saubon
replied. He glanced at Gotian once again, realized the Grandmaster had given him this insight. He wants me to lead. Trusts me. But then the man didn’t
know him. No one did. No one— What are these thoughts! Save the Ainoni, the
Tydonni comprised the largest contingent of the Holy War—some seventy thousand
hard’bitten men. Add to that Skaiyelt’s murderous twenty thousand, and they
possessed nearly all the might of the Middle-North. The greatest Norsirai host
since the fall of the Ancient North! Ah, Skauras, my heathen friend… Suddenly the severed head
upon the lance no longer seemed a rebuke, a totem of their doom; it seemed a
sign, the smoke that promised cleansing fire. With unaccountable certainty,
Saubon realized that Skauras was
afraid… As well he should be. His misapprehensions fell
away, and the old exhilaration coursed like liquor through his veins, a
sensation he had always attributed to Gilgaol, One-Eyed War. The Whore will be kind to you. Saubon tossed the lance
and its grisly trophy back to Kussalt, then began barking orders, dispatching
multiple messengers to inform Athjeari and Wanhail of the situation, charging
Anfirig with the attempt to locate Gothyelk, bidding Gotian to send his knights
throughout the column, urging restraint and discipline. “Until we rejoin
Gothyelk, we remain in the hills,” he declared. “If Skauras wishes to close
with us, either let him fight on foot or break a thousand necks!” Then suddenly, he found
himself alone with Kussalt, his ears buzzing, his face flushed. It was happening, he
realized. It was beginning. After years and months, the
womanish war of words was finally over, and the real war was beginning. The
others, like Proyas, had yearned to untangle the “holy” in “Holy War” from the
Emperor’s knots. Not Saubon. It was the “war” he was most interested in. This
was what he told himself, anyway. The Plains of Mengedda And not only was it
happening, it was happening the way Prince Kellhus had said it would. No one knows you. No one. He glanced at the
retreating forms of Gotian and Sarcellus as they thudded down the slope. The
thought of sacrificing them—as Prince Kellhus, or the Gods, had
demanded—suddenly deadened his heart. Punish them. You must make sure the
Shrial Knights are punished. Something cold caught his
throat, and as quickly as Gilgaol had possessed him, the God fled. “Is something wrong,
m’Lord?” Kussalt asked. It was uncanny, the way the man could guess his moods.
But then, he’d always been there. Saubon’s earliest childhood memory was of
Kussalt scooping him up into his arms and racing into the galleries of Moraor
after a bee sting had nearly choked him. Without realizing, Saubon
resumed chewing on his knuckles. “Kussalt?” “Yes?” Saubon hesitated, found
himself looking away to the south, to the Battleplain. “I need a copy of The Tractate … I need to search for… something.” “What do you need to
know?” the old groom said, his voice both shocked and curiously tender… Saubon glared at him.
“What business—” “I ask only because I
carry The Tractate with me always…” His chapped hand
had wandered to his chest as he spoke; he laid his palm flat across his heart.
“Here.” He’d memorized it, Saubon
realized. For some reason this shocked him to the point of becoming faint. He’d
always known Kussalt to be pious, and yet… “Kussalt…” he began, but
could think of nothing to say. Those old, implacable
eyes blinked, nothing more. “I need…” Saubon finally
ventured, “I need to know what the Latter Prophet has to say regarding…
sacrifice.” The groom’s bushy white
brows knitted together. “Many things. Very many things… I don’t understand.” “What the Gods demand… Is
it proper because they demand it?” The First March “No,” Kussalt said, still
frowning. For some reason, the
thoughtless certainty of this answer angered him. What did the old fool know? “You disbelieve me,”
Kussalt said, his voice thick with weariness. “But it’s the glory of Inri Sej—” “Enough of this prattle,”
Coithus Saubon snapped. He glanced at the severed head—at the apple—noticed the
glint of a golden incisor between slack and battered lips. So this was their
enemy… Drawing his sword, he struck it from the lance, and the lance from
Kussalt’s fist. “I believe what I need
to,” he grated. HADTER S The Plains of Mengedda One sorcerer, the ancients say, is worth a thousand warriors in battle and ten thousand sinners
in Hell. —DRUSAS ACHAMIAN, THE
COMPENDIUM OF THE FIRST HOLY WAR When shields become crutches, and swords
become canes, some hearts are put to rout. When wives become plunder, and foes
become thanes, all hope has guttered out. —ANONYMOUS, “LAMENT FOR
THE CONQUERED” Early Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, near the Plains of Mengedda Morning broke, and rough
Galeoth and Tydonni horns pealed through the clear air, sounding, at the moment
of their highest pitch, like a woman’s shriek. The call to battle. Despite thousands of
Fanim horsemen and dozens of small pitched battles, the day previous had
witnessed the reunion of the Galeoth, Tydonni, and Thunyeri hosts in the hill
country to the immediate north of the Battleplain. Reconciled, Coithus Saubon
and Hoga Gothyelk agreed to march out onto the northern terminus of the plains
that very ihe first March evening, with the hope of
pressing their advantage—if it could be called such. Here, they decided, their
position would be as strong as anything they might hope to find. To the
northeast, they could shelter their flank behind a series of salt marshes,
whereas to the west, they could depend on the hills. A shallow ravine, guttered
by a stream that fed the marshes, wound the entire length, from flank to flank.
Here they had planned to draw up the common line. Its slopes were too shallow
to break any charge, but it would force the heathen to scramble through the
muck. Now the wind came from
the east, and men swore they could smell the sea. Some—a few—wondered at the
ground beneath their feet. They asked others whether their sleep had been
troubled, or whether they could hear a faint sound, like the hiss of foam in
tidal pools. The Great Earls of the
Middle-North gathered their households and their client thanes, who in turn
gathered their households. Majordomos hollered commands over the din. There
were cheers and raucous laughter, the rolling thunder of hooves as bands of
younger knights, already drunk, rushed southward, eager to be among the first
to catch sight of the heathen. Milling on carpets of bruised and trampled
grass, thousands made haste to ready themselves. Wives and concubines embraced
their men. Shrial Priests led crowds of warriors and camp-followers alike in
prayer. Thousands knelt upon the turf, muttering aloud from their ancestor
scrolls, touching morning-cool earth to their lips. Cultic priests intoned
ancient rites, anointed idols with blood and precious oils. Goshawks were
sacrificed in the name of Gilgaol. The shanks of butchered antelope were thrown
across the godfires of the Dark Hunter, Husyelt. Augurs cast their bones.
Surgeons set knives upon the fire, readied their kits. The sun rose bold on the
horizon, bathing the turmoil in golden light. Standards waved listlessly in the
breeze. Men-at-arms gathered in irregular masses, making for their places in
the line. Mounted cohorts filed among them, their arms flashing, their shields
bright with menacing totems and images of the Tusk. Suddenly shouts broke out
among those already gathered along the ravine. The entire horizon seemed to move, winked as though powdered by silver filings. The
heathen. The Kianene Grandees of Gedea and Shigek. The Plains of Mengedda Cursing, thundering
commands, the Earls and Thanes of the Middle-North managed to draw up their
thousands along the ravine’s northern edge. The stream had already become a
black, muddy basin, pocked and clotted with deep hoofprints. On the ravine’s
southern edge, before the massed lines of footmen, the Inrithi knights milled
in great clots. Cries of dismay were raised when those ranging farther afield
discovered bones among the weeds, bundled in rotted leather and cloth. The ruin
of an earlier Holy War. Many different hymns were
taken up, particularly among the low-caste footmen, but they soon faltered,
yielding to the cadences of one deep-throated paean. Soon the air thrummed with
the chorus of thousands. The hornsmen began marking the refrains with sonorous
peals. Even the caste-nobles, as they arranged themselves into long iron ranks,
joined: A warring we have come A reaving we shall work. And when
the day is done, In our eyes the Gods shall lurk! It was a song as old as
the Ancient North, a song from The
Sagas. And as
the Inrithi gave it voice once again, they felt the glory of their past flood
through them, brace them. A thousand voices and one song. A thousand years and one song! Never had they felt so rooted, so
certain. The words struck many with the force of revelation. Tears streamed
down sunburned cheeks. Passions ignited, swept through the ranks, until men
roared inarticulately and brandished their swords against the sky. They were
thousands and they were one. In our eyes the Gods shall lurk! Taking the dawn as their
armature, the Kianene rode out to answer them. They were a race born to the
fierce sun, not to clouds and gloomy forests as the Norsirai, and it seemed to
bless them with glory. Sunlight flashed across silvered battlecaps. The silk
sleeves of their khalats glimmered, transformed their lines into a
many-coloured horizon. Behind them the air resounded with pounding drums. i/‘t Ihe First March And the Inrithi sang, In our eyes the Gods shall lurk! Saubon, Gothyelk, and the
other ranking nobles conferred for one last time before dispersing along the
line. Despite their best efforts, it remained uneven, the ranks painfully
shallow in some places, and point-lessly deep in others. Arguments broke out
among clients of different lords. A man named Trondha, a client thane of
Anfirig, had to be wrestled to the ground after attempting to knife one of his peers.
But still, the song thundered, so loud some clasped their chests, fearing for
the rhythm of their hearts. A warring we have come A reaving we shall work! The Kianene drew closer,
encompassing the grey’green plain, endless thousands of approaching horsemen—far
more, it seemed, than the Inrithi leaders had supposed. Their drums thundered
out across the open spaces, throbbing through an ocean of rumbling sound. The
Galeoth longbow-men, Agmundrmen from the northern marches primarily, raised
their yew bows and released. For a moment the sky was thatched, and a thin
shadow plunged into the advancing heathen line—to little effect. The Fanim were
closer now, and the Inrithi could see the polished bone of their bows, the iron
points of their lances, their wide-sleeved coats fluttering in the breeze. And they sang, the pious
Knights of the Tusk, the blue-eyed warriors of Galeoth, Ce Tydonn, and
Thunyerus. They sang, and the air shivered as though the skies were vaulted in
stone. And when the day is done, In our eyes the
Gods shall lurk! Crying “Glory to the God!” Athjeari and his thanes broke ranks, crouching
forward on their mounts, slowly dipping their lances. More Houses abandoned the
line and pounded toward the Kianene: Wanhail, Anfirig, Werijen Greatheart, and
then old Gothyelk himself, bellowing, The Plains of Mengedda “Heaven wills it!” Like an avalanche, House after House followed,
until almost all the mail-clad might of the Middle-North cantered out to greet
their foe. “There!” footmen on the line would cry,
glimpsing the Red Lion of Saubon or the Black Stag of Gothyelk and his sons. From a trot the massive
warhorses were urged to a slow gallop. Nesting thrushes took flight, burst
slapping into the sky. Everything became breath and iron, the rumble of brothers
before, behind, and to the side. Then, like a cloud of locusts, arrows swept
among them. There was a hellish racket punctuated by screaming horses and
astonished shouts. Warhorses toppled and thrashed, yanking knights to the
ground, breaking backs, crushing legs. Then the madness fell
away. Once again it was the pure thunder of the charge. The strange camaraderie
of men bent to a single, fatal purpose. Hummocks, scrub, and the bones of the
Vulgar Holy War’s dead rushed beneath. The wind bled through chain links,
tousled Thunyeri braids and Tydonni crests. Bright banners slapped against the
sky. The heathen, wicked and foul, drew closer, ever closer. One last storm of
arrows, these ones almost horizontal to the ground, punching against shield and
armour. Some were struck from their saddles. Tongue tips were bitten off in the
concussion of the fall. The unhorsed arched across the turf, screamed and
swatted at the sky. Wounded mounts danced in frothing circles nearby. The rest
thundered on, over grasses, through patches of blooming milkwort waving in the
wind. They couched their lances, twenty thousand men draped in great mail
hauberks over thick felt, with coifs across their faces and helms that swept
down to their cheeks, riding chargers caparisoned in mail or iron plates. The
fear dissolved into drunken speed, into the momentum, became so mingled with exhilaration as to be
indistinguishable from it. They were addicted to the charge, the Men of the
Tusk. Everything focused into the glittering tip of a lance. The target nearer,
nearer… The rumble of hooves and
drums drowned their kinsmen’s song. They crashed through a thin screen of
sumac… Saw eyes whiten in sudden terror. Then impact. The jarring
splinter of wood as lances speared through shield, through armour. Suddenly the
ground became still and solid beneath them, and the air rang with wails and
shouts. Hands drew sword The First March and axe. Everywhere
figures grappled and hacked. Horses reared. Blades pitched blood into the sky. And the Kianene fell, undone
by their ferocity, crumpling beneath northern hands, dying beneath pale faces
and merciless blue eyes. The heathen recoiled from the slaughter—and fled. The Galeoth, the Tydonni,
and the Thunyeri raised a mighty shout and spurred after them. But the Shrial
Knights reined to a stop, seemed to mill in confusion. The Inrithi knights
spurred their warhorses, but the Fanim outdistanced them, peppered them with
arrows as they fled. Suddenly they dissolved into an advancing tide of heathen horsemen, more heavily armoured. The
two great lines crashed. Several desperate moments ensued. The orange and black
standard of Earl Hagarond of Osgald disappeared in the tumult, and the Galeoth
lord was speared lifeless on the ground. A lance through the throat heaved Magga,
cousin of Skaiyelt, from his horse and threw him into his kinsmen. Death came
swirling down. Gothyelk himself was felled, and the roars of his sons pierced
the din. The ululating cries of the Fanim reached a crescendo… But war was bloody work,
and the iron men hammered their foes, split skulls through battlecaps, cracked
wooden shields, broke the arms bearing them. Yalgrota Sranchammer beheaded a
heathen horse with a single blow, tossed Fanim Grandees from their saddles as
though they were children. Werijen Greatheart, Earl of Plaideol, rallied his
Tydonni and scattered the heathen who assailed Gothyelk. On the ground, Goken
the Red, the Thunyeri Earl of Cern Auglai, butchered man and horse alike, and
cut his way back to his struggling standard. Never had the Kianene encountered
such men, such furious determination. Desert-dark faces howled against the
turf. Hawkish eyes slackened with fear. A moment of respite. Householders dragged
their wounded lords to pockets of safety. Injured in the arm, Earl Cynnea of
Agmundr ranted at his kinsmen not to pull him away. Earl Othrain of Numaineiri
wept as he lifted his family’s ancient standard from the lifeless hands of his
son and raised it once more. Prince Saubon bellowed for another horse. Across
the stretch they had thundered across only moments before, men stumbled The Plains of Mengedda or crawled, fumbling to
staunch their wounds. But many more roared in exultation, the madness of battle
upon them, cruel Gilgaol galloping through their hearts. Their enemy was
everywhere, before them, beside them, sweeping in on their flanks. Massive
cohorts wheeled in the near distance, charged them from behind. Splendid in
their silk khalats and golden corselets, the Grandees of Gedea and Shigek yet
again assailed the iron men. Beset on all sides, the
Men of the Tusk died. Taken in the back by lances. Jerked by hooks from their
saddles and ridden down. Pick-like axes punched through heavy hauberks. Arrows
dropped proud warhorses. Dying men cried to their wives, their Gods. Familiar
voices pierced the cacophony. A cousin. A mead-friend. A brother or father,
shrieking. The crimson standard of Earl Kothwa of Gaethuni toppled, was raised
once more, then disappeared forever, as did Kothwa and five hundred of his
Tydonni. The Black Stag of Agansanor was also overcome, trampled into the turf.
Gothyelk’s householders tried to drag their wounded Earl away, but were cut
down amid a flurry of Kianene horsemen. Only a frantic charge by his sons saved
the old earl, though his eldest, Gotheras, was gored in the thigh. Through the din, the
Earls and Thanes of the Middle-North could hear horns desperately signalling
retreat, but there was nowhere to withdraw. Jeering masses of heathen horsemen
swirled about them, peppering them with arrows, rolling back their flanks,
shrugging away their disjointed counter-charges. Everywhere they looked, they
saw the silken standards of the Fanim, stitched in gold, bearing strange animal
devices. And the endless, unearthly drums pounded out the rhythm of their dying. Then suddenly,
impossibly, the Kianene divisions blocking their retreat scattered, and lines
of white-clad Shrial Knights swept into their midst, crying, “Flee, brothers‘. Flee!” Panicked knights
galloped, ran, or stumbled toward their countrymen. Bloodied bands tumbled
through the ravine, careened into their own men. The Shrial Knights fought on
for several moments, then wheeled, racing back, pursued by masses of heathen
horsemen—a howling rush of lances, shields, dark faces, and frothing horses, as
wide as the horizon. Limping across the Battleplain, hundreds of wounded were
cut down I ME riRST MARCH within throwing distance
of the common line. The Men of the Tusk could only watch, aghast. Their song
was dead. They could hear only drums, pounding, pounding, pounding… Dread and the heathen
were upon them. “We had them… Had them!” Saubon screamed, spitting blood. Gotian seized him by both
shoulders. “You had nothing, fool. Nothing! You knew the rule! When you break
them, return to the line!” After he’d skidded
through the muck of the stream and pressed his way through the ranks, Gotian
had sought out the Galeoth Prince, but had found a raving lunatic in his stead. “But we had them!” Saubon cried. There was a sudden shout,
and Gotian reflexively raised his shield. Saubon simply continued to rave.
“They broke like children before—” There was a clatter,
like hail against a copper roof. Men screamed. “—like children! We hacked them to the ground!” A heathen shaft stuck from the Galeoth’s chest. For a
moment, the Grandmaster thought the man was dead, but Saubon merely reached up
and snapped it. It had pierced his hauberk, but had been stilled by the felt
beneath. “We fucking well had them!” Saubon continued to roar. Gotian grabbed him again,
shook him. “Listen!” he cried. “That’s what they
wanted you to think! The Kianene are too nimble, too pliable on the field and
too fierce of heart to truly break. When you charge, you charge to bleed them,
not to rout them!” Saubon looked at him
dully. “I’ve doomed us…” “Gather your wits, man!” Gotian roared. “We’re not like the heathen. We’re
hard, but we’re brittle. We break! Gothyelk is down. Wounded—
perhaps mortally! You must
rally these men!” “Yes… Rally…” Abruptly,
Saubon’s eyes shone, as though some brighter fire now
moved him. “The Whore would be kind!” the Prince cried. “That’s what he said!” Gotian could only stare,
bewildered. Coithus Saubon, a Prince
of Galeoth, the seventh son of old evil Eryeat, hollered for his horse. The Plains of Mengedda Great tides of Fanim
lancers, countless thousands of them, crashed into the Inrithi line—and were
stopped dead. Galeoth and Tydonni pikemen gutted their horses. Tattooed
Nangaels from Ce Tydonn’s northern marches cudgelled the fallen in the mud.
Agmundrmen punched arrows through shield and corselet with their deadly yew
bows. Auglishmen from the deep forests of Thunyerus broke ranks when the Fanim
fled, hurling hatchets that buzzed like dragonflies. At other points along the
ravine, leather-armoured cohorts of Fanim swept parallel to the Inrithi ranks,
loosing arrows and taunts, tossing the heads of those caste-nobles who’d fallen
in the first charge. The Northmen would hunch beneath their kite shields,
weather the barrage, and then, to the dismay of the heathen, throw those self-same
heads back at them. Soon the Fanim began
flinching from sections of the Inrithi line— from the stouthearted Gesindalmen
and Kurigalders of Galeoth, from the grim Numainerish and long-bearded
Plaidolmen of Ce Tydonn—but they found none so fearsome as the flaxen-haired
Thunyeri, whose great shields seemed walls of stone, and whose two-handed axes
and broadswords could split iron-armoured men to the heart. Horseless, the
giant Yalgrota Sranchammer stood before them, roaring curses and waving his axe
wildly in the air. When the Kianene indulged him, he and his clansmen hacked
them into bloody kindling. Yet again and again, the
Grandees of Gedea and Shigek spilled across the ravine and charged headlong
into the iron men, besetting the Galeoth, then the Tydonni, searching for one
ill-forged link. They need only break the Inrithi once, and this knowledge
drove them to acts of fanatic desperation. Men with shattered scimitars, with
spouting wounds, even men with their bowels hanging about their knees, surged forward,
threw themselves at the Norsirai. But each time they became mired in melee,
mud, and carnage before the howls of their lords sent them galloping for the
safety of the open plain. In their wake the Men of the Tusk stumbled to their
knees, crying out in bitter relief. To the northeast, where
the common line trailed into the salt marshes, the Padirajah’s son, Crown
Prince Fanayal, led the Coyauri, his father’s elite heavy cavalry, against the
Cuarwishmen of Ce Tydonn, who had ihe first March crowded into the ranks of
their neighbours to the west and were caught scrambling back to their
positions. For several moments, all was chaos, and dozens of Cuarwishmen could
be seen fleeing into the marshes. Broadswords and scimitars flashed in the
sunlight. Suddenly bands of shimmering Coyauri began spilling behind the line,
though the Fanayal’s White Horse standard remained stalled near the ravine.
Gothyelk’s two younger sons charged the Coyauri with what horse that remained
to them, and the Fanim, without the open ground their tactics favoured, were
driven back with atrocious losses. Heartened by this
success, Prince Saubon of Galeoth mustered those knights still mounted, and the
Inrithi began, with more and more confidence, answering Fanim assaults with
countercharges. They would crash into the seemingly amorphous masses, the Fanim
would melt, then they would race to evade the darting masses trying to envelop
their flanks. Breathless, they would tumble back into the common line, lances
broken, swords notched, ranks thinned. Saubon himself lost three horses. Earl
Othrain of Numaineiri was carried back by his household, mortally wounded. He
soon joined his dead son. The sun climbed high, and
scoured the Battleplain with heat. The Earls and Thanes of the Middle-North
cursed and marvelled at the fluid tactics of the Kianene. They gazed with envy
at their magnificent, glossy-coated horses, which the heathen riders seemed to
guide with thought alone. They no longer scoffed that the heathen Grandees were
proficient with the bow. Many shields were quilled with arrows. Broken shafts
jutted from the hauberks of many men. In the Inrithi camp, thousands sprawled
dead or wounded because of the heathen’s archery. The Fanim withdrew and
reformed, and the Men of the Tusk raised a ragged cheer. Many infantrymen,
suffocated by the heat, dashed into the corpse-strewn ravine and doused their
heads with bloody and fouled water. Many others fell to their knees and shook,
wracked by silent sobs. Body-slaves, priests, wives, and harlots walked among
the men, salving wounds, offering water or beer to the common soldiers and wine
to the caste-nobles. Small hymns were raised among pockets of exhausted
warriors. Officers bawled commands, enlisting hundreds to hammer broken pikes,
spears, even shards of wood to spike the incline before their lines. The Plains of Mengedda Word arrived that the
heathen had sent divisions of horsemen north into the hills in a bid to
outflank the Inrithi position, where, anticipated by Prince Saubon, they had
been utterly undone by the tactics and valour of Earl Athjeari and his Gaenrish
knights. More cheers swept through the common line, and for a short time, they
waxed louder than the incessant thunder of Fanim drums. But their jubilation was
short-lived. Massed on the plains before them, the heathen had assembled
beneath their triangular banners in long, staggered lines. The drums fell
silent. For a moment, the Men of the Tusk could hear wind across the grasses,
even bees as they meandered over the dead that choked the ravine. As they
watched, a small party of horsemen trotted imperiously before the ranks of
motionless Fanim, bearing the Black Jackal device of Skauras, the Kianene
Sapatishah-Governor of Shigek. They heard a faint harangue, answered by
resounding shouts in an unknown tongue. Prince Saubon could be
heard bellowing, offering fifty gold talents to the archer who could kill, and
ten to the one who could wound, the Sapatishah. After testing the wind,
individual Agmundrmen raised their yew bows to the sun and began taking
potshots. Most of the missiles fell far short, but some few made the distance.
The distant horsemen affected not to notice, until abruptly one began swatting
at the back of his neck, then toppled to the turf. . The Men of the Tusk
roared with jeering laughter. As one, they pounded their shields, hooting and
yelling. The Sapatishah’s entourage scattered, leaving one figure: a nobleman
on a magnificent white caparisoned in black and gold, obviously unafraid,
apparently unmoved by the derision booming across the plain. And to a man, the
Inrithi realized they looked upon the great Skauras ab Nalajan, whom the Nansur
called Sutis Sutadra, the Southern Jackal. Arrows fletched in
faraway Galeoth pocked the turf about him, but he didn’t move. More and more
shafts feathered the ground as Agmundrmen began finding the drift and distance.
Facing the Inrithi, the remote Sapatishah pulled a knife from his crimson
girdle—and began paring his nails. Now the Fanim began to
laugh and roar as well, beating their round shields with sun-flashing
scimitars. The very earth seemed to shiver, so ferocious was the din.
Two races, two faiths, willing hate and murder across the littered Battleplain. Then Skauras raised a
hand, and the drums resumed their implacable throbbing. The Fanim began
advancing along the entirety of their line. The Men of the Tusk fell silent,
butted their pikes and squared their shields with those of their neighbours. It
was beginning again. Trailing clouds of dust,
the Kianene ponderously gathered speed. As though counting drumbeats, the
forward ranks lowered their lances in unison, urged their horses to gallop.
With a piercing cry, they threw themselves at the Inrithi, while mounted
archers swept to either side, showering the Northmen with arrows. They came
crashing in successive waves, deeper and more numerous than in the morning.
Entire companies were sacrificed for mere lengths of earth. Here and there,
against the Usgalders of Galeoth, against the battered Cuarwishmen, the
Nangaels and Warnutes of Ce Tydonn, the Kianene gained the crest of the ravine,
pressed the iron men back. Pikes snapped, gouged faces, hooked harnesses.
Curved scimitars cracked helms, snapped collarbones through iron mail. Maddened
horses crashed through rank and shield. And just when the heathen’s numbers and
momentum seemed to fail, more waves resolved from the dust, leaping through the
ravine, pounding over the dead, lancing into the staggered footmen. There was
no time for tactics, no time for prayer, only the desperate scramble to kill
and live. At several points, the
common line wavered, broke… Then, as though stepping
out of the blinding sun, the Cishaurim revealed themselves. Saubon even beat at
several of the fleeing Usgalders with the flat of his sword, but it was no use.
Mad with panic, they scrambled from his warhorse’s snorting path—and from the
gold-armoured horsemen running them down. “The God!” Saubon roared as he barrelled into the pursuing
Coyauri. “The God wills it!” His black crashed against the
mount of the heathen before him. The smaller charger stumbled, and Saubon
punched his swordpoint clear through its astonished rider’s neck. He wheeled
and parried a heavy blow from a Kianene garbed in flowing The Plains of Mengedda crimson. His black
stumbled sideways and screamed, throwing him thigh to thigh with the man—though
Saubon towered higher. Saubon smashed down with his pommel and the man tumbled
backward from his saddle, his face bloody ruin. From somewhere, a blade nicked
Saubon’s helm. He slashed the now riderless charger’s hindquarters and it went
dancing into the heathen dogs before him, then he swept his broadsword in a
great backward arc, shearing off the jaw of his assailant’s mount. The horse
reared; its rider went down. Saubon reined his black to the left and trampled
the shrieking blasphemer. “The God!” he cried, hacking at another man, cracking the wood
of his shield. “Wills!” His second blow shattered the warding arm beneath.
“It!” The third cracked his silvered
helm, halved his dark face. The Coyauri beyond the slumping man hesitated.
Those behind Saubon, however, did not. A lance scraped along his back, snagged
his hauberk, almost throwing him from his saddle. Standing in his stirrups, he
hacked again, snapping the lance. When his opponent reached back for his curved
blade, Saubon plunged his sword into the joints of the man’s harness. Another
down. The heathen milled around him, bewildered. “Craven,” Saubon spat,
and spurred into them with a crazed laugh. They recoiled in terror—that was the
death of two more of them. But Saubon’s black inexplicably reared and stumbled…
Another fucking horse! He slammed hard against the turf. Muddy
thought—confusion. A stamping forest of legs and hooves. Inert bodies. Bruised
weeds. Up… up… must get up! He kicked at his thrashing mount. A great, buoyant
shadow loomed above. Iron-shod hooves chopped the turf about his head. He
jammed his sword upward, felt the point skid along the horse’s sternum, then
plunge into soft brown belly. Flash of sunlight. Then he was clear, stumbling
to his feet. But something shattered across his helm, knocking him back to his
knees. Another concussion sent him face first into the ground. By the God, his fury felt
so empty, so frail against the earth! He
reached out with his bare left hand and grabbed another hand—cold, heavily
callused, leathery fingers and glass nails. A dead hand. He looked up across
the matted grasses and stared at the dead man’s face. An Inrithi. The features
were flattened against the ground and partly sheathed in ihe Mrst March blood. The man had lost
his helm, and sandy-blond hair jutted from his mail hood. The coif had fallen
aside, pressed against his bottom lip. He seemed so heavy, so stationary—like more ground… A nightmarish moment of
recognition, too surreal to be terrifying. It was his face!
His own hand he held! He tried to scream. Nothing. But there was the thunder
of heavier hooves, shouts in familiar tongues. Saubon let slip the cold
fingers, struggled to his hands and knees. Concerned voices. From nowhere it
seemed, arms were hoisting him to his feet. He stared numbly at the bare turf,
at the site where a moment before his corpse
had been… This ground… This ground is cursed! “Here, take my arm,” the
voice was fatherly, as though to a son who’d just learned a hard lesson.
“You’re saved, my Prince.” It was Kussalt. Saved? “Are you whole?” Winded, Saubon spat blood
and gasped, “Bruised only…” Mere yards away, Shrial
Knights and Coyauri jostled and hacked at one another. Swords rang, danced
flashing across sun and sky. So beautiful. So impossibly remote, like a
spectacle woven in cloth… Saubon turned wordlessly
to his groom. The old warrior looked haggard, beaten. “You stemmed the breach,”
Kussalt said, his eyes strange with wonder, perhaps even pride. Saubon blinked at the
blood trickling into his left eye. An inexplicable cruelty overcame him.
“You’re old and slow… Give me your horse!” Kussalt’s look soured.
Old lips tightened. “This is no place to be
thin-skinned, you old fool. Now
give me your fucking horse!” Kussalt jerked, as though
something had popped within him, then slumped forward, staggering Saubon with
his weight. He fell backward with his
groom, crashed on his rump. “Kussalt!” He dragged the man onto
his thighs. An arrow shaft jutted from the small of Kussalt’s back. The Plains of Mengedda The groom gurgled,
coughed dark, old-man’s blood. His rolling eyes found Saubon’s, and the old
warrior laughed, coughed more blood. Saubon’s skin pimpled with dread. How many
times had he heard the man laugh? Three or four, over the course of his entire
lifetime? No’no-no-no… “Kussalt!” “I would have you know…” the old man wheezed, “how much I hated you …“ A convulsion, then he
spat snotty blood. A long gasp, then he went utterly still. Like more earth. Saubon looked around the
strange pocket of calm that held them. Everywhere, through the trampled
grasses, dead eyes watched. And he understood. Cursed. The Coyauri had reeled
away, fleeing through the guttered ravine. But instead of cheering, men
screamed. Somewhere, lights flashed, so bright they threw shadows in the midday
sun. He never hated me… How could he? Kussalt was
the only one who… Funny joke. Ha-ha, you old fool… Someone was standing over
him, shouting. So tired. Had he ever
been so tired? “Cishaurim!” someone was
screaming. “Cishaurim!” Ah, the lights… A slapping blow, torn
links scoring his cheek. Where had his helm gone? “Saubon! Saubon!”
Incheiri Gotian was screaming. “The
Cishaurim!” Saubon pulled his fingers
from his cheek. Saw blood. Fucking ingrate. Fucking
shit-skinned pick. Make sure they’re punished! Punish them! Punish! Fucking picks. “Charge them,” the
Galeoth Prince said mildly. He hugged his dead groom tight against his thighs
and stomach. What a joker. “You must charge the
Cishaurim.” ixvo 1 IVIAKUM They walked to elude the
companies of crossbowmen they knew the Inrithi kept behind their lines, armed
with the Tears of God. Not one among their number could be risked, not with the
Scarlet Spires girding for war—not for any reason. They were Cishaurim,
Indara’s Waterbearers and their breath was more precious than the breath of
thousands. They were oases among men. Drawing their palms over
grass, goldenrod, and white alyssum, they walked toward the common line,
fourteen of them, their yellow silk cassocks whipped by wind and fiery
convections, the five snakes about each of their throats outstretched, like the
spokes of a candelabra, searching every direction. The desperate Northmen fired
volley after volley of arrows, but the shafts burst into puffs of flame. The
Cishaurim continued walking, sweeping their gouged eyes along the bristling
Inrithi lines. Wherever they turned, blue-blinding light exploded among the Men
of the Tusk, blistering skin, welding iron to flesh, charring hearts… Many Northmen held their
position, dropping prone beneath their shields as they’d been taught. But many
others were already fleeing— Usgalders, Agmundrmen, and Gaenrish, Numaineirish
and Plaidolmen— senseless to the rallying cries of their officers and lords.
The Inrithi centre floundered, began to evaporate. Battle had become massacre. Amid the tumult, Crown
Prince Fanayal and his Coyauri fled the ravine, the Shrial Knights pursuing
them through billowing dust and smoke—or so it seemed to all who watched. At
first, the Fanim could scarce credit their eyes. Many cried out, not in fear or
dismay, but in wonder at the deranged ferocity of the idolaters. When Fanayal
wheeled away, Incheiri Gotian, some four thousand Shrial Knights massed behind
him, continued galloping forward, crying—weeping—“The God wills it!” They scattered across the Battleplain, unbloodied
save for the morning’s first disastrous charge, hurtling through the grasses,
crouched low out of terror, crying out their fury, their defiance. They charged
the fourteen Cishaurim, drove their mounts into the hellish lights that
unspooled from their brows. And they died burning, like moths assailing coals
in a fire’s heart. Filaments of blue
incandescence, fanning out, glittering with unearthly beauty, burning limbs to
cinders, bursting torsos, immolating The Plains of Mengedda men in their saddles.
Amid the shrieks and wails, the rumble of hooves, the thunder of men howling “The God wills it!” Gotian was pitched breakneck from the charred
remnants of his horse. Biaxi Scoulas, his leg burnt to a stump, toppled and was
trampled to pulp by those pounding after him. The knight immediately before
Cutias Sarcellus exploded, and sent a knife whistling through his windpipe. The
First Knight-Commander collapsed, slapped face first onto the ground. Death
came swirling down. Brains boiled in skulls.
Teeth snapped. Hundreds fell in the first thirty seconds. Hundreds more in the
second. Scorching light materialized everywhere, like the cracks that dizzy
glass. And still the Shrial Knights whipped their horses forward, leaping the
smouldering ruin of their brothers, racing one another to their doom, thousands
of them, howling, howling. The scrub and grasses ignited. Oily smoke bloomed
skyward, drawn toward the Cishaurim by the wind. Then a lone rider, a
young adept, swept up to one of the sorcerer-priests—and took his head. When
the nearest turned his sockets to regard him, only the boy’s horse erupted in
flame. The young knight tumbled and continued running, his cries shrill, his
dead father’s Chorae bound to the palm of his hand. Only then did the
Cishaurim realize their mistake—their arrogance. For several heartbeats they
hesitated… And a tide of burnt and
bloody knights broke from the rolling smoke, among them Grandmaster Gotian,
hauling the Gold Tusk on White, his Order’s sacred standard. In that final
rush, hundreds more fell burning. But some didn’t, and the Cishaurim rent the
earth, desperately trying to bring those with Chorae down. But it was too
late—the raving knights were upon them. One tried to flee by stepping into the
sky, only to be felled by a crossbow bolt bearing a Tear of God. The others
were cut down where they stood. They were Cishaurim,
Indara’s Waterbearers, and their death was more precious than the death of
thousands. For an impossible moment,
all was silent. The Shrial Knights, those few hundred who survived, began
limping and staggering back to the battered ranks of their Inrithi brothers.
Incheiri Gotian was among the last to reach safety, bearing a burnt youth slumped
across his shoulders. J Ihe March Skauras, knowing the
Cishaurim had accomplished their task despite their deaths, roared at his
Grandees to attack, but the shock of what they had witnessed weighed too
heavily upon them. The Fanim withdrew, milling in confusion, while opposite a
great swath of scorched earth and smoking dead, the Earls and Thanes of the
Middle-North desperately reassembled the centre of the common line. By the time
the Grandees of Shigek and Gedea renewed their assault, the iron men were again
in position, their ranks thinned, their hearts hardened. And they began singing
anew their ancient paean, which now struck them as more prophecy than song: A warring we have come A reaving we shall work. And when
the day is done, In our eyes the Gods shall lurk! As the afternoon waxed,
many more joined the fallen. Earl Wanhail of Kurigald was thrown from his horse
in a counter-charge, and broke his back. Skaiyelt’s youngest brother, Prince
Narradha, was felled by an arrow in the eye. Among the living, some collapsed
of heat exhaustion. Some went mad with grief, and had to be dragged, frothing,
to the priests in the camp. But those who stood couldn’t be broken. The iron
men had rekindled their song, and the song had rekindled their violent fervour.
The pounding of Fanim drums dimmed, then was drowned out altogether. Thousands
of voices and one song. Thousands of years and one song. And when the day is done, In our eyes the
Gods shall lurk! As the sun lowered in the
western skies, the Fanim flinched more and more from the Inrithi line, charged
with ever greater trepidation. For they saw demons in the eyes of their
idolatrous enemy. Skaurus had already
sounded the retreat when the banners of Proyas and his silver-masked Conriyans
came snapping down the western hills. Without signal, the Galeoth, Tydonni, and
Thunyeri ranks surged The Plains of Mengedda forward and ran booming
across the Battleplain. Exhausted, heartbroken, the Fanim panicked; withdrawal
degenerated into rout. The knights of Conriya swept into their midst, and the
great Kianene host of Skaurus ab Nalajan, Sapatishah-Governor of Shigek, was
massacred. Meanwhile, the Earls and Thanes of the Middle-North descended with
what horse they had remaining on the vast Fanim encampment. Succumbing to licentious
fury, the harrowed Northmen raped the women, murdered the slaves, and plundered
the sumptuous pavilions of innumerable Grandees. By sunset, the Vulgar
Holy War had been avenged. Over the following weeks,
the Men of the Tusk would find thousands of bloated horses on the road to
Hinnereth. They had been ridden to death, so mad were the heathen to escape the
iron men of the Holy War. Hunched on his saddle,
Saubon watched files of weary men and women trudge across the moonlit grasses,
no doubt eager to at last overtake Proyas and his knights. The Conriyan Prince,
Saubon realized, must have pressed hard, perilously hard, to have so far
outstripped his baggage and followers. He required no mirror to know how he
looked: the horrified expressions of those walking from the darkness were
reflection enough. Blood soaked his tattered surcoat. Gore clotted the links of
his mail harness. He waited until the man
was almost immediately below before calling out to him… “Your friend. Where is
he?” The sorcerer, Achamian,
shrank from his mounted form, clutching his woman. Small wonder, looming out of
the dark like a bloodied apparition. “You mean Kellhus?” the
square-bearded Schoolman asked. Saubon glowered.
“Remember your place, dog. He’s a prince.” “You mean, Prince Kellhus, then?” Unaccountably chastised,
Saubon paused, licked his swollen lips. “Yes…” The sorcerer shrugged. “I
don’t know. Proyas drove us like cattle to catch you. Everything’s confused…
Besides, princes don’t loiter with the likes of us in the wake of battle.” Saubon glared at the
mealy-mouthed fool, wondering whether he should strike him for his
impertinence. But the memory of seeing his own The First March corpse on the field gave
him pause. He shuddered, clutched his elbows. That wasn’t me! “Perhaps… Perhaps you can
help me, then.” The sorcerer scowled in a
bemused manner Saubon found offensive. “I’m at your disposal, my Prince.” “This ground… What is it
about this ground?” The sorcerer shrugged
again. “This is the Battleplain… This is where the No-God died.” “I know the legends.” “I’m sure you do… Do you
know what topoi are?” Saubon grimaced. “No.” The attractive woman at
his side yawned, rubbed her eyes. Without warning, a wave of fatigue crashed
over the Galeoth Prince. He swayed in his saddle. “You know the way you can
see far from heights,” the sorcerer was saying, “like towers or mountain
summits?” “I’m not a fool. Don’t
deal with me as one.” Pained smile. “Topoi are
like heights, places where one can see far… But where heights are built with
mounds of stone and earth, topoi are built with mounds of trauma and suffering.
They are heights that let us see farther than this world… some say into the
Outside. That’s why this ground troubles you—you stand perilously high… This is
the Battleplain. What you feel isn’t so different from vertigo.” Saubon nodded, feeling
his throat tighten. He understood, and for no apparent reason, that
understanding roused an immeasurable relief. Two ferocious sobs wracked him.
“Exhaustion,” he croaked, wiping angrily at his eyes. The sorcerer watched him,
now with more regret than reproach. The woman stared at her feet. Unable to look at the
man, Saubon vaguely nodded in his direction, then made to ride off. The
Schoolman’s voice, however, brought him up short. “Even among topoi,” he
called, “this place is… special.” There was something different in his tone, a
reluctance, perhaps, which struck Saubon like a winter gust across sweaty skin. “How so?” he managed,
looking into the dark night. The Plains ofMengedda “Do you remember the line
from The Sagas, ‘Em yutiri Tir
mauna, kirn raussaraim…” Saubon blinked away
tears, said nothing. “The soul that encounters
Him,‘” the Schoolman continued, ’“passes no further.‘“ “And just fucking what,”
the Galeoth Prince said, shocked by the savagery of his own voice, “is that
supposed to fucking mean?” The sorcerer looked out
across the dark plains. “That in some way, He’s out there somewhere…
Mog-Pharau.” When he turned back to Saubon, there was real fear in his eyes. “The dead do not escape the
Battleplain, my Prince… This place is cursed. The No-God died here.” jviengeuua ■ g m * HApTER S Mengedda Sleep, when deep enough, is indistinguishable from vigilance. —SORAINAS, THE BOOK OF
CIRCLES AND SPIRALS Early Summer, 4111 Year-of’the-Tusk, the Plains of M.engedda Broad black wings
outstretched, the Synthese drifted on the early morning wind, just savouring
the curious familiarity of it all. The eastern skyline
gradually brightened, then suddenly the sun cracked the horizon, lancing
between the hills, over the corpse-strewn expanse of the Battleplain, and out
into the infinite black, where it would, eventually, trace a thread
incomprehensibly long… Perhaps all the way home. Who could blame it for
indulging in nostalgia? To be here again after millennia, at the place where it
had almost happened, where Men and Nonmen had almost
flickered out forever. Almost. Alas… Soon enough. Soon enough. It lowered its small
human head and studied the patterns the innumerable dead had sketched across
the plains, marvelling at the resemblances to certain sigils once prized by its
species—back when they could actually be called such. Genera. Species. Race. Inchoroi, the vermin had
called them. For a time it wondered at
the sense of depth generated by the thousands of slow-circling vultures
below, each sinking to the feast. Then it caught the scent it had been
searching for… that otherworldly fetor—so distinctive!— encoded in case of just
such a contingency. So Sarcellus was dead.
Unfortunate. At least the Holy War had
prevailed—over the Cishaurim, no less! Golgotterath would
approve. Smiling, or perhaps
scowling, with tiny human lips, the Old Name swooped down to join the vultures
in their ancient celebration. L The distances writhed,
twisted with maggot-white forms draped in human skins—with Sranc, shrieking
Sranc, thousands upon thousands of them, clawing black blood from their skin,
gouging themselves blind. Blind! The whirlwind roared through their masses,
tossing untold thousands into orbit about its churning black base. Mog-Pharau walked. The Great King of
Kyraneas clutched Seswatha about the shoulders, but the sorcerer could not hear
his cry. Instead he heard the voice, uttered through a hundred thousand Sranc
throats, flaring like bright-burning coals packed into his skull… The voice of
the No-God. WHAT DO YOU SEE? See? What could he… I MUST KNOW WHAT YOU
SEE The Great King turned
from him, reached for the Heron Spear. TELL ME Secrets… Secrets! Not
even the No-God could build walls against what was forgotten! Seswatha glimpsed
the unholy Carapace shining in the whirlwind’s heart, a nimil sarcophagus
sheathed in choric script, hanging… WHAT AM- Achamian woke with a
howl, his hands cramped into claws before him, shaking. But there was a tender
voice, shushing, cooing reassurances. Soft hands caressed his face, stroked
sweaty hair from his eyes, daubed tears from his cheek. Esmi. He lay in her arms for a
long while, periodically shuddering, straining to keep his eyes open, to see
what was here—now. “I’ve been thinking of
Kellhus,” she said after his breathing had settled. “Did you dream of him?”
Achamian half-heartedly teased. He tried to clear his voice of phlegm. Esmenet laughed. “No, you
fool. I sa—” WHAT DO YOU SEE? A shrieking chorus, sharp
and brief. He shook his head. “Sorry?” he said, laughing uneasily. “What did
you say? I must have sleep in my eyes and
ears…” “I said, just thinking.” “About what?” Somehow, he could feel
her cock her head, the way she always did when struggling to articulate
something that eluded her. “About the way he speaks… Haven’t you—” I CANNOT
SEE “No,” he wheezed. “Never noticed.” He coughed violently. “That,” she said, “is what you get sitting on the smoky
side of the fire.” One of her traditional admonitions. “Old meat is better
smoked.” His traditional reply. He squeezed sweat from his eyes. “Anyway, Kellhus…” she
continued, lowering her voice. Canvas was thin, and the camp crowded. “With
everyone whispering about him because of the battle and what he said to Prince
Saubon, it struck me—” TELL ME “—before falling asleep
that almost everything he says is either, well… either near or far …” Achamian swallowed,
managed to say, “How do you mean?” He needed to piss. Esmenet laughed. “I’m not
sure… Remember how I told you how he asked me what it was like to be a
harlot—you know, to lie with strange men? When he talks that way, he seems
near, uncomfortably near, until you realize how
utterly honest and unassuming he is… At the time, I thought he was just another
rutting dog—” WHAT AM V. “Thepoint, Esmi…” Mengedda 14b There was an annoyed
pause. “Other times, he seems breathtakingly far when he talks, like he stands on some remote mountain
and can see everything, or almost everything…” She paused again, and from the
length of it, Achamian knew he had bruised her feelings. He could feel her
shrug. “The rest of us just talk in the middle somewhere, while he… And now
this, seeing what happened yesterday before it happened. With each day—” I CANNOT SEE “—he seems to talk a little nearer and a little farther. It makes me— Akka? You’re
trembling! Shaking!” He gasped for breath.
“I-I can’t stay here, Esmi.” “What do you mean?” “This place!” he cried.
“I can’t stay here!” “Shhh. It’ll be all
right. I heard soldiers talking last night about moving come today. Away from
the dead—from the chance of vapours and—” TELL ME Achamian cried out, struggled
to retrieve his wits. “Shhh, Akka, shhh…” “Did they say where?” he
gasped. Esmenet had kicked free
her blankets to kneel naked over him, palms on his chest. She looked worried.
Very worried. “They said something about ruins, I think.” “Ev-even worse.” “What do you mean?” “This place is shaking me
to pieces, Esmi. Echoes. Echoes. R-remember what I’s-said to Saubon last night?
The N-No-God… His… his echo is too strong here. Too strong! And the ruins, that
would be the city of Mengedda.
Where it happened… Where the No-God was struck
down. I know this sounds mad, but I think this place — I think
this place recognizes me… M-me or Seswatha within me.” “So what should we—” TELL “Leave… Camp in the
eastern hills overlooking the Battleplain. We can wait for the others there.” Her expression darkened
with other worries. “Are you sure, Akka?” “We’ll be safe… We just
need to be far for a while.” HE riRST MARCH With the accumulation of
power, Achamian had once said, comes mystery. An old Nilnameshi proverb. When
Kellhus had asked what the proverb meant, the Schoolman had said it referred to
the paradox of power, that the more security one exacted from the world, the
more insecure one became. At the time, Kellhus had thought the proverb yet
another of Achamian’s vacant generalizations, one that exploited the world-born
propensity to confuse obscurity with profundity. Now he wasn’t so sure. Five days had passed
since the battle. The last of the sun had boiled away among the western hills.
The Great Names—including Conphas and Chepheramunni—had gathered with their
retinues in an overgrown amphitheatre that had been excavated in ancient times
from the side of a low hill. An enormous bonfire burned in its centre,
transforming the stage into a hearth. The Great Names sat and conferred around
the amphitheatre’s lowest tier, while their advisers and caste-noble countrymen
bickered and jested on the tiers above. Their ceremonial dress, much of it
looted, glinted and shimmered in the firelight. Their faces shone pale orange.
Before them, bare-chested slaves marched from the darkness to the stage, where
they cast furniture, clothing, scrolls, and other worthless items from the
Kianene camp onto the bonfire. A strange, iron-blue smoke whipped skyward from
the flames. Its smell was offensive—reminiscent of the manural unguents used by
the Yatwerian priestesses—but there was nothing else to burn on the
Battleplain. At long last, the Holy
War was entire. Earlier in the afternoon, the Nansur and Ainoni hosts had filed
across the plains and joined the vast encampment beneath the ruins of
Mengedda—a once great city, Achamian had told Kellhus, destroyed during the
early Age of Bronze. For the first time since faraway Momemn, a full Council of
the Great and Lesser Names had been called. Even though his rank and notoriety
had earned him a place among those sitting above the Great Names, Kellhus had
elected to sit with the knights, men-at-arms, and followers massed on the
heaped mounds of earth and rubble opposite the amphitheatre, where he could
cultivate his reputation for humility and easily survey the expressions of all
those he must conquer. Mengedda For the most part, their
faces exhibited startling contrasts. Some bore marks—bandages, puckered wounds,
and yellowing bruises—of the recent battle, while others bore no marks at all,
particularly among the newly arrived Nansur and Ainoni. Some were flushed with
celebratory cheer, for the back of the heathen had been broken. While others
were ashen with horror and sleeplessness… Victory on the Battleplain,
it seemed, had carried its own uncanny toll. Ever since setting their
pallets and mats across the Plains of Mengedda, various men and women of the
Holy War had complained of suffering brutal nightmares. Each night, they
claimed, they found themselves in desperate straits on the Battleplain,
striving against and falling before foes they’d never before seen: archaic
Nansur, true desert Kianene, Ceneian infantrymen, ancient Shigeki chariots,
bronze-armoured Kyraneans, stir-rupless Scylvendi, Sranc, Bashrags, and even,
some had insisted, Wracu— dragons. When the encampment was
moved clear of the carrion winds to the ruins of Mengedda, the nightmares had
only intensified. Some began claiming they’d dreamed of the recent battle
against the Kianene, that they were burned anew by the Cishaurim, or that they
fell to the battle-maddened Thunyeri. It was as though the ground had hoarded
the final moments of the doomed, and counted and recounted them each night on
the ledger of the living. Many tried to stop sleeping altogether, especially
after a Tydonni thane was found dead one morning in his pallet. Some, like
Achamian, had actually fled. Then the pitted knives,
coins, shattered helms, and bones started to appear, as though slowly vomited
from the earth. At first here and there, found jutting from the turf in the
morning, and in places men insisted they couldn’t have been missed. Then more
frequently. After stubbing his toe, one man allegedly found the skeleton of a
child beneath the rushes of his tent. Kellhus himself had
dreamt nothing, but he’d seen the bones. According to Gotian, who’d explained
the legends regarding the Battleplain in private council two days earlier, this
ground had imbibed too much blood over the millennia, and now, like over-salted
water, had to discharge the old to accommodate the new. The Battleplain was
cursed, he said, but they needn’t fear for their souls so long as they The First March remained resolute in
their faith. The curse was old and well understood. Proyas and Gothyelk, neither
of whom suffered dreams, were loath to leave, both because the couriers they’d
sent to Conphas and Chepheramunni had named Mengedda as their point of
rendezvous, and because the streams running through the ruined city afforded
the only expedient supply of water within a three-day march. Saubon also
insisted they stay, though for reasons, Kellhus knew, entirely his own. Saubon did dream. Only Skaiyelt had demanded they leave. Somehow, the very ground
of battle had become their foe. Such contests, Xinemus had remarked one night
about their fire, belonged to philosophers and priests, not warriors and
harlots. Such contests, Kellhus
had thought, simply should not be… Ever since learning the
desperate details of the Inrithi triumph, Kellhus had found himself beset with
questions, quandaries, and enigmas. Fate had been kind to Coithus Saubon, but only because the
Galeoth Prince had dared punish the Shrial Knights. By all accounts, Gotian’s
catastrophic charge against the Cishaurim had saved the Earls and Thanes of the
Middle-North. Events, in other words, had unfolded precisely as Kellhus had
predicted. Precisely. But the problem was that
he hadn’t predicted anything. He’d merely said what he’d
needed to say to maximize the probabilities of securing Saubon and destroying
Sarcellus. He’d taken a risk. It simply had to be coincidence. At least this was what he’d told
himself—at first. Fate was but one more world-born subterfuge, another lie men
used to give meaning to their abject helplessness. That was why they thought
the future a Whore, something who favoured no man over another. Something
heartbreakingly indifferent. What came before determined what came after… This was the basis of the Probability Trance. This was the
principle that made mastering circumstance, be it with word or sword, possible.
This was what made him Dunyain. One of the Conditioned. Then the earth began
spitting up bones. Wasn’t this proof that the ground answered to the tribulations of men, that it was not indifferent? And if earth—earth!—wasn’t indifferent, then what of the future? Could
what came after actually determine what came
before? What if the line Mengedda running between past and
future was neither singular nor straight, but multiple and bent, capable of
looping in ways that contradicted the Law of Before and After? Could he be the
Harbinger, as Achamian insisted? Is this why you’ve summoned me, Father? To save these children? But these were what he
called primary questions. There were so many more immediate mysteries to be
interrogated, so many more tangible threats. Such questions either belonged to
philosophers and priests, as Xinemus had said, or to Anasurimbor Moenghus. Why haven’t you contacted me, Father? The bonfire waxed
brighter, consuming a small library of scrolls the slaves had hauled from the
darkness. Even though Kellhus sat apart, he could feel his position among the caste-nobles arrayed before
him. It was like a palpable thing, as though he were a fisherman manning
far-flung nets. Every glance, every watchful stare, was noted, categorized, and
retained. Every face was deciphered. A knowing look from a
figure sitting among Proyas’s caste-nobles… Palatine Gaidekki. He’s discussed me at length with his peers, regards me as a
puzzle, arid thinks himself pessimistic as to the solution. But part of him
wonders, even yearns. A look from one of
the.Tydonni. A momentary meeting of eyes… Earl Cerjulla. He’s heard the rumours, but remains too proud of his own
battlefield deeds to concede anything to fate. He suffers
the nightmares… A passing glance from
behind Ikurei Conphas… General Martemus. He’s heard much about me, but is too preoccupied to truly
care. From among the Thunyeri,
a fiery-haired warrior, searching for someone among the crowd… Earl Goken. He’s heard almost nothing of me. Too few Thunyeri speak
different
tongues. A contemptuous glare from
among the Conriyans… Palatine Ingiaban. He discusses me with Gaidekki, argues that I’m a fraud. M31 relationship to Cnaьir is what interests him. He too has stopped sleeping. A steady, fixed look from
among Gotian’s diminished retinue… Sarcellus. li>U The First March One of what seemed a
growing number of inscrutable faces. Skin-spies, Achamian had called them. Why did he stare? Because
of the rumours, like the others? Because of the horrific toll his words had
exacted on the Shrial Knights? Gotian, Kellhus knew, struggled not to hate him… Or did he know that
Kellhus could see him and had tried to kill him? Kellhus matched the
thing’s unblinking gaze. Since his first encounter with Skeaos on the AndiamineHeights, he’d refined his understanding
of their peculiar physiognomy. Where others saw blemished or beautiful faces,
he saw eyes peering through clutched fingers. So far, he’d identified eleven of
the creatures masquerading as various powerful personages, and he had no doubt
there were more… He nodded amiably, but
Sarcellus simply continued watching, expressionless, as though unaware or
unconcerned that what he stared at was staring back… Something, Kellhus thought. They suspect something. There was a small
commotion in his periphery, and turning, Kellhus saw Earl Athjeari pressing his
way through the crowded spectators, climbing toward him. Kellhus bowed his head
appropriately as the young caste-noble approached. The man reciprocated, though
his declension fell slightly short. “Afterward,” Athjeari
said. “I need you to come with me afterward.” “Prince Saubon.” The striking,
chestnut-haired man worked his jaw. Athjeari was someone, Kellhus knew, who
understood neither melancholy nor indecision, which was partly why he thought
this errand demeaning. As much as he admired his uncle, he thought Saubon was
making too much of this impoverished prince from Atrithau. Far too much. So much pride. “My uncle wants to meet,”
the Earl said, as though explaining a lapse. Without further word, he began
pressing his way back to the amphitheatre. Kellhus looked out over the crowds
below to the Great Names. He glimpsed Saubon nervously looking away. His anguish grows. His fear deepens. For six nights now, the Galeoth
Prince had assiduously avoided him, even in those councils where they shared
seats about the same fire. Something had happened on the field, Mengedda 1M something more grievous
than losing kinsmen or sending the Shrial Knights to their doom. An
opportunity. Sarcellus, Kellhus
noticed, had left his seat on the tiers, and now stood with a small party of
Shrial Priests preparing to assist Gotian in the inaugural rites. The general
rumble of voices trailed. The Grandmaster began
with a purificatory prayer Kellhus recognized from The Tractate. Then he spoke for some time of Inri Sejenus, the
Latter Prophet, and what it meant for men to be Inrithi. “Whosoever repents the
darkness in their heart,” he quoted from the Book of Scholars, “let him raise
high the Tusk and follow.” To be Inrithi, he reminded them, was to be a
follower of Inri Sejenus. And who followed more faithfully than those who
walked in his Holy Steps? “Shimeh,” he said in a clear, far-travelling voice. “Shimeh
is near, very near, for we have travelled farther in one day with our swords
than we have in two years with our feet…” “Or our tongues!” some wit cried out. Warm
laughter. “Four nights ago,” Gotian
declared, “I sent a scroll to Maithanet, our Most Holy Shriah, Exalted Father
of our Holy War.” He paused, and all was silence save the cracking of the
bonfire. He still wore bandages about both hands, which had been burned by
dragging the fallen through fiery grasses. “Upon that scroll,” he
continued, “I wrote but one word—one word!— for my fingers still bled.” Sporadic shouts broke
from the masses. The Charge of the Shrial Knights had already become legend.
“Triumph!” he cried. “Triumph!” The Men of the Tusk
exploded in exultation, howling and wailing, some even weeping. Shadowy beneath
the stars, the mounds and debris of surrounding Mengedda shivered. But Kellhus remained
silent. He glanced at Sarcellus, who had his back partially turned toward him,
and noticed… discrepancies. Smiling, resplendent in
firelight and gold and white, Gotian waved for the masses to settle, then
called on them to join him in the TemplePrayer. Z The First March Sweet God of Gods, who walk among us,
innumerable are your holy names… Words uttered through a
thousand human throats. The air thrummed with an impossible resonance. The
ground itself spoke, or so it seemed… But Kellhus saw only Sarcellus—saw only
differences. His stance, his height and build, even the lustre of his black
hair. All imperceptibly different. A replacement. The original copy had
been killed, Kellhus realized, just as he’d hoped. The position of Sarcellus,
however, had not. His death had gone unwitnessed, and they’d simply replaced
him. Strange that a man could
be a position. for your name is Truth, which endures and
endures, for ever and ever. After completing the
purificatory rites, Gotian and Sarcellus with-drew. Stiff in their ornamental
hauberks, the Gilgallic Priests then rose to declare the Battle’Celebrant, the
man whom dread War had chosen as his vessel on the field five days previous.
The masses fell silent in anticipation. The selection of the Battle-Celebrant,
Xinemus had complained to Kellhus earlier that day, was the object of
innumerable wagers, as though it were a lottery rather than a divine
determination. An older man, his square-cut beard as white as hoarfrost,
stepped to the forefront of the others: Cumor, the High Cultist of Gilgaol. But
before he could begin, Prince Skaiyelt leapt to his feet and cried, “Wedt firlik peor kaflang dau hara mausrot!” He whirled from the Great and
Lesser Names to those massed about Kellhus, his long blond hair and beard
spilling from shoulder to shoulder. “Wedt dau hara mut keflinga! Keflinga!” Cumor sputtered something
indignant and unintelligible, while everyone else turned to Skaiyelt’s Thunyeri
for explanation. His translators, it seemed, were nowhere to be found. Mengedda “He says,” one of
Gothyelk’s men finally shouted in Sheyic from the higher tiers, “that we must
first discuss leaving this place. That we must flee.” The humid air suddenly buzzed
with competing shouts, some accusatory, others crying out assent. Skaiyelt’s
monstrous groom, Yalgrota, jumped to his feet and began beating his chest and
roaring threats. The shrunken Sranc heads about his waist danced like tassels.
Inexplicably, Skaiyelt began kicking at the ground. He crouched with his knife,
then stood, raising something against the bonfire’s glare. Hundreds gasped. He held a skull, half
choked with dirt, half crushed by some ancient blow. “Wedt,” he said slowly, “dau hara mut keflinga.” The dead surfacing like
the drowned… How, Kellhus thought, couldthis
be possible? But he needed to stay
focused on practical mysteries—not those pertaining to the ground. Skaiyelt tossed the skull
into the bonfire, glared at his fellow Great Names. The debate continued, and
one by one they acquiesced, though Chepheramunni at first refused to credit the
story. Even the Exalt-General conceded without complaint. Over the course of
the debate, some looks wandered toward Kellhus, but no one solicited his
opinion. After a short time, Proyas announced that the Holy War would leave
Mengedda and her cursed plains come morning. The Men of the Tusk
rumbled in wonder and relief. Attention was once again
yielded to aging Cumor, who, either because he was flustered or dreaded further
interruptions, dispensed with the Gilgallic rites altogether and came directly
to stand over Saubon. The other priests seemed more than a little disconcerted. “Kneel,” the old man
called out in a quavering voice. Saubon did as he was
told, but not before sputtering, “Gotian! He led the charge!” “It is you, Coithus
Saubon,” Cumor replied, his tone so soft that few, Kellhus imagined, could hear
him. “You… Many saw it. Many saw him, the
Shield-Breaker, glorious Gilgaol … He looked through your eyes!
Fought with your limbs!” “No…” ihe first March Cumor smiled, then
withdrew a circlet woven of thorns and olive sprigs from his voluminous right
sleeve. Save for the odd cough, the gathered Inrithi fell absolutely silent.
With an old man’s unsteady gentleness, he placed the circlet upon Saubon’s
head. Then stepping back, the High Cultist of Gilgaol cried, “Rise, Coithus
Saubon, Prince of Galeoth… Battle-Celebrant!” Once again the assembly
thundered in exultation. Saubon pressed himself to his feet, but slowly, like a
man wearied by a near heartbreaking run. For a moment he looked about in
disbelief, then without warning, he turned to Kellhus, his cheeks shining with
tears in the firelight. His cleanshaven face still bore cuts and bruises from five
days previous. Why? his anguished look said. I don’t deserve this… Kellhus smiled sadly, and
bowed to the precise degree jnan demanded from all men in the presence of a
Battle-Celebrant. He’d more than mastered their brute customs by now; he’d
learned the subtle flourishes that transformed the seemly into the august. He
knew their every cue. The roaring redoubled.
They’d all witnessed their exchanged look; they’d all heard the story of
Saubon’s pilgrimage to Kellhus at the ruined shrine. It happens, Father. It happens. But the thunderous
cheering suddenly faltered, trailed into the rumble of questioning voices.
Kellhus saw Ikurei Conphas standing before the bonfire not far from Saubon, his
shouts only now becoming audible. “—fools!” he railed.
“Rank idiots! You’d honour this man? You’d acclaim acts that
nearly doomed the entire Holy War?” A tide of jeers and
taunts swelled through the amphitheatre. “Coithus Saubon, Battle-Celebrant,” Conphas cried in derision, and somehow managed to
silence the rumble. ‘’Fool-Celebrant, I say! The man who nearly saw
all of you killed on these cursed fields! And trust me, this is the one place
where you don’t want to die…“ Saubon simply watched
him, dumbstruck. “You know what I mean,”
the Exalt-General said to him directly. “You know what you did was errant
folly.” Reflections of the bonfire curled like oil across his golden
breastplate. The masses had fallen
utterly silent. He had no choice, Kellhus knew, but to intervene. Mengedda Conphas is too clever to — “The craven see folly
everywhere,” a powerful voice boomed from the lower tiers. “All daring is rash
in their eyes, because they would call their cowardice ‘prudence.’” Cnaьir had
stood from his place next to Xinemus. Months had passed, and still the
Scylvendi’s penetration surprised him. Cnaьir saw the danger, Kellhus realized,
knew that Saubon would be useless if he were discredited. Conphas laughed. “So I’m
a coward, am I, Scylvendi?” His right hand happened upon the pommel of his
sword. “In a manner,” Cnaьir
said. He wore black breeches and a grey thigh-length vest—plunder from the
Kianene camp—that left both his chest and banded arms bare. Firelight shimmered
across the vest’s silk embroidery, flashed from his pale eyes. As always, the
plainsman emanated a feral intensity that made others, Kellhus noted, stiffen
in inarticulate alarm. Everything about him looked hard, like sinew one had to
saw rather than slice. “Since defeating the
People,” the Scylvendi continued, “much glory has been heaped upon your name.
Because of this, you begrudge others that same glory. The valour and wisdom of
Coithus Saubon have defeated Skauras—no mean thing, if what you said at your
Emperor’s knee was to be believed. But since this glory is not yours, you think
it false. You call it foolishness, blind lu—” . “It was blind luck!” Conphas cried. “The Gods favour the
drunk and the soft-of-head… That’s the only lesson we’ve learned.” “I cannot speak to what
your gods favour,” Cnaьir replied. “But you have learned much, very much. You
have learned the Fanim cannot withstand a determined charge by Inrithi knights,
nor can they break a determined defence by Inrithi footmen. You have learned
the strengths and shortcomings of their tactics and their weapons against a
heavily armoured foe. You have witnessed the limits of their patience. And you
have taught as well—a very important lesson. You have taught them to fear. Even now, in the hills, they run like jackals before
the wolf.” Cheers spread through the
crowds, gradually growing into another deafening roar. Stupefied, Conphas stared
at the Scylvendi, his fingers kneading his pommel. He’d been roundly defeated.
And so swiftly… The First March Mengeaaa “Time for another scar on
your arms!” someone cried, and laughter boomed through the amphitheatre. Cnaьir
graced the assembled Inrithi with a rare fierce grin. Even from this distance,
Kellhus knew the Exalt-General felt neither shame nor embarrassment: the man
smiled as though a crowd of lepers had just insulted his beauty. For Conphas,
the derision of thousands meant as little as the derision of one. The game was
all that mattered. Among those Kellhus
needed to dominate, Ikurei Conphas was an especially problematic case. Not only
did he suffer pride—almost lunatic in proportion—he possessed a pathological disregard
for the estimations of other men. Moreover, like his uncle the Emperor, he
believed that Kellhus himself was somehow connected to Skeaos—to the Cishaurim, if Achamian could be believed. Add to that a
childhood surrounded by the labyrinthine intrigues of the Imperial Precincts,
and the Exalt-General became almost as immune to Dunyain techniques as the
Scylvendi. And he planned, Kellhus
knew, something catastrophic for the Holy War… Another mystery. Another
threat. The Great Names moved on
to bicker about further things. First Proyas, using arguments he’d rehearsed,
Kellhus surmised, with Cnaьir, suggested they send a mounted force to Hinnereth
with all dispatch, not to take the city but to secure its surrounding fields
before they could be prematurely harvested and sheltered within its walls. The
same, he declared, should be done for the entire coastline. Under torment,
several Kianene captives had said that Skauras, as a contingency, had ordered
all the winter grains in Gedea harvested as soon as they became milk-ripe.
Swearing that the Imperial Fleet could supply the Holy War entire, Conphas
argued against the plan, warning that Skauras yet possessed the strength and
cunning to destroy any such force. Loath to depend on the Emperor in any way,
the other Great Names were disinclined to believe him, however, and it was
agreed: several thousand horsemen would be mustered and sent out on the morrow
under Earl Athjeari, Palatine Ingiaban, and Earl Werijen Greatheart. Then the incendiary issue
of the Ainoni host’s sloth and the constant fragmentation of the Holy War was
broached. Here masked Chepheramunni, who had to
answer to the Scarlet Spires, found a surprise ally in Proyas, who argued, with
several provisos, that they actually should continue travelling in separate contingents. When the issue
threatened to become intractable, he called on Cnaьir for support, but the
Scylvendi’s harsh assessment had little effect, and the argument dragged on. The first Men of the Tusk
continued shouting into the night, growing ever more drunk on the Sapatishah’s
sweet Eumarnan wines. And Kellhus studied them, glimpsed depths that would have
terrified them had they known. Periodically, he revisited the thing called
Sarcellus, who often gazed back, as though Kellhus were a boy with fine shanks
that a wicked Shrial Knight might love. It taunted him. But such a look was
merely a semblance, Kellhus knew, as surely as the expressions animating his own face. Still, there could be no
doubt—not any longer… They knew Kellhus could see them. I must move more quickly, Father. The Nilnameshi had it
wrong. Mysteries could be killed, if one possessed the power. Lounging beneath the
bellied crimson canvas of his pavilion, Ikurei Conphas spent the first hour
verbally entertaining various scenarios involving the Scylvendi’s murder.
Martemus had said little, and in some infuriated corner of his thoughts Conphas
suspected that the drab General not only secretly admired the barbarian but had
thor-oughly enjoyed the earlier fiasco in the amphitheatre. And yet, by and
large, this bothered Conphas little, though he couldn’t say why. Perhaps,
assured of Martemus’s actual loyalty, he cared nothing for the man’s spiritual
infidelities. Spiritual infidelities were as common as dirt. Afterward, he spent another
hour telling Martemus what was to happen at Hinnereth. This had lightened his
mood greatly. Demonstrations of his brilliance always buoyed his spirits, and
his plans for Hinnereth were nothing short of genius. How well it paid to be
friends with one’s enemies. The First March And so, feeling
magnanimous, he decided to open a little door and allow Martemus—easily the
most competent and trustworthy of all his generals—into some rather large
halls. In the coming months, he would need confidants. All Emperors needed
confidants. But of course, prudence
demanded certain assurances. Though Martemus was loyal by nature, loyalties
were, as the Ainoni were fond of saying, like wives. One must always know where
they lie—and with absolute certainty. He leaned back into his
canvas chair and peered past Martemus to the far side of the pavilion, where
the crimson Standard of the Over-Army rested in its illumined shrine. His gaze
lingered on the ancient Kyranean disc that glinted from the folds—supposedly
once the chest piece of some Great King’s harness. For some reason the figures
stamped there—golden warriors with elongated limbs—had always arrested him. So
familiar and yet so alien. “Have you ever stared at
it before, Martemus? I mean, truly stared?” For a moment the General
looked as though he might be too far into his cups, but only for a moment. The
man never truly got drunk. “The Concubine?” he asked. Conphas smiled
pleasantly. Common soldiers commonly referred to the Over-Standard as the
“Concubine” because tradition demanded it be quartered with the Exalt-General.
Conphas had always found the name particularly amusing: he’d drawn his cock
across that hallowed silk more than once… A strange feeling, to spill one’s
seed on the sacred. Quite delicious. “Yes,” he said, “the Concubine.” The General shrugged.
“What officer hasn’t?” “And how about the Tusk?
Have you ever laid eyes upon it?” Martemus raised his
brows. “Yes.” “Really?” Conphas
exclaimed. He himself had never seen the Tusk. “When was that?” “As a boy, back when
Psailas II was Shriah. My father brought me with him to Sumna to visit his
brother—my uncle—who for a time was an orderly in the Junriuma… He took me to
see it.” “Did he now? What did you
think?” The General stared into
his wine bowl, which he held poised between his wonderfully thick fingers.
“Hard to remember… Awe, I think.” Mengedda “Awe?” “I remember my ears
ringing. I shook, I know that… My uncle told me I should be afraid, that the
Tusk was connected to far bigger things.” The
General smiled, fixing Conphas with his clear brown eyes. “I asked him if he
meant a mastodon and he swatted me—right there!—in the presence of the Holiest
of Holies…” Conphas affected
amusement. “Hmm, the Holiest of Holies…” He took a long sip of his wine,
savoured the warm, almost buzzing taste. Many years had passed since he’d last
enjoyed Skauras’s private stock. He could still scarcely believe the old jackal
had been bested, and by Coithus
Saubon… He’d
meant what he’d said earlier: the Gods did favour the soft-of-head. Men like Conphas, on the
other hand, they tested. Men like themselves… “Tell me, Martemus, if you had to
die defending one or the other, the Concubine or the Tusk, which would it be?” “The Concubine,” the
General replied without a whisper of hesitation. “And why’s that?” Again the General
shrugged. “Habit.” Conphas fairly howled.
Now that was funny. Habit. What more
assurance could a man desire? Dear
man! Precious man! He paused, collected
himself for a moment, then said, “This man, Prince Kellhus of Atrithau… What do
you make of him?” Martemus scowled, then
leaned forward in his chair. Conphas had once made a game of this, leaning
forward and back, and watching the way Martemus’s pose answered his, as though
some critical distance between their faces must always be observed. In some
ways, Martemus was such a strange man. “Intelligent,” the
General said after a moment, “well spoken, and utterly impoverished. Why do you
ask?” Still hesitant, Conphas
appraised his subordinate for a moment. Martemus was unarmed, as was custom
when conferring alone with members of the Imperial Family. He wore only a plain
red smock. He cares nothing
about impressing me…
This, Conphas reminded himself, was what made his opinion so invaluable. “I think it’s time I told
you a little secret, Martemus… Do you remember Skeaos?” iou ihe Mrst March “The Emperor’s Prime
Counsel. What of him?” “He was a spy, a Cishaurim spy… My uncle, ever keen to confirm his fears, noted
that Prince Kellhus seemed peculiarly interested in Skeaos during that final
gathering of the Great Names on the Andiamine Heights. Our Emperor, as you
know, is not one to idly brood over his suspicions.” Martemus blanched with
shock. For a moment, it looked his nose might fall off his face. Conphas could
almost read his thoughts: Skeaos
aCishaurim spy? This is a little secret? “So Skeaos admitted
working for the Cishaurim?” The Exalt-General shook
his head. “He didn’t need to… He was… He was some kind of abomination—a faceless abomination!—and of a species the Imperial Saik
couldn’t detect… Which means of course he must have been Cishaurim.” “Faceless?” Conphas blinked, and for
the thousandth time saw Skeaos’s oh-so-familiar face… unclutch. “Don’t ask me
to explain. I cannot.” Fucking words. “So you think this Prince
Kellhus is a Cishaurim spy as well? A contact of some kind? “He’s something, Martemus. Just what remains to be seen.” The General’s astonished
expression suddenly hardened into something shrewd. “Like the Emperor, you’re
not one to harbour idle suspicions, Lord Exalt-General.” “True, Martemus. But
unlike my uncle, I know the wisdom of staying my hand, of letting my enemies
think I’m deceived. To observe, and to observe closely, is not to remain idle.” “But this is my point,”
Martemus said. “Surely you’ve purchased informants. Surely you’ve had the man
watched… What have you learned so far?” Surely. “Not much. He
camps with the Scylvendi, seems to share a woman with him—quite a beauty, I’m
told. He spends his days with a Schoolman named Drusas Achamian—the same Mandate fool my uncle contracted to corroborate the
Imperial Saik regarding Skeaos, though whether this is anything more than a
coincidence, I don’t know. Supposedly they talk history and philosophy. He
belongs, like Mengedda the Scylvendi, to
Proyas’s inner circle, and he wields, as fairly the entire Holy War witnessed
tonight, some kind of strange power over Saubon. Otherwise, the caste-menials
seem to think he’s a poor man’s prophet—a seer or something.“ “Not much?” Martemus
exclaimed. “From your description, he sounds like a man of power to me—frightful power, if he belongs to the Cishaurim.” Conphas smiled. “Growing
power…” He leaned forward, and sure enough, Martemus leaned back. “Would you
like to know what I think?” “Of course.” “I think he’s been sent
by the Cishaurim to infiltrate and destroy the Holy War. Saubon’s idiotic march
and that nonsense about ‘punishing the Shrial Knights’ was simply his first
attempt. Mark me, there will be another. He bewitches men,
somehow, plays the prophet…” Martemus narrowed his
eyes and shook his head. “But I’ve heard quite the opposite. They say he denies
those who make more of him than he is.” Conphas laughed. “Is
there any better way to posture as a prophet? People don’t like the smell of
presumption, Martemus. Even the pig castes have noses as keen as wolves when it
comes to those who claim to be more. Me, on the other hand, I quite like the
savoury stink of gall. I find it honest.” Martemus’s face darkened.
“Why are you telling me this?” “Always to the quick, eh,
General? Small wonder I find you so refresh-ing.” “Small wonder,” the man
repeated. Such a dry wit, Martemus.
Conphas reached for the decanter and refilled his bowl with more of the
Sapatishah’s wine. “I tell you this, Martemus, because I would have you play
general in a different sort of war. Quite against all reason, you’ve become a
man of power. If this Prince Kellhus collects followers to a purpose, if he courts the mighty, then you should prove well nigh
irresistible.” A pained expression crept
into Martemus’s face. “You want me to play disciple?” “Yes,” Conphas replied.
“I do not like the smell of this man.” “Then why not just have
him killed?” The First March But of course… How could he be so penetrating and so dense by
turns? The Exalt-General inclined
his bowl and watched the blood-dark wine roll in the bottom. For an instant,
its bouquet transported him back years, to his days as a hostage in Skauras’s
opulent court. He glanced once again to the Over-Standard behind its curtain of
incense. His sweet Concubine. “It’s strange,” Conphas
said, “but I feel young.” HApTER PlGHT Mengedda All men are greater than dead men. —AINONI PROVERB Every monumental work of the State is
measured by cubits. Every cubit is measured by the length of the
Aspect-Emperor’s arm. And the Aspect’Emperor’s arm, they say, stands beyond
measure. But 1 say the AspecuEmperor’s arm is measured by the length of a
cubit, and that all cubits are measured by the works of the State. Not even the
All stands beyond measure, for it is more than what lies within it, and “more”
is a kind of measure. Even the God has His cubits. —IMPARRHAS, PSUKALOGUES Early Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk,
the Plains of Mengedda “They celebrate my
uncle’s honour,” Earl Athjeari said as he led Kellhus through carousing mobs of
drunk Northmen. The Galeoth preferred leather wedge tents with heavy wooden
frames adorned by tusks and crude animal totems. Without the need to stake guy
ropes, they were able to arrange them board to board, canvas to canvas, in
large circular enclosures about a central fire. Athjeari led him through
enclosure after enclosure, prompted by Kellhus’s questions to explain the
various peculiarities of his people’s appearance, customs, and traditions.
Though annoyed at The First March first, the young Earl was
soon beaming with wonder and pride, struck not only by the distinctiveness and
nobility of his people, but by a new self-understanding as well. Like so many
men, he’d never truly considered who or what he was. Coithus Athjeari, Kellhus
knew, would never forget this walk. At once so easy and so difficult… Kellhus had taken the
shortest path. He’d acquired crucial background knowledge concerning Saubon’s
heritage, and he’d gained the confidence and admiration of his precocious
nephew, who hence would look on Prince Kellhus of Atrithau as a friend and
more, as someone who made him wiser—better—than
he was with other men. Eventually, they
shouldered their way into an enclosure far larger, and far drunker, than any of
the others. On the far side Kellhus glimpsed the Red Lion banner of House
Coithus rising above the shadowy congregation. Athjeari began pushing his way
toward it, cursing and berating his countrymen. But he paused when they neared
the enclosure’s centre, where a bonfire whisked sparks and smoke into the night
sky. “This will interest you,”
he said, grinning. A large clearing had been
opened before the fire, and two Galeoth, breathless and stripped to the waist,
stood facing each other in its heart, holding what appeared to be two staffs between
them. Each, Kellhus realized, had their wrists bound by leather straps to the
end of each pole, so they were held from each other. Gripping the polished
wood, they leaned each against the other, their white chests and sunburned arms
taut with veins and straining muscle. The onlookers hooped and roared. Suddenly the nearer man
pulled rather than pushed with his left, and his opponent stumbled forward.
Then the two men fairly danced around the fire, heaving, yanking, shoving,
thrusting, whatever it took to bring their opponent to the packed earth. The larger man staggered,
and for a moment looked as though he might lurch into the fire. The crowd
gasped, then cheered as he caught himself just short of the fiery column. With
a roar he jerked the smaller man into his long shadow, then drove him back,
only to suddenly falter, shaking his head fiercely. A small flame puffed from
his cropped mane, at the sight of which literally dozens doubled over with
laughter. The man Mengedda cried out, cursed. For an
instant, it appeared he might panic, but someone sent what looked like beer or
mead slapping across his scalp. More booming laughter, punctuated by cries of
foul. Athjeari chortled, turned
to Kellhus. “These two really hate each other,” he called over
the ruckus. “They want blood or burns more than silver!” “What is this?” “We call it gandoki, or ‘shadows.’ To beat your gandoch, your shadow, you must knock him to the ground.” His
laugh was relaxed and infectious, the laugh of a man utterly certain of his
place among others. “The picks,” he added, using the common derogatory term for
non-Norsirai, “they think we Galeoth are a race without subtlety—and so women
say of men! But gandoki proves that it’s not entirely true.” Then suddenly, as though
stepping through a door from nowhere, Sarcellus stood between them, wearing the
same white and gold vestments as at the amphitheatre. “Prince,” he said, bowing
his head to Kellhus. Athjeari fairly whirled.
“What are you doing here?” The Shrial Knight laughed, fixing the Earl with
large camel-lashed eyes. “The same as you, I suppose. I wished to confer with
Prince Kellhus.” “You followed us,”
Athjeari said. “Please…” the thing
replied, pretending to be offended. “I knew I’d find him here, enjoying the
largesse”—he looked sceptically at the surrounding crowds—“of the
Battle-Celebrant.” Athjeari glanced at
Kellhus, his look, his heart rate, even the draw of his breath striking a note
of scarcely concealed aversion. He thought Sarcellus vain and effete, Kellhus
realized, a particularly repellent member of a species he’d long ago learned to
despise. But then, that was likely what the original Cutias Sarcellus had been:
a pompous caste-noble. Sarcellus, the real
Sarcellus, was dead. What stood here in his stead was a beast of some kind, an
exquisitely trained animal. It had wrenched Sarcellus from his place and had
assumed all he once was. It had robbed him even of his death. No murder could be more
total. “Well then,” the young
Earl said, looking off as though distracted. Ihe First March “Allow me a few words
with the Knight-Commander,” Kellhus said. Though he scowled as he spoke,
Athjeari agreed to meet him at Saubon’s tent in a short time. “Run along,”
Sarcellus said, as the Earl impatiently shoved his way among his shouting
kinsmen. A keening shriek pealed
through the air. Kellhus saw the larger gandoki player stumble and fall beneath
the fists of several Galeoth who’d broken from the crowd. But the screaming
came from his smaller opponent. Kellhus glimpsed the man between shadowy legs,
blistered from the fire, smoking coals still embedded in his right shoulder and
arm. Others came rushing to
the larger man’s defence… A knife flashed. Blood slopped across the packed
ground. Kellhus glanced at
Sarcellus, who stood rigid, utterly absorbed by the mayhem unfolding before
them. Pupils dilated. Arrested breath. Quickened pulse… It possesses involuntary responses. Its right hand, Kellhus
noted, lingered near his groin, as though strain-ing against some overpowering
masturbatory compulsion. Its thumb stroked its forefinger. Another cry rang
out. The thing called
Sarcellus fairly trembled with ardour. These things hungered, Kellhus realized.
They ached. Of all the rude animal
impulses that coerced and battered the intellect, none possessed the subtlety
or profundity of carnal lust. In some measure, it tinctured nearly every
thought, impelled nearly every act. This was what made Serwe so invaluable.
Without realizing, every man at Xinemus’s fire—with the exception of the
Scylvendi—knew they best wooed her by pandering to Kellhus. And they could do
naught but woo her. But Sarcellus, it was
clear, ached for a different species of congress. One involving suffering and
violence. Like the Sranc, these skin-spies continually yearned to rut with
their knives. They shared the same maker, one who had harnessed the venal beast
within their slaves, sharpened it as one might a spear point. The Consult. “Galeoth,” Sarcellus
remarked with an offhand grin, “are forever cutting their own throats, forever
culling their own herd.” Mengedda The brawl had been cut
short by the ranting of Earl Anfirig. Carried hanging from arms and legs, three
bloodied men were being hurried from the fire. “They strive,‘” Kellhus
said, quoting Inri Sejenus, ’“for they know not what. So they cry villainy, and
claim others stand in their way‘…” Somehow the Consult knew
he’d been instrumental to the Emperor’s discovery of Skeaos. The question was
whether his role had been incidental or otherwise. If they suspected he could
somehow see their skin-spies, they would be forced to balance the immediate
threat of exposure against the need to know how he could see them. I must walk the linebetween,
make myself a mystery they must solve … Kellhus stared at the
thing for a bold moment. When it feigned a scowl, he said, “No, please, indulge
me… There’s something about you… About your face.” “Is that why you watched
me so in the amphitheatre?” For a heartbeat, Kellhus
opened himself to the legion within. He needed more information. He needed to
know, which meant he needed a weakness, a vulnerability… This Sarcellus is new. “Was I that indiscreet?” Kellhus said. “I apologize… I was
thinking of what you said to me that night in the Unaras at the ruined shrine…
You made quite an impression.” “And what did I say?” It acknowledges its ignorance as any man would, any man
with nothing to hide… These things are well-trained. “You don’t recall?” The imposter shrugged. “I
say many things.” With a smirk it added, “I have a beautiful voice…” Kellhus simulated a frown.
“Are you playing with me? Playing some kind of game?” The counterfeit face
clenched into a scowl. “I assure you, I’m not. Just what did I say?” “That something had
happened,” Kellhus began apprehensively, “that the endless… hunger, I think you said…” Something like a
twitch—too faint for world-born eyes—flickered across its expression. O ihe First March “Yes,” Kellhus continued.
“The endless hunger…” “What about it?” A near imperceptible
tightening of pitch, quickening of cadence. “You told me you weren’t what you
seemed. You told me you weren’t
a Shrial Knight.” Another twitch, like a
spider answering a shiver through its silk. These things can be read. “You deny this?” Kellhus
pressed. “Are you telling me you don’t remember?” The face had become as
impassive as a palm. “What else did I say?” It’s confused… Uncertain as to what to
do. “Things I could scarcely
credit at the time. You said you’d been assigned to coordinate observation of
the Mandate Schoolman, and to that end you’d seduced his lover, Esmenet. You
said that I was in great danger, that your masters thought I had some hand in
some disaster in the Emperor’s court. You said that you were prepared to help…” The creases and wrinkles
of its expression jerked into a network of hairline cracks, as though sucking
humid night air. “Did I tell you why I
confessed all this?” “Because you’d hungered
for it too… But what’s this? You really don’t remember, do you?” “I remember.” “Then what is this? Why have you become so… so coy? You seem different.” “Perhaps I’ve
reconsidered.” So much. In the span of
moments, Kellhus had confirmed his hypotheses regarding the Consult’s immediate
interests, and he’d uncovered the rudiments of what he needed to read these
creatures. But most important, he’d sown the threat of betrayal. How could
Kellhus possibly know what he knew, they would ask, unless the original
Sarcellus had actually told him? Whatever their ends, the Consult depended,
through and through, upon total secrecy. One defection could undo everything.
If they feared for the reliability of their field agents—these skin-spies—they
would be forced to restrict their autonomy and to proceed with more caution. In other words, they
would be forced to yield the one commodity Mengedda Kellhus required more
than any other: time. Time to dominate this Holy War.
Time to find Anasurimbor Moenghus. He was one of the
Conditioned, Dunyain, and he followed the shortest path. The Logos. The surrounding crowds
had settled into rumbling conversations, and both Kellhus and Sarcellus looked
to the bonfire. A towering Gesindalman, his hair bound into a war-knot, raised
the gandoki sticks high against the night sky, crying out for more challengers.
Laughing, the thing called Sarcellus seized Kellhus by the forearm and pulled
him into the raucous circle. The crowd began thundering anew. It believed me. Did it improvise? Was it
acting out of panic? Or was this its intent all along? There was no question of
refusing the challenge, not in the company of warlike men. The resulting loss
of face would be crippling. Washed by the heat of the
bonfire, they stripped, Kellhus to the linen kilt he wore beneath his blue-silk
cassock, Sarcellus to nothing, in the fashion of Nansur athletes. The Galeoth
howled in ridicule, but the thing called Sarcellus seemed oblivious. They stood
a length apart, appraising each other while two Agmundrmen bound their wrists
to the poles. The Gesindalman jerked each pole to ensure it was secure, then
without a glance at either of them, he cried, “Gaaaancioch.1” Shadow. Bare skin yellow in the
firelight, they circled each other, lightly grasping the ends of their poles.
Though still roaring, the crowds trailed into silence, fell away altogether,
until there was only one figure, Sarcellus, occupying one place… Kellhus. Sheets of muscle flexing
beneath fire-shining skin, many anchored and connected in inhuman ways. Dilated
eyes watching, studying, from a knuckled face. Steady
pulse. Tumid phallus, hardening. A mouth made of gracile fingers, moving,
speaking… “We are old, Anasurimbor,
very, very old. Age is power in this world.” He was bound to a beast,
Kellhus realized, to something, according to Achamian, begot in the bowels of
Golgotterath. An abomination of the Old Science, the Tekne… Possibilities
bloomed, like branches twining through the open air of the improbable. The First March “Very many,” it hissed,
“have thought to play the game you now play.” Losing was the simplest
solution, but weakness incited contempt, invited aggression. “We’ve had a thousand
thousand foes through the millennia, and we’ve made shrieking agonies of their
hearths, wildernesses of their nations, mantles of their skins…” But defeating this
creature could render Kellhus too much a threat. “All of them,
Anasurimbor, and you are no different.” He must strike some kind
of balance. But how? Kellhus thrust with his
right, heaved with his left, tried to draw Sarcellus off-balance. Nothing. It
was as though the poles had been harnessed to a bull. Preternatural reflexes.
And strong—very strong. Strategies revised.
Alternatives revisited. The thing called Sarcellus grinned, his phallus now
curved like a bow against his belly. To be aroused by battle or competition,
Kellhus knew, occasioned great honour among the Nansur. How strong is it? Kellhus leaned into the poles,
elbows back, as though holding a wheelbarrow, and pushed. Sarcellus adopted the same stance. Muscle strained,
knotted, gleaming as though oiled. The ash poles creaked. “Who are you?” Kellhus
cried under his breath. Sarcellus grunted, its
fists shaking, sinking to its waist, then it yanked. Kellhus skidded forward.
The instant of his imbalance, it jerked around, as though throwing a discus.
Kellhus caught himself, heaved back on both poles. Then they were dancing
around the clearing, jerking and thrusting, matching move with countermove,
each the perfect shadow of the other… Between heartbeats,
Kellhus tracked the shift and sway of its centre of balance, an abstract point
marked by the peak of its erection. He observed repetitions, recognized
patterns, tested anticipations, all the while analyzing the possibilities of
the game, the manifold lines of move and consequence. He restricted himself to
an elegant yet limited repertoire of moves, luring it into habits, reflexive
responses… “What do you want?” he cried. Then he improvised. From a near crouch, he
kicked down on the left pole while throwing up his left arm, and punching out
with his right. Its right hand slammed to the Mengedda earth, Sarcellus doubled
forward and was thrown back. For an instant it resembled a man bound to a
falling boulder… It kicked free of the
ground, trying to somersault back to its feet. Kellhus yanked the poles
backward, tried to slam it onto its stomach. Somehow it managed to pull its
left leg, knee to chest, underneath in time. Its right foot scooped into the
fire… A shower of ash and coals
went streaming into the air, not to blind Kellhus, but to obscure the two of them, he realized, from the watching
Galeoth… It jerked both arms back
and out, thrust itself forward between the poles, kicked. Kellhus blocked with
his own shin and ankle—once, twice… It means to kill me… An unfortunate accident while
playing a barbaric Galeoth game. Kellhus jerked his arms
inward and across, caught the thing’s third kick with the bisecting poles. For
a heartbeat, he held the advantage in balance. He thrust it backward, heaved it
nude into the golden flames… Perhaps if I injure… Then yanked it forward. A mistake. Unharmed,
Sarcellus landed running, barrelled Kellhus backward with inhuman strength,
slammed him into the packed Galeoth masses, bowling men over and forcing others
to scramble clear. Once, twice, Kellhus almost fell, then his back slammed
against something heavy—a tent frame. It collapsed with a crack and the wedge
tent went down, under, and they were in the darkness beyond the enclosure—where
the thing, Kellhus realized, hoped to kill. This must end! His feet caught hard
earth. Bracing his legs, grasping the poles, he dipped and wrenched upward,
wheeling Sarcellus high into the night air. The thing’s astonishment lasted
only a heartbeat, and it managed to crack one of the poles with a kick… Kellhus
slapped it to the ground like a flag. The place became a man,
slick with perspiration, breathing deep. The first of the Galeoth
sprinted over the demolished tent, calling for torches, stumbling in the sudden
darkness. They saw Sarcellus pressing himself to his hands and knees at
Kellhus’s feet. As astounded as they were, they bawled out Kellhus’s name,
acclaiming him victor. The First March What have I done, Father? As they unbound his
wrists, slapping him on the back and swearing they’d never seen the like,
Kellhus could only watch Sarcellus, who slowly pulled himself to his feet. Bones should have been
broken. But then, Kellhus now knew, it was a thing without bones, a thing of
cartilage… Like a shark. Saubon watched Athjeari
stare in horror at the bones scattered across the earthen floor. The tent was
small, far smaller than the garish pavilions used by the other Great Names.
Beneath the blue and red-dyed canvas, there was room enough only for a beaten
field cot and a small camp table, where the Galeoth Prince sat, so very deep
into his cups… Outside the revellers
howled and laughed—the fools! “But he’s here, Uncle,” the young Earl of Gaenri said. “He waits…” “Send him away!” Saubon
cried. He loved his nephew, dearly, couldn’t look at him without seeing his
beloved sister’s beautiful face. She’d protected him from Papa. She’d loved him
before she died… But had she known him? Kussalt knew — “But Uncle, you asked—” “I care not what I
asked!” “I don’t understand…
What’s happened to you?” To be known by one man
and to be hated! Saubon leapt from his seat,
seized his nephew about the shoulders, cowed him the way only one of Eryeat’s
sons could. How he wanted to cry out the truth, to confess everything to this
boy, this man with his sister’s eyes—his sister’s blood! But he wasn’t her… He
didn’t know him. And he would despise him
if he did. “I cannot! I cannot have
him see me like this! Can’t you see?” No one must know! No one! “Like what?” “This.1”
Saubon bawled, thrusting the young man back. Athjeari caught his
balance and stood dumbstruck, openly hurt. He should have been outraged, Saubon
thought. He was the Earl of Gaenri, Khengedda one of the most powerful
men in Galeoth. He should have been infuriated, not appalled… Kussalt’s
forever-murmuring lips. “I
would have you know how much 1hate-” “Just send him away!”
Saubon cried. “As you wish,” his nephew
murmured. Glancing once again at the bones prodding through the earth, he
withdrew through the leather flaps. Bones. Like so many
little tusks. No one! Not even him! Though it was late, sleep
was out of the question. It seemed to Eleazaras that he’d been asleep for
weeks, now that High Ainon and the Scarlet Spires had finally rejoined the Holy
War. For what was sleep, if not unconsciousness of the greater world? A
profound ignorance. To remedy this, Eleazaras
had set Iyokus, his Master of Spies, to work the instant their palanquins had
set ground on the Plains of Mengedda. The battlefield of five days previous
needed to be surveyed, and witnesses interviewed, to determine what tactics the
Cishaurim had used, and how the Inrithi had bested them. The various informants
and spies they’d placed throughout the Holy War also had to be contacted and
questioned, both to ascertain how things stood in general now that they marched
through heathen territory, and to pursue the matter of these new Cishaurim
spies. Faceless spies. Spies without the Mark. He awaited Iyokus outside
his pavilion, pacing by torchlight, while his secretaries and Javreh bodyguards
watched from a discreet distance. After spending weeks entombed in his
palanquin, he found himself despising enclosed spaces. Everything seemed to
bind and constrict these days. After a time, Iyokus
emerged from the darkness, a ghoul in flashing crimson. “Walk with me,” he said
to the chanv addict. “Through the encampment?” “You fear riots?” the
Grandmaster asked somewhat incredulously. “After losing so many to the Cishaurim,
I’d assumed they’d appreciate a few blasphemers in their midst.” The First March “No… I thought we might
visit the ruins instead. They say Mengedda is older than Shir…” “Ah, Iyokus the
Antiquarian,” Eleazaras laughed. “I keep forgetting…” Though he personally had
no interest in seeing the ruins—he thought antiquarianism a defect
of character proper to Mandate Schoolmen__ he felt curiously
indulgent. Besides, the dead made for good company, he supposed, when planning
one’s very survival. Instructing his
bodyguards to remain behind, he strolled with Iyokus into the darkness. “So what did you find?”
he asked. “After we illuminated the
fields,” Iyokus said, “things fell into place…” Caught from the side by passing
torchlight, his pigment-deprived eyes seemed to glow a momentary red. “Most
unsettling, seeing the work of sorcery without the Mark. I had forgotten…” “One more reason for this
outrageous risk, Iyokus: to stamp out the Psukhe…” A sorcery they couldn’t see.
A metaphysics they couldn’t comprehend… What more did they need? “Indeed,” the
linen-skinned man replied unconvincingly. “What we know is this: according to
every report, Galeoth and non-Galeoth, Prince Saubon singlehandedly repulsed
the Padirajah’s Coyauri—” “Impressive,” Eleazaras
said. “As impressive as it is
unlikely,” the ever-sceptical Master of Spies said. “But the point is moot.
What matters is that the Fanim were then chased by the Shrial Knights. That, I think, was the decisive factor.” “How so?” “The scorched turf
corresponding to Gotian’s charge doesn’t begin at Saubon’s lines along the
ravine, where one might expect, but rather some seventy paces out… I think the
Coyauri, as they fled, actually screened the Shrial Knights from the Cishaurim…
They were only a hundred or so paces away when the psukari began Scourging
them.” “It was the Scourge they
used, then?” Iyokus nodded. “I would
say so. And perhaps the Lash, as well.” “So they were Secondaries
or Tertiaries?” “Without question,” the
Master of Spies replied, “perhaps under one or two Primaries… It’s a pity we
didn’t have the foresight to post observers among the Norsirai: aside from what
you and I witnessed ten years ago, Mengedda we know next to nothing
about their Concerts. And unfortunately no one seems to know just who any of
them were—not even the higher ranking Kianene captives.“ Eleazaras nodded. “It
would be nice to know who… Even still, a dozen of them dead, Iyokus. A dozen!” The Schoolmen of the
Three Seas were called the “Few” for good reason. The Cishaurim, according to
their informants in Shimeh and Nenciphon, could field at most one hundred to
one hundred and twenty ranking psukari, very near the number of sorcerers of
rank the Scarlet Spires itself could field. When one counted in thousands, the
loss of twelve scarcely seemed significant, and Eleazaras had no doubt that
many in the Holy War, among the Shrial Knights in particular, gnashed their
teeth at the thought of how many they had lost for the sake of so few. But when
one counted, as Schoolmen did, in tens,
the loss of twelve was nothing short of catastrophic—or glorious. “An astounding victory,”
Iyokus said. He gestured to the Men of the Tusk passing them in shadowy clots:
spectators, Eleazaras imagined, returning from the Council of Great and Lesser
Names. “And from what I gather, the Men of the Tusk have only the dimmest
notion.” So much the better, Eleazaras thought. Strange, the
way cruelty and jubilation could strike such sweet chords. “This,” he said with an
air of declaration, “will be our strategy then. We conserve ourselves at all costs, allow these dogs to continue killing as many
Cishaurim as they can.” He paused to secure Iyokus’s gaze. “We must save
ourselves for Shimeh.” How many times had he,
Iyokus, and the others debated this issue? Despite the sometimes unfathomable
power of the Psukhe, it remained, they all agreed, inferior to the Anagogis.
The Scarlet Spires would win an open confrontation with the Cishaurim—there was
no doubt. But how many of them would die? What power would the Scarlet Spires
wield after destroying the Cishaurim? A
triumph which saw them reduced to the status of a Minor School wouldn’t be a
triumph at all. They must do more than
defeat the Cishaurim, they must obliterate them. No matter how lunatic his
thirst for vengeance, Eleazaras would not gut his School. The First March “A wise course,
Grandmaster,” Iyokus said. “Yet I fear the Inrithi won’t fare so well in a
second encounter.” “And why’s that?” “The Cishaurim walked,
probably to conceal themselves from Saubon’s Chorae bowmen and crossbowmen,
whom he’d positioned too far behind his forward ranks. The strange thing,
however, is that they approached without a cavalry escort…” “They walked in the open?
But I thought striking from opening waves of horsemen was their traditional
tactic…” “So the Emperor’s
specialists claimed.” “Arrogance,” Eleazaras
said. “Whenever they engage the Nansur, they face the Imperial Saik. This time
they knew we were days away, still crossing the Southron Gates.” “So they waived
precautions because they thought themselves invincible…” Iyokus looked down, as
though watching his sandalled feet and bruised toenails peep from the hem of
his shining gown. “Possible,” he finally said. “Their intent seems to have been
to decimate the Inrithi centre, nothing more, to ensure it would collapse in
the next assault. They probably thought themselves cautious…” They’d walked beyond the
camp fires and embroidered round tents of their Ainoni countrymen to the
perimeter of lost Mengedda. The ground sloped upward, breached by broad stone
foundations—the remnants of some ancient wall, Eleazaras realized. Taking care
not to soil their gowns, they gained the stony summit. Around them stretched a
great swath of debris fields, truncated walls, and on the skyline, an ancient
acropolis crowned by a gallery of cyclopean pillars standing desolate beneath
the constellation of Uroris. Something broke the back of this place, Eleazaras thought. Something breaks the back of every place ... “What news of Drusas
Achamian?” he asked. For some reason, he felt breathless. The chanv addict stared
into the night, lost in another of his annoying reveries. Who knew what
happened in that spidery and methodical soul? Finally he said, “I fear you may
be right about him…” “You fear?” Eleazaras fairly snapped. “You concluded the
interrogation of Skalateas yourself. You know what happened that night beneath
the Mengedda Emperor’s palace better
than anyone—save the principals, perhaps. The abomination recognized Achamian, ergo, Achamian is somehow connected to the
abomination. The abomination could only be a Cishaurim spy, ergo Achamian is
connected to the Cishaurim.“ Iyokus turned to him, his
face as mild as milk. “But is the connection significant?” “That is the very question we must answer.” “Indeed. And how do you
propose we answer it?” “How else? By seizing
him. By interrogating him.” Did he think the menace of these changelings didn’t
warrant such extreme measures? Eleazaras couldn’t imagine any greater threat! “Just like Skalateas?” Eleazaras thought of the
shallow grave they had left in Anserca, suppressed an uncharacteristic shudder. “Just like Skalateas.” “And that,” Iyokus said, “is precisely what I fear.” Suddenly Eleazaras
understood. “You think,” he said, “that it would be useless to ply him…” Over the centuries, the
Scarlet Spires had abducted dozens of Mandate Schoolmen, hoping to wrest from
them the secrets of the Gnosis, the sorcery of the Ancient North. Not one of
them had succumbed. Not one. “I think plying him for the Gnosis would be useless,” Iyokus said. “What I fear is that
even under torment or the Compulsions, he’ll simply insist the abomination that
replaced Skeaos was a Consult and not a Cishaurim—” “But we already know,”
Eleazaras cried, “that the man plays a tune far different from the one he
sings! Think of Geshrunni! Drusas Achamian cut off his face… And then, a little over a year later, he’s
recognized by a faceless spy in the Emperor’s dungeons?
This is no mere coincidence!” Eleazaras glared at the
man, clutched his shaking hands. He did not, he decided, like the reptilian way
Iyokus listened. “I know these arguments,”
Iyokus said. He turned to once again scrutinize the moonlit ruins, his
expression translucent and unreadable. “I simply fear there’s more to this…” “There’s always more,
Iyokus. Why else would men murder men?” HE TIRST MARCH Esmenet had tried, many
times since her daughter’s death, to attend to the void within her. She tried questioning it
away by asking the priests she bedded, but they always said the same thing,
that the God dwelt only in temples, and that she’d made a brothel of her body.
Then they would brothel her again. For a time, she tried smearing it away by
coupling with men for anything, half-coppers, bread, even a rotted onion—once.
But men could never fill, only muddy. So she turned to others
like her, watching, observing. She studied the always-laughing whores, who
somehow exulted in being guttered day for night, or the chirping slave girls,
their faces anchored forward beneath their water-urns, smiling and rolling
their eyes from side to side. She made their motions her motions, as though
certainty were a kind of dance. And for a time she discovered comfort, as
though habits of gesture and expression could drum for a deadened heart. For a time she forgot the
distance between a fact and a face. She had never tried to
love. If joy in gesture couldn’t unseat desolation, then perhaps, joy in
desperation. For five days now, they’d
camped together in the hills overlooking the Battleplain. Ranging ahead,
Achamian had found a small stream, which they’d followed into the stony
heights. They climbed into a band of pitch pine, whose massive cones rocked in
slow circles in the wind, and found a pool of translucent green. They camped
nearby, though the lack of forage for Achamian’s mule, Daybreak, forced them to
trek for an hour or so every day to gather fodder to supplement his grain. Five days. Joking and
brewing tea in the cool mornings, making love to the rush of dry wind through
the trees, eating hare and squirrel— snared by Achamian, no less!—with their
rations in the evening, touching each other’s faces with wonder in the
moonlight. And swimming, floating.
The crush of ardent heat in cool waters. How she wished it would
never end. Esmenet pulled their
sleeping mats from the tent, slapped them one after the other in the wind, then
set them across warm rock. They’d pitched their tent across the soft ground
beneath an ancient and massive pitch pine, a lone sentinel near the terminus of
a broad shelf that terraced the north and eastern faces of the hill. Mengedda This, she thought, is our place … Without visitors, without ruins, without memories, save for the animal bones they’d found curled
beneath the tree when they’d first arrived. She ducked back into the
tent, pulled Achamian’s worn leather satchel from the corner. It was musty,
slick and damp where it had lain against the grasses. Powdery white mould had
crept up the stitching. She carried it out into
the sunlight, sitting cross-legged on a soft but prickly carpet of pine
needles. She pulled out various sheaves of vellum, and weighting them down with
stones, set them out to dry. She found a small doll, human shaped, wooden, but
with a simple silken nob for a head and a small rusty knife for a right hand.
Humming an old tune from Sumna, she bounced it around, kicked its wooden legs
in a little jig. After laughing at her foolishness, she set it out in the sun
as well, crossing its legs and pressing its arms behind its head so that it
looked like a daydreaming field-slave. What would Achamian be doing with a
doll? Then she pulled out a
sheet that had been folded separate from the others. Opening it, she saw a
series of brief, vertical scribbles arrayed across it, each joined to one, two,
or several others by hastily scratched lines. Even though she couldn’t
read—she’d yet to meet a woman who could—she somehow knew this sheet was
important. She resolved to ask Achamian when he returned. After securing it under
an axe-shaped flint, she turned to the stitching, began scratching away the
mould with a twig. Achamian emerged from the
shadows of the deeper wood a short time afterward, bare to the waist, the
firewood in his arms braced against his black-furred belly. He shot her a
friendly frown as he walked past, glancing at his doll and papers. She grinned
and snorted. She adored seeing him like this: a sorcerer playing woodsman, down
to the breeches, no less. Even after all her time travelling with the Holy War,
breeches still looked outlandish, barbaric—even curiously erotic. They were
illegal in many Nansur cities. “Do you know why the
Nilnameshi think cats are more human than monkeys?” he asked, stacking his wood
against the trunk of their great pine. “No.” HU Ihe First March Mengedda He turned toward her,
slapping his palms against his breeches. “Curiosity. They think curiosity is
what defines men.” He walked up to her, grinning. “It certainly defines you.” “Curiosity has nothing to
do with it,” she replied, trying to sound cross. “Your bag smells like mouldy
cheese.” “I always thought that
was me.” “You smell like ass.” Achamian laughed, raised
devilish brows. “But I washed my beard…” She tossed pine needles
at his face, but the wind tugged them away. “And what’s that for?” she asked,
gesturing to the doll. “To lure little girls into your tent?” He sat next to her on the
ground. “That,” he said, “is a Wathi Doll…
You’d make me throw it away if I told you more.” “I see… And this,” she
continued, lifting the folded sheet. “What’s this?” His good humour
evaporated. “That’s my map.” She held the parchment
out between them, waved away a small wasp. “What’s this writing? Names?” “Individuals and
different Factions. Everyone with some bearing on the Holy War… The lines mark
their interrelationships… See,” he said, pointing to a line of vertical script
on the centre left edge, “that says, ‘Maithanet.’” “And below?” “Inrau.” Without thinking she
reached out and clutched his knee. “What about the top
corner, here,” she said, a little too quickly. “The Consult.” She listened to him
recite the names, the Emperor, the Scarlet Spires, the Cishaurim, explaining
their different intents and how he thought each might be related to the others.
He said nothing that she hadn’t heard before, but for some reason it suddenly
seemed a powerful thing scratched in ink across this cured animal hide. It
suddenly seemed horrifyingly real … A world of implacable forces.
Hidden. Violent… Chills pimpled her skin.
Achamian, she realized, didn’t
belong to her—not
truly. He never could. What was she compared with these mighty things? I can’t even read… “So why, Akka?” she found
herself saying. “Why have you stopped?” “What do you mean?” He
stared fixedly at the sheet, as though absorbed. “I know what you’re
supposed to do, Akka. In Sumna, you were
constantly out, making inquiries, courting informants. Either that or you were
waiting on some news. You were constantly spying. But not any more Not since you brought me
to your tent.“ “I thought it was only
fair,” he said breezily. “After all, you gave up—” “Don’t lie, Akka.” He sighed, and though
sitting, assumed the stooping air of slaves who carried onerous burdens. She
stared into his eyes. Clear, glistening brown. Need-nervous. Sad and wise. As
always when she was this near to him, she yearned to comb her fingers through
his beard, to probe the chin and jaw beneath. How I love
you. “It’s not you, Esmi,” he
said. “It’s him …” His gaze fell to the name
nearest ‘The Consult’ on the parchment sheet, the only one he’d yet to.
decipher for her. He didn’t need to. “Kellhus,” she said. They were silent for a
time. A sudden gust whisked through the pine, and she glimpsed bits of fluff
rolling away, up the granite slope and off into endless sky. For a moment she
feared for the sheaves of parchment, but they were safe beneath their stones,
their corners opening and closing like speechless mouths. They’d ceased speaking of
Kellhus aloud, ever since fleeing the Battleplain. Sometimes it seemed an
unspoken accord, the kind lovers used to numb shared hurts. Other times it
seemed a coincidence of aversions, like avoiding issues of fidelity or sex. But
for the most part it just seemed unnecessary, as though any words they might
use had been always already said. For a time Kellhus had
been a troubling figure, but he’d soon become intriguing, someone warm,
welcoming, and mysterious—a man who promised pleasant surprises. Then at some
point he’d become towering, someone who overshadowed all others—like a noble
and indulgent father, or a
great king breaking bread with his slaves. And now, even more so in his
absence, he’d become a shining figure. A beacon of some kind.
Something they must follow, if only because all else was so dark… What is he? she wanted to say, but looked
speechlessly to her lover instead. To her husband. They smiled at each
other, shyly, as though just remembering they weren’t strangers. They clasped
dry, sun-warm hands. Never
have I been sohappy. If only her daughter… “Come,” Achamian abruptly
said, pressing himself to his feet. “I want to show you something.” She followed him from the
matted humus onto the bare, sun-hot stone. She hissed and scampered to avoid
burning her feet, climbing to the rounded ledge. With each step, the vast
grey-green sweep of the Battleplain rose to brace the skies. Taking Achamian’s
proffered hand, she joined him on the ledge. She raised a hand to her brow,
shielding her eyes from the sun’s glare. Then she saw them… “Sweet Sejenus,” she whispered. Like the shadows of truly
mountainous clouds, they darkened the plain, great columns of them, their arms
winking like powdered diamond in the sunlight. “The Holy War marches,”
Achamian said, rigid with what could only be awe. Breathing hurt, or so it
seemed. She glimpsed cohorts of knights, hundreds, even thousands, strong, and
great files of infantrymen, as long as entire cities. She saw baggage-trains,
rows of wains no bigger than grains of sand. And she saw banner after
fluttering banner bearing the devices of a thousand Houses, each embroidered
with silken Tusks… “So many!” she exclaimed.
What terror the Fanim must feel… “More than two hundred
and fifty thousand Inrithi warriors,” Achamian said, “or so Zin claims…” For
some reason, his voice came to her as though from the deeps of some cave. It
sounded trapped and hollow. “And as many camp-followers, perhaps… No one knows
for sure.” Mengedda Thousands upon thousands.
With the ponderousness of distant things, they encompassed the nearer reaches
of the plain. They moved, she thought, like wine bleeding through wool. How could so many be bent
to one dreadful purpose? One place. One city. Shimeh. “Is it…” she found
herself gasping, “is it like something from your dreams?” He paused, and though he
neither swayed nor stumbled, Esmenet suddenly feared he was about to fall. She
reached out, clutched his elbow. “Like my dreams,” he
said. . $i ■■ ■
■■<■■■■■i ‘ ■
“■”■“ ■■ ■■ ” HApTER Nine HlNNERETH One can look into the future, or one can
look at the future. The latter is by far the more instructive. —AJENCIS, THE THIRD
ANALYTIC OF MEN If one doubts that passion and unreason
govern the fate of nations, one need only look to meetings between the Great.
Kings and emperors are unused to treating with equals, and are often
excessively relieved or repelled as a result. The Nilnameshi have a saying,
“When princes meet, they find either brothers or themselves,” which is to say,
either peace or war. —DRUSAS ACHAM1AN, THE
COMPENDIUM OF THE FIRST HOLY WAR Early Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, Momemn Song and myriad
glittering torches greeted Ikurei Xerius III as he passed through curtains of
wispy linen and into the palatial courtyard. Only in light must the Emperor be
seen. There was a rustle of fabric as the throngs fell to their knees and
pressed their powdered faces against the lawns. Only the tall Eothic Guardsmen
remained standing. With child-slaves holding the hem of his gown, Xerius walked
among the prostrated forms and savoured, as he always did, this loneliness.
This godlike loneliness. He
summons me! Me! The insolence! Hinnereth He mounted the wooden
steps and climbed into the Imperial Chariot. A call was given for all to rise. Xerius held out his white
gloved hand, idly wondering whom Ngarau, his Grand Seneschal, had chosen to
hand him the reins—an honour of great traditional significance, but beneath the
Emperor’s practical notice. Xerius trusted the judgement of his Grand Seneschal
implicitly… As he’d once trusted Skeaos. A pang of horror. How
long would that name cut like glass? Skeaos. He barely noticed the boy
who handed him the reins. Some young scion of House Kiskei? No matter. Xerius
was typically graceful even when distracted—a trait inherited from his father.
His father might have been a craven fool, but, oh, how he’d always looked the
Great Emperor. Xerius passed the reins
to his Charioteer and numbly signalled the advance. The team started at the
snap of the Captain’s whip, then began prancing forward, drawing the
gold-panelled chariot behind them. The censers affixed to the runners rattled,
trailing streamers of blue incense. Jasmine and sweet sandalwood. The Emperor
must be spared the disconcerting smells of his capital. Observed by hundreds of
painted and ingratiating faces, Xerius stared firmly forward, his stance
statuary, his look remote and haughty. Only a select few received the nod of
imperial acknowledgment: his bitch-mother, Istriya; old General Kumuleus, whose
support had assured him the Mantle after his father’s death; and of course his
favourite augur, Arithmeas. The intangible gold of Imperial favour was
something Xerius hoarded jealously, and he was shrewd in its dispensation.
Daring may be required to make the climb, but thrift was ever the key to holding the summit. Another lesson Xerius had
learned from his mother. The Empress had steeped him in the bloody history of
his predecessors, tutored him with endless examples of past disaster. This one
too trusting, that one too cruel, and so on. Surmante Skilura II, who’d kept a
bowl of molten gold at his side to fling at those who displeased him, had been
too cruel. Surmante Xatantius, on the other hand, had been too martial— conquest
should enrich, not bankrupt. Zerxei Triamarius III had been too fat—so fat he
needed slaves to brace his knees when he rode his horse. His death, Istriya had
chortled, had been as much a matter of ihe Second March aesthetic decency as
anything else. An emperor must look a God, not an overstuffed eunuch. Too much of this and too
much of that. “The world doesn’t constrain us,” the indomitable Empress had
once explained, batting her harlot eyes, “so we must constrain ourselves—like
the Gods… Discipline, sweet Xerius. We must have discipline.” Something he possessed in
abundance, or so Xerius thought. Outside the courtyard,
files of heavy cavalrymen, elite Kidruhil, positioned themselves before and
after the Imperial Chariot, and flanked by running torch-bearers, the shining
procession wound down the Andiamine Heights toward the dark and smoky troughs
of Momemn. Moving slowly so the torch-bearers could keep pace, it clattered
through the Imperial Precincts and onto the long, monumental avenue that joined
the palace compounds to the temple-complex of Cmiral. Numerous Momemnites stood
in shadowy clots along the avenue, straining for a glimpse of their divine
Emperor. Obviously word of his short pilgrimage had spread throughout the city.
Turning left and right, Xerius smiled and raised his hand in salute after
leisurely salute. So he wants this to be public… At first, he could see
little beyond the runners and their glittering torches, nor could he hear much
over the sound of hooves clopping across cobble. The farther they travelled,
however, the more congested the processional avenue became. Soon slaves and
caste-menials jostled within spitting distance of the torch-bearers, their
faces clearly illuminated, and Xerius realized that they actually jeered and
laughed each time he saluted them. For a moment he feared his heart might stop.
He clutched the shuddering runners to steady himself. That he could make such a
fool of himself! Despite the streaming
censers, the air took on the distinct odour of shit. Within moments, it
seemed, hundreds had become thousands, and as their numbers grew, so did their
gall. Soon the air shivered with the thunder of multitudes. Horrified, Xerius
watched the torchlight sort through face after unwashed face, each turned to
him, some watching in silent accusation or contempt, some sneering, others
shouting or howling in spittle-flecked rage. The procession trundled on, as yet
unimpeded, but Hinnereth the sense of bristling
pageantry had evaporated. Xerius swallowed. Cold sweat snaked between his
clothes and skin. He turned his eyes resolutely forward, to the stiff backs of
his cavalrymen. This is what he wants, he told himself. Remember, be disciplined! Officers bawled urgent
commands. The Kidruhil drew their clubs. The procession found brief
respite crossing the bridge over the Rat Canal. Xerius saw pleasure barges
anchored in the black waters, drifting in torch-illumined fogs of incense.
Rising from their cushions, caste-merchants and concubines lifted clay wafers,
blessing-tablets to be broken in his name. But their looks, Xerius could not
help but notice, turned away long before his passage was complete—to the
awaiting mobs. The unruly Momemnites
once again engulfed the procession. Women, the old and the infirm, even
children, all shouting now, all brandishing fists… Glancing down, Xerius saw a
poxed man rolling a rotted tooth on his tongue, which he spit as the Imperial
Chariot passed. It fell somewhere beneath the wheels… They truly abhor me, Xerius realized. They hate me… Me.‘ But this would change, he
reminded himself. When all was finished, when the fruits of his labour had
become manifest, they would hail him as no other emperor in living memory. They
would rejoice as trains of heathen slaves bore tribute to the Home City, as
blinded kings were dragged in chains to their Emperor’s feet. And with shielded
eyes they would gaze upon Ikurei Xerius III and they would know—know.1—that
he was indeed the Aspect-Emperor, returned from the ashes of
Kyraneas and Cenei to compel the world, to force nation and tribe to bow and
kiss his knee. I will show them! They will see! The immense plaza of
Cmiral opened before him, and the thunder of Momemn’s masses reached its
crescendo, stealing his breath, numbing him with sound and implication. The
forward Kidruhil halted, milled in momentary confusion. Xerius saw one
cavalryman’s horse rear. The Kidruhil who followed galloped ahead to secure the
flanks. All flourished their clubs, waving them in warning, striking any who
came too near. Beyond their small perimeter of gleaming armour and torchlight
the world was dark riot. Impoverished humanity, roaring fields of them, from
the temple-compounds to the left and right to the great basalt pillars of
Xothei ahead. Xerius clenched the
chariot’s forward rail until his knuckles whitened and his hands ached. All of
them… Over and over, crying that
name… Dread,
dizziness, and a sense of inner falling. Has he
incited them against me? Is this to be an assassination? He watched as his Kidruhil clubbed
first a sliver, then a wedge into the mobs. Suddenly he grinned, gritted his
teeth in fierce pleasure. This was how the Gods affirmed
themselves: with the blood of mortals! The crowd surged against the forward
Kidruhil, and the thunder seemed redoubled. Several shining horsemen stumbled
and vanished. More horsemen rushed forward. Clubs rose and fell. Swords were
drawn. The Charioteer steadied
his team, glanced nervously at him. You look an Emperor in the eye? “Go!” Xerius roared. “Into them! Go!” Laughing, he leaned from
the runners and spat upon his people, upon those who cried another’s name when
Ikurei Xerius III stood godlike in their midst. If only he could spit molten
gold! Slowly, the chariot
trundled ahead, lurching and throwing him forward as the wheels chipped over the
fallen. His stomach burned with fear, his bowels felt loose, but there was a
wildness in his thoughts, a delirium that exulted in death’s proximity. One by
one the torch-bearers were pulled under, but the Kidruhil stood fast, battling
their way ever forward, hacking their way among the masses, their swords rising
and falling, rising and falling, and it seemed to Xerius that he punished the
mongrels with his arm, that it was he who reached forward and chopped them to the ground. Laughing maniacally, the
Emperor of Nansur passed among his people, toward the growing immensity of
temple Xothei. Finally the decimated
procession reached the ranks of Eothic Guardsmen arrayed across Xothei’s
monumental steps. Deafened, afflicted by the torpor of dreams, Xerius was
guided from the chariot onto the raised wooden walkway that led to the temple’s
great gate. The Emperor must always be seen standing above mere men. He
viciously grabbed one of the captains by the arm. “Send word to the
barracks! Hack this place to silence! I want my chariot to skid across blood
when I return!” Discipline. He would
teach them. tьnnereth Then he strode toward
Xothei’s gate, stumbled for a moment on the hem of his gown, felt his heart
stop beating for fury as laughter coloured the ambient roar. He glanced for an
instant across what seemed an ocean of anger and rapture. Then, gathering his
gown, he very nearly fled up the walkway. The temple’s massive stonework
encompassed him. Shelter. The doors were ground
shut behind him. His legs folded beneath
him. A moment of hushed bewilderment. The cold floor against his knees. He
placed a trembling hand to his forehead, was surprised by the sweat that ran
between his fingers. Foolishness! What would
Conphas think? Ringing ears. Airy
darkness. Around him, that name shivered up from the stone. Maithanet. A thousand thousand voices—or so it seemed—crying like
a prayer the name that Xerius spat as a curse. Maithanet. Feeling winded, he walked
unsteadily across the antechamber, paused. Few of the great lamp wheels had
been set alight. Pale circles of light were thrown across the vast temple
floor, across the rows of faded prayer tile. Columns as thick as netia pine
soared into gloom. The hymnal galleries above were barely discernible in the
dark. During times of official worship this floor would billow with clouds of
incense, making the temple’s recesses vague and ghostly, smearing the points of
lamplight with haloes so that it seemed to the faithful that they stood at the
very juncture of this world and the Outside. But now the place was cavernous
and bare. Beneath the memory of myrrh, it smelled like a cellar. It was the
juncture of nothing—only a pocket of peace purchased by dead stone. In the distance, Xerius
could see him, kneeling in the centre of the great hemisphere of idols. There you are, he thought, feeling some
solidity return to his hollow limbs. His slippers whispered as he walked across
the floor. Unconsciously, his hands strayed across his vests and gown,
smoothing, straightening. His eyes flitted across the friezes etched into the
columns: kings, emperors, and gods, all rigid with the supernatural dignity of
figures in stone. He lyz.1HE SECOND MARCH came to a stop before the
first tier of stairs. The tallest, centre dome gaped above him. He stared for several
moments at the Shriah’s broad back. Face your Emperor you fanatic ingrate! “I’m pleased you’ve
come,” Maithanet said with his back still turned to him. The voice was rich,
enfolding. There was no deference in the tone. Jnan held Shriah and Emperor
equal. “Why this, Maithanet? Why
here?” The broad back turned.
Maithanet was wearing a plain white frock with sleeves that ended mid-arm. For
an instant he appraised Xerius with glittering eyes, then he raised his head to
the distant sound of the mob, as though it were the sound of rain prayed for
and received. Xerius could see the strong chin beneath the black of his oiled
beard. His face was broad, like that of a yeoman, and surprisingly youthful,
though nothing about the man’s manner spoke of youth. How old are you? “Listen!” Maithanet hissed, raising his hands to the resonant
sound of his name. Maithanet-Maithanet-Maithanet … “I am not a proud man,
Ikurei Xerius, but it moves me to hear them call thus.” Despite the foolish
dramatics, Xerius found himself awed by the man’s presence. The giddiness of
moments before revisited his limbs. “I haven’t the patience,
Maithanet, for games of jnan.” The Shriah paused, then
smiled winningly. He began walking down the steps. “I’ve come because of the
Holy War… I’ve come to look into your eyes.” These words further
disconcerted the Emperor. Xerius had known, before coming here, that the stakes
of this meeting could be high. “Tell me,” Maithanet
said, “have you sealed a pact with the heathen? Have you vowed to betray the
Holy War before it reaches the Sacred Land?” Could he know? “I assure you, Maithanet…
No.” “No?” “I’m injured, Shriah,
that you would—” Maithanet’s laughter was
sudden, loud, reverberant enough to fill even the hollows of great Xothei. tьnnereth Xerius fairly gasped. The
Writ of Psata-Antyu, the code governing Shrial conduct, forbade laughing aloud
as a carnal indulgence. Maithanet, he realized, was giving him a glimpse of his
depths. But for what purpose? All of this—the mobs, the demand to meet here in
Xothei, even the chanting of his name—was a demonstration of some kind,
terrifying in its premeditated lack of subtlety. I’ll crush you, Maithanet was saying. If the Holy War fails, you’ll be destroyed. “Accept my apology,
Emperor,” Maithanet said lightly. “It would seem that even a holy war may be
poisoned by”—a pained smile—“false rumours, hmm?” He tries to cow me… He knows
nothing, so he tries to cow me! Xerius remained silent, wrathful. He’d always
possessed, he thought, a greater facility for hatred than Conphas. His
precocious nephew could be vicious, savage even, but he inevitably slipped back
into that glassy remoteness that so unnerved those in his company. For Xerius,
hatred was something as enduring as it was implacable. Such a strange habit, he
suddenly realized, these momentary inquiries into his nephew’s nature. When had
Conphas become the rule he used to measure the cubits of his own heart? “Come, Ikurei Xerius,”
the Shriah of the Thousand Temples solemnly said, as though the gravity of what
would ensue might forever mark their lives. And for an brief instant, Xerius
grasped the gift of character that had hurtled this man to such heights: the
ability to impart sanctity to the moment, to touch people with awe as though it
were bread drawn from his own basket. “Come… Listen to what I
say to my people.” But over the course of
this brief exchange, the sounds of thousands chanting Maithanet’s name had
transformed, hesitantly at first, but with greater certitude with each passing
moment. Changed. Into screams. Obviously, the nameless
Captain had executed his Emperor’s instructions with blessed alacrity. Xerius
grinned his own winning grin. At last he felt a match for this obscenely
imposing man. “Do you hear, Maithanet?
Now they call out my name.” “Indeed they do,” the Shriah
said darkly. “Indeed they do.” Hmnereth Late Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, Hmnereth, on the coast of Qedea As though crowded by an
antipathy to the sea, the land folded as it approached the broken coasts of
Gedea. Since the coastal plains were narrow or nonexistent, save the alluvial
flatlands surrounding Hinnereth, it seemed the land itself had conspired to
bring the Holy War to the ancient city. As the first cohorts descended the
terraced hills, Hinnereth sprawled before them, huddled against the Meneanor, a
warren of mud and baked’brick structures enclosed by sandstone fortifications.
The mournful wail of horns pierced the salty air, rang from hill to sea, and
pronounced the city’s doom. Column after column wound down from the hills: the
turbulent swordsmen of the Middle-North, the long-skirted knights of Conriya
and High Ainon, the veteran infantrymen of the Nansurium. Hinnereth was an old
prize. Like all lands falling between great, competing civilizations, Gedea had
been a perpetual tributary, little more than an anecdote in the chronicles of
her conquerors. Hinnereth, her only city of note, had seen innumerable foreign
governors: Shigeki, Kyranean, Ceneian, Nansur, and most recently, Kianene. And
now the Men of the Tusk would cut their names onto that list. The Holy War dispersed
into several different camps around the fields and groves outside of
Hinnereth’s walls. After conferring, the Great Names sent an embassy of thanes
and barons to the gates demanding unconditional surrender. When the Fanim of
Ansacer ab Salajka, the Kianene Sapatishah of Gedea, chased them away with
arrows and ballis-tae, thousands were sent into the fields to harvest the wheat
and millet secured the week previous by the advance forces of Earl Athjea’ri,
Palatine Ingiaban, and Earl Werijen Greatheart. Thousands more were sent into
the hills to hew down trees for rams, towers, catapults, and mangonels. The
Siege of Hinnereth had begun. After a week of
preparations, the Men of the Tusk made their first assault. Clouds of arrows
fell among them. Boiling oil poured down upon their mantlets. Men fell
screaming from their ladders, or were cut down on the battlements. Fiery pitch
transformed their siege towers into soaring pyres. They bled and burned beneath
the walls of Hinnereth, and the Fanim mocked them from the heights. In the wake of the
disaster, some Great Names sent a delegation to the Scarlet Spires.
Chepheramunni had already warned Saubon and the others that the Scarlet
Schoolmen, short of Shimeh or a Cishaurim attack, had no intention of assisting
the Men of the Tusk, so the decision was made to limit their demands. They
asked for one breach in the walls, no more. Eleazaras’s refusal was scathing,
as was the condemnation of Proyas and Gotian, who had forsworn the use of
blasphemy unless absolutely necessary. Another round of
preparations followed. Some toiled in the hills, harvesting timber for more
siege engines. Others hunched in the darkness of sappers’ tunnels, dragging
stone and sharp gravel out with blistered hands. Still others raised pyres of
scrub and burned the dead. At night, they drank water carted down from the
hills, ate bread, golden-red clusters of figs, roasted quail and goose—and
cursed Hinnereth. During this time, bands
of Inrithi knights ranged south along the coasts, skirmishing with the remnants
of Skauras’s host, plundering fishing villages, and sacking those walled towns
that failed to immediately throw open their gates. Earl Athjeari struck inland,
scouring the hills in search of battle and plunder. Near a small fortress
called Dayrut, he surprised a detachment of several thousand Kianene and put
them to rout with as many hundred thanes and knights. Returning to the
fortress, he forced the locals to build a small catapult, which he then used to
lob severed Kianene heads into the fortress one at a time. One hundred and
thirty-one heads later, the terrified garrison threw open the gates and
prostrated themselves in the dust. Each of them was asked: “Do you repudiate
Fane and accept Inri Sejenus as the true voice of the manifold God?” Those who
answered no were immediately beheaded. Those who answered yes were bound with
ropes and sent back to Hinnereth, where they were sold to the slavers who
followed the Holy War. Other strongholds
likewise fell, such was the general terror of the iron warriors. The old Nansur
fortresses of Ebara and Kurrut, the half-ruined Ceneian fortress of Gunsae, the
Kianene citadel of Am-Amidai, built when the populace had been still largely
Inrithi—all of them, like so many coins swept into the mailed fist of the Holy
War. Gedea would fall, it seemed, as quickly as the Inrithi could ride. At Hinnereth, meanwhile,
the Great Names had completed their preparations for a second assault, only to
be awakened by shouts of V1AKUH astonishment. Men tumbled
from their tents and pavilions. At first, most pointed to the great flotilla of
war galleys and carracks anchored in the bay, hundreds of them, bearing the
Black Sun pennants of Nansur. But soon, they all stared in disbelief at
Hinnereth. The great forward gates of the city had been thrown open. All along
the curtain walls, tiny figures pulled down the triangular banners of Ansacer,
the infamous Black Gazelle, and raised the Black Sun of the Nansur Empire. Some cheered. Others
howled. Bands of half-naked horsemen could be seen galloping toward the
towering gates, where they were halted by phalanxes of Nansur infantrymen. For
a moment swords flashed in the distance. But it was too late.
Hinnereth had fallen, not to the Holy War, but to Emperor Ikurei Xerius III. At first, Ikurei Conphas
ignored the summons of the Council, and the daunting task of placating Saubon
and Gothyelk fell to General Martemus. With the arrival of the Nansur fleet the
previous night, he brusquely explained, the Gedean Sapatishah had seen the
hopelessness of his position, and so sent Conphas the terms of his surrender.
Martemus even produced a letter, dark with the cursive script of the Kianene,
which he claimed was in Ansacer’s own hand. The Sapatishah, he asserted, was
deeply frightened of the fervour of the Inrithi, and would surrender only to
the Nansur. In matters of mercy, Martemus said, a known enemy was always more
preferable than an unknown. It had been the first instinct of the Exalt-General,
he continued, to summon all the Great Names and present this letter for their
appraisal, but Martemus himself had reminded the Exalt-General that the
proffered capitulation of one’s enemy was always a delicate thing, the result
perhaps of passing apprehension rather than real resolution. Accordingly, the
Exalt-General had decided to be decisive rather than democratic. When the Great Names
demanded to know why, if Conphas had truly acted in the interests of the Holy
War, Hinnereth still remained closed to them, Martemus merely shrugged and
informed them that those were the terms of the Sapatishah’s surrender. Ansacer
was a tender man, he said, and feared for the safety of his people. He had,
moreover, great respect for the discipline of the Nansur. Hinnereth 19/ In the end, only Saubon
refused to accept Martemus’s explanation. Hinnereth was his by right, he
bellowed, just spoils of his victory on the Battleplain. When Conphas finally
arrived the Galeoth Prince had to be physically restrained. Afterward, Gothyelk
and Proyas reminded him that Gedea was an empty and impoverished land. Let the
Emperor gloat over his first, hollow prize, they said. The Holy War would
continue its march south. And ancient Shigek, a land of legendary wealth,
awaited them. “Stay with me, Zin,”
Proyas called out. He’d dismissed the
council only moments earlier. Now standing, he watched his people mill and make
ready to leave. They filled the smoky interior of his pavilion, some pious,
others mercenary, almost all of them proud to a fault. Gaidekki and Ingiaban
continued to argue, as they always did, over things material and immaterial.
Most of the others began filing from the chamber: Ganyatti, Kushigas, Imrothas,
several high-ranking barons, and of course, Kellhus and Cnaьir. With the
exception of the Scylvendi, they bowed one by one before vanishing through the
blue silk curtains. Proyas acknowledged each with a curt nod. Soon Xinemus was left
standing alone. Slaves scurried through the surrounding gloom, gathering plates
and sticky wine bowls, straightening rugs, and repositioning the myriad
cushions. “Something troubles you,
my Prince?” the Marshal asked. “I just have several
questions…” “About?” Proyas hesitated. Why
should a prince shrink from speaking of any man? “About Kellhus,” he said. Xinemus raised his
eyebrows. “He troubles you?” Proyas hooked a hand
behind his neck, grimaced. “In all honesty, Zin, he’s the least troubling man
I’ve ever known.” “And that’s what troubles
you.” Many things troubled him,
not the least of which was the recent disaster at Hinnereth. They’d been
outmanoeuvred by Conphas and the Emperor. Never again. He had no time and little
patience for these… personal matters. “Tell me, what do you
make of him?” “He terrifies me,”
Xinemus said without an instant’s hesitation. Proyas frowned. “How so?” The Marshal’s eyes
unfocused, as though searching for some text written within. “I’ve spilled many
bowls with him,” he said hesitantly. “I’ve broken much bread, and I cannot
count the things he’s shown me. Somehow, some way, his presence makes me… makes
me better.” Proyas looked to the
ground, to the interleaved wings embroidered across the carpet at his feet. “He
has that effect.” He could feel Xinemus
study him in his cursed way: as though he saw past the fraudulent trappings of
manhood to that sunken-chested boy who’d never left the training ground. “He’s only a man, my
Prince. He says so himself… Besides, we’re past—” “How is Achamian?” Proyas
asked abruptly. The stocky Marshal
scowled. He buried two fingers between the plaits of his beard to scratch his
chin. “I thought his name was forbidden.” “I merely ask.” Xinemus nodded warily.
“Well. Very well, in fact. He’s taken a woman, an old love of his from Sumna.” “Yes… Esmenet is it? The
one who was a whore.” “She’s good for him,” Xinemus said
defensively. “I’ve never seen him so content, so happy.” “But you sound worried.” Xinemus narrowed his eyes
an instant, then sighed heavily. “I suppose I do,” he said, looking past
Proyas. “For as long as I’ve known him, he’s been a Mandate Schoolman. But now…
I don’t know.” He glanced up, matched his Prince’s gaze. “He’s almost stopped
speaking of the Consult and his Dreams altogether… You’d approve.” “So he’s in love,” Proyas
said, shaking his head. “Love!” he exclaimed incredulously. “Are you sure?” A
grin overpowered him. Xinemus fairly cackled.
“He’s in love, all right. He’s been stumbling after his pecker for weeks now.” Proyas laughed and looked
to the ground. “So he has one of those, does he?” Akka in love. It seemed both
impossible and strangely inevitable. Men like him need love… Men unlike me. “That he does. She seems
exceedingly fond of it.” Hinnereth Proyas snorted. “He is a sorcerer after all.” Xinemus’s eyes slackened for
an instant. “That he is.” There was a moment of awkward silence. Proyas sighed
heavily. Wi any man other than Xinemus, these questions would’ve come natural
without uncertainty or reservation. How could Xinemus, his beloved Zi be so
mulish about something so obvious to other men? “Does he still teach Kellhus?”
Proyas asked. “Every day.” The Marshal
smiled wanly, as though at his own foolis ness. “That’s what this is about,
isn’t it? You want to believe Kellhus more, but—” “He was right about
Saubon!” Proyas exclaimed. “Even in the detai Zin! The details!” “And yet,” Xinemus continued, frowning at the interruption, “
openly consorts with Achamian. With a sorcerer
…” Xinemus mockingly had
spoken the word as other men spoke it: lik< thing smeared in shit. Proyas turned to the
table, poured himself a bowl of wine. It had tast so sweet of late. “So what do you think?”
he asked. “I think Kellhus simply
sees what I see in Akka, and what you
once’s;… That a man’s soul can be good apart fro—” “The Tusk says,” Proyas
snapped, ‘“Burn them, for they are Unclea Burn them! How much more clarity can
there be? Kellhus consorts w: an abomination. As do you.” The Marshal was shaking
his head. “I can’t believe that.” Proyas fixed him with his
gaze. Why did he feel so cold? “Then you cannot believe
the Tusk.” The Marshal blanched, and
for the first time the Conriyan Prince’s fear on his old sword-trainer’s
face—fear! He wanted to apologize, unsay what he’d said, but the cold was so
unyielding… So true. I simply go by the Word! If one couldn’t trust the
God’s own voice, if one refused to lister even for sentiment’s sake!—then
everything became scepticism 3 scholarly disputation. Xinemus listened to his
heart, and this was at 01 his strength and his weakness. The heart recited no
scripture. MARCH “Well then,” the Marshal
said thinly. “You needn’t worry about Kellhus any more than you worry about
me…” Proyas narrowed his eyes and nodded. There was constraint,
there was direction, there was, most illuminating of all, a summoning together. Night had fallen, and
Kellhus sat alone upon a promontory, leaning against a solitary cedar. Drawn
eastward by years of wind, the cedar’s limbs swept across the starry heavens
and forked downward. They seemed moored as though by strings to the panorama
below: the encamped Holy War, Hinnereth behind her great belts of stone, and
the Meneanor, her distant rollers silvered by moonlight. But he saw none of this,
not with his eyes… The promises and threats
of what was came murmuring, and futures were discussed. There was a world, Earwa,
enslaved by history, custom, and animal hunger, a world driven by the hammers
of what came before. There was Achamian and
all he had uttered. The Apocalypse, the lineages of Emperors and Kings, the
Houses and Schools of the Great Factions, the panoply of warring nations. And
there was sorcery, the Gnosis, and the prospect of near limitless power. There was Esmenet and
slender thighs and piercing intellect. There was Sarcellus and
the Consult and a wary truce born of enigma and hesitation. There was Saubon and
torment pitched against lust for power. There was Cnaьir and
madness and martial genius and the growing threat of what he knew. There was the Holy War
and faith and hunger. And there was Father. What would you have me do? Possible worlds blew
through him, fanning and branching into a canopy of glimpses… Nameless Schoolmen
climbing a steep, gravelly beach. A nipple pinched between fingers. A gasping
climax. A severed head thrust against the burning sun. Apparitions marching out
of morning mist. Hinnereth A dead wife. Kellhus exhaled, then breathed
deep the bittersweet pinch of cedar, earth, and war. There was revelation. Ten Atsushan Highlands Love is lust made meaningful. Hope is
hunger made human. —AJENCIS, THE THIRD
ANALYTIC OF MEN How does one learn innocence? How does one
teach ignorance? For to be them is to know
them not. And
yet they are the immovable
point from which the compass of life swings, the measure of all crime and
compassion, the rule of all wisdom and folly. They are the Absolute. —ANONYMOUS, THE 1UPROMPTA Late Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk,
Qedean interior Peace had come. Achamian had dreamed of
war, more war than anyone save a Mandate Schoolman could dream. He’d even
witnessed war between nations—the Three Seas bred quarrels as readily as did
liquor. But he’d never belonged to one. He had never marched as he marched now,
sweating beneath the Gedean sun, surrounded by thousands of iron-armoured Men,
by the lowing of oxen and the tramping of countless sandalled feet. War, in the
smoke darkening the horizon, in the braying of horns, in the great carnival of
encampment after encampment, in the blackened stone and whitened dead. War, in
past nightmares and future apprehensions. Everywhere, war. Atsushan Highlands And somehow, peace had
come. There was Kellhus, of
course. Since resolving not to
inform the Mandate of his presence, Achamian’s anguish had receded, then fallen
away altogether. How this could be mystified him for the most part. The threat
remained. Kellhus was, Achamian would remind himself from time to time, the
Harbinger. Soon the sun would rise behind the No-God and cast his dread shadow
across the Three Seas. Soon the Second Apocalypse would wrack the world. But
when he thought of these things a queer elation warmed his horror, a drunken
exhilaration. Achamian had always been incredulous of stories of men breaking
ranks in battle to charge their foe. But now he thought he understood the
impulse behind that heedless rush. Consequences lost all purchase when they
became mad. And desperation, when pressed beyond anguish, became narcotic. He was the fool who
dashed alone into the spears of thousands. For Kellhus. Achamian still taught him
during the daylong march, though now both Esmenet and Serwe accompanied them,
sometimes chatting to each other, but mostly just listening. Surrounding them,
Men of the Tusk marched in their thousands, bent beneath their packs, sweating
in the bright Gedean sun. Somehow, impossibly, Kellhus had exhausted everything
Achamian knew of the Three Seas, so they talked of the Ancient North, of
Seswatha and his world of bronze, Sranc, and Nonmen. Soon, Achamian realized
from time to time, he would have nothing left to give Kellhus—save the Gnosis. Which he could not give,
of course. But he found it hard to resist wondering what Kellhus with his
godlike intellect would make of it. Thankfully, the Gnosis was a language for
which the Prince possessed no tongue. The marches tumbled to a
halt sometime between mid-afternoon and dusk, depending on the terrain and,
most important, the availability of water. Gedea was a dry land, the Atsushan
Highlands especially so. After the brisk routine of pitching camp, they
gathered about Xinemus’s fire, though Achamian often found himself eating alone
with Esmenet, Serwe, and Xinemus’s slaves. More and more, Xinemus, Cnaьir, and
Kellhus supped with Proyas, who, under the Scylvendi’s coarse tutelage, had become a man obsessed
with strategy and planning. But usually they all found themselves about the
fire for an hour or two before retiring to their pallets or mats. And here, as everywhere
else, Kellhus shone. One night, shortly after
the Holy War had left Hinnereth, they found themselves eating a contemplative
meal of rice and lamb, which Cnaьir had secured for them the previous day.
Commenting on the luxury of eating steaming meat, Esmenet asked the whereabouts
of their provider. “With Proyas,” Xinemus
said, “discussing war.” “What could they possibly
talk about all the time?” Caught mid-swallow,
Kellhus held out a hand. “I’ve heard them,” he said, his eyes wry and
bright. “Their conversations sound something like this…“ Esmenet was laughing
already. Everyone else leaned forward eagerly. In addition to mischievous wit,
Kellhus had an uncanny gift for voices. Serwe fairly chortled with excitement. Kellhus assumed an
imperious and warlike face. He spat between his feet, then in a voice that
raised goose pimples, so near was it to Cnaьir’s own, he said: “The People do
not ride like sissies. They place one testicle to the left of the saddle, one
testicle to the right, and they do not bounce, they are so heavy.” “I would,”
Kellhus-as-Proyas replied, “be spared your impudence, Scylvendi.” Xinemus coughed a
mouthful of wine. “That is because you do
not understand the ways of war,” Kellhus-as-Cnaьir continued. “They are hairy,
and they are dark, like the cracks of unwashed wrestlers. War is where the
sandal of the world meets the scrotum of men.” “I would be spared your
blasphemy, Scylvendi.” Kellhus spat into the
fire. “You think your ways are the ways of the People, but you are wrong. You
are silly girls to us, and we would make love to your asses were they as
muscular as those of our horses.” “I would be spared your affections, Scylvendi!” “But you would live on,”
Esmenet cried out, “in the scars I cut into my arm!” Atsushan Highlands The camp fairly shrieked
with laughter. Xinemus hung his head between his knees, shuddering and
snorting. Esmenet rolled backward on her mat, screaming in her enticing and
adorable way. Zenkappa and Dinchases leaned against each other, their shoulders
jerking. Serwe had curled into a ball, and seemed to weep with joy as much as
laugh. Kellhus merely smiled, looked about as though mystified by their
hysterics. When Cnaьir arrived later
that night everyone fell silent, at once abashed and conspiratorial. Scowling,
the Scylvendi paused before the fire, looked from face to grinning face.
Achamian glanced at Serwe, was shocked by the malice in her smile. Suddenly Esmenet burst
out laughing. “You should have heard Kellhus,” she cried. “You sounded
hilarious!” The Scylvendi’s weathered
face went blank. His murderous eyes became dull with… Could it be? Then
contempt regained the heights of his expression. He spat into the fire and
strode off. His spittle hissed. Kellhus stood, apparently
stricken with remorse. “The man’s a thin-skinned
lout,” Achamian said crossly. “Mockery is a gift between friends. A gift.” The Prince whirled. “Is
it?” he cried. “Or is it an excuse?” Achamian could only
stare, dumbstruck. Kellhus had rebuked him. Kellhus. Achamian looked to the others, saw his shock
mirrored in their faces, though not his dismay. “Is it?” Kellhus
demanded. Achamian felt his face
flush, his lips tremble. There was something about Kellhus’s voice. So like
Achamian’s father’s… Who’s he to- “Forgive me, Akka,” the
Prince said, lowering his head as though stunned by his own outburst. “I punish
you for my own folly… I act twice the fool.” Achamian swallowed. Shook
his head. Forced a smile. “No… No, I apologize…”
His voice quavered. “I was too harsh.” Kellhus smiled, leaned to
place a hand on his shoulder. At his touch, Achamian’s entire side went numb.
For some reason the Prince’s smell, leather with a hint of rosewater, always
flustered him. ~.-.^inn JCUUNU 1V1ARCH “Then we’re fools
together,” Kellhus said. There was delight, and the brief, uncanny sense that
Kellhus was expecting something… “I’ve been saying that
all along,” Xinemus growled from the far side of the fire. The Marshal’s timing was
impeccable—as usual. Esmenet led the charge of nervous laughter, and they
recaptured something of their earlier cheer. Achamian found himself laughing as
well. All of them, at some
point or another, inevitably ran afoul of one another’s humour. Xinemus would
complain of Iryssas, who would harp about Esmenet, who would gripe about Serwe,
who would carp about Achamian, who would gripe about Xinemus. Too dense, too
forward, too vain, too crude, and so on. All men were caste-merchants in some
respect, haggling and trading, but without scales or touchstones to confirm the
weight or purity of their coinage. They had only guesswork. Backbiting, petty
jealousies, resentments, arguments, and third-party arbitrations simply
belonged to the market of men. But with Kellhus, it was
different. Somehow he managed to browse the market without opening his purse.
Almost from the beginning they’d recognized him as the Judge—including Xinemus,
who was the titular head of their fire. No doubt there was an uncertainty about
him, a capriciousness appropriate to his brilliance, but these were simply
departures from a profound and immovable centre. Intelligence, as penetrating
as any in near or far antiquity. Compassion, as broad as Inrau’s and yet
somehow far deeper—a benevolence born of understand‘ ing rather than forgiveness, as though he could see
through the delinquent rush of thought and passion to the still point of
innocence within each soul. And words! Analogies that seized reality and burned
it from the inside out… He possessed, Achamian
sometimes thought, what the poet Protathis claimed all men should strive for:
the hand of Triamis, the intellect of Ajencis, and the heart of Sejenus. And others thought this
as well. Every evening, after the
dinner fires burned low, men and women from every nation, it seemed, began
gathering round the perimeter of Xinemus’s camp, sometimes calling out to
Kellhus, but mostly keeping to themselves. A few in the beginning, then more
and more, until they comprised a Atsushan Highlands congregation of three
dozen or so souls. Soon Xinemus’s Attrempans were leaving large swaths of empty
pasture between their round tents and their Marshal’s pavilion. They would be
supping with strangers otherwise. For the first week or so
everyone, including Kellhus, did their best to ignore them, thinking this would
shortly drive them away. Who, they wondered, would sit unacknowledged night
after night watching others— watching strangers—take their repose? But like
little brothers with no resources of their own, they persisted. Their numbers
even multiplied. On a whim, Achamian took
a seat among them one night, and watched as they watched, hoping to understand
what it was that drew them to so demean themselves. At first, he merely saw
familiar figures illumined by firelight against a greater dark. Cnaьir sitting
cross-legged, his back as broad as an Ainoni fan and strapped with scarred
muscle. Beyond him, on the far side of the fire, Xinemus upon his campstool,
hands on his knees, his square-cut beard brushing his chest as he laughed in
response to Esmenet, who knelt beside him, muttering something wicked about
somebody, no doubt. Dinchases. Zenkappa. Iryssas. Serwe leaning back on her
mat, bouncing her knees together, innocently exposing warm and promising
shadows. And next to her, Kellhus, sitting serene and golden. Achamian glanced at those
seated throughout the surrounding darkness. He saw Men of the Tusk from every
nation and caste. Some leaned together, talking amongst themselves. But most
sat as he did, apart from their fellows, eyes sorting through the bright
figures before them as though struggling to read by fading candlelight. They
seemed… ensor-celled, like fish drawn to a flashing lure. Compelled, not so
much by the light as by the surrounding dark. “Why do you do this?” he
asked the man sitting nearest to him, a blond Tydonni with a soldier’s forearms
and a caste-noble’s clear eyes. “Can’t you see?” the man
replied, without so much as glancing in his direction. “See what?” “See him.” “You mean Prince
Kellhus?” The man turned to him,
his smile at once beatific and filled with pity. “You’re too close,” he
said. “That’s why you can’t see.” “See what?” Achamian
asked. His breath felt pinched. HK SECOND MARCH “He touched me once,” the
man inexplicably replied. “Before Asgilioch. I stumbled while marching and he
caught me by the arm. He said, ‘Doff your sandals and shod the earth.’” Achamian chortled. “An
old joke,” he explained. “You must have cursed the ground when you stumbled.” “So?” the man replied. He
was fairly trembling, Achamian realized, with indignant fury. Achamian frowned, tried
to smile, to reassure. “Well, it’s an old saying—ancient, in fact—meant to
remind people not to foist their failings on others.” “No,” the man grated,
“it’s not.” Achamian paused. “Then what does it mean?” Rather than answer, the
man had turned away, as though wilfully consigning Achamian and his question to
the oblivion of what he couldn’t see. Achamian stared at him for a thick
moment, bewildered and curiously dismayed. How could fury secure the truth? He
stood, slapped dust from his knees. “It means,” the man said
from behind him, “that we must uproot the world. That we must destroy all that
offends.” Achamian started, such
was the hatred in the man’s voice. He turned— to sneer or to scold, he wasn’t
sure which. Instead he simply stared, dumbfounded. For whatever reason, the man
couldn’t match his gaze; he scowled at the firelight instead. Achamian glanced
from him to the other faces in the darkness. Most had turned to the sound of
angry voices, but even as he watched they drifted back to Kellhus in the light.
And somehow, the Schoolman simply knew these people wouldn’t go away. I’m no different, he thought, feeling the
perplexing twinge of insights into things already known. 1 simply sit closer to the fire… Their reasons were his reasons. He knew this. Their grounds were
inchoate and innumerable: grief, temptation, remorse, confusion. They watched
out of weariness, out of clandestine hope and fear, out of fascination and
delight. But more than anything, they watched out of necessity. They watched because they
knew something was about to happen. Without warning, the fire popped, belching
a geyser of sparks, one of which floated toward Kellhus. Smiling, he glanced at
Serwe, then Atsushan Highlands reached out and pinched
the point of orange light between thumb and forefinger. Extinguished it. Several gasped in the
darkness. As the days passed, more
and more watchers gathered. The situation became doubly uncomfortable, both
because their camp had become a peculiar stage, an enclosure of light surrounded
by shadowy watchers, and because of Kellhus’s seething humour. The Prince of
Atrithau had affected everyone who frequented Xinemus’s fire, each according to
their hopes and hurts, and to see the man who’d rewritten the ground of their
understanding angry was troubling in the way of loved
ones suddenly acting contrary to all expectations. One night, for reasons
peculiar to his own brooding humour, Xinemus finally blurted: “Dammit, Kellhus!
Why don’t you just talk to them?” Stunned silence. Esmenet
reached out, clutched Achamian’s hand in the shadows between them. Only the
Scylvendi continued eating, fingering gruel into his mouth. Achamian found
himself repulsed, as though he witnessed something lewd and animal. A man too
bent to the arch of his lust. “Because,” Kellhus said
tightly, his eyes riveted upon the fire, “they make more of me than I am.” Do they? Achamian thought. He knew the others asked
themselves the same question, even though they rarely spoke of Kellhus to one
another. For some reason, a peculiar shyness afflicted them whenever the
subject of Kellhus arose, as though they harboured suspicions too foolish or
too hurtful to reveal. Achamian could only really speak of him to Esmenet, and
even then… “So,” Xinemus snapped.
More than anyone, he seemed able to pretend that Kellhus was simply another
face about their fire. “Go tell them.” Kellhus stared at the
Marshal for several unblinking moments, then nodded. Without a word, he stood
and strode off into the darkness. And so began what Achamian
came to call “The Imprompta,” the nightly talks—almost sermons—Kellhus started
giving to the Men of the Tusk. Not always, but often, he and Esmenet would join
him, watch from nearby as he answered questions, discussed innumerable things.
He told the two of them that their presence gave him heart, that they reminded
him he was no more than those to whom he spoke. He confessed a growing conceit, a
thought that terrified because he found it easier and easier to bear. “So often when I speak,”
he said, “I don’t recognize my voice.” Achamian couldn’t remember ever
clutching Esmenet’s hand so fiercely. The numbers attending
began to swell, not so fast that Achamian could notice a difference between
consecutive nights, but fast enough that several dozen had become hundreds by
the time the Holy War neared Shigek. A handful of more devoted listeners would
assemble a small wooden platform, upon which they would lay a mat between two
iron braziers. Kellhus would sit cross-legged, poised and immobile between the
shining flames. Usually he would wear a plain yellow cassock—looted, Serwe had
told Achamian, from the Sapatishah’s camp on the Plains of Mengedda. And
somehow, whether by posture, bearing, or some trick of the light, he would look
unearthly. Even glorious. One evening, for reasons
he couldn’t fully articulate, Achamian followed Kellhus and Esmenet with a
candle, his writing accoutrements, and a sheaf of parchment. The previous night
Kellhus had spoken of trust and betrayal, telling the story of a fur trapper he’d
known in the wastes north of Atrithau, a man who’d remained faithful to his
dead wife by fostering a heartbreaking devotion to his dogs. “When one love
dies,” he’d said, “one must love another.” Esmenet had openly wept. It just
seemed that such words had to be written. With Esmenet,
Achamian unrolled their mat to the left of Kellhus’s platform. Torches had been
staked across the small field. The atmosphere was sociable, though hushed by
something more than respect and not quite reverence. Achamian glimpsed more
than a few familiar faces in the crowd. Several high-ranking caste-nobles were
present, including a square-jawed man wearing a Nansur general’s blue
cloak—General Sompas or Martemus, Achamian believed. Even Proyas sat in the
dust with the others, though he seemed troubled. He looked away instead of
acknowledging Achamian’s gaze. Kellhus took his place
between the potted fires. The resulting silence seemed to hiss. For several
moments he seemed unbearably real, like the sole living man,
something raw and tumid in a world of smoky apparitions. Atsushan Highlands He smiled, and Achamian’s
chest, which had tightened like parched leather, relaxed to the point of
feeling sodden. An unaccountable relief washed through him. Breathing deeply,
he readied his quill, cursed as the first errant droplet of ink tapped onto the
page. “Akka,” Esmenet chided. As always, Kellhus
searched the faces of those before him, his eyes glinting with compassion.
After a few heartbeats his gaze settled upon one man—a Conriyan knight by the
look of his tunic and the heft of his gold rings. Otherwise he looked haggard,
as though he still slept upon the Battleplain. His beard was knotted with
forgotten plaits. “What happened?” Kellhus
asked. The nameless knight
smiled, but there was a strange and subtle incon-gruence in his expression,
something like glimpsing the difference between white eyes and yellow teeth. “Three days ago,” the man
said, “our lord heard rumour of a village some miles to the west, so we rode
out, hoping for plunder…” Kellhus nodded. “And what
did you find?” “Nothing… I mean, no
village. Our lord was wroth. He claims the others—” “What did you find?” The man blinked. Panic
flashed from the stoic weariness of his expression. “A child,” he said
hoarsely. “A dead child… We were following this trail, something worn by
goatherds, I think, cutting across this hillside, and there was just this dead
child, a girl, no more than five or six, lying in our path. Her throat had been
cut…” “What happened next?” “Nothing… I mean, we
simply ignored her, continued riding as though she were nothing more than
discarded cloth… a-a scrap of leather in the dust,” he added, his voice
breaking. He looked down to his callused palms. “Guilt and shame wrack
you by day,” Kellhus said, “the feeling that you’ve committed some mortal
crime. Nightmares wrack you by night… She speaks to you.” The man’s nod was almost
comical in its desperation. He hadn’t, Achamian realized, the nerve for war. “But why?” he cried. “I
mean, how many dead have we seen?” The Second March “But not all seeing,”
Kellhus replied, “is witness.” “I don’t understand…” “Witness is the seeing
that testifies, that judges so that it may be
judged. You saw, and you judged. A trespass had been committed, an innocent had
been murdered. You saw this.” “Yes!” the man hissed. “A little girl. A little girl!” “And now you suffer.” “But why?” he cried. “Why
should I suffer? She’s not mine. She was heathen!” “Everywhere… Everywhere
we’re surrounded by the blessed and the cursed, the sacred and the profane. But
our hearts are like hands, they grow callous to the world. And yet, like our
hands even the most callous heart will blister if overworked or chafed by
something new. For some time we may feel the pinch, but we ignore it because we
have so much work to do.” Kellhus had looked down into his right hand. Suddenly
he balled it into a fist, raised it high. “And then one strike, with a hammer or a sword, and the blister breaks, our heart is torn. And then we suffer, for we feel the ache for the blessed,
the sting of the cursed. We no longer see, we witness …” His luminous eyes settled
upon the nameless knight. Blue and wise. “This is what has
happened to you.” “Yes… Yes! B-but what
should I do?” “Rejoice.” “Rejoice? But I suffer!” “Yes, rejoice! The callused hand cannot feel the lover’s cheek.
When we witness, we testify, and when we testify we make ourselves responsible for what we see. And that—that—is what it means to belong.” Kellhus suddenly stood,
leapt from the low platform, took two breathtaking steps into their midst.
“Make no mistake,” he continued, and the air thrummed with the resonance of his
voice. “This world owns you. You belong, whether you want to or not. Why do we suffer? Why do
the wretched take their own lives? Because the world, no matter how cursed, owns us. Because we belong. “Should we celebrate
suffering?” a challenging voice called. From somewhere… Prince Kellhus smiled,
glancing into the darkness. “Then it’s no longer suffering, is it?” Atsushan Highlands The small congregation
laughed. “No,” Kellhus continued,
“that’s not what I mean. Celebrate’t meaning of suffering. Rejoice that you belong, not that you sufi Remember what the Latter Prophet
teaches us: glory comes in joy a sorrow. Joy and sorrow…” “I’s-see see the wisdom of
you-your words, Prince,” the namel knight stammered. “I truly see! But…” And somehow, Achamian
could feel his question… What is there to gain? “I’m not asking you to
see,” Kellhus said. “I’m asking you to witnes Blank face. Desolate
eyes. The nameless knight blinked, and two te silvered his cheek. Then he
smiled, and nothing, it seemed, could be glorious. “To make myself…” His
voice quavered, broke. “To m-make…” “To be one with the world
in which you dwell,” Kellhus said. “To in a covenant of your life.” The world … You
will gain the world. Achamian looked down to
his parchment, realized he’d stop writing. He turned, looked helplessly at
Esmenet. “Don’t worry,” she said.
“I remember.” Of course she did. Esmenet. The second
pillar of his peace, and by far the mightie the two. It seemed at once strange
and fitting to find something almost coi gal in the midst of the Holy War. Each
evening they would v exhausted from Kellhus’s talks or from Xinemus’s fire,
holding hands young lovers, ruminating or bickering or laughing about the eveni
events. They would pick their way through the guy ropes, and Achan would pull
the canvas aside with mock gallantry. They would touch brush as they disrobed,
then hold each other in the dark—as the together they could be more than what
they were. A whore of word and a
whore of body. The greater world had
receded into shadow. He thought of Inrau and less over the days, and pondered
the concerns of his life i Esmenet—and Kellhus—more and more. Even the threat
of the Cor and the Second Apocalypse had become something banal and rerr IME OECOND MARCH like rumours of war among
pale-skinned peoples. Seswatha’s Dreams still came as fierce as ever, but they
dissolved in the softness of her touch, in the consolation of her voice. “Hush,
Akka,” she would say, “it’s only a dream,” and like smoke, the
images—straining, groaning, spitting, and shrieking—would twist into
nothingness. For once in his life, Achamian was seized by the moment, by now… By the small hurt in her eyes when he said something
careless. By the way her hand drifted to his knee of its own accord whenever
they sat together. By the nights they lay naked in the tent, her head upon his
chest and her dark hair fanned across his shoulder and neck, speaking of those
things only they knew. “Everyone knows,” she
said one night after making love. They’d retired early, and
they could hear the others: first mock protests and uproarious laughter, then
utter quiet bound by the magic of Kellhus’s voice. The fire still burned, and
they could see it, muted and blurred across the dark canvas. “He’s a prophet,” she
said. Achamian felt something
resembling panic. “What are you saying?” She turned to study him.
Her eyes seemed to glitter with their own light. “Only what you need to hear.” “And why would I need to
hear that?” What had she said? “Because you think it.
Because you fear it… But most of all, because you need it.” We are damned, her eyes said. “I’m not amused, Esmi.” She frowned, but as
though she’d noticed nothing more than a tear in one of her new Kianene silks.
“How long has it been since you’ve contacted Atyersus? Weeks? Months?” “What is it with—” “You’re waiting, Akka.
You’re waiting to see what he becomes.” “Kellhus?” She turned her face away,
lowered her ear to his heart. “He’s a prophet.” She knew him. When
Achamian thought back, it seemed that she’d always known him. He’d even thought
her a witch when they met for the first time, not only because of the
ever-so-faint Mark of the charmed whore’s shell that she used as a
contraceptive, but because Atsushan Highlands 21i> she guessed he was a
sorcerer before he uttered scarcely five words. From the very beginning, she
seemed to have a talent for him. For Drusas Achamian. It was strange, to be
known—truly known. To be awaited rather than anticipated. To be accepted
instead of believed. To be half another’s elaborate habits. To see oneself
continually foreshadowed in another’s eyes. And it was strange to
know. Sometimes she laughed so hard she belched. And when disappointed, her
eyes dimmed like candles starved of air. She liked the feel of knives between
her toes. She loved to hold her hand slack and motionless while his cock
hardened beneath. “I do nothing,” she would whisper, “and yet you rise to me.”
She was frightened of horses. She fondled her left armpit when deep in thought.
She did not hide her face when she cried. And she could say things of such
beauty that sometimes Achamian thought his heart might stop for having listened. Details. Simple enough in
isolation, but terrifying and mysterious in their sum. A mystery that he knew… Was that not love? To
know, to trust a mystery… Once, on the night of
Ishoiya, which Conriyans celebrated with copious amounts of that foul and
flammable liquor, perrapta, Achamian asked Kellhus to describe the way he loved
Serwe. Only he, Xinemus, and Kellhus remained awake. They were all drunk. “Not the way you love
Esmenet,” the Prince replied. “And how is that? How do
I love her?” He staggered to his feet, his arms askew. He swayed before the
smoke and fire. “Like a fish loves the ocean? Like, like…” “Like a drunk loves his
cask,” Xinemus chortled. “Like my dog loves your leg!“ Achamian granted him
that, but it was Kellhus’s answer he most wanted to hear. It was always
Kellhus’s answer. “So, my Prince? How do I love Esmenet?” Somehow a note of anger
had crept into his tone. Kellhus smiled, raised
his downcast eyes. Tears scored his cheek. “Like a child,” he said. The words knocked
Achamian from his feet. He crashed to his buttocks with a grunt. The Second March “Yes,” Xinemus agreed. He
looked forward into the night, smiling… Smiling for his friend, Achamian
realized. “Like a child?” Achamian
asked, feeling curiously childlike. “Yes,” Kellhus replied.
“You ask no questions, Akka. It simply is … Without reserve.” He turned to him with the look
Achamian knew so well, the look he so often yearned for when others occupied
Kellhus’s attention. The look of friend, father, student, and teacher. The look
his heart could see. “She’s become your
ground,” Kellhus said. “Yes…” Achamian replied. She’s become my wife. Such a thought! He beamed
with a childish glee. He felt wonderfully drunk. M;y wife! But later that same
night, he somehow found himself making love to Serwe. Afterward he would
scarcely remember, but he’d awakened on a reed mat by the remains of the fire.
He’d been dreaming of the white turrets of Myclai and rumours of Mog-Pharau.
Xinemus and Kellhus were gone, and the night sky seemed impossibly deep, the
way it had looked that night he and Esmenet had slept out of doors at the
ruined shrine. Like an endless pit. Serwe knelt above him, as flawless as ivory
in the firelight, at once smiling and crying. “What’s wrong?” he
gasped. But then he realized she’d hiked his robe to his waist, and was rolling
his cock against his belly. He was already hard—insanely so, it seemed. “Serwe …” he managed to protest, but with each roll of her
palm, bolts of rapture shuddered through him. He arched against the ground,
straining to press himself into her hand. For some reason, it seemed that all
he needed, all he’d ever needed, was to feel her fingers close about the head
of his member. “No,” he moaned, digging his heels into the turf, clawing
at the grass. What was happening? She released him, and he
gasped at the kiss of cool air. He could feel his own fiery pulse… Something. He needed to
say something! This couldn’t be happening! Atsusnan rngmanus ^n But she’d slipped free
her hasas, and he trembled at the sight of her. So lithe. So smooth. White in
shadow, burnished gold in firelight. Her peach hazed with tender blond. She no
longer touched him, yet her beauty flailed at him, wrenched at his groin. He
swallowed, struggled to breathe. Then she straddled him. He glimpsed the
porcelain sway of her breasts, the hairless curve of her belly. Is she with— She encompassed him. He
cried out, cursed. “It is you!” she hissed,
sobbing, staring desperately into his eyes. “I can see you. I can see!“ He turned his head aside
in delirium, afraid he would climax too soon. This was Serwe… Sweet Sejenus,
this was Seru>e! Then he saw Esmenet,
standing desolate in the dark. Watching… He closed his eyes, grimaced, and
climaxed. “Guh… g-guh…” “I can feel you!” Serwe cried. When he opened his eyes
Esmenet was gone—if she had ever been. Serwe continued to grind against him.
The whole world had become a slurry of heat and wetness and thundering aching
thrusting beauty. He surrendered to her abandon. Somehow he awoke before
the horns and sat for a time at the entrance to his tent, watching Esmenet
sleep, feeling the pinch of dried seed on his thighs. When she awoke, he
searched her eyes, but saw nothing. Through the hard, long march of the
following day, she chastised him for drinking and nothing more. Serwe didn’t so
much as look at him. By the following evening he’d convinced himself it had
been a dream. A delicious dream. The perrapta. There could be no other
explanation. Fucking fish
liquor, he
thought, and tried to feel ruefully amused. When he told Esmenet, she laughed
and threatened to tell Kellhus. Afterward, alone, he actually wept in relief.
Never, he realized, not even the night following the madness with the Emperor
beneath the Andiamine Heights, had he felt a greater sense of doom. And he knew
he belonged to Esmi—not the world. She was his covenant.
Esmenet was his wife. The Holy War crept ever
closer to Shigek, and still he ignored the Mandate. There were excuses he could
assemble. He could ponder the Z18 Ihe Second March impossibility of making
discreet inquiries, bribes, or dissembling suggestions in an encampment of
armed fanatics. He could remind himself of what his School had done to Inrau.
But ultimately they meant nothing. He would rush the enemy
ranks. He would see his heresy through. To the end, no matter what horrors it
might hold. For the first time in a long and wandering life, Drusas Achamian
had found happiness. And peace had come. The day’s march had been
particularly trying, and Serwe sat by the fire, rubbing her toes while staring
across the flames at her love, Kellhus. If only it could always be like this… Four days previous Proyas
had sent the Scylvendi south with several hundred knights—to learn the ways
into Shigek, Kellhus had said. Four days without chancing upon his famished
glare. Four days without cringing in his iron shadow as he escorted her to
their pavilion. Four days without his dread savagery. And each of them spent
praying and praying, Let him
be killed! But this was the one
prayer Kellhus wouldn’t answer. She stared and wondered
and loved. His long blond hair flashed golden in the firelight; his bearded
features radiated good humour and understanding. He nodded as Achamian spoke to
him about something— sorcery perhaps. She paid scant attention to the
Schoolman’s words. She was too busy listening to Kellhus’s face. Never had she seen such
beauty. There was something inexplicable, something godlike and surreal, about
his appearance, as though a breathtaking elegance, an impossible grace, laid
hidden within his expressions, something that might flare at any moment and
blind her with revelation. A face that made each moment, each heartbeat… A gift. She placed a hand on the
gentle swell of her belly, and for an instant, she thought she could feel the
second heart within her—no larger than a sparrow’s—drumming through moment after
thickening moment. His child… His. So much had changed! She
was wise, far more so, she knew, than a girl of twenty summers should be. The
world had chastened her, had shown Atsushan Highlands her the impotence of
outrage. First the Gaunum sons and their cruel lusts. Then Panteruth and his
unspeakable brutalities. Then Cnaiur and his iron-willed madness. What could
the outrage of a soft-skinned concubine mean to a man such as him? Just one
more thing to be broken. She knew the futility, that the animal within would
grovel, shriek, would place soothing lips around any man’s cock for a moment of
mercy—that it would do anything, sate any hunger, to survive. She’d been
enlightened. Submission. Truth lay in submission. “You’ve surrendered,
Serwe,” Kellhus had told her. “And by surrendering, you have conquered me!” The days of nothing had
passed. The world, Kellhus said, had prepared her for him. She, Serwe hil Keyalti, was to be his sacred
consort. She would bear the sons of the Warrior-Prophet. What indignity, what
suffering, could compare with this? Certainly, she wept when the Scylvendi
struck her, clenched her teeth in fury and gagging shame when he used her. But
afterward she knew, and Kellhus had taught her that
knowing was exalted above all
other things. Cnaiur
was a totem of the old dark world, the ancient outrage made flesh. For every
god, Kellhus had told her, there was a demon. For every God… The priests, both those
of her father and those of the Gaunum, had claimed the Gods moved the souls of
men. But Serwe knew the Gods also moved as men. So often, watching Esmenet, Achamian, Xinemus,
and the others about the fire, she would be amazed that they couldn’t see,
though sometimes she suspected that, in their heart of hearts, they knew and
yet were stubborn. But then, unlike her,
they didn’t couple with a god—and his guises. They hadn’t been taught how to
forgive, how to submit, as she’d been taught, though they learned slowly. She
often glimpsed the small, sometimes lonely ways in which he instructed them. And
it was a wondrous thing, to watch a god instruct others. Even now, he
instructed them. “No,” Achamian was
asserting. “We sorcerers are distinguished by our ability, you caste-nobles by
your blood. What does it matter whether other men recognize us as such? We are
what we are.” With smiling eyes, Kellhus said, “Are you sure?” The Second March Serwe had seen this many
times. The words would be simple, but the way would wrench at their hearts. “What do you mean,”
Achamian said blankly. Kellhus shrugged. “What
if I were to tell you that I’m like you.” Xinemus’s eyes flashed to
Achamian, who laughed nervously. “Like me?” the Schoolman
asked. He licked his lips. “How so?” “I can see the Mark,
Akka… I can see the bruise of your damnation.” “You jest,” Achamian snapped,
but his voice was strange… Kellhus had turned to
Xinemus. “Do you see? A moment ago, I was no different from you. The
distinction between us didn’t exist until just—” “It still doesn’t exist,”
Achamian blurted, his voice rising. “I would have you prove this!” Kellhus studied the man,
his look careful and troubled. “How does one prove what one sees?” Xinemus, who seemed
unperturbed, chuckled. “What is it, Akka? There’s many who see your blasphemy,
but choose not to speak it. Think of the College of Luthymae…” But Achamian had jumped
to his feet, his expression bewildered, even panicked. “It’s just that… that…” Serwe’s thoughts leapt.
He knows, my love! Achamian
knows what you are! She flushed at the memory
of the sorcerer between her legs, but then reminded herself that it wasn’t Achamian whom she remembered, it was Kellhus… “You must know me Serwe,
in all nry guises.” “There is a way to prove this!” the Schoolman exclaimed. He
fixed them with a ludicrous stare, then without warning hurried off into the
darkness. Xinemus had begun
muttering some joke, but just then Esmenet sat next to Serwe, smiling and
frowning. “Has Kellhus worked him
into a frenzy again?” she asked, handing Serwe a steaming bowl of spiced tea. “Again,” Serwe said, and
grasped the proffered bowl. She tipped a glittering drop to the earth before
drinking. It tasted warm, coiled in her stomach like sun-hot silk. “Mmmm… Thank
you, Esmi.” Atsushan Highlands Esmenet nodded, turned to
Kellhus and Xinemus. The previous night, Serwe had cut Esmenet’s black hair
short—man short—so that now she resembled a beautiful boy. Almost as beautiful as me, Serwe thought. She’d never known a woman
like Esmenet before: bold, with a tongue as wicked as any man’s. She frightened
Serwe sometimes, with her ability to match the men word for word, joke for
joke. Only Kellhus could best her. But she had always been considerate. Serwe
had asked her once why she was so kind, and Esmenet had replied that the only
peace she’d found as a harlot had been caring for those more vulnerable than
her. When Serwe insisted she was neither a whore nor vulnerable, Esmenet had
smiled sadly, saying, “We’re all whores, Serchaa…” And Serwe had believed
her. How couldn’t she? It sounded so much like something Kellhus might say. Esmenet turned to look at
her. “Was the day’s march hard on you, Serchaa?” She smiled the way Serwe’s
aunt had once smiled, with warmth and concern. But then her expression suddenly
darkened, as though she’d glimpsed something disagreeable in Serwe’s face. Her eyes
became hooded. “Esmi?” Serwe said. “Is
something wrong?” Esmenet’s look became
faraway. When it returned, her handsome face wrinkled into another smile—more
sad, but just as genuine. Serwe looked nervously to
her hands, suddenly terrified that Esmenet somehow knew. In her soul’s eye, she glimpsed the Scylvendi
toiling above her in the dark. But
it wasn’t him! “The hills,” she said
quickly. “The hills are so hard… Kellhus says he’ll get me a mule.” Esmenet nodded. “Make
sure he…” She paused, frowned at the darkness. “What’s he up to now?” Achamian had returned
from the darkness, bearing a small doll about as long as a forearm. He sat the
doll down on the earth, with its back resting against the bonelike stone he’d
been using as a seat moments earlier. With the exception of the head, it was
carved from dark wood, with jointed limbs, a small rusty knife for a right
hand, and engraved with rows of tiny text. The head, however, was a silken
sack, shapeless, and no larger than a poor man’s purse. Staring at it, it
suddenly seemed V1AKUH a dreadful thing to
Serwe. The firelight gleamed across its polished surfaces and gave the illusion
that the words had been carved inches deep. The small shadow that framed it was
black as pitch against the stone and shifted uneasily with the twining glitter
of the flames. It looked like a little dead man propped before a towering fire. “Does Achamian scare you,
Serchaa?” Esmenet asked. Something wicked and mischievous glinted in her eyes. Serwe thought about that
night at the ruined shrine, when he’d sent light to the stars. She shook her
head. “No,” she replied. He was too sad to frighten. “He will after this,”
Esmenet said. “He leaves for proof,”
Xinemus jeered, “and he returns with a toy!” “This is no ‘toy,’”
Achamian muttered, annoyed. “He’s right,” Kellhus
said seriously. “It is some kind of sorcerous artifact. I can see the Mark.” Achamian looked at
Kellhus sharply, but said nothing. The fire crackled and hissed. He finished
adjusting the doll, took two steps back. Suddenly, framed by the darkness and
the shining fires of the greater encampment, he seemed less a weary scholar and
more a Mandate Schoolman. Serwe shivered. “This is called a ‘Wathi
Doll,’” he explained, “something I… I purchased from a Sansori witch a couple
of years ago… There’s a soul trapped in this doll.” Xinemus coughed wine
through his nose. “Akka,” he rasped, “I won’t tolerate—” “Humour me, Zin! Please…
Kellhus says he’s one of the Few. This is the one way for him to prove it
without damning himself—or you, Zin. Apparently for me, it’s already too late.” “What should I do?”
Kellhus asked. Achamian knelt and
fetched a twig from the ground at his feet. “I’ll simply scratch two words into
the earth, and you’ll speak them, aloud. You won’t be uttering a Cant, so you
won’t be marked by the blood-of-the-onta. No one will look at you and know you
for a sorcerer. And you’ll still be pure enough to handle Trinkets without
discomfort. You’ll just be uttering the artifacts cipher… The doll will awaken
only if you truly are one of the Few.” Atsushan Highlands “Why’s it bad that anyone
recognize Kellhus as a sorcerer?” Bloody Dinch asked. “Because he’d be damned!” Xinemus nearly shouted. “That,” Achamian
acknowledged, “and he’d quickly be dead. He’d be a sorcerer without a school, a
wizard, and the Schools don’t brook
wizards.” Achamian turned to
Esmenet; they exchanged a quick, worried look. Then he walked over to Kellhus.
Serwe could tell that a large part of him already regretted this spectacle. With the twig, Achamian
deftly scratched a line of signs in the earth before Kellhus’s sandalled feet.
Serwe assumed that they were two words, but she couldn’t read. “I’ve written
them in Kunitiric,” he said, “to spare the others any indignity.” He stepped
back, nodded slowly. Despite the brown of innumerable days spent in the sun, he
looked grey. “Speak them,” he instructed. Kellhus, his bearded face
solemn, studied the words for a moment, then in a clear voice said, “Skuni ari’sitvua…” All eyes scrutinized the
doll lying slack against the stone in the firelight. Serwe held her breath.
She’d expected that perhaps the limbs might twitch and then drawl into drunken
life, as though the doll were a puppet, something that might prance on the end
of invisible strings. But that didn’t happen. The first thing to move, rather,
was the stained, silk head—but it didn’t loll with lazy life, or even slowly
nod; instead, something moved from within.
Serwe gasped in horror, realizing that a tiny face—nose, lips, brow, and eye sockets—now strained against
the fabric… It was as though a
narcotic haze had settled upon them, the torpor of bearing witness to the
impossible. Serwe’s heart hammered. Her thoughts wheeled… But she couldn’t look
away. A human face, small enough to palm, pressed against the silk. She could
see tiny lips part in a soundless howl. And then the limbs moved—suddenly,
deftly, with none of the swaying stagger of a puppet. Whatever moved those
limbs moved them from within, with the compact elegance of a body assured of
its extremities. And with half-panicked thoughts, Serwe understood that it was
a soul, a self-moving soul… In a single, languorous
motion, it leaned The Second March forward, braced its arms
against the earth, bent its knees, then came to its feet, casting a slender
shadow across the earth, the shadow of man with a sack bound about his head. “B;y all that’s holy …” Bloody Dinch hissed in a breathless voice. The wooden man turned its
eyeless face from side to side, studied the dumbstruck giants. It raised the small,
rusty blade it possessed in lieu of a right hand. The fire popped, and it
jumped and whirled. A smoking coal bounced to a stop at its feet. Looking down,
it knelt with the blade, flicked the coal back into the fire. Achamian muttered
something unspeakable, and it collapsed in a jumble of splayed limbs. He looked
blankly at Kellhus, and in a voice as ashen as his expression, said, “So you’re
one of the Few…” Horror, Serwe thought. He
was horrified. But why? Couldn’t he see? Without warning, Xinemus
leapt to his feet. Before Achamian could even glance at him, the Marshal had
seized his arm, yanked him violently about. “Why do you do this?”
Xinemus cried, his face both pained and enraged. “You know that it’s difficult enough for me to… to… You know! And now displays such as this? Blasphemy?” Stunned, Achamian looked
at his friend aghast. “But Zin,” he cried. “This is what I am.” “Perhaps Proyas was
right,” he snapped. With a growl he thrust Achamian away, then paced off into
the darkness. Esmenet leapt from her place by Serwe and grasped one of
Achamian’s slack hands. But the sorcerer stared off into the blackness that had
encompassed the Marshal of Attrempus. Serwe could hear Esmenet’s insistent
whisper: “It’s okay, Akkal
Kellhus will speak to him. Show him his folly…” But Achamian, his face turned from those watching
about the fire, pushed at her feebly. Still bewildered, her
skin still tingling in dread, Serwe looked to Kellhus beseechingly: Please… you must make this better! Xinemus must forgive Achamian
this. They must all learn to forgive! Serwe didn’t know when
she’d begun speaking to him with her face, but she did it so often now that
many times she couldn’t sort what she’d told him from what she’d shown him.
This was part of the infinite peace between them. Nothing was hidden. Atsushan Highlands And for some reason, his
look reminded her of something he’d once said: “I must reveal myself to themslowly Serwe, slowly.
Otherwise they’ll turn against me …” Late that night, Serwe
was awakened by voices—angry voices, just outside their tent. Reflexively she
grasped for her belly. Her innards churned with fright. Dear Gods… Mercy! Please, mercy! The Scylvendi had
returned. As she knew he would.
Nothing could kill Cnaьir urs Skiotha, not so long as Serwe remained alive. Not again… please-please… She could see nothing,
but the menace of his presence already clutched at her, as though he were a
wraith, something feral and malevolent bent upon consuming her, scraping out
her heart the way Cepaloran women scrape pelts clean with sharpened oyster
shells. She began to cry, softly, secretly, so he wouldn’t hear… Any moment,
she knew, he would thrash into the tent, fill it with the stink of a man who’d
just shed his hauberk, grip her about the throat and… Pleaasse! 1 know I’m supposed to be a good
girl—I’ll be a good girl! Please! She heard his harsh
voice, low so as not to be overheard, but fierce nonetheless. “I tire of this,
Dunyain.” “Nuta’tharo hirmuta,” Kellhus replied with an impassiveness that unnerved
her—until she realized: He’s cold
because he hates him… Hates him as I do! “I will not!” the
Scylvendi spat. “Sta puth yura’gring?” “Because you ask me too!
I tire hearing you defile my tongue. I tire of being mocked. I tire of these
fools you ply. I tire of watching you defile my prize! M)> prize!” A moment of silence. Buzzing ears. “Both of us,” Kellhus
said in taut Sheyic, “have secured places of honour. Both of us have gained the
ears of the great. What more could you want?” “I want only one thing.” lib The Second March Atsushan Highlands “And together, we walk
the shortest path to—” Kellhus abruptly halted.
A hard moment passed between them. “You intend to leave,”
Kellhus said. Laughter, like a wolf’s
growl broken into fragments. “There is no need to
share the same yaksh.” Serwe gasped for air. The
scar on her arm, the swazond the plainsman had given beneath the Hethanta
Mountains, flared in sudden pain. No-no-no-no-no … “Proyas…” Kellhus said,
his voice still blank. “You intend to camp with Proyas.” Please God noooo! “I have come for my
things,” Cnaьir said. “I have come for my prize.” Never in all her violent
life had Serwe felt herself pitched upon such a precipice. The breath was
choked from her mid-sob, and she became very still. The silence shrieked. Three
heartbeats it took Kellhus to answer, and for three heartbeats her very life
hung as though from a gibbet between the voices of men. She would die for him,
she knew, and she would die without him. It seemed she’d always known this,
from the first clumsy days of her childhood. She almost gagged for fear. And then Kellhus said:
“No. Serwe stays with me.” Numb relief. Warm tears.
The hard earth beneath her had become as fluid as the sea. Serwe very nearly
swooned. And a voice that wasn’t hers spoke through her anguish and her rapture
and said: Merc}1… At lastmercy … She heard nothing of
their ensuing argument; succour and joy possessed their own thunder. But they
didn’t speak long, not with her weeping aloud. When Kellhus returned to his
place beside her, she threw herself upon him, showered him with desperate
kisses and held his strong body so tight she could scarcely breathe. And at
last, when the great weariness of the unburdened overwhelmed her and she lay
spinning on the threshold of sweet, childlike sleep, she could feel callused
yet gentle fingers slowly caressing her cheek. A God touched her.
Watched over her with divine love. Its back to canvas, the
thing called Sarcellus crouched, as still as stone. The musk of the Scylvendi’s
fury permeated the night air, sweet and sharp, heady with the promise of blood.
The sound of the woman weeping tugged at its groin. She might have been worth
its fancy, were it not for the smell of her fetus, which sickened… What passed for thought
bolted through what passed for its soul. Shigek HApTER E Shigek If all human events possess purpose, then
all human deeds possess purpose. And yet when men vie with men, the purpose of
no man comes to fruition: the result always falls somewhere in between. The
purpose of deeds, then, cannot derive from the purposes of men, because all men
vie with all men. This means the deeds of men must be willed by something other
than men. From this it follows that we are all slaves. Who then is our Master? —MEMGOWA, THE BOOK OF DIVINE ACTS What is practicality but one moment
betrayed for the next? —TRIAMIS I, JOURNALS AND DIALOGUES Late Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tu.sk,
southern Qedea Gedea didn’t so much end
as vanish. After dozens of skirmishes and petty sieges, Coithus Athjeari and
his knights raced south across the vast sandstone plateau of the Gedean
interior. They followed ravines and ridge lines, always climbing. By day they
hunted antelope for food and jackals for sport. At night they could smell the
Great Desert on the wind. The grasses faltered, gave way to dust, gravel, and
pungent-smelling scrub. After riding three full days without seeing so much as
a goatherd, they finally sighted smoke on
the southern horizon. They hastened up the slopes, only to rein their
caparisoned mounts to a sudden and panicked halt. The ground plummeted a
thousand feet or more. To either side great escarpments ramped into the hazy
distances. Before them the long waters of the River Sempis snaked across a
plain of verdant green, its back flashing opposite the sun. Shigek. The ancient Kyraneans had
called her “Chemerat,” the “Red Land,” because of the copper-coloured silt the
seasonal floods deposited across the plains. In far antiquity, she ruled an
empire that extended from Sumna to Shimeh, and her God-Kings produced works
unrivalled to this day, including the legendary Ziggurats. In near antiquity
she was famed for the subtlety of her priests, the elegance of her perfumes,
and the effectiveness of her poisons. For the Men of the Tusk, she was a land
of curses, crypts, and uneasy ruins. A place where the past
became dread, it ran so deep. Athjeari and his knights
descended the escarpments and wondered that sterile desert could so quickly
become lush fields and heavy trees. Wary of ambush, they followed the ancient
dikes, rode through one abandoned village then another. Finally they found one
old man without fear, and with some difficulty determined that Skauras and all
the Kianene had abandoned the North Bank. Hence the smoke they had seen from
the escarpment. The Sapatishah was burning every boat he could find. The young Earl of Gaenri
sent word to the Great Names. Two weeks later the first
columns of the Holy War marched unopposed into the Sempis Valley. Bands of
Inrithi spread across the floodplain, securing stores, occupying the villas and
strongholds abandoned by the Kianene. There was little bloodshed—at first. Along the river, the Men
of the Tusk saw sacred ibis and heron wading among the reeds and great flocks
of egret wheeling over the black waters. Some even glimpsed crocodiles and
hippopotamuses, beasts which, they would learn, the Shigeki revered as holy.
Away from the river, where small stands of various trees—eucalyptus and
sycamore, date palm and fan palm—perpetually screened the distances, they were
often surprised by ruined foundations, by pillars and walls bearing engravings
of nameless LJV1HE SECOND MARCH kings and their forgotten
conquests. Some of the ruins were truly colossal, the remains of palace or
temple complexes once as great, it seemed to them, as the Andiamine Heights in
Momemn or the Junrьima in Holy Sumna. Many of them wandered for a time,
pondering things that may or may not have happened. When they passed
villages, walking along earthen banks meant to capture floodwaters for the
fields, the inhabitants gathered to watch them, shushing children and holding
tight barking dogs. In the centuries following the Kianene conquest the Shigeki
had become devout Fanim, but they were an old race, tenants who had always
outlived their landlords. They could no longer recognize themselves in the
warlike images that glared from the broken walls. So beer, wine, and water were
given to slake the invader’s thirst. Onions, dates, and fresh’baked breads were
furnished to sate his hunger. And, sometimes, daughters were offered to comfort
his lust. Incredulous, the Men of the Tusk shook their heads and exclaimed that
this was a land of marvels. And some were reminded of their first youthful
visit to their father’s ancestral home, of that strange sense of returning to a place where they had never been. Shigek was oft named in The Tractate, the rumour of a distant tyrant, already ancient in
those ancient days. As a result, some among the Inrithi found themselves
troubled because the words seemed to overshoot the place. They urinated in the
river, defecated in the trees, and slapped at the mosquitoes. The ground was
old, melancholy, more fertile perhaps, but it was ground like any other ground.
Most, however, found themselves struck by awe. No matter how sacred the text,
the words merely dangled when the lands remained unseen. Each in their own way,
they realized that pilgrimage was the work of stitching the world to scripture.
They had taken their first true step. And Holy Shimeh seemed so
close. Then Cerjulla, the
Tydonni Earl of Warnute, encountered the walled town of Chiama. Fearing
starvation because of a blight the previous year, the town elders demanded
guarantees before throwing open their gates. Rather than negotiate, Cerjulla
simply ordered his men to storm the walls, which were easily overcome. Once
within, the Warnutishmen butchered everyone. Shigek Li Two days afterward, there
was another massacre at Jirux, the great river fortress opposite the South Bank
city of Ammegnotis. Apparently the Shigeki garrison left there by Skauras had
mutinied and murdered all their Kianene officers. When Uranyanka, the famed
Ainoni Palatine of Moserothu, arrived with his knights, the mutineers threw
open the gates only to be herded together and executed en masse. Heathens,
Uranyanka would later tell Chepheramunni, he could tolerate, but treacherous
heathens he could not forbear. The following morning,
Gaidekki, the tempestuous Palatine of Anplei, ordered the assault of a town
called Huterat, not too far from the Old Dynasty city of Iothiah, presumably
because his interpreter, a notorious drunkard, had mistranslated the town’s
terms of surrender. Once the gates were taken, his Conriyans ran amok through
the streets, raping and murdering without discrimination. Then, as though murder
possessed its own unholy momentum, the Holy War’s occupation of the North Bank
degenerated into wanton carnage, though for what reason, no one knew. Perhaps
it was the rumours of poisoned dates and pomegranates. Perhaps bloodshed simply
begat bloodshed. Perhaps faith’s certainty was as terrifying as it was
beautiful. What could be more true than destroying the false? Word of the Inrithi
atrocities spread among the Shigeki. Before the altar and in the streets the
Priests of Fane claimed that the Solitary God punished them for welcoming the
idolaters. The Shigeki began barricading themselves in their great, domed
tabernacles. With their wives and children they gathered wailing on the soft
carpets, crying out their sins, begging for forgiveness. The thunder of rams at
the doors would be their only answer. Then the rush of iron-eyed swordsmen. Every tabernacle across
the North Bank witnessed some kind of massacre. The Men of the Tusk hacked the
screaming penitents into silence, then they kicked over the tripods, smashed
the marmoreal altars, tore the tapestries from the walls and the grand kneeling
rugs from the floors. Anything carrying the taint of Fanimry they heaved into
colossal bonfires. Sometimes, beneath the rugs, they found the breathtaking
mosaics of the Inrithi who had originally raised the temple, and the structure
would be spared. Otherwise the great Fanim tabernacles of Shigek were burned.
Beneath monstrous towers of smoke, dogs nosed the
heaped dead and licked blood from the broad steps. In Iothiah, which had
thrown open her gates in terror, hundreds of Kerathotics, an Inrithi sect that
had managed to survive centuries of Fanim oppression, saved themselves by
singing the ancient hymns of the Thousand Temples. Men who had wailed in terror
suddenly found themselves embracing the long lost brothers of their faith. That
night the Kerathotics took to the streets, kicking down doors, murdering old
competitors, unscrupulous tax-farmers, anyone they had begrudged under the
Sapatishah’s regime. Their grudges were many. In red-walled Nagogris,
the Men of the Tusk actually began slaughtering one another. Almost as soon as
the Holy War had arrived in Shigek, the Shigeki potentates remaining in the
city sent emissaries to Ikurei Conphas, offering to surrender to the Emperor in
exchange for Imperial protection. Conphas promptly dispatched General
Numemarius and a cohort of Kidruhil. Through some unexplained blunder, however,
the gates were relinquished to a large force of Thunyeri, fierce Ingraulish and
Skagwamen for the most part, who promptly began plundering the city. The
Kidruhil attempted to intervene, and pitched battles broke out in the streets.
When General Numemarius met with Yalgrota Sranchammer under flag of truce, the
giant brained him. Disorganized by the death of their general and unnerved by
the ferocity of the blond-bearded warriors, the Kidruhil withdrew from the
city. But none suffered more
horribly than the Fanic priests. At night, around fires of heathen reliquary,
the Inrithi used them for drunken sport, slicing open their bellies, leading
them like mules by their own entrails. Some were blinded, some strangled, some
were forced to watch their wives and daughters raped. Others were flayed alive.
A great many were burned as witches. Scarcely a village could be found without
the mutilated corpse of some Fanic priest or functionary nailed to the vaulting
limbs of a eucalyptus tree. Two weeks passed, then
suddenly, as though some precise measure had been exacted, the madness lifted.
In the end, only a fraction of the Shigeki population had been killed, but no
traveller could pass more than an hour without crossing paths with the dead.
Instead of the humble boats of fishermen and traders, bloated corpses bobbed Shigek down the defiled waters
of the Sempis and fanned out across the Meneanor Sea. At long last, Shigek had
been cleansed. From the summit the
ziggurat seemed far steeper than it had from the ground below. But then so did
most things—after the fact. Cresting the last of the
treacherous steps, Kellhus turned to the surrounding vista. To the north and
west, all was cultivation. He saw diked fields, lines of sycamore and ash, and
villages that looked like mounds of shattered pottery in the distance. Several
smaller ziggurats reared in the near distance, staunch and stolid, anchoring a
network of channels and embankments that reached out to the hazy Gedean
escarpments. To the south, past the shoulders of the ziggurat Achamian had
called Palpothis, he saw stands of marsh gingkos standing like bent sentinels
amid thickets of sandbar willows. The mighty Sempis glittered in the sunlight
beyond. And to the east he saw lines of red through green—raised footpaths and
ancient roadways—passing beneath shadowy copses and between sunny fields, all
converging on Iothiah, which darkened the horizon with her walls and smoke. Shigek. Yet another
ancient land. So old and so vast, Father… Did you see it
thus? He glanced down the stair
that formed a causeway across the ziggurat’s mammoth back, saw Achamian still
labouring up the steps. Sweat darkened the armpits and collar of his white
linen tunic. “I thought you said the
ancients believed their gods lived atop these things,” Kellhus called down.
“Why do you tarry?” Achamian paused, scowled
up at the remaining distance. Gasping for breath, he struggled to smile through
his grimace. “Because the ancients believed their gods lived atop these
things…” Kellhus grinned, then
turned to study the wrecked summit. The ancient godhouse lay in shambles:
ruined walls and spilled blocks. He inspected sundered engravings and
indecipherable pictograms. The remains of gods, he imagined, and their earthly
invocations. Faith. Faith had raised
this black-stepped mountain—the beliefs of long dead men. So much, Father, and all in the name of
delusion. It scarcely seemed
possible. And yet the Holy War wasn’t so different. In some ways it was a far
greater, if more ephemeral, work. In the months since
arriving at Momemn, Kellhus had laid the foundation of his own ziggurat,
insinuating himself into the confidence of the mighty, instilling the suspicion
that he was more—far more—than the prince he claimed to be. With the reluctance
proper to wisdom and humility, he’d finally assumed the role others had thrust
upon him. Given the complexities involved, he had initially hoped to proceed
with more caution, but his encounter with Sarcellus had forced him to
accelerate his timetable, to take risks he would have otherwise avoided. Even
now, he knew, the Consult watched him, studied him, and pondered his growing
power. He had to seize the Holy War before their patience dwindled too far. He
had to make a ziggurat of these men. You saw them too, didn’t you, Father? Is
it you they hunt? Are they the reason you summoned me? Looking across the near
distance, he saw a man walking with his oxen along a raised pathway, flicking
them with his switch every third or fourth step. He saw backs bent in
neighbouring fields of millet. A half-mile away, he saw a party of Inrithi
horsemen riding in single file through yellowing wheat. Any one of them could be
a Consult spy. “Sweet Seja!” Achamian
cried as he gained the summit. What would the sorcerer
do if he learned of his secret conflict with the Consult? The Mandate couldn’t
be involved, Kellhus knew, not until he possessed power enough to parley with
them as equals. Everything came to power. “What’s this called
again?” Kellhus asked, though he forgot nothing. “The Great Ziggurat of
Xijoser,” Achamian replied, still panting. “One of the mightiest works of the
Old Dynasty… Remarkable, isn’t it?” “Yes…” Kellhus said with false forced
enthusiasm. He must feel shame. “Something troubles you?”
Achamian asked, leaning against his knees. He turned to spit over the summit’s
edge. “Serwe…” Kellhus said
with an air of admission. “Tell me, would you think her capable of being…” He
feigned a nervous swallow. Shigek Achamian looked away to
the hazy landscape, but not before Kellhus glimpsed a fleeting expression of
terror. Palms turning upward, nervous stroke of his beard, flaring heart rate… “Being what?” the sorcerer
asked with sham disinterest. Of all the souls Kellhus
had mastered, few had proven as useful as Serwe. Lust and shame were ever the
shortest paths to the hearts of world-born men. Ever since he’d sent her to
Achamian the sorcerer had compensated for his half-remembered trespass in
innumerable subtle ways. The old Conriyan proverb was true: no friend was more
generous than the one who has seduced your wife… And generosity was
precisely what he needed from Drusas Achamian. “Nothing,” Kellhus said
with a shake of his head. “All men fear their women venal, I suppose.” Some
openings must be continually worked and worried, while others must be left to
fester. Avoiding his gaze, the
Schoolman groaned and rubbed his lower back. “I’m getting too old for this,” he
said with anxious good humour. He cleared his throat and spit one final time.
“How Esmi would crow…” Esmenet. She too had a
part to play. After so many weeks of
prolonged contact, Kellhus had come to know Achamian far better than Achamian
knew himself. Those who loved the Schoolman—Xinemus and Esmenet—often thought
him weak. They softened hard words, pretended not to notice the unsteady hands
or the fragile expressions, and they spoke with an almost parental
defensiveness on his behalf. But Drusas Achamian, Kellhus knew, was stronger
than anyone, especially Drusas Achamian, suspected. Some men frittered
themselves away with incessant doubt and reflection until it seemed they had no
shape they could grasp hold of. Some men had to be hewed by the crude axe of
the world. Tested. “Tell me,” Kellhus said,
“how much must a teacher give?” He knew that Achamian had
long since stopped thinking himself his teacher, but the sorcerer was just vain
enough not to disabuse him of this impression. The most powerful flatteries
dwelt not in what was said but in the assumptions behind what was said. “That,” Achamian replied,
daring his gaze once again, “depends upon the student…” “So the student must be
known to prevent giving too little.” He must
question himself.
“Or too much.” This was an intellectual
habit of Achamian’s: noting the importance of contrary and not so obvious
things. He delighted in throwing aside the veil, in revealing the complexities
that lurked beneath simple things. In this he was almost unique: world-born
men, Kellhus had found, despised complexity as much as they cherished flattery.
Most men would rather die in deception than live in uncertainty. “Too much…” Kellhus
repeated. “You mean like Proyas?” Achamian glanced to his sandalled feet. “Yes.
Like Proyas.” “What did you teach him?” “What we call the
exoterics… Logic, History, Arithmetic—everything save the esoterics—sorcery.” “And that was too much?” The sorcerer paused in
puzzlement, suddenly unsure as to what he’d meant. “No,” he conceded after a
moment. “I guess not. I had hoped to teach him doubt,
tolerance, but the clamour of his faith was too great. Perhaps if they’d let me
finish his education… But he’s lost. Another Man of the Tusk.” Now show him ease. Kellhus snorted in a half
laugh. “Like me.” “Exactly,” the Mandate
Schoolman said, grinning in the both sly and shy way that others, Kellhus had
noted, found so endearing. “Another bloodthirsty fanatic.” Kellhus laughed Xinemus’s
laugh, then trailed, smiling. For some time he’d been mapping Achamian’s
responses to the finer nuances of his expression. Though Kellhus had never met
Inrau, he knew—with startling exactitude—the peculiarities of the young man’s
manner and expression—so well that he could prompt Achamian to thoughts of
Inrau with little more than a look or a smile. Paro Inrau. The student
Achamian had lost in Sumna. The student he’d failed. “There’s more than one
kind of fanaticism,” Kellhus said. bhigek Lit The sorcerer’s eyes
widened momentarily, then narrowed in anxious thoughts of Inrau and the events
of the previous year—things he’d rather not remember. The Mandate must become more than a hated
master, they must become an enemy. “But not all fanaticisms
are equal,” Achamian said. “How do you mean? Not
equal in principle, or not equal in consequence?” Inrau was such a
consequence, as were the countless thousands the Holy War had murdered over the
past several days. Your School, Kellhus had suggested, is no different. “The Truth,” Achamian
said. “The Truth distinguishes them. No matter what the fanaticism, Inrithi,
Consult, or even Mandate, the consequences are the same: men die or suffer. The
question is one of what they die or suffer for …” “So purpose—true
purpose—justifies suffering, even death?” “You must believe as
much, otherwise you wouldn’t be here.” Kellhus smiled as though
abashed at having been exposed. “So it all comes to Truth. If one’s purposes
are true…” “Anything can be
justified. Any torment, any murder…” Kellhus rounded his eyes
the way he knew Inrau would. “Any betrayal,” he said. Achamian stared, his
nimble face as stony as he could manage. But Kellhus saw past the dark skin,
past the sheath of fine muscle, past even the soul that toiled beneath. He saw
arcana and anguish, a yearning steeped in three thousand years of wisdom. He
saw a child beaten and bullied by a drunken father. He saw a hundred
generations of Nroni fishermen pinioned between hunger and the cruel sea. He
saw Seswatha and the madness of war without hope. He saw ancient Ketyai
tribesmen surge down mountain slopes. He saw the animal, rooting and rutting,
reaching back to time out of memory. He didn’t see what came
after; he saw what came before… “Any betrayal,” the
sorcerer repeated dully. He is close. “And your cause,” Kellhus
pressed. “The prevention of the Second Apocalypse.” “Is true. There can be no
doubt.” “So in the name of that
cause, you can commit any act, any betrayal/” Achamian’s eyes slackened
in dread, and Kellhus glimpsed a worry too fleet to become a question. The
Schoolman had become accustomed to the efficiency of their discourse: rarely
had they ever wandered from question to question as they did now. “It’s strange,” Achamian
said, “the way things spoken with assurance by one can sound so outrageous when
repeated by another…” An unanticipated turn,
but an opportunity as well. A shorter
path. “It troubles,” Kellhus
said, “because it shows that conviction is as cheap as words. Any man can
believe unto death. Any man can claim your claim.” “So you fear I’m no
different from any other fanatic.” “Wouldn’t you?” How deep does his conviction go? “You are the Harbinger, Kellhus. If you dreamed Seswatha’s
Dream as I did…” “But couldn’t Proyas say
the same of his fanaticism? Couldn’t he say, ‘If you spoke to Maithanet as I
did’?” How far would he follow
it? To the death? The sorcerer sighed and
nodded. “That’s always the dilemma, now isn’t it?” “But whose dilemma? Mine
or yours?” Would he follow it
beyond? Achamian laughed, but in
the clipped manner of men who make light of what horrifies them. “It’s the world’s dilemma, Kellhus.” “I need more than that,
Akka—more than bald assertions.” Would he follow it all the way? “I’m not sure—” “What is it you want of
me?” Kellhus exclaimed in sudden desperation. Inrau’s indecision warbled
through his voice. Inrau’s horror pulled wide his eyes. I must have it. The sorcerer stared,
horror-stricken. “Kellhus, I…” “Think of what you’re
telling me! Think, Akka, thinkl You’re saying that I’m the sign of the Second Apocalypse, that I augur mankind’s
extinction!” Shigek But of course Achamian
thought him more… “No, Kellhus… Not the
end.” “Then what am I? Just
what do you think I am?” “I think… I think you may
be…” “What, Akka? What?” “Everything has a purpose!” the Schoolman cried in exasperation. “You’ve come
to me for a reason, even if you’ve yet to embrace
it.” This, Kellhus knew, was
false. For events to have purpose, their ends had to determine their
beginnings, and this was impossible. Things were governed by their origins, not
their destinations. What came before determined what came after; his
manipulation of these world-born men was proof enough of that… If the Dunyain
had been mistaken in their theorems, their axioms remained inviolate. The Logos
had been complicated—nothing more. Even sorcery, from what he’d gleaned,
followed laws. “And what purpose is
that?” Kellhus asked. Achamian hesitated, and
though he remained utterly silent, everything from his expression to his scent
to his pulse howled in panic. He licked his lips… “I think… to save the
world.” Always it came to this.
Always the same delusion. “So I’m your cause?” Kellhus said incredulously. “I’m the Truth that justifies your fanaticism?” Achamian could only stare
in dread. Plundering the man’s expression, Kellhus watched the inferences
splash and trickle through his soul, drawn of their own weight to a single,
inexorable conclusion. Everything… B;y his own admission, he must yield everything. Even the Gnosis. How powerful have you become, Father? Without warning, Achamian
stood and started down the monumental stair. He took each step with weary
deliberation, as though counting them. The Shigeki wind tousled his shining
black hair. When Kellhus called to him, he said only, “I tire of the heights.” As Kellhus had known he
would. General Martemus had
always considered himself a practical man. He was someone who always clarified
his tasks, then methodically set about achieving his goals. He had no
birthright, no pampered childhood, to cloud his judgement. He simply saw,
appraised, and acted. The world was not so complicated, he would tell his
junior officers, so long as one remained clearheaded and ruthlessly practical.
See. Appraise. Act. He had lived his life by
this philosophy. How easily it had been defeated. The task had seemed
straightforward, if somewhat unusual, in the beginning. Watch Prince
Anasurimbor Kellhus of Atrithau, and attempt to gain his confidence. If the man
collected followers to some insidious purpose, as Conphas suspected, then a
Nansur General suffering a crisis of faith should have proven an irresistible
opportunity. It did not. Martemus had
attended at least a dozen of his evening sermons, or “imprompta,” as they were
calling them, before the man had even acknowledged him with a single word. Of course, Conphas, who
always faulted his executors before his assumptions, had held Martemus
responsible. There could be no doubt Kellhus was Cishaurim, because he was
connected to Skeaos, who was indubitably Cishaurim. There could be no doubt the
man played the prophet, not after the incident with Saubon. And there could be
no way the man knew that Martemus was bait, since
Conphas had told no one of his plan other than Martemus. Therefore, Martemus had failed, even if Martemus was too obstinate to see
this for himself. But this was merely one
of innumerable petty injustices Conphas had foisted on him over the years. Even
if Martemus had cared to take insult, which was unlikely, he was far too busy
being afraid. He wasn’t quite sure when
it happened, but at some point during the long march across Gedea, General
Martemus, as eminently practical as he was, had ceased believing that Prince
Kellhus played the prophet. This didn’t mean he
thought the man was in fact a prophet—Martemus
remained practical in that respect—only that he no longer knew what he believed… But soon he would, and
the prospect terrified him. Martemus was also an intensely loyal man, and he
treasured his position as Ikurei Conphas’s aide de camp. He often
thought he’d been bom to serve under the mer< rial
Exalt-General, to balance the man’s undeniable brilliance with in sober, more
dependable observations. The prodigy
must be reminded of practical, he would often think. No matter how delectable the
spices, c could not do without salt. But if Kellhus was in
fact… What happened to his loyalty then? Martemus pondered this
while sitting among the steaming thousa: who’d gathered to hear Prince
Kellhus’s first sermon since the madnes reaching Shigek. Before him loomed
ancient Xijoser, the Great Ziggu a mountain of corniced and polished black stone
so massive it seemed should cover his face and fall to his belly. The luxuriant
plains of Sempis Delta swept out in either direction, embellished by lesser zig
rats, waterways, reed marshes, and endless rice paddies. The sun fla white in
desert skies. Throughout the crowds,
men and women talked and laughed. Fc time Martemus watched the couple before
him share a humble repas onions and bread. Then he realized those sitting
around him were tal care to avoid his look. His uniform and blue cloak probably
frighte them, he thought, made him appear a caste-noble. He looked from ne:
bour to distracted neighbour, trying to think of something he might sa set them
at ease. But he couldn’t bring himself to utter the first word A profound loneliness
struck him. He thought of Conphas once ag Then he saw Prince
Kellhus, small and distant, descending Xijo monumental stair. Martemus smiled,
as though finding an old friend foreign market. What will he say? When he first started
attending the imprompta, Martemus assumed the talks would be either heretical
or easily dismissed. They ‘t neither. Indeed, Prince Kellhus recited the words
of the Old Prophets of Inri Sejenus as though they were his own. Nothing of
what he contradicted any of the innumerable sermons Martemus had heard < the
course of his life—though those sermons often contradicted another. It was as
though the Prince pursued further truths, the unspc implications of what all
orthodox Inrithi already believed. To listen to him, it
seemed, was to learn what one already k without knowing. The Prince of God, some
called him. He-who-sheds-light-within. His white silk robes shining in the
sunlight, Prince Kellhus paused on the ziggurat’s lower steps and looked over
the restless masses. There was something glorious about his aspect, as though
he’d descended not from the heights but from the heavens. With a flutter of
dread Martemus realized he never saw the man ascend the ziggurat, nor even step from the ruin of the
ancient godhouse upon its summit. He had just… noticed him. The General cursed
himself for a fool. “The Prophet Angeshrael,”
Prince Kellhus called, “came down from his fast on Mount Eshki.” The assembly
fell absolutely silent, so much so that Martemus could hear the breeze buffet
his ears. “Husyelt, the Tusk tells us, sent a hare to him, so he might eat at
last. Angeshrael skinned the Hunter’s gift and struck a fire so he might feast.
When he had eaten and was content, sacred Husyelt, the Holy Stalker, joined him
at his fire, for the Gods in those days had not left the world in the charge of
Men. Angeshrael, recognizing the God as the God, fell immediately to his knees
before the fire, not thinking where he would throw his face.” The Prince
suddenly grinned. “Like a young man on his wedding night, he erred in his eagerness…”
Martemus laughed with a thousand others. Somehow the sun flashed brighter. “And the God said, ‘Why
does our Prophet fall to his knees only? Are not Prophets Men like other Men?
Should they not throw their faces to the earth?’ To which Angeshrael replied,
‘I find my fire before me.’ And peerless Husyelt said, ‘The fire burns across
earth, and what fire consumes becomes earth. I am your God. Throw your face to
the earth.’” The Prince paused. “So Angeshrael, the Tusk
tells us, bowed his head into
the flames.” Despite the close, humid
air, Martemus’s skin pimpled. How many times, especially as a child, had he
stared into some fire, struck by the errant thought of plunging his face into
the flames—if only to feel what a Prophet once felt? Angeshrael. The Burnt
Prophet. He lowered his face
into fire! Fire! “Like Angeshrael,” the
Prince continued, “we find ourselves kneeling before just such a fire…” Martemus caught his
breath. Heat flared through him, or so it seemed. Shigek “Truth!” Prince Kellhus
cried, as though calling out a name that every man recognized. “The fire of
Truth. The Truth of who you are…” Somehow his voice had
divided, become a chorus. “You are frail. You are
alone. Those who would love you know you not. You lust for obscene things. You
fear even your closest brother. You understand far less
than you pretend… “You—you!—are these things. Frail, alone, unknown, lusting,
fearing, and uncomprehending. Even now you
can feel these truths burn. Even now”—he raised a hand as though to further
quiet silent men—“they consume
you.” He lowered his hand. “But
you do not throw your face to the earth. You do not…” His glittering eyes fell
upon Martemus, who felt his throat tighten, felt the small finishing-hammer of
his heart tap-tap-tap blood to his face. He sees through me. He witnesses… “But why?” the Prince asked, his timbre bruised by an old and
baffling pain. “In the anguish of this fire lies the God. And in the God lies
redemption. Each of you holds the key to your own
redemption. You already kneel before it! But still you do
not throw your face to the earth. You are
frail. You are alone. Those who love you know you not. You lust for obscene things. You fear even your closest brother. And you understand far less than you pretend!!‘ Martemus grimaced. The
words had drawn a pain from his bowels to the back of his throat and sent his
thoughts reeling in giddy recognition of something at once familiar and
estranged. Me… He speaks of me! “Is there any among you
who would deny this?” Silence. Somewhere, someone
wept. “But you do deny this!” Prince Kellhus cried, like a lover
confronted by an impossible infidelity. “All of you! You kneel, but you also cheat—cheat the fire of your own heart! You give breath to
lie after lie, clamour that this fire is not the Truth. That you are strong. That you are not alone. That those who love you do know you. That you
lust not for obscene things. That you fear
not your brother in any way. That you
understand everything.1” How many times had
Martemus lied thus? Martemus the practical man. Martemus the realistic man. How
could he be these things if he knew
so well of what
Prince Kellhus spoke? “But in the secret
moments—yes, the secret moments—these denials ring
hollow, do they not? In the secret moments you glimpse the anguish of Truth. In
the secret moments you see that your life has been a mummer’s farce. And you
weep! And you ask what is wrong! And you cry out, ‘Why cannot I be strong?’” He leapt down several
steps. “Why cannot I be strong?” Martemus’s throat
ached!—ached as though he himself had bawled these words. “Because,” the Prince
said softly, “you lie.” And Martemus thought madly: Skin and hair… He’s just a man! “You are frail because you feign strength.” The voice was disembodied now, and it whispered
secretly into a thousand flushed ears. “You are alone because you lie ceaselessly. Those who love you do not know you because you are a mummer. You lust for obscene things because you deny that you lust. You fear your brother, because you fear what he sees. You understand little because to learn you must
admit you know nothing.” How could a life be cupped into
a single palm? “Do you see the tragedy?”
the Prince implored. “The scriptures bid us to be godlike, to be more than what we are. And what are we? Frail men, with
peevish hearts, envious hearts, choked by the shroud of our own lies. Men who remain frail because they cannot confess their frailty.” And this word, frail, seemed pitched down from the heavens, from the
Outside, and for an instant, the man who’d spoken it was no longer a man but
the earthly surface of something far greater. Frail… Spoken not from the lips of a man, but from
somewhere else… And Martemus understood. I sit in the presence of the God. Horror and bliss. Chafing his eyes.
Blinding his skin. Everywhere. The presence of the God. To at last be still, to be braced by that which braced the very world,
and to see at long last how far one had plummeted. And it seemed to Martemus
that he was here for the first time, as though one
could only truly be oneself—be
here!—in the
clearing that was God. Here… Shigek ‘tkf, The impossibility of
drawing sweet air through salty lips Th of moving soul and furtive
intellect. The grace of thronging passions TK impossibility. The impossibility… The miracle of here. “Kneel with me,” a voice from nowhere said. “Take my hand and do not fear. Throw your face into the
furnace!” A place had been prepared
for these final words, words that traced the scripture of his heart. A place of
rapture. The multitude cried out,
and Martemus cried with them. Some openly wept, and Martemus wept with them.
Others reached out as though trying to clutch his image. Martemus raised two
fingers to brush his distant face. How long Prince Kellhus
spoke he couldn’t say. But he spoke of many things, and upon whatever ground
his words set foot, the world was transformed. “What does it mean, to be a warrior? Is not war the fire? The furnace?
Is not war the very truth of our frailty?” He even taught them a hymn, which, he said, had come to him in
a dream. And the song moved them the way only a song from the Outside could
move them. A hymn sung by the very Gods. For the rest of his days, Martemus
would awaken and hear that song. And afterward, when the
masses thronged about the Prince, fell to their knees and softly kissed the hem
of his white robe, he bid them to stand, reminded them that he was just a man
like other men. And at long last, when the crush of bodies delivered Martemus
to him, the surreal blue eyes regarded him gently, glanced not at all at his golden
cuirass, his blue cloak, or the insignia of his station. “I have waited for you,
General.” The excited rumble of
others grew distant, as though the two of them had been submerged. Martemus
could only stare, dumbstruck, overawed, and so gratified… “Conphas sent you. But
that has changed now, hasn’t it?” And Martemus felt a child
before his father, unable to lie, unable to speak the truth. The Prophet nodded as
though he had spoken. “What will happen to your loyalty, I wonder?” Somewhere distant, almost
too far to touch, men cried out. Martemus watched the Prophet turn his head,
reach back with a golden-haloed hand, and seize a flying arm, which bore a
fist, which gripped a long and silvery knife. Assassination, he thought without concern. The man before him
couldn’t be killed. He knew that now. The mobs pummelled the
assassin to the earth. Martemus glimpsed a bloodied, howling face. The Prophet turned back
to him. “I would not divide your
heart,” he said. “Come to me again, when you are ready.” “I’m warning you, Proyas.
Something must be done about this man.” Ikurei Conphas had said this somewhat
more emphatically than he’d intended. But then these
were emphatic times. The Conriyan Prince
reclined in his camp chair and looked at him blandly. He picked at his
trim beard with an absent hand. “What do you suggest?“ Finally. “That we convene a full
Council of the Greater and Lesser Names.” “And?” “That we bring charges
against him.” Proyas frowned. “Charges? What charges?” “Under the auspices of the Tusk. The Old
Law.” “Ah, I see. And what would you charge Prince
Kellhus with?” “With fomenting blasphemy. With pretensions
to prophecy.” Proyas nodded. “In other words,” he said scathingly, “with being
a False Prophet.” Conphas laughed
incredulously. He could remember once—long ago it now seemed—thinking he and
Proyas would become fast and famous friends over the course of the Holy War.
They were both handsome. They were close in age. And in their respective
corners of the Three Seas, they were considered prodigies of similar
promise—that was, until his obliteration of the Scylvendi at the Battle of
Kiyuth. I have no peers. “Could any charge be more
appropriate?” Conphas asked. “I agreed,” Proyas replied testily, “to discuss
ways of surprising Skauras on the South Bank, not to discuss the piety of a man
I consider to be my friend.“ Although Proyas’s
pavilion was large and richly outfitted, it was both gloomy and intolerably
hot. Unlike the others, who had traded their canvas for the marble of abandoned
villas, Proyas maintained himself as though still on the march. Only a fanatic. “You’ve heard of these
Sermons at Xijoser?” Conphas asked, thinking, Martemus, you fool… But then, that was the
problem. Martemus wasn’t a fool. Conphas could scarce imagine anyone less
foolish… That was precisely the problem. “Yes, yes,” Proyas
replied with an exasperated breath. “I’ve been invited to attend on a
number of occasions, but the field keeps me busy.“ “I imagine… Did you know
that many among the rank and file—my men, your men—refer to him as the Warrior-Prophet? The Warrior- Prophet?“ “Yes. I know this as
well…” Proyas said this with the same air of indulgent impatience as before,
but his brows knitted together, as if pinching a troubling thought. “As it stands,” Conphas
said, speaking as though at the limits of his good humour, “this is the Holy
War of the Latter Prophet… of Inri
Sejenus. But if
this fraud continues to gather followers, it will fast become the Holy War of
the Warrior-Prophet. Do you understand?” Dead prophets were useful,
because one could rule in their name. But live prophets? Cishaurim prophets? Perhaps 1 should tell him what happened
with Skeaos… Proyas shook his head in
weary dismissal. “What would you have me do, eh, Conphas? Kellhus is… unlike
other men. There’s no doubt about that. And he does have these dreams. But he
makes no claim to be a prophet. And he’s angered when others call him so.” “So what? So he must
first admit to being a False Prophet? Being a
False Prophet in fact isn’t enough?” His expression pained,
Proyas regarded him narrowly, looked him up and down as though assessing the
appropriateness of his field armour. “Why does this concern
you so, Conphas? You’re most assuredly not a pious man.” What would you have me do, Uncle? Should
1 tell him? Conphas suppressed the
urge to spit like the Scylvendi, ran his tongue over his teeth instead. He
despised indecision. “The question of my piety
is not the concern here.” Proyas drew in and
released a heavy breath. “I’ve sat long hours with the man, Conphas. Together,
we’ve read aloud from The
Chronicle of the Tusk and The Tractate, and not once, in all that time,
have I detected the merest whisper of heresy. In fact, Kellhus is perhaps the
most deeply pious man I’ve ever met. Now the fact that others have begun
calling him Prophet is disturbing, I agree. But it is not his doing. People are
weak, Conphas. Is it so surprising that they look to him and see his strength
for more than what it is?” Conphas felt sweet
disdain unfold across his face. “Even you…
He’s ensnared even you.” What kind of man? Though
he was loath to admit it, his briefing with Martemus had shook him deeply.
Somehow, over a matter of mere weeks, this Prince Kellhus had managed to reduce
his most dependable man to a babbling idiot. Truth! The frailty of men! The
furnace! What nonsense! And yet
nonsense that was seeping through the Holy War like blood through linen. This
Prince Kellhus was a wound. And if he was in fact a Cishaurim spy as dear old
Uncle Xerius feared, he could well prove mortal. Proyas was angered, and
answered disdain with disdain. “Ensnaring,” he snorted. “Of course you would see it as such. Men of ambition never
understand the pious. For them, goals must be worldly in order to be sensible.
Solutions to base hungers,” There was something
forced, Conphas decided, about these words. I’ve planted a seed at least. “There’s much to be said
for being well fed,” Conphas snapped, then turned on his heel. He’d exceeded
his daily ration of idiots. Proyas’s voice halted him
before the curtains. “One last thing,
Exalt-General.” Conphas turned, lids low,
eyebrows raised. “Yes?” “You’ve heard of the
attempt on Prince Kellhus’s life?” Shigek “You mean there’s another
sober man in this world?” Proyas smiled sourly. For
a moment, real hatred flashed in his eyes. “Prince Kellhus tells me
the man who tried to kill him was Nansur. One of your officers, in fact.” Conphas stared at the man
blankly, realizing he’d been duped. All those questions… Proyas had asked them
in order to implicate him, to see whether he had
motive. Conphas cursed himself for a fool. Fanatic or not, Nersei Proyas was
not a man to be underestimated. This is becoming a nightmare. “What?” Conphas said.
“You propose to arrest me?” “You propose to arrest
Prince Kellhus.” Conphas grinned. “You
would find it hard to arrest an army.” “I see no army,” Proyas
said. Conphas smiled. “But you
do…” Of course there was
nothing Proyas could do, even if the assassin had survived to name Conphas
directly. The Holy War needed the Empire. Even still, there was a
lesson to be learned. War was intellect. Conphas would teach this Prince
Kellhus that… His loitering Kidruhil
snapped to attention as Conphas exited the pavilion. As a precaution he’d taken
some two hundred of the heavily armoured cavalrymen as an escort. The Great
Names were scattered from Nagogris on the edge of the Great Desert to Iothiah
on the Sempis Delta, and Skauras had landed raiders on the North Bank to harry
them. Risking death or capture clearing up a matter such as this wouldn’t do.
So far, the problem of Anasurimbor Kellhus remained more theoretical than
practical. As his attendants fetched
his horse, the Exalt-General looked for Martemus, found him milling among the
troopers. Martemus had always preferred the company of common soldiers to that
of officers, something that Conphas had once thought quaint, but now found
annoying—even seditious. Martemus… What’s happened to you? Conphas mounted his black
and rode over to him. The taciturn General watched him, apparently without
apprehension. V 1V1AKCH Like a Scylvendi, Conphas
spat on the earth beneath the shod hooves of Martemus’s horse. Then he glanced
back at Proyas’s pavilion, at the embroidered eagles splayed in black across
the weathered white canvas, and at the guards who eyed him and his men
suspiciously. The Eagle and Tusk pennant of House Nersei lolled in the lazy
breeze, framed by the faint escarpments of the South Bank. He turned back to his
wayward General. “It appears,” he said in
a fierce voice that wouldn’t carry, “that you aren’t the only casualty of this
spy’s sorcery, Martemus… When you kill this Warrior-Prophet, you’ll be avenging
many, very many.” HApTER Twelve IOTHIAH ; …the ends of the earth shall be wracked by the howls
of the wicked, ■■ and the idols shall be cast down and shattered,
stone against stone. And the demons of the idolaters shall hold open their
mouths, like ■4. starving lepers, for no man living will answer their
outrageous hunger. —16:4:22 THE WITNESS OF
FANE •I Though youiose your soul, you shall win the world. .‘—MANDATE CATECHISM Late Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk,
Shigek Xinemus didn’t
particularly like the man, and had never trusted him, but he’d nonetheless been
trapped into speaking with him. The man, Therishut, a baron of dubious
reputation from Conriya’s frontier with High Ainon, had intercepted him as
Xinemus made his way from a planning session with Proyas. Upon seeing Xinemus,
the man’s thinly bearded face had brightened with his best “oh-how-fortuitous”
look. It was in Xinemus’s nature to be patient with even those he disliked, but
distrust was a different matter altogether. And yet, it was the small
indignities that the pious man must endure over all. “I seem to remember, Lord
Marshal,” Therishut said, hastening to match his pace, “that you have an
affinity for books.” Ever polite, Xinemus
nodded, and said: “An acquired taste.” “Then you must be excited
that the famed Sareotic Library, in Iothiah, was taken intact by the Galeoth.” “The Galeoth? I thought
it was the Ainoni.” “No,” Therishut replied,
drawing his lips into a strange upside-down smile. “I’ve heard that it was the
Galeoth. Men of Saubon’s own household in fact.” “Indeed,” Xinemus said,
impatiently. “Well enough then…” “I see you’re busy, Lord Marshal. No bother…
I’ll send one of my slaves to arrange an audience.” To bump into Therishut
was annoying enough, but to actually suffer through a formal visit? “I’m never too busy for a
Baron of the Land, Therishut.” “Good!” the man nearly squealed. “Well then…
Not long ago, a friend of mine—well, I should say he’s not yet my friend, but
I… I…” “He’s someone you hope to curry favour with,
Therishut?” Therishut’s face both brightened and soured. “Yes! Although that
sounds rather indelicate, don’t you think?” Xinemus said nothing, but
walked on, his eyes firmly fixed on the top of his pavilion amidst the jumble
of others in the distance. Beyond, the hills of Gedea were pale in the haze. Shigek, he thought. We’ve taken Shigek! For some strange reason, the certainty that soon,
impossibly soon, he’d set eyes on Holy Shimeh seized him. It’s happening… It was almost enough to make him be kind to
Therishut. Almost. “Well, this friend of
mine who’d just returned from the Sareotic Library asked me what ‘gnosis’ was.
And since you’re the closest thing to a scholar I know, I thought you could
help me help him. Do you know what ’gnosis’ is?” Xinemus stopped and eyed
the small man carefully. “Gnosis,” he said carefully, “is the name of the old
sorcery of the Ancient North.” “Ah yes!” Therishut exclaimed. “That makes
sense!” “What interest does your friend have in
libraries, Therishut?” “Well, you know there’s a rumour that Saubon
might sell the books to raise more money.” Xinemus hadn’t heard this
rumour, and it troubled him. “I doubt the Iothiah other Great Names would
countenance that. So what, your friend has already begun taking inventory?“ “He’s a most enterprising
soul, Lord Marshal. A good man to know if one’s interested in profits—if you
know what I mean…” “Merchant-caste dog, no
doubt,” Xinemus said matter-of-factly. “Let me give you some advice, Therishut:
heed your station.” But rather than take
offence at this, Therishut smiled wickedly. “Surely, Lord Marshal,” he said in
a tone devoid of all deference, “you of all people.” Xinemus blinked,
astonished more by his own hypocrisy than by Baron Therishut’s insolence. A man
who sups with a sorcerer castigating another for currying favour with a
merchant? Suddenly the hushed rumble of the Conriyan camp seemed to buzz in his
ears. With a fierceness that shocked him, the Marshal of Attrempus stared at
Therishut, stared at him until, flustered, the fool mumbled insincere apologies
and scurried away. As he walked the
remaining distance to his pavilion, Xinemus thought of Achamian, his dear
friend of many, many years. And he thought of his caste, and was faintly
shocked by the hollow of uneasiness that opened in his gut when he recollected
Therishut’s words: You of all
people. How many think this? Their friendship had been
strained of late, Xinemus knew. It would do them both some good if Achamian
spent several days away. In a library. Studying
blasphemy. “I don’t understand,”
Esmenet said with more than a little anger. He’s leaving me… Achamian heaved a burlap
sack of oats across his mule’s back. His mule, Daybreak, regarded her solemnly.
Beyond him, the largely deserted encampment crowded the slopes, pitched among
and between small stands of black willows and cottonwoods. She could see the
Sempis in the distance, shining like obsidian inlay beneath the punishing sun.
Whenever she glanced at the hazy South Bank, dark with vegetation, she could
feel the heathen watching. “I don’t understand,
Akka,” she repeated, plaintively this time. lHt JtUOND MARCH “But, Esmi…” “But what?” He turned to her,
obviously irritated, distracted. “It’s a library. A library!” “So?” she said hotly.
“The illiterate are not—” “No,” he snapped,
scowling. “No! Look, I need some time alone. I need time to think. To think,
Esmi, think!” The desperation in his
voice and expression shocked her into momentary silence. “About Kellhus,” she
said. The skin beneath her scalp prickled. “About Kellhus,” he
replied, turning back to his mule. He cleared his throat, spit into the dust. “He’s asked you, hasn’t
he?” Her chest tightened. Could it be? Achamian said nothing,
but there was a subtle heartlessness to his movements, and almost imperceptible
blankness to his eyes. She was learning him, she realized, like a song sung
many times. She knew him. “Asked me what?” he said
finally, tying his sleeping mat to the pack saddle. “To teach him the
Gnosis.” For the past three weeks,
since following the Conriyan column into the Sempis Valley, through the madness
of the occupation—ever since the night with the Wathi Doll—a strange rigidity
had seemed to haunt Achamian, a tension that made it impossible for him to love
or laugh for anything more than moments. But she’d assumed his argument with
Xinemus and their subsequent estrangement had been the cause. Several days earlier
she’d confronted the Marshal on the issue, telling him of his friend’s
apprehensions. Yes, Achamian had committed an outrage, she explained, but he’d
erred out of foolishness not disrespect. “He tries to forget, Zin, but he
cannot. Every morning I cradle him as he cries out. Every morning I remind him
the Apocalypse is over… He thinks Kellhus is the Harbinger.” But Xinemus, she could
tell, already knew this. He was patient in tone, word, manner—everything save
his look. His eyes had never truly listened, and she’d known something deeper
was wrong. A man like Xinemus, Achamian had told her once, risked much keeping
a sorcerer as a friend. lothiah She’d never pressed
Achamian with anything more than warm reminders, like “He worries for you, you
know.” The hurts of men were brittle, volatile things. Achamian liked to claim
that men were simple, that women need only feed, fuck, and flatter them to keep
them happy. Perhaps this was true of certain men, perhaps not, but it certainly
wasn’t true of Drusas Achamian. So she’d waited, assuming that time and habit
would return the two old friends to their old understanding. For some reason, the
notion that Kellhus, and not Xinemus, lay at the root
of his distress never occurred to her. Kellhus was holy—she harboured
absolutely no doubt about that now. He was a prophet, whether he himself
believed it or not. And sorcery was unholy… What was it Achamian had
said he would become? A god-sorcerer. Achamian continued to
fuss over his baggage. He hadn’t said anything. He didn’t need to. “But how could it be?”
she asked. Achamian paused, stared
at nothing for several heartbeats. Then he turned to her, his face blank with
hope and horror. “How could a prophet
speak blasphemy?” he said, and she knew that for him this was already an old
and embittered question. “I asked him that…” “And what did he say?” “He cursed and insisted
he wasn’t a prophet. He was offended… hurt even.” I’ve a talent for that, his tone said. A sudden desperation
welled in Esmenet’s throat. “You can’t teach him, Akka! You mustn’t teach him!
Don’t you see? You’re the
temptation. He
must resist you and the promise of power you hold. He must deny you to become
what he must become!” “Is that what you think?”
Achamian exclaimed. “That I’m King Shikol tempting Sejenus with worldly power
like in The Tractate? Maybe he’s right, Esmi, did you
ever consider that? Maybe he’s not a prophet!” Esmenet stared at him,
fearful, bewildered, but strangely exhilarated as well. How had she come so
far? How could a whore from a Sumni slum stand here, so near the world’s heart? How had her life become
scripture? For a moment, she couldn’t believe… MARCH “The question, Akka, is
what do you think?” Achamian looked to the
ground between them. “What do I think?” he repeated pensively. He raised his
eyes. Esmenet said nothing, though she felt the hardness melt from her gaze.
Achamian shrugged and sighed. “That the Three Seas couldn’t be more unprepared
for a Second Apocalypse… The Heron Spear is lost. Sranc roam half the world, in
numbers a hundred—a thousand!—times greater than in Seswatha’s day. And Men
hold only a fraction of the Trinkets.” He stared at her, and it seemed his eyes
had never been so bright. “Though the Gods have damned me, damned us, I can’t
believe they would so abandon the world…” “Kellhus,” she whispered. Achamian nodded. “They’ve
sent us more than a Harbinger… That’s what I think, or hope—I don’t know…” “But sorcery, Akka…” “Is blasphemy, I know.
But ask yourself, Esmi, why are sorcerers bias-phemers? And
why is a prophet a prophet?” Her eyes opened
horror-wide. “Because one sings the God’s song,” she replied, “and the other
speaks the God’s voice.” “Exactly,” Achamian said.
“Is it blasphemy for a prophet to utter sorcery?” Esmenet stood staring,
dumbstruck. For the God to
sing His own song…
“Akka…” He turned back to his
mule, bent to retrieve his satchel from the dust. A sudden panic welled through
her. “Please don’t leave me, Akka.” “I told you, Esmi,” he said, without turning
his face to her, “I need to think.” But we think so well together! He was wiser for her
counsel. He knew this! Now he confronted a
decision unlike any other… So why would he leave her? Was there something else?
Something more he was hiding? She glimpsed him writhing
beneath Serwe… He’s found a
younger whore,
something whispered. “Why do you do this?” she
asked, her voice far sharper than she had wished. lothiah An exasperated pause. “Do
what?” “It’s like a labyrinth
with you, Akka. You throw open gates, invite me in, but refuse to show me the
way. Why do you always hide ?” His eyes flashed with
inexplicable anger. “Me?” he laughed, turning
back to his task. “Hide, you say?” “Yes, hide. You’re so weak, Akka, and you need not be. Think of what Kellhus has
taught us!” He glanced at her, his
eyes poised between hurt and fury. “How about you? Let’s talk about your
daughter… Remember her? How long has it been since you’ve—” “That’s different! She
came before you! Before you!” Why would he say this?
Why would he try to hurt? M;y girl! My baby girl is dead! “Such fine discriminations,”
Achamian spat. “The past is never dead, Esmi.” He laughed bitterly. “It’s not
even past.” “Then where’s my
daughter, Akka?” For an instant he stood
dumbstruck. She often baffled him like this. Broken down fool! Her fingers started
shaking. Hot tears spilled across her cheeks. How could she think such things? Because of what he said… How dare he! He gaped at her, as
though somehow reading her soul. “I’m sorry, Esmi,” he said vaguely. “I
shouldn’t have mentioned… I shouldn’t have said what I said.” His voice trailed away,
and he again turned to his mule, began angrily cinching straps. “You don’t
understand what the Gnosis is to us,” he added. “More than my pulse would be
forfeit.” “Then teach me! Show me
how to understand!” This is Kellhus! We discovered him together! “Esmi… I can’t talk to
you about this. I can’t…” “But why?” “Because I know what
you’ll say!” “No, Akka,” she said,
feeling the old whorish coldness. “You don’t. You’ve no idea.” He caught the rough hemp
cord hanging from his mule’s crude bridle, momentarily fumbled it. For an
instant, everything about him, his MARCH sandals, his baggage, his
white-linen robe, seemed lonely and poor. Why did he always look so poor? She thought of Sarcellus:
bold, sleek, and perfumed. Shabby cuckold! “I’m not leaving you,
Esmi,” he said with a queer kind of finality. “I could never leave you. Not
again.” “1 see but one sleeping
mat,” she said. He tried to smile, then
turned, leading Daybreak away at an awkward gait. She watched him, her innards
churning as though she dangled over unseen heights. He followed the path
eastward, passing a row of weather-beaten round tents. He seemed so small so
quickly. It was so strange, the way bright sun could make distant figures dark… “Akka!” she cried out,
not caring who heard. “Akka!” I love you. The figure with the mule
stopped, distant and for a moment, unrecognizable. He waved. Then he
disappeared beneath a stand of black willows. Intelligent people,
Achamian had found, were typically less happy. The reason for this was simple:
they were better able to rationalize their delusions. The ability to stomach
Truth had little to do with intelligence— nothing, in fact. The intellect was
far better at arguing away truths than at finding them. Which was why he had to
flee Kellhus and Esmenet. He led his mule along a
path bounded to his right by the black expanse of the Sempis and to his left by
a line of gigantic eucalyptus trees. Save for the odd flash of warmth between
limbs, the half-canopy sheltered him from the sun. A breeze seeped through his
white linen tunic. It was peaceful, he thought, to at long last be alone… When Xinemus had told him
that certain books pertaining to the Gnosis had been found in the Sareotic
Library, he could read the subtext well enough. You should leave, his friend had said without saying. Ever since the
night with the Wathi Doll, Achamian had expected to be banished from his
friend’s fire, even if temporarily. Even more, he needed to be banished, to be forced from the company of
those who overwhelmed him… Iothiah But it cut nonetheless. No matter, he told
himself. Just another feud born of the awkwardness of their friendship. A
caste-noble and a sorcerer. “There is no friend more difficult,” one of the
poets of the Tusk had written, “than a sinner.” And Achamian was nothing
if not a sinner. Unlike some sorcerers, he
rarely pondered the fact of his damnation. For much the same reason, he
imagined, men who beat their wives didn’t ponder their fists… But there were other
reasons. In his youth, he’d been one of those students who’d delighted in
irreverence and impiousness, as though the mortal blasphemy he learned licensed
any blasphemy, large and small. He and Sancla, his cellmate in Atyersus, used
to actually read The Tractate aloud and laugh at its absurdities.
The passages dealing with the circumcision of caste-priests. And of course the
passages dealing with manural purification rites. But one passage, more than
any other, would haunt him over the years: the famous “Expect Not Admonition”
from the Book of Priests. “Listen!” Sancla had
cried from his pallet one night. ‘“And the Latter Prophet said: Piety is not
the province of money-changers. Do not give food for food, shelter for shelter,
love for love. Do not throw the Good upon the balance, but give without expectation. Give food for nothing, shelter
for nothing, love for nothing. Yield unto him who trespasses against you. For
these things alone, the wicked do not do. Expect not, and you shall find glory
everlasting.’” The older boy fixed
Achamian with his dark, always-laughing eyes— eyes that would make them lovers
for a time. “Can you believe it?” “Believe what?” Achamian
asked. He already laughed because he knew that whatever Sancla cooked up was
certain to be deliriously funny. He was simply one of those people. His death
in Aoknyssus three years later—he’d been killed by a drunken caste-noble with a
Trinket—would crush Achamian. Sancla tapped the scroll
with his forefinger, something that would have earned him a beating in the
scriptorium. “Essentially Sejenus is saying, ‘Give without expectation of
reward, and you can expect a huge reward!’” Achamian frowned. The Second March “Don’t you see?” Sancla
continued. “He’s saying that piety consists of good acts in the absence of
selfish expectation. He’s saying you give nothing—nothing!—when you expect
something in exchange… You simply don’t give.” Achamian caught his
breath. “So the Inrithi who expect to be exalted in the Outside…” “Give nothing,” Sancla
had said, laughing in disbelief. “Nothing! But we, on the other hand, dedicate
our lives to continuing Seswatha’s battle… We give everything, and we can
expect only damnation as a result. We’re the only ones, Akka!” We’re the only ones. As tempting as those
words were, as moving and as important as they’d been, Achamian had become too
much a sceptic to trust them. They were too flattering, too self-aggrandizing,
to be true. So instead, he’d thought it simply had to be enough to be a good man. And if it wasn’t
enough, then there was nothing good about those who measured good and evil. Which was likely the
case. But of course Kellhus had
changed everything. Achamian now pondered his damnation a great deal. Before, the question of
his damnation had merely seemed an excuse for self-torment. The Tusk and The Tractate couldn’t be more clear, though Achamian had read many
heretical works suggesting that the Scriptures’ manifold and manifest
contradictions proved that the prophets, olden day and latter, were simply
men—which they were. “All Heaven,” Protathis had once written, “cannot shine
through a single crack.” So there was room to doubt his damnation. Perhaps, as Sancla had
suggested, the damned were in fact the elect. Or perhaps, as Achamian was more
inclined to believe, the uncertain were the Chosen Ones. He’d often
thought the temptation to assume, to sham certainty, was the most narcotic and
destructive of all temptations. To do good without certainty was to do good
without expectation… Perhaps doubt
itself was the
key. But then of course the
question could never be answered. If genuine doubt was in fact the condition of
conditions, then only those ignorant of the answer could be redeemed. To ponder
the question of his damnation, it had always seemed, was itself a kind of
damnation. So he didn’t think of it. lothiah Zbl But now… Now there could be an answer. Every day he walked with its
possibility, talked… Prince Anasurimbor
Kellhus. It wasn’t as though he
thought Kellhus could simply tell him the answer, even if he could ever summon
the courage to ask. Nor did he think that Kellhus somehow embodied or
exemplified the answer. That would make him too small. He was not, in some
mystic Nonmen fashion, the living sign of Drusas Achamian’s fate. No. The
question of his damnation or his exaltation, Achamian knew, depended on what he himself was willing to sacrifice. He himself would answer the
question… With his actions. And as much as this
knowledge horrified him, it also filled him with an abiding and incredulous
joy. The fear it engendered was old: for some time he’d feared the fate of the
entire world depended on those selfsame actions. He’d grown numb to
consequences of deranged proportions. But the joy was something new, something
unexpected. Anasurimbor Kellhus had made salvation a real possibility. Salvation. Though you lose your
soul, the Mandate catechism began, you shall win the world. But it need not be!
Achamian knew that now! Finally he could see how desolate, how bereft of hope, his prior life had been. Esmenet had taught him how
to love. And Kellhus, Anasurimbor Kellhus, had taught him how to hope. And he would seize them,
love and hope. He would seize them, and he would hold them fast. He need only decide what
to do… “Akka,” Kellhus had said
the previous night, “I need ask you something.” Only the two of them sat
about the fire. They boiled water for some midnight tea. “Anything, Kellhus,”
Achamian replied. “What troubles you?” “I’m troubled by what I
must ask…” Never had Achamian seen
such a poignant expression, as though horror had been bent to the point where
it kissed rapture. A mad urge to shield his eyes almost overcame him. “What you must ask?” The Second March Kellhus had nodded. “Each day, Akka, I am
less my self.” Such words! Their mere
memory struck him breathless. Standing in an islet of sunlight, Achamian paused
along the trail, pressed his palms to his chest. A cloud of birds erupted into
the sky. Their shadows flickered across him, soundless. He blinked at the sun. Do 1 teach him the Gnosis? To his gut he balked at
the notion—the mere thought of surrendering the Gnosis to someone outside his
School made him blanch. He wasn’t even sure he could teach Kellhus the Gnosis, even if he desired. His
knowledge of the Gnosis was the one thing he shared with Seswatha, whose
imprint owned every movement of his slumbering soul. Will you let me! Do you see what I see? Never—never!—in the
history of their School had a sorcerer of rank betrayed the Gnosis. Only the
Gnosis had allowed the Mandate to survive. Only the Gnosis had allowed them to
carry Seswatha’s war through the millennia. Lose it, and they became no more
than a Minor School. His brothers, Achamian knew, would fight themselves to
extinction to prevent that from happening. They would hunt both of them without
relenting, and they would kill them if they could. They would not listen to
reasons… And the name, Drusas Achamian, would become a curse in the dark halls
of Atyersus. But what was this other
than greed or jealousy? The Second Apocalypse was imminent. Hadn’t the time
come to arm all the Three Seas? Hadn’t Seswatha himself bid them share their
arsenal before the shadow fell? He had… And wouldn’t this make
Achamian the most faithful of all Mandate Schoolmen? He resumed walking, as
though in a stupor. In his bones he knew that Kellhus had been sent. The peril was too great,
and the promise too breathtaking. He’d watched as Kellhus consumed a lifetime
of knowledge in the space of months. He’d listened, breathless, as Kellhus
voiced truths of thought more subtle than Ajencis, and truths of passion more profound
than Sejenus. He’d sat in the dust gaping as the man extended the geometries of
Muretetis beyond the limits Iothiah of comprehension, as he corrected the ancient logic then drafted new logics the way a child might scribble spirals with a
stick. What would the Gnosis be
to such a man? A plaything? What would he discover? What power would he wield? Glimpses of Kellhus,
striding as a god across fields of war, laying low host of Sranc, striking
dragons from the sky, closing with the resurrected No-God, with dread
Mog-Pharau… He’s
our saviour! I know it! But what if Esmenet were
right? What if Achamian were merely the test? Like old, evil Shikol in The Tractate, offering Inri Sejenus his thighbone sceptre, his
army, his harem, everything save his crown, to stop preaching… Achamian halted once
again, was bumped forward two steps by his mule, Daybreak. Stroking his snout,
he smiled in the lonely way of men with hapless animals. A breeze swept across
the shining reaches of the Sempis, hissed through the trees. He began
trembling. Prophet and sorcerer. The
Tusk called such men Shaman. The word lay like a ziggurat in his thoughts,
immovable. Shaman. No… This is madness! For two thousand years
Mandate Schoolmen had kept the Gnosis safe. Two thousand years! Who was he to
forsake such tradition? Nearby, a crowd of young
children was gathered beneath the sweep of a sycamore, chirping and jostling
like sparrows over spilled bread. And Achamian saw two young boys, no more than
four or five, making arm-waving declarations each with a hand firmly clasped in
the hand of the other. The innocence of the act struck him, and he found
himself wondering how old they would be when they saw the error of holding
hands. Or would they discover
Kellhus? A whining sound drew his
eyes upward. He nearly cried out in shock. A naked corpse had been nailed to
the rafters of the tree above, purple and marbled with black-green. After the
surprise passed he thought of kicking or cutting the man down, but then where
would he carry him? To some nearby village? The Shigeki were so terrified of
the Inrithi he’d be surprised if they looked at him, let alone touched him. The Second March A pang of remorse struck
him, and inexplicably, he thought of Esmenet. Be safe. Leading Daybreak,
Achamian continued past the children, through the sun-dappled shade and toward
Iothiah, the ancient capital of the Shigeki God-Kings, whose walls wandered
across the distance, belts of faint stone glimpsed through dark eucalyptus
limbs. Achamian walked, and wrestled with impossibilities… The past was dead. The
future, as black as a waiting grave. Achamian wiped his tears
on his shoulder. Something unimaginable was about to happen, something
historians, philosophers, and theologians would argue for thousands of years—if
years or anything else survived. And the acts of Drusas Achamian would loom so
very large. He would simply give.
Without expectation. His School. His calling.
His life… The Gnosis would be his
sacrifice. Behind her mighty curtain
walls, Iothiah was a warren of four-storey mud’brick buildings welded
continuously together. The alleyways were narrow, screened from above by
palm-leaf awnings, so that Achamian felt as though he walked through desert
tunnels. He avoided the Kerothotics: he didn’t like the look of triumph in
their eyes. But when he encountered armed Men of the Tusk he would ask them for
directions, and then pick his way through a further welter of alleys. The fact
that most of the Inrithi he encountered were Ainoni concerned him. And once or
twice, when the walls opened enough for him to spy the monuments of the city,
he thought he could sense the deep bruise of the Scarlet Spires somewhere in
the distance. But then he encountered a
troop of Norsirai horsemen—Galeoth, they said—and he was somewhat relieved.
Yes, they knew how to find the Sareotic Library. Yes, the Library was in
Galeoth hands. Achamian lied as he always lied, and told them that he was a
scholar, come to chronicle the exploits of the Holy War. As always, their eyes
brightened at the thought of finding some small mention in the annals of
written history. They instructed him to follow as best he could, claiming they
would pass the Library on their way to wherever it was they were stationed. Iothiah Noon saw him in the
shadow of the Library, more apprehensive than ever. If rumours of the
existence of Gnostic texts had reached him, wouldn’t they also have reached the
Scarlet Spires? The thought of jostling for scrolls with the red-robed
Schoolmen filled him with more than a little dread. “What do you think?” he
asked Daybreak, who snorted and nosed his palm. The idea that Gnostic
texts might have lain hidden here all this time wasn’t as preposterous as it
seemed. The Library was as old as the Thousand Temples, built and maintained by
the Sareots, an esoteric College of priests dedicated to the preservation of
knowledge. There was a time, during the Ceneian Empire, when it was law in
Iothiah for all those entering the city in possession of a book to surrender it
to the Sareots so that it might be copied. The problem, however, was that the
Sareotic College was a religious institution, and as such, it necessarily
forbade any of the Few from entering the famed Library. When, many centuries
later, the Sareots were massacred by the Fanim in the fall of Shigek, it was
rumoured that the Padirajah himself had entered the Library. From his vest, the
legend went, he pulled a slender, leather-bound copy of the kipfa’aifan, the Witness
of Fane, bent to
the shape of his breast. Holding it high in the airy gloom, he declared, “Here
lies all written truth. Here lies the one path for all souls. Burn this wicked
place.” At that instant, it was said, a single scroll spilled from the racks
and came rolling to his booted feet. When the Padirajah opened it he found a detailed
map of all Gedea, which he later used to crush the Nansur in a number of
desperate battles. The Library was spared,
but if it was closed to Schoolmen under the Sareots, it might well have ceased
to exist under the Kianene. There very well could be
Gnostic texts in this Library, Achamian knew. They’d been discovered before. If
there were any reason, aside from their dreams of the Old Wars, why the
sorcerers of the Mandate were the most scholarly of the Schoolmen, it was their
jealousy of the Gnosis. The Gnosis gave them a power far out of proportion to
the size of their School. If a School like the Scarlet Spires were to come into
its possession—who could say what might happen? Things wouldn’t fare well with
the Mandate, that much was certain. The Second March But then, all that was
about to change—now that an Anasurimbor had returned. Achamian led his mule
into the middle of a small walled courtyard. The cobble had long ago been
ground into red dust, save for the odd stones surfacing here and there like
turtle shells. The Library itself presented the square front of a Ceneian
temple, with columns soaring to brace a crumbling lintel pocked by figures that
may have once been gods or men. Two large Galeoth swordsmen reclined in the
shade against the two pillars flanking the entrance. They acknowledged him with
bored stares as he approached. “Greetings,” he called,
hoping they spoke Sheyic. “I am Drusas Istaphas, chronicler to Prince Nersei
Proyas of Conriya.” When they failed to
reply, he paused. Achamian found himself particularly unnerved by the one with
a scar that dimpled his face from his hairline to his chin. These didn’t seem
like friendly men. But then, what cheer would a warrior find guarding something
as useless as books ? Achamian cleared his throat.
“Have there been many other visitors to the Library?” “No,” the scarless man
replied, shrugging his shoulders beneath his hauberk. “Just a few
thieving merchants, is all.” The man spat something across the dust, and
Achamian realized he’d been sucking on a peach pit. “Well I can assure you
I’m not of that caste. Assuredly not…” Then, with a mixture of
curiosity and deference: “Do I have your leave to enter?” The man nodded to his
mule. “Can’t bring that thing,” he said. “Can’t have a donkey shitting in
our hallowed halls now can we?“ He smirked, and turned to his scarred
friend, who continued to stare at Achamian. He looked like a bored boy
deciding whether to poke a dead fish. After gathering several
things from his mule, Achamian rushed up the steps past the two guards. The
great doors were gilded in tarnished bronze, and one of them lay ajar enough to
admit a single man. As Achamian ducked into the gloom he heard one of the
Galeoth—the scarred one, he thought—mutter “Filthy pick.” But the old Norsirai slur
didn’t bother him. Rather, he was excited. A
sudden urge to cackle almost overcame him. Only now, it seemed, did the fact
that this was the Sareotic
Library fully
strike him. The damned Sareots, hoarding text after text for over a thousand
years. What might he lothiah find? Absolutely
anything, and not just Gnostic works, might lie hidden within. The Nine Classics, the early Dialogues of lnceruti—even the lost works of Ajencis! He passed through the
darkness of a great vaulted antechamber, across a mosaic floor that once, he
decided, had portrayed Inri Sejenus holding out haloed hands—at least before
the Fanim, who’d obviously never used this place, had defaced it. He retrieved
a candle from his saddlebag and ignited it with a secretive word. Holding the
small point of light before him, he plunged into the hallowed halls of the
Library. The Sareotic Library was
a warren of pitch-black hallways that smelled of dust and the ghost of rotting
books. Englobed by light, Achamian wandered through the blackness and filled
his arms with treasures. Never had he seen such a collection. Never had he
witnessed so many ruined thoughts. Out of the thousands of
volumes, and thousands upon thousands of scrolls, Achamian would be surprised
if more than several hundred could be salvaged. He found nothing that even
hinted at the Gnosis, but he did, nevertheless, find several things of peculiar
interest. He found one book by
Ajencis he’d never seen before, but it was written in Vaparsi, an ancient
Nilnameshi language he knew well enough only to decipher the title: The Fourth Dialogue of the Movements of the Planets as They Pertain to… something or another. But the fact that this was a
dialogue meant that it was exceedingly important. Very few of the great
Kyranean philosopher’s dialogues survived. He found a heap of clay
tablets written in the cuneiform script of ancient Shigek and draped by cobwebs
woollen with dust. He retrieved one that seemed in good shape and decided he
would try to smuggle it out, even though it might be a granary inventory for
all he knew. It would make a good gift, he thought, for Xinemus. And he found other tomes
and scrolls—curiosities mostly. An account of the Age of Warring Cities by a
historian he’d never encountered before. A strange, vellum-paged book, called
On the Temples and Their
Iniquities,
which made him wonder if the Sareots might not have had heretical leanings. And
some others. ihe second March After a time, both his
excitement at finding things intact and his outrage at finding them destroyed
flagged. He tired, and finding a stone bench in a niche, he arranged his
discoveries and his humble belongings around him as though they were totems in
a magic circle, then ate some stale bread and drank wine from his skin. He
thought of Esmenet while he ate, cursed himself for his sudden longing. He did
his best not to think of Kellhus. He replaced his
sputtering candle and decided to read. Alone withbooks,
yet again.
Suddenly he smiled. Again? No,
at last… A book was never “read.” Here, as elsewhere, language
betrayed the true nature of the activity. To say that a book was read was to
make the same mistake as the gambler who crowed about winning as though he’d
taken it by force of hand or resolve. To toss the number-sticks was to seize a
moment of helplessness, nothing more. But to open a book was by far the more
profound gamble. To open a book was not only to seize a moment of helplessness,
not only to relinquish a jealous handful of heartbeats to the unpredictable
mark of another man’s quill, it was to allow oneself to be written. For what was a book if not a long consecutive
surrender to the movements of another’s soul? Achamian could think of
no abandonment of self more profound. He read, and was moved to chuckle by
ironies a thousand years dead, and to reflect pensively on claims and hopes
that had far outlived the age of their import. He wouldn’t remember
falling asleep. There was a dragon in his
dream, old, hoary, terrible—and malevolent beyond compare. Skuthula, whose
limbs were like knotted iron, and whose black wings, when he descended, were
broad enough to‘ blot half the sky. The great fountain of luminescent fire that
vomited from Skuthula’s maw burnt the sand around his Wards to glass. And
Seswatha fell to one knee, tasted blood, but the old sorcerer’s head was thrown
back, his white hair whipped into ribbons by the wind of beating dragon-wings,
and the impossible words thundered like laughter from his incandescent mouth.
Needles of piercing light filled the sky… lothiah But the corners of this
scene were crimped, and then suddenly, as though dreams were painted across
parchment, it crumpled and was tossed into blackness… The blackness of open eyes… Gasping breath. Where was he? The Library, yes…
The candle must have gone out. But then he realized just
what had awakened him. His Wards of
Exposure, which he’d maintained ever since joining the Holy— Sweet Sejenus… The Scarlet Spires. He fumbled in the
darkness, gathered his satchel. Quickly,
quickly … He
stood in the blackness, and peered with different eyes. The chamber was long,
with low ceilings, and galleried by rows of racks and shelves. The intruders
were somewhere near, hastening between queues of mouldering knowledge, closing
on him from various points throughout the Library. Did they come for the
Gnosis? Knowledge ever found itself on the scales of greed, and no knowledge in
the Three Seas, perhaps, was as valuable as the Gnosis. But to abduct a Mandate
Schoolman in the midst of the Holy War? One would think the Scarlet Spires
would have more pressing concerns—like the Cishaurim. One would think… But what
of the skin-spies? What of the Consult? They’d known he was bound
to investigate even the rumour of a Gnostic text. And they
had known a Library would be where he felt safest. Who would risk
such treasures? Certainly not fellow Schoolmen, no matter how ill their
will… The entire thing, he
realized, was an outrageously extravagant trap—a trap that had included
Xinemus. What better way to lull an ever suspicious Mandate Schoolman than to
dangle the lure through the lips of his most trusted friend? Xinemus? No. It couldn’t be. Sweet Sejenus… This was actually happening! Achamian grabbed his
satchel and lunged through the blackness, crashed into a heavy rack of scrolls,
felt papyrus crumble in his fingers like the mud that skins the bottom of dried
puddles. He thrust his satchel into the leafy debris. Quickly, quickly. Then he stumbled back in the direction he’d come. itv Ihe Second March They were closer now.
Lights smeared the ceiling over the black shelves facing him. He backed into the small
alcove where he’d snoozed, then began uttering a series of Wards, short strings
of impossible thoughts. Light flashed from his lips. Luminescence sheeted the
air before him, like the glare of sunlight across mist. Dark muttering from
somewhere amid the teetering queues—skulking, insinuating words, like vermin
gnawing at the walls of the world. Then fierce light,
transforming, for a heartbeat, the shelves before him into a dawn horizon…
Explosion. A geyser of ash and fire. The concussion sucked the
air from his lungs. The heat cracked the stone of the surrounding walls. But
his Wards held. Achamian blinked. A
moment of relative darkness… “Yield Drusas Achamian…
You’re overmatched!” “Eleazaras?” he cried.
“How many times have you fools tried to wrest the Gnosis from us? Tried
and failed!” Shallow breath. Hammering
heart. “Eleazaras?” “You’re doomed, Achamian!
Would you doom the riches about you as well?” As precious as they were,
the words rolled and stacked about him meant nothing. Not now. “Don’t do this,
Eleazaras!” he cried in a breaking voice. The stakes! Thestakes! “It’s already—” But Achamian had
whispered secrets to his first attacker. Five lines glittered along the gorge
of blasted shelves, through smoke and wafting pages. Impact. The air cracked.
His unseen foe cried out in astonishment—they always did at the first touch of
the Gnosis. Achamian muttered more ancient words of power, more Cants. The
Bisecting Planes of Mirseor, to continuously stress an opponent’s Wards. The
Odaini Concussion Cants, to stun him, break his concentration. Then the Cirroi
Loom… Dazzling geometries leapt
through the smoke, lines and parabolas of razor light, punching through wood
and papyrus, shearing through stone. The Scarlet Schoolman screamed, tried to
run. Achamian boiled him in his skin. lothiah Darkness, save for
glowering fires scattered through the ruin. Achamian could hear the other
Schoolmen shouting to each other in shock and dismay. He could feel them
scramble among the queues, hasten to assemble a Concert. “Think on this,
Eleazaras! How many are you willing to sacrifice?” Please. Don’t be
a— The roar of flame. The
thunder of toppling shelves. Fire broke like foaming surf about his Wards. A
blinding flash, illuminating the vast chamber from corner to corner. The crack
of thunder. Achamian stumbled to his knees. His Wards groaned in his thoughts. He struck back with
Inference and Abstraction. He was a Mandate Schoolman, a Gnostic
Sorcerer-of-the-Rank, a War-Cant Master. He was as a mask held before the sun.
And his voice slapped the distances into char and ruin. The hoarded knowledge of
the Sareots was blasted and burned. Convections whipped pages into fiery
cyclones. Like leathery moths, books spiralled into the debris. Dragon’s fire
cascaded between the surviving shelves. Lightning spidered the air, crackled
across his defences. The last queues fell, and across the ruin Achamian
glimpsed his assailants: seven of them, like silk-scarlet dancers in a field of
funeral pyres: the Schoolmen of the Scarlet Spires. The glimpse of tempests
disgorging bolts of blinding white. The heads of phantom dragons dipping and
belching fire. The sweep of burning sparrows. The Great Analogies, shining and
ponderous, crashing and thundering about his Wards. And through them, the
Abstractions, glittering and instantaneous… The Seventh Quyan
Theorem. The Ellipses of Thosolankis… He yelled out the impossible words. The leftmost Scarlet
Schoolman screamed. The ghostly ramparts about him crumbled beneath an arcana
of encircling lines. The Library walls behind him exploded outward, and he was
puffed like paper into the evening sky. For a moment, Achamian
abandoned the Cants, began singing to save his Wards. Cataracts of hellfire.
The floor failed. Great ceilings of stone clapped about him like angry palms to
prayer. He fell through fire and he second March rolling, megalithic ruin.
But still he sang. He was a Scion of
Seswatha, a Disciple of Noshainrau the White. He was the slayer of Skafra,
mightiest of the Wracu. He had pitched his song against the dread heights of
Golgotterath. He had stood proud and impenitent before Mog-Pharau himself… Jarring impact. Different
footing, like the pitched deck of a ship. Shrugging slabs and heaped ruin away,
tossing thundering stone into sky. Plunging through meaning after dark meaning,
the hard matter of the world collapsing, falling away like lover’s clothing,
all in answer to his singing song. And at last the sky, so
water-cool when seen from the inferno’s heart. And there: the Nail of
Heaven, silvering the breast of a rare cloud. The Sareotic Library was
a furnace in the husk of ragged, free-standing walls. And above, the Scarlet
Magi hung as though from wires, and pummelled him with Cant after wicked Cant.
The heads of ghostly dragons reared and vomited lakes of fire. Rising and
spitting, wracking him with dazzling, bone-snapping fire. Sun after blinding
sun set upon him. On his knees, burned,
bleeding from mouth and eyes, encircled by heaped stone and text, Achamian
snarled Ward after Ward, but they cracked and shattered, were pinched away like
rotted linen. The very firmament, it seemed, echoed the implacable chorus of
the Scarlet Spires. Like angry smiths they punished the anvil. And through the madness,
Drusus Achamian glimpsed the setting sun, impossibly indifferent, framed by
clouds piled rose and orange… It was, he thought, a
good song. Forgive me, Kellhus. HApTER Thirteen Men are forever pointing at others, which, is why I always follow the knuckle and not the nail. —ONTILLAS, ON THE FOLLY OF
MEN A day with no noon, A year with no fall, Love is forever
new, Or love is not at all. ■■ —ANONYMOUS, “ODE TO THE LOSS OF
LOSSES” Late Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, Shigek There was light. “Esmi…” She stirred. What was her
dream? Yes… Swimming. The pool in the hiUs above the
Battleplain. A hand grasped her bare
shoulder. A gentle squeeze. “Esmi… You must wake up.” But she was so warm… She blinked, grimaced when she realized it was
still night. Lamplight. Someone carried a lamp. What was Akka doing? She rolled onto her back,
saw Kellhus kneeling over her, his expression grave. Frowning, she pulled her
blanket over her breasts. mt. ObCOND MARCH “Wha—” she started, but
paused to clear her throat. “What is it?” “The Library of the Sareots,” he said in a
hollow voice. “It burns.” She could only blink at the lamplight. “The Scarlet
Spires have destroyed it, Esmi.” She turned, looking for Achamian. Something about Xinemus’s
expression struck Proyas to the marrow. He looked away, ran an idle thumb over
the lip of his golden wine bowl, which lay empty on the table before him. He
stared at the glister of the eagles stamped into its side. “And just what would you
have me do, Zin?” Incredulity and impatience. “Everything in your power!” The
Marshal had informed him of Achamian’s abduction two days previous—never had
Proyas seen him so frantic with worry. At his behest, he’d issued orders for
the arrest of Therishut, a baron from the southern marches he only vaguely
remembered. Then, he’d ridden to Iothiah, where he demanded and received an
audience with Eleazaras himself. The Grandmaster had been accommodating, but he
categorically denied the Marshal’s accusations. He claimed his people had
stumbled upon a hidden cell of Cishaurim while investigating the Sareotic
Library. “We grieve the loss of two of our own,” he said solemnly. When Proyas asked, with
all due courtesy, to view the Cishaurim remains, Eleazaras said: “You can take them if you wish… Have you a sack?” You do see, his eyes had said, the futility of what you do. But Proyas had seen the futility
from the very beginning—even if they could find Therishut. Soon the Holy War
would cross the River Sempis and assault Skauras on the South Bank. The Men of
the Tusk needed the Scarlet Spires—desperately if what the Scylvendi said was
true. What was the life of one man—a blasphemer no less—compared with that
need? The God demanded sacrifices… Proyas could see the
futility—he could scarce see anything else! The difficulty was one of making
Xinemus see. “Everything in my power?”
the Prince repeated. “And what, pray tell, might that be, Zin? What power does
a Prince of Conriya hold over the Scarlet Spires?” Shigek He regretted the
impatience in his tone, but it couldn’t be helped. Xinemus continued to
stand at the ready, as though on parade. “You could call a Council…” “Yes, I could, but what
purpose would that serve?” “Purpose?” Xinemus
repeated, obviously horrified. “What purpose
would it serve?” “Yes. It may be a hard
question, but it’s honest.” “Don’t you understand?”
Xinemus exclaimed. “Achamian isn’t dead and gone! I’m not asking you to avenge him! They’ve
taken him,
Proyas. Even now, somewhere in Iothiah, they hold him. They ply him in ways you
and I cannot imagine. The Scarlet Spires! The Scarlet Spires have Achamian!” The Scarlet Spires. For
those who lived in the High Ainon’s shadow, they were the very name of dread.
Proyas breathed deep. The God had decreed his priorities… Faith makes strong. “Zin… I know how this
torments you. I know you feel responsible, but—” “You ungrateful,
arrogant, little pissant!” the Marshal exploded. He seized the corners of the
table, leaned forward over the sheaves of parchment. Spittle flecked his beard.
“Did you learn so little from him? Or was your heart flint in childhood as
well? This is Achamian, Proyas. Akka.1 The
man who doted on you! Who cherished you! The man who made you into who you are!” “Remember yourself
Marshal! I will toler—” “You will hear me out!”
Xinemus roared, pounding the table with his fist. The golden wine bowl bounced
and rolled off the edge. “As inflexible as you
are,” the Marshal grated, “you know how these things work. Remember what you
said on the Andiamine Heights? ‘The game is without beginning or end.’ I’m not
asking you to storm Eleazaras’s compound, Proyas, I’m simply asking you to play the game! Make them think you’ll stop at nothing to see Akka
safe, that you’re willing to declare open war against them if he should be
killed. If they believe you’re willing to forsake anything, even Holy Shimeh,
to recover Achamian, they will yield. They will yield!” Proyas stood, retreated
from his old sword-trainer’s furious aspect. He did know how “these things” worked. He had threatened Eleazaras with war. Kb Ihe Second March He laughed bitterly. “Are
you mad, Zin? Are you truly asking me to
put my old boyhood tutor before my God? To put a sorcerer before my God?” Xinemus released the
table, stood upright. “After all these years, you still don’t understand, do
you?” “What’s there to understand?”
Proyas cried. “How many times must we have this conversation? Achamian is
Unclean! Unclean!” A heady sense of conviction seized
him, an incontestable making certain, as though knowing
possessed its own fury. “If blasphemers kill blasphemers, then we’re saved oil
and wood.” Xinemus flinched as
though struck. “So you will do nothing.” “And neither will you, Marshal. We prepare to march against the South Bank.
The Padirajah has summoned every Sapatishah from Girgash to Eumarna. All Kian
assembles!” “Then I resign as Marshal
of Attrempus,” Xinemus declared in a stiff voice. “What is more, I repudiate
you, your father, and my oath to House Nersei. No longer shall I call myself a
Knight of Conriya.” Proyas felt a numbness
through his face and hands. This was impossible. “Think about this, Zin,” he
said breathlessly. “Everything… Your estates, your chattel, the sanctions of
your caste… Everything you have, everything
you are, will be
forfeit.” “No, Prosha,” he said,
turning for the curtains. “It’s you who surrender everything.” Then he was gone. The reed wick of his oil
lamp sputtered and fizzled. The gloom deepened. So much! The endless battles
with his peers. The heathen. The burdens—the innumerable burdens! The
never-ending fear of what might come. And Xinemus had always been there. He’d
always been the one! The one who understood, who made
clear what vexed, who shouldered what was beyond bearing… Akka. Sweet Seja… What had he
done? Nersei Proyas fell to his
knees, clutched at a knifing pang in his stomach. But the tears wouldn’t
come. I know you test me! I
know you test me! f Two bodies, one warmth. Wasn’t that what Kellhus
had said of love? Esmenet watched Xinemus
sit hesitantly, as though unsure of } welcome. He ran a heavy hand across his face. She could
see the desp ation in his eyes. “I’ve made,” he said
leadenly, “what inquiries I could.” He meant there had been
talk, the chatter of men who must m; certain sounds, preserve certain
semblances. “No! You must make more!
You can’t give up, Zin. Not after…” The pain in his eyes
completed her sentence. “The Holy War assaults
the South Bank in a matter of days, Esmi He pursed his lips. He meant the issue of
Drusas Achamian had been conveniently forj ten, as all intractable and
embarrassing matters must be. How? How cc one know Drusas Achamian, wander
through his precincts, and then away, whisked like sheets across dry skin? But
they were men. Men v dry on the outside, and wet only within. They couldn’t
commingle, ‘t their life to another in the ambiguity of fluids. Not truly. “Perhaps…” she said,
wiping tears and trying hard, very hard smile. “Perhaps Proyas is-is lonely…
Perhaps he n-needs to take his with—” “No, Esmi. No.” Hot tears. She shook her
head slowly, her face slack. No… I must do something! There must be something I can do! Xinemus looked past her
to the sunny earth, as though searchin lost words. “Why won’t you stay with
Kellhus and Serwe?” he asked. So much had changed in
such a short time. Xinemus’s camp dissolved with his station. Kellhus had taken
Serwe to join Proyas,‘s thing that had dismayed her even though she understood
his reason much as Kellhus loved Akka, all men were his province now. But she’d
begged! Grovelled! She had even tried, at the pitch of shai desperation, to
seduce him, though he would have none of it. The Holy War. The Holy
War. Everything was about the fu Holy War! Lis ihe second March What about Achamian? But Kellhus couldn’t
cross Fate. He had a far greater whore to answer to… “And if Akka comes back?”
she sobbed. “What if he comes back and can’t find me?” Though everyone had left,
her tent—Akka’s tent—hadn’t moved. She lingered
in the gap where her joy had been. Now under the command of Iryssas, the
Attrempans treated her with deference and respect. The “sorcerer’s woman” they
called her… “It’s not good for you to
stay here alone,” Xinemus said. “Iryssas will march with Proyas soon, and the
Shigeki… There could be reprisals.” “I’ll manage,” she
croaked. “I’ve spent my life alone, Zin.” Xinemus pressed himself
to his feet. He held a hand to her cheek, pinched away a tear with a gentle
thumb. “Stay safe, Esmi.” “What are you going to
do?” He glanced into the
distance behind her, perhaps at the hazy ziggurats, perhaps at nothing. “Search,” he said in a
hopeless voice. “I’ll ride with you,” she
exclaimed, jumping to her feet. I’m coming, Akka! I’m coming! Xinemus strode wordlessly
to his horse, climbed into his saddle. He drew a knife from his girdle, then
tossed it high in the air. It thudded into the bare earth between her feet. “Take it,” he said. “Be
safe, Esmi.” For the first time
Esmenet noticed Dinchases and Zenkappa in the distance, also mounted, waiting
for their former lord. They waved before falling in behind him. She fell to her
seat, burst into further sobs. She buried her face in hot arms. When she looked up, they
were gone. Helplessness. If women
were hope’s oldest companions, it was due to helplessness. Certainly women
often exercised dreadful power over a single hearth, but the world between
hearths belonged to men. And it was into this world that Achamian had
disappeared: the cold darkness between firepits. All she could do was
wait… What greater anguish could there be than waiting? Nothing etched the
shape of one’s impotence with more galling Shigek meticulousness than the
blank passage of time. Moment after moment, some dull with disbelief, others
taut with voiceless shrieks. Moment after gnashing moment. Bright with the
flare of agonized questions: Where
is he? What will I do without him? Dark with the exhaustion of hope: He’s dead. I am alone. Waiting. This was what
tradition said a woman should do. To wait at the hearth’s edge.
To peer and peer and yet always be stared down. To haggle endlessly with
nothing. To think without hope of insight. To repeat words said and words
implied. To chase hints into incantations, as though by their tumbling
precision and the sheer pitch of their pain the movements of her soul might
seize the world at some deeper level, and force it to yield. As the days passed, it
seemed she’d become a still point in the ponderous wheel of events, the only
structure to remain after the floodwaters retreated. The tents and pavilions
fell like shrouds unfurled across the dead. The vast baggage trains were
loaded. Armoured men on horse chopped to and fro from the horizon, bearing
arcane missives, onerous commands. Great columns were formed up across the
pasture, and with shouts and hymns, they passed away. Like a season. And Esmenet sat alone in
the midst of their absence. She watched the breeze tease threads free of
trampled grasses. She watched bees dart like black buzzing dots across the
bruised reaches. She felt embalmed by the silence. She was held motionless by
the false peace of passing commotion. Sitting before Achamian’s tent, her back
turned to their pathetic possessions, her every surface exposed to gaping,
sun-bright spaces, she wept—called out his name as though he might lie hidden
behind some copse of black willows, whose verdant branches waved each
independent of the other, as though beneath the tug of different skies. She could almost see him,
crouched behind that shade-black trunk. Come out, Akka… They’ve all left. It’s safe now, my love… Day. Night. Esmenet would make her
own silent inquiries, an interrogation without hope of answer. She would think
much of her dead daughter, and make forbidden comparisons between that cold
world and this one. She would walk down to the Sempis and stare at its black
waters, not knowing l.v’tj inc otuuND MARCH whether she wanted to
drink or drown. She would glimpse herself in the distance, arms waving… One body, no warmth. Day. Night. Moment by
moment. Esmenet had been a whore,
and whores knew how to wait. Patience through the long succession of lusts, her
days lined up as though words on a scroll as long as life, each whispering the
same thing. It’s safe now, my love. Come out. It is safe. Since leaving Xinemus’s
camp, Cnaiur passed his days much as before, either conferring with Proyas or
discharging his requests. Skauras had wasted little time in the weeks following
his defeat on the Battleplain. He’d ceded what land he couldn’t hold, which
included the entire North Bank of the Sempis. He burned every boat he could
find to prevent any mass crossing, raised makeshift watch towers along the
entire South Bank, and gathered the remnants of his army. Fortunately for the
Shigeki and their new Inrithi warlords, he hadn’t burned the granaries or
scorched the fields and orchards as he withdrew. In Council, Saubon claimed
this was due to the heathen’s haste, which in turn was due to their terror. But
Cnaiur knew better. There had been nothing haphazard about the Kianene
evacuation of the North Bank. They knew Hinnereth would delay the Men of the
Tusk. Even at Zirkirta, where the Scylvendi had crushed the heathen eight years
before, the Kianene had recovered quickly from their initial rout. They were a
tenacious and resourceful race. Skauras had spared the
North Bank, Cnaiur knew, because he intended to reclaim it. This wasn’t a fact
Inrithi stomachs found easy to digest. Even Proyas, who’d set aside the many
conceits of his caste and had embraced Cnaьir’s tutelage, couldn’t believe the
Kianene still posed any real threat. “Are you assured of your
victory?” Cnaiur asked one night while supping with the Prince in private. “Assured?” Proyas
replied. “But of course.” “Why?” Shigek “Because my God has
willed it.” “And Skauras? Would he
not give much the same answer?” Proyas’s eyebrows jumped up, then knitted into
a frown. “But that’s not to the point, Scylvendi. How many thousands have we
killed? How much terror have we struck into their hearts?” “Too few thousands, and
far, far too little terror.” Cnaiur explained the way the memorialists recited
verses dedicated to each of the Nansur Columns, stories that described their devices,
their arms, and their mettle in battle so that when the Tribes went on
pilgrimage or to war, they could read the Nansur battle line. “This was why the
People lost at Kiyuth,” he said. “Conphas switched his Columns’ devices, told
us a false story…” “Any fool knows how to
read his opponent’s line!” Proyas spat. Cnaiur shrugged. “Then tell me,” he
said, “what story did you read on the Battleplain?” Proyas blanched. “How in
the blazes am I supposed to know? I recognized only a handful…” “I recognized all of
them,” Cnaiur asserted. “Of all the great Kianene Houses, and there are many,
only two-thirds rode against us on the Plains of Mengedda. Of those, several
were likely token contingents, depending on how many enemies Skauras entertains
among his peers. After the massacre of the Vulgar Holy War, many among the
heathen, including the Padirajah, were no doubt contemptuous of the Holy War’s
threat…” “But now…” Proyas said. “They will not repeat
their mistake. They will strike treaties with Girgash and Nilnamesh. They will
empty every barracks, saddle every horse, arm every son… Make no mistake, even
now they ride toward Shigek in their thousands. They will answer Holy War with
Jihad.” Following this exchange,
Proyas out and out capitulated to his admonishments. At the next Council, after
the other Great Names, with the exception of Conphas, scoffed at Cnaiur and his
warnings, Proyas had captives secured in cross-river raids dragged before them.
They confirmed everything Cnaiur had predicted. For over a week, the wretches
said, Grandees from as far away as Seleukara and Nenciphon had been riding out
of the southern deserts. Some names even the Norsirai seemed to recognize:
Cinganjehoi, the far-famed Sapatishah of Eumarna, Imbeyan, MARCH the Sapatishah of Enathpaneah,
even Dunjoksha, the tyrannical Sapatishah who ruled the governorate of Amoteu
from Shimeh. It was agreed. The Holy
War had to cross the River Sempis as soon as humanly possible. “To think,” Proyas
confided to him afterward, “that I thought you no more than an effective ruse
to employ against the Emperor. Now you’re our general in all but name. You
realize that?” “I have said or offered
nothing that Conphas himself could not say or offer.” Proyas laughed. “Save
trust, Scylvendi. Save trust.” Though Cnaьir grinned, these words cut him for
some reason. What did it matter, the trust of dogs and cattle? Cnaьir had been born for
war, as much as he’d been bred for it. This, and this alone, was the one
certainty of his life. So he bent himself to the problem of assaulting the
South Bank with relish and uncommon zeal. While the Great Names directed the
construction of rafts and barges in great enough numbers to convey the entire
Holy War across the Sempis, Cnaьir supervised the Conriyan effort to find the
ideal place to land. He led his war parties on night raids against the South
Bank, even bringing cartographers to map the terrain. If one thing impressed
him about the Inrithi manner of making war, it was their use of maps. He
directed the questioning of captives, and even taught several traditional
Scylvendi techniques to Proyas’s interrogators. He questioned those, such as
Earl Athjeari, who raided the South Bank to plunder and harry, about what
they’d seen. And he held council with others, like Earl Cerjulla, General Biaxi
Sompas, and Palatine Uranyanka, who shared his task. Except for Proyas’s
councils, he neither saw nor spoke to Kellhus. The Dunyain was little more than
a rumour. Cnaьir’s days were much
the same as before. But his nights… They were far different. He never pitched his tent
on the same ground. Most evenings, after sunset or after supping with Proyas
and his caste-nobles, he rode from the Conriyan camp, past the sentries and out
into the fields. He struck his own fire, listened to the night wind roar
through the trees. Sometimes, when he could see it, he stared at the Conriyan
encampment and counted fires like an idiot child. “Always number your foemen,”
his father had f Shigek once told him, “by the
glitter of their fires.” Sometimes he gazed at the stars and wondered if they
too were his enemies. Every so often, he imagined he camped across the lonely
Steppe. The Holy Steppe. He often brooded over
Serwe and Kellhus. He found himself continually rehearsing his reasons for
abandoning her to the Dunyain. He was a warrior—a Scylvendi warrior! What need
had he, man-killing Cnaьir, of a woman? But no matter how obvious
his reasons, he still couldn’t help but think of her. The globes of her
breasts. The wandering line of her hips. So perfect. How he’d burned for her,
burned the way a warrior, a man, should! She was his prize—his proof! He remembered pretending
to sleep while listening to her sob in the darkness. He remembered the remorse,
as heavy as spring snow, pressing him breathless with its cold. What a fool
he’d been! He thought of the apologies, of the desperate pleas that might
soften her hatred, that might let her see. He thought of kissing the gentle
swell of her belly. And he thought of Anissi, the first wife of his heart,
slumbering in the nickering gloom of their faraway hearth, holding tight their
daughter, Sanathi, as though sheltering her from the terror of womanhood. And
he thought of Proyas. On the worst nights he
hugged himself in the blackness of his tent, screaming and sobbing. He beat the
earth with his fists, stabbed holes with his knife, then fucked them. He cursed
the world. He cursed the heavens. He cursed Anasurimbor Moenghus and his
monstrous son. He thought, So
be it. On the best nights he
made no camp at all, but instead rode to the nearest Shigeki village, where he
would kick in doors and glory in screams. On a whim, he avoided those doors
marked with what he imagined was lamb’s blood. But when he found all the doors
so marked, he ceased to discriminate. “Murder me!” he would roar at them. “Murder meand
it stops!” Bawling men. Shrieking
girls and silent women. He would take what compensation he could. A week passed before
Cnaьir found the Holy War’s best point of purchase on the South Bank: the
shallow tidal marshes along the southern edge of the Sempis Delta. Of course
all the Great Names, with the IHt OECOND MARCH exception of Proyas and
Conphas, balked at the news, especially after their own people returned with
descriptions of the terrain. They were knights, through and through, trained
and bred to the charge, and from all accounts, no horse could do more than
thrash its way forward through the marsh. But of course that was
the point. At a Council held in
Iothiah, Proyas bid him to explain his plan to the assembled Inrithi. He
unrolled a large map of the southern Delta across the table occupied by the
Great Names. “At Mengedda,” he
declared, “you learned the Kianene were faster. This means no matter where you
assemble to cross the Sempis, Skauras will assemble first. But at Mengedda you
also learned the strength of your footmen. And more important, you taught. These marshes are shallow. A man, even a heavily
armed man, can easily walk through them, but horses must be led. As much as you
pride your mounts, the Kianene pride theirs more. They will refuse to dismount,
and they will not send their conscripts to contest you. What could conscripts
do against men who can break a Grandee’s charge? No. Skauras will yield the
entirety of the marsh…” He jabbed a chapped
finger at the map, some distance to the south of the marsh. “He will draw back here,
to the fortress of Anwurat. He will give you all this pasture to assemble. He
will cede you both ground and your horses.” “How can you be so
certain?” Gothyelk cried. Of all the Great Names, the old Earl of Agansanor
seemed the most troubled by Cnaьir’s savage heritage—with the exception of
Conphas, of course. “Because Skauras,” Cnaьir
said evenly, “is not a fool.” Gothyelk hammered a fist
down on the table. But before Proyas could intervene, the Exalt-General stood
from his seat and said, “He’s right!” Stunned, the Great Names
turned to him. Since the debacle at Hinnereth, Conphas had largely kept his
counsel. His was no longer a welcome voice. But to hear him confirm the
Scylvendi on something as daring as this… “The dog’s right, as much
as it pains me to say it.” He looked at Cnaьir with eyes that both laughed and
hated. “He’s found our purchase on the South Bank.” Shigek Cnaьir imagined cutting
his pampered throat. After this, the Scylvendi
Chieftan’s reputation was secured. He even became something of a fashion among
certain Inrithi caste-nobility, particularly the Ainoni and their wives. Proyas
had warned him this might happen. “They will be drawn to you,” he explained,
“the way old leches are drawn to young boys.” Cnaьir found himself beset with
invitations and propositions. One woman, through sheer perseverance, even found
him at his camp. He stopped short of strangling her. As the far-flung Holy War
began gathering near Iothiah, Cnaьir troubled himself with thoughts of Skauras,
much the way he’d once troubled himself with thoughts of Conphas before the
Battle of Kiyuth. The man was obviously fearless. The story of him standing
alone paring his nails while Saubon’s Agmundrmen archers feathered the
surrounding turf had become something of a legend. And from his interrogations
of Kianene captives Cnaьir had learned other details: that he was a severe
disciplinarian, that he possessed a gift for organization, and that he
commanded the respect of even those who otherwise outranked him, such as the
Padirajah’s son, Fanayal, or his famed son-in-law, Imbeyan. Cnaьir had also,
quite inadvertently, learned much from Conphas, who occasionally recollected
incidents from his youth as a hostage of the Sapatishah. If his stories could
be believed, Skauras was an exceedingly canny and strangely mischievous man. Of all these
characteristics, it was this latter, mischievousness, that struck Cnaьir the
most. Apparently Skauras liked to drug his unwitting guest’s wine with a
variety of Ainoni and Nilnameshi narcotics—even with chanv on occasion. “All
those who drink with me,” Conphas once quoted him as claiming, “drink with
themselves as well.” When Cnaьir had first heard this story, he’d thought it
simply more proof of the way luxury drowned manly sense. But now he wasn’t so
sure. The point of the narcotics, Cnaьir realized, was to make his guests other to themselves, strangers with whom they could tip
bowls. Which meant the wily
Sapatishah not only liked to trick and deceive, he liked to show, to prove… For Skauras, the imminent
battle would be more than a contest, it would be a demonstration. The man had
underestimated the Inrithi at Mengedda, seeing only his strengths and his
opponent’s weaknesses, _^^ьic uccUBU 1V1AKCH much as Xunnurit had
underestimated Conphas at Kiyuth. He wouldn’t try to overpower the Men of the
Tusk; he was not a man to repeat his mistakes. Rather, he would try to outwit
them, to show them fools… So what would the wily
old warrior do? Cnaiur shared his
apprehensions with Proyas. “You must be sure,” he
told the Prince, “that the Scarlet Spires remains with the host at all points.” Proyas had pressed a hand
to his forehead. “Eleazaras will resist,” he said wearily. “He’s already said
he will follow only after the Holy War has crossed.
Apparently his spies have told him the Cishaurim remain in Shimeh…” Cnaiur scowled and spat.
“Then we have the advantage!” “The Scarlet Spires, I fear, conserve
themselves for the Cishaurim.” “They must accompany us,” Cnaiur insisted,
“even if they remain hidden. There must be something you can offer.” The Prince smiled
mirthlessly. “Or someone,” he said with uncommon grief. At least once daily,
Cnaiur rode to the river to view the preparations. The floodplains surrounding
Iothiah had been denuded of trees, as had the banks of the Sempis, where
thousands of barebacked Inrithi toiled over felled trunks, hacking, pounding,
binding. He could ride for miles, breathing deep the smell of sweat, pitch, and
hewn wood, before glimpsing the end of them. Hundreds hailed him as he passed,
saluting him with cries of “Scylvendi!”—as though his ancestry had become his
fame and title. Cnaiur need only peer
across the Sempis to know that Skauras awaited them on the far bank. As tiny as
mites in the distance, Fanim horsemen continuously patrolled the
shoreline—entire divisions of them. Sometimes he heard their thousand-throated
jeers across the water, sometimes the throb of their drums. As a precaution,
squadrons of Imperial war galleys were stationed in the river. The Holy War began
embarking long before dawn. Hundreds of crude barges and thousands of rafts
were first poled then paddled into the Sempis. By the time the morning sun
enamelled the waters much of the vast flotilla was underway, packed with
anxious men and horses. Shigek Cnaiur crossed with
Proyas and his immediate entourage. Xinemus was absent, which Cnaiur thought
strange, until he realized that the Marshal had his own men to watch over. But
of course Kellhus was in attendance, and the Prince stood at his side for some
time. They traded avid words, and periodically Proyas laughed with an
uneasiness that tickled to hear. Cnaiur had watched the
Dunyain’s influence grow. He’d watched as he gradually bridled all those about
Xinemus’s fire, working their hearts the way saddle makers worked leather,
tanning, gouging, shaping. He’d watched as he lured more and more Men of the
Tusk with the grain of his deceit. He’d watched him yoke thousands—thousands!—with simple words and bottomless looks. He’d watched
him minister to Serwe… He’d watched until he could bear watching no more.
Cnaiur had always known Kellhus’s capabilities, had always known the Holy War
would yield to him. But knowing and witnessing were two different things. He
cared nothing for the Inrithi. And yet, watching Kellhus’s lies spread like
cancer across an old woman’s skin, he found himself fearing for them—fearing, even as he scorned them! How they
fell over themselves, fawning, wheedling, grovelling. How they degraded
themselves, youthful fools and inveterate warriors alike. Imploring looks and
beseeching expressions. Oh, Kellhus… Oh, Kellhus … Staggering drunks! Unmanly ingrates! How easily they surrendered. And none more so than
Serwe. To watch her succumb, again and again. To see his hand drift deep
between Dunyain thighs… Fickle, treacherous,
whorish bitch! How many times must he strike her? How many times must he take
her? How many times must he stare, dumbfounded by her beauty? Cnaiur sat cross-legged
on the prow, watching the far embankment, probing the shadows beneath the
trees. He could see clots of horsemen, what seemed thousands of them, tracking
their slow drift down river. The air was dank. Nervous
voices rang across the waters: Inrithi calling to each other between crafts,
jokes mostly. Cnaiur saw far too many bare asses. “Look at the assholes!”
some wit cried out, watching the Kianene crowding the opposite bank. “I resent that!” someone
bawled from a nearby raft. “What are you? Heathen?” “Nay, I’m an asshole!” For a time, it seemed the
Sempis itself thundered with laughter. But the mood turned when one fool
stumbled into the river. Cnaiur actually saw it happen. The man hit the water
face first, and thanks to his armour, simply continued dropping until obscured
by the reflections of his horrified comrades. Jeers and catcalls thundered from
the southern shore. Proyas cursed, and soundly upbraided all those floating
within earshot. Afterward, the Prince
left Kellhus and jostled his way to Cnaiur on the prow, his eyes shining in
that peculiar way—the way they always shone after he spoke with Kellhus. The
way, in fact, everyone’s eyes shone, as though they just had awakened from a
nightmare and found their families intact. But there was more to his
manner, a too-forward camaraderie that spoke of dread. “You avoid Kellhus like
the plague, you know that?” Cnaiur snorted. Proyas watched him, his
smile fading. “Such things are difficult,” he said. His eyes darted from Cnaiur
to the heathen streaming and massing along the southern shore. “What things are
difficult?” Cnaiur asked. Proyas grimaced,
scratched the back of his head. “Kellhus told me…” “Told you what?” “About Serwe.” Cnaiur nodded, spat into
the water rolling beneath the prow. Of course the Dunyain had told him. What
better way to explain their estrangement? What better way to explain the
estrangement between any men? A woman. Serwe… His prize. His
proof. The perfect explanation.
Simple. Plausible. Certain to discourage further questions… The Dunyain explanation. A moment of silence
passed, awkward with misgivings and small misapprehensions. “Tell me, Cnaiur,” Proyas
finally said. “What do the Scylvendi believe? What are their Laws?” “What do I believe?” Shigek “Yes… Of course.” “I believe your ancestors
killed my God. I believe your race bears the blood-guilt of that crime.” His voice didn’t quaver.
His expression didn’t break. But as always, he could hear the
infernal chorus. “So you worship
vengeance…” “I worship vengeance.” “And that’s why the
Scylvendi call themselves the People of War.” “Yes. To war is to
avenge.” The proper answer. So why
the throng of questions? “To take back what has
been taken,” Proyas said, his eyes at once troubled and bright. “Like our Holy
War for Shimeh.” “No,” Cnaiur replied. “To
murder the taker.” Proyas shot him an
alarmed look, then glanced away. With an air of admission that Cnaiur found
effeminate, he said, “I like you much better, Scylvendi, when I forget who you
are.” But Cnaiur had turned
away, searching the southern banks for sight of more men who would kill him, if
they could. What Proyas remembered or forgot mattered nothing to him. He was
what he was. I am of the People! In a long drifting
column, the Inrithi flotilla entered the first of the Delta channels. Cnaiur couldn’t
help but wonder what Skauras would think when his watchers reported they’d lost
sight of the Holy War. Had he anticipated this? Or had he simply feared it?
Even now the Emperor’s warships would be taking positions along the
southernmost navigable channels. The Sapatishah would know soon enough where
the Holy War intended to land. As it happened, they were
harassed only by mosquitoes. The morning, then the afternoon, took on the
strange character of lulls before imminent battle. It was always the same. For
some reason, the air would become leaden, the moments would drop like stones,
and a restless boredom unlike any other would weigh and weigh, making necks
stiff and heads ache. Every man, no matter how terrified on the morn, would
find himself yearning for the battle, as though the
violence of its promise burdened far more than the violence of its
consummation. Night passed in discomfort and the delirium of almost sleep. They reached the salt
marshes around noon the following day: a deep-green sea of reeds reaching to
either horizon. Suddenly the torpor lifted, and Cnaiur felt a sudden frenzy
akin to that of the charge. He waded with the others through the morass,
dragging the barge as far forward as possible, hacking with his sword at the
towering papyrus. Soon he found himself one of thousands stamping forward,
levelling the reeds into a vast swampy plain. Eventually inroads were cut to
the hard ground of the South Bank. With Proyas, Kellhus, Ingiaban, and a party
of knights, Cnaiur slogged forward to see what awaited them. As always the
Dunyain’s presence made his heart itch, like the threat of a blow from unseen
quarters. To the east they glimpsed
the distant breakers of the Meneanor. Before them, to the south, the land
climbed in stony heaps, becoming a mass of iron-coloured hills. To the west
they saw a broad swath of pasture, creased like a brooding man’s forehead,
darkened by distant orchards. On a lone hill, barely distinguishable for the
haze, they could see the squat ramparts of Anwurat. Small bands of horsemen
trotted across the intervening distance, but nothing more. Skauras had yielded the
South Bank. As Cnaiur had predicted. Proyas fairly howled in celebration. “What
fools!” Ingiaban cried. “What fools!” Ignoring the torrent of
acclamation, Cnaiur glanced at Kellhus, wasn’t surprised to see him watching,
studying. Cnaiur spat and looked away, knowing full well what the Dunyain had
seen. It was too easy. The Holy War spent the
entire afternoon stumping out from the swamp. Most pitched their tents in the
failing light of dusk. Cnaiur heard the Inrithi sing, scoffed as he always
scoffed. He watched them kneel in prayer, congregate around their priests and
idols. He listened to them laugh and cavort, and he wondered that their
merriment could sound genuine rather than forced, as it should on the eve
before battle. War for them wasn’t holy. War for them was a means, not an end.
A track to their destination. Shimeh. But the darkness snuffed
their celebratory mood. To the south and to the west the entire horizon
twinkled with lights, like embers kicked Shigek across folds of blue
wool. Camp fires, innumerable thousands of them, tended by the leather-hearted
warriors of Kian. The beat of drums rolled down the hillsides. At the Council of Great
and Lesser Names, the Men of the Tusk, dazzled by the bloodless success of
their landing, acclaimed Cnaiur their King-of-Tribes—what they called their
Battlemaster. Followed by his generals and lesser officers, Ikurei Conphas
stormed from the Council in a fury. Cnaiur wordlessly accepted, too conflicted
to feel either pride or embarrassment. Slaves were given the task of stitching
his own battlefield standard, something the Inrithi held sacred. Afterward, Cnaiur found
Proyas standing alone in the darkness, staring at the countless heathen fires. “So many,” the Prince
said softly. “Eh, Battlemaster?” Proyas hitched his lips
into a smile, but Cnaiur could see him wring his hands in the moonlight. The
barbarian was struck by how young the man looked, how frail… For the first
time, it seemed, Cnaiur understood the catastrophic dimensions of what would
soon happen. Nations, faiths, and races. Where did this young man,
this boy, belong in all of this? How would he fare? , He could be my son. : “I shall overcome them,” Cnaiur said. But aftetward, as he
walked toward his solitary camp on the windy shores of the Meneanor, he fumed
over these words. Who was he to give assurances to an Inrithi prince? What did
it matter to him who died and who lived? What did it matter so long as he was
party to the killing? I am of the People! Cnaiur urs Skiotha, the
most violent of all men. Later that night, he
squatted before the churning surf and washed his broadsword in the sea,
thinking of how he’d once crouched on the misty shores of the faraway Jorua Sea
with his father, doing much the same. He listened to the thunder of distant
breakers, to the hiss of water washing through sand and gravel. He looked
across the Meneanor’s shining reaches and pondered its tracklessness. A
different kind of steppe. What was it his father
had said of the sea? Afterward, as he sat
sharpening his blade for the morrow’s worship, Kellhus stepped soundlessly from
the blackness. The wind twisted his hair into flaxen tails. Cnaьir grinned wolfishly.
For some reason he wasn’t surprised. “What brings you here, Dunyain?” Kellhus studied his face
by firelight, and for the first time Cnaьir didn’t care. know you lie. “Do you think the Holy
War will prevail?” Kellhus asked. “The great prophet,”
Cnaьir snorted. “Have others come to you with that same question?” “They have,” Kellhus
replied. Cnaьir spat into the
fire. “How fares my prize?” “Serwe is well… Why do
you avoid my question?” Cnaьir sneered, turned
back to his blade. “Why do you ask questions when you know the answer?” Kellhus said nothing, but
stood like something otherworldly against the darkness. The wind whipped smoke
about him. The sea thundered and hissed. “You think something has
broken within me,” Cnaьir continued, drawing out his whetstone to the stars.
“But you are wrong… You think I have become more erratic, more unpredictable,
and therefore more a threat to your mission…” He turned from his
broadsword and matched the Dunyain’s bottomless gaze. “But you are wrong.” Kellhus nodded, and
Cnaьir cared not at all. “When this battle comes,”
the Dunyain said, “you must instruct me… You must teach me War.” “I would sooner cut my
throat.” A gust assailed his fire,
blowing sparks over the strand. It felt good, like a woman’s fingers through
his hair. “I’ll give you Serwe,”
Kellhus said. The sword fell with a
clang to Cnaьir’s feet. For an instant, it seemed he gagged on ice. “Why,” he spat
contemptuously, “would I want your pregnant whore?” Shigek “She’s your prize,”
Kellhus said. “She bears your child.” Why did he long for her
so? She was a vain, shallow-witted waif— nothing more! Cnaьir had seen the way
Kellhus used her, the way he dressed her. He’d heard the words he bid her
speak. No tool was too small for a Dunyain, no word too plain, no blink too
brief. He’d utilized the chisel of her beauty, the hammer of her peach… Cnaьir
had seen this! So how could he
contemplate… All I have is war! The Meneanor crashed and
surged across the beaches. The wind smelled of brine. Cnaьir stared at the
Dunyain for what seemed a thousand heartbeats. Then at last he nodded, even
though he knew he relinquished the last remnant of his hold on the abomination.
After this he would have nothing but the word of a Dunyain… He would have nothing. But when he closed his
eyes he saw her, felt her soft and supple, crushed beneath his frame. She was
his prize! His proof! Tomorrow, after worship… He would take what
compensation he could. Fourteen Anwurat It is the difference in knowledge that
commands respect. This is why the true test of every student lies in the
humiliation of his master. —GOTAGGA, THE PRIMA ARCANATA The children here play with bones instead
of sticks, and whenever I see them, 1 cannot but wonder whether the humeri they
brandish are faithful or heathen. Heathen, I should think, for the bones
seem bent. —ANONYMOUS, LETTER FROM
ANWURAT Late Summer, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk,
Shigek Reviewing the latest
intelligence reports, Ikurei Conphas let Martemus stand unacknowledged for
several moments. The canvas walls of his command pavilion had been rolled up
and bound to facilitate traffic. Officers, messengers, secretaries, and scribes
shuttled back and forth between the lamp-illumined interior and the surrounding
darkness of the Nansur encampment. Men called out and muttered in deliberation,
their faces almost uniformly blank, their eyes slack with the wary expectancy
of battle. They were Nansur, and no people had lost more sons to the Fanim.
Such a battle! And he—he! the Lion of Kiyuth!—would be little more than a
subaltern… No matter, it would be
salt for the honey, as the Ainoni were fond of saying. The bitterness that made
vengeance sweet. “When dawn breaks and the
Scylvendi dog leads us into battle,” Conphas said, still studying the documents
fanned across the table before him, “I’ve decided that you, Martemus, will be
my representative.” “Do you have any specific instructions?” the
General asked stiffly. Conphas looked up, appraised the hard-jawed man for
several condescending moments. Why had he allowed him to keep his blue
general’s cloak? He should have sold the fool to the slavers. “You think I give you
this charge because I trust you to the degree I distrust the Scylvendi… But
you’re wrong. As much as I despise the savage, as much as I intend to see him
dead, I do in fact trust him in matters of war…” And well he should, Conphas
mused. As strange as it seemed, the barbarian had been his student for quite
some time. Since the Battle of Kiyuth, if not longer… No wonder they called
Fate a whore. * “But you, Martemus,”
Conphas continued. “You I scarcely trust at all.” “Then why give me such an assignment?” No protestations of
innocence, no hurt looks or clenched fists… Only stoic curiosity. For all his
failings, Conphas realized, Martemus remained a remarkable man. It would be
such a waste. “Because you’ve
unfinished business.” Conphas handed several sheets to his secretary, then
looked down as though to study the next sheaf of parchment. “I’ve just been
told the Prince of Atrithau accompanies the Scylvendi.” He graced the General
with a dazzling smile. Martemus said nothing for a stone-faced moment. “But I
told you… He’s… he’s…” “Please,” Conphas
snapped. “How long has it been since you’ve drawn your sword, hmm? If I doubt
your loyalty, I laugh at your prowess… No. You’ll only observe.” “Then who—” But Conphas had already
waved the three men forward: the assassins dispatched by his uncle. The two,
who were obviously Nansur, weren’t all that imposing, perhaps—but the third,
the black-skinned Zeumi, drew nervous glances from even the most distracted of
Conphas’s officers. He towered a full head above the surrounding mob,
bull-chested and yellow-eyed. He wore
the red-striped tunic and iron-scale harness of an imperial auxiliary, though a
great tulwar hung across his back. A Zeumi sword-dancer. The
Emperor had been generous indeed. “These men,” Conphas
said, staring hard at the General, “will do the work…” He leaned forward,
lowering his voice so as not to be overheard. “But you, Martemus, you’ll be the one who brings me
Anasurimbor Kellhus’s head.” Was that horror he saw in
the man’s eyes.? Or was it hope? Conphas fell back into his chair. “You can use
your cloak as a sack.” The long howl of Inrithi
horns pierced the predawn gloom, and the Men of the Tusk arose certain of their
triumph. They stood on the South Bank. They had met their enemy before and had
crushed him. They would enter battle with all of their assembled might. And
most importantly, the God himself walked among them—they could see
Him in thousands of I bright eyes. Spears and lances had become, it seemed to
them, markers| of the Tusk. The air was rifled by the
commanding cries of thanes, barons, and their majordomos. Men hastened into
their gear. Horsemen streamed between the tents. Armoured men knelt in circles,
praying. Wine was passed, bread hastily broken and devoured. Bands of men
drifted to their places in the line, some singing, some watchful. Small groups
of wives and prostitutes waved hands and coloured scarfs at passing troops of
mounted warriors. Priests intoned the most profound benedictions. By the time the sun
gilded the Meneanor, the Inrithi had assembled in rank after glorious rank
across the fields. Several hundred paces away an immense arc of silvered
armour, brilliant coats, and stamping horses awaited them. From the southern
heights to the dark Sempis, the Fanim encompassed the horizon. Great divisions
of horsemen trotted across the northern pastures. Arms flashed from the walls
and turrets of Anwurat. Deep formations of spearmen darkened the shallow
embankments to the south. More horsemen massed across the southern hilltops,
following the heights to the sea. Every distance, it seemed, bristled with
heathen. The Inrithi line seethed
with the habits and hatreds of its constituent nations. The unruly Galeoth,
hurling insults and jeering reminders of Anwurat earlier slaughter. The
magnificent knights of Conriya, hollering curses through silvered war masks.
The glaring Thunyeri, swearing oaths of blood to their shield-brothers. The
disciplined Nansur, standing immobile, keen to the calls of their officers. The
Shrial Knights, eyeing the skies, their lips tight with fervent prayer. The
haughty Ainoni, anxious and impassive behind the white cosmetics of war. The
black-armoured ranks of Tydonni, taking sullen measure of the mongrels they
were about to kill. A hundred hundred banners
fluttered in the morning wind. What was this trade he
had made? War for a woman… With Kellhus at his side,
Cnaьir led a small army of officers, observers, and field messengers up turf
and gravel ramps to the summit of a small hillock dominating the central
pastures. Proyas had provided him slaves, and they hastened to prepare his
command, unloading trestles from the wains, pitching canopies, and laying mats
upon the ground. They raised his ad hoc standard: two bolts of white silk, each
banded with lateral stripes of red and flanked by horsetails that swished in
the sea-borne breeze. The Inrithi were already
calling it the “Swazond Standard.” The mark of their Battlemaster. Cnaьir rode to the
summit’s edge and stared in wonder. Beneath him, sweeping out
in either direction, the Holy War darkened the woollen distances: great squares
and mobs of infantrymen, files and lines of burnished knights. Facing them, the
heathen ranks scrawled along the hills and opposing fields, twinkling in the
morning sun. Just small enough to obscure with two fingers, the fortress of
Anwurat reared in the near distance, its walls and parapets adorned with long
saffron banners. The air thrummed with the
din of innumerable shouts. The faint peal of faraway battlehorns was
overpowered by the strident blare of those more near. Cnaьir breathed deep,
smelled sea, desert, and dank river— nothing of the absurd spectacle before
him. If he closed his eyes and covered his ears, he thought, he could pretend
he was alone… I am of the Land! MARCH He dismounted,
contemptuously thrust his reins to the Dunyain. Staring across the plains, he
searched for weaknesses in the Inrithi disposition. Beyond a mile, their
standards became little more than snags in the tatting of their ranks, so he
could only assume the farther Great Names had arrayed their formations as
discussed. The Ainoni especially, on the extreme south, looked little more than
dark fields aligned along the lower slopes of the coastal hills. He pinched his eyes,
stiffened in sudden awareness of Kellhus at his side. The man wore a white
samite robe, cinched into a tail in the Conriyan style, which is to say at the
small of his back, so that his waist and legs remained unencumbered. Beneath he
sported a corselet of Kianene manufacture—probably looted from the
Battleplain—and the pleated kilt of a Conriyan knight. His battlecap was
Nansur, open faced, without so much as a nose bar. As always, the long pommel
of his sword jutted above his left shoulder. Two crude-looking knives, their
hilts worked with Thunyeri animal devices, had been thrust into his leather
girdle. On the right breast of his robe, someone had embroidered the Red Tusk
of the Holy War. Cnaьir’s skin prickled at
the nearness of him. What was this trade he had made? Never had Cnaьir suffered
a night like the night previous. Why? he’d screamed at the Meneanor. Why had he
agreed to teach the Dunyain war? War! For Serwe? For a bauble found on the
Steppe? For nothing? He’d traded many things
over the past months. Honour for the promise of vengeance. Leather for
effeminate silks. His yaksh for a prince’s pavilion. The Utemot in their
unwashed hundreds, for the Inrithi in their hundreds of thousands… Battlemaster… King’of-Tribes! Part of him reeled in
drunken exultation at the thought. Such a host! From the river to the hills, a
distance of almost seven miles, and still the ranks ran deep! The People could
never assemble such a horde, not if they emptied every yaksh, saddled every
boy. And here he, Cnaьir urs Skiotha,
breaker-of’horses-and-men, commanded. Outland princes, earls and palatines,
thanes and barons in their thousands, even an Exalt-General answered to him! Ikurei Conphas, the hated author of Kiyuth! Anwurat What would the People
think? Would they call this glory? Or would they spit and curse his name, give
him to the torments of the aged and infirm? But wasn’t all war, all
battle, holy? Wasn’t victory the mark of the righteous? If he crushed the
Fanim, ground them beneath the heel of his boot, what would the People think of
his trade then? Would they finally say, “This man, this many-blooded man, is
truly of the land”? Or would they whisper as
they always whispered? Would they laugh as they always laughed? “Yours is the name of our shame!” What if he made a gift of
the Inrithi? What if he delivered them to destruction? What if he rode home
with Ikurei Conphas’s head in a sack? “Scylvendi,” Moenghus said from his side.
That voice! Cnaьir looked to Kellhus,
blinking. Skauras! the Dunyain’s look shouted. Skauras is our foe here! Cnaьir turned to the expectant
Inrithi behind him. He could hear them muttering. With the exception of Proyas,
each of the Great Names had sent representatives—to keep watch as much as to
dispense advice, Cnaьir imagined. He recognized many of them from the Councils
of the Great and Lesser Names: Thane Ganrikka, General Martemus, Baron
Mimaripal, others. For some reason, a great hollow opened in his belly… I must concentrate! Skauras is the foe here! He spat across the dusty
grass. Everything was at the ready. The Inrithi had assembled with a swiftness
and exactitude that heartened. Skauras had deployed precisely as Cnaьir had
expected. There was nothing more to be done, yet… More time! I need more time! But he had no time. War
had come, and he’d agreed to yield its secrets in exchange for Serwe. He’d
agreed to surrender the last shred of leverage he possessed. After this he
would have nothing to secure his vengeance. Nothing! After this, there would be
no reason for Kellhus to keep him alive. I’m a threat to him. The only man who knows his secret… So what was she, that he’d doom himself for her? What
was she, that he would trade war? me otLUND 1V1ARCH Something is wrong with me… Something-No!
Nothing! Nothing!.j “Signal the general advance,”
he barked, turning back to the field. A; chorus of excited voices erupted
behind him. Horns soon clawed at the sky. ‘t Kellhus fixed him with shining, empty eyes. But Cnaьir had already
looked away, back to the sweep of the west and to the great lines and squares
of the Holy War sprawled across it. Long rows of armoured horsemen were
beginning to trot forward, followed by deeper ranks of footmen, walking with
the speed with which one might greet a friend. Perhaps half a mile distant, the
Fanim awaited them across the depths and the heights, holding tight their
stamping thoroughbreds, hunching behind shield and spear. The pounding of their
drums rumbled down from the hills. The Dunyain loomed in his
periphery, as sharp as a mortal rebuke. What was this trade he had made? A
woman for war. Something is
wrong… Behind him, the Inrithi lords
began singing. Along the entirety of the
line, the Inrithi knights quickly outpaced the men-at-arms. Hares darted from
copses, raced across the parched turf. Shod hooves made hash of desiccated
weeds. Soon the Men of the Tusk sailed across the uneven pasture, trailing
immense skirts of dust. The sky was darkened by heathen arrows. Horses
shrieked, tumbled. Armoured men rolled across the turf and were trampled by
their kin. But the Men of J the Tusk combed the fields with thundering hooves.
Bobbing lance tips | sketched circles around the nearing wall of heathen, who
barbed the distance like a hedge of silvered thorns. Hatred clamped tooth to
tooth. War shouts became howls of ecstasy. Heart and limb hummed with rapture.
Could anything be so clear, so pure? Outstretched like great, fluid arms the
holy warriors embraced their enemy. The sermon was simple. Break. Die. Anwurat Serwe was utterly alone.
She’d avoided the company of the priests and other women who’d gathered in
prayer at various points throughout the encampment. She’d already prayed to her
God. She’d kissed him, and had wept as he’d ridden off to join the Scylvendi. She sat before their
firepit, boiling water for the tea prescribed by Proyas’s physician-priest. Her
tanned arms and shoulders burned in the rising sun. There was sand beneath the
thin grass, and she could feel its grit chafe the soft skin behind her knees.
The pavilion billowed and snapped like a ship’s sail in the wind—a strange
song, with random crescendo and meaningless pause. She wasn’t afraid, but she
was afflicted by competing confusions. Why must he risk himself? The loss of Achamian had
filled her with pity for Esmenet and with fear for herself. Until his
disappearance it hadn’t seemed she lived in the midst of a war. It had been
more like a pilgrimage—not one where the faithful travel to visit something
sacred, but rather one where people travel to deliver something holy. To deliver
Kellhus. But if Achamian, a great sorcerer, could vanish, become a casualty, might not Kellhus vanish
also? But this thought didn’t
so much frighten her—the possibility was too unthinkable—as it confused her.
One cannot fear for a God, but one can be baffled over whether one should. Gods could die. The
Scylvendi worshipped a dead god. Does Kellhus
fear? That too, was unimaginable. She thought she heard
something—a shadow—behind her, but her water had begun to boil. She stood to
retrieve the crude kettle with clumsy sticks. How she missed Xinemus’s slaves!
She managed to set it on the turf without burning herself—a minor miracle. She
stood, sighing and rubbing her lower back, when a warm hand reached around her
and clutched her growing belly. Kellhus! Smiling, she half-turned,
pressed her cheek to his chest and hooked a hand about his neck. “What are you doing?” she
laughed—and frowned. He seemed shorter. Did he stand in a hole? ihe second March “Warring is hungry
business, Serwe. Certain appetites must be attended.” Serwe blushed and
wondered yet again that he had chosen her—her! I
bear his child. “Now?” she murmured.
“What of the battle? Don’t you worry?” His eyes laughing, he
drew her toward the entrance of their pavilion. “I worry for you.” His Inrithi retinue
chattered and cheered behind him. Different voices cried, “Look! Look!” Everywhere Cnaьir turned,
he saw glory and horror. To his right, waves of Galeoth and Tydonni galloped
across the northern pastures into masses of Kianene horsemen. Before him, thousands
of Conriyan knights raced beneath the peril of Anwurat’s heights. To his
immediate left, the Thunyeri, and beyond them, the Nansur Columns, marched
inexorably westward. Only the extreme south, obscured by curtains of dust,
remained inscrutable. His heart quickened. His
breath sharpened. Too fast!
Everything happenstoo fast! Saubon and Gothyelk
scattered the Fanim, pursued them hard through swirling grit. Proyas, flanked by
hundreds of mail-armoured knights, crashed into the bristling ranks of an immense
Shigeki phalanx. His footmen had charged into his wake, and now thronged about
Anwurat’s southern bastions, bearing mantlets and great iron-headed ladders.
Archers raked the parapets in volleys, while trains of men and oxen dragged
assorted siege engines into position. Skaiyelt and Conphas
advanced across the pasture to the south, holding their horses in reserve. A
series of earthen embankments, shallow but too sharp for charging horses,
stepped the fields before them. As Cnaьir had guessed, the Sapatishah had
massed his Shigeki conscripts along them. The position might have rendered
Skauras’s entire centre immune to attack had not Cnaьir ordered several hundred
rafts dragged from the marshes and dispersed among the Thunyeri and Nansur.
Even now, in a hail of spears and javelins, the Nansur were raising the first
of them as improvised ramps. Anwurat General Setpanares and
his tens of thousands of Ainoni knights remained hidden. Cnaьir could see the
rearmost infantry phalanxes— they were little more than the shadows of squares
at this distance—but nothing more. Already the dogs gnaw at my gut! He glanced at Kellhus.
“Since Skauras has secured his flanks using the land,” he explained, “this
battle will be one of yetrut, penetration, not one of unswaza, envelopment. Hosts, like men, prefer to face their
enemy. Circumvent or break their lines, assault them from the flank or the
rear…” He let his voice trail.
The wind had thinned the dust to near transparency across the southern hills.
Peering, he could see threads of what must be Ainoni knights withdrawing all
along their two-mile section of line. They seemed to be reforming on the
slopes. Behind them, the many bars and squares of Ainoni infantry had stalled. The Kianene still held
the heights. I should have given the Ainoni the centre! Who has
Skauras positioned there? Imbeyan? Swarjuka? “And this,” Kellhus
asked, “is how you crush your foe?” “What?” “By assaulting their
flank or rear…” Cnaьir shook his black
mane. “No. This is how you convince your foe.” “Convince?” Cnaьir snorted. “This war,” he snapped in Scylvendi, “is simply your war made honest.“ Kellhus acknowledged
nothing. “Belief… You’re saying battle is a disputation of belief… An
argument.” Cnaьir squinted, peered
once more toward the south. “The memorialists call
battle otgai wutmaga, a great quarrel. Both hosts take
the field believing they are the victors. One host must be disabused of that
belief. Attacking his flank or his rear, overawing him, bewildering him,
shocking him, killing him: these are all arguments, meant to convince your foe
he is defeated. He who believes he is defeated is defeated.” “So in battle,” Kellhus
said, “conviction makes true.” “As I said, it is
honest.” Ihe Second March Skauras! 1 must concentrate upon Skauras! Overcome by a sudden
restlessness, Cnaьir tugged at his mail harness as though plagued by a pinch.
Barking several brief commands, he dispatched a rider to General Setpanares. He
needed to know who’d beaten the Ainoni back from the hilltops—though by the
time the man returned, Cnaьir knew, the battle would likely be decided. Then he
ordered the Hornsman to remind the General to secure his flanks. Out of
expediency, they’d adopted the Nansur mode of communication, with batteries of
trumpeters stationed about the field, relaying coded numbers that corresponded
to a handful of different warnings and commands. Though the Ainoni General
struck him as solid, his King-Regent, Chepheramunni, was a rank fool. And the Ainoni were a
vain and effeminate race—something Skauras wouldn’t overlook. Cnaьir glanced at the
Nansur and the Thunyeri. The farther Columns, those adjacent to the Ainoni,
appeared to be storming up their ramps already. Closer, where he could actually
distinguish individual men, the first of the rafts were slamming into place.
Wherever they fell, several Shigeki vanished—crushed. The first of the Thunyeri
charged forward, howling… Meanwhile Proyas and his
stalwarts waded through disintegrating ranks of Shigeki. Sunlight flashed from
their threshing swords. But farther west, beyond the mud-brick village and dark
orchards to the immediate rear of the Shigeki, Cnaьir could see distant lines
of approaching horsemen: Skauras’s reserves, he imagined. He couldn’t discern
any of their devices through the haze, but their numbers looked worrisome… He
dispatched a messenger to warn the Conriyans. Everything goes to plan… Cnaьir had known the Shigeki
flanking Anwurat would collapse before the fury of Proyas’s charge. And
Skauras, he assumed, had also known: the question was one of whom the Sapatishah would send into the breach… Probably Imbeyan. Then he glanced to the
north, to the open fields, where the Fanim horsemen had fallen back before
Gothyelk and Saubon, taking high-walled Anwurat as their implacable hinge. “See
how Skauras frustrates Saubon/” he said. Anwurat Kellhus searched the
pastures and nodded. “He doesn’t contest so much as delay.” “He concedes the north.
The Galeoth and Tydonni knights possess the advantage of gaiwut, of shock. But the Kianene possess the advantages of utmurzu, cohesion, and fira, speed. Though the Fanim cannot withstand the Inrithi
charge, they are quick enough and cohesive enough to execute the malk unswaza, the defensive envelopment.” Even as he said this, he
saw streamers of hard-riding Kianene sluice around the Northmen. Kellhus nodded, his eyes
fixed on the distant drama. “When the attacker over-commits on the charge, he
risks exposing his flanks.” “Which the Inrithi
usually do. Only their superior angotma, heart, saves them.” Inrithi knights stood
their ground, suddenly beset on all sides. Some distance away, the Galeoth and
Tydonni infantry continued to trudge forward. “Their conviction,”
Kellhus said. Cnaьir nodded. “When the
memorialists counsel the Chieftains before battle, they bid them recall that in
conflict all men are bound to one another, some by chains, some by ropes, and
some by strings, all of different lengths. They call these bindings the mayutafiuri, the ligaments of war. These are just ways of
describing the strength and flexibility of a formation’s angotma. Those Kianene the People would call trutu garothut, men of the long chain. They can be thrown apart, but
they will pull themselves together. The Galeoth and Tydonni we would call trutu hirothut, men of the short chain. Left alone, such men would
battle and battle. Only disaster or utgirkoy,
attrition, can break the chains of such men.” As they watched, the
Fanim scattered before the long swords of the Norsirai knights, drawing back to
reform even farther to the west. “The leader,” Cnaьir
continued, “must continually appraise and reappraise the string, rope, and
chain of his enemy and his men.” “So the north doesn’t worry you.” “No…” Cnaьir whirled southward,
struck by an inexplicable apprehension of doom. The Ainoni knights appeared to
have retired for some reason, though too much dust still obscured the heights
to be certain. The infantry had resumed
their climb, all along the line. He dispatched messengers to Conphas, bidding
him to send his Kidruhil to the Ainoni rear. He ordered the Hornsman to signal
Gotian… “There,” he said to
Kellhus. “Do you see the Ainoni infantry advance?” “Yes… Certain formations seem to drift… to
the right.” “Without knowing, men will lean into the
shield of the man to their right, seeking protection. When the Fanim charge to
meet them, they will concentrate on those units, watch…” “Because they betray
weaknesses in discipline.” “Yes, depending on who
leads. If Conphas were directing them, I would say they drift right
purposefully, to draw the Kianene away from his less experienced formations.” “Deception.” Cnaьir clutched his
iron-plated girdle tight. A tremor had passed through his hands. Everything goes to plan! “Know what your enemy
knows,” he said, hiding his face in the distance. “The ligaments must be
defended as fiercely as they are attacked. Use knowledge of your enemy,
deception, terrain, even harangues or examples of valour to guard and guard
vigorously. Tolerate no disbelief. Fortify your host against it, and punish all
instances with torture and death.” What’s Setpanares doing? “Because it spreads,”
Kellhus said.‘ “The People,” Cnaьir
replied, “have many stories of Nansur Columns f perishing to the man… The
hearts of some men never break. But most I look to others for what
to believe…“ “And this is rout, the
loss of all conviction? What we witnessed on the Battleplain?” Cnaьir nodded. “This is
why cnamturu, vigilance, is a leader’s
greatest virtue. The field must be continually read. The signs must be judged
and rejudged. The gobozkoy must not be missed!” “The moment of decision.” Cnaьir scowled,
remembering that he’d mentioned the term in passing months ago, at the fateful
Council with the Emperor on the Andiamine Heights. “The moment of decision,” he
repeated. Anwurat He continued staring at
the coastal hills, watching the long line of faint infantry squares ascend the
distant slopes. General Setpanares had
withdrawn his horse… But why? Save the south, the Fanim
relented on every front. What plagued him so? Cnaьir glanced at
Kellhus, saw his shining eyes study the distances the way they so often
scrutinized souls. A gust cast his hair forward across his lower face. “I fear,” the Dunyain
said, “the moment has already passed.” Between her cries, Serwe
heard the peal of battlehorns. “How?” she gasped. She lay on her side, her
face buried in the cushions where Kellhus had thrust it. He plumbed her from
behind, his chest a furnace across her back, his hand holding her knee high.
How different he felt! “How what, sweet Serwe?” He pressed deep and she
moaned. “So different,” she breathed. “You feel so different.” “For you, sweet Serwe…
For you…” For her! She ground
against him, savoured his difference. “Yessss,” she hissed. He rolled onto his back,
pulling her onto him. He traced the ivory summit of her belly with his haloed
left hand, then reached down to make her cry out. With his right, he yanked her
head up by her hair, turned her so he could mutter in her ear. Never had he
used her like this! “Talk to me, sweet Serwe.
Your voice is as sweet as your peach.” “W-what?” she panted.
“What would you have me say?” He reached down, lifted
her buttocks from his hips—effortlessly, as though she were a coin. He began
thrusting, slow and deep. “Speak of me…” “Kellhhhhussss,” she
moaned. “I love you… I worship you! I do, I do, I do!” “And why, sweet Serwe?” “Because you’re the God
incarnate! Because you’ve been sent!” The Second March He fell absolutely still,
knowing he’d delivered her to the humming brink. She gasped for air upon
him, felt his heart pound against her spine and through his member, thrum like
a bowstring. Through fluttering lashes, she gazed up at the geometry of canvas
creases, watched the lines bend and refract through joyous tears. She encompassed him. To
his foundation, he was hers! The mere thought made the air between her thighs
thicken, until every draft seemed palpable, like something twitching. She cried out. Such
rapture! Such sweet rapture! Sejenus… “And the Scylvendi,” he
purred, his voice moist with promise. “Why does he despise me so?” “Because he fears you,”
she mumbled, squirming against him. “Because he knows you’ll punish him!” He began moving again,
but with infernal wariness. She squealed, clenched her teeth, marvelled at the
wonder of his difference. He even smelled
different. Like… Like… His hand closed about the
back of her neck… How she loved this game! “And why does he call me Dunyain?” “What do you mean?”
Cnaьir said to the Dunyain. “Nothing has been decided. Nothing!” He tries to deceive me! To undermine me before these
outlanders! Kellhus regarded him with
utter dispassion. “I’ve studied The
Book of Devices,
the Nansur manual describing the various personages and their signs in the
Kianene order of—” “As have I!” The illuminated pages,
anyway. Cnaьir couldn’t read. “Most of the devices lie
too far to be seen,” Kellhus continued, “but I’ve been able to infer the
identity of most…” Lies! Lies! He fears 1 grow too powerful! “How?” Cnaьir fairly
cried. Anwurat “Differing shapes. The
manual includes lists of each Sapatishah’s client Grandees… I simply counted.” Cnaьir swept out his hand
as though beating the air of flies. “Then who faces the
Ainoni?” “Overlooking the
Meneanor, Imbeyan with the Grandees of Enathpaneah. Swarjuka of Jurisada
occupies the remaining heights. Dunjoksha and the Grandees of Holy Amoteu hold
the descending ground opposite the Ainoni right and Nansur left. The Shigeki,
the centre. Even though Skauras’s standard flies from Anwurat, I believe his
Grandees, along with Ansacer and the other survivors of the Battleplain,
contest the northern pastures. Those horsemen beyond the village, the ones
about to descend upon Proyas, likely belong to Cuaxaji and the Grandees of
Khemema. Others ride with him, auxiliaries or allies of some kind… Likely the
Khirgwi. Many ride camels.” Cnaьir stared
incredulously at the man, his jaw working. “But that is impossible…” Where was Crown Prince
Fanayal and the feared Coyauri? Where was dread Cinganjehoi and the famed Ten
Thousand Grandees of Eumarna? “It’s fact,” Kellhus
said. “Only a fraction of Kian stands before us.” Cnaьir jerked his gaze
yet again to the southern hills and knew, from heart to marrow, that the
Dunyain spoke true. Suddenly he saw the field through Kianene eyes. The fleet
Grandees of Shigek and Gedea drawing the Tydonni and Galeoth ever farther west.
The Shigeki multitude dying as they should, and fleeing as everyone knew they
would. Anwurat, an immovable point threatening the Inrithi rear. Then the
southern hills… “He shows us,” Cnaьir
murmured. “Skauras shows us…” “Two armies,” Kellhus
said without hesitation. “One defending, one concealed, the same as on the
Battleplain.” Just then, Cnaьir saw the
first long threads of Kianene horsemen descend the faraway southern slopes.
Skirts of dust billowed behind them, obscuring the threads that followed. Even
from here he could see the Ainoni infantrymen bracing… Miles of them. The Nansur and Thunyeri,
meanwhile, had charged and hacked theь way past the final embankments. The
Shigeki ranks dissolved before their onslaught. Innumerable thousands already
fled westward, pursued b^ inn oecond March battle-crazed Thunyeri.
The Inrithi officers and caste-nobles behind Cnaьir and Kellhus broke into
full-throated cheers. The fools. Skauras need not fight a
battle of penetration along a single line. He had speed and cohesion, fira and utmurzu. The Shigeki were simply a ruse,
a brilliantly monstrous sacrifice—a way to scatter the Inrithi across the
broken plains. Too much conviction, the wily old Sapatishah knew, could be as
deadly as too little. A great ache filled
Cnaьir’s chest. Only Kellhus’s strong grip saved him the humiliation of falling
to his knees. Always the same… Never had he been so
conflicted. Never had he been so confused. Throughout the battle,
while the others had gawked, exclaimed, and pointed, General Martemus had
watched the Scylvendi and Prince Kellhus, straining to hear their banter. The
barbarian wore a harness of polished scale, the sleeves hacked short to reveal
his many-scarred forearms. A leather girdle set with iron plates strapped his
stomach and waist. A pointed Kianene battlecap, its silvering chipped in
innumerable places, protected his head. Long black hair whipped about his
shoulders. Martemus could’ve
recognized him from miles distant. He was Scylvendi filth. As impressive as
he’d found the man both in Council and in the field, the outrage of a
Scylvendi—a Scylvendi!—overseeing the Holy War in
battle was almost too much to bear. How could the others not see the disgusting
truth of his heritage? The man’s every scar argued his assassination! Martemus
would’ve gladly—gladly!—sacrificed his life to avenge
those the savage had butchered. Why, then, had Conphas
ordered him to murder the other man standing next to the
Scylvendi? Because, General, he’s a Cishaurim spy… But no spy could speak
such words. That’s his sorcery! Always remember— No! Not sorcery, truth! As I said, General. That is his sorcery… Anwurat Martemus watched, unmoved
by the prattle around him. But no matter how mortal his mission, he couldn’t
ignore glory in the field. No soldier could. Drawn by shouts of genuine
triumph, Martemus turned to see the heathen’s entire centre collapse. Across
miles, from Anwurat to the southern hills, Shigeki formations crumbled and
scattered westward, pursued by charging ranks of Nansur and Thunyeri footmen.
Martemus cheered with the others. For a moment, he felt only pride for his
countrymen, relief that victory had come at so slight a cost. Conphas had
conquered again! Then he glanced back at
the Scylvendi. He’d been a soldier too
long not to recognize the stink of disaster— even beneath the perfume of
apparent victory. Something had gone cata-strophically wrong… The barbarian screamed at
the Hornsman to signal the retreat. For a moment, those about Martemus could
only stare in astonishment. Then everything erupted in tumult and confusion.
The Tydonni thane, Ganrikki, accused the Scylvendi of treachery. Weapons were
drawn, brandished. The deranged barbarian kept roaring at them to peer south,
but nothing could be seen for the dust. Even still, the violence of the
Scylvendi’s protestations had unsettled many. Several began shouting for the
Hornsman, including Prince Kellhus. But the Scylvendi had had enough. He
barrelled through the astonished onlookers and leapt onto his horse. Within
heartbeats, it seemed, he was racing southeast, trailing a long banderole of
dust. Then the horns sounded,
cracking the air. Others started running to
their horses as well. Martemus turned back, looked to the three men Conphas had
given him. One, the towering black-skinned Zeumi, met his eyes, nodded, then
glanced past him to the Prince of Atrithau. They would run nowhere. Unfortunate, Martemus
thought. Running had been his first truly practical thought in a long time. For a heartbeat, Prince
Kellhus caught his look. His smile held such sorrow that Martemus nearly
gasped. Then the Prophet turned to the distances seething beneath his feet. on ihe second March Vast waves of Kianene
horsemen, their corselets flashing from their many-coloured coats, charged down
the slopes and slammed into the astonished Ainoni. The forward ranks hunched
behind their shields, struggled to brace their long spears on the incline,
while above them scimitars flashed in the morning sun. Dust swept across the
arid slopes. Horns brayed in panic. The air thundered with shouts, rumbling
hooves, and the pulse of Fanim drums. More heathen lancers crashed into and
through the Ainoni ranks. The tributary Sansori
under Prince Garsahadutha were the first to break, scattering before none other
than fierce Cinganjehoi himself, the famed Tiger of Eumarna. Within moments, it
seemed, the Grandees of Eumarna were pounding into the rear of the forward
phalanxes. Soon every phalanx on the Ainoni left, with the exception of the
elite Kishyati under Palatine Soter, was either stranded or routed. Withdrawing
in order, the Kishyati fought off charge after charge, purchasing precious time
for the Ainoni knights below. The whole world, it
seemed, was obscured by wind-drawn curtains of dust. Stiff in their elaborate
armour, the knights of Karyoti, Hinnant, and Moserothu, Antanamera, Eshkalas,
and Eshganax, thundered up the slopes, charging through the thousands who fled.
They met the Fanim in an ochre haze. Lances cracked and horses shrieked. Men
cried out to the hidden heavens. Swinging his great
two-handed mace, Uranyanka, Palatine of humid Moserothu, upended heathen after
heathen. Sepherathindor, Count-Palatine of Hinnant, led his painted knights on
a rampage, hewing men like wood. Prince Garsahadutha and his Sansori stalwarts
continued charging forward, searching for the holy standards of their kinsmen.
The Kianene horsemen broke and fled before them, and the Ainoni bellowed in
exultation. The wind began to clear
the haze. Then Garsahadutha,
several hundred paces ahead of his peers, stumbled into Crown Prince Fanayal
and his Coyauri. Skewered through the eye socket, the Sansori Prince crashed
from his saddle, and death came swirling down. Within moments, all six hundred
and forty-three knights of Sansor had been either unhorsed or killed. Unable to
see more than several paces, many of the Ainoni knights below simply charged
the Anwurat sound of battle—vanished
into the saffron fog. Others milled about their barons and palatines, waiting
for the wind. Horse archers appeared on
their flanks and to their rear. Serwe huddled, wracked by
sobs, struggling to cover herself with her blanket. “What have I done?” she
bawled. “What have I done to displease you?” A haloed hand struck her,
and she slammed against the carpets. “I love you!” she
shrieked. “Kellhuuuus!” The Warrior-Prophet
laughed. “Tell me, sweet, sweet
Serwe, what have I planned for the Holy War?” The Swazond Standard
leaned in a gust, the bolts of white billowing and snapping like sails. Martemus
had already resolved to kick the abomination to the ground—afterward… Everyone
had abandoned the hillock, save himself, Prince Kellhus, and Conphas’s three
assassins. Though more dust than
ever plumed along the southern hills, Martemus could see what had to be Ainoni
infantry fleeing the pale clouds. He’d long since lost sight of the Scylvendi
across the broken pasture. To the west of the looming disaster, he could see
the Columns of his countrymen reforming. Soon, Martemus knew, Conphas would
have them marching double-time toward the marshes. The Nansur were old hands
when it came to surviving Fanim catastrophes. Prince Kellhus sat with
his back to the four of them, his feet sole to sole and his palms flat upon his
knees. Beyond him, men climbed and toppled from fortress walls, lines of
knights galloped across dusty pastures, north-men axed hapless Shigeki to the
ground… The Prophet seemed to be…
listening. . No. Bearing witness. Not him, Martemus thought. I cannot do this. The first of the
assassins approached. Fifteen Anwurat Where the holy take men for fools, the
mad take the world. —PROTATHIS, THE GOAT’S
HEART Late Summer, 4111Year-of‘the-Tusk, Shigek A dried riverbed creased the heart of the plain, and
for a time Cnaьir raced through it, climbing out only when the course began
winding like an old man’s veins. He jerked his black to a stamping halt on the
bank. The coastal hills piled above him, their heights and seaward reaches
still skirted in chalklike dust. To the west, the remaining Ainoni phalanxes
were withdrawing down the slopes. To the east, innumerable thousands sprinted
across the broken pasture. Not far, on a small knoll, he saw a clot of
infantrymen dressed in long black leather kilts stitched with iron rings, but
without helms or weapons. Some sat, others stood, stripping off their armour.
Save those who wept, all watched the shrouded hills with a look of stunned
horror. Where were the Ainoni
knights? To the extreme east,
where the turquoise and aquamarine band of the Meneanor disappeared behind the
dun foundations of the hills, he saw a great cataract of Kianene horsemen spill
across the strand. He need not see their devices to know: Cinganjehoi and the
Grandees of Eumarna, pounding across uncontested ground… Anwurat Where were the reserves?
Gotian and his Shrial Knights, Gaidekki, Werijen Greatheart, Athjeari, and the
others? Cnaiur felt a sharp pang
in his throat. He clenched his teeth. It’s happening again… Kiyuth. Only this time he was Xunnurit. He was the arrogant mule! He pinched sweat from his
eyes, watched the Fanim gallop behind a screen of distant scrub and
stunted trees—an endless tide… The encampment. They ride for the encampment… With a yell he spurred
his horse to the east. Serwe. Masses of warring men
animated the horizon, crashing into stubborn ranks, churning in melee. The air
didn’t so much thunder as hiss with the sound of distant battle,
like a sea heard through a conch shell, Martemus thought—an angry sea. Winded,
he watched the first of Conphas’s assassins stride up behind Prince Kellhus,
raise his short-sword… There was an impossible moment—a sharp intake of breath.
The Prophet simply turned and caught the descending blade between his thumb and
forefinger. “No,” he said, then swept around, knocking the man to the turf with
an unbelievable kick. Somehow the assassin’s sword found its way into his left
hand. Still crouched, the Prophet drove it down through the assassin’s throat,
nailing him to the turf. A mere heartbeat had passed. The second Nansur
assassin rushed forward, striking. Another kick from a crouch, and the man’s
head snapped backward, his blade flew from senseless fingers. He slumped to the
earth like a cast-off robe—obviously dead. The Zeumi sword-dancer
lowered his great tulwar and laughed. “A civilized man,” he
said, his voice deep. Without warning, he sent
the tulwar whooshing through the air around him. Sunlight flashed as though
from the silvered spokes of a chariot wheel. Now standing, the Prophet
drew his strange, long-pommelled sword from his shoulder sheath. Holding it in
his right hand, he lowered its tip to the ground before his
booted feet. He flicked a clot of dirt into the sword-dancer’s eyes. The
sword-dancer stumbled back, cursing. The Prophet lunged, buried his sword point
deep into the assassin’s palate. He guided the towering corpse to the earth. He stood alone against a
vista of strife and woe, his beard and hair boiling in the wind. He turned to
Martemus, stepped over the sword-dancer’s body… Illuminated by the
morning sun. A striding vision. A walking aspect… Something too terrible.
Too bright. The General stumbled
backward, struggled to draw his sword. “Martemus,” the vision said. It reached
out and clasped the wrist of his frantic sword arm. “Prophet,” Martemus
gasped. The vision smiled,
saying: “Skauras knows the Scylvendi leads us. He’s seen the Swazond Standard…” General Martemus stared,
uncomprehending. The Warrior-Prophet
turned, nodded toward the sweeping landscape. No recognizable lines
remained. Martemus saw Proyas and his Conriyan knights first, stranded about
the mud-brick warren of the distant village. Erupting from the shadow of the
orchards, several thousand Kianene horsemen swept about their flank, led by the
triangular standard of Cuaxaji, the Sapatishah of Khemema. The Conriyans were
doomed, Martemus thought, but otherwise he didn’t understand what the
Warrior-Prophet meant… Then he glanced toward Anwurat. “Khirgwi,” the General
murmured. Thousands of them, mounted on tall loping camels, plowing into the
hastily drawn ranks of Conriyan infantry, spilling around their flanks, racing
toward the hillock, toward the Swazond Standard… Toward them. Their unnerving,
ululating war cries permeated the din. “We must flee!” he cried. “No,” the Warrior-Prophet
said. “The Swazond Standard cannot fall.” “But it will!” Martemus
exclaimed. “It already has!” The Warrior-Prophet
smiled, and his eyes glittered with something Anwurat fierce and unconquerable.
“Conviction, General Martemus…” He gripped his shoulder with a haloed hand.
“War is conviction.” Confusion and terror
ruled the hearts of the Ainoni knights. Disoriented in the dust, they hailed
one another, trying to determine some course of action. Cohorts of fleet
archers swept about them, shooting their caparisoned horses out from beneath
him. Knights cursed and hunched behind arrow-studded shields. Every time
Uranyanka, Sepherathindor, and the others charged, the Kianene scattered,
outdistanced them while sending more knights crashing into the sun-baked turf.
Many of the Ainoni lost their way and were stranded, harassed from all sides.
Kusjeter, the Count-Palatine of Gekas, blundered onto the summit of the slopes
and found himself trapped between the spiked earthworks that had defeated the
initial Ainoni charges and the ruthless lances of the Coyauri below. Time and
again he fought off the elite Kianene cavalrymen, only to be unhorsed and taken
for dead by his own men. His knights panicked, and he was trampled in their
flight. Death came swirling down… Meanwhile the Sapatishah
of Eumarna, Cinganjehoi, charged across the pastures below. Most of his
Grandees fanned northward, eager to visit ruin on the Inrithi encampment. The
Tiger himself struck westward, riding hard with his household through fields of
bolting Ainoni infantrymen. He stormed the command of General Setpanares,
overrunning it. The General himself was killed, but Chepheramunni, the
King-Regent of High Ainon, managed a miraculous escape. Far to the northwest, the
command of Cnaьir urs Skiotha, Battlemaster of the Holy War, dissolved in
confusion and accusations of treachery. The masses of Shigeki conscripts
composing Skauras’s centre had utterly folded before the combined might of the
Nansur, Thunyeri, and the flanking charge of Proyas and his Conriyan knights.
Believing the Holy War victorious, the Inrithi had dashed forward in pursuit,
abandoning their formations. The battle line broke into disordered masses
separated by glaring expanses of open pasture. Many actually fell to their
knees on the parched turf, crying out thanks to the God. Very few heard the
horns signalling a J18 Ihe Second March general retreat, largely
because very few horns carried the call. Most trumpeters had refused to believe
the command was real. Not once did the
thundering drums of the heathen falter. The Grandees of Khemema
and tens of thousands of camel-mounted Khirgwi, ferocious tribesmen from the
southern deserts, materialized out of the masses of fleeing Shigeki and charged
headlong into the scattered Men of the Tusk. Cut off from his infantry, Proyas
withdrew to the mud-brick alleys of a nearby village, crying out to both the
God and his men. Falling into shield-wall circles across the pastures, the
Thunyeri fought with stubborn astonishment, shocked to encounter an enemy whose
fury matched their own. Prince Skaiyelt desperately called for his Earls and
their knights, but they were frustrated by the embankments. One great battle had
become dozens of lesser ones—more desperate and far more dreadful. Everywhere
the Great Names looked, cohorts of Fanim rode hard across the open pasture.
Where the heathen outnumbered, they charged and overwhelmed. Where they could
not grapple, they circled and harried with deadly archery. Overcome by dismay, many
knights charged alone, only to be unhorsed by arrows and trampled into the
dust. Cnaьir rode hard, cursing
himself for losing his way among the endless alleys and avenues of the camp. He
reined to a halt in an enclosure of heavy-framed Galeoth tents, searched the
northern distances for the distinctive peaks of the round tents favoured by the
Conriyans. From nowhere it seemed, three woman dashed northward across the
enclosure, then vanished past the tents on the far side. A moment later,
another followed, black-haired, screaming something unintelligible in some
Ketyai tongue. He looked to the south, saw dozens of plumes of black smoke. The
wind faltered for a moment, and the surrounding canvas fell silent. Cnaьir glimpsed a blue
surcoat abandoned next to a smoking firepit. Someone had been stitching a red
tusk across its breast… He heard screams—thousands of them. Where was she? Anwurat He knew what was
happening, and more importantly, he knew how it would happen. The first fires had been set as a
signal to those Inrithi in the field—to convince them they were truly overthrown.
Otherwise the encampment would be closely inventoried before it was destroyed.
Even now, Kianene would be encircling the camp, loath to lose any plunder,
especially the kind that wriggled and screamed. If he didn’t find Serwe soon… He spurred off to the
northeast. Yanking his black tight
around a pavilion panelled with embroidered animal totems, he broke along a
winding corridor, saw three Kianene sitting upon their caparisoned mounts. They
turned at the sound of his approach, but at once looked away, as though
mistaking him for one of their own. They seemed to be arguing. Drawing his
broadsword, Cnaьir spurred to a gallop. He killed two on his first pass. Though
their orange-coated comrade had called out at the last instant, they hadn’t so
much as looked at him. Cnaьir reined to a halt, wheeled to make a second pass,
but the remaining Fanim fled. Cnaьir ignored him and struck due east, at last
recognizing—or so he thought—where he stood in the encampment. A skin-pimpling shriek,
no more than a hundred paces away, brought him to a momentary trot. Standing in
his stirrups, he caught fleeting glimpses of figures dashing between crowded
shelters. More screams rifled the air, breathless and very near. Suddenly a
horde of camp-followers burst sprinting from between the panoply of surrounding
tents and pavilions. Wives, whores, slaves, scribes, and priests, either crying
or blank-faced, simply rushing where everyone else seemed to rush. Some
screamed at the sight of him and scrambled either to the left or the right.
Others ignored him, either realizing he wasn’t Fanim or knowing he could only
strike so many. After a moment their numbers thinned. The young and the hale
became the old and the infirm. Cnaьir glimpsed Cumor, the aging high priest of
Gilgaol, urged forward by his adepts. He saw dozens of frantic mothers hauling
terrified children. Some distance away, a group of twenty or so bandaged
warriors—Galeoth by the look of them—had abandoned their flight and now
prepared to make a stand. They started singing… Cnaьir heard a growing
chorus of harsh and triumphant cries, the snort and rumble of horses… He reined to a halt, drew
his broadsword. ihe second March Anwurat Then he saw them,
jostling and barrelling among the tents, looking for a moment like a host wading
through crashing surf. The Kianene of Eumarna… Cnaьir looked down,
startled. A young woman, her leg slicked in blood, an infant strapped to her
back, clutched his knee, beseeching him in some unknown tongue. He raised his
boot to kick her, then unaccountably lowered it. He leaned forward and hoisted
her before him onto his saddle. She fairly shrieked tears. He wheeled his black
around and spurred after the fleeing camp-followers. He heard an arrow buzz by
his ear. His golden hair fanned in
the wind. His white samite robe billowed. “Keep down!” the Prophet
commanded. But Martemus could only
stand dumbfounded. The fields beneath seethed with dust and shadowy files of
Khirgwi. Before them, the Warrior-Prophet jerked first one shoulder back, then
the other. He ducked his head, swayed back from the waist, crouched, then
bounced upright. It was a curious dance, at once random and premeditated,
leisurely and breath-takingly quick… It wasn’t until one struck Martemus in the
thigh that he realized the Prophet danced about the path of arrows. The General fell to the
ground, clutching his leg. The whole world howled, clamoured. Through tears of pain he
glimpsed the Swazond Standard against the sun’s flashing glare. Sweet Sejenus. I’m going to die. “Run!” he cried. “You must run!” His black snorted
spittle, gasped, and screamed. Tent after tent whisked by, canvas stained and
striped, leather painted, tusks and more tusks. The nameless woman in his arms
trembled, tried vainly to look at her baby. The Kianene thundered ever closer,
galloping in files down the narrow alleys, fanning across the rare openings. He
could hear them trade shouts, cry out tactics. “Skafadi!” they cried. “Jam til Skafadi!” Soon many were pounding along parallel alleyways.
Twice he had to crush the woman and her
child against the neck of his horse as arrows hissed about them. He spurred more blood
from his black’s flanks. He heard screams, realized he’d overtaken the mass of
fleeing camp-followers. Suddenly everywhere he looked he saw frantic, hobbling
men, wailing mothers, and ashen-faced children. He jerked his mount to the
left, knowing the Kianene followed him. He was the famed Skafadi Captain who
rode witb the idolaters. Every captive he’d interrogated had heard of him. He
broke into one of the immense squares the Nansur used for drills, and his black
leapt forward with renewed fury. He drew his bow, notched a shaft, anc killed
the nearest Kianene pounding through the dust behind him. Hi: second shaft
found the neck of the horse following, and an entire clustei of Fanim toppled
in a plume of dust. “Zirkirtaaaaa!” he howled. The woman shrieked in
terror. He glanced forward, saw dozens o Fanim horsemen streaming into the
western entrance of the field. Fucking Kianene. He brought his ailing
black about and spurred toward the northen entrance, thanking the Nansur and
their slavish devotion to the compass The sky rang with distant screams and
raw-throated shouts of “Dt-ut-ut utJ” The nameless woman wept in terror. Nansur barrack tents
hedged the north like a row of filed teeth. The ga] between them bounced
nearer, nearer. The woman alternately looke< forward, then yanked her head
backward to the Kianene—as did, absurdly her black-haired infant. Strange,
Cnaьir thought, the way infants kne’t when to be calm. Suddenly Fanim horsemen
erupted through the north ern entrance as well. He swerved to the right,
galloped along the airy whit tents, searching for a way to barge between. When
he saw none, he race for the corner. More and more Kianene thundered through
the easter entrance, fanning across the field. Those behind pounded nearer.
Sever; more arrows whisked through the air about them. He wheeled his blac
about, knocked the woman face first onto the dusty turf. The babe finall
started screeching. He tossed her a knife—to cut through canvas… The air thrummed with
hooves and heathen shouts. “Run!” he barked at her.
“Run!” Veils of dust swept over
him. He turned, laughing. Drawing his broadsword,
he ducked a sweeping scimitar, then jabbed his assailant in the armpit. He
swept his sword about and shattered the blade of the next, splitting the man’s
cheek. When the fool reached up, Cnaьir punched through his silvered corselet.
Blood fountained like wine from a punctured skin. He caught the shield of the
next, swinging his sword like a mace. The man toppled backward over his horse’s
rump, somehow landed on his hands and knees. His helm bounced from his head,
between stamping hooves. Flipping his grip, Cnaьir stabbed down through the
back of his skull. He stood in his stirrups,
swung the blood from his blade into the faces of the astonished Kianene. “Who?” he roared in his
sacred tongue. He hacked at the
riderless horses barring him from his foe. One went down thrashing. Another
screamed and bucked into the knotted heathen ranks. “I am Cnaьir urs
Skiotha,” he bellowed, “most violent of all men!” His heaving black stepped
forward. “I bear your fathers and your brothers upon my arms!” Heathen eyes
flashed white from the shadows of their silvered helms. Several cried out. “Who,” Cnaьir roared, so fiercely all his skin seemed
throat, “willmurder me?” A piercing, feminine cry. Cnaьir glanced back, saw the
nameless woman swaying at the entrance of the nearest tent. She gripped the
knife he’d thrown her, gestured with it for him to follow. For an instant, it
seemed he’d always known her, that they’d been lovers for long years. He saw
sunlight flash through the far side of the tent where she’d cut open the
canvas. Then he glimpsed a shadow from above, heard something not quite… Several Kianene cried
out—a different terror. Cnaьir thrust his left
hand beneath his girdle, clutched tight his father’s Trinket. For an instant he met the
woman’s wide uncomprehending eyes, and over her shoulder, those of her baby boy
as well… Somehow he knew that now—that he was a son. Anwurat He tried to cry out. They became shadows in a
cataract of shimmering flame. One space. And the crossings were
infinite. Kellhus had been five
when he’d first set foot outside Ishual. Pragma Uan had gathered him and the
others his age, bid them all hang onto a long rope. Then without explanation he
led them down the terraces, out the Fallow Gate, and into the forest, stopping
only when he reached a grove of mighty oaks. He allowed them to wander for a
time—to sensitize themselves, Kellhus now knew. To the chattering of one
hundred and seventeen birds. To the smells of moss along bark, of humus
wheezing beneath little sandals. To the colours and the shapes: white bands of
sunlight against copper gloom, black roots. But for all this roaring
and remarkable newness, Kellhus could think of nothing save the Pragma. In
fact, he fairly trembled with anticipation. Everyone had seen Pragma Uan with
the older boys. Everyone knew he taught what the older boys called the ways of limb… Of battle. “What do you see?” the
old man finally asked, looking to the canopy above them. There were many eager
answers. Leaves. Branches. Sun. But Kellhus saw more. He
noticed the dead limbs, the scrum of competing branch and twig. He saw slender
trees, mere striplings, ailing in the shadow of giants. “Conflict,” he said. “And how is that, young
Kellhus?” Terror and exultation—the
passions of a child. “The tr-trees, Pragma,” he stammered. “They war for… for space.” “Indeed,” Pragma Uan
replied, his manner devoid of anything save confirmation. “And this, children,
is what I shall teach you. How to be a tree. How to war for space…” “But trees don’t move,”
another said. “They move,” the Pragma
replied, “but they are slow. A tree’s heart beats but once every spring, so it
must war in all directions at once. It must branch and branch
until it obscures the sky. But you, your hearts beat many, many times, you need
only war in one direction at a time. This is how men seize space.“ As old as he was, the
Pragma seemed to pop to his feet. He brandished a stick. “Come,” he said, “all of
you. Try to touch my knees.” And Kellhus rushed with the others through the
dappled sunlight. He squealed with frustration and delight each time the stick
thwacked or poked him back. He watched in wonder as the old man danced and
swirled, sent children flopping onto their rumps or rolling like badgers
through the leaves. Not one touched his legs. Not one so much as stepped into
the circle described by his stick. Pragma Uan had been a triumphant
tree. The absolute owner of one space. Wrapped in tattered brown
cloth, bearing shields of lacquered camel hides, the Khirgwi beat their
lurching camels forward, brandished their wild scimitars. The air screamed with
their ululations. Kellhus raised his
Dunyain steel. They laughed and sneered.
Desert dark faces, so certain… They came galloping
toward the circle described by his sword. Cnaьir kicked at his
saddle and the blasted hulk of his horse. He pushed himself from the ash,
blinked stinging smoke from his eyes. Ringing. Aside from smoke and the stink
of scorched meat, the whole world was ringing. He could hear nothing else. He found the burnt husks
that had been the nameless woman and her child. He retrieved his knife, holding
it gingerly by its charred grip. It burned and did not
burn, in the strange way sorcerous heat seeped into the real. He began walking
northward, passing among the sagging, curse-embroidered pavilions of the
Ainoni. Pictogram banners fluttered in the wind. Behind him, Scarlet Schoolmen
strode across the sky. Pillars of fire whooshed soundlessly. Lightning sheeted
the distances. It seemed that men should shriek. And he thought, Serwe ... Anwurat People, elated,
terrified, bewildered, crowded about him. Though their mouths opened and their
tongues flapped against their teeth, Cnaьir heard only ringing. He pressed them
aside with hollow arms, continued walking. Something ached in his
left hand. He opened it, saw his father’s Chorae. Dull even in sunlight,
cluttered with senseless script, a grimy iron eyeball. Twice it had saved him. He pressed it back
beneath his girdle. Then he heard the crack
of lightning. The ringing faded into a piercing whine—almost inaudible. He
paused, closed his eyes. Screams and shouts, this one far, that one near, very
near. They etched the distances, sweeping out to the horizon of his hearing,
finally vanishing in the ambient roar of battle and sea… After a time he found
Proyas’s elaborate pavilion occupying a small knoll. How weathered it now
looked, he thought, and sadness welled through him. Everything seemed so tired. He found the old pavilion
he’d shared with Kellhus nearby, creaking and flapping in the wind. A kettle
sat next to the blackened pit. Smoke spiralled across the ground, raced between
neighbouring tents. Cnaьir’s heart hammered.
Had she gathered with the other followers to watch the battle from the
southwestern edge of the encampment? Had the Kianene taken her? A beauty such
as hers was sure to be taken, pregnant or not. She was a plaything of princes.
An extraordinary gift! ! A prize! The sound of her voice
made him jump. A shriek… For a moment he stood
dumbfounded, unable to move. He heard a masculine voice, soft, cajoling, and
yet somehow insanely cruel… The ground dipped at
Cnaьir’s feet. He stumbled backward. One step. Two. His skin prickled to the
point of stinging. The Dunyain. “Please!” Serwe screamed.
“Pleasssse!” The Dunyain! How? Cnaьir crept forward. His
ribs seemed rock. He couldn’t breathe! The knife trembled in his hand. He reached
out, used the dagger’s shaking tip to part the canvas flap. The interior was too dark
to see at first. He glimpsed shadows, heard Seme’s hitching sobs… Then he saw her, kneeling
naked before a towering shadow. One eye swelled shut, blood pulsing from her
scalp and nose, sheeting her neck and her breasts. What? Without thinking, Cnaьir
slipped into the gloom of the pavilion. The air reeked of foul rutting. The
Dunyain whirled, as naked as Serwe, a bloody hand clamped about his engorged
member. “The Scylvendi,” Kellhus
drawled, his eyes blazing with lurid rapture. “I didn’t smell you.” Cnaьir struck at his
heart. Somehow the bloody hand flickered up, grazed his wrist. The knife dug
deep just below the Dunyain’s collar bone. Kellhus staggered back,
raised his face to the bellied canvas, and screamed what seemed a hundred
screams, a hundred voices bound to one inhuman throat. And Cnaьir saw his face open, as though the joints of his mouth were legion and
ran from his scalp to his neck. Through steepled features, he saw lidless eyes,
gums without lips… The thing struck him, and
he fell to one knee. He yanked his broadsword clear. But it had vanished
through the flap, leaping like some kind of beast. With their horses dying
beneath them, the scattered masses of Ainoni knights soon had no choice but to
stand their ground. More and more, the Kianene rode howling into their midst,
making targets of their white-painted faces in the sunny murk. Blood clotted
luxurious square-cut beards. Pictogram standards were toppled and trampled.
Dust transformed sweat into grime. Seriously wounded, Sepherathindor was
carried from the forward ranks, where he “laughed with Sarothesser,” as all
Ainoni caste-nobles strove to do when certain of death. Some, like Galgota,
Palatine of Eshganax, charged down the slopes to escape, abandoning those
kinsmen and clients who’d been unhorsed. Some, like cruel Zursodda, bled his
people with reckless counter-attacks until scarcely a mounted man remained. But
others, like hard-hearted Uranyanka, or fair Chinjosa, the Count-Palatine of
Antanamera, simply Anwurat ill awaited each heathen
onslaught. They bellowed encouragement to their men, disputed every dusty step.
Again and again the Kianene charged. Horses screamed. Lances cracked. Men
yelled and wailed. Scimitars and longswords rang across the slopes. And each
time the Fanim reeled back, astounded by these defeated men who refused to be
defeated. To the northwest, the
Khirgwi assaulted the Inrithi with relentless and sometimes deranged fury. Many
actually leapt from their taller camels to tackle dumbstruck knights from their
saddles. Kushigas, the Conriyan Palatine of Annand, was killed this way, as was
Inskarra, the Thunyeri Earl of Skagwa. Proyas was encircled, as were thousands
of Thunyeri behind their shield-walls. The Khirgwi swept about Anwurat and
descended on the fortress’s Conriyan besiegers, putting them to rout. And they
charged the rambling hillock where the Battlemaster had planted his Swazond
Standard. The Grandees of Eumarna,
meanwhile, stormed through the winding alleys and long avenues of the Inrithi
encampment, setting tent and pavilion alight, cutting down priests, dragging
screaming wives to the ground and violating them. At the sight of smoke pluming
from the distant camp, many men in Skauras’s staff fell to their knees and
wept, giving praise to the Solitary God. Several hailed the Sapatishah, kissing
the ground near his feet. Then glittering lights
filled the eastern sky. Cinganjehoi’s glorious horsemen had blundered upon the Scarlet
Spires… And catastrophe. Those who survived the
Schoolmen’s initial assault fled in their thousands, most along the broad
beaches along the Meneanor, where they were caught by Grandmaster Gotian, Earl
Cerjulla, and Earl Athjeari, leading the Holy War’s reserves. Some nine
thousand Inrithi knights descended upon them, hacking them to the sand, driving
them back into the crashing surf. Very few escaped. The Imperial Kidruhil,
meanwhile, broke the bristling collar about the knights of High Ainon. Imbeyan
and the Grandees of Enathpaneah were driven back. For the first time there was
pause in what would be called the Battle of the Slopes. The dust began to
clear… When the situation on the pastures below became clear, shouts of
exultation broke from the long and tagged lines of Ainoni knights. With the
Kidruhil, they charged as one toward the heights. To the north, the
ferocious momentum of the Khirgwi was first blunted by the miraculous stand of
Prince Kellhus of Atrithau beneath the Swazond Standard, then stopped
altogether by the flanking charges of the black-armoured Auglish and Ingraulish
knights of Earl Goken and Earl Ganbrota. Then the drums of the
Fanim fell silent. Far to the northwest, Prince Saubon and Earl Gothyelk had
finally broken the Grandees of Shigek and Gedea, whom they chased along the
banks of the Sempis. Though vastly outnumbered, Earl Finaol and his Canutish
knights charged the Padirajic Guardsmen protecting the sacred drums. Earl
Finaol himself was speared in the armpit, but his kinsmen won through, and cut
down the fleeing drummers. Soon breathless Galeoth and Tydonni footmen were
chasing women and slaves through the sprawling Kianene encampment. The great Fanim host
disintegrated. Crown Prince Fanayal and his Coyauri fled due south, pursued by
the Kidruhil along the never-ending beaches. Imbeyan surrendered the heights to
the spattered Ainoni and attempted to withdraw through the hills. But Ikurei
Conphas had anticipated him, and he was forced to flee with a handful of
householders while his Grandees bled themselves charging the hard-bitten
veterans of the Selial Column. Though General Bogras was killed by a stray
Kianene arrow, the Nansur did not break, and the Enathpaneans were cut down to
a man. The Khirgwi fled southwest, pursued by the iron men into the trackless
desert. Hundreds of Inrithi would
be lost for following the tribesmen too far. Cnaьir saw his charred
knife on the mats. Clutching a bloodstained
blanket, Serwe staggered after Kellhus, screaming like a lunatic. When Cnaьir
restrained her, she began clawing at his eyes. He pushed her to the ground. “He neeeeds me,” she
wailed. “He’s hurt!” “It wasn’t him,” Cnaьir
murmured. “You killed him! You
killed him!” “It wasn’t him!” “You’re sick! You’re
mad!” Anwurat Somehow the old rage
swamped his disbelief. He grabbed her by the arm and wrenched her
through the flaps. “I’m taking you! You’re my prize!” “You’re mad!” she
shrieked. “He’s told me everything about you! Everything!” He struck her to the
ground. “What has he said?” She wiped blood from her
lip, and for the first time didn’t seem afraid. “Why you beat me. Why your
thoughts never stray far from me, but return, always return to me in fury. He’s
told me everything.‘” Something trembled
through him. He raised his fist but his fingers would not clench. “What has he said?” “That I’m nothing but a
sign, a token. That you strike not me, but yourself!” “I will strangle you! I
will snap your neck like a cat’s! I will beat blood from your womb!” “Then do it!” she
shrieked. “Do it, and be done with it!” “You are my prize! My
prize! To do with as I please!” “No! No! I’m not your
prize! I’m your shame! He told me this!” “Shame? What shame? What
has he said?” “That you beat me for
surrendering as you surrendered! For fucking him the way you fucked his father!” She still lay on the
ground, legs askew. So beautiful. Even beaten and broken. How could anything
human be so beautiful? “What has he said?” he
asked blankly. He. The Dunyain. She was sobbing now.
Somehow the knife had appeared in her hands. She held it to her throat, and he
could see the perfect curve of her neck reflected. He glimpsed the single
swazond upon her forearm. She has killed! “You’re mad!” she wept.
“I’ll kill myself! I’ll kill myself! I’m not your prize! I’m his! HIS!” Serwe… Her fist hooked inward.
The blade parted flesh. But somehow he’d captured
her wrist. He wrenched the knife from her hand. He left her weeping
outside the Dunyain’s pavilion. He stared out over | the trackless Meneanor as
he wandered between the tents, through the J growing crowds of jubilant
Inrithi. So unnatural, he thought,
the sea… When Conphas found
Martemus, the sun was an orb smouldering in the cloudless skies of the west,
gold across pale blue—colours stamped into every man’s heart. With a small cadre
of bodyguards and officers, the Exalt-General had ridden to the hillock where
the accursed Scylvendi had established his command. On the summit, he found the
General sitting cross-legged beneath the Scylvendi’s leaning standard,
surrounded by ever widening circles of Khirgwi dead. The man stared at the
sunset as though he hoped to go blind. He had removed his helmet, and his
short, silvered hair fluttered in the breeze. The man looked at once younger,
Conphas thought, and yet more fatherly without his helmet. Conphas dismissed his
entourage, then dismounted. Without a word he strode to the General, drew his
longsword, then hacked at the Swazond Standard’s wooden pole. Once, twice… With
a crack, the wind bore the obscene banner slowly down. Satisfied, Conphas stood
over his wayward General, gazing out to the sunset as though to share in
whatever nonsense Martemus thought he saw. “He’s not dead,” Martemus said.
“Pity.” Martemus said nothing. “Do you remember,”
Conphas asked, “that time we rode across the fields of dead Scylvendi after
Kiyuth?” Martemus’s eyes flickered
to him. He nodded. “Do you recall what I said to you?” “You said war was intellect.” “Are you a casualty of that war, Martemus?” The sturdy General
frowned, pursed his lips. He shook his head. “No.” “I worry that you are, Martemus.” Martemus turned away from
the sun and studied him with pinched eyes. “I worried too… But no
longer.” “No longer… Why so, Martemus?” /‘tnwurat “I watched,” the General
said. “I saw him kill all these heathen. He killed and he killed until they
fled in terror.” Martemus turned back to the sunset. “He’s not human.” “Neither was Skeaos,”
Conphas replied. Martemus looked to his
callused palms. “I am a practical man,
Lord Exalt-General.” Conphas studied the
sun-burnished carnage, the open mouths and unclosed eyes, the hands like
good-luck monkey paws. He followed the smoke pluming from Anwurat—not so far
away. Not so far. He gazed back into
Martemus’s sun. There was such a difference, he thought, between the beauty
that illuminated, and the beauty that was illuminated. “You are at that,
Martemus. You are at that.” Skauras ab Nalajan had
dismissed his subordinates, servants, and slaves, the long train of men that
defined any station of power, and sat alone at a polished mahogany table
drinking Shigeki wine. For the first time, it seemed, he truly tasted the
sweetness of those things he had lost. Though old, the
Sapatishah-Governor was still hale. His white hair, oiled to his scalp in the
Kianene fashion, was as thick as that of any younger man. He had a
distinguished face, made severe and wise by his long moustaches and thin
braided beard. His eyes glittered dark beneath a brooding brow. He sat in a high turret
room of Anwurat’s citadel. Through the narrow window he could hear the sounds
of desperate battle below, the voices of beloved friends and followers crying
out. Though he was a pious
man, Skauras had committed many wicked acts in his life—wicked acts were ever
the inescapable accessories of power. He contemplated them with regret and
pined for a simpler life, one with fewer pleasures, surely, but with fewer
burdens as well. Certainly nothing so crushing as this… I have doomed my people … my faith. It had been a good plan,
he reflected. Give the idolaters the illusion of a single fixed line. Convince
them he would fight their battle. Draw their right into the north. Break their
line, not through punishing and futile ll-lfc JEL’UND MARCH charges, but by breaking—or appearing to—in the centre. Then crush their left
with Cinganjehoi and Fanayal. How glorious it should have been. Who could have guessed
such a plan? Who could have anticipated him? Probably Conphas. Old enemy. Old friend—if
such a man could be anyone’s friend. Skauras reached beneath
his jackal-embroidered coat and withdrew the parchment the Nansur Emperor had
sent him. For months it had pressed against his breast, and now, after the
day’s disaster, it was perhaps the only remaining hope of stopping the
idolaters. Sweat had rounded it to the curve of his body, had rendered it
cloth-soft. The word of Ikurei Xerius III, the Emperor of Nansur. Old foe. Old friend. Skauras didn’t read it.
He didn’t need to. But the idolaters—they must never read it. He placed its corner in
the brilliant teardrop of his lamp. Watched it curl and ignite. Watched the
spindly threads of smoke rise before they were yanked out the window. By the Solitary God, it
was still daylight! “And they looked up, and saw that lo, the
day had not gone, and that their shame lay open, for all to see…” The Prophet’s words. May
he grant them mercy. He let the parchment go
as fluttering wings of flame engulfed it. It thrashed feebly, like a living
thing. The finish of the table blistered and blackened beneath. A fitting mark, the
Sapatishah-Governor supposed. A hint. A small oracle to future doom. Skauras drank more wine.
Already the idolaters were ramming the door. Quick, deadly men. Are we all dead? he wondered. No. Only me. In the depths of his
final, most pious prayer to the Solitary God, he didn’t hear the fibrous
snapping of wood. Only the final crash and the sound of kindling skating across
the tiled floor told him that the time had come to draw his sword. He turned to face the
rush of strapping, battle-crazed infidels. It would be a short battle. She awoke with her head
cradled in his lap. He wiped her cheeks and brow with a wetted cloth. His eyes
glittered with tears in the lantern light. “The baby?” she gasped. Kellhus closed his eyes
and nodded. “Is fine.” She smiled and began
weeping. “Why? How have I angered you?” “It wasn’t me, Serwe.” “But it was you! I saw
you!” “No… You saw a demon. A
counterfeit with my face…” And suddenly she knew. What had been familiar became alien. What had been
inexplicable became clear. A demon visited me! A demon… She looked to him. More
hot tears spilled across her cheeks. How long could she cry? But I …He… Kellhus blinked slowly.
He took you. She gagged. She rolled
her cheek onto his thigh. Convulsions wracked her, but no vomit would come.
“I…”she sobbed. “I…” “You were faithful.” She turned to him, her
face crumpling. But it wasn’t you! “You were deceived. You
were faithful.” He wiped at her tears,
and she glimpsed blood on his cloth. They la^ silently for a time, simply
staring into each other’s eyes. She felt her stinging skin soothed, her hurts
fade into a strange buzzing ache. How long she wondered, could she stare into
those eyes? How long could her hear bask in their all-knowing sight? Forever! Yes, forever. “The Scylvendi came,” she
finally said. “He tried to take me.” “I know,” Kellhus replied. “I told him he
could.” And somehow she knew this
too. But why? He smiled glory. “Because I knew you
wouldn’t let him.” How much have they learned? In the lonely light of a
single lantern, Kellhus talked to Serwe in cooing tones, matching her rhythms,
heartbeat for heartbeat, breath for breath. With a patience no world-born man
could fathom, he slowly lured her into the trance the Dunyain called the
Whelming, to the place where voice could overwrite voice. Eliciting a long string
of automatic responses, he reviewed her interrogation at the hands of the
skin-spy. Then he gradually scraped the thing’s assault from the parchment of
her soul. Come morning, she would awaken puzzled by her cuts and bruises,
nothing more. Come morning, she would awaken cleansed. Afterward, he pressed
through the raucous and celebratory alleys of the encampment, walking toward
the Meneanor, toward the Scylvendi’s seaside camp. He ignored all those who
hailed him, adopting an air of brooding distraction that wasn’t so far from the
truth… Those who persisted shrank from his angry glare. He had one task
remaining. Of all his studies, none
had been so deep or so perilous as the Scylvendi. There was the man’s pride,
which like Proyas and the other Great Names had made him exceedingly sensitive
to relations of dominance. And there was his preternatural intelligence, his
ability not only to grasp and penetrate but to reflect on the movements of his
own soul— to ask after the origins of his own thoughts. But more than anything
there was his knowledge—his knowledge of the Dunyain.
Moenghus had yielded too much truth in his effort to escape the Utemot those
many years ago. He’d underestimated what Cnaьir would make of the fragments
he’d revealed. Through his obsessive rehearsal of the events surrounding his
father’s death, the plainsman had come to many troubling conclusions. And now,
of all world-born men, he alone knew the truth of the Dunyain. Of all
world-born men, Cnaьir urs Skiotha was awake… Anwurat Which was why he had to
die. Almost to a man, the Men
of Earwa adhered without thought or knowledge to the customs of their people. A
Conriyan didn’t shave because bare cheeks were effeminate. A Nansur didn’t wear
leggings because they were crude. A Tydonni didn’t consort with dark-skinned
peoples—or picks, as they called them—because they were polluted. For
world-born men, such customs simply were.
They gave precious food to statues of dead stone. They kissed the knees of
weaker men, They lived in terror of their wanton hearts. They each thought
themselves the absolute measure of all others. They felt shame, disgust esteem,
reverence… And they never asked why. Not so with Cnaьir. Where
others adhered out of ignorance of tht alternatives, he was continually forced
to choose, and more importantly to affirm
one thought from the infinite field of possible thoughts, one ac from the
infinite field of possible acts. Why upbraid a wife for weeping Why not strike
her instead? Why not laugh, ignore, or console? Why no weep with her? What made
one response more true than another? Was i one’s blood? Was it another’s words
of reason? Was it one’s God? Or was it, as Moenghus had claimed, one’s goal? Encircled by his people, born of them and destined
to die among them Cnaьir had chosen his blood. For thirty years he tried to
beat his thought and passions down the narrow tracks of the Utemot. But despite
his brute persistence, despite his native gifts, his fellow tribesmen could
alway smell a wrongness about him. In the intercourse between men, ever move
was constrained by others’ expectations; it was a kind of dance, an as such, it
brooked no hesitation. The Utemot glimpsed his flickerin doubts. They
understood that he tried, and they knew that whoever trie
to be of the People couldn’t be of the People. So they punished him with
whispers and guarded eyes—for more tha a hundred seasons… Thirty years of shame and
denial. Thirty years of torment and terro A lifetime of cannibal hatred… In the
end, Cnaьir had cut a trail of h own making, a solitary track of madness and
murder. He had made blood his
cleansing waters. If war was worship, the Cnaьir would be the most pious of the
Scylvendi—not simply of’t‘t People, but the greatest
among them as well. He told himself his arms were his glory. He was Cnaьir urs
Skiotha, the most violent of all men. And so he continued
telling himself, even though his every swazond marked not his honour, but the
death of Anasurimbor Moenghus. For what was madness, if not a kind of
overpowering impatience, a need to seize at once what the
world denied? Moenghus not only had to die, he had to die now—whether he was Moenghus or not. In his fury, Cnaьir had
made all the world his surrogate. And he avenged himself upon it. Despite the accuracy of
this analysis, it availed Kellhus little in his attempts to possess the Utemot
Chieftain. Always the man’s knowledge of the Dunyain barred his passage. For a
time, Kellhus even considered the possibility that Cnaьir would never succumb. Then they found Serwe‘—a
surrogate of a different kind. From the very beginning, the Scylvendi had made
her his track, his proof that he followed the ways of the People. Serwe was the
erasure of Moenghus, whose presence Kellhus’s resemblance so recalled. She was
the incantation that would undo Moenghus’s curse. And Cnaьir fell in love, not
with her, but with the idea of loving her. Because if he
loved her, he couldn’t love Anasurimbor Moenghus… Or his son. What followed had been
almost elementary. Kellhus began seducing
Serwe, knowing that he showed the barbarian his own seduction at the hands of
Moenghus some thirty years previous. Soon, she became both the erasure and the repetition of Cnaьir’s heartbreaking hate. The plainsman began
beating her, not simply to prove his Scylvendi contempt for women, but to
better beat himself. He punished her for repeating his sins, even though he at once loved her and despised
love as weakness… And so as Kellhus
intended, contradiction piled upon contradiction. World-born men, he’d
discovered, possessed a peculiar vulnerability to contradictions, particularly
those that provoked conflicting passions. Nothing, it seemed, so anchored their
hearts. Nothing so obsessed. Once Cnaьir had utterly
succumbed to the girl, Kellhus simply took her away, knowing the man would trade
anything for her return, and that he would do so without even understanding
why. Anuiurat And now the usefulness of
Cnaьir urs Skiotha was at an end. The monk climbed the sparsely grassed pate of
a dune. The wind whipped through his hair, yanked his white samite robe about
his waist. Before him, the Meneanor swept out to where the earth seemed to
spill into the great void of the night. Immediately below, he saw the
Scylvendi’s simple round tent; it had been kicked down and trampled. No fire
burned before it. For a moment Kellhus
thought he was too late, then he heard raw shouts on the wind, glimpsed a
figure amid the heaving waves. He walked through the ruined camp to the water’s
edge, felt the crunch of shells and gravel beneath his sandalled feet. Moonlight
silvered the rolling waters. Gulls cried out, hanging like kites in the night
wind. Kellhus watched the waves
batter the Scylvendi’s nude form. “There are no tracks!”
the man screamed, beating the surf with his fists. “Where are the—” Without warning, he went
rigid. Dark water swelled about him, engulfed him almost to his shoulders, then
tumbled forward in clouds of crystalline foam. He turned his head, and Kellhus
saw his weathered face, framed by long tails of sodden black hair. There was no
expression. Absolutely no expression. Cnaьir began wading to
shore; the surf broke about him, as insubstantial as smoke. “I did everything you
asked,” he called over the surrounding thunder. “I shamed my father into
battling you. I betrayed him, my tribe, my race…” The water dropped from
his massive chest to the concave plane of his stomach and groin. A wave crashed
about his white thighs, tugged upon his long phallus. Kellhus filtered out the
Meneanor’s clamour, bound his every sense to the approaching barbarian. Steady
pulse. Bloodless skin. Slack face… Dead eyes. And Kellhus realized: I cannot read this man. “I followed you across
the trackless Steppe.” The slap of bare feet
across waterlogged sand. Cnaьir paused before him, his great frame glistening
as though enamelled in the moonlight. “I loved you.” Kellhus reached back,
drew his Dunyain sword, levelled it before him. “Kneel,” he said. The Scylvendi fell to his
knees. He held out his arms, trailing fingers through the sand. He bent his
face back to the stars, exposing his throat. The Meneanor surged and seethed
behind him. Kellhus stood motionless
above him. What is this, Father? Pity? He gazed at the abject
Scylvendi warrior. From what darkness had this passion come/ “Strike!” the man cried.
The great scarred body trembled in terror and exultation. But still, Kellhus
couldn’t move. “Kill me!” Cnaьir shouted
to the bowl of the night. With uncanny swiftness he seized Kellhus’s blade,
jerked its point to his throat. “Kill! Kill!” “No,” Kellhus said. A
wave crashed, and the wind whipped cold spray across them. Leaning forward, he
gently pried his blade from the man’s heavy grip. Cnaьir’s arms snapped
about either side of his head, wrenched him to the cool sand. Kellhus remained
motionless. Whether by luck or instinct, the barbarian had yanked him within a
coin’s edge of death. The merest twitch, Kellhus knew, could break his neck. Cnaьir drew him close
enough for him to feel his humid body heat. “1 loved you!” he both whispered and screamed. Then he thrust
Kellhus backward, nearly tossing him back to his feet. Wary now, Kellhus rolled
his chin to straighten a kink from his neck. Cnaiur stared at him in hope and
horror… Kellhus sheathed his
sword. The Scylvendi swayed
backward, raising his fists to his head. He clutched handfuls of hair, wrested
them from his scalp. “But you said!” he raved,
holding out bloody shocks of hair. “You said!”
Kellhus watched, utterly unmoved. There were other uses. There were always
other uses. Anwurat The thing called
Sarcellus followed a narrow track along the embankments between fields. Despite
the uncharacteristic humidity, it was a clear night, and the moon etched the
surrounding clots of eucalytpus and sycamore in blue. He slowed as he passed
the first ruins, and guided his mount between a long gallery of columns that
jutted from a collection of grassy mounds. Beyond the columns, the Sempis lay
as still as any lake, bearing the white moon and the shadowy line of the
northern escarpments upon its mirror back. Sarcellus dismounted. This place had once
belonged to the ancient city of Girgilioth, but that mattered little to the
thing called Sarcellus. He was a creature of the moment. What mattered was that
it was a landmark, and landmarks were good places for spies to confer with
their handlers—human or otherwise. Sarcellus sat with his
back against one of the columns, lost in thoughts both predatory and
impenetrable. Cylindrical friezes of leopards standing like men soared across
the moon-pale column above. The flutter of wings stirred him from his reverie
and he looked up with his large brown eyes, reminded of different pillars. A bird the size of a
raven alighted upon his knee—a bird like any raven save for its white head. White, human head. The face twitched with
bird-nervousness, regarded Sarcellus with tiny turquoise eyes. “I smell blood,” it said
in a thin voice. Sarcellus nodded. “The
Scylvendi… He interrupted my interrogation of the girl.” “Your effectiveness?” “Is unimpaired. I heal.” A tiny blink. “Good. Then
what have you learned?” “He’s not Cishaurim.” The
thing had spoken this softly, as though to preserve tiny eardrums. A cat-curious turn of the
head. “Indeed,” the Synthese said after a moment. “Then what is he?” “Dunyain.” Tiny grimace. Small,
glistening teeth, like grains of rice, flashed between its lips. “All games end
with me, Gaortha. All games.” Sarcellus became very
still. “I play no game. This man is Dunyain. That’s what the Scylvendi
calls him. She said there’s no doubt.“ “But there’s no order called ‘Dunyain’ in
Atrithau.” “No. But then we know that he’s not a Prince
of Atrithau.” The Old Name paused, as though to cycle large human thoughts through a small bird
intellect. “Perhaps,” it eventually
said, “it’s no coincidence that this order takes its name from
ancient Kunьiric. Perhaps this man’s name, Anasurimbor, is not a
clumsy Cishaurim lie after all. Perhaps he is of the Old Seed.“ “Could the Nonmen have
trained him?” “Perhaps… But we have
spies—even in Ishterebinth. There is little that Nin-Ciljiras does that we
don’t know. Very little.” The small face cackled.
It folded and unfolded its obsidian wings. “No,” it continued, its
small brow furrowed, “this Dunyain is not a ward of the Nonmen… When the light
of ancient Kunьiri was stamped out, many stubborn embers survived. The Mandate
is just such an ember. Perhaps the Dunyain is another, just as stubborn…” The blue eyes
flickered—another blink. “But far more secretive.” Sarcellus said nothing.
Speculation on such matters was beyond his warrant, beyond his making. The tiny teeth clicked,
once, twice, as though the Old Name tested their mettle. “Yes… An ember … in the very shadow of Holy Golgotterath no less…” “He’s told the woman the
Holy War will be his.” “And he’s not Cishaurim!
Such a mystery, Gaortha! Who are the Dunyain? What do they want with the Holy
War? And how, my pretty pretty child, can this man see through your face?” “But we don’t—” “He sees enough ... Yes, more than enough…” It bent its head to the
right, blinked, then straightened. “Indulge this Prince
Kellhus for a while yet, Gaortha. With the Mandate sorcerer removed from the
game he’s become less of a threat. Indulge him… We must learn more about this
‘Dunyain.’” “But even now he grows in
power. More and more these Men call him Anwurat ‘Warrior-Prophet’ or ‘Prince
of God.’ If he continues, he will become very difficult to remove.“ “Warrior-Prophet…” The
Synthese cackled. “Very cunning, this Dunyain. He leashes these fanatics with
leather of their own making… What is his sermon, Gaortha? Does it in any way
threaten the Holy War?” “No. Not yet, Consult
Father.” “Measure him, then do as
you see fit. If it seems he might call the Holy War to kennel, you must silence
him—no matter what the cost. He is but a curiosity. The Cishaurim are our foe!” “Yes, Old Father.” Gleaming like wet marble,
the white head bobbed twice, as though in answer to some overriding instinct. A
wing dropped to Sarcellus’s knee, dipped between his shadowy thighs… Gaortha
went rigid. “Are you badly hurt, my
sweet child?” “Yessss,” the thing called
Sarcellus gasped. The small head tilted
backward. Heavy-lidded eyes watched the wingtip circle and stroke, stroke and
circle. “Ah, but imagine… Imagine a world where no womb quickens, where no soul
hopes!” Sarcellus sucked drool in
delight. Shigek Men never resemble one another so much as when asleep or
dead. —OPPARITHA, ON THE CARNAL The arrogance of the Inrithi waxed bright
in the days following Anwurat. Though the sober-minded demanded they press the
attack, the great majority clamoured for respite. They thought the Fanim
doomed, just as they thought them doomed after Mengedda. But while the Men of
the Tusk tarried, the Padirajah plotted. He would make the world his shield. —DRUSAS ACHAMIAN, THE
COMPENDIUM OF THE FIflST HOLY WAR Early Autumn, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk,
lothiah Achamian suffered dreams… Dreams drawn from the
sheath. Drizzle hazed the
distances, obscuring the Ring Mountains behind drapes of woollen grey, granting
the madness before him the span of all visible creation. Masses of Sranc,
bristling with black-bronze weapons. Ranks of Bashrag, beating the mud with
their massive hammers. And beyond them, the high ramparts of Golgotterath.
Misty barbicans above precipitous cliffs, the two great horns of the Ark
rearing into murky obscurity, curved and golden against the endless grey,
trailing skirts of unguttered water. Shigek Hoary Golgotterath,
raised about the greatest terror ever to fall from the heavens. Soon to yield… A great yawing rumbled
from the parapets out and across the dreary plains. Like a tide of spiders,
the Sranc surged forward, howling through pools, sprinting through mud. They
crashed into the phalanxes of the warlike Aorsi, the long-haired bulwark of the
North; they seethed against the shining ranks of the Kunьiri, the high tide of
Norsirai glory. The Chieftain-Princes of the High Norsirai whipped their
chariots forward and all perished before them. The standards of Ishterebinth,
last of the Nonmen Mansions, charged deep into a sea of abominations, leaving
black-blooded ruin in their wake. Great Nil’gikas stood like a point of
brilliant sunlight amid smoke and violent shadow. And Nymeric sounded the
Worldhorn, over and over, until the Sranc could hear nothing but the peal of
their doom. Seswatha, Grandmaster of
the Sohonc, raised his face to the rain and tasted sweet joy, for it was
happening, truly happening! Unholy Golgotterath, ancient Min-Uroikas, was about
to fall. He had warned them in time! Achamian would relive all
eighteen years of that delusion. Dreams drawn from the
knife’s sheath. And when he awakened, to
the sound of harsh shouts or to the patter of cold water across his face, it
would seem that one horror had merely replaced another. He would blink against
torchlight, would dully note the bite of chains, a mouth stuffed with rank
cloth, and the dark, scarlet-robed figures that surrounded him. And he would
think, before succumbing to the Dreams once again, It comes … the Apocalypse
comes… “Strange, isn’t it,
Iyokus?” “And what is that?” “That men can be rendered
so helpless so easily.” “Men and Schools…” “What are you implying?” “Nothing, Grandmaster.” actUMU MARCH “Look! He watches!” “Yes… He does that from
time to time. But he must recover more of his strength before we can begin.” Esmenet cried out when
she saw them walking their mounts across the field toward her. Kellhus and
Serwe, haggard from long and sleepless travel. Suddenly she was running across
the uneven pasture, as though drawn by a long irresistible line. Toward them.
No, not them—toward him. She flew to him, clutched
him harder than she thought her limbs capable. He smelt of dust and scented
oils. His beard and hair kissed her bare skin with soft curls. She could feel
her tears roll from her cheek to his neck in continuous lines. “Kellhus,” she sobbed.
“Oh, Kellhus… I think I’m going mad!” “No, Esmi… It is grief.” He seemed a pillar of
comfort. His square chest flattening her breasts. His long warding arms about
her back and narrow waist. He pressed her back, and
she turned to Serwe, who was also crying. They hugged, then together walked
back to the lonely tent on the slope. Kellhus led their horses. “We missed you, Esmi,” Serwe said, strangely flustered. Esmenet regarded the girl
with sorrow. Her left eye was bruised black and cherry and an angry red cut
poked from beneath her hairline. Even if Esmenet had the heart—and she had
none—she would wait for Serwe to explain rather than ask what had happened.
With such marks, asking demanded lies, and silence afforded truth. That was the
lot of women— especially when they were wanton… Aside from her face, the
girl appeared healthy, almost aglow. Beneath her hasas, her belly had swelled
in the narrow-hipped manner Esmenet could only envy. A hundred questions
assailed Esmenet. How was her back? How often did she pee? Had there been any
bleeding? Suddenly she realized how terrified the girl must be—even with
Kellhus. Esmenet could remember her own joyous terror. But then, she’d been
alone. Absolutely alone. “You must be famished!”
she exclaimed. Serwe shook her head in
feeble denial, and both Esmenet and Kellhus laughed. Serwe was always hungry—as
a pregnant woman should be. For a moment, Esmenet
felt the old sunshine flash from her eyes. “It’s so good to see you,” she said.
“I’ve mourned more than the loss of Achamian.“ Dusk had come, so she
began drawing wood—mostly bone-coloured flotsam she’d found along the river—to
throw into the fire. Kellhus sat cross-legged before the dwindling flames.
Serwe leaned her head against his shoulder, her hair nearly bleached white by
the sun, her nose red and peeling as always. “This is the same fire,”
Kellhus said. “The one we struck after first coming to Shigek.“ Esmenet paused, her arms
wrapped about her wood. “It is!” Serwe exclaimed.
She looked around the bare slopes, turned to ‘ the dark band of the river in
the near distance. “But everything’s gone… All the tents. All the people…” Esmenet fed the fire
piece by elaborate piece. She’d obsessed over her fires of late. There was no
one else to tend. She could feel Kellhus’s
gentle scrutiny. “Some hearths can’t be
rekindled,” he said. “It burns well enough,”
Esmenet murmured. She blinked tears, sniffled and wiped at her nose. “But what makes a hearth,
Esmi? Is it the fire, or the family that keeps it?“ “The family,” she finally
said. A strange blankness had overcome her. “We’re that family… You
know that.” Kellhus had bent his head sideways to look into her down turned
face. “And Achamian knows that too.“ Her legs became
strangers, and she stumbled, fell onto her rump. She began weeping yet again. “B-but I-I have to-to
stay… I-I have-have’t-to wait for him… for him to come home.“ Kellhus knelt beside her,
lifted her chin. She glimpsed a tear’s shining track across his left
cheek. “We are that home,” he
said, and somehow that was the end of it. V1ARCH Over the course of
dinner, Kellhus explained all that had happened the previous week. He was a
most extraordinary storyteller—he always had been—and for a time Esmenet found
herself lost in the Battle of Anwurat and its wrenching intricacies. Her heart
pounded in her throat when he described the burning of the encampment and the
charge of the Khirgwi, and she clapped and laughed every bit as hard as Serwe
when he described his defence of the Swazond Standard, which according to him
consisted of no more than a succession of outlandishly lucky blunders. And she
found herself wondering that such a miraculous man—a prophet! for he could be
nothing else—concerned himself with her,
Esmenet, a caste-menial whore from the slums of Sumna. “Ah, Esmi,” he said, “it
brings such peace to my heart to see you smile.” She bit her lip, laughed
through a crying face. He continued, more
seriously, to explain the events following the battle. How the heathens had
been chased into the desert. How Gotian had held Skauras’s severed head before
their victory fires. How even now the Holy War secured the South Bank. From the
Delta to the deep desert, tabernacles burned… Esmenet had seen the
smoke. They sat silently for a
while, listening to the fire gorge on her wood. As always the sky was desert
clear, and the vault of stars seemed endless. Moonlight silvered the eternal
Sempis. How many nights had she
pondered these things? Sky and sweeping landscape. Dwarfing her, terrifying her
with their monstrous indifference, reminding her that hearts were no more than
fluttering rags. Too much wind, and they were tossed into the great black. Too
little, and they fell slack. What chance did Akka
have? “I received word from
Xinemus,” Kellhus finally said. “He still searches…” “So there’s hope?” “There’s always hope,” he
said in a voice that at once encouraged and deadened her heart. “We can only
wait and see what he finds.” Esmenet couldn’t speak.
She glanced at Serwe, but the girl avoided her eyes. They think he’s deed. Shigek She knew better than to
hope. This was the world. But dead seemed such an impossible
thought. How could one think the end of thinking? Akka would— “Come,” Kellhus said, in
the quick and open manner of someone assured of his new course. He strode
around her small fire, sat with his knees in his hands next to her. With a
stick he scratched an oddly familiar sign into the bare earth before them. “In
the meantime, let’s teach you how to read.” It seemed all crying had
been wrung from her, but somehow… Esmenet looked to Kellhus
and smiled through her tears. Her voice felt small and broken. “I’ve always wanted to
read.” The seamless transition
of agonies—from Seswatha’s torture in the bowels of Dagliash two thousand years
before to now… The pain of puckered burns,
chafed wrists, joints contorted by the wrong distribution of his body’s weight.
At first Achamian didn’t realize he was awake. It merely seemed that
Mekeritrig’s face had transformed into that of Eleazaras—the inhumanly
beautiful face of the Mantraitor had become that of the Grandmaster, rutted and
whiskered. “Ah, Achamian,” Eleazaras
said, “it’s good to see you seeing—things in this world at least. For some time
we feared you wouldn’t awaken at all. You were very nearly killed, you know.
The Library was absolutely ruined… All those books ash, simply because of your
stubbornness. How the Sareots must howl in the Outside. All their poor books.” Achamian was gagged,
naked, and chained, wrists above his head and ankle to ankle, so that he hung
suspended over a great mosaic floor. The chamber was vaulted, but he couldn’t
see the ceiling’s peak, nor could he see the terminus of the walls that framed
the silk-gowned entourage before him. The surrounding spaces were lost in
gloom. Three glowering tripods provided light, and only he, hanging in the
confluence of their circles of illumination, was bright. “Ah yes…” Eleazaras
continued, watching him with a thin smile. “This place. It’s always good to
have a sense of one’s prison, no? An old Inrithi chapel, by the looks of it.
Built by the Ceneians, I suppose.” IHfc OECOND MARCH Suddenly he understood. The Scarlet Spires! I’m dead… I’m dead. Tears welled down his
cheeks. His body, beaten, numb from hanging betrayed him, and he felt the rush
of urine and bowel along his naked legs heard mud slap across the mosaic
serpents at his feet. Nooo! This can’t be happening! Eleazaras laughed, a
thin, wicked thing. “And now,” he said, his tone jnanic and droll, “some
long-dead Ceneian architect also howls.” There was uneasy laughter
from his retinue. Seized by animal panic,
Achamian writhed against his chains, hacked against the cloth in his throat.
Spasms struck and he went limp. He swung in small circles, punished by wave
after wave of pain. Esmi… “There’s much certainty here,” Eleazaras said, holding a kerchief to his
face, “don’t you think, Achamian? You know why you’ve been taken. And you also know the inevitable
outcome. We’ll ply you for the Gnosis, and you, conditioned by years of Mandate
training, will frustrate our every attempt. You’ll die in agony, your secrets
clutched close to your heart, and we’ll be left with yet another useless
Mandate corpse. This is the way that it’s supposed to happen, no?” Achamian simply stared in
blank horror, an anguished pendulum slowly swinging to and fro, to and fro… What Eleazaras said was
true. He was supposed to die for his knowl‘ edge, for the Gnosis. Think, Achamian, think!
Please^please’dear-God’you-must’think! Without the guidance of
the Nonmen Quya, the Anagogic Schools of the Three Seas had never learned how
to surpass what were called the Analogies. All their sorcery, no matter how
powerful or ingenious, arose through the power of arcane associations, through
the resonances between words and concrete events. They required
detours—dragons, lightnings, suns—to bum«. the world. They could not, like
Achamian, conjure the essence of these | things, the Burning
itself. They knew nothing of the Abstractions. Where they were poets, he
was a philosopher. They were mere bronze to his
iron, and he would show them. Achamian snorted air
through his nostrils. Through bleary eyes, he glared at the Grandmaster. Shigek I will see you burn! I will see you bum! “But here,” Eleazaras was saying, “in these tumultuous times,
the past need not be our tyrant. Here, your torment, your death, isn’t assured…
Here, nothing is for certain.” Eleazaras walked from the
others—five graceful, measured steps—and came to a stop very near to Achamian. “To prove this to you,
I’ll have your gag removed. I’ll actually let you speak, rather than ply you, as we have your fellow
Schoolmen in the past, with endless Compulsions. But I warn you, Achamian, it
will be fruitless to try to assail us.” He produced a slender hand from the
cuff of his glyph-embroidered sleeve, gestured to the mosaic floor. Achamian saw a broad
circle, painted in red, across the stylized animals of the mosaic floor: the
representation of a snake scaled by pictograms and devouring its own tail. “As you can see,”
Eleazaras said mildly, “you’re chained above a Uroborian Circle… To even begin
a Cant will invite immeasurable pain, I assure you. I’ve witnessed it before.” So had Achamian. The
Scarlet Spires, it seemed, possessed many potent poetic devices. The Grandmaster
retreated, and a lumbering eunuch appeared from the shadows. With fat but
nimble fingers, he withdrew the gag. Achamian sucked air through his mouth,
tasted the stink of his body’s earlier treachery. He hung his head forward,
spit as best he could. The Scarlet Schoolmen
watched him expectantly, even apprehensively. “Well?” Eleazaras asked. Achamian blinked, cocked
his neck against the pain. “Where are we?” he croaked. A broad smile split the
Grandmaster’s thin grey goatee. “Why, Iothiah of course.” Achamian grimaced and
nodded. He looked down to the Uroborian Circle beneath, saw his urine trickle
along the grout between mosaic tiles… It didn’t seem a matter
of courage, only a giddy instant of disconnection, a wilful ignorance of the
consequences. He said two words. Agony. Enough to shriek, to
empty bowels once again. Threads of incandescence,
winding, forking beneath his skin, as though he possessed sunlight for blood. Shriek and shriek until
it seemed that eyes must rupture, that teeth must crack, spill to mosaic floor,
clicking like porcelain against porcelain. And then back to nightmares of a far
older, and far less momentary, torment. When the shrieking
stopped, Eleazaras stared at the unconscious figure. Even chained and naked,
his shrivelled phallus prodding from black pubic hair, the man seemed…
threatening. “Stubborn,” Iyokus said,
in a tone that insolently asked, What
did youexpect? “Indeed,” Eleazaras
replied, and fumed. Delay after delay. The Gnosis would be such a lovely thing
to wrest from this quivering dog, but it would be an unexpected gift. What he needed to know is what happened that night in the Imperial
Catacombs beneath the Andiamine Heights. He needed to know what this man knew
of the Cishaurim skin-spies. The Cishaurim! Directly or indirectly,
this one Mandate dog had undone whatever advantage they’d gained at the Battle
of Mengedda. First, by killing two sorcerers of rank at the Sareotic Library,
among them Yutirames, an old and powerful ally of Eleazaras’s. Then, by
providing that fanatic Proyas with leverage. If it hadn’t been for the man’s threats
of avenging his “dear old tutor,” Eleazaras would never have allowed the
Scarlet Spires to join the Holy War on the South Bank. Six! Six sorcerers of
rank fell to Fanim bowmen armed with Chorae at the Battle of Anwurat. Ukrummu,
Calasthenes, Nai’n… Six! And this, Eleazaras knew,
was precisely what the Cishaurim wanted… To bleed them while jealously guarding
their own blood! Oh, he did covet the
Gnosis. So much that it almost proved a counterweight to that other
word—“Cishaurim.” Almost. That evening at the Sareotic Library, watching this
one man resist eight sorcerers of rank Shigek with glittering, abstract
lights, Eleazaras had envied as he’d never envied before. Such miraculous
power. Such purity of dispensation. How? he had thought. How? Fucking Mandate pigs. After he learned what he
needed about the Cishaurim, he would see this dog plied in the old way. All
things in the world were a lottery, and who knew, seizing this man might prove
an act as significant as destroying the Cishaurim—in the end. That, Eleazaras decided,
was Iyokus’s problem. He could not fathom the fact that certain rewards made
even the most desperate gambles worthwhile. He knew nothing of hope. Chanv addicts never
seemed to know anything of hope. The Sempis seemed more
than a river in the crossing. Esmenet had ridden behind
Serwe to a nearby Inrithi ferry, both terrified of floating on a beast’s back,
and amazed by the girl’s native ability to ride. She was Cepaloran, Serwe
explained. She’d been born astride a saddle. Which meant, Esmenet
thought in a moment of uncommon bitterness, with her legs spread wide. Afterward, standing in
the shade of hissing leaves, she looked across the river to the denuded North
Bank. The barrenness saddened her, reminded her of her heart and why she had to
leave. But the distance… A terrifying sense of finality seized her, a certainty
that the Sempis, whose waters she’d thought kind, was in fact ruthlessly
vindictive, and would brook no return. I can swim… I know how to swim! Kellhus clasped her about
the shoulder. “The world looks south,” he said. Returning to the Conriyan
encampment was far less difficult than she feared. Proyas had pitched camp
beyond the high walls of Ammegnotis, the only great city on the South Bank.
Because of this they found themselves part of a great stream of market-bound
traffic: bands of horsemen, wains, barefooted penitents, all crowding the side
of the road where the shade of palms was deepest. But rather than vanishing
into the crowd, •L ifugek they found themselves
beset by people, mostly Men of the Tusk but some camp-followers as well, all
begging to be touched or blessed by the Warrior-Prophet. Word of his stand
against the Khirgwi, Serwe explained, had further confirmed him in the hearts
of many people. They were fairly mobbed by the time they reached the camp. “He no longer rebukes
them,” Esmenet said, watching in astonishment. Serwe laughed. “Isn’t it
wonderful?” And it was—it was! There was Kellhus, the man who had teased her so
many times about their fire, walking among adoring masses, smiling, touching
cheeks, uttering warm and encouraging words. There was Kellhus! The Warrior-Prophet. He looked up to them,
grinned and winked. Pressed against the girl’s back in the saddle, Esmenet
could feel Serwe shiver in delight, and for an instant she experienced a pang
of savage jealousy. Why did she always lose? Why did the Gods hate her so? Why
not someone else, someone deserving? Why not Serwe? But shame followed hard
on these thoughts. Kellhus had come for her. Kellhus! This man whom others worshipped had come
out of concern for her. He does this for Achamian. For his
teacher… Proyas had posted pickets
around the outskirts of the Conriyan camp—primarily because of the furor
surrounding Kellhus, Serwe explained—and they soon found themselves walking
unmolested through long canvas alleys. Esmenet had told herself
she feared returning because it would stir too many recollections. But losing
those recollections was what she truly feared. Her refusal to leave their old
camp had been rash, desperate, pathetic… Kellhus had shown her that. But
remaining had fortified her somehow—or so it
seemed when she thought about it. There was the clutching sense of
defensiveness, the certainty that she must protect Achamian’s surroundings.
She’d even refused to touch the chipped clay bowl he’d used for his tea that
final morning. By describing his absence in such heartbreaking detail, such
things had become, it seemed to her, fetishes, charms that would secure his
return. And there was the sense of desolate pride. Everyone had fled, but she
remained—she remained! She would look across the abandoned
fields, at the firepits becoming earthen, at the paths scuffed
through the grasses, and all the world would seem a phost. Only her loss would
seem real… Only Achamian. Wasn’t there some glory, some grace in that? Now she was moving on—no
matter what Kellhus said about hearth and family. Did that mean she
was leaving Akka behind as well? She wept while Kellhus
helped her pitch Achamian’s tent, so small and threadbare, in the shadow of the
grand brocaded pavilion he shared with Serwe. But she was grateful. So very
grateful. She had assumed the first
few nights would be awkward, but she was wrong. Kellhus was too generous, and
Serwe too innocent, for her to feel anything other than welcome. From time to
time, Kellhus would make her laugh, simply to remind her, Esmenet suspected,
that she could still feel joy. Otherwise, he would either share her sorrow, or
withdraw, so she might suffer in seclusion. Serwe was… well, Serwe.
Sometimes she would seem utterly oblivious to Esmenet’s grief and act as though
nothing had changed, as though Achamian might at any moment come strolling down
the winding alley, laughing or quarrelling with Xinemus. And though Esmenet
found the thought of this offensive, she found it peculiarly comforting in
practice. It was nice to pretend. Other times, Serwe would
seem absolutely devastated, for her, for Achamian, as well as for herself. Part
of this was the pregnancy, Esmenet knew—she herself had wept and laughed like a
madwoman while carrying her daughter—but Esmenet found it particularly
difficult to bear. She would dutifully ask Serwe what was wrong, would always
he gentle, but her thoughts would fill her with shame. If Serwe said she cried
for Achamian, Esmenet would wonder why. Had they been lovers for more than one
night? If Serwe said she cried for her,
Esmenet would be indignant. What? Was she that pathetic? And if Serwe simply
seemed to wallow, Esmenet would find herself disgusted. How could anyone be so
selfish? Afterward, Esmenet would
berate herself. What would Achamian think of such bitter, spiteful thoughts?
How disappointed he’d be! “Esmi!” he’d say. “Esmi, please …” And she’d spend watch after sleepless watch
remembering all her horrid words, all her petty cruelties, and begging the Gods
for forgiveness. She didn’t mean them. How could she? On her third night, she
heard a soft tapping against her tent flap. When she pulled it aside, Serwe
pressed in, smelling of smoke, oranges, and jasmine. The half-naked girl knelt
in the gloom crying. Esmenet already knew Kellhus hadn’t returned, because
she’d been listening. He had his councils and, of course, his growing
congregation. “Serchaa?” she asked,
overcome by the motherly weariness of having to console those who suffered far
less than herself. “What is it, Serchaa?” “Please, Esmi. Please, I
beg you!” “Please what, Serchaa? What do you mean?” The girl hesitated. Her
eyes were little more than glittering points in the gloom. “Don’t steal him!” Serwe
suddenly cried. “Don’t steal him from me!” Esmenet laughed, but
softly so as not to bruise the girl’s feelings. “Steal Kellhus,” she
said. “Please, Esmi! Y-you’re
so beautiful… Almost as beautiful as me! But you’re smart too! You speak to him
the way other men speak to him! I’ve heard you!” “Serchaa… I love Akka. I love Kellhus too, but not… not the way you fear.
Please, you mustn’t fear! I couldn’t bear it if you feared me, Serchaa!”
Esmenet had thought herself sincere, but afterward, as she nestled against
Serwe’s slender back, she found herself exulting in the thought of Serwe’s
fear. She curled the girl’s blond hair between her fingers, thinking of the way
Serwe had swept it across Achamian’s chest… How easy, she wondered, would it
yank from her scalp? Why did
you lie with Akka? Why? The following morning,
Esmenet awoke stricken with remorse. Hatred, as the Sumni said, was a rapacious
houseguest, and lingered only in hearts fat with pride. Esmenet’s heart had
grown very thin. She stared at the girl in the tinted light. Serwe had rolled
in her sleep, and now lay with her angelic face turned to Esmenet. Her right
hand cupped the bulge of her stomach. She breathed quiet as a babe. How could such beauty
dwell in a slumbering face? For a time, Esmenet pondered what it was she
thought she saw. There was a peculiar sense of sneakiness, the thrill of one-sided witness so familiar to
children. This was what made Esmenet grin. But there was far more: the aura of
dormant life, the premonition of death, the wonder of seeing the unruly
carnival of Shigek human expression enclosed
in the stillness of a single point. There was a sense of truth, a recognition
that all faces held this one point in common.
This, Esmenet knew, was her face, as it was Achamian’s, or
even Kellhus’s. But more than anything, there was a glorious vulnerability. The
sleeping throat, the Nilnameshi proverb went, was easily cut. Was this not
love? To be watched while you slept… She was crying when Serwe awoke. She
watched the girl blink, focus, and frown. ‘Why?“ Serwe asked. Esmenet smiled. “Because
you’re so beautiful,” she said. “So perfect.” Serwe’s eyes flashed with joy.
She rolled onto her back, stretching her arms into the stuffy air. “1 know!” she cried, rolling her shoulders in a little jig.
She looked to Esmenet, bounced her eyebrows up and down. “Everybody wants me!”
she laughed. “Even you!” “Little bitch!” Esmenet
gasped, raising her hands as though to claw at her eyes. Kellhus was already at
the fire when they tumbled from the tent, laughing and squealing. He shook his
head—as perhaps a man should. From that day, Esmenet
found herself tending to Serwe with even greater kindness. It was so strange,
so confusing, the friendship she’d found with this girl, this pregnant child
who had taken a prophet as a lover. Even before Achamian had
left for the Library, she’d wondered what it was Kellhus saw in Serwe.
Certainly it had to be more than her beauty— which was, Esmenet often thought,
nothing short of otherworldly. Kellhus saw hearts, not skin, no matter how
smooth or marble white. And Serwe’s heart had seemed so flawed. Joyous and
open, certainly, but also vain, petulant, peevish, and wanton. But now Esmenet wondered
whether these very flaws held the secret of her heart’s perfection. For she’d
glimpsed that perfection while watching her sleep. For an instant, she’d
glimpsed what only Kellhus could see… The beauty of frailty. The splendour of
imperfection. She had witnessed, she realized. Witnessed truth. She could find
no proper words, but she felt better for it, revived somehow. That morning
Kellhus had looked at her and had nodded in a MARCH frank, admiring manner
that reminded her of Xinemus. He said nothing because nothing needed to be
said—or so it seemed. Perhaps, she thought, truth wasn’t unlike sorcery.
Perhaps those who see truth simply see each other. Later, before she left
with Serwe to scrounge through the half-abandoned bazaars of Ammegnotis,
Kellhus assisted her with her reading. Despite her protestations, he’d given
her The Chronicle of the Tusk as a primer. Simply holding the
leather-bound manuscript filled her with dread. The look of it, the smell of
it, even the rasping creak of its spine spoke of righteousness and irrevocable
judgement. The pages seemed inked in iron. Every word she sounded out possessed
an anxiousness all its own. Every bird-track column threatened the next. “I need not,” she told
Kellhus, “read the warrant of my own damnation!” “What does it say?”
Kellhus asked, ignoring her tantrum. “That I’m filth!” “What does it say, Esmi.” She returned to the
exhausting trial of wrestling sounds from marks, and words from sounds. The day was desert hot,
particularly in the city, where the stone and the mud brick soaked up the sun
and seemed to redouble its heat. Esmenet retired early that night, and for the
first time in many days, fell asleep without crying for Achamian. She awoke to what the
Nansur called “fool’s morning.” Her eyes simply fluttered open, and she found
herself alert, even though the darkness and the temperature told her the
morning lay many watches away. She frowned at the entrance to the tent, which
had been pulled open. Her bare feet jutted from her blankets. Moonlight bathed
them and the sandalled feet of a man… “Such interesting company
you keep,” Sarcellus said. Screaming never occurred to her. For a heartbeat or
two, his presence seemed as proper as it seemed impossible. He lay
beside her, his head propped on his elbow, his large brown eyes glittering with
amusement. Beneath white, gold-floriated vestments, he wore a Shrial gown with
a Tusk embroidered across its chest. He smelled of sandalwood and other ritual
incenses she couldn’t identify. “Sarcellus,” she
murmured. How long had he been watching her? Shigek “You never did tell the
sorcerer about me, did you?” “No.” He shook his head in
rueful mockery. “Naughty whore.” The sense of unreality
drained away, and the first true pang of fear struck her. “What do you want,
Sarcellus?” “You.” “Leave…” “Your prophet isn’t what
you think he is… You do know that.” Fear had become terror.
She knew full well how cruel he could be to those who fell outside the narrow
circle of his respect, but she’d always thought herself within that circle—even
after she’d left his tent. But something had happened… Somehow, she understood
she meant nothing, absolutely nothing, to the man now gazing upon her. “Leave now, Sarcellus.” The Knight-Commander
laughed. “But I need you, Esmi. I need your help…There’s gold…” “I’ll scream. I’m
warning—” “There’s life!” Sarcellus snarled. Somehow his hand had clamped
about her mouth. She didn’t need to feel the prick to know he held a knife to
her throat. “Listen, whore. You’ve
made a habit of begging at the wrong table. The sorcerer’s dead. Your prophet
will soon follow. Now I ask, where does that leave you?” He swept the covers away,
exposed her to the warm night air. She flinched, sobbed as the knifepoint
swizzled across her moonlit skin. “Eh, old whore? What will you do when your peach loses its
pucker, hmm? Whom will you bed then? How will you end, I wonder? Will you be
fucking lepers? Or will you be sucking scared little boys for scraps of bread?” She wet herself in
terror. Sarcellus breathed deep,
as though savouring the bouquet of her humiliation. His eyes laughed. “Is that understanding I smell?” Esmenet, sobbing, nodded against the iron
fingers. Sarcellus smirked, removed his hand. She shrieked, screamed until it
seemed her throat must bleed. Then Kellhus held her,
and she was drawn from the tent to the glowirm coals of the firepit. She heard
shouts, saw men crowding about them with torches, heard voices rumbling in
Conriyan. Somehow she explained what happened, shuddering and sobbing within
the frame of Kellhus’s strong arms After what seemed both heartbeats and days,
the commotion passed. People returned to what sleep remained to them. The
terror receded, replaced by the exhausted throb of embarrassment. Kellhus told
her he would complain to Gotian, but that there would be very little anyone
could do. “Sarcellus is a
Knight-Commander,” Kellhus said. And she was just a dead
sorcerer’s whore. Naughty whore. Esmenet refused Serwe’s
offer to stay with her and Kellhus in their pavilion, but accepted her offer to
wash with her laver. Afterward, Kellhus followed her to her tent. “Serwe cleaned it for
you,” he said. “She replaced your bedding.” Esmenet started crying yet again.
When had she become so weak? So pathetic? How could you leave me? Why did you leave
me? She crawled into the tent
as though diving into a burrow. She hid her face in clean woollen blankets. She
smelled sandalwood… Bearing his lantern,
Kellhus followed, sat cross-legged over her. “He’s gone, Esmenet… Sarcellus
won’t return. Not after tonight. Even if nothing happens, the questions will
embarrass him. What man doesn’t suspect other men of acting on their own
lusts?” “You don’t understand,”
she gasped. How could she tell him? All this time fearing for Achamian, even
daring to mourn him, and still… “I lied to him!” she exclaimed. “I lied to Akka!” Kellhus frowned. “What do you mean?” “After he left me in
Sumna the Consult came to me, the Consult
Kellhus! And I knew that Inrau’s death had been no suicide. I knew it! But I
never told Akka. Sweet Sejenus, / never told him! And now he’s gone, Kellhus! Gone!” “Breathe, Esmi. Breathe… What does this have to do with Sarcellus?” “I don’t know… That’s the mad part. I don’t
know!” “You were lovers,” Kellhus said, and she went
still, like a child confronted by a wolf. Kellhus had always known her secret,
since that Shigek ight at the Shrine above
Asgilioch when he’d interrupted her and Sarcellus. So why her terror now? “For a time you thought
you loved Sarcellus,” Kellhus continued. “You even judged Achamian against him…
You judged and found Achamian wanting.“ “I was a fool!” she
cried. “A fool!” How could she be such a fool? No man is your equal, love! No man! “Achamian was weak,”
Kellhus said. “But I loved him for those weaknesses! Don’t you see? That’s why I loved
him!” I loved him in truth! “And that’s why you could
never go to him… To go to him while you shared Sarcellus’s bed would be to
accuse him of those very weaknesses he couldn’t bear. So you stayed away,
fooled yourself into thinking you searched for him when you were hiding all the
while.” “How can you know these
things?” she sobbed. “But no matter how much
you lied to yourself, you knew… And that’s why you could never
tell Achamian about what happened in Sumna—no matter how much he needed to
know! Because you knew he wouldn’t understand, and you feared what he would
see…” Despicable, selfish,
hateful… Polluted. But Kellhus could see…
He’d always seen. “Don’t look at me!” she
cried. Look at me… “But I do, Esmi. I do
look. And what I see fills me with wonder.” And these narcotic words,
so warm and so close—so very close!— stilled her. Her pillow ached against her
cheek, and the hard earth beneath her mat bruised, but all was warm and all was
safe. He blew out his lantern, then quietly withdrew from her tent. The warm
memory of his fingers continued to comb her hair. Obviously famished, Serwe
had started eating early. A pot of rice boiled on the fire, which Kellhus
periodically opened and closed, adding onions, spices, and Shigeki pepper.
Ordinarily Esmenet would have cooked, but MARCH Kellhus had her reading
aloud from The Chronicle of
the Tusk,
laughing at her rare fumbles and showering her with encouragement. She was reading the
Canticles, the old “Tusk Laws,” many of which the Latter Prophet had
rescinded in The Tractate. Together they wondered that children were stoned
to death for striking their parents, or that when a man murdered some other
man’s brother, his own brother was executed. Then she read, ‘“Suffer
not a…’” She recognized the words
because of sheer repetition. Sounding out the following word, she said,
‘“whore…”’ and stopped. She glanced at Kellhus and angrily recited, ‘“Suffer
not a whore to live, for she maketh a pit of her womb…’” Her ears burned. She
squelched a sudden urge to cast the book into the flames. Kellhus gazed back,
utterly unsurprised. He’5 been waiting for me
to reach this passage. All along… “Give me the book,” he said, his tone unreadable. She
did as she was told. In a fluid, almost
thoughtless motion, he pulled his knife from the ceremonial sheath he wore
about his waist. Pinching the blade near the tip, he proceeded to scratch the
ink of the offending statement from the vellum. For several heartbeats, Esmenet
couldn’t comprehend what he was doing. She simply stared, a petrified witness. Once the column was
clean, he leaned back to survey his handiwork. “Better,” he said, as though
he’d just scraped mould from bread. He turned to pass the book back. Esmenet couldn’t bring
herself to touch it. “But… But you can’t do that!” “No?” He pressed the book into
her hands. She fairly tossed it into the dust on her far side. “That’s Scripture, Kellhus. The Tusk. The Holy Tusk!” “I know. The warrant of your damnation.”
Esmenet gawked like a fool. “But…” Kellhus scowled and shook
his head, as though astonished she could be so dense. “Just who, Esmi, do you
think I am?” Serwe‘ chirped with
laughter, even clapped her hands. “Wh-who?” Esmenet
stammered. It was the most she could manage. Other than in rare anger or jest,
she’d never heard Kelhus speak with… with such presumption. “Yes,” Kellhus repeated,
“who?” His voice seemed satin thunder.
He looked as eternal as a circle. Then Esmenet glimpsed it:
the shining gold about his hands… Without thinking, she rolled to her knees
before him, pressed her face into the dust. Please.1
Please.1 I’m nothing! Then Serwe hiccuped. Suddenly,
absurdly, it was just Kellhus before her, laughing, drawing her up from the
dust, bidding her to eat her supper. “Better?” he said as she
numbly resumed her place beside him. Her whole skin burned and prickled. He
nodded toward the open book while filling his mouth with rice. Bewildered, flustered,
she blushed and looked down. She nodded to her bowl. I knew this.1 I
always knew this! The difference was that
Kellhus now knew as well. His presence burned in her periphery. How, she
breathlessly wondered, how could she ever look into his eyes again? Throughout her entire
life she’d looked upon things and people that stood apart. She was Esmenet, and
that was her bowl, the Emperor’s silver, the Shriah’s man, the God’s ground,
and so on. She stood here, and those things there. No longer. Everything, it seemed, radiated the
warmth of his skin. The ground beneath her bare feet. The mat beneath her
buttocks. And for a mad instant, she was certain that if she raised her fingers
to her cheek, she would feel the soft curls of a flaxen beard, that if she
turned to her left, she would see Esmenet hovering motionless over her rice
bowl. Somehow, everything had
become here, and everything here had become him. Kellhus! She breathed in. Her
heart battered her breast. He scraped
the passage clean! In a single exhalation,
it seemed, a lifetime of condemnation slipped from her, and she felt shriven, truly shriven. One breath and she was absolved! She experienced a
kind of lucidity, as though her thoughts had been cleansed like water
strained through bright white cloth. She thought she should cry, but the sunlight was too sharp, the air too
clear for weeping. Everything was so certain. He
scraped the passage clean! Then she thought of Achamian. The air smelled of wine
and vomit and armpits. Torches flared through the murk, painting mud-brick
walls in oranges and blacks, illuminating slivers of the drunken warriors who
crowded the dark: a bearded jaw line here, a furrowed brow there, a glistening
eye, a bloody fist upon a pommel. Cnaьir urs Skiotha walked among them, through
the tight alleys of the Heppa, Ammegnotis’s ancient district of revels. He
shouldered his way forward, moving intently, as though he had a destination.
Laughter and light boomed through wide-thrown doors. Shigeki girls giggled,
called out in mangled Sheyic. Children hawked stolen oranges. Laughing, he
thought. All of them laughing… You’re
not of the land! “You!” he heard someone cry. Weeper! Faggot weeper! “You,” a young Galeoth man at his side said. Where had he
come from? His eyes flashed in wonder, but something about the broken light
made his face lurid. His lips looked wanton and feminine, the black hollow of
his mouth promising. “You travelled with him. You’re his first disciple! His
first!” “Who?” “Him. The
Warrior-Prophet.” You beat me, old Bannut, his father’s
brother, cried, for fucking
him theway you fucked his father!“ Cnaьir seized the man,
yanked him close. “Who?” “Prince Kellhus of
Atrithau… You’re the Scylvendi who found him on the Steppe. Who delivered him
to us!” Yes… The Dunyain. Somehow he’d forgotten about him. He glimpsed a face
blow open, like Steppe grasses in a gust. He felt a palm, warm and tender upon
his thigh. He began shaking. Shigek You’re more… More than the People! “I am of the People!” he
grated. The man wrenched
ineffectually at his wrists. “Pleease!” he hissed. “I thought… I thought…” Cnaьir tossed him to the
ground, glared at the shadowy procession of passersby. Did they laugh? I watched you that night! 1 saw the way
you looked at him! How did he find himself
on this track? Where was he riding? “What did you call me?”
he screamed at the prostrate man. He remembered running as
hard as he could, away from the black paths worn through the grasses, away from
the yaksh and his father’s all-knowing wrath. He found a clutch of sumacs and
cleared a hollow in their hidden heart. The weave of green grasses through
grey. The smell of earth, of beetles crawling through damp and dark grottoes.
The smell of solitude and secrecy, under the sky but sheltered from the wind.
He pulled the broken pieces from his belt and spread them in breathless wonder.
He reassembled them. She was so sad. And so beautiful. Impossibly beautiful. Someone. He was
forgetting to hate someone. In terror, all men throw up their hands
and turn aside their faces. Remember, Tratta, always preserve the face! For
that is where
you are. —THROSEANIS, TR1AM1S 1MPERATOR The Poet will yield up his stylus only
when the Geometer can explain how Life can at once be a point and a line. How
can all time, all creation, come to the now? Make no mistake: this moment, the
instant of this very breath, is the frail thread from which all creation hangs. That men dare to be thoughtless… —TERES ANSANSIUS, THE CITY OF MEN Early Autumn, 4111 Year-of-the-Tu.sk,
Shigek One day, returning from
the river with their laundered clothes, Esmenet overheard several Men of the
Tusk discussing the Holy War’s preparations for their continuing march. Kellhus
spent part of the afternoon with her and Serwe, explaining how the Kianene,
before retreating across the desert, had slaughtered every camel on the South
Bank, just as they’d burned every boat before retreating across the Sempis.
Since then, forays into the deserts of Khemema to the south had found every well
poisoned. Shigek “The Padirajah,” Kellhus
said, “hopes to make of the desert what Skauras hoped to make of the Sempis.” The Great Names, of
course, were undeterred. They planned to march along the coastal hills followed
by the Imperial Fleet, which would provide them with all the water they would
need. The road would be laborious—they would have to send parties of thousands
through the hills to collect the water—but it would see them safely to
Enathpaneah, to the very marches of the Sacred Land, long before the Padirajah
could possibly recover from his defeat at Anwurat. “Soon you two will be
shuffling through sand,” Kellhus said in the warm teasing manner that Esmenet
had learned to love long ago. “It’ll be hard for you, Serwe, heavy with child,
carrying our pavilion on your back.” The girl shot him a look,
at once scolding and delighted. Esmenet laughed, at the same time realizing
she’d be travelling even farther from Achamian… She wanted to ask Kellhus
if he’d heard any word from Xinemus, but she was too frightened. Besides, she
knew Kellhus would tell her as soon as any news arrived. And she knew what that
news would be. She’d glimpsed it in Kellhus’s eyes many, many times. Once again they’d
gathered about the same side of the fire to avoid the winding smoke, Kellhus in
the centre, Serwe on his right, and Esmenet on his left. They were cooking
small pieces of lamb on sticks, which the} ate with small pieces of bread and
cheese. This had become a favourite treat of theirs—one of many little things
that had kept the promise o: family. Kellhus leaned past her
to grab more bread, still teasing Serwe. “Have you ever pitched a pavilion
across sand before?” “Kell-hussss,” Serwe complained and exulted. Esmenet breathed deeply
his dry, salty smell. She couldn’t help herself “They say it takes forever” he chided, withdrawing his hand and acci dentally
brushing Esmenet’s right breast. The tingle of inadvertent
intimacy. The flush of a body suddenly thicl with a wisdom that transcended
intellect. For the remainder of the
afternoon, Esmenet found her eyes plagued b a nagging waywardness. Where before
her look had confined itself ti Kellhus’s face, it now
roamed over his entire form. It was as though her eyes had become brokers,
intermediaries between his body and her own. When she saw his chest, her
breasts tingled with the prospect of being crushed. When she glimpsed his
narrow hips and deep buttocks, her inner thighs hummed with expectant warmth.
Sometimes her palms literally itched! Of course this was
madness. Esmenet needed only to catch Serwe’s watchful eyes to recall herself. Later that night, after
Kellhus had left, the two of them stretched across their mats, their heads
almost touching, their bodies angled to either side of the fire. They often did
this when Kellhus was away. They stared endlessly into the flames, sometimes
talking, but mostly saying nothing at all, save yelping when the fire spat
coals. “Esmi?” Serwe asked in a peculiar, brooding tone. “Yes, Serchaa?” “I would, you know.” Esmenet’s heart
fluttered. “You would what?” “Share him,” the girl said. Esmenet swallowed. “No…
Never, Serwe… I told you not to worry.” “But that’s what I’m saying… I don’t fear
losing him, not any more, and not to anyone. All I want is what he
wants. He’s everything…” Esmenet lay breathless,
staring between legs of wood at the pulsing furnace of coals. “Are you saying… Are you
saying that he…” wants me… Serwe laughed softly. “Of
course not,” she said. “Of course not,” Esmenet
repeated. With an inner shrug, she shook away these mad and maddening thoughts.
What was she doing? He was Kellhus. Kellhus. She thought of Akka,
blinked two burning tears. “Never, Serwe.” Kellhus didn’t return
until the following night, when he rode into their little camp accompanied by
Proyas himself. The Conriyan Prince looked particularly travel-worn and
haggard. He was dressed in a simple blue tunic—his riding clothes, Esmenet
supposed. Only the gold-embroidered intricacy of his hems spoke to his station.
His beard, which he usually Shigek 5b I kept clipped close to his
jaw, had grown out, so that it more resembled the square-cut beards of his
caste-nobles. At first Esmenet kept her
gaze averted, worried Proyas might guess the intensity of her hatred if he
glimpsed her eyes. How couldn’t she hate him? He’d not only refused to help
Achamian, he’d refused to allow Xinemus to help as well, and had divested the
Marshal of his rank and station when he insisted. But something in his voice, a
high-born desperation, perhaps, made her watchful. He seemed uncomfortable—even
forlorn—as he took his place beside Kellhus at the fire, so much so that she
found her dislike faltering. He too had loved Achamian once. Xinemus had told
her as much. Perhaps that’s why he
suffered. Perhaps he wasn’t so unlike her. That, she knew, was what
Kellhus would say. After pouring everyone
watered wine, and serving the men the remnants of the meal she’d prepared for
herself and Serwe, Esmenet took a seat on the far side of the fire. The men discussed matters
of war as they ate, and Esmenet was struck by the contradiction between the way
Proyas deferred to Kellhus and the general reserve of his manner. Suddenly she
understood why Kellhus forbade his followers from joining their camp. Men like
Proyas, like any of the Great Names, she supposed, would be troubled by
Kellhus. Those at the centre of things were always more inflexible, always more
invested, than those at the edges. And Kellhus promised a new centre… It was easy to move from
edge to edge. The men fell silent to
finish their lamb, onions, and bread. Proyas set aside his plate, washed his
palette with a sip of wine. He glanced at Esmenet, inadvertently it seemed,
then stared off into the distance. Esmenet suddenly found the quiet
suffocating. “How fares the
Scylvendi?” she asked, uncertain of what else to say. He glanced back to her.
For an instant, his eyes lingered on her tattooed hand… “I see him but rarely,”
the handsome man replied, staring into the flames. “But I thought he
counselled…” She paused, suddenly uncertain as to the propriety of her words.
Achamian had always complained of her forward manner with caste-nobles… “Counselled me on war?”
Proyas shook his head, and for a brief instant she could see why Achamian had
loved him. It was so strange, being with those he’d once known. Somehow it made
his absence at once palpable and easier to bear. He was real. He had left
his mark. The world remembered. “After Kellhus explained
what happened at Anwurat,” the Prince continued, “the Council hailed Cnaьir as
the author of our victory. The Priests of Gilgaol even declared him
Battle-Celebrant. But he would have nothing of it…” The Prince took another
deep draught of wine. “He finds it unbearable, I think…” “As a Scylvendi among
Inrithi?” Proyas shook his head,
set his empty bowl curiously close to his right foot. “Liking us,” he said. Without further word he
stood and excused himself. He bowed to Kellhus, thanked Serwe for the wine and
her gracious company, then without so much as glancing at Esmenet, strode off
into the darkness. Serwe stared at her feet.
Kellhus seemed lost in otherworldly ruminations. Esmenet sat silently for a
time, her face burning, her limbs and thoughts itching with a peculiar hum. It
was always peculiar, even though she knew it as well as the taste of her own
mouth. Shame. Everywhere she went. It
was her characteristic stink. “I’m sorry,” she said to
the two of them. What was she doing here?
What could she offer other than humiliation? She was polluted—polluted! And
here she stayed with Kellhus? With Kellhus?
What kind of fool was she? She couldn’t change who she was, no sooner than she
could wash the tattoo from the back of her hand! The seed she could rinse away,
but not the sin! Not the sin! And he was… He was… “I’m sorry,” she sobbed.
“I’m sorry!” Esmenet fled the fire,
crawled into the solitary darkness of her tent. Of his tent! Akka’s! Kellhus came to her not
long after, and she cursed herself for hoping he would. Shigek “I wish I were dead,” she
whispered, lying face first against the ground. “So do many.” Always implacable
honesty. Could she follow where he led? Had she the strength? “I’ve only loved two
people in my life, Kellhus…” The Prince never looked away. “And they’re both
dead.” She nodded, blinked tears. “You don’t know my sins,
Kellhus. You don’t know the darknesses I harbour in my heart.” “Then tell me.” They talked long into the
night, and a strange dispassion moved her, rendering the extremities of her
life—death, loss, humiliation—curiously inert. Whore. How many men had
embraced her? How many gritty chins against her cheek? Always something to be
endured. All of them punishing her for their need. Monotony had made them seem
laughable, a long queue of the weak, the hopeful, the ashamed, the angered, the
dangerous. How easily one grunting body replaced the next, until they became
abstract things, moments of a ludicrous ceremony, spilling bowel-hot libations
upon her, smearing her with their meaningless paint. One no different from the
next. They punished her for
that as well. How old had she been,
when her father had sold her to the first of his friends? Eleven? Twelve? When
had the punishment begun? When had he first lain with her? She could remember
her mother weeping in the corner… but not much more. And her daughter… How old
had she been? She had thought her
father’s thoughts, she explained. Another mouth. Let it feed itself. The
monotony had numbed her to the horror, had made degradation a laughable thing.
To trade flashing silver for milky seed— the fools. Let Mimara be schooled in
the foolishness of men. Clumsy, rutting animals. One need only pay with a
little patience, mimic their passion, wait, and soon it would be over. In the
morning, one could buy food… Food from fools, Mimara. Can’t you see child?
Shush. Stop weeping. Look! Food from fools! “That was her name?”
Kellhus asked. “Mimara?” “Yes,” Esmenet said. Why
could she say that name now, when she could never utter it with Achamian?
Strange, the way long sorrow could silence the pang of unspeakable things. The first sobs surprised
her. Without thinking, she leaned into Kellhus, and his arms enclosed her. She
wailed and beat softly against his chest, heaved and cried. He smelled of wool
and sunburned skin. They were dead. The only ones she’d ever loved. After her
breathing settled, Kellhus pressed her back, and her hands fell slack to his
lap. Over the course of several heartbeats, she felt him harden against the
back of her wrist, as though a serpent flexed beneath wool. She neither
breathed nor moved. The air, as silent as a candle, roared… She pulled her
hands away. Why? Why would she poison
a night such as this? Kellhus shook his head, softly laughed. “Intimacy begets
intimacy, Esmi. So long as we remember ourselves, there’s no reason for shame.
All of us are frail.” She looked down to her
palms, her wrists. Smiled. “I remember… Thank you, Kellhus.” He raised his hand to her
cheek, then ducked from her little tent. She rolled to her side, squeezed her
hands palm to palm between her knees, and murmured curses until she fell
asleep. The message had arrived
by sea, the man said. He was Galeoth, and from the look of his surcoat, a
member of Saubon’s own household. Proyas weighed the ivory
scroll-case in his hand. It was small, cold to the touch, and finely worked
with tiny Tusks. Clever workmanship, Proyas thought. Innumerable tiny
representations, each figure defined by further figures, so that there was no
blank ground to throw each into relief, only tusks and more tusks. There was a
sermon, Proyas mused, even in the container of this message. But then that was
Maithanet: sermons all the way down. The Conriyan Prince thanked and dismissed
the man, then returned to his chair by his field table. It was hot and humid in
his pavilion, so much so he found himself resenting the lamps for their Shigek in added heat. He’d stripped
down to a thin, white linen tunic and had already decided that he would sleep
naked—after he investigated this letter. With his knife he
carefully broke the canister’s wax seal. He tipped it, and the small scroll
slid out, fastened by yet another seal, this one bearing the Shriah’s own mark. What could he want! Proyas brooded for a
moment on the privilege of receiving such letters from such a man. Then he
snapped the wax seal, peeled open the parchment roll. Lord Prince TNersei Proyas, May the Gods of the God shelter you, and
keep you. Your last
missive… Proyas paused, struck by
a sense of guilt and mortification. Months ago, he’d written Maithanet at
Achamian’s behest, asking about the death of a former student of his—Paro
Inrau. At the time, he hadn’t believed he would actually send it. He’d been
certain that writing the letter would make sending it impossible. What better
way to at once discharge and dispose of an obligation? Dear Maithanet, a sorcerer friend of mine wants me to ask whether you killed one of his spies … It was madness. There was no way he could send such a letter… And yet. How could he not feel a
sense of kinship to this Inrau, this other student Achamian had loved? How
could he not remember everything about the blasphemous fool, the wry smile, the
twinkling eyes, the lazy afternoons doing drills in the gardens? How could he
not pity him, a good man, a kind man,
hunting fables and wives’ tales to his everlasting damnation? Proyas had sent the
letter, thinking that at long last the matter of his Mandate tutor could be put
to rest. He’d never expected a reply—not truly. But he was a Prince, an heir
apparent, and Maithanet was the Shriah of the Thousand Temples. Letters between
such men somehow found their way, no matter how fierce the world between them. ihe second March Proyas continued reading,
holding his breath to numb the shame. Shame at having sent such a trivial
matter to the man who would cleanse the Three Seas. Shame at having written
this to a man at whose feet he’d wept. And shame for feeling shame at having
fulfilled an old teacher’s request. Lord Prince Nersei Proyas, May the Gods of the God shelter you, and
keep you. Your last missive, we are afraid, left us
deeply perplexed, until we recalled that you yourself once maintained several—How should we put it?—dubious
associations. We had been informed that the death of this young priest, Paro
lnrau, had been a suicide. The College of Luthymae, the priests charged with
the investigation of this matter, reported that this lnrau had once been a
student of Mandate sorcery, and that he had recently been seen in the company
of one Drusas Achamian, his old teacher. They believed that this Achamian had
been sent to pressure lnrau into performing various services for his School; in
short, to be a spy. They believe that, as a result, the young priest found
himself in an untenable position. Tribes 4:8: “He wearies of breath, who has no place he might breathe.” The responsibility for this young man’s
unfortunate death, we fear, lies with this blasphemer, Achamian. There is
nothing more to it. May the God have mercy on his soul. Canticles 6:22: “The earth weeps at words which know not the
Gods’ wrath.” But as your missive left us perplexed, we
fear that this missive shall leave you equally baffled. By allying the Holy War with the Scarlet Spires, we have
already asked much in the way of Compromise from pious men. But in this it has
been clear, we pray, that Necessity forced our hand. Without the Scarlet
Spires, the Holy War could not hope to prevail against the Cishaurim. “Answer not blasphemy with blasphemy,” our Prophet says, and this
verse has been oft repeated by our enemies. But in answering the charges of the
Cultic Priests, the Prophet also says: “Many are
those who are cleansed by way of iniquity. For the Light must ever follow upon
the dark, if it is to be Light, and the Holy must ever follow upon the wicked,
if it is to be Holy.” So it is that the Holy War must follow upon the Scarlet Spires, if it is to be Holy. Scholars 1:3: “Let Sun follow Night, according
to the arch of Heaven.” Now we must ask a further Compromise of
you, Lord Nersei Proyas. You must do everything in your power to assist this Mandate Schoolman. Perhaps this might not be as difficult as
we fear, since this man was once your teacher in Ab’knyssus. But we know the
depth of your piety, and unlike the greater Compromise we have forced upon you
with the Scarlet
Spires, there is no Necessity
that we can cite that might give comfort to a heart made restless by the company of sin. Hintarates 28:4: “I ask of you, is there any friend more difficult than the
friend who sins?” Assist Drusas Achamian, Proyas, though he
is a blasphemer, for in this wickedness, the Holy shall also fottow. Everything
shall be made clear, in the end. And it shall be glorious. Scholars 22:36: “For the warring heart becomes weary and will turn to sweeter
labours. And the peace of dawn’s rising shall accompany Men throughout the
toils of the day.” May the God and all His Aspects shelter you and keep you. Maithanet v. Proyas lowered the
letter to his lap. “Assist Drusas Achamian…” What could the Shriah
possibly mean? What could be at stake, for him to make such a request? And what was he to do
with such a request, now that it was too late? Now that Achamian was
gone. I killed him… And Proyas suddenly
realized that he’d used his old teacher as a marker, as a measure of his own
piety. What greater evidence could there be of righteousness than the
willingness to sacrifice a loved one? Wasn’t this the lesson of Angeshrael on
Mount Kinsureah? And what better way to sacrifice a loved one than by hating? Or delivering him to his
enemies… He thought of the whore
at Kellhus’s fire—Achamian’s lover, Esmenet… How desolate she’d seemed. How
frightened. Had he authored that look? ihe Second March She’s just a whore! And Achamian was just a
sorcerer. Just. All men were not equal.
Certainly the Gods favoured whom they would, but there was more. Actions determined the worth of any pulse. Life was the God’s
question to men, and actions were their answers. And like all answers they were
either right or wrong, blessed or cursed. Achamian had condemned himself, had
damned himself by his own actions! And so had the whore… This wasn’t the
judgement of Nersei Proyas, this was the judgement of the Tusk, of the Latter
Prophet! Inri Sejenus… Then why this shame? This
anguish? Why this relentless, heart-mauling doubt? Doubt. In a sense, that
had been Achamian’s single lesson. Geometry, logic, history, mathematics using
Nilnameshi numbers, even philosophy!—all these things were dross, Achamian
would argue, in the face of doubt. Doubt had made them, and doubt would unmake
them. Doubt, he would say, set
men free… Doubt, not truth! Beliefs were the
foundation of actions. Those who believed without doubting, he would say, acted
without thinking. And those who acted without thinking were enslaved. That was what Achamian
would say. Once, after listening to
his beloved older brother, Tirummas, describe his harrowing pilgrimage to the Sacred
Land, Proyas had told Achamian how he wished to become a Shrial Knight. “Why?” the portly
Schoolman had exclaimed. They’d been strolling
through the gardens—Proyas could remember bounding from leaf to fallen leaf
just to hear them crackle beneath his sandals. They stopped near the immense
iron oak that dominated the garden’s heart. “So I can kill heathens
on the Empire’s frontier!” Achamian tossed his hands
skyward in dismay. “Foolish boy! How many faiths are there? How many competing
beliefs? And you would murder another on the slender hope that
yours is somehow the only one?” “Yes! I have faith!” “Faith,” the Schoolman
repeated, as though recalling the name of a hated foe. “Ask yourself, Prosha…
What if the choice isn’t between certainties, between this
faith and that, but between faith and doubt?
Between renouncing the mystery and embracing it?“ “But doubt is weakness!”
Proyas cried. “Faith is strength! Strength!” Never, he was convinced, had he
felt so holy as at that moment. The sunlight seemed to shine straight through
him, to bathe his heart. “Is it? Have you looked
around you, Prosha? Pay attention, boy. Watch and tell me how many men, out of
weakness, lapse into the practice of doubt.
Listen to those around you, and tell me what you see…” He did exactly as
Achamian had asked. For several days, he watched and listened. He saw much
hesitation, but he wasn’t so foolish as to confuse that with doubt. He heard
the caste-nobles squabble and the hereditary priests complain. He eavesdropped
on the soldiers and the knights. He observed embassy after embassy posture
before his father, making claim after florid claim. He listened to the slaves
joke as they laundered, or bicker as they ate. And in the midst of innumerable
boasts, declarations, and accusations, only rarely did he hear those words
Achamian had made so familiar, so commonplace… The words Proyas himself found
so difficult! And even then, they belonged most to those Proyas considered
wise, even-handed, compassionate, and least to those he thought stupid or
malicious. “I don’t know.” Why were these words so
difficult? “Because men want to
murder,” Achamian had explained afterward. “Because men want their gold and
their glory. Because they want beliefs that answer to their fears, their hatreds, and their hungers.” Proyas could remember the
heart-pounding wonder, the exhilaration of straying… “Akka?” He took a deep,
daring breath. “Are you saying the Tusk lies.?” A look of dread. “I don’t
know…” Difficult words, so
difficult they would see Achamian banished from Aoknyssus and Proyas tutored by
Charamemas, the famed Shrial scholar. And Achamian had known this would happen…
Proyas could see that now. Why? Why would Achamian,
who was already damned, sacrifice so much for so few words? He thought he was giving me something… Something important. The Second March Drusas Achamian had loved
him. What was more, he’d loved him so deeply he’d imperilled his position, his
reputation—even his vocation, if what Xinemus had said was true. Achamian had
given without hope of reward. He wanted me to be free. And Proyas had given him
away, thinking only of rewards. The thought was too much
to bear. did it for the Holy War! For Shimeh! And now this letter—from
Maithanet. He snatched up the
parchment, scanned it once again, as though the Shriah’s manly script might
offer some answer… “Assist Drusas Achamian…” What had happened? The
Scarlet Spires he could understand, but what use could the Shriah of the
Thousand Temples have with a Schoolman? And with a Mandate Schoolman, no less… A sudden chill dropped
through him. Beneath the black walls of Momemn, Achamian had once argued that
the Holy War wasn’t what it seemed… Was this letter proof of that fact? Something had frightened,
or at least concerned, Maithanet. But what? Had he heard rumours of
Prince Kellhus? For weeks now, Proyas had meant to write the Shriah regarding
the Prince of Atrithau, but for some reason he couldn’t bring himself to put
ink to parchment. Something compelled him to wait, but whether it was hope or
fear he couldn’t determine. Kellhus simply struck him as one of those mysteries
that could only be resolved through patience. And besides, what would he say?
That the Holy War for the Latter Prophet was witnessing
the birth of a Latter Latter Prophet? As much as he was loath
to admit it, Conphas was right: the notion was simply too absurd! No. If the Holy Shriah
harboured reservations concerning Prince Kellhus, Proyas was fairly confident
he would’ve simply asked. As it was, there wasn’t so much as a hint, let alone
mention, of the Prince of Atrithau in the letter. Chances were Maithanet had no
inkling of Kellhus’s existence, let alone his growing stature. No, Proyas decided. It
must be something else… Something the Shriah thought beyond his
tolerance or his ken. Otherwise, why not explain his reasons? Could it be the Consult? “The Dreams,” Achamian
had said at Momemn. “They’ve been so forceful of late.“ “Ah, back to the
nightmares again…” “Something is happening,
Proyas. I know it. I feel it!” Never had he looked so
desperate. Could it be? No. It was too absurd.
Even if they did exist, how could the Shriah find them when the Mandate
themselves couldn’t? No… It had to be the
Scarlet Sf>ires. After all, that had been Achamian’s mission, hadn’t it?
Watch the Scarlet Spires… Proyas yanked at his hair and snarled under his
breath. Why? Why couldn’t this one
thing be pure? Why must everything holy— everything!—be riddled by tawdry and
despicable intent? He sat very still,
drawing breath after shuddering breath. He imagined drawing his sword, slashing
and hacking wildly through his chambers, howling and shrieking… Then he
collected himself to the beat of his own pulse. Nothing pure… Love
transformed into betrayal. Prayers bent into accusations. This was Maithanet’s
point, wasn’t it? The holy followed upon the wicked. Proyas had thought
himself the moral leader of the Holy War. But now he knew better. Now he knew
he was merely one more piece upon the benjuka plate. The players were perhaps
known to him—the Thousand Temples, House Ikurei, the Scarlet Spires, the
Cishaurim, and perhaps even Kellhus—but the rules, which were the most
treacherous element of any game of benjuka, were definitely not known. I don’t know. I don’t
know anything. The Holy War had only
triumphed, and yet never had he felt so desperate. So weak. I told you, old tutor. I told you… As though stirring from a
stupor, Proyas called for Algari, his old Cironji body-slave, and bid the man
to bring him his writing chest. As tired as he was, he had no choice but to
answer the Shriah now. Tomorrow the Holy War marched into the desert. For some reason, after
unlatching the small mahogany and ivory chest and running his fingers over the
quill and curled parchment, Nersei Proyas felt like a young boy once again,
about to begin his writing drills under Achamian’s hawkish but all-forgiving
eyes. He could almost feel the sorcerer’s friendly shadow, looming watchfully
over his boy-slender shoulders. “That House Nersei could
produce a boy so daft!” “That the School of Mandate could send a
tutor so blind!” Proyas
almost laughed his tutor’s world-wise laugh. And tears clotted his eyes as he
completed the first line of his baffled reply to Maithanet. … but it would seem, Your Eminence, that Drusas Achamian
is dead. Esmenet smiled, and
Kellhus saw through her olive skin, through the play of muscles over bone, all
the way to the abstract point that described her soul. She knows 1 see her, Father. The campsite bustled with
activity and rumbled with open-hearted conversation. The Holy War was about to
march across the deserts of Khemema, and Kellhus had invited all fourteen of
his senior Zaudunyani, which meant “the Tribe of Truth” in Kunьiric, to his
fire. They already knew their mission; Kellhus need only remind them of what he
promised. Beliefs alone didn’t control the actions of men. There was also desire, and these men, his apostles, must shine with that
desire. The Thanes of the Warrior-Prophet. Esmenet sat across from
him on the far side of the fire, laughing and chatting with her neighbours,
Arweal and Persommas, her face flushed with a joy she wouldn’t have dared
imagine and couldn’t yet dare admit. Kellhus winked at her, then looked to the
others, smiling, laughing, calling out… Scrutinizing. Dominating. Shigek Each was a riotous font
of significance. The downcast eyes, quickened heart, and fumbling words of
Ottma spoke to the overpowering presence of Serwe‘, who blithely gossiped at
his side. The momentary sneer the instant before Ulnarta smiled meant he still
disapproved of Tshuma because he feared the blackness of his skin. The way
Kasalla, Gayamakri, and Hilderath oriented their shoulders toward Werjau, even
while speaking to others, meant they still considered him to be first among
them. And indeed, the way Werjau tended to call across the fire more and more,
leaning forward with his palms down, while the others generally restricted
their conversation to those beside them, spoke to the assertion of unconscious
relations of dominance and submission. Werjau even thrust out his chin… “Tell me, Werjau,”
Kellhus called out. “What is it you see within your heart?” Such interventions were
inevitable. These were world-born men. “Joy,” Werjau said,
smiling. Faint deadening about the eyes. Flare in pulse. Blush reflex. He sees, and he doesn’t see. Kellhus compressed his
lips, rueful and forbearing. “And what is it I see?” This he knows… The sound of other voices
trailed into silence. Werjau lowered his eyes. “Pride,” the young
Galeoth said. “You see pride, Master.” Kellhus grinned, and the
anxiety was swept from them. “Not,” he said, “with
that face, Werjau.” All of them, including
Serwe and Esmenet, howled with laughter, and Kellhus glanced around the fire,
satisfied. He could tolerate no posturing among them. It was the utter absence
of presumption that made his company so utterly unique, that made their hearts
leap and their stomachs giddy at the prospect of seeing him. The weight of sin
was found in secrecy and condemnation. Strip these away, deny men their
deceptions and their judgements, and their self-sense of shame and
worthlessness simply vanished. They felt greater in his
presence, both pure and chosen. Pragma Meigon stared
through young Kellhus’s face, saw his fear. “They’re harmless,” he said. “What are they, Pragma?” “Exemplary defectives…
Specimens. We retain them for purposes of education.” The Pragma simulated a
smile. “For students such as you, Kellhus.” They stood deep beneath
Ishual, in a hexagonal room within the mighty galleries of the Thousand
Thousand Halls. Save for the entrance, staggered racks of knobbed and runnelled
candles covered the surrounding walls, shedding a light without shadows and as
bright and clear as the noonday sun’s. This alone made the room
extraordinary—light was otherwise forbidden in the Labyrinth—but what made the
room astonishing were the many men shackled in its sunken centre. Each of them was naked,
linen pale, and bound with greening copper straps to boards that leaned gently
backward. The boards themselves had been arranged in a broad circle, with each
man lying fixed within arm’s reach of his comrades and positioned at the edge
of the floor’s central depression, so that a boy Kellhus’s height could stand
at the lip of the surrounding floor and look the specimens directly in the
face… Had they possessed faces. Their heads were drawn
forward into open iron frames, where they were held motionless by bracketing
bars. Behind their heads, wires had been fixed to the base of each frame. These
swept forward in a radial fashion, ending in tiny silver hooks that anchored
the obscuring skin. Slick muscle gleamed in the light. To Kellhus, it looked as
though each man had thrust his head into a spider web that had peeled away his
face. Pragma Meigon had called it the Unmasking Room. “To begin,” the old man
said, “you’ll study and memorize each of their faces. Then you’ll reproduce
what you’ve seen on parchment.” He nodded to a battery of worn scrivening
tables along the southern walls. His limbs as light as
autumn leaves, Kellhus stepped forward. He heard the masticating of pasty
mouths, a chorus of voiceless grunts and gaspings. “Their larynxes have been
removed,” Pragma Meigon explained. “To assist concentration.” Kellhus paused before the
first specimen. Shigek “The face possesses
forty-four muscles,” the Pragma continued. “Operating in concert, they are
capable of signifying every permutation of passion. All those permutations,
young Kellhus, derive from the fifty-seven base and base-remove types found
here in this room.” Despite the absence of
skin, Kellhus immediately recognized horror in the flayed face of the specimen
strapped before him. Like warring flatworms, the fine muscles about his eyes
strained outward and inward at the same time. The larger, rat-sized muscles
about his lower face yanked his mouth into a perpetual fear-grin. Lidless eyes
stared. Rapid breaths hissed… “You’re wondering how he
can maintain that particular expressive configuration,” the Pragma said.
“Centuries ago we found we could limit the range of behaviours by probing the
brain with needles—with what we now call neuropuncture.” Kellhus stood transfixed.
Without warning, an attendant loomed over him, holding a narrow reed between
his teeth. He dipped the reed into the bowl of fluid he carried, then blowing,
sprayed the specimen with a fine orangish mist. He then continued on to the
next. “Neuropuncture,” the
Pragma continued, “made possible the rehabilitation of defectives for
instructional purposes. The specimen before you, for instance, always displays
fear at a base-remove of two.” “Horror?” Kellhus asked. “Precisely.” Kellhus felt the
childishness of his own horror fade in understanding. He looked to either side,
saw the specimens curving out of sight, rows of white eyes set in shining red
musculatures. They were only defectives— nothing more. He returned his gaze to
the man before him, to fear base-remove two, and committed what he saw to
memory. Then he moved on to the next gasping skein of muscles. “Good,” Pragma Meigon had
said from his periphery. “Very good.” Kellhus turned once more
to Esmenet, peeled away her face with the hooks of his gaze. She’d already made two
trips from the fire to her tent—promenades to draw his attention and covertly
gauge his interest. She periodically The Second March looked from side to side,
feigning amusement in things elsewhere to see if he watched her. Twice he let
her catch him. Each time he grinned with boyish good nature. Each time she
looked down, blushing, pupils dilated, eyes blinking rapidly, her body
radiating the musk of nascent arousal. Though Esmenet had not yet come to his
bed, part of her ached for him, even wooed him. And she knew it not. For all her native gifts,
Esmenet remained a world-born woman. And for all world-born men and women, two
souls shared the same body, face, and eyes. The animal and the intellect.
Everyone was two. Defective. One Esmenet had already
renounced Drusas Achamian. The other would soon follow. Esmenet blinked against
the turquoise sky, held a hand against the sun. No matter how many times she
witnessed it, she was dumbstruck. The Holy War. She’d paused with Kellhus
and Serwe on the summit of a rise so that Serwe could readjust her pack. Fields
of Inrithi warriors and camp-followers walked past them, toward the crumbling
cliffs of the southern escarpment. Esmenet looked from man to armoured man,
each farther than the next, past clots and through thickening screens, until
losing them in the teeming distances, where they winked in the sunlight like
metal filings. She turned, saw the sand-coloured walls of Ammegnotis behind
them, dwindling against the black and green of the river and her verdant banks. Shigek. Goodbye, Akka. Teary-eyed, she
deliberately struck out on her own, simply waving a hand when Kellhus called
out to her. She walked among
strangers, feeling the aim of hooded eyes and muttered words—as she so often
did. Some men actually accosted her, but she ignored them. One even angrily
grabbed her tattooed hand, as though to remind her of something she owed all
men. The parched grasses became thinner and thinner, leaving gravel that burned
toes and cooked air. She sweat and suffered and somehow knew it was only the
beginning. J ‘■> That evening she found
Kellhus and Serwe without much difficulty. Though they had little fuel, they
managed dinner with a small fire. The air cooled as quickly as the sun
descended, and they enjoyed their first desert dusk. The ground radiated warmth
like a stone drawn from a hearth. To the east, sterile hills ringed the
distance, obscuring the sea. To the south and west, beyond the riot of the
encampment, the horizon formed a perfect shale line that thickened into red as
it approached the sun. To the north, Shigek could still be glimpsed between the
tents, its green becoming black in the growing twilight. Serwe was already
snoozing, curled across her mat close to the little lapping tongue of their
fire. “So how was your walk?”
Kellhus asked. “I’m sorry,” she said,
shamefaced. “I—” “There’s no need to
apologize, Esmi… You walk where you choose.” She looked down, feeling
both relieved and grief-stricken. “So?” Kellhus repeated.
“How was your walk?” “Men,” she said leadenly.
“Too many men.” “And you call yourself a
harlot,” Kellhus said, grinning. Esmenet continued staring
at her dusty feet. A shy smile stole across her face. “Things change…” “Perhaps,” he said in a
manner that reminded Esmenet of an axe biting into wood. “Have you ever
wondered why the Gods hold men higher than women?” Esmenet shrugged. “We
stand in the shadow of men,” she replied, “just as men stand in the shadow of
the Gods.” “So you think you stand in the shadow of men?” She smiled. There was no
deception with Kellhus, no matter how petty. That was his wonder. “Some men, yes…” “But not many?” She laughed, caught in an
honest conceit. “Not many at all,” she admitted. Not even, she breathlessly
realized, Akka… Only you. “And what of other men?
Aren’t all men overshadowed in some respect?” HK OtCOND MARCH “Yes, I suppose…” Kellhus turned his palms
upward—a curiously disarming gesture. “So what makes you less than a man?” Esmenet laughed again,
certain he played some game. “Because everywhere I’ve been—every place I’ve heard of for that matter—women serve men. That’s simply the
way. Most women are like…” She paused, troubled by the course of her thoughts.
She glanced at Serwe, her perfect face illuminated by the wavering light of the
fire. “Like her,” Kellhus said. “Yes,” Esmenet replied,
her eyes forced to the ground by a strange defensiveness. “Like her… Most women
are simple.” “And most men?” “Well, certainly more men
than women are learned… Wise.” “And is this because men
are more than women?” Esmenet stared at him,
dumbfounded. “Or is it,” he continued,
“because men are granted more than women in this world?” She stared, her thoughts
spinning. She breathed deeply, set her palms carefully upon her knees. “You’re
saying women are… are actually equal?.” Kellhus hoisted his brows
in pained amusement. “Why,” he asked, “are men willing to exchange gold to lie
with women?” “Because they desire us…
They lust.” “And is it lawful for men
to purchase pleasure from a woman?” “No…” “So why do they?” “They can’t help
themselves,” Esmenet replied. She lifted a rueful eyebrow. “They’re men.” “So they have no control
over their desire?” She grinned in her old
way. “Witness the well-fed harlot sitting before you.” Kellhus laughed, but
softly, and in a manner that effortlessly sorted her pain from her humour. “So why,” he said, “do
men herd cattle?” “Cattle?” Esmenet
scowled. Where had all these absurd thoughts come from? “Well… to slaughter
for…” Shigek She trailed in sudden
understanding. Her skin pimpled. Once again she sat in shadow, and Kellhus
hoarded the failing sun, looking for all the world like a bronze idol. The sun
always seemed to relinquish him last… “Men,” Kellhus said,
“cannot dominate their hunger, so they dominate, domesticate, the objects of their hunger. Be it cattle…” “Or women,” she said
breathlessly. The air prickled with
understanding. “When one race,” Kellhus
continued, “is tributary to another, as the Cepalorans are to the Nansur, whose
tongue do both races speak?” “The tongue of the
conqueror.” “And whose tongue do you
speak?” She swallowed. “The
tongue of men.” With every blink, it
seemed, she saw man after man, arched over her like dogs… “You see yourself,”
Kellhus said, “as men see you. You fear growing old, because men hunger for
girls. You dress shamelessly, because men hunger for your skin. You cringe when
you speak, because men hunger for your silence. You pander. You posture. You
primp and preen. You twist your thoughts and warp your heart. You break and
remake, cut and cut and cut, all so you might answer in your conqueror’s tongue!” Never, it seemed, had she
been so motionless. The air within her throat, even the blood within her heart,
seemed absolutely still… Kellhus had become a voice falling from somewhere
between tears and firelight. “You say, ‘Let me shame
myself for you. Let me suffer you! I beg you, please!”’ And somehow, Esmenet knew
where these words must lead, so she thought of other things, like how parched
skin and cloth seemed so clean… Filth, she realized,
needed water the same as men. “And you tell yourself,”
Kellhus continued, “These tracks I will not follow!‘ Perhaps you refuse certain
perversities. Perhaps you refuse to kiss. You pretend to scruple, to
discriminate, though the world has forced you onto trackless ground. The coins!
The coins! Coins for everything, and everything for coins! For the landlord.
For the apparati, when they come for their bribes. For the vendors who feed
you. For the toughs with scabbed knuckles. And secretly, you ask yourself,
’What could be Ihe Second March unthinkable when I’m
already damned? What act lies beyond me, when I have no dignity?‘ ‘“What love lies beyond
sacrifice?’” Her face was wet. When
she drew her hand from her cheek, the whorls of her fingertips were black. “You speak the tongue of
your conquerors…” Kellhus whispered. “You say, Mimara, come with me child.” A shiver passed through
her, as though she were a drumskin … “And you take her…” “She’s dead!” some woman
cried. “She’s dead!” “To the slavers in the
harbour…” “Stop!” the woman hissed. “I say, no!” Gasping, like knives. “And you sell her.” She remembered his arms
enclosing her. She remembered following him to his pavilion. She remembered
lying at his side, weeping and weeping, while his voice made her anguish plain,
while Serwe stroked tears from her cheeks, ran cool fingers through her hair.
She remembered telling them what had happened. About the hungry summer, when
she had swallowed men for free just for their seed. About hating the little
girl—the filthy little bitch!—who wept and demanded and demanded, who ate her food,
who sent her into the streets, all because of love! About the hollow-eyed
madness. Who could understand starvation? About the slavers, their larders
growing fat because of the famine. About Mimara shrieking, her little girl
shrieking! About the poison coins… Less than a week! They had lasted less than
a week! She remembered shrieking. And she remembered
weeping as she’d never wept before, because she’d spoken, and he had heard. She remembered drifting in his confidence, in his
poetry, in his godlike knowledge of what was right and true… In his absolution. “You are forgiven,
Esmenet.” Who are you to forgive? “Mimara.” She awoke with her head
upon his arm. There was no confusion, though it seemed there should be. She
knew where she was, and though part of her quailed, part of her exulted as
well. She lay with Kellhus. I didn’t couple with him… I only wept. Her face felt bruised
from the previous evening. The night had been hot, and they’d slept without
blankets. For what seemed a long time, she lay motionless, simply savouring his
white-skinned nearness. She placed a hand upon his bare chest. He was warm and
smooth. She could feel the slow drum of his heart. Her fingers tingled, as
though she touched an iron-smith’s anvil as he hammered. She thought of the weight
of him, flushed… “Kellhus…” she said. She
looked up to the profile of his face, somehow knowing he was awake. He turned and looked at
her, his eyes smiling. She snorted in
embarrassment, then looked away. Kellhus said, “It’s
strange, isn’t it, lying so close…” “Yes,” she replied
smiling, looking up, then out and away. “Very strange.” He rolled to face her.
Esmenet heard Serwe groan and complain from his far side, still
asleep. “Shhh,” he said laughing
softly. “She loves sleep more than me.” Esmenet looked at him and
laughed, shaking her head, beaming with incredulous excitement. “This is so strange!” she
hissed. Never had her eyes felt so bright. She pressed her knees
together in nervousness. He was so close! He leaned toward her, and
her mouth slackened, her eyes became heavy-lidded. “No,” she gasped. Kellhus shot her a
friendly frown. “My loin cloth just bunched,” he said. “Oh,” she replied. They
both burst into laughter. Again she could sense the
weight of him… He was a man who dwarfed
her, as a man should. Then his hand was beneath
her hasas, sliding between her thighs, and she found herself moaning into his
sweet lips. And when he entered her, pinned her
the way the Nail of Heaven pinned the skies, tears brimmed and spilled from her
eyes, and she could only think, At last! At last he takes me! And it did not seem, it was. No one would call her
harlot any more. ffl^^ Dart III xThe Third March HApTER Eighteen Khemema To piss across water is to piss across your reflection. —KHIRGWI PROVERB Early Autumn, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, southern Shigek Sweating beneath the sun,
the Men of the Tusk struck south, winding up the staggered escarpments of the
South Bank, and onto the furnace plains of the Carathay Desert, or as the
Khirgwi called it, Ej’ulkiyah, the “Great Thirst.” The first night, they
stopped near Tamiznai, a caravan entrepot that had been sacked by the
retreating Fanim. Shortly afterward,
Athjeari, who’d been sent to reconnoitre the route to Enathpaneah, returned
from the southern waste, his men hollow-eyed with thirst and exhaustion. His
mood was black. He told the Great Names that he’d found no unpolluted wells,
and that he’d been forced to travel by night, the heat was so intense. The
heathen, he said, had retreated to the far side of Hell. The Great Names told
him of the endless trains of mules they’d brought, and of the Emperor’s fleet
that would follow them loaded with fresh Sempis water. They explained their
elaborate plans for transporting that water across the coastal hills. “You know not,” the young
Earl of Gaenri said, “the lands you risk.” The following evening, the horns of
Galeoth, Nansur, Thunyerus, Conriya, Ce Tydonn, and High Ainon pealed through
the arid air. Khemema J Pavilions were torn down
amid the shouts of soldiers and slaves. Mules were loaded and beaten into long
files. The Cultic Priests of Gilgaol cast a goshawk onto their godfire, then
released another to the evening sun. Infantrymen swung their packs from their
spears, joking and complaining about the prospect of marching through the
night. Hymns resolved and faded from the rumble of busy thousands. The air cooled, and the
first columns set across the western shoulders of Khemema’s coastal hills. The first Khirgwi came
after midnight, howling from the backs of loping camels, bearing the truth of
the Solitary God and His Prophet on the edges of sharp knives. The attacks were
both brief and vicious. They fell upon stragglers, soaked the sands with red
waters. They evaded the Inrithi pickets and swept howling into the baggage trains,
where they sliced open the precious bladders of water wherever they found them.
Sometimes, especially when they strayed onto hard gravel flats, they were
overtaken and cut down in furious melees. Otherwise, they outdistanced their
pursuers and vanished into the moonlit sands. The next day, the first
mule trains crawled through the coastal hills to the Meneanor and found a bay,
quicksilver in the sun and peppered by the red-sailed ships of the Nansur
fleet. There were hearty greetings as the first boatloads of water were dragged
ashore. Songs were raised as the onerous work of transferring the water to the
mules began. Men stripped to their waist, and many plunged into the rolling
waves to relieve themselves of the heat. And that evening, when the Holy War
stirred from suffocating tents, they were greeted by fresh Sempis water. The Holy War continued
its nocturnal march. Despite the bloodcurdling raids, many found themselves
awed by the beauty of the Carathay. There were no insects, save the odd crazed
beetle rolling its ball of dung across the sands. The Inrithi laughed at these,
called them “shit chasers.” And there were no animals, except of course the
vultures circling endlessly above. Where there was no water, there was no life,
and apart from the heavy skins draped about the shoulders of the Holy War,
there was no water in the Carathay. It was as if the sun had burnt the whole
world to sterile bone. The Men of the Tusk stood apart from the sun, stone, and
sand, and it was beautiful, like a haunting nightmare HIRU MARCH described by another. It
was beautiful because they need not suffer the consequences of what they
witnessed. On the seventh assigned
meeting between the Holy War and the Imperial Fleet, the Men of the Tusk picked
their way through dry gorges and gathered across the beaches. They looked
across the Meneanor, which was marbled by vast curls of lime and turquoise, and
saw no ships. The rising sun gilded the sea in white. They could see the
distant breakers, like lines of foaming diamonds. But no ships. They waited. Messengers
were sent back to the encampment. Saubon and Conphas soon joined them, bathed
in the sea water for a time, spent an hour arguing, and then rode back to the
Holy War. A Council was called and the Great and Lesser Names squabbled until
dusk, trying to decide what to do. Accusations were levelled against Conphas,
but were quickly dropped when the Exalt-General pointed out that his life was
as much at stake as theirs. The Holy War waited a
night and a day, and when the Emperor’s fleet still failed to arrive, they
decided to continue their march. Many theories were aired. Perhaps, Ikurei
Conphas suggested, the fleet had been beset by a squall and had decided to sail
south to the next designated meeting point to conserve time. Or perhaps, Prince
Kellhus suggested, there was a reason why the Kianene had waited so
long to contest the seas. Perhaps the camels had been slaughtered and the fleet
hidden to lure the Holy War into the Carathay. Perhaps Khemema was a
trap. Two days later, the bulk
of the Great and Lesser Names accompanied the mule trains across the hills to
the sea, and stared dumbfounded at its empty beauty. When they returned from
the hills, they no longer walked apart from the desert. Sun, stone, and sand
beckoned to them. All water was severely
rationed according to caste. Anyone caught hoarding or exceeding their ration,
it was declared, would be executed. In Council, Ikurei
Conphas unfurled maps inked by Imperial Cartographers in the days when Khemema
had belonged to the Empire, and jabbed his finger at a place called Subis. The
oasis of Subis, he insisted, was far too large for the heathens to poison. With
the water remaining, the Holy War could reach Subis intact, but only if
everything—mules, slaves, camp-followers—was left behind… Khemema 3{. “Leave behind…” Proyas
said. “How do you propose we do that?” Even though orders were
dispatched with the utmost secrecy, wo spread quickly through the drowsing
encampment. Many fled to the doom in the open desert. Some took up arms. The
rest simply waited be cut down: body-slaves, camp whores, caste-merchants, even
slavei Screams echoed over the dunes. Several riots and
mutinies broke out among the Inrithi. At first, mai refused to kill their own.
The Holy War, the Great Names explained their men, had to survive. They had to survive. In the end, countk thousands were
murdered by the grief-stricken Men of the Tusk. On priests, wives, and useful
tradesmen were spared. That night the Inrithi
marched blank-eyed through what seemed cooling oven—away from the horror behind
them, toward the promi of Subis… Men-at-arms, warhorses, and hearts had become
beasts burden. When the Khirgwi found
the fields of heaped bodies and strev belongings, they fell to their knees and
cried out in exultation to tl Solitary God. The trial of the idolaters had
begun. The enormous column of
the Holy War drifted and scattered in tl rush southward. The Khirgwi massacred
hundreds of stragglers. Sevei tribes cut to the heart of the column, wreaking
what havoc they cou before fleeing into the waste. One group of raiders
actually stumbled upi the Scarlet Spires, and were burnt into oblivion. The following morning the
Great and Lesser Names met in despei tion. Water, they knew, had to lie all
about them; the Khirgwi couldi harass them otherwise. So where were their
wells? They called forwa the more successful raiders among them—Athjeari,
Thampis, Detnamri and others—and charged them with taking the battle to the
desert trit with the goal of finding their hidden wells. Leading thousands of
Inrit knights, these men rode over the long dunes and disappeared into’t
wavering distances. With the exception of
Detnammi, the Ainoni Palatine of Eshkal; they all returned the following night,
beaten back by the ferocity of’t Khirgwi and the merciless heat of the
Carathay. No wells had been four Even if they had, Athjeari said, he had no
idea how they might found twice, so featureless was the desert. ihe ihird March Meanwhile, the water had
almost run out. With Subis nowhere in sight, the Great Names decided to put
down all horses save those belonging to caste-nobility. Several thousand
Cengemi footmen, Ketyai tributaries of the Tydonni, mutinied, demanding that all horses be slaughtered and the excess rations be
divided equally among all Men of the Tusk. Gothyelk and the other Earls of Ce
Tydonn responded with ruthless alacrity. The leaders of the mutiny were
arrested, gutted, then hung from pikes above the sand. Very little water
remained the ensuing night, and the Men of the Tusk, their skin like parchment,
overcome by irritability and fatigue, began casting away their food. They no
longer hungered. They thirsted, thirsted as they’d never
thirsted before. Hundreds of horses collapsed and were left to snort their
final breaths in the dust. A strange apathy descended upon the men. When the
Khirgwi assailed them, many simply continued to walk, not hearing or not caring
that their kinsmen perished behind them. Subis, they would think, and that name became more fraught
with hope than the name of any God. When dawn arose and they
still hadn’t reached Subis, the decision was made to continue. The world became
a hazy furnace of baked stone and dunes tanned and curved like a harlot’s
lovely skin. The distances shimmered with hallucinatory lakes, and many
perpetually ran, convinced they saw the promised oasis, promised Subis. Subis … A lover’s name. The Men of the Tusk
stumbled down long, flinty slopes, filed between sandstone outcroppings that
resembled towering mushrooms on thin stems. They climbed mountainous dunes. The village looked like a
many-chambered fossil unearthed by the wind. The deep green and sun silver of
the oasis beckoned with its impossibility… Subis. Ragged ranks surged
across the sun-hammered sands. Men charged through the abandoned village,
between date palms trailing skirts of dead fronds and acacias freighted with
weaver’s nests. They jostled, skidded across the packed dust, toppled splashing
and laughing into the glittering waters… Where they found
Detnammi. Khemema Dead, bloated, floating
in the crystal green, with all four hundred and fifty-nine of his men. The promise of Subis had
been poisoned. The Khirgwi had found a way. But the Men of the Tusk
were beyond caring. They gulped water and retched, then gulped more. Thousands
upon thousands roared down the dunes and descended upon the oasis. They pushed
and heaved at the masses before them only to find themselves engulfed. Hundreds
were crushed to death. Hundreds more actually drowned as men were shouldered
into the pool’s centre. Some time passed before the Great Names could impose
order. Thanes and knights warded men from the oasis at sword point. They were
forced to make more than a few examples. Eventually, vast relays were organized
to fill and distribute waterskins. Swimmers began removing the dead from the
pool. Bodies were heaped in the sun. The Great Names denied
Detnammi and his men funeral rites, realizing he’d struck south for Subis
instead of searching for Khirgwi wells— obviously to save himself.
Chepheramunni, the King-Regent of High Ainon, denounced the Palatine of
Eshkalas, posthumously stripped him of his rank and station. Ritual Ainoni
curses were cut into his body, which was laid out for the vultures. Meanwhile, the Men of the
Tusk drank their fill. Many retired to the shade beneath the palms, leaning
against trunks and wondering that fronds could so resemble vulture’s wings.
Their thirst slaked, they began to worry about sickness. The Cultic
physician-priests of dread Pestilence, Akkeagni, were called before the Great
Names, and they named those sicknesses associated with drinking water fouled by
the dead. Otherwise, their pharmaka and their reliquary abandoned to the
desert, they could do little more than mutter pre-emptive prayers. The God would not be
satisfied. Everyone was afflicted
somehow—chills, cramps, nausea—but thousands became severely ill, stricken by
convulsive vomiting and diarrhea. By the following morning, the worst were
doubled over with abdominal pain, their skin blotched by angry red spots. In Council, the Great
Names stared and stared at Ikurei Conphas’s maps. Enathpaneah, they knew, was
simply too far. They sent several IMC 1HIKU MARCH dozen parties to various
points on the Meneanor coast, hoping against hope they might find the Imperial
Fleet. Accusations were levelled against the Emperor, and twice Conphas and
Saubon had to be physically restrained. When the search parties returned from
the hills empty-handed, the Great Names solemnly agreed to continue their
southward march. Either way, Prince
Kellhus said, the God would see to them. The Men of the Tusk abandoned Subis
the following evening, their waterskins brimming with polluted water. Several
hundred, those too sick to walk, remained behind, waiting for the Khirgwi. Sickness spread among the
men, and those without friends or kin were abandoned. The Holy War became a
vast army of shuffling men and stumbling horses, marching across blue vistas of
sun-cracked stone and flint-strewn sand. About the Nail of Heaven, clouds of
stars wheeled above them, numbering their dead. Those too sick to keep pace
fell behind, wept in the dust like broken men, dreading the morrow’s sun as
much as the Khirgwi. “Enathpaneah,” the
walkers said to one another, for the Great Names had lied, telling them
Enathpaneah was only three days distant when it was more than six. “The God
will show us to Enathpaneah.” A name like a promise… Like Shimeh. For those afflicted by
diarrhea, the ration of water simply wasn’t enough. Already weakened, they
collapsed, panting against the cool sands. Many of the sickest died this
way—thousands of them. After two days, the water
began to run out. The thirst returned. Lips cracked, eyes grew curiously soft,
and skin tightened, became as dry as papyrus and cracked around joints. There were some, very
few, who seemed impossibly strong during this trial. Nersei Proyas was one of
the few caste-nobles who refused to water his horse while his men died. He
walked among the steadfast knights and soldiers of Conriya, giving words of
encouragement, reminding them that before all, faith was a matter of trial. Followed by two beautiful
women, Prince Kellhus also spread words of strength. They didn’t merely suffer,
he told men, they suffered for … For Shimeh. For the Truth. For
the God! And to suffer for the God was to secure glory in the Outside. Many
would be broken in this furnace, that Khemema was true, but those who
survived would know the temper of their own hearts. They would be, he claimed,
unlike other men. They would be more … The Chosen. Wherever Prince Kellhus
and his two women went, men crowded about them, begging to be touched, to be
cured, to be forgiven. Stained by dust into the colour of the desert, his face
bronzed and his flowing hair almost bleached white, he seemed the very incarnation
of sun, stone, and sand. He, and he alone, could stare into the endless
Carathay and laugh, hold out his arms to the Nail of
Heaven and give thanks for their suffering. “The God chooses!” he
would cry, “The God!” And the words he spoke
were like water. On the third night, he
halted in a vast bowl between dunes. He marked a place across the trampled
sands, and bid several of his closest adherents, his Zaudunyani, to begin
digging. When they despaired of finding anything, he commanded them to
continue. Very soon they felt moisture in the sand… Then he walked farther and
bid those rushing past to dig more holes at various places. Others he organized
into an armed perimeter. Held back by hedges of levelled spears, wondering
thousands crowded around the lip of the depression, curious to see what
happened. After several watches, some fourteen pools of dark water glittered in
the moonlight. Spring-fed wells… The waters were muddy,
but they were sweet, and unfouled by the taste of dead men. When the first of the Great
Names at last beat and hollered their way to the floor of the depression, they
found Prince Kellhus at the bottom of a pit, standing knee-deep in waters with
a dozen others, hoisting brimming skins to the groping hands above. “He showed me,” he laughed,
when they hailed them. “The God showed me!” More wells were dug at
the behest of the Great Names, and water relays were once again organized.
Since most of the Holy War had suffered severe dehydration, the Great Names
decided to linger for several days. The remaining horses were butchered and
eaten raw for lack of fuel. In the Councils, Prince Kellhus was congratulated
for his discovery, but lttt 1 H1RD MARCH little more. Many in the
Holy War, especially the caste-menials, openly hailed him as the Warrior-Prophet.
In closed meetings the Great Names argued over the Prince of Atrithau, but they
could find no consensus. The desert, Ikurei Conphas warned, had made a False
Prophet of Fane as well. Meanwhile, the Khirgwi
tribes gathered in the deep desert, thinking the Holy War, like a jackal, had
found its place to die. The following night they attacked en masse, a wild rush
of thousands spilling from the crests of dunes, confident they would ride down
more corpses than men. Though surprised, the Men of the Tusk, their flesh
revived, their faith renewed, encircled and slaughtered the desert tribesmen.
Entire tribes, who’d bled much through the endless skirmishes across Khemema,
were extinguished. The survivors withdrew to their hidden oasis homes. The last of the food gave
out. Waterskins were once again filled and heaped across strong backs. Songs
were raised across the dark, desert landscape, many of them hymns to the
Warrior-Prophet. The Holy War resumed its southward march, unconquered and
defiant. Between Mengedda, Anwurat, and the desert, they had lost almost a
third of their number, but still their great columns spanned the horizon. They crossed deep wadis,
cut by the infrequent winter rains, and climbed rolling dunes. They laughed
once again at the shit-chasers scurrying with their dung across the sands. Day
came, and they perched their canvas sheets against the punishing sun so they
might sleep through the merciless heat. As evening fell on the
second day, and the encampment once again made ready to march, many noticed
clouds across the western sky—the first clouds they’d seen, it seemed to them,
since Gedea. They were smeared across the horizon, deep purple, and they folded
around the setting sun so that it seemed the iris of an angry red eye. Without
their omen-texts, the priests could only guess at the meaning. The air still shimmered
with heat, rolled like water over the sun-baked distances. And it was
still—very still. A hush fell across the reaches of the Holy War. Men peered at
the horizon, looked nervously at the wrathful eye, realizing the clouds
belonged to the ground not the sky. And then they
understood. Sandstorm. Khemema With the sluggish
elegance of a scarf coiling in the wind, pummelling clouds of dust rolled
toward them from the west. Old Carathay could stil hate. The Great Thirst could
still punish. Skin-serrating blasts.
Gusts with a million stinging teeth. The Men o the Tusk howled to one another
without being heard. They tried to look perhaps glimpsed the shadowy figures of
others through the brown haze but were then blinded. They huddled in clots
beneath the biting wind felt the sand suck at them as it heaped around their
limbs. Theь makeshift shelters were torn away, thrashed like paper through
mountainous gusts. A new calligraphy of dunes was scrawled about them Forgotten
waterskins were buried. The sandstorm raged until
dawn, and when the winds receded, the Men of the Tusk wandered like stunned
children across a transformec land. They salvaged what they could of their
remaining baggage, founc several dead men buried beneath the sands. The Great
and Lesser Name; met in Council. They hadn’t enough shelter from the sun, they
realized to remain through the day. They must march—that much was clear. Bui
where? Most argued that they should return to the well discovered b) Prince Kellhus—as he was still called in the
Councils, as much by his owr insistence as by the loathing some had taken to
the name “Warrior-Prophet.” At least they had enough water to make it that far. But the dissenters, led
by Ikurei Conphas, insisted the well was likely lost to the sands. They pointed
to the surrounding dunes, so bright in the sun they sheared one’s eyes, and
insisted the land around the wells was certain to have been just as disfigured
if not more. If the Holy War usec its remaining water to march away from Enathpaneah, and the wells couldn’t be found,
then it was doomed. As it stood, Conphas claimed once again relying upon his
map, the Holy War was within two days march of water. If they marched now they
would suffer, certainly, but the> would survive. To the surprise of some,
Prince Kellhus agreed. “Surely,” he said, “it’s better to wager suffering to
avoid death than to wager death to avoid suffering.” The Holy War marched
toward Enathpaneah. They passed beyond the
sea of dunes and entered land like a burning plate, a flat stone expanse where
the air fairly hissed with heat. Once again the water was
strictly rationed. Men became dizzy with thirst and some began casting away
armour, weapons, and clothes, walkin] like naked madmen until they fell, their
skin blackened by thirst anc blistered by sun. The last of the horses died, and
the footmen, eve resentful that their lords tended to their mounts more
faithfully thai to their men, would curse and kick gravel at the wooden corpses
as the} passed. Old Gothyelk collapsed and was strapped to a litter made by his
sons, who shared their rations of water with him. Lord Ganyatti, the Conriyan
Palatine of Ankirioth, whose bald head looked so much like a blistered thumb jutting
from a torn glove, was bound like a sack tc his horse. When night had at last
fallen, the Holy War continued its march south, once again stumbling along the
backs of sandy dunes. The Men of the Tusk walked and walked, but the cool
desert night provided little relief. None talked. They formed an endless
procession of silent wraiths, passing across Carathay’s folds. Dusty, harrowed,
hollow-eyed, and with drunken limbs, they walked. Like a pinch of mud dropped
in water they crumbled, wandered from one another, until the Holy War became a
cloud of disconnected figures, feet scraping across gravel and dust. The morning sun was a
shrill rebuke, for still the desert had not ended. The Holy War had become an
army of ghosts. Dead and dying men lay scattered in their thousands behind it,
and as the sun rose still more fell. Some simply lost the will, and fell seated
in the dust, their thoughts and bodies buzzing with thirst and fatigue. Others
pressed themselves until their wracked bodies betrayed them. They struggled
feebly across the sand, waving their heads like worms, perhaps croaking for
help, for succour. But only death would come
swirling down. Tongues swelled in
mouths. Parchment skin went black and tightened until it split about purple
flesh, rendering the dying unrecognizable. Legs buckled, folded, refused one’s
will as surely as if one’s spine had been broken. And the sun beat them,
scorching chapped skin, cooking lips to hoary leather. There was no weeping, no
wails or astonished shouts. Brothers abandoned brothers and husbands abandoned
wives. Each man had become a solitary circle of misery that walked and walked. Khemema Gone was the promise of
sweet Sempis water. Gone was the promise of Enathpaneah… Gone was the voice of the
Warrior-Prophet. Only the trial remained,
drawing out warm, thrumming hearts into an agonized line, desert thin—desert
simple. Frail heartbeats stranded in the wastes, pounding with receding fury at
seeping, water-starved blood. Men died in the
thousands, gasping, each breath more improbable than the last, at furnace air,
sucking final moments of anguished, dreamlike life through throats of charred
wood. Heat like a cool wind. Black fingers twitching through searing sands.
Flat, waxy eyes raised to blinding sun. Whining silence and
endless loneliness. Esmenet stumbled by his
side, kicking sand and fiery gravel with feet she could no longer feel. Above
her, the sun shrieked and shrieked, but she’d long ceased worrying how light
could make sound. He carried Serwe in his
arms, and it seemed to Esmenet that she’d never witnessed anything so
triumphant. Then he stopped before a
deep and dark vista. She swayed and the
wailing sun twirled above her, but somehow he was there, beside her, bracing
her. She tried licking cracked lips, but her tongue was too swollen. She looked
to him, and he grinned, impossibly hale… He leaned back and cried
out to the hazy roll and pitch of distant green, to the wandering crease of a
flashing river. And his words resounded across the compass of the horizon. “Father! We come,
Father!” Early Autumn, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, lothiah Xinemus’s fierce scowl
silenced him, and the three men retreated into a grotto of darkness where the
wall pinched one of the compound’s structures. They dragged the warrior-slave’s
corpse with them. “I always thought these
bastards were tough,” Bloody Dinch whispered, his eyes still wild from his
kill. MARCH “They are,” Xinemus
replied softly. He scanned the gloomy courtyard below them—a puzzle-box of open
spaces, bare walls, and elaborate facades. “The Scarlet Spires purchase their
Javreh from the Sranc Pits. They are hard men, and you’d do well to remember
it.” Zenkappa smirked in the
dark and added, “You got lucky, Dinch.” “By the Prophet’s Balls!” Bloody Dinch
hissed, “I—” “Shhht!” Xinemus spat. Both Dinch and Zenkappa were good
men, fierce men, Xinemus knew, but they were bred to battle in open fields, not
to slink through shadows as they did now. And it bruised Xinemus in some
strange way that they seemed incapable of grasping the importance of what they
attempted. Achamian’s life meant little to them, he realized. He was a
sorcerer, an abomination. Achamian’s disappearance, the Marshal imagined, was a
matter of no small relief to the two of them. There was no place for
blasphemers in the company of pious men. But if they failed to
grasp the importance of their task, they were well aware of its lethality. To
skulk like thieves among armed men was harrowing enough, but in the midst of
the Scarlet Spires… Both were frightened,
Xinemus realized—thus the forced humour and empty bravado. Xinemus pointed to a
nearby building across a narrow portion of the courtyard. The bottom floor
consisted of a long row of colonnades framing the pitch-black of its hollow
interior. “Those abandoned
stables,” he said. “With any luck, they’ll be connected to those barracks.” “Empty barracks, I hope,” Dinch whispered, studying the dark
confusion of buildings. “So they look.” I’ll save you Achamian… Undo what I’ve
done. The Scarlet Spires had
taken up residence in a vast, semi-fortified complex that looked as though it
dated back to the age of Cenei—the sturdy palace of some long-dead Ceneian
Governor, Xinemus supposed. They had watched the compound for over a fortnight,
waited as the great trains of armed men, supplies, and slave-borne litters
wound from the narrow gates into Iothiah’s labyrinthine streets to join the
march across Khemema. Xinemus had no definite idea of the size of the Scarlet
Spires‘ H ■s i Khemema 4C contingent, but he
reckoned it numbered in the thousands. This meat the compound itself must be
immense, a warren of barracks, kitchen storerooms, apartments, and official
chambers. And this meant that whe the bulk of the School travelled south, those
few remaining would find difficult to defend against intruders. This was good… If in fact
Achamian was actually imprisoned here. The Scarlet Spires
wouldn’t dare take Achamian with them; Xinemi was sure of that much. The road
was no place to interrogate a Mandai sorcerer, especially when one marched with
a prince such as Proyas. Ar the fact that the Scarlet Spires had actually left
a mission here meant th; the School had
unfinished business to attend to in Iothiah. Xinemus hs wagered that Achamian
was that unfinished business. If he wasn’t here, then
he was very likely dead. He’s here! I feel it! When the three men
reached the interior of the stables, Xinemi clutched at the Trinket about his
neck as though it were holier than tl small golden Tusk that clicked at its
side. The Tears of God. Their on hope against sorcerers. Xinemus had inherited
three Trinkets when h father had died, and this was the
reason he attempted this with on Dinchases and Zenkappa. Three Trinkets for
three men about to wand into a den of abominations. But Xinemus prayed they
wouldn’t ne< them. Whatever their sins, sorcerers were men, and men slept. “Hold them in your bare
fists,” Xinemus commanded. “Remembs they must be touching your skin to afford
you any protectio Whatever you do, don’t
let it go… This place is sure to be protected 1 Wards, and if the Trinket
leaves your skin, even for a moment, we’ll 1 undone…” He ripped his own Trinket
from about his neck, and it comforted by the cold weight of
its iron, the imprint of its deep run against his palm. The stalls hadn’t been
mucked, and the stable smelled of dried hors shit and straw. After several
moments of fumbling they found a passag way that led them into the abandoned
barracks. Then their nightmarish
journey through the maze began. Tl complex was as huge as Xinemus had both
hoped and feared, and much as he was relieved by the endless series of empty rooms and cor dors, he despaired of ever finding
Achamian. Once or twice they hea Ihe Ihird March distant voices speaking
Ainoni, and they would crouch in pitch shadows or behind exotic Kianene
furniture. They passed through dusty audience halls, filled with enough
moonlight that they might wonder at the grand, geometric frescoes across the
vaulted ceilings. They skulked by sculleries and kitchens, and heard slaves
snoring in the humid dark. They crept up stairs and down halls lined by
apartments. Each door they opened seemed hinged upon a precipice: either
Achamian or certain death lay on the far side. Every instant, every breath
seemed an impossible gamble. And everywhere they
imagined the ghosts of the Scarlet Magi, holding arcane conferences, summoning
demons, or studying blasphemous tomes in the very rooms they glided past. Where were they holding
him? After some time, Xinemus
began to feel bold. Was this how a thief or a rat felt, prowling at the edges
of what others could see or know? There was exhilaration, and strangely enough,
comfort in lurking unseen in the marrow
of your enemy’s bones. Xinemus was overcome by a sudden certainty: We’re going to do this! We’re going to
save him! “We should check the
cellars…” Dinch hissed. A sheen of sweat covered his grizzled face and his grey
square-cut beard was matted. “They’d put him someplace where his screams
couldn’t be heard by visitors, wouldn’t they?” Xinemus grimaced, both at
the loudness of the old majordomo’s voice and at the truth of what he said.
Achamian had been tortured and tortured long… It was an unbearable thought. Akka… They returned to a stone
stairwell they’d passed, descended down into pitch blackness. “We need some light!”
Zenkappa exclaimed. “We won’t be able to find our hands down here!” They stumbled blindly
into a carpeted corridor, packed close enough together to smell the sweat of
one another’s fear. Xinemus despaired. This was hopeless! But then they saw a
light, and a small sphere of illuminated hallway, moving… Khemema Wo The corridor where they
found themselves was narrow with a low rounded ceiling—they could see this
now—and exceedingly long, as though it ran the greater length of the compound.
A sorcerer walked through it. The figure was thin, but
dressed in voluminous scarlet silk robes, with deep sleeves embroidered with
golden herons. His face was the clearest, because it was bathed in impossible
light. Rutted cheeks lost in the slick curls of a lavishly braided beard,
bulbous eyes, bored by the tedium of walking from place to place, all
illuminated by a teardrop of candlelight suspended a cubit before his forehead,
without any candle. Xinemus could hear
Dinch’s breath hiss through clenched teeth. The figure and the ghostly light
paused at a juncture in the corridor, as if he had stumbled across a peculiar
smell. The old face scowled for a moment, and the sorcerer seemed to peer into
the darkness at them. They stood as still as three pillars of salt. Three
heartbeats… It was as though the eyes of Death itself sought them. The man’s scowl lapsed
back into boredom, and he turned down the juncture, trailing a momentary skirt
of illuminated stonework and scrolled carpet in his wake. And then blackness.
Sanctuary. “Dear, sweet Sejenus…” Dinch gasped. “We must follow him,”
Xinemus whispered, feeling his nerves gradually calm. Witnessing the face, the
sorcerous light, now made their every step sing with peril. The only thing
keeping Dinchases and Zenkappa behind him, Xinemus knew, was a loyalty that
transcended fear of death. But here, in this place, in the bowels of a Scarlet
Spires stronghold, that loyalty was being tested as it had never been tested
before, even in the heart of their most desperate battles. Not only did they
gamble with the obscenely unholy, there were no rules here, and this, added to mortal fear, was enough to
break any man. They found the juncture
but could see no light down the other corridor, so they inched blindly forward
as they had before, following the limestone walls with their fingers. They came to a heavy
door. Xinemus could see no light seep around it. He grasped the iron latch,
hesitated. He’s
close! I’m sure of it! Xinemus pulled open the
door. From the drafts across
their humid skin they could tell the door opened upon a large chamber, but the
darkness was still impenetrable. They felt as though they were entombed in
dread night. Holding a hand before
him, Xinemus stepped into open blackness, hissed at the others to follow. A voice cracked the
silence, stilled their hearts. “But this will not do.” Then lights, blinding,
stinging bright and bewildering. Xinemus yanked free his sword. Blinked, and squinting,
focused on the figures congregated about them. A half-circle of a dozen Javreh,
fully geared for war beneath blue and red coats. Six of them with levelled
crossbows. Stunned, his thoughts
reeling in panic, Xinemus lowered his fathers great sword. We’re undone… Behind stood three of the
Scarlet Magi. The one they’d seen earlier, another much like him but with a
beard dyed in yellow henna, and a third, who from his very bearing Xinemus knew
had to be the senior. Against his crimson gown
the man was more than pale; he was devoid of pigment. A chanv addict, no doubt.
One small obscenity to heap upon all the others. About his waist he wore a
broad blue sash, and over it, a golden belt pulled low to his groin by a heavy
pendant that hung between his thighs—serpents coiled about a crow. The red’irised eyes
studied them, pained by amusement. “Tsk, tsk, tsk…” From lips as translucent as
drowned worms. Do something! I
must do something!
But for the first time in his life, Xinemus was paralyzed by terror. “Those things,” the
sorcerer-addict continued, “that you clutch to protect yourselves against us…
Those Trinkets. We can feel them, you know… Especially
when they grow near. Hard sensation to describe, really… Kind of like a stone
marble, pitting a thin sheet of cloth. The more marbles, the deeper the pit…” The flicker of
translucent eyelids. “It was almost as though we could smell you.” Xinemus managed to sound
defiant. “Where’s Drusas Achamian?” Khemema “Wrong question, my
friend. If I were you, I should rather ask, ‘What have I done?’” Xinemus felt the flare of
righteous anger. “I’m warning you, sorcerer. Surrender Achamian.” “Warn me?” Droll laughter. The man’s cheeks fluted like fish
gills. “Unless you’re speaking of inclement weather, Lord Marshal, I think
there’s very little you could warn me about. Your Prince has marched into the
wastes of Khemema. I assure you, you’re quite alone here.” “But I still bear his
writ.” “No, you don’t. You were
stripped of your rank and station. But either way, the fact is you trespass, my friend. We Schoolmen look very seriously upon
trespass, and care nothing for the writ of Princes.” Humid dread. Xinemus felt
his hackles rise. This had been a fool’s errand… But my path is righteous… The sorcerer smiled
thinly. “Tell your clients to drop their Trinkets. Of course, you may drop
yours as well, Lord Marshal… Carefully.” Xinemus glanced
apprehensively at the levelled bolts, at the stone-faced Javreh who aimed them,
and felt as though his life was held from a string. “Immediately!” the mage
snapped. * All three Trinkets thudded like
plums against the carpets. “Good… We’re fond of
collecting Chorae. It’s a good thing to know where they are…” Then the man uttered
something that turned his crimson irises into twin suns. Xinemus was thrown to his
knees by a blast of heat from behind him. He could hear shrieking… Dinch and Zenkappa
shrieking. By the time he turned,
Dinch had already fallen, a heap of writhing char and incandescent flame.
Zenkappa flailed and continued to shriek, immolated in a column of blowing
fire. He stumbled two steps into the dark corridor and collapsed onto the
floor. The shrieks trailed into the sound of sizzling grease. On his knees, Xinemus
stared at the two fires. Without knowing, he’d brought his hands up to cover
his ears. L HIRD MARCH M;y path… He felt gauntleted hands
clench him, powerful limbs pin him to his knees. He was wrenched around to face
the chanv addict. The sorcerer was very near now, near enough that the Marshal
could smell his Ainoni perfumes. “Our people tell us,” the
addict said, in a tone which suggested that untoward things were best not
mentioned in polite company, “that you’re Achamian’s closest friend—from the
days when you both tutored Proyas.” Like a man unable to
fully rouse himself from a nightmare, Xinemus simply stared, slack-faced. Tears
streamed down his broad cheeks. I’ve failed you again, Akka. “You see, Lord Marshal,
we worry that Drusas Achamian tells us lies. First we’ll see if what he’s told
you corresponds with what he’s been telling us. And then we shall see if he
values the Gnosis over his closest friend. If he values knowledge over life and love…” The translucent face
paused, as though happening across a delicious thought. “You’re a pious man,
Marshal. You already know what it means to be an instrument of the truth, no?”
Yes. He knew. To suffer. Heaps of masonry nested
in ashes.i Truncated walls, hedged
by rubble, sketching random lines against] night sky. Cracks forked like blind
branches chasing elusive sun. Spilled columns, halved by moonlight. Scorched stone. The Library of the
long-dead Sareots, ruined by the avarice of the Scarlet Schoolmen. Silent, save for the
small sound of scraping, like a bored child playing with a spoon. How long had it scuttled
like a rat through the hollows, crawled through the labyrinthine galleries hewn
by the random plunge of cement and stone? Past entombed texts, wood-blackened
and crocodile-scaled by Khemema fire, and once a lifeless
human hand. Through a tiny mine, whose only ore was the debris of knowledge.
Upward, always upward, digging, burrowing, crawling. How long? Days? Weeks? It knew very little of
time. It shrugged its way
through torn, animal-skin pages pinched by massive surfaces of stone. It heaved
aside a palm-sized brick, raised a silky face to the clouds of stars. Then it
climbed and climbed, and at last lifted its small, puppet body upon the summit
of the ruin. Raised a little knife, no
bigger than a cat’s tongue. As though to touch the
Nail of Heaven. A Wathi Doll, stolen from
a dead Sansori witch… Someone had spoken its
name. Fnathpaneah What vengeance is this! That he should
slumber while 1 endure? Blood douses no hatred, cleanses no sin. Like seed, it
spills of its own volition, and leaves naught but sorrow in its wake. —HAMISHAZA, TEMP1RAS THE KING … and my soldiers, they say, make idols
of their swords. But does not the sword make certain? Does not the sword make
plain? Does not the sword compel kindness from those who kneel in its shadow? I
need no other god. —TRIAMIS, JOURNALS AND DIALOGUES Late Autumn, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk,
Enathpaneah The first sound Proyas
heard was the rush of wind through leaves, the sound of openness. Then,
impossibly, he heard gurgling water—the sound of life. The desert… He awoke with a start,
blinked sunlight from eyes that teared in pain. It seemed a coal flared red-hot
behind his forehead. He tried to call out for Algari, his body-slave, but could
do no more than whisper. His lips stung, burned as though bleeding. “Your slave
is dead.” Enathpaneah ‘ Proyas remembered
something… A great bloodletting across sands. He turned to the sound of
the voice, saw Cnaьir crouched nearby, b over what looked to be a belt. The man
was shirtless, and Proyas no the blistered skin of his massive shoulders, the
stinging red of his scar arms. His normally sensual lips were swollen and
cracked. Behind him brook sloshed through a groove that wandered between earth
and stc The green of living things blurred the distance. “Scylvendi?” Cnaьir looked up, and for
the first time Proyas noticed his age: branching of wrinkles about his
snow-blue eyes, the first greying hair his black mane. The barbarian was, he
realized, not so much younger tl his father. “What happened?” Proyas
croaked. The Scylvendi resumed
digging at the leather wrapped about scarred knuckles. “You collapsed,” he
said. “In the desert…” “You… You saved me?” ■
Cnaьir paused without looking up. Then continued working. They drifted like reavers
come from the furnace, men hard-bitten by trials of the sun, and they fell upon
the villages and stormed the hill forts and villas of northern Enathpaneah.
Every structure they bun Every man they smote with the edge of the sword, until
none were breathing. So too, every woman and child they found hidden they pt
the sharp knife. There were no innocents.
This was the secret they carried away f the desert. All were guilty. They wandered southward,
scattered bands of wayfarers, come i the
plains of death to harrow the land as they’d been harrowed, to del suffering as
they’d suffered. The horrors of the desert were reflecte their ghastly eyes.
The cruelty of blasted lands was written into’t gaunt frames. And their swords
were their judgement. Some three hundred
thousand souls, perhaps three-fifths of’t combatants, had marched under the
Tusk into Khemema. Only hundred thousand, almost
all of them combatants, would leave. Despite these losses, with the exception
of Palatine Detnammi, none of the Great had died. Using the Inrithi
caste-nobles as compass points, Death had drawn circles, each one more narrow
than the last, taking the slaves and the camp-followers, then the indentured caste-menial
soldiers, and so on. Life had been rationed according to caste and station. Two
hundred thousand corpses marked the Holy War’s march from the oasis of Subis to
the frontier of Enathpaneah. Two hundred thousand dead, beat into black leather
by the sun. For generations the
Khirgwi would call their route saka’ilrait, “the Trail of Skulls.” The desert road had
sharpened their souls into knives. The Men of the Tusk would lay the keel of
another road, just as appalling, and far more furious. Late Autumn, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk,
lothiah How long had they plied
him? How much misery had he
endured? But no matter how they
tormented him, with crude pokers or with the subtlest of sorcerous deceits, he
could not be broken. He shrieked and shrieked, until it had seemed his howls
were a faraway thing, the torment of some stranger carried upon the wind. But
he did not break. It had nothing to do with strength. Achamian wasn’t strong.
But Seswatha… How many times had
Achamian survived the Wall of Torment in Dagliash? How many times had he bolted
from the anguish of his sleep, weeping because his wrists were free, because no
nails pierced his arms? In the ways of torture, the Scarlet Spires were mere
understudies compared with the Consult. No. Achamian wasn’t
strong. For all their merciless
cunning, what the Scarlet Magi never understood was that they plied two men, not one. Hanging naked from the chains, his face
slack against shoulder and chest, Achamian could see the foremost of his
diffuse shadows fan across the mosaic floor. And no matter how Enathpaneah violent the agonies that
shuddered through him, the shadow remained firm, untouched. It whispered to
him, whether he wailed or gagged… Whatever they do, I remain untouched. The heart of a great tree never
bums. The heart of a great tree never bums. Two men, like a circle
and its shadow. The torture, the Cants of Compulsion, the narcotics—everything
had failed because there were two men for them to compel, and the
one, Seswatha, stood far outside the circle of the present. Whatever the
affliction, no matter how obscene, his shadow whispered, But I’ve suffered more… Time passed, misery piled
upon misery, then the chanv addict, Iyokus, dragged a man before him, thrust
him to his knees just beyond the Uroborian Circle, arms bound behind his back,
naked save for his chains. A face, broken and bearded, looked up to him, seemed
to weep and laugh. “Akka!” the stranger
cried out, his mouth mealy with blood. Spittle trailed from his lips. “Bease,
Akka! Beease tell them!” There was something about
him, an irksome familiarity… “We’ve exhausted the
conventional methods,” Iyokus said, “as I suspected we would. You’ve proven
yourself as stubborn as your predecessors.” The red-irised eyes darted to the
stranger. “The time has come to break new ground…” “I can bear no more,” the
man sobbed. “No more…” The Master of Spies
pursed his bloodless lips in mock remorse. “He came hoping to save you, you
know.” Achamian peered at the
man as though he were something accidentally glimpsed—something merely there. No. It couldn’t be. He
wouldn’t permit it. “So the question is,”
Iyokus was saying, “how far does your indifference extend? Will it bear the
mutilation of loved ones?” No! “I find dramatic gestures
are more effective at the beginning, before a subject becomes too accustomed…
So I thought we would start by putting out his eyes.” He made a circling
gesture with his index finger. One of the slave-soldiers behind Xinemus grabbed
a fistful of hair, yanked his head back, then raised a shining knife. The Third March Iyokus glanced at
Achamian, then nodded to his Javreh. The man stabbed downward, almost gingerly,
as though skewering a plum from a platter. Xinemus shrieked, the pit
of his eye cramped about polished steel. Achamian gasped at the
impossibility. That so familiar and so cherished face, crinkling into a
thousand friendly frowns, splitting into a thousand rueful grins, asylum amid
so much condemnation, now, now… The Javreh lifted his
knife. “ZIN!” Achamian
screeched. But there was his hanging
shadow, smeared across mortared glass, whispering, know not this man. Iyokus was speaking.
“Achamian. Achamian! I need you to listen to me carefully, Achamian, as one
Schoolman to another. You and I both know you’ll never leave this room alive.
But your friend, here, Krijates Xinemus…” “Beaassee!” the Marshal
wailed. “Beeaaaaseee!” “I am,” Iyokus continued,
“the Master of Spies for the Scarlet Spires. No more and no less. I bear
neither you nor your friend the slightest ill will. Unlike some, I need not hate
my subjects to do what I do. You and your suffering are simply a means to an
end. If you give me what my School needs, Achamian, your friend will become
useless to me. I’ll order his chains removed, and set him free. You have my
word as a Schoolman on that…” Achamian believed him,
and would have given anything if he could. But a sorcerer two thousand years
dead looked from his eyes, watched with a horrific detachment… Iyokus studied him, his
membranous skin moist in the unsteady light. He hissed and shook his head. “Such fanatic
stubbornness! Such strength!” The red-gowned sorcerer
whirled, nodded to the slave-soldier holding Xinemus. “Nooooo!” a piteous voice
howled. A stranger convulsed in
sightless agony, soiling himself. I know not this man. Enathpaneah The nameless orange tabby
froze, crouched, his ears pricked forward, his eyes fastened on the
debris-strewn alleyway before him. Something crept through the shadows, slow
like a lizard in the cold… Suddenly it dashed across dusty sunlight. The tabby
jumped. For five years he’d
skulked the alleys and gutters of Iothiah, feeding on mice, preying on rats,
and when he could, scavenging rare scraps discarded by men. Once he’d even
eaten from the corpse of a fellow cat that some boys had thrown from a rooftop. Only recently had he
started dining on dead men. Every day, with a piety born of his blood, he
padded, crept, and prowled along the same circuit. Through the alleys behind
the Agnotum Market, where the rats nosed garbage, along the ruined wall, where
the dead weeds and thistles beckoned mice, behind the eateries on the Pannas,
across the temple ruins, then through the labyrinthine slots between the
crumbling Ceneian tenements, where sometimes a child might scratch his ears. For some time now, dead
men had started appearing along his track. And now this… Slinking around
obstacles, he crawled to the nest of shadows where the running thing had
disappeared. He wasn’t hungry. He just needed to see. Besides, he longed for
the taste of living, bleeding prey… Hunched against a
burnt-brick wall, he craned his head around a corner. He halted, absolutely
still, the world before his face murmuring through his whiskers… No heartbeat, no
whistling rat squeals that only he could hear. But something moved… He leapt at a shadowy
form, claws extended. He bore the figure down, burying claws into its back,
teeth into its soft fabric of its throat. The taste was wrong. The smell was
wrong. He felt the first cut, then the second. He wrenched at the throat,
seeking meat, the gorgeous rush of hot blood. But there was nothing. Another
cut. “> The tabby released
the thing, tried to scramble away, but his hindquarters flailed, faltered. He
yowled and shrieked, scratching at the scabbed cobble. The Third March Little doll arms closed about
the tabby’s throat. The taste of blood. Late Autumn, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk,
Caraskand Positioned on the great
land route linking the nations south of the Carathay to Shigek and Nansur,
Caraskand was an ancient and strategic way station. All those goods that
merchants were loath to trust to the capricious seas—Zeumi silks, the cinnamon,
pepper, and magnificent tapestries of Nilnamesh, Galeoth wool and fine Nansur
wine—passed through the great bazaars of Caraskand, and had done so for
thousands of years. A Shigeki outpost in the
days of the Old Dynasty, Caraskand had grown with the passing centuries, and
for brief periods between the ascendancy of greater nations, had ruled her own
small empire. Enathpaneah was a semimountainous land, sharing in both the arid
summers of the Carathay and the rain-drenched winters of Eumarna. Caraskand
sprawled across nine hills in her heart. Her great curtain walls had been
raised by Triamis I, the greatest of the Ceneian Aspect-Emperors. The vast
markets had been cleared by Emperor Boksarias when Caraskand had been one of
the wealthiest governorates in the Ceneian Empire. The hazy towers and vast
barracks of the Citadel of the Dog, which could be seen from any of the city’s
nine heights, had been raised by the warlike Xatantius, Emperor of Nansur,
who’d used Caraskand as his proxy capital for his endless wars against
Nilnamesh. And the white-marble magnificence of the Sapatishah’s Palace, which
made an acropolis of the Kneeling Heights, had been raised by Pherokar I, the fiercest
and most pious of Kian’s early Padirajahs. Although tributary,
Caraskand was a great city in the way of Momemn, Nenciphon, or even Carythusal.
And though she’d been the prize of innumerable wars, she was proud. Proud cities do not
yield. Despite the proclamations
of the Padirajah, the Holy War had somehow survived Khemema. The Men of the
Tusk were no longer a terrifying rumour from the north. Their approach could be
measured by Enathpaneah the plumes of smoke that
marred the northern horizon. Refugees crowded the gates, speaking of butchery
at the hands of inhuman men. The Holy War, they said, was the wrath of the
Solitary God, who’d sent the idolaters to punish them for their iniquities. Panic seized Caraskand,
and not even the reassurances of their glorious Sapatishah-Governor, Imbeyan
the All-Conquering, could calm the city. Hadn’t Imbeyan fled like a beaten dog
from Anwurat? Hadn’t the idolaters killed three-quarters of the Grandees of
Enathpaneah? Strange names were traded in the streets. Saubon, the blond beast
of barbaric Galeoth, who could loosen men’s bowels with a look. Conphas, the
great tactician who had crushed even the Scylvendi with genius in arms.
Athjeari, more wolf than man, who ranged the hillsides and plundered all of
hope. The Scarlet Spires, the obscene sorcerers from whom even the Cishaurim
fled. And Kellhus, the Demon who walked among them as a False Prophet, inciting
them to mad and diabolical acts. These names were repeated often, and
carefully, as are all sounds of doom, like the gongs that marked the evening
executions. But there was no talk of
submission in the streets and bazaars of Caraskand. Very few fled. A silent
consensus had grown among them: the idolaters must be resisted, that was the
Solitary God’s will. One didn’t flee God’s wrath, no more than a child fled the
raised hand of his father. To be punished was the
lot of the faithful. They crowded the
interiors of their grand tabernacles. They wept and prayed, for themselves, for
their possessions, for their city. The Holy War was coming… Late Autumn, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, lothiah They’d left him in the
chapel for some time, hanging from the chains, slowly suffocating. The tripods
had grown dim, reduced to beds of glowering coals, so that the surrounding
darkness was shaped by lines and faint surfaces of orange stone. Achamian
wasn’t aware that Iyokus had joined him until the chanv addict spoke. “You’re curious, no
doubt, to know how the Holy War fares.” Achamian didn’t move his
head from his chest. lo Ihe Ihird March “Curious?” he croaked. The linen-skinned
sorcerer was little more than a voice in his periphery. “The Padirajah, it seems,
is a very cunning man. Rather than simply assume victory, he’d made plans
beyond the Battle of Anwurat. This is the sign of intellect, you know. The
ability to plan against your hopes. He knew the Holy War
must cross the wastes of Khemema to continue its march on Shimeh.” A small cough. “Yes… I know.” “Well, there was some
question, back when the Holy War besieged Hinnereth, as to why the Padirajah
refused to give battle at sea. The Kianene fleet scarce rules the Meneanor, but
it’s far from impotent. The question was raised again when we took Shigek, then
forgotten. Everyone assumed Kascamandri thought his fleet overmatched—and why
not? For all Kian’s victories against the Empire over the centuries, very few
have been at sea… It turns out everyone assumed wrong.” “What do you mean?” “The Holy War decided to
march across Khemema using the Imperial Fleet to bear their water. It now
appears the Padirajah had anticipated this. Once the Holy War had marched far
enough into the desert that it couldn’t turn back, the Kianene fleet fell upon
the Nansur…” Iyokus grinned with
sardonic bitterness. “They used the
Cishaurim.” Achamian blinked, saw
red-sailed ships burning in the mad lights of the Psukhe. A sudden flare of
concern—he was beyond fear now—bid him raise his head and stare at the Scarlet
Schoolman. The man seemed a ghost against shimmering white silks. “The Holy War?” Achamian
croaked. “Nearly destroyed.
Innumerable dead lie across the sands of Khemema.” Esmenet? He hadn’t thought her name for a long while. In the
beginning, it had been a refuge for him, reprieve in the sweet sound of a name,
but once they brought Xinemus to their sessions, once they started using his
love as an instrument of torment, he’d stopped thinking of her. He’d withdrawn
from all love… Enathpaneah To things more profound. “It seems,” Iyokus
continued, “that my brother Schoolmen ha suffered grievously as well. Our
mission here has been recalled.” Achamian stared down at
him, unaware that tears had wet his swoll cheeks. Iyokus watched him carefully,
standing just beyond the edge the accursed Uroborian Circle. “What does that mean?”
Achamian rasped. Esmenet? M31 love… “It means your torment is at an end…” Hesitant
pause. “I would hs you know, Drusas Achamian, that I was against seizing you.
I’ve presic over the interrogation of Mandate Schoolmen before, and know them
be both tedious and futile… And distasteful… most distasteful.” Achamian
stared, said nothing, felt nothing. “You know,” Iyokus continued, “I wasn’t
surprised when the Marsha Attrempus corroborated your version of the events
beneath 1 Andiamine Heights. You truly believe that the Emperor’s adviser, Skes
was a Consult spy, don’t you?” Achamian swallowed
painfully. “I know he was. And someday soon will you.” “Perhaps. Perhaps… But
for now, my Grandmaster has decided th spies must be Cishaurim. One cannot
substitute legends for whai known.” “You substitute what you
fear for what you don’t know, Iyokus.” Iyokus regarded him narrowly, as though
surprised that one so helpl so degraded, could still say fierce things.
“Perhaps. But regardless, our ti together is at an end. Even now we make
preparations to join brethren beyond Khemema…” Hanging like a sack from
the chains, his body numb from remembe agony, Achamian looked upon the sorcerer
as though from an immovE place, from some hold deep within the beaten ship of
his body. A pi not at sea. Iyokus had become
anxious. “I know our kind isn’t
given to… religious inclinations,” he said,‘ I thought I’d extend this one
courtesy at least. Within a matter of da^ slave will be sent down to the
cellars bearing a Trinket and a knife.’ Trinket will be for you, and the knife
for your friend… You have that 1 to prepare yourself for your journey.“ ZU Ihe Third March Such strange words for a
Scarlet Schoolman. For some reason, Achamian knew this wasn’t another sadistic
game. “Will you tell this to Xinemus as well?” The translucent face
turned to him sharply, but then unaccountably softened. “I suppose I will,”
Iyokus said. “He at least might be assured a place in the Afterlife…” The sorcerer turned, then
strode pale into the blackness. A distant door opened onto an illuminated
corridor, and Achamian glimpsed the profile of Iyokus’s face. For an instant,
he looked like any other man. Achamian thought of
swaying breasts, the kiss of skin to skin in lovemaking. Survive, sweet Esmi. Survive me. Late Autumn, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, Caraskand Flushed by their
atrocities, the southward-wandering Men of the Tusk gathered about the great
walls of Caraskand. In immense trains, they filed down from the heights and
found their fury tempered by towering fortifications. The ramparts scrawled
across the surrounding hills, immense sandstone belts the colour of copper,
rising and falling across the haze of distant slopes. Unlike the walls of
Shigek’s great cities, these, the Inrithi found, were defended. Standards were planted in
rocky soil. Client nobles, who’d been flung far afield by the suffering of the
desert, found their patron lords. Makeshift tents and pavilions were raised.
Shrial and Cultic priests gathered the faithful, and long dirges were raised
for those countless thousands claimed by the desert. The Councils of the Great
and Lesser Names were held, and after long rites of benediction for their
survival of Khemema, the investiture of Caraskand was planned. Nersei Proyas rode out to
meet with Imbeyan at the Ivory Gate, so named because its immense barbican was
constructed of white limestone rather than the reddish rock of Enathpaneah’s
quarries. Through an interpreter, the Conriyan Prince demanded the Sapatishah’s
surrender and made promises regarding the release of Imbeyan’s household and
the Enathpaneah lives of the city’s
inhabitants. Dressed in magnificent coats of blue and yellow, Imbeyan laughed
and said that what the desert had started, the stubborn walls of Caraskand
would see completed. Raised upon steep slopes
for the most part, Caraskand’s walls met level ground only along their
northeastern sections, where the hills yielded to several miles of alluvial
flatland, choked with field and grove and peppered with abandoned farms and
estates—the Tertae Plain. Here, the Inrithi built their largest camps and
prepared to storm the gates. Sappers began dredging
their tunnels. Teams of oxen and men were sent into the hills to fell timber
for siege engines. Outriders were dispatched to scout and plunder the
surrounding countryside. Blistered faces healed. Desert-gnawed limbs were
thickened with hard work and the hearty spoils of Enathpaneah. The Inrithi once
again began singing their songs. Priests led processions around the vast
circuit of Caraskand’s walls, brushing the ground before them with rushes and cursing
the stone of the fortifications. From the walls, the heathens would jeer and
cast missiles, but they were little heeded. For the first time in
months, the Inrithi saw clouds, real clouds, curling through the sky like milk
in water. At night, when the Inrithi
gathered about their fires, the tales of woe and redemption in Khemema were
gradually replaced by remarks of wonder at their survival and ceaseless
speculation about Shimeh. Caraskand was a name often
mentioned in The Tractate, enough that it seemed the great
gate to the Sacred Land. Blessed Amoteu, the country of the Latter Prophet, was
very near. “After Caraskand,” they
said, “we shall cleanse Shimeh.” Shimeh. In speaking this
holy name, the fervour of the Holy War was rekindled. Masses trekked into the
hillsides to hear the sermons of the Warrior-Prophet, who many believed had
delivered the Holy War from the desert. Thousands scarred their arms with tusks
and became his Zaudunyani. In the Councils of the Great and Lesser Names, the
lords of the Holy War listened to his counsel with trepidation. The Prince of
Atrithau had joined the Holy War impoverished, but he now commanded a
contingent as great as any. ml ihe Ihird March Then, as the Men of the
Tusk prepared their first assault against Caraskand’s turrets, the skies
darkened, and it began to rain. Three hundred Tydonni were killed in a flash
flood south of the city. Dozens more when a sapper’s tunnel collapsed. Dried
stream beds became torrents. It rained and rained, so that parched leather began
to rot and mail hauberks had to be continually rolled in barrels of gravel to
defeat the rust. In many places the earth became as soft and slick as rotten
pears, and when the Inrithi attempted to bring up their great siege towers they
found them immovable. The winter rains had
come. The first man to die of
the plague was a Kianene captive. Afterward his body was launched from a
catapult over the city’s walls—as would be those who followed. Late Autumn, 4111 Year-of’the-Tusk,
lothiah Mamaradda had decided he
would kill the sorcerer first. Though he wasn’t sure why, the Javreh Captain
found the idea of killing a sorcerer thrilling to the point of
arousal. That this might have anything to do with the fact that his masters
were also sorcerers never occurred to him. He entered the chapel
briskly, clenching and unclenching the Trinket his masters had given him. The
sorcerer hung like some huntsman’s prize at the far end of the chamber, his
battered form bathed in the orange glow of the three tripods flanking him. As
Mamaradda approached he noticed that the man swayed gently to and fro, as
though in some gentle draft. Then he heard the sound of scraping, high-pitched,
like iron against glass. He paused midway beneath
the airy vaults, instinctively peered at the floor beneath the sorcerer—at the
black-red calligraphy of the Uroborian Circle. He saw something small
crouched at the edge of the Circle… A cat? Scratching to bury piss? He
swallowed, squinted. The rapid scrape-scrape -scrape whined bright in his ears,
as though someone filed his teeth with a rusty knife. What? It was a tiny man, he realized. A tiny man bent over the Uroborian
Circle, scraping at the arcane paint… A doll? Enathpaneah Mamaradda hissed in
sudden terror, clutched for his knife. The scraping stopped. The
hanging sorcerer raised his bleary, bearded face, fixed Mamaradda with
glittering eyes. A heartbeat of abject horror. The Circle is broken! There was an impossible
muttering… Sunlight sparkled from
the sorcerer’s mouth and eyes. Impossible lights, curved
like Khirgwi blades, pranced like spider’s legs around him. Geysers of dust and
shards spat from the mosaic floor. The very air seemed to crack. Mamaradda raised his arms
and howled, was blinded by a flurry of unearthly incandescence. But then the lights were
gone, and he was untouched—unharmed… He remembered the Trinket
clenched fast in his fist. Mamaradda, Shield Captain of the Javreh, laughed. The tripods spilled, as
though kicked over by shadows. A shower of coals took Mamaradda in the face.
Several found his mouth, cracked his teeth with their heat. He dropped his
Trinket, screamed over the muttering… His heart exploded in his
chest. Fire boiled outward, flaring through his orifices and his fingernails.
Mamaradda fell, little more than wet skin about char. Vengeance roamed the
halls of the compound—like a God. And he sang his song with
a beast’s blind fury, parting wall from foundation, blowing ceiling into sky,
as though the works of man were things of sand. And when he found them, cowering beneath their Analogies, he sheared through
their Wards like a rapist through a cotton shift. He beat them with hammering
lights, held their shrieking bodies as though they were curious things, the
idiot thrashing of an insect between thumb and forefinger… Death came swirling down. He felt them scramble
through the corridors, desperate to organize some kind of concerted defence. He
knew that the sound of agony and blasted stone reminded them of their deeds.
Their horror would be the horror of the guilty. Glittering death had come to redress their
trespasses. Suspended over the
carpeted floors, encompassed by hissing Wards, he blasted his own ruined halls.
He encountered a cohort of Javreh. Their frantic bolts were winked into ash by
the play of lights before him. Then they were screaming, clawing at eyes that
had become burning coals. He strode past them, leaving only smeared meat and
charred bone. He encountered a dip in the fabric of the onta, and he knew that
more awaited his approach armed with the Tears of God. He brought the building
down upon them. And he laughed more mad
words, drunk with destruction. Fiery lights shivered across his defences and he
turned, seething with dark crackling humour, and spoke to the two Scarlet Magi
who assailed him, uttered intimate truths, fatal Abstractions, and the world
about them was wracked to the pith. He clawed away their
flimsy Anagogic defences, raised them from the ruin like shrieking dolls, and
dashed them against bone-breaking stone. Seswatha was free, and he
walked the ways of the present bearing tokens of ancient doom. He would show them the
Gnosis. When the first shiver
passed through the foundations, Iyokus thought, / should’ve known. His next thought,
unaccountably, was of Eleazaras. told him ill would come of this. For the completion of
their task, Eleazaras had left him only six Schoolmen, three of them sorcerers
of rank, and some two hundred and fifty Javreh. Worse yet, they were scattered
throughout the compound. Once he might have thought this would be more than
enough to manage a Mandate sorcerer, but after the fury of the Sareotic Library
he was no longer sure… Even had they been prepared. We’re doomed. Over the long years of
his life, the chanv had rendered his passions as colourless as his skin. What
he felt now was more the memory of a passion rather than the passion itself.
The memory of fear. But there was hope yet.
The Javreh possessed at least a dozen Trinkets, and moreover, he, Heramari Iyokus, was here. Enathpaneah Like his brethren, he
envied the Mandate the Gnosis, but unlike therr he did not hate. If anything,
Iyokus respected the Mandate. He under stood the pride of secret knowledge. Sorcery was nothing if
not a great labyrinth, and for a thousand year the Scarlet Spires had charted
it, delving, always delving, mining knowl edge both dread and disastrous. And
even though they’d yet to discove the glorious precincts of the Gnosis, there
were certain branches, certaь forks, which they alone had mapped. Iyokus was a scholar of these forbid den
forks, a student of the Daimos. A Daimotic sorcerer. In their darkest
conferences, they sometimes wondered: How woulc the War-Cants of the Ancient
North fare against the Daimos? The sound of screams
percolated through the halls. The wall thrummed with the reverberations of
nearing blasts. Iyokus, who was war and calculating even in circumstances as
dreadful as these, understooc the time had come to answer that question. He threw aside the
brilliant carpets and painted the circles across th< tiles with deft, practised
strokes. Light spilled from his colourless lips as h< muttered the Daimotic
Cants. And, as the tempest approached, he at las completed his interminable
song. He dared speak the Ciphrang’s name. “Ankaryotis! Heed me!” From the safety of his
circle of symbols, Iyokus gazed in wonder at th< sheeted lights of the
Outside. He looked upon a writhing abomination scales like knives, limbs like
iron pillars… “Does it hurt?” he asked
against the thunder of its wail. “‘ What hast thou done, mortal? Ankaryotis, a fury of the deep, a Ciphrang
summoned from the Abyss “I have bound you!” Thou art damned! Dost thou not recognize
he who shall keepeth thee fa Eternity? A demon… “Either way,” Iyokus
cried, “such is my fate!” The Javreh leapt like
flaming dancers, screaming, stumbling, thrashing across the lavish Kianene
carpets. ihe ihird March Battered, naked, Achamian
walked between them. “IYOKUS!” he thundered. Sheets of falling stucco
flashed into smoke against his Wards. “IYOKUS!” Dust shivered in the air. With words, he tore the
walls before him away. He walked over empty space, across a collapsed floor.
Masonry crashed from the ceilings. He peered through the billowing clouds of
powdered brick… And was engulfed in
brilliant dragon fire. He turned to the chanv
addict, laughed. Encircled by ghostly walls, the Master of Spies crouched on a
floating fragment of floor, his pale face working to his staccato song…
Vultures brighter than sunlight swept into Achamian’s defences. Shimmering lava
exploded from beneath, washed across his Wards. Lightning danced from the
room’s four dark corners… “YOU ARE OVERMATCHED,
IYOKUS!” He struck with a Cirroi
Loom, grasping the addict’s Wards with geometries of light. Then he was falling,
borne down by a raving demon, perched upon his Wards, hammering with great
nailed fists. With each blow he coughed
blood. He crashed into heaped
debris, struck with an Odaini Concussion Cant, throwing the Ciphrang backward
through shadowy ruin. He glanced up, searching for Iyokus. He glimpsed him
scrambling through a breach in the far wall. He sung a Weara Comb, and a
thousand lines of light flashed outward. The wall collapsed, riddled with
innumerable holes, as did the ceiling beyond. Incandescent threads fanned
across Iothiah and into the night sky. He pushed himself to his
feet. “IYOKUS!” Howling, the demon once
again leapt upon him, blazing with hellish light. Achamian charred its
crocodile hide, ribboned its otherworldly flesh, smote its elephantine skull
with ponderous cudgels of stone, and it bled fire from a hundred wounds. But
still it refused to fall. It howled obscen- Enathpaneah ities that cracked rock
and rifled the ground with chasms. More floors collapsed, and they grappled
through dark cellars made bright by flickering fury. Sorcerer and demon. Unholy Ciphrang, a
tormented soul thrust into the agony of the World, harnessed by words like a
lion by strings, yoked to the task that would see it freed. Achamian endured its
unearthly violence, heaped injury after injury upon its agony. And in the end it
grovelled beneath his song, cringed like a beaten animal, then faded into the
blackness… Achamian wandered naked
through the smoking ruins, a husk animated by numb purpose. He stumbled down
slopes of debris and wondered that he’d been the catastrophe that had wrought
this devastation. He saw the mutilated corpses of those he’d burned and broken.
He spat upon them in sudden memory of his hate. The night was cool and he
savoured the kiss of air across his skin. The stone bit his bare feet. He passed blankly into
the intact structures, like a ghost returning to where memories burn brightest.
It took some time, but at last he found Xinemus, chained, huddled in his own
excrement, and weeping as he clutched arms and knees over his nakedness. For a
while Achamian simply sat next to him… “I can’t see!” the
Marshal wailed. “Sweet Sejenus, I can’t see!” He groped for, then
seized, Achamian’s cheeks. “I’m so sorry, Akka. I’m
so sorry…” But the only words
Achamian could remember were those that killed. That damned. When they finally hobbled
from the ruined compound of the Scarlet Spires into the alleys of Iothiah, the
astonished onlookers—Shigeki, armed Kerathotics, and the few Inrithi who
garrisoned the city—gaped in both wonder and horror. But they dared not ask them
anything. Nor did they follow the two men as they shuffled into the darkness of
the city. HApTER Twenty Caraskand The vulgar think the God by analogy to
man and so worship Him in the form of the Gods. The learned think the God by
analogy to principles and so worship Him in the form of Love or Truth. But the
wise think the God not at all. They know that thought, which is finite, can
only do violence to the God, who is infinite. It is enough, they say, that the
God thinks them. —MEMGOWA, THE BOOK OF
DIVINE ACTS …for the sin of the idolater is not that
he worships stone, but that he worships one stone over others. —8:9:4 THE WITNESS OF FANE Early Winter, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk,
Caraskand Immense timber and hide
siege towers trundled toward Caraskand’s western walls, driven by vast teams of
mud-splattered oxen and exhausted men. Catapults hurled stone and flaming
pitch. Inrithi archers raked the parapets. From flanking towers and the streets
beyond the wall, heathens released soaring clouds of arrows. Throughout the
packed ranks of Inrithi, men cried out, rolled in the muck clutching wounded
limbs. The towers groaned nearer, their sides sheeted in flaming tar. The men
massed on their peaks hunched behind their shields, peered through smoke,
waiting for the signal. Caraskand A horn blared through the
din. The timber bridges
slammed onto the battlements. Iron-armo knights surged across, crying “Die or
conquer!” Swinging | broadswords, they leapt into the spears and scimitars of
the Kianene the ground below, thousands more rushed forward, raising Ј
iron-hooked ladders. Stones and corpses crashed down upon tl Blistering oil
sent men screaming from the rungs. But somehow, gained the summits, heaved
themselves between the battlements anc upon the Fanim. Pitched battles were
fought against woollen’s Faithful and heathen alike toppled from the heights. The Nangaels, the
Anpleians, and the dour Gesindalmen all man to seize sections of the wall. More
and more Inrithi spilled from the ; towers or clambered over the parapets, pausing
only to glance in wo at the great city exposed below. Some charged the nearest
tower. Ot were forced to crouch behind their teardrop shields as heathen bow
began scouring the heights from nearby rooftops. Shafts flashed overh buzzing
like dragonflies. Pots of burning pitch exploded among tl Men fell shrieking,
trailing streamers of smoke. One of the siege to erupted into an inferno. The
other smoked so intensely that dozer Nangaelish knights fell from the bridge,
urged to rush blind by tl choking behind. Then Imbeyan and his
Grandees charged from the towers. Men g pled,
hacked, and roared. Denied their siege towers
and exposed to a whistling barrag missiles from the city side of the wall, the
Inrithi began falling n quickly than the ladders could replace them. Within
moment: seemed, every man boasted a dozen arrows jutting from his shieL armour.
The knights striving against Imbeyan found themselves pre back through the
screams and corpses of their kinsmen. At last Iyengar, seeing the mortal
desperation in the eyes of his knig signalled the retreat. The survivors fell
back to the ladders. Very reached the ground alive. Twice more the Inrithi
stormed the walls of Caraskand over the foil ing weeks, and twice more the
ferocity and craft of the Kianene di them back with atrocious losses. The siege wore on through
the rains and pestilence. Within days of
identifying the sickness that caste-menials called “the hollows” and
caste-nobles “hemoplexy,” the physician-priests found themselves overwhelmed
with hundreds complaining of headaches and chills. When Hepma Scaralla, the
ranking High Priest of Akkeagni, Disease, informed the Great Names that the
rumours were true, that the dread God indeed groped among them with his
hemoplectic Hand, panic seized the Holy War. Even after Gotian threatened
deserters with Shrial Censure, hundreds fled into the Enathpanean hills, such
was the terror of hemoplexy. While the healthy warred
and died beneath Caraskand’s walls, thousands remained within their sodden,
makeshift tents, vomiting spittle, burning with fever, wracked by convulsive
chills. After a day or two, eyes would dull, and aside from bouts of delirious
ranting, men would be robbed of all spirit. After four or five days, skin would
discolour—welts raised by the God’s Hand, the physician-priests explained. The
fevers would peak after the first week, then rage for another, robbing even
iron-limbed men of all remaining strength. Either it broke, or the invalid fell
into a deathlike sleep from which very few ever awakened. Throughout the
encampments the physician-priests organized lazarets for those without retinues
or comrades to care for them. The surviving priestesses of Yatwer, Anagke,
Onkis, even Gierra, as well as other cultic servants of the Hundred Gods,
attended to pallet after pallet of prostrate sick. And no matter how much
aromatic wood they burned, the stench of death and bowel gagged passersby.
Nowhere, it seemed, could a man walk without hearing delirious shrieks or
smelling hemoplectic putrescence. The stench was such that many Men of the Tusk
took to walking through the encampment holding urine-soaked rags to their
faces—as was the Ainoni custom during times of pestilence. The plague intensified,
and Disease’s Hand spared no one, not even members of the blessed castes.
Cumor, Proyas, Chepheramunni, and Skaiyelt all succumbed within days of one
another. At times, it seemed the sick outnumbered the healthy. Shrial Priests
wandered through the wretched alleyways of the encampment, stumping through mud
from tent to tent, searching for the dead. The funeral pyres burned
continuously. In one grievous night three hundred Inrithi died, among them
Imrothus, the Conriyan Palatine of Aderot. Caraskand And the miserable rains
waxed on and on, rotting canvas, hemp, and hope. Then the Earl of Gaenri
returned, bearing news of doom. Ever impatient, Athjeari
had abandoned Caraskand in the early days of the siege, charging through
Enathpaneah with his Gaenrish knights and some thousand more Kurigalders and
Agmundrmen given to him by his uncle, Prince Saubon. He stormed the old Ceneian
fortress of Bokae on the western frontier of Enathpaneah, taking it with few
losses. Then he ranged southward, crushing those local Grandees who dared take
the field against him and raiding the northern frontiers of Eumarna, where his
knights were heartened to find good, green land. For a time he besieged
the immense fortress of Misarat, but withdrew once word came that Cinganjehoi
himself had set out to relieve the fortress. Athjeari struck northeast. He
evaded the Tiger in the cedar-wooded ravines of the Betmulla Mountains, then
descended into Xerash, where he met and routed the small army of Utgarangi, the
Sapatishah of Xerash. The Sapatishah proved a compliant captive, and in
exchange for five hundred horses and intelligence, Athjeari delivered him
unharmed to his ancient capital, Gerotha, the city reviled in The Tractate as the “harlot of Xerash.” Then he rode hard for
Caraskand. What he found dismayed
him. He recounted his journey
for those Great Names fit to attend Council, moving quickly to the intelligence
offered by Utgarangi. According to the Sapatishah, the Padirajah himself, the
great Kascamandri, marched from Nenciphon with the survivors of Anwurat, the
Grandees of Chianadyni—the homeland of the Kianene—and the warlike Girgash, the
Fanim of Nilnamesh. That night Prince
Skaiyelt died, and the Thunyeri filled the showering sky with their uncanny
dirges. The following day, word arrived that Cerjulla, the Tydonni Earl of
Warnute, had also fallen, encamped about the walls of nearby Joktha. Not long
after, Sepherathindor, the Ainoni Count-Palatine of Hinnant, stopped breathing.
And according to the physician-priests, Proyas and Chepheramunni would soon
follow… A great fear seized the
surviving leaders of the Holy War. Caraskand continued to rebuke them, Akkeagni
oppressed them with misery and death, and the Padirajah
himself marched upon them with yet another heathen host. They were far from home,
among hostile lands and wicked peoples, and the God had turned his face from
them. They were desperate. And for such men
questions of why, sooner or later always became questions of who… humid, The rain drummed down
across his pavilion, filling it with ambient roar. “So just what,” Ikurei
Conphas asked, “do you want, Knight-Commander?” He frowned. “Sarcellus is it?” Though Sarcellus often
accompanied Gotian at council, Conphas had never been introduced to him—not
formally. The man’s dark hair matted his scalp, bled rainwater across what in
childhood must have been a lovely and brattish face. The white surcoat over his
hauberk was improbably clean, so much so that he looked an anachronism, a
throwback to the days when the Holy War still camped beneath Momemn. Everyone
else, Conphas included, had been reduced to rags or plundered Kianene attire. The Shrial Knight nodded
without breaking eye contact. “Merely to speak about troubling things,
Exalt’General.” “I’m always keen for
troubling news, Knight-Commander, let me assure you.” Conphas grinned, adding,
“I’m something of a masochist, or have you noticed?” Sarcellus smiled
winsomely. “The Councils have made this fact exceedingly clear, Exalt-General.” Conphas had never trusted
Shrial Knights. Too much devotion. Too much renunciation… Self-sacrifice, he’d
always thought, was more madness than foolishness. He’d come to this
conclusion in his adolescence, after perceiving just how often—and how
happily—others injured or destroyed themselves in the name of faith or
sentiment. It was as though, he realized, everyone took instructions from a
voice he couldn’t hear—a voice from nowhere. They committed suicide when
dishonoured, sold themselves into slavery to feed their children. They acted as
though the world possessed fates Caraskand •worse than death or enslavement, as though they couldn’t
live with themselves if harm befell others… Wrack his intellect as he
might, Conphas could neither fathom the sense nor imagine the sensation. Of
course there was the God, the Scriptures, and all that rubbish. That voice he could understand. The threat of eternal
damnation could wring reason out of the most ludicrous sacrifice. That voice came from somewhere. But this other voice… Hearing voices made one
mad. One need only stroll through a local agora, listen to the hermits cry,
“What? What?” to confirm that fact. And for Shrial Knights, hearing voices made
one fanatic as well. “So what’s your trouble?”
Conphas asked. “This man they call the
Warrior-Prophet.” “Prince Kellhus,” Conphas
said. He leaned forward in his
camp chair, gestured for Sarcellus to take a seat. He could smell mustiness
beneath the aromatic steam of his pavilion’s censers. The rain had trailed, and
now merely drummed fingers across the canvas slopes above. “Yes… Prince Kellhus,”
Sarcellus said, squeezing water from his hair. “What about him?” “We know tha—” “We?” The Shrial Knight blinked
in irritation. Despite his pious appearance, there was, Conphas thought,
something about his bearing, some whiff of conceit perhaps, that belied the
gold-embroidered tusk across his breast… Perhaps he’d misjudged this Sarcellus. Perhaps he’s a man of reason. “Yes,” the man continued.
“Myself, and a handful of my brothers…” “But not Gotian?” Sarcellus grimaced in a
fashion that Conphas found most agreeable. “No, not Gotian… Not yet, anyway.” Conphas nodded. “By all
means, continue…” “We know you’ve tried to
assassinate Prince Kellhus.” The Exalt-General
snorted, at once amused and offended. The man was either exceedingly bold or
insufferably impertinent. “You know, do you; “We think …” Sarcellus amended. “Whatever… What’s important ihe Ihird March is that you realize we share your sentiment. Especially after the madness of
the desert…“ Conphas frowned. He knew
what the man meant: Prince Kellhus had walked from the Carathay commanding the
worship of thousands, and the wonder of everyone, it sometimes seemed, save
himself. But Conphas would’ve expected a Shrial Knight to argue signs and
omens, not power… The desert had been madness. At first Conphas had shambled through
the sands no different from the rest, cursing that damned fool Sassotian, whom
he’d installed as General of the Imperial Fleet, and pondering, endlessly
pondering, mad scenarios that would see him saved. Then, after he burned
through the hope that fuelled these ruminations, he found himself harassed by a
peculiar disbelief. For a while, the prospect of death seemed something he
merely indulged for decorum’s sake, like the fatuous assurances caste-merchants
heaped onto their wares. “Yes, yes, you will die! I guarantee!” Please, he thought. Who do you think 1 am? Then, with the shadowy
lassitude that characterized so much of that march, his doubt flipped into
certainty, and he felt an almost intellectual wonder—the wonder of finding the
conclusion to one’s life. There was no final page, he realized, no last cubit
to the scroll. The ink simply gave out, and all was blank and desert white. So here, he thought, looking across the wind-rippled dunes, lies mylife’s
destination. This is the place that has waited for me, waited since before I was
born … But then he’d found him, Prince Kellhus, scooping up water in that sandy pit—wading while he, Ikurei Conphas, died of thirst! Of all the
deranged possibilities he’d considered, none seemed quite as mad as this: saved
by the man he’d failed to kill. What could be more galling? More ludicrous? But at the time… At the
time, his heart had caught—it still fluttered at the memory!—and for an
instant, Conphas had wondered if Martemus had been right… Perhaps there was more to this man. This Warrior-Prophet. Indeed. The desert had
been madness. Conphas fixed the Shrial
Knight with an appraising stare. “But he saved the Holy War,” he said. “Your
life… My life…” Sarcellus nodded.
“Indeed, and that, I would say, is the problem.” “How so?” Conphas snapped, even though he
knew exactly what the man meant. The Knight-Commander
shrugged. “Before the desert, Prince Kellhus was simply another zealot with
some claim to the Sight. But now Especially now with the Dread God walking
among us…” He sighed and leaned forward, his hands folded together, his
forearms against his knees. “I fear for the Holy War, Exalt-General. We fear for the Holy War. Half of our brothers acclaim
this fraud as another Inri Sejenus, as our salvation, while the other half
decry him as an anathema, as the cause of our misery.” “Why are you telling me
this?” Conphas asked mildly. “Why are you here, Knight-Commander?” Sarcellus’s grin was
crooked. “Because there’ll be mass mutinies, riots, perhaps even open warfare…
We need someone with the skill and power to minimize or forestall such
eventualities, someone who yet commands the loyalty of his men. We need someone
who can preserve the Holy War.“ “After you’ve killed
Prince Kellhus…” Conphas said derisively. He shook his head, as though
disappointed by his own lack of surprise. “He camps with his followers now, and
they guard him as though he were the Tusk. They say that in the desert a
hundred of them surrendered their water—their lives—to him and his women. And
now another hundred have stepped forward as his bodyguard, each of them sworn
to die for the Warrior-Prophet. Not even the Emperor could claim such
protection! And still you think you can kill him.” A drowsy blink, which
made Conphas certain—absurdly—that Sarcellus had beautiful sisters. “Not think,
Exalt-General… Know.” Seme’s scream was like an
animal thing, as much a grunt as a wail Esmenet bent over her, combing her
fingers through the girl’s sweaty hair Rain pulsed across the bellied ceiling
of their makeshift pavilion, and her< and there a trickle of water glittered
in the gloom, slapping against plaitec mats. For Esmenet, it seemed they
crouched in the illuminated heart of; cave, littered by musty cloth and rotting
reeds. Caraskand The Kianene woman Kellhus
had summoned cooed to Serwe in a tongue only Kellhus seemed to understand.
Esmenet found the throaty sound of the woman’s voice soothing. They stood, she
realized, in a place where differences of language and faith no longer
mattered. Serwe was about to give birth. The midwife sat cross-legged
between Serwe’s opened knees, Esmenet knelt over her anguished face, and
Kellhus stood above them, his expression watchful, wise, and sad. Esmenet
looked to him, worried. All
will be as it should be, his eyes said. But his smile did not sweep her apprehension away. There’s more, she reminded herself. More than me. How long had it been since Achamian had left her?
Not that long, perhaps, but the desert lay between them. No walk, it seemed,
could be longer. The Carathay had ravished her, fumbling with knot and clasp,
thrusting leathery hands beneath her robe, running polished fingertips across
her breasts and thighs. It had stripped her past her skin, to the wood of her
bones. It had spilled and raked her across the sand, like seashells. It had
offered her up to Kellhus. At first she’d barely
noticed the desert. She’d been too drunk, too juvenile, with joy. When Kellhus
walked with her and Serwe, she’d laughed and talked much as she always had, but
it’d seemed a pretense somehow, a way to disguise the wondrous intimacies they
now shared. She’d forgotten what it’d been like in her adolescence, before
whoring had placed nakedness and coupling beyond the circle of private, secret
things. Making love to Kellhus—and Serwe—had taken what was once brazen and made
it demure. She felt hidden and she felt whole. When Kellhus walked with
his Zaudunyani, she and Serwe marched hand in hand, discussing everything and
anything so long as it returned to him. They giggled and blushed, used jokes to
plot pleasures. They confessed resentments and fears, knowing the bed they
shared brooked no deceit. They dreamed of palaces, of armies of slaves. Like
little boys, they boasted of kings kissing the earth beneath their feet. But in all that time, she
hadn’t so much walked through as around the Carathay. Dunes, like the
tangle of tanned harem bodies. Plains hissing with sunlight. The desert had
seemed little more than a fitting ground for her love and the nearing
ascendancy of the Warrior-Prophet. Only when the water began to fail, when they
massacred the slaves and the camp-followers… Only then did she truly cross the
Great Thirst. The past crumbled, and
the future evaporated. Her every heartbeat belonged, it seemed, to a different
heart. She could remember the accumulating signs of death, wasting, as though
her body were a candle notched with the watches—a light to read by. She could
remember wondering at Serwe, who’d become a stranger in Kellhus’s arms. She
could remember wondering at the stranger who walked with her own limbs. Nothing branched in the
Carathay. Everything roamed without root or source. The death of trees: this,
she had thought, was the secret of the desert. Then Kellhus asked her to
surrender her water. Serwe.
She’ll lose the baby… His clear eyes reminded
her of who she was: Esmenet. She drew up her waterskin and extended it with
unwavering hands. She watched him pour her muddy life into a stranger’s mouth.
And when the last of it trailed like spittle, she understood—she apprehended—and with a brilliance no less ruthless than the sun. There’s more than me. Kellhus tossed her
waterskin into the dust. You are the first, his eyes said, and his look was
like water—like life. Her feet scalded by gravel. Her hair feathered by dust.
Her lips cracked by the sun. Every breath like burning wool in her throat and
chest. And then, impossibly, they came to good, green earth. To Enathpaneah.
They stumbled into a rivered valley, into the shade of strange willows. While
Serwe dozed he undressed Esmenet, carried her into the transparent waters. He
bathed her, washed the velvet dust from her skin. You are my wife, he said. You, Esmi… She blinked, and the sun
glittered through her water-beaded lashes. We crossed the desert, he said. And I, she thought, am your wife. He laughed, pawed at her
face as though embarrassed, and she caught and kissed his sun-haloed palm… The
waters that trailed from the flaxen ringlets of his hair and beard had been
brown—the colour of dried blood. J8 Ihe Third March Kellhus built a shelter
of stone and branches for Serwe. He snared rabbits, rooted for tubers, and made
fire by spinning sticks into sticks. For a time, it seemed they alone survived,
that all mankind and not just the Holy War had perished. They alone spoke. They
alone gazed and understood that they gazed. They alone loved,
across all lands and all waters, to the world’s very pale. It seemed all
passion, all knowing, was here, ringing in one penultimate note. There was no
way to explain or to fathom the sensation. It wasn’t like a flower. It wasn’t like
a child’s careless laugh. They had become the
measure… Absolute. Unconditioned. When they made love in
the river, it seemed they sanctified the sea. You, Esmenet, are my wife. Burning, submerged in
clear waters—in each other… The anchoring ache. The desert had changed
everything. “Kellhuuus!” Serwe panted
between contractions. “Kellhus, I’m afraid!” She groaned and cried out.
“Something’s wrong! Something’s wrong!” Kellhus exchanged several
words with the Kianene matron, who rinsed Serwe’s inner thighs with steaming
water, nodded and grinned. He glanced at Esmenet, then knelt beside the
prostrate girl, cupped her shining cheek. She seized his hand and pressed her
gasping mouth against it, her blond brows knitted in panic, her look desperate,
beseeching. “Kelluuussss!” “Everything,” he said,
his eyes bright with wonder, “is as it should be, Serwe.” “You,” the girl
exclaimed, gulping air. “You!” He nodded, as though
hearing far more than one enigmatic word. Smiling, he wiped tears from her
cheek with the flat of his thumb. “Me,” he whispered. For a heartbeat, Esmenet
glimpsed herself as though from afar. How could she not catch her breath? She
knelt with him, the Warrior-Prophet, over the
woman giving birth to his first child… The world had its habits.
Sometimes events would pinch, tickle, or caress—occasionally they would
batter—but somehow they always funnelled into the monotony of the
half-expected. So many dim (Jaraskand happenings! So many
moments that shed no light, that marked no turn, that signalled nothing at all,
save elemental loss. For her entire life, Esmenet had felt like a child being
led by the hand of a stranger, passing through this crowd and that, heading
somewhere she knew she shouldn’t go, but fearing too much to ask or to fight. Where are you taking me? She had never dared ask
this, not because she feared the answer, but because she feared what the answer
would make of her life. Nowhere.
Nowhere good. But now, after the
desert, after the waters of Enathpaneah, she knew the answer. Every man she’d
bedded, she had bedded for him. Every sin she’d committed, she had committed
for him. Every bowl she’d chipped. Every heart she’d bruised. Even Mimara. Even
Achamian. Without knowing, Esmenet had
lived her entire life for him—for Anasurimbor Kellhus. Grief for his compassion.
Delusion for his revelation. Sin so he might forgive. Degradation so he might
raise her high. He was the origin. He was the destination. He was the from where and the to which,
and he was here! Here! It was mad, it was
impossible, it was true. When she reflected on it,
Esmenet could only laugh in joyous wonder. How distant the holy had always
seemed, like the faces of kings and emperors on the coins she’d so coveted.
Before Kellhus, all she knew of the holy was that it somehow always found her
at the pitch of her misery and humiliation. Like her father, it came in the
small hours of the night, whispering threats, demanding submission, promising
brevity, solace, and providing only interminable horror and shame. How could she not hate
it? How could she not fear it? She’d been a whore in Sumna, and being a whore in a holy city was no mean thing.
Some of the others jokingly referred to themselves as “cutpurses at the gates
to Heaven.” They traded endless, mocking stories about the pilgrims who so
frequently wept in their arms. “All that work to see the Tusk,” old Pirasha had
once quipped, “and they end up showing it instead!” And Esmenet had laughed
with them, even though she knew those pilgrims wept because they’d failed,
because they’d sacrificed crops, savings, and the company
of loved ones to come to Sumna. No low-caste man was so foolish as to aspire to wealth or joy—the world was far too capricious.
Only redemption, only holiness, lay within their grasp. And there she was
swinging her knees in her window, like one of those mad lepers who, for no more
reason than spite, threw themselves upon the unafflicted. How distant that woman
now seemed—that whore. How near the Holy… Serwe wailed and
shrieked, her body cramped about the agony of her womb. The Kianene woman cried
out encouragement, grimaced and smiled. Serwe threw her head back into
Esmenet’s knees, puffing air, staring with crazed eyes, screaming. Esmenet
watched, breathless, her limbs numbed by wonder, her thoughts troubled that something
so miraculous could fit so seamlessly into the moment-to-moment banality of
life. “Heba serrisa!” the Kianene woman cried. “Heba serrisa!” The babe sucked its first
breath, gave voice to its first, wailing prayer. Esmenet stared at the
newborn, realizing it was the spoils of her surren-j dered water. She had
suffered so that Serwe might drink, and now there was this squalling babe, this
son of the Warrior-Prophet. There had been branches
after all… Crying, she looked down
at Serwe. “A son, Serchaa. You have a son! And he isn’t blue!” Biting her lip, Serwe
smiled, sobbed and laughed. They shared a wise and joyous look no man save
Kellhus could understand. Laughing aloud, he lifted
the screeching babe from the midwife’s arms, peered at it searchingly. It
quieted, and for a moment seemed to study Kellhus in turn, dumbfounded as only
an infant can be. He raised it beneath a glittering thread of water, rinsed the
blood and mucus from its face. When it began squalling once again, he cried out
in mock surprise, turned to Serwe with tender eyes. For an instant, just an
instant, Esmenet thought she’d heard the voice of someone hated. He lowered the child and
delivered it to Serwe, who cradled it and continued to cry. A sudden grief
overcame Esmenet, the rebuke of Caraskand another’s joy. Keeping
her face lowered, she stood, then wordlessly rushed out of the pavilion. Outside, the men of the
Hundred Pillars, Kellhus’s sacred bodyguard, stared in iron-eyed alarm, but
made no move to stop her. Even still, she wandered only a short distance among
the ad hoc shelters, knowing that some fretting adherent would harass her
otherwise. The Zaudunyani, the faithful, maintained an armed perimeter about
the encampment at all times—as much to guard against their fellow Men of the
Tusk, Kellhus had admitted, as against heathen sorties. Another thing the desert
had changed… The rain had stopped, and
the air was cool and hard with dripping things. The clouds had parted and she
could see the Nail of Heaven, like a glittering navel revealed by raised
woollen robes. If she lifted her face and stared only at the Nail, she knew she
could imagine herself anyplace: Sumna, Shigek, the desert, or even in one of
Achamian’s sorcerous Dreams. The Nail of Heaven was the one thing, she thought,
that cared nothing for where or when. Two men—Galeoth by the
look of them—trudged toward her through darkness and muck. “Truth shines,” one
of them, his face still puckered from what had to be bad desert burns, muttered
as they neared. Then they recognized her… “Truth shines,” Esmenet
replied, lowering her face. She avoided their
flustered looks as they passed. “Lady…” one of them whispered, as
though choked by wonder. More and more they acted shamefaced and servile in her
presence, as though she herself were becoming more and more. Though it made her
uncomfortable, their obeisance also thrilled her. And with the passing of the
days, it seemed to embarrass her less and please her more. It was no dream. Notes rasped from the
dark horizon. Somewhere, she knew, the Shrial Priests blew their prayer horns,
and the orthodox Inrithi knelt before their makeshift shrines. For a moment the
sound reminded her of Serwe’s cries, heard from afar. Her grief tumbled into
regret. Why couldn’t she give this moment of joy to Serwe, when in the desert
she’d willingly given her her water, when she’d very nearly given her her life?
Was it jealousy she felt? No. Jealousy pursed one’s lips into a bitter line.
She hadn’t felt bitter… ^“ti ihe Ihird March Had she? Kellhus is right… We know not what moves
us. There was
more, always more. The mud felt cool beneath
her toes—so different from furnace sands. Cries from a nearby tent
startled her. It was someone suffering the hollows, she realized. Even as she
backed away, she battled the urge to see who it might be, to offer comfort. “Pleeassse…” a thin voice
gasped. “I need… I need…” “I cannot,” she said,
staring in horror at the shadowy, leather and branch hut housing the voice.
Kellhus had cloistered the sick, allowing only the survivors of earlier
outbreaks to attend those still ailing. The Dread God, he said, communicated
the disease through lice. “I roll about in my own
excrement!” “I can’t…” “How?” the wretched voice
asked. “How?” “Please,” Esmenet softly
cried. “You must understand. It’s forbidden.” “He can’t hear you…” Kellhus. Hearing his
voice seemed an inevitable thing. She felt his arms encompass her, his silky
beard comb across her bare neck. These didn’t seem inevitable; they almost
surprised… “They hear only their own
suffering,” he explained. “Like me,” Esmenet
replied, suddenly overcome with remorse. Why had she run? “You must be strong,
Esmenet.” “Sometimes I feel strong.
Sometimes I feel new, but then…” “You are new. My Father has remade all of us. But your past
remains your past, Esmenet. Who you once were, remains who you once were.
Forgiveness between strangers takes time.” How could he do this? How
could he so effortlessly speak her heart? But she knew the answer
to that question—or so she thought. Men, Kellhus had once told
her, were like coins: they had two sides. Where one side of them saw, the other side of them was seen, and though all men were both at once, men could only
truly know the side of themselves that saw and the side of others that was
seen—they could only truly know the inner half of themselves and the outer half
of others. Caraskand At first Esmenet thought
this foolish. Was not the inner half the whole, what was only imperfectly apprehended by others? But
Kellhus bid her to think of everything she’d witnessed in others. How many
unwitting mistakes? How many flaws of character? Conceits couched in passing
remarks. Fears posed as judgements… The shortcomings of
men—their limits—were written in the eyes of those who watched them. And this
was why everyone seemed so desperate to secure the good opinion of others—why
everyone played the mummer. They knew without knowing that what they saw of
themselves was only half of who they were. And they were desperate to be whole. The measure of wisdom,
Kellhus had said, was found in the distance between these two selves. Only afterward had she
thought of Kellhus in these terms. With a kind of
surpriseless shock, she realized that not once—not once!—had she glimpsed
shortcomings in his words or actions. And this, she understood, was why he
seemed limitless, like the ground, which extended from the small circle about
her feet to the great circle about the sky. He had become her horizon. For Kellhus, there was no
distance between seeing and being seen. He alone was whole. And what was more,
he somehow stood from without and saw from within. He made whole… She bent her head back
and gazed up into his eyes. You’re here, aren’t you? You’re with me…
inside. “Yes,” Kellhus said, and
it seemed a god looked upon her. She blinked two wondrous
tears. I am your wife! Your wife! “And you must be strong,”
he said over the piteous voice of the invalid. “The God purges the Holy War,
purifies us for the march on Shimeh.” “But you said we needn’t
fear the disease.” “Not the disease—the
Great Names. Many of them are beginning to fear me… Some think the God punishes
the Holy War because of me. Others fear for their power and privilege.” Did he fear an attack, a
war within the Holy War? “Then you must speak to
them, Kellhus. You must make them see!” He shook his head. “Men
praise what flatters and mock what rebukes— you know that. Before, when it was
just the slaves and the men-at-arms, Caraskand they could afford to
overlook me. But now that their most trusted advisers and clients take the
Whelming, they’re beginning to understand the truth of their power, and with
it, their vulnerability.“ He holds me! This man holds me! “And what’s that?” “Belief.” Esmenet looked hard into
his eyes. “You and Serwe,” he
continued, “aren’t to travel unaccompanied under any circumstances. They would
use you against me if they could…” “Have things become so
desperate ?” “Not yet. But they could
very soon. So long as Caraskand continues to resist us…” Sudden, bottomless
horror. In her soul’s eye she glimpsed assassins dispatched in the black of
night, gold-adorned conspirators scowling by candlelight. “They’ll try to kill
you?” “Yes.” “Then you must kill
them!” The thoughtless ferocity
of these words shocked her. But she didn’t repent them. Kellhus laughed. “To say
such things on such a night!” he chided. Her earlier remorse came rushing back.
Serwe had given birth tonight! Kellhus had a son! And all she could do was
wallow in her own lacks and losses. Why did you leave me, Akka? An aching sob welled
through her. “Kellhus,” she murmured. “Kellhus, I feel so ashamed! I envied
her! I so envied her!” He chuckled and nuzzled her scalp. “You, Esmenet, are the
lens through which I’ll burn. You… You’re the womb of tribes and
nations, the begetting fire. You’re immortality, hope, and history. You’re more
than myth, more than scripture. You’re the mother of these things! You,
Esmenet, are the mother of more…” Breathing deep the dark,
rainy world, she clutched his arms tight against her. She’d known this, ever
since the earliest days of the desert, she’d known this. It was why she’d cast
her whore’s shell, the contraceptive charm the witches sell, across the sands. You are the begetting fire… No more would she turn aside
seed from her womb. Early Winter, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, the Meneanor coast, near lothiah TELL ME … A towering whirlwind,
joining armed earth to hoary heavens, belching dust and Sranc into the
skies. WHAT DO YOU SEE? Achamian awoke without
crying out. He lay still, searching for his breath. He blinked tears, but he did
not weep. Sunlight shone through his fretted window, illuminating the banded
crimson carpet in the room’s heart. He nestled deep into the warm sockets of
his sheets, wondering at the peace of his mornings. The luxury alone seemed
impossible. Somehow, after the destruction of the Scarlet Spires compound in
lothiah, he and Xinemus had found themselves honoured guests of Baron Shanipal,
the representative Proyas had left behind in Shigek. Apparently one of the
Baron’s client knights had found them wandering naked through the city.
Recognizing Xinemus, he’d delivered them to Shanipal, who’d brought them here—a
luxurious Kianene villa on the Meneanor coast—to convalesce. For weeks now, they’d
enjoyed the Baron’s protection and hospitality, long enough to forget their
wonder at having escaped and to begin obsessing over their losses. Survival,
Achamian was fast learning, was itself something to be survived. He coughed and kicked his
feet free of his covers. His Shigeki attendant, one of two slaves Baron
Shanipal had assigned him, appeared from behind a floral-brocaded partition.
The Baron, who was one of those odd men whose graciousness or viciousness
depended on how convincingly one catered to his eccentricities, had determined
they must live like the dead Grandees who once owned this villa. Apparently,
the Kianene slept with slaves in their rooms—like the Norsirai with their dogs. After bathing and
dressing, Achamian prowled the halls of the villa, searching for Xinemus, who
obviously hadn’t returned to his room the previous night. The Kianene had left
enough behind—mahogany-veneered furniture, soft-brushed rugs, and cerulean wall
hangings—that Achamian could almost believe he was the guest of a true Fanim
Grandee instead of an Inrithi Baron who happened to dress and live like one. ihiku MARCH He found himself cursing
the Marshal as he searched the rooms. The healthy always begrudged the sick:
being shackled by another’s incapacities was no easy thing. But the resentment
Achamian suffered was curiously ingrown, almost labyrinthine in its complexity.
With Xinemus, every day seemed more difficult than the last. In so many ways, the
Marshal was his oldest and truest friend—this alone made Achamian responsible.
The fact the man had sacrificed what he’d sacrificed, suffered what he’d
suffered, to save Achamian simply compounded this
responsibility. But Xinemus still suffered. Despite the sunlight, despite the
silk and submissive slaves, he still screamed in those basements, he still
betrayed secrets, he still cracked teeth in anguish… Every day it seemed, he
lost his eyes anew. And because of this, he didn’t simply hold Achamian
accountable, he accused… “Look at the wages of my
devotion!” he’d once shouted. “Do the sockets weep, for my cheek feels dry. Do
the lids wither, eh, Akka? Describe them to me, for I can no longer see!” “No one asked you to save
me!” Achamian had cried. How long must he repay unwanted favours? “No one asked
you for your folly!” “Esmi,” Xinemus had
replied. “Esmi asked.” No matter how hard
Achamian tried to forgive these tantrums, their poison struck deep. He often
found himself mulling the limits of his responsibility, as though they were a
matter for debate. What exactly did he owe? Sometimes he told himself that
Xinemus, the true Xinemus, had died, and that this blind tyrant was no more
than a stranger. Let him beg with the others in the gutter! Other times he
convinced himself that Xinemus needed to be abandoned, if only to scrub
him of his cursed caste-noble pride. “You hold fast what you
must relinquish,” he once told the Marshal, “and you relinquish what you must
hold fast… This cannot go on, Zin. You must remember who you are!” And yet Xinemus wasn’t
alone. Achamian had changed also— irrevocably. Not once had he wept for
his friend. He, the weeper… Nor had he cried out upon awakening from the
Dreams—not since escaping. For some reason, he just did not feel… capable. He
could remember the Caraskand sensations, the roaring
ears, the burning eyes and panged throat, but they seemed rootless, abstract,
like something read rather than known. What was strange was that
Xinemus seemed to need his tears, as though worse than
the torments, worse than blindness even, was the fact that he, and not Achamian, had become the weak one. Stranger
still, the more Xinemus seemed to need his tears, the farther they slipped from
Achamian’s grasp. Often it seemed they wrestled when they spoke, as though
Xinemus were the failing father who continually shamed himself by trying to
assert ascendency over his son. “I’m the strong one!”
he’d once bawled in a drunken stupor. “Me!” Watching, Achamian could muster no
more than breathless pity. He could mourn, he could feel, but he couldn’t weep
for his friend. Did this mean he too had been gouged of something essential? Or
had he recovered something? He felt neither strong nor decisive, and yet he
somehow knew he’d become these things. “Torment teaches,” the poet Protathis
wrote, “what love has forgotten.” Had this been the gift of the Scarlet Spires?
Had they burned some lesson into him? Or had they simply beaten him numb? Whatever the answer, he
would see them burn—especially Iyokus. He would show them the wages of his
newfound certainty. Perhaps that had been their gift. Hatred. After querying several
slaves, he found Xinemus drinking alone on one of the terraces overlooking the
sea. The morning sun promised hot skin in cool air—a sensation Achamian had
always found heartening. The crash of breakers and the smell of brine tickled
him with memories of his youth. The Meneanor swept out to the horizon, the
turquoise of the shallows dropping into bottomless blue. Drawing a deep breath, he
approached the Marshal, who reclined with a bowl in his hands, his feet kicked
upon the glazed brick railing. The previous night Shanipal had offered to pay
their way by ship to Joktha, the port city of Caraskand. Achamian intended—no, needed—to leave as soon as possible, but he couldn’t do so
without Xinemus. For some reason, he knew Xinemus would die if he left him
behind. Grief and bitterness had killed greater men. He paused, mustering his
arguments, steeling his nerves… Without warning, Xinemus exclaimed, “All this
dark!” He was drunk, Achamian
realized, noticing the pale red stains across the breast of his white linen
tunic. Dead drunk. Achamian opened his
mouth, but no words came. What could he say? That Proyas needed him? Proyas had
stripped him of his land and titles. That the Holy War needed him? He would
only be a burden—he knew that… Shimeh! He came to see — Xinemus pulled his feet
down, leaned forward in his chair. “Where do you lead, eh,
Dark? What do you mean?” Achamian stared at his
friend, studied the planes of sunlight across his bearded profile. As always,
he caught his breath at the sight of his empty eye sockets. It was as though
Xinemus would forever have knives jutting from his eyes. The Marshal pressed a
palm outward to the sun, as though reassuring himself of some fact of distance.
“Eh, Dark? Were you always like this? Were you always here?” Achamian looked down,
stricken with remorse. Say
something! But the words would not
come. What was he to say? That he had no choice but to find Esmenet? Then go! Go find
your whore! Just leave me be! Xinemus cackled,
stumbling as drunks often do from one passion to another. “Do I sound bitter, Dark?
Oh, I know you’re not so bad. You spare me the indignity of Akka’s face! And
when I piss, I need not convince myself my hands are big! To think…” At first, Achamian had
been desperate for news regarding the Holy War, so much so he could scarcely
grieve for Xinemus and his loss. For the entirety of his torment, Esmenet had
seemed unthinkable, as though some part of him had understood the vulnerability
she represented. But from the moment he recovered his senses, he could think of
no one else—save perhaps Kellhus. What he would give to hold her in his arms,
to smother her with laughter, tears, and kisses! What joy he would find in her
joy, in her weeping disbelief! He could see it all so
clearly… How it would be. “I just want to know,”
Xinemus cried in a drunk’s cajoling manner, “who
you fucking are!” Caraskand Though at first he had
only cause to fear the worst, Achamian knew she lived. According to the rumours, the Holy War had
almost perished crossing Khemema. But according to Xinemus, she travelled with Kellhus, and he could imagine no place safer. Kellhus couldn’t die, could he? He was the Harbinger, sent to save humanity from the Second Apocalypse. Yet another certainty
born of his torment. “You feel like wind!”
Xinemus cried, his voice growing more shrill. “You smell like sea!” Kellhus would save the
world. And he, Drusas Achamian, would be his counsellor, his guide. “Open your eyes, Zin!”
the Marshal cried, his voice cracking. Achamian glimpsed spittle flash in the
sunlight. “Open your fucking
eyes!” A powerful breaker exploded across the black rocks
below. Salty mist hazed the air. Xinemus dropped his wine
bowl, slapped madly at the sky, crying, -“Huhh! Huhh!” Achamian dashed forward
two steps. Paused. “Every sound,” the
Marshal gasped. “Every sound makes me cringe! Never have I suffered such fear!
Never have I suffered such fear! Please, God… Please!” “Zin,” Achamian
whispered. “I’ve been good! So
good!” “Zin!” The Marshal fell
absolutely still. “Akka?” His arms fell
inward, and he clutched at himself, as though trying to squeeze into the
darkness only he could see. “Akka, no! No!” Without thinking,
Achamian hastened to him, embraced him. “You’re the cause of
this!” Xinemus screeched into his chest. “This isyour
doing!” Achamian held tight his
sobbing friend. The broadness of Xinemus’s shoulders surprised his outstretched
arms. “We need to leave,” he
murmured. “We must find the others.” “I know,” the Marshal of
Attrempus gasped. “We must find Kellhus!” Achamian lowered his jaw
against his friend’s scalp. He wondered that his cheeks were dry. “Yes… Kellhus.” The Third March Early Winter, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, near Caraskand The hub of the abandoned
estate had been built by the ancient Ceneians. On his first visit, Conphas had
amused himself by touring the structures according to their historical
provenance, finishing with the small marble tabernacle some Kianene Grandee had
raised generations past. He despised not knowing the layout of the buildings
that housed him. It was a general’s habit, he supposed, to think of all places
as battlefields. The Inrithi caste-nobles
began arriving in the afternoon, troops of mounted men cloaked against the
interminable drizzle. Standing with Martemus in the gloom of a covered veranda,
Conphas watched them hasten across the courtyard. They’d changed so much, it
seemed, since that afternoon in his uncle’s Privy Garden. If he closed his eyes
he could still see them, scattered among the ornamental cypresses and
tamarisks, their faces hopeful and unguarded, their manner arrogant and
theatrical, their finery reflecting the peculiarities of their respective
nations. Looking back, everything about them seemed so… untested. And now, after months of war, desert, and disease,
they looked grim and hard, like those infantrymen in the Columns who
continually renewed their terms—the flint-hearted veterans that recruits
admired and young officers mortally feared. They seemed a separate people, a
new race, as though the differences that distinguished Conriyans from Galeoth,
Ainoni from Tydonni, had been hammered out of them, like impurities from steel. And of course they all
rode Kianene horses, all wore Kianene clothes… One must not overlook the
superficial; it ran too deep. Conphas glanced at
Martemus. “They look more heathen than the heathen.” “The desert made the
Kianene,” the General said, shrugging, “and it has remade us.” Conphas regarded the man
thoughtfully, troubled for some reason. “No doubt you’re right.” Martemus fixed him with a
bland stare. “Will you tell me what this is about? Why summon the Great and
Lesser Names secretly?” The Exalt’General turned
to the black, rain-curtained hills of Enathpaneah. “To save the Holy War, of
course.” Caraskand 4M “I thought we cared only
for the Empire.” Once again Conphas
scrutinized his subordinate, trying to decipher the man more than the remark.
Since the debacle with Prince Kellhus, he continuously found himself wanting to
suspect the General of treachery. He begrudged Martemus much for what had
happened in Shigek. But not, strangely enough, his company. “The Empire and the Holy
War travel the same road, Martemus.” Though soon—he found himself thinking,
they would part ways. It would be so very tragic… First Caraskand, then Prince Kellhus.
The Holy War must wait. Order must be observed in all things. v Martemus had not so much as blinked. “And if—” “Come,” Conphas
interrupted. “Time to tease the lions.” The Exalt-General had instructed his
attendants—after the desert he’d been forced to enlist soldiers to do the work
of slaves—to take the Inrithi caste-nobles to a large indoor riding room
adjacent to the stables. Conphas and Martemus found them spread in clots
throughout the airy gloom, warming themselves over the orange glow of coal
braziers, muttering in the low voices of sodden men—some fifty or sixty of them
all told. For an instant, no one noticed their arrival, and Conphas stood
motionless beneath the arched entranceway, studying them, from their eyes,
which seemed desert bright in the grey light, to the straw clinging to their
wet boots. How much, he idly wondered, would the Padirajah pay for this room?
The voices trailed as more and more men noticed his presence. “Where’s the
Anasurimbor?” Palatine Gaidekki called out, his look a; sharp and as cynical as
always. Conphas grinned. “Oh, he’s
here, Palatine. In theme if not in body.” “More than Prince Kellhus is missing,” Earl
Gothyelk said. “So i: Saubon, Athjeari… Proyas is sick, of course, but I see
none of Kellhus’ more ardent defenders here…” “A felicitous
coincidence, I am sure…” “I thought this was about
Caraskand,” Palatine Uranyanka said. “But of course! Caraskand resists us.
We’re here to ask why.” “So why does she resist us?”
Gotian asked, his tone contemptuous. Not for the first time Conphas realized
that they despised him—almos to a man. All men hate their betters. He opened his arms and
walked into their midst. “Why?” he called out, glaring at them, challenging
them. “This is the question, isn’t it? Why do the rains keep falling, rotting
our feet, our tents, our hearts? Why does the hemoplexy strike us
down indiscriminately? Why do so many of us die thrashing in our own bowel?” He
laughed as though in astonishment. “And all this after the desert! As if the Carathay weren’t woe enough! So
why? Need we ask old Cumor to consult
his omen-texts?” “No,” Gotian said
tightly. “It is plain. The anger of the God burns against us.” Conphas inwardly smiled.
Sarcellus had insisted the so-called Warrior-Prophet would be dead within days.
But whether he succeeded or not— and Conphas suspected not—they would need
allies following the attempt. No one knew precisely how many “Zaudunyani”
Prince Kellhus commanded, but they numbered in the tens of thousands at least…
The more the Men of the Tusk suffered, it seemed, the more they turned to the
fiend. But then, as the saying
went, no dog so loved its master as when it was beaten. Conphas glared at the
assembled lords, pausing in the best oratorical fashion. “Who could disagree?
The anger of the God does burn against us. And well it
should…” He swept his gaze across
them. “Given that we harbour
and abet a False Prophet.” Howls erupted from among
them, more in protest than in assent. But Conphas had expected as much. At this
juncture, the important thing was to get these fools talking. Their bigotries would do the rest. Twenty-one Caraskand And We will give over all of them, slain,
to the Children of Eanna; you shall hamstring their horses and burn their
chariots with fire. You shall bathe your feet in the blood of the wicked. —TRIBES 21:13, THE
CHRONICLE OF THE TUSK Winter, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, Caraskand Coithus Saubon bound
through the rain, skidded across a section of slop, leapt a small ravine, and
climbed the far side. He raised his face to the grey sky and laughed. It’s mine! By the Gods it will be mine! Realizing that this
moment demanded a certain modicum of jnan, composure at the very least, he
reduced his gait, walking briskly through the clusters of ad hoc shelters. When
finally he spied Proyas’s pavilion near a copse of rain-dreary sycamores, he hastened
toward it. King! Yes 1 shall be King! The Galeoth Prince halted
before the pavilion, puzzled by the absence of guards. Proyas was somewhat
soft-hearted with his men—perhaps he’d bid them stay within, out of the fucking
rain. All around, muddy ground sizzled with waters. The turf was moated with
flooded ruts and puddles. The rain drummed across the sagging canvas before
him. King of Caraskand! The Third March Caraskand “Proyas!” he shouted
through the ambient roar. He could feel the rain at long last soak through the
heavy felt beneath his hauberk. It felt like a warm kiss against his skin.
“Proyas! Blast you man, I need to talk! I know you’re in there!” At length he heard a
muffled voice cursing from within. When the flap was at last pulled aside, Saubon
was taken aback. Proyas stood before him, thin, haggard, a dark wool blanket
wrapped about his shivering frame. “They said you’d
recovered,” Saubon said, embarrassed. “Of course I’m recovered,
you idiot. I stand.” “Where are your guards?
Your physician?” A gravelly cough wracked
the ailing Prince. He cleared his throat, blew strings of sputum from his
mouth. “Sent them all away,” he said, wiping his lip with a sleeve. “Needed to
sleep,” he added, raising a pained brow. Saubon roared with
laughter, almost grabbed the man in his mailed arms. “You won’t be able to
sleep now, my pious friend!” “Saubon. Prince. Please,
to the point if you will. I’m grievously sick.” “I’ve come to ask a
question, Proyas… One question only.” “Ask it then.” Saubon suddenly calmed,
became very serious. “If I deliver Caraskand,
will you support my bid to be its King?” “What do you mean
‘deliver’?” “I mean throw open its
gates to the Holy War,” the Galeoth Prince replied, fixing him with a
penetrating, blue-eyed stare. Proyas’s whole bearing
seemed transformed. The pallor fell from his face. His dark eyes became lucid
and attentive. “You’re serious about this.” Saubon cackled like a
greedy old man. “Never have I been so serious.” The Conriyan Prince
scrutinized him for several moments, as though gauging the alternatives. “I like not this game
you—” “Just answer the
question, damn you! Will you support my bid to be crowned King of Caraskand?” Proyas was silent for a
moment, but then slowly nodded. “Yes… You deliver Caraskand, and I assure you,
you’ll be its King.” Saubon raised his face
and his arms to the menacing sky and howled out his battle cry. The rains
plummeted upon him, rinsed him in soothing cold, fell between his lips and
teeth and tasted of honey. He’d tumbled in the breakers of circumstance, so
violently that mere months ago he’d thought he would die. Then he’d met
Kellhus, the Warrior-Prophet, the man who’d set him onto the path toward his
own heart, and he’d survived calamities that could break ten lesser men. And
now this, the lifelong moment come at last. It seemed a giddy, impossible
thing. It seemed a gift. Rain, so heartbreakingly
sweet after Khemema. Beads pattered against his forehead, cheeks, and closed
eyes. He shook water from his matted hair. King… I will be King at long last. “Where,” Proyas asked,
“have all these hard silences come from?” Cnaьir regarded him from
the pavilion’s gloomy heart. The Conriyan Prince, he realized, hadn’t been idle
during his convalescence. He’d been thinking. “I don’t understand,” Cnaьir
said. “But you do, Scylvendi…
Something happened to you at Anwurat. I need to know what.“ Proyas was still
sick—grievously so, it appeared. He sat bundled beneath wool blankets in a camp
chair, his normally hale face drawn and pale. In any other man, Cnaьir would
have found such weakness disgusting, but Proyas wasn’t any other man. Over the
months the young prince had come to command something troubling within him, a
respect not fit for a fellow Scylvendi, let alone an outlander. Even sick he
seemed regal. He’s just another lnrithi dog! “Nothing happened at
Anwurat,” Cnaьir said. “What do you mean, nothing? Why did you run? Why did you disappear?” Cnaьir scowled. What was
he supposed to say? That he went mad? He’d spent many sleepless
nights trying to wring sense from Anwurat. He could remember the battle
slipping from his grasp. He could remember murdering a Kellhus who wasn’t
Kellhus. He could remember sitting L The Third March on the strand, watching
the Meneanor hammer the shore with fists of foaming white. He could remember a
thousand different things, but they all seemed stolen, like stories told by a
childhood friend. Cnaьir had lived the
greater part of his life with madness. He heard the way his brothers spoke, he
understood how they thought, but despite endless recriminations, despite years
of roaring shame, he couldn’t make those words and thoughts his own. His was a
fractious and mutinous soul. Always one thought, one hunger, too many! But no
matter how far his soul wandered from the tracks of the proper, he’d always
borne witness to its treachery—he’d always known the measure of his depravity. His confu‘ sion had
been that of one who watches the madness of another. How? he would cry. How could these thoughts be mine? He had always owned his
madness. But at Anwurat, that had
changed. The watcher within had collapsed, and for the first time his madness
had owned him. For weeks he’d been little more than a corpse bound to a
maddened horse. How his soul had galloped! “What does it matter to
you, my comings and goings?” Cnaьir fairly cried. He hooked his thumbs in his
iron-plated girdle. “I am not your client.” Proyas’s expression
darkened. “No… But you stand high among my advisers.” He looked up, his eyes
hesitant. “Especially since Xinemus…” Cnaьir grimaced. “You
make too mu—” “You saved me in the
desert,” Proyas said. Cnaьir quashed the sudden
yearning that filled him. For some reason, he missed the desert—far more so than the Steppe. What was it?
Was it the anonymity of footsteps, the impossibility of leaving track or trail?
Was it respect? The Carathay had killed far more than he… Or had his heart
recognized itself in her desolation? So many cursed questions! Shut up! Shut— “Of course I saved you,”
Cnaьir said. “What prestige I hold, remember, I hold through you.” Almost
instantly lie regretted the remark. He had meant it as a dismissal, but it had
sounded like an admission. For a moment, Proyas
looked as though he might cry out in frustration. He lowered his face instead,
studied the mats beneath his bare white feet. When he looked up, his expression
was at once plaintive and challenging. Caraskand “Did you know that
Conphas recently called a secret council discuss Kellhus?” Cnaьir shook his head.
“No.” Proyas was watching him very closely. “So you and Kellhus still don’t
speak.” “No.” Cnaьir blinked,
glimpsed an image of the Dьnyain, his f; cracking open as he screamed. A
memory? When had it happened? “And why’s that, Scylvendi?” Cnaьir struggled to hide
his sneer. “Because of the woman.” “You mean Serwe?” He could remember Serwe
shrieking, covered in blood. Had’t happened at Anwurat as well? Had it happened
at all? She was my mistake. What had possessed him to
take her that day he and Kellhus had kil the Munuati? What had possessed him to
take a woman—a woman!— the trail? Was it her beauty? She
was a prize—there could be no dc about that. Lesser chieftains would have
flaunted her at every oppo nity, would have entertained offers just to see how
many cattle she cc fetch, all the while knowing she was beyond bartering. But
still, it was Moenghus he hunted! Moenghus! No. The
answer was plain: he’d taken her because of Kelll Hadn’t he? She was my proof. Before finding her, he’d
spent weeks alone with the man—weeks al with a Dunyain. Now, after watching the inhuman fiend devour h after
Inrithi heart, it scarcely seemed possible he’d survived. The bott less
scrutiny. The narcotic voice. The demonic truths… How couL not take Serwe after
enduring such an ordeal? Besides beautiful, she simple, honest, passionate—everything
Kellhus wasn’t. He warred ag; a spider. How could he not crave the company of
flies? Yes… That was it! He’d
taken her as a landmark, as a reminder of i was human. He
should’ve known she’d become a battleground inste; He used her to drive me mad! “You must pardon my
scepticism,” Proyas was saying. “Many mei strange when it comes to women… But
you?” Cnaitir bristled. What was he saying? The Third March Proyas looked down to the
sheafs on the table next to him, their corners curling in the wet. He absently
tried to straighten one with thumb and forefinger. “All this madness with
Kellhus has set me thinking,” he said. “Especially about you. By the thousands they flock to him, they abase
themselves before him. By the thousands … And yet you, the one man who
knows him best, can’t abide his company. Why is that, Cnaьir?” “As I said, because of
the woman. He stole my prize.” “You loved her?” Men, the memorialists
said, often strike their sons to bruise their fathers. But then why did they
strike their wives? Their lovers? Why had he beaten Serwe?
To bruise Kellhus? To injure a Dunyain? Where Kellhus caressed,
Cnaьir had slapped. Where Kellhus whispered, Cnaьir had screamed. The more the
Dunyain compelled love, the more he exacted terror, and without any true
understanding of what he did. At the time, she had simply deserved his fury. Wayward bitch! he would
think. How could you? How
could you? Did he love her? Could
he? Perhaps in a world
without Moenghus… Cnaьir spat across the
Prince’s matted floor. “I owned her! She was mine!“ “And this is all?” Proyas
asked. “This is the sum of your grudge against Kellhus?” The sum of his grudge…
Cnaьir nearly cackled aloud. There was no sum for what he felt. “I find your silence
unnerving,” Proyas said. Cnaьir spat once again.
“And I find your interrogation offensive. You presume too much, Proyas.” The drawn yet handsome
face flinched. “Perhaps,” the Prince said, sighing deeply. “Perhaps not…
Nevertheless, Cnaьir, I would have your answer. I must know the truth!” The truth? What would
these dogs make of the truth? How would Proyas react? He eats you, and you know it not. And when he’s done, there
will be only bones… “And what truth would
that be?” Cnaьir snapped. “Whether Kellhus is truly an Inrithi Prophet? You
think that is a question I can answer?” Caraskand Proyas had leaned forward
in agitation; he now collapsed back in his chair. “No,” he gasped, drawing
a hand to his forehead. “I merely hoped that…” He trailed, shaking his head
wearily. “But none of this is to the point. I called you here to discuss other
matters.” Cnaьir watched the man
closely, found himself troubled by the evasiveness of his eyes. Conphas has approached him… They plan to
move against Kellhus. Why
should he continue lying for the Dunyain? He no longer believed the man would
honour their pact… So just what did he believe? “Saubon has come to me,”
Proyas continued. “He’s exchanged missives—and now even hostages—with a Kianene
officer named Kepfet ab Tanaj. Apparently, Kepfet and his fellows hate Imbeyan
so fiercely they’re prepared to sacrifice anything just to see him dead.” “Caraskand,” Cnaьir said. “He offers
Caraskand.” “A section of her walls, to be more precise.
To the west, near a small postern gate.” “So you want my counsel?
Even after Anwurat?” Proyas shook his head. “I want more than your counsel,
Scylvendi. You’re always saying we Inrithi carve up honour the way others carve
up stags, and this is no different. We have suffered much. Whoever breaks
Caraskand will be immortalized…” “And you are too sick.” The Conriyan Prince
snorted. “First you spit at my feet, now you call out my infirmities… Sometimes
I wonder whether you earned those scars murdering manners instead of men!”
Cnaьir felt like spitting, but refrained. “I earned these scars murdering
fools.” Proyas started laughing
but finished hacking phlegm from his lungs. He leaned back and blew strings of
mucus into a spittoon set in the shadows behind his chair. Its brass rim
gleamed in the uncertain light. “Why me?” Cnaьir asked. “Why not Gaidekki or
Ingiaban?” Proyas groaned and shuddered beneath his blankets. He leaned
forward, elbows on knees, and clutched his head. Clearing his throat, he raised
his face to Cnaьir. Two tears, relics of his coughing fit, fell across his
cheek. The Third March “Because you’re”—he
swallowed—“more capable.” Cnaьir stiffened, felt a
snarl twitch across his lips. He
means moredisposable! “I know you think that I
lie,” Proyas said quickly. “But I don’t. If Xinemus were still… still…” He
blinked, shook his head. “I would’ve asked him.” Cnaьir studied him
closely. “You fear this may be a trap… That Saubon might be deceived.” Proyas chewed at the
inside of his cheek, nodded. “An entire city for the life of one man? No hatred
could be so great.” Cnaьir did not bother
contradicting him. There was a hate that
eclipsed the hater, a hunger that encompassed the very ground of appetite. Bent low, his broadsword
before him, Cnaьir urs Skiotha stole across the heights of the wall toward the
postern gate, thinking of Kellhus, Moenghus, and murder. Need me… I must find some way to make him need me! Yes… The madness was
lifting. Cnaьir paused, pressed
his armoured back against the wet stone. Saubon crowded close behind him,
followed by some fifty other hand-picked men. Drawing long even breaths, Cnaьir
tried to calm the anxiousness of his limbs. He glanced across the great weave
of moonlit structures below. It was strange, seeing the city that had bitterly
denied them so exposed, almost like lifting the skirts of a sleeping woman. A heavy hand fell upon
his shoulder, and Cnaьir turned to see Saubon in the gloom, his hard, grinning
face framed by his mail hood. Moonlight rimmed his battle helm. Though he
respected the Galeoth Prince’s prowess on the field, Cnaьir neither liked nor
trusted him. The man had, after all, kennelled with the Dunyain’s other dogs. “She looks almost
wanton…” Saubon whispered, nodding toward the city below. He looked back, his
eyes bright. “Do you still doubt me?” “I never doubted you.
Only your faith in this Kepfet.” The Galeoth Prince’s grin
broadened. “Truth shines,” he said. Cnaьir squashed the urge
to sneer. “So do pigs’ teeth.” Caraskand He spat across the
ancient stonework. There was no escaping the Dunyain—not any more. It sometimes
seemed the abomination spoke from every mouth, watched from all eyes. And it
was only getting worse. Something… There must be something 1 can do! But what? Their pact to
murder Moenghus was a farce. The Dunyain honoured nothing for its own sake. For
them only the ends mattered, and everything else, from warlike nations to shy
glances, was a tool—something to be used. And Cnaьir possessed nothing of
use—not any more. He’d squandered his every advantage. He couldn’t even offer
his reputation among the Great Names, not after the degradation of Anwurat… No.
There was nothing Kellhus needed from him. Nothing except… Cnaьir actually
gasped aloud. Except my
silence. In his periphery, he
glimpsed Saubon turn to him in alarm. “What’s wrong?” Cnaьir glanced at him
contemptuously. “Nothing,” he said. The madness was lifting. Cursing in Galeoth,
Saubon started past him, crawling beneath the pitted battlements. Cnaitir
followed, his breath rasping over-loud in his ears. Rainwater had pooled
through the joints between flagstones, reflecting moonlight. He splashed
through them, his fingers aching with cold. The farther they crept along the
parapet, the more the balance of vulnerability seemed to shift. Before
Caraskand had seemed exposed, but now, as the towers of the postern gate loomed
nearer, they seemed the vulnerable ones. Torches glittered along the tower’s
crest. They paused before an
iron-strapped door, looked to one another apprehensively, as though realizing
this would be the definitive test of Kepfet and his unlikely hatred. Saubon
looked almost terrified in the pallid light. Cnaьir scowled and yanked on the
iron handle. It grated open. The Galeoth Prince
hissed, laughed as though amused by his momentary doubt. Whispering “Die or
conquer!” he slipped around the masonry into the black maw. Cnaьir glanced one
last time at Caraskand’s moonlit expanse, then followed, his heart thundering. Moving in dark, deadly
files, they spilled through the corridors and down the stairwells. As Proyas
had bidden him, Cnaьir stayed close tc The Third March Caraskand Saubon, jostling behind
him through narrow hallways. He knew the layout of the gate must be simple, but
tension and urgency made it seem a maze. Saubon’s outstretched
hand stopped him in the blackness, pulled him to the chapped wall. The Galeoth
Prince had halted before a door. Threads of golden light traced its outline in
the dark. Cnaьir’s skin prickled at the sound of muted shouts. “The God,” Saubon
whispered, “has given me this place, Scylvendi. Caraskand will be mine!” Cnaьir peered at him in
the darkness. “How do you know?” “I know!” The Dunyain had told him.
Cnaьir was certain of it. “You brought Kepfet to
Kellhus… Didn’t you?” He let the Dunyain read his face. Saubon grinned and
snorted. Without answering, he turned his back to Cnaьir, rapped the door with
the pommel of his sword. Wood scraped against
stone—the sound of someone pushing back a chair. There was a muffled laugh,
voices speaking Kianene. If the Norsirai sounded like grunting pigs, Cnaьir
thought, the Kianene sounded like honking geese. Saubon swung his
broadsword around, gripping it like a dagger and raising it high. For a mad
instant, he resembled a boy preparing to spear fish in a stream. The door
jerked open; a human face surfaced… Saubon snatched the man’s
braided goatee, stabbed downward with his sword. The Kianene was dead before he
clanked to the ground. Howling, the Galeoth Prince leapt into airy light beyond
the door. Cnaьir tumbled after him
with the others, found himself in a narrow, candle’lit room. A great wheeled
spool loomed before him, wrought in ancient wood, wrapped by chains that
dropped from chutes in the fluted ceiling. Beyond, he glimpsed several
red-jacketed Kianene soldiers scrambling for their weapons. Two simply sat
dumbstruck, one with bread in hand, at a rough-hewn table set in the far
corner. Saubon hacked into their
midst. One fell shrieking, clutching his face. Cnaьir leapt into the
fray, crying out in Scylvendi. He hammered the sword from the slack, panicked
hand of the heathen guardsman before him: a stoop-shouldered adolescent
sporting no more than wisps of a goatee. Cnaьir crouched
and hacked at the legs of a second guardsman rushing his flank. The man
toppled, and Cnaьir whirled back to the boy, only to see him vanish through a
far door. A Galeoth knight he didn’t recognize speared the man he’d felled. Nearby, Saubon hacked at
two Kianene, brandishing his sword like a pipe, grunting obscenities with each
swing. He’d lost his helm; blood matted his shaggy blond hair. Cnaьir charged
to his side. With his first blow, he cracked the round, yellow and black shield
of the nearest guardsman. The heathen skidded on blood, and as his arms
reflexively opened, Cnaьir punched his sword through the man’s ring harness.
His scream was a convulsive, gurgling thing. Glancing to his left, he saw
Saubon shear off his foeman’s lower jaw. Hot blood sprayed across Cnaьir’s
face. The heathen stumbled, flailed. Saubon silenced him with a blow that
almost severed his head. “Raise the gate!” the
Galeoth Prince roared. “Raise the gate!” Inrithi warriors, mostly ruddy-faced
Galeoth, now packed the room. Several fell upon the wooden wheels. The sound of
chains grating across stone drowned out their excited muttering. The air reeked
of pierced entrails. Saubon’s captains and thanes
had assembled about him. “Hortha! Fire the signal! Mearji, storm the second
tower! You must take it, son! You must make your ancestors proud!” The radiant
blue eyes found Cnaьir. Despite the blood threading his face, there was a
majesty to his look, a paternal confidence that chilled Cnaьir’s heart. Coithus
Saubon was already king, and he belonged to Kellhus. “Secure the murder room,”
the Galeoth Prince said. “Take as many men as you need…” His eyes swept across
all those assembled. “Caraskand falls, my brothers! By the God, Caraskand falls!” Cheers resounded through
the room, fading into hoarse shouts and the sound of boots making muck of the
glossy pools of red across the floor. “Die or conquer!” men cried. “Die or
conquer!” After crowding through a
far hallway, Cnaьir barged through a likely door and found the murder room,
though the gloom was so deep it took several moments for his eyes to adjust.
Not far, a single point of candlelight sputtered in circles. He could hear the
portcullis creaking up into the ancient machinery of the chamber. He could
smell the humid cold of The Third March outside, feel air wash
upward from his feet. He was standing upon a large grate, he realized, set over
the passage between the two gates. Things and surfaces resolved from the gloom:
wood stacked against the walls; rows of amphorae, no doubt filled with oil to
pour through the grate; two ovens no higher than his knee, each stocked with
kindling, furnished with bellows, and bearing iron pots for cooking the oil… Then he saw the Kianene
boy he’d disarmed earlier, huddled against the far wall, his brown eyes as wide
as silver talents. For a heartbeat, Cnaьir couldn’t look away. The sound of
screams and shouts echoed through unseen corridors. “P’pouada’t‘fada,” the adolescent sobbed. “Os-osmah… Pipiri osmah!” Cnaьir swallowed. From nowhere it seemed, a
Galeoth thane—someone Cnaьir didn’t recognize—strode past him toward the boy,
his sword raised. Just then, light glittered up from the passage below, and
through the grate at his feet, Cnaьir saw a band of torch-bearing Galeoth rush
toward the outer doors of the postern gate. He glanced up, saw the thane swing
his sword downward as though clubbing an unwanted whelp. The boy had raised
warding hands. The blade glanced from his wrist and struck along the bone of
his forearm, slicing back a shank of meat the size of a fish. The boy screamed. The doors burst open
beneath. Exultant cries pealed through the room, followed by cold air and
shining torchlight. The first of the thousands Saubon had concealed on the
broken slopes beneath the gate began rushing through the passageway beneath.
The thane hacked at the adolescent, once, twice… The screams stopped. Squares of light raced
across the thane’s blood-spattered form. The blue-eyed man gazed in wonder at
the spectacle beneath. He glanced at Cnaьir, grinned, and pawed at his teary
cheeks. “Truth shines!” he
convulsively cried. “Truth shines!” His eyes shouted glory. Without thinking, Cnaьir
dropped his sword and seized him, almost hoisted him from his feet. For a
heartbeat, they grappled. Then Cnaьir smashed his forehead into the thane’s
face. The man’s broadsword fell from senseless fingers. His head lolled
backward. Cnaьir slammed his forehead down again, felt teeth snap. Shouts and clamour
reverberated up Caraskand 4( through the iron grate.
With each rushing torch lattices of shadow swe] up and over them. Again, bone
hammering against bone, face breakir beneath face. The bridge of the man’s nose
collapsed, then his left cheel Again and again, smashing his face into slurry. 1 am stronger! The twitching thing
slouched to the ground, drained across the Me of the Tusk. Cnaьir stood, his chest
heaving, blood streaming in rivulets across th iron scales of his harness. The
very world seemed to move, so great wa the rush of arms and men beneath him. Yes, the madness was
lifting. Horns pealed across the
great city. War horns. There was no rain in the
morning, but a thin fog wearied the distances drained Caraskand’s reaches of
contrast and colour, rendering the fa quarters ghostlike. Though overcast, one
could feel the sun burninj behind the clouds. The Fanim, both native
Enathpaneans and Kianene, crowded ontc roofs and strained to see what was
happening. As they watched a growing pall of smoke rise from the eastern
quarters of the city, women claspec crying children tight, ashen-faced men
scored their forearms with fingernails, and old mothers wailed into the sky.
Below them, Kianene horsemen beat their way through the tight streets, riding
down their own people, struggling to answer the call of the Sapatishah’s drums
and make their way to the towering fortress in the city’s northwest, the
Citadel of the Dog. And then, after a time, the terrified watchers could
actually see, in those distant streets where the angles allowed them, the Men
of the Tusk—small, wicked shadows through the smoke. Iron-draped figures rushed
through the streets, swords rose and fell, and tiny, hapless forms collapsed
beneath them. Some of the onlookers were so terror-stricken they became sick.
Some rushed down into the congested streets to join in the mad, hopeless
attempt to escape. Others remained, and watched the approaching columns of
smoke. They prayed to the Solitary God, tore at their beards and their clothes,
and thought panicked thoughts about everything they were about to lose. The Third March Saubon had gathered his
men and struck through the streets toward the mighty Gate of Horns. The massive
barbican fell after fierce fighting, but the Galeoth had found themselves
sorely pressed by those Fanim horsemen the Sapatishah’s officers had been able
to muster. In the narrow streets, clots of men joined in dozens of small,
pitched battles. Even with the constant string of reinforcements arriving from
the postern gate, the Galeoth found themselves stubbornly giving ground. But the mighty Gate of
Horns was finally thrown open, and Athjeari with his Gaenrish knights pounded
into the city on their stolen horses, followed by rank after rank of Conriyans,
invincible and inhuman behind their godlike masks. In their wake, their Prince,
the ailing Nersei Proyas, was borne into Caraskand on a litter. The Kianene were routed
by this new onslaught, and their last chance to save their city was lost.
Organized resistance crumbled and became confined to small pockets scattered
throughout Caraskand. The Inrithi broke into roaming bands and began to pillage
the city. Houses were ransacked.
Entire families were put to the sharp knife. Black-skinned Nilnameshi slave
girls were dragged sobbing from their hiding places by the hair, violated, and
then put to the sword. Tapestries were torn from the walls, rolled, or tied
into sacks into which plates, statu-ary, and other articles of gold and silver
were swept. The Men of the Tusk rifled through ancient Caraskand, leaving
behind them scattered clothes and broken chests, death and fire. In some places
the scattered looters were slaughtered and chased away by armed bands of
Kianene, or held at bay until some thane or baron rallied enough men to close with
the heathen. The hard battles were
fought across Caraskand’s great market squares and through the more magnificent
of the buildings. Only the Great Names were able to hold enough men together to
batter open the tall doors and then fight their way down the long, carpeted
corridors. But in these places, the spoils were the greatest—cool cellars
filled with Eumarnan and Jurisadi wines, golden reliquary behind fretted
shrines, alabaster and jade statues of lions and desert wolves, intricate
plaques of clear chalcedony. Their coarse shouts echoed beneath airy domes.
They tracked blood and filth across broad, white-tiled floors. Men sheathed
their weapons and fumbled with their breeches, strolling into the marmoreal
recesses of some dead Grandee’s harem. Caraskand The doors of the great
tabernacles were battered down, and the Men of the Tusk waded among masses of
kneeling Fanim, hacking and clubbing until the tiled floors were matted with
the dead and dying. They smashed down the doors of the adjoining compounds,
wandered into the dim, carpeted interiors. Soft shadows and strange scents
greeted them. Light rained down through tiny windows of coloured glass. At
first they were fearful. These were the dens of the Unholy, where the monstrous
Cishaurim worked their abominations. They walked quietly, numbed by their
dread. But eventually the drunkenness of the screaming streets would return to
them. Someone would reach out and spill a book from an ivory lectern, and when
nothing happened the aura of foreboding would dissolve, replaced by sudden,
righteous fury. They would laugh, cry out the names of Inri Sejenus and the
Gods as they plundered the inner sanctums of the False Prophet. They tortured
Fanic priests for their secrets. They set glorious, many-pillared tabernacles
of Caraskand aflame. The Men of the Tusk cast
the bodies from the rooftops. They rifled the pockets of the dead, tugging
rings from grey fingers, or just sawing at the knuckles to save time. Shrieking
children were torn from their mothers, tossed across rooms and caught on sword
point. The mothers were beaten and raped while their gutted husbands wailed
about their entrails. The Inrithi were like wild-eyed beasts, drunk with
howling murder. Moved by the God’s own fury, they utterly destroyed all in the city,
both men and women, young and old, oxen, sheep, and asses, with the edge of the
sharp sword. The anger of the God
burned bright against the people of Caraskand. Sunlight broke across the
city, cold and brilliant against a dark horizon. Wings outstretched, the Old
Name floated on hot western winds. Caraskand pitched and yawed beneath him, a
vista of flat-roofed structures, encrusting hillsides, enveloping distances in
mud-brick confusion, opening about broad agoras and monumental complexes. Fires burned in the east,
screening the far quarters. He soared around mountainous plumes. He saw Caraskandi
crowding the rooftop gardens of the merchant quarter, howling in disbelief. He
saw packs of armed Inrithi ranging through abandoned
streets, dispersing into buildings. He saw the first of the domed tabernacles
burning. From so far, they looked like bowls upended over firepits. He saw
horsemen charging across the great market squares, and phalanxes of footmen
battling down broad avenues toward the hazy blue ramparts of the Citadel of the
Dog. And he saw the man who
called himself Dunyain, fleeing across ramshackle rooftops, running like the
wind, pursued by the jump and tumble of Gaorta and the others. He watched the
man leap and pirouette onto a third floor, sprint, then vault beyond the far
edge of the adjacent two-storey structure. He landed in a crouch amid a clot of
Kianene footmen, then bounced away, taking four lives with him. The soldiers
had scarcely drawn their swords when Gaorta and his brothers descended upon
them. What was this man? Who
were the Dunyain? These were questions that
needed to be answered. According to Gaorta, the man’s Zaudunyani, his “tribe of
truth,” numbered in the tens of thousands. It was only a matter of weeks,
Gaorta insisted, before the Holy War succumbed to him entirely. But the
questions these facts raised were overmatched by the perils. Nothing could
interfere with the Holy War’s mission. Shimeh must be taken. The Cishaurim must
be destroyed! Despite the questions,
the man’s existence could no longer be toler-ated. He had to die, and for
reasons that transcended their war against the Cishaurim. More troubling than
his preternatural abilities, more troubling than even his slow conquest of the
Holy War, was the man’s name. An Anasurimbor had returned—an Anasurimborl And though Golgotterath had long scoffed at the
Mandate and their prattle regarding the Celmomian Prophecy, how could they
afford to take chances? They were so near! So close! Soon the Children would
gather, and they would rain ruin upon this despicable world! The End of Ends
was coming… One did not gamble with such things. They would kill this Anasurimbor Kellhus, then
they would seize the others, the Scylvendi and the women, to learn
what they needed to know. The Dunyain’s distant
figure dashed into some kind of compound— disappeared. The Synthese
craned its small human neck, banked against the sweeping sky, watched
his slaves disappear after him. Caraskand Good. Gaorta and his
brothers were closing .. ■ The Warrior-Prophet… The
Old Name had already decided he would couple with his corpse. The percussive slap of
sandals, the rhythmic pant of tireless, animal lungs, the slap of fabric about
hooking arms. They’re too fast! Kellhus ran. As fleet as
memories, chambers rushed past him, each possessing the spare elegance of
desert peoples. Behind him, Sarcellus and the others fanned through the
surrounding corridors. Kellhus kicked through a door, rolled down a stone
stair, came to his feet in the gloom. They followed, mere heartbeats behind. He
heard steel whisk against wood—a sheath. He ducked right and rolled. A knife
flashed to his left, chipped dim stone, clattered to the floor. Kellhus plunged
down another stair, into pitch blackness. He blundered through a brittle wooden
door, felt the air bloom into emptiness about him, smelled stale cistern
waters. The skin-spies hesitated. Ail eyes need light. Kellhus spun about the
room, his every surface alive, reading the warp and weft of drafts, the crunch
and rasp of his sandals scuffing stone, the flutter of his clothing. His
outstretched fingers touched table, chair, brick oven, a hundred different
surfaces in a handful of instants. He fell into stance in the room’s far
corner. Drew his sword. Motionless. Somewhere in the pitch, a
wood splinter snapped. He could feel them slip
through the entrance, one after the other. They spread across the far wall,
their hearts thudding in competing rhythms. Kellhus could smell their musk roll
through the room. “I’ve tasted both of your
peaches,” the one called Sarcellus said—to mask the sounds of the others,
Kellhus realized. “I tasted them long and hard—did you know that? I made them
squeal…” “You lie!” Kellhus cried
in mimicry of desperate fury. He heard the skin-spies pause, then close on the corner
where he’d thrown his voice. “Both were sweet,”
Sarcellus called, “and so very juicy… The man, they say, ripens the peach.” Ihe Ihird March Kellhus had punched his
sword point through the ear of the creature that glided before him, lowered it
as soundlessly as he could to the ground. “Eh, Dunyain?” Sarcellus
asked. “That makes you twice the cuckold!” One bumped into a chair. Kellhus leapt, gutted it,
rolled under the table as it squealed and shrieked. “He plays us!” one cried.
“Vnza, pophara tokuk!” “Smell him!” the thing called Sarcellus
shouted. “Cut anything that smells his smell!” The disembowelled
creature flopped and flailed, screaming in demonic voices—as Kellhus had hoped.
He ducked from under the table, backed to the wall to the left of the entrance.
He pulled free his samite robe, tossed it onto the back of a chair he couldn’t
see—but remembered… Kellhus stood motionless.
The drafts came to him, murmuring. He could feel their bestial heartbeats,
taste the feral heat of their bodies. Two leapt at his robe before him. Swords
swooped and cracked into the chair. Lunging, he skewered the one to the left in
the throat, only to have his blade wrenched from him as the creature toppled
backward. Kellhus leaned back and to the left, felt steel whip the air. He
caught an arm, exploded the elbow, blocked the knife-bearing fist that hooked
about. He reached into its throat and jerked out its windpipe. He jumped backward.
Sarcellus’s sword whistled through the blackness. Twisting into a handstand,
Kellhus caught the back of a chair and vaulted to a crouch at the far edge of
the trestle table. The gutted skin-spy
thrashed immediately below him. Even still, he heard the thing called Sarcellus
bound out of the cellar. Flee… For several moments
Kellhus remained still, drawing long deep breaths. Inhuman screaming resounded
through the blackness. It sounded like something—many somethings—burning alive. How are such creatures possible? What do
you know of them, Father? Retrieving
his long-pommelled sword, Kellhus struck off the living skin-spy’s head. Sudden
silence. He wrapped it, still streaming blood, in his slashed robe. Then he climbed back
toward slaughter and daylight. Caraskand 4/ The great black fortress
the Men of the Tusk called the Citadel of the Dog dominated the easternmost of
Caraskand’s nine hills. They called her such because the way her inner and
outer curtain walls enclosed the towering central keep vaguely resembled a dog
curled about his master’s leg. The Fanim simply called her “Il’huda.” “the Bulwark.” Raised by the great Xatantius,
the most warlike of the early Nansur emperors, the Citadel of the Dog reflected
the scale and ingenuity of a people who’d managed to flourish in the shadow of
the Scylvendi: round towers, massive barbicans, offset inner and outer gates.
The fortress’s defences were tiered, so that each concentric ring overshadowed
the next. And her outer walls were shelled in a glossy, well-nigh impenetrable,
basalt. Knowing that the
fortress—which the Nansur called “Insarum,” her original name—was the key to
the city, Ikurei Conphas had assailed it almost immediately, hoping to storm
the walls before Imbeyan could organize any concerted defence. The men of the
Selial Column gained the southern heights only to be thrown back after horrifying
losses. Soon the Galeoth were on the steep slopes with them, and then the
Tydonni: Saubon and Gothyelk were not so foolish as to leave such a prize to
the Exalt-General. Siege engines constructed to assail Caraskand’s curtain
walls were drawn up. Mangonels hurled burning tar over the fortifications.
Trebuchets rained granite boulders and Fanim bodies. Tall, iron-hooked ladders
were pressed against the walls, and the Kianene hefted rocks and boiling oil
over the battlements to crush and burn those that climbed them. Protected by
hide mantlets, an iron-headed battering ram was brought under the immense
barbican and beneath a hail of fire and missiles began hammering at the gate.
Clouds of arrows reached into the sky. Saubon himself was carried down with a
Kianene arrow in his thigh. Sheer numbers and
ferocity gained the Warnutishmen of Ce Tydonn the western wall. Tall, bearded
knights, clients of the dead Earl Cerjulla, hacked through the crowds of
heathen who swarmed up to dislodge them. They were pelted by archers from the
inner compound, but the arrows, if they could punch through the heavy mail,
were merely embedded in the thick layers of felt beneath. Many roared and
fought with several shafts jutting from their backs. The dead and dying were The Third March thrown headlong from the
walls to crash onto the rocks or the men teeming below. The Tydonni planted
their feet and refused to give ground, while behind them, more of their
cousins, Agansi under Gothyelk’s youngest son, Gurnyau, gained the summit. Under
the direction of the wounded Saubon, the longbowmen of Agmundr raked the
heights of the inner wall, forcing the Enathpanean and Kianene archers to
shelter behind crenellations. Someone raised the Mark of Agansanor, the Black
Stag, upon one of the outer towers. A great shout was raised by the Inrithi
encircling the heights. Then came a light more
blinding than the sun. Men cried out, point‘ ing to mad, saffron-robed figures
hanging between the towers of the black keep. Eyeless Cishaurim, each with two
snakes wrapped about their throats. Threads of unholy
incandescence waved across the outer wall like ropes in water. Stone cracked
beneath the flashing heat. Hauberks were welded to skin. The Tydonni crouched
beneath their great tear-shaped shields, leaning against the light, shouting in
horror and outrage before being swept away. The Agmundrmen fired vainly at the
floating abominations. Teams of Chorae Crossbowmen watched bolt after bolt
whistle wide because of the range. The tall knights of Ce
Tydonn were decimated. Many, seeing the hopelessness of their plight,
brandished their longswords, howled curses until the end. Others ran. Those who
could scrambled down the ladders. Several warriors leapt from the battlements,
their beards and hair aflame. An unholy torrent consumed Gothyelk’s Standard. Then the lights flickered
out. For a moment all was
silent save for those left screaming upon the heights. Then the Kianene upon
the walls burst into cheers. They rushed across the stolen summits, cast those
Tydonni still living from the wall, including Gothyelk’s youngest son, Gurnyau.
Mad with grief, the old Earl had to be dragged away. The Men of the Tusk
withdrew in turmoil. Riders were dispatched, charged with finding the Scarlet
Spires, who’d yet to enter Caraskand. They bore but one message: “Cishaurim
defend the Citadel of the Dog.” Caraskand Still bearing his trophy,
Kellhus strode out onto the terrace of an abandoned palatial compound. He
passed through a small garden of winter blooms and sculpted shrubs. The body of
a dead woman, her gown hiked over her head, lay motionless between two
junipers. Stepping over her, Kellhus walked out across the shining marble to
the terrace balustrade. The breeze carried a bouquet of foul and sweet
odours—the smell of precious things burning. The Citadel of the Dog
dominated the near distance, black and hazy, rising mountainous from the welter
of walls and roofs crowding the valley below. He glimpsed tiny Kianene soldiers
rushing along the heights, their silvered helms winking as they passed between
battlements. He saw Inrithi bodies dumped from the walls. To the north and to the
south, Caraskand continued to die. Peering through screens of smoke, he studied
the riot of distant buildings, glimpsed dozens of miniature dramas: pitched
battles, petty atrocities, bodies being stripped, women wailing, even a child
jumping from a rooftop. A sudden shriek drew his eyes downward, and he saw a
band of black-armoured Thunyeri rushing through the enclosed garden of the
compound immediately below the terrace. He quickly lost sight of them. Harsh
laughter wafted up through the breeze. He looked past the
Citadel, south to the hills beyond Caraskand’s far-wandering walls. To Shimeh. I grow; near, Father. Very near. He swung the bloody sack
he’d made of his robe from his shoulder, and the thing’s severed head tumbled
across the marmoreal floor. He studied its face, which seemed little more than
a tangle of snakes with human-skin. A lidless eye gleamed in the shadows
beneath. Kellhus already knew these creatures weren’t sorcerous artifacts; he’d
learned enough from Achamian to conclude they were worldly weapons, fashioned
by the ancient Inchoroi the way swords were fashioned by Men. But with their
faces undone, this fact seemed all the more remarkable. Weapons. And the Consult
had finally wielded them. Wars within wars. It has finally come to this. Kellhus had already
encountered several of his Zaudunyani. Even now his instructions were spreading
through the city. Serwe and Esmenet would be evacuated from the camp. Soon his
Hundred Pillars would be tit ihe ihird March securing this nameless
merchant palace. The Zaudunyani he’d charged with watching the skin-spies he’d
so far identified were being sought. If he could organize before the chaos
ended… The Holy War must be
purged. Just then, light flared
across the Citadel. A crack boomed over the city, like thunder rising out from
the ground. A chorus of unsettling disharmonies reverberated in its wake. More
flashes of light, and Kellhus saw sheets of masonry crash down the Citadel’s
foundations. Debris tumbled down the hillside. Hanging in the air, the
sorcerers of the Scarlet Spires had formed a great semicircle about the
Citadel’s immense barbican. Through a dark hail of arrows, glittering fire
washed over the turrets, and even from this distance Kellhus could see burning
Fanim leap into the baileys. Lightning leapt from phantom clouds, exploding
stonework and limbs alike. Flocks of incandescent sparrows swarmed over the
battlements, plummeting into face after howling face. Despite the destruction,
one Scarlet Schoolman, then another, and then another still, plunged to the
rooftops below, struck into salt by heathen Chorae. His eye drawn by a blinding
flash, Kellhus saw one sorcerer crash into the hillside, where he broke and
tumbled like a thing of stone. Hellish lights scourged the ramparts. Tower tops
exploded in flame. All living things were consumed. The song of the Scarlet
Schoolmen trailed. The thunder rumbled into the distances. For several heartbeats,
all Caraskand stood still. The fortress walls steamed with the smoke of burning
flesh. Several of the sorcerers strode forward. Achamian had told Kellhus once
that no sorcerer truly flew, but rather walked a surface that wasn’t a
surface—the ground’s echo in the sky. The Schoolmen advanced through the
curtains of smoke until they dangled over the narrow baileys of the inner keep.
Kellhus glimpsed the outline of their ghostly Wards. They seemed to be waiting…
or searching. Suddenly, from various
points across the Citadel, seven lines of piercing blue swept across smoke and
sky, intersecting on the centremost Schoolman… Cishaurim, Kellhus realized. Cishaurim shelter in the Citadel. The ring of crimson
figures, mere specks in the distance, answered Caraskand their hidden foe. Kellhus
raised a hand against the brilliance. The air shivered with concussions. A
western tower buckled beneath the weight of fire, then ponderously toppled.
Breaking over the outer curtain wall, it plunged to slopes below, where it collapsed
into an avalanche of rubble and pluming dust. Kellhus watched,
wondering at the spectacle and at the promise of deeper dimensions of
understanding. Sorcery was the only unconquered knowledge, the last remaining
bastion of world-born secrets. He was one of the Few—as Achamian had both
feared and hoped. What kind of power would he wield? And his father, who was
Cishaurim, what kind of power did he already
wield? The Scarlet Schoolmen
pummelled the Citadel without pause or remorse. There was no sign of the
Cishaurim who’d attacked moments earlier. Smoke and dust billowed and plumed,
encompassing the black-walled heights. Sorcerous lights flashed through what
clear air remained; otherwise they flickered and pulsed as though through veils
of black gossamer. Uncanny hymns ached in
Kellhus’s ears. How could such things be said? How could words come before? Another tower collapsed
in the south, crashing upon its foundations, swelling into a black cloud-that
rolled down over the surrounding tenements. Watching Men of the Tusk flee
through the streets, Kellhus glimpsed a figure in yellow silks soar free of the
surging eclipse, arms to his side, sandalled feet pointing downward. The
Inrithi warriors scattered beneath him. A surviving Cishaurim. Kellhus watched the
figure glide low over the stepped rooftops, dip into avenues. For a moment he
thought the man might escape— smoke and dust had all but engulfed the Scarlet
Schoolmen. Then he realized… The Cishaurim was turning
in his direction. Rather than continuing south,
the figure hooked westward, using what structures he could to cover his passage
from the far-seeing Schoolmen. Kellhus tracked his progress as he zigzagged
through the streets, averaging the mean of his sudden turns to determine his
true The Third March trajectory. As
improbable—as impossible—as it seemed, there could be no doubt: the man was
coming toward him. Could it be? Father? Kellhus backed away from
the balustrade, bent to rewrap the skin-spy’s severed head in his ruined robe.
Then he gripped one of two Chorae his Zaudunyani had given him… According to
Achamian, it offered immunity to the Psukhe as much as it did sorcery. The Cishaurim was
climbing the slopes to the terrace, kicking loose leaves as he skimmed the odd
tree-top. Birds burst into the air in his wake. Kellhus could see the black
pits of his eyes, the two distended snakes about his neck, one looking forward,
the other scanning the Citadel’s continuing destruction. A dragon’s howl gouged
the distances, followed by another thunderclap. The marble tingled beneath his
feet. More clouds of black bloomed about the Citadel… Father? This cannot be! The Cishaurim glided low
over the compound where Kellhus had seen the Thunyeri a short time earlier,
then swooped upward. Kellhus actually heard the flutter of his silken robes. He leapt backward,
drawing his sword. The sorcerer-priest sailed over the balustrade, his hands
pressed together, fingertip to fingertip. “Anasurimbor Kellhus!”
the descending figure called. Meeting his reflection,
the Cishaurim came to a jarring halt. Flecks of debris chattered across the
polished marble. Kellhus stood motionless,
holding tight his Chorae. He’s too young— “I am Hifanat ab
Tunukri,” the eyeless man said breathlessly, “a Dionorate of the tribe
Indara-Kishauri… I bear a message from your Father. He says, ‘You walk the
Shortest Path. Soon you will grasp the Thousandfold Thought.’” Father? Sheathing his sword,
Kellhus opened himself to every outward sign the man offered. He saw
desperation and purpose. Purpose
above all… “How did you find me?” “We see you. All of us.”
Behind the man, the smoke rising from the Citadel opened like a great velvet
rose. Caraskand “Us?” “All of us who serve him—the Possessors of the Third Sight.” Him… Father. He controlled a faction within the Cishaurim… “I must,” Kellhus said
emphatically, “know what he intends.” “He told me nothing… Even
if he had, there wouldn’t be time.” Though battle stress and
the absence of eyes complicated his reading, Kellhus could see the man spoke
sincerely. But why, after summoning him from so far, would his father now leave
him in the dark? He knows the Pragma have sent me as an assassin… He needs to be certain of me first. “I must warn you,”
Hifanat was saying. “The Padirajah himself comes with the South. Even now his
outriders ponder the smoke they see on the horizon.” There had been rumours of
the Padirajah’s march… Could he be so close? Contingencies, probabilities, and
alternatives lanced through Kellhus’s intellect—to no avail. The Padirajah
coming. The Consult attacking. The Great Names plotting… “Too much happens… You
must tell my father!” “There’s no—” The snake watching the
Citadel abruptly reared and hissed. Kellhus glimpsed three Scarlet Schoolmen
striding across the empty sky. Though threadbare, their crimson gowns flashed
in the sunlight. “The Whores come,” the
eyeless man said. “You must kill me.” In a single motion
Kellhus drew his blade. Though the man seemed oblivious, the closer asp reared
as though drawn back by a string. “The Logos,” Hifanat said,
his voice quavering, “is without beginning or end.” Kellhus beheaded the
Cishaurim. The body slumped to the side; the head lopped backward. Halved, one
of the snakes flailed against the floor. Still whole, the other wormed swiftly
into the garden. Rising where the Citadel
of the Dog had been, a great black pillar of smoke loomed over the sacked city,
reaching, it seemed, to the very heavens. Every quarter of
Caraskand burned now, from the “Bowl”—so named because of its position between
five of Caraskand’s nine hills—to the Old i he ihird March City, marked by the
gravelly fragments of the Kyranean wall that had once enclosed ancient
Caraskand. Columns of smoke hazed and plumed the distances—none so great as the
tower of ash that dominated the southeast. From a hilltop far to the
south, Kascamandri ab Tepherokar, the High Padirajah of Kian and all the
Cleansed Lands, watched the smoke with tears in his otherwise hard eyes. When
his scouts had first come to him with news of the disaster, Kascamandri had refused
to believe it, insisting that Imbeyan, his always resourceful and ferocious
son-in-law, simply signalled them. But there was no denying his eyes.
Caraskand, a city that rivalled white-walled Seleukara, had fallen to the
cursed idolaters. He had arrived too late. “What we cannot deliver,”
he told his shining Grandees, “we must avenge.” Even as Kascamandri
wondered what he would tell his daughter, a troop of Shrial Knights caught
Imbeyan and his retinue trying to flee the city. That evening Gotian directed
his fellow Great Names to set their booted feet upon the man’s cheek, saying,
“Cherish the power the God has given us over our enemies.” It was an ancient
ritual, first practised in the days of the Tusk. Afterward, they hung the
Sapatishah from a tree. “Kellhus!” Esmenet cried,
running through a gallery of black marble pilasters. Never had she set foot in
a structure as vast or luxurious. “Kellhus!” He turned from the
warriors who congregated around him, smiled with the wry, touching camaraderie
that always sent a pang from her throat to her heart. Such a wild, reckless
love! She flew to him. His arms
wrapped her shoulders, enveloped her in an almost narcotic sense of security.
He seemed so strong, the one immovable thing… The day had been one of
doubt and horror—both for her and Serwe. Their joy at Caraskand’s fall had been
swiftly knocked from them. First, they’d heard news of the assassination
attempt. Devils, several wild-eyed Caraskand Zaudunyani had claimed,
had set upon Kellhus in the city. Not long after, men of the Hundred Pillars
had come to evacuate the camp. No one, not even Werjau or Gayamakri, seemed to
know whether Kellhus still lived. Then they’d witnessed horror after horror
racing through the ransacked city. Unspeakable things. Women. Children… She’d
been forced to leave Serwe in the courtyard. The girl was inconsolable. “They said you’d been
attacked by demons!” she cried into his chest. “No,” he chuckled. “Not
demons.” “What happens?” Kellhus gently pushed her
back. “We’ve endured much,” he said, stroking her cheek. He seemed to be
watching more than looking… She understood the implied question: How strong are you? “Kellhus?” “The trial is about to
begin, Esmi. The true trial.” A horror like no other
shuddered through her. Not you! she inwardly cried. Never you! He had sounded afraid. Winter, 4111 Year-of-the-TusJc, the Bay of Trantis Even though the wind
still buffeted the sails in fits and starts, the bay was preternaturally calm.
One could balance a Chorae on an upturned shield, the Amortanea was so steady. “What is it?” Xinemus
asked, turning his face to and fro in the sunlight. “What is it everyone sees?” Achamian glanced to his
friend, then back to the wrecked shore. A gull cried out, as
gulls always do, in mock agony. Throughout his life
moments like this would visit him—moments of quiet wonder. He thought of them
as “visitations” because they always seemed to arise of their own volition. A
pause would descend upon him, a sense of detachment, sometimes warm, sometimes
cold, and he would think, How
is it I live this life? For the span of several heartbeats, the nearest things—the feel of
wind through the hairs of his arm, the pose of Esmenet’s shoulders as she
fussed over their meagre belongings—would seem very far. And the world, from the
taste of his teeth to the unseen tou Ihe Ihird March horizon, would seem
scarcely possible. How? he would silently murmur. How could this be? Aside from the wonder,
there was never any answer. Ajencis had called this
experience umresthei om
aumreton, “possessing
in dispossession.” In his most famed work, The Third Analytic of Men, he claimed it to be the heart of
wisdom, the most reliable mark of an enlightened soul. The same as true
possession required loss and recovery, true existence, he argued, required umresthei om aumreton. Otherwise one simply stumbled through a dream… “Ships,” Achamian said to
Xinemus. “Burnt ships.” The great irony, of
course, was that umresthei om
aumreton
rendered everything dreamlike—or nightmarish, as the case might be. The lifeless heights of
Khemema’s coastal hills walled the circumfer‘ ence of the bay. Beneath tiered
escarpments, a series of narrow beaches rimmed the shoreline. The sands were
linen white, but for as far as the eye could see, a rind of blackened debris marred
the slopes, like the salt ringing the armpits of a field-slave’s tunic.
Everywhere, Achamian saw ships and the remains of ships, all gutted by fire.
There were hundreds of them, covered in legions of red-throated gulls. Shouts echoed across the
deck of the Amortanea. The Captain, a Nansur named
Meьmaras, had called anchor. Some ways from the shore,
several half-burned derelicts conferred on a sandbar—triremes by the look of
them. Beyond them, a dozen or so prows reared from the water, their iron rams
browning with rust, their bright-painted eyes chapped and peeling. The majority
of ships packed the strand, beached like diseased whales, obviously cast up by
some forgotten storm. A few were little more than blackened ribs about a keel.
Others were entire hulks, stumped on their side or overturned entirely.
Batteries of broken oars jutted skyward. Seaweed hung in hairy ropes from the
bulwarks. And everywhere Achamian looked he saw gulls, swinging through the air
above, squabbling over lesser wreckage, and crowding the upturned bellies of
ship after harrowed ship. “This is where the
Kianene destroyed the Imperial Fleet,” Achamian explained. “Where the Padirajah
nearly destroyed the Holy War…” He remembered Iyokus describing the disaster
while he’d hung helpless in the Caraskand cellars of the Scarlet
Spires’ compound. That was when he’d stopped fearing for himself and had
started fearing for Esmenet. Kellhus.
Kellhus has kept her safe. “The Bay of Trantis,”
Xinemus said sombrely. By now, the whole world knew of this place. The Battle
of Trantis had been the greatest naval defeat in the Empire’s history. After
luring the Men of the Tusk deep into the desert, the Padirajah had attacked
their only source of water, the Imperial Fleet. Though no one knew exactly what
had happened, it was generally accepted that Kascamandri had managed to secrete
a great number of Cishaurim aboard his own fleet. According to rumour, the
Kianene had returned from the battle short only two galleys, both of which
they’d lost to a squall. “What do you see?”
Xinemus pressed. “What does it look like?” “The Cishaurim burned
everything,” Achamian replied. He paused, almost
overcome by a visceral reluctance to say anything ‘ more. It seemed
blasphemous, somehow, rendering a thing like this in words—a sacrilege. But
then such was the case whenever one described ’ another’s loss. There was no
way around words. “There’s charred ships
everywhere… They look like seals, sunning on the shore. And there’s
gulls—thousands of gulls… What we call gopas in Nron. You know, the ones that look like they’ve
had their throats cut. Ill-mannered brutes they are.” Just then, the Amortanea’s Captain, Meьmaras, walked from his men to join them
on the railing. From their first meeting in Iothiah, Achamian had found himself
liking the man. He was what the Nansur called a tesper-ari, a private contractor who’d once commanded a war
galley. His hair was short and patrician-silver, and his face, though leathered
by the sea, possessed a thoughtful delicacy. He was clean-shaven, of course,
which made him seem boyish. But then all Nansur seemed boyish. “It’s out of our way, I
know,” the man explained. “But I had to see for myself.” “You lost someone,”
Achamian said, noting his swollen eyes. The Captain nodded,
looked nervously to the charred hollows strewn across the beach. “My brother.” “You’re certain he’s
dead?” A party of gulls
screeched overhead. An embassy, offering terms. oZ The Third March “Others,” Meьmaras said,
“acquaintances of mine who’ve gone ashore, say that bones and dried carcasses
litter the strand for miles— north and south. As catastrophic as the Kianene
attack was, thousands perhaps tens of thousands, survived because General
Sassotian had moored so close to shore… Don’t you smell it?” he asked, glancing
at Xinemus. “The dust… like bitter chalk. We stand at the edge of the Great
Carathay.” The Captain turned to
Achamian, held his gaze with firm brown eyes. “No one survived.” Achamian stiffened,
struck by what was now an old fear. Despite the desert air, a clamminess crept
over his skin. “The Holy War survived,” he said. The Captain frowned, as
though put off by something in Achamian’s tone. He opened his mouth in retort,
but then paused, his eyes suddenly thoughtful. “You fear you’ve lost
someone as well.” He glanced yet again at Xinemus. “No,” Achamian said. She’s alive! Kellhus has saved her! Meьmaras sighed, looked
away in pity and embarrassment. “I wish you luck,” he said to the lapping
waters. “I truly do. But this Holy War…” He fell into cryptic silence. “What about the Holy
War?” Achamian asked. “I’m an old sailor. I’ve
seen enough voyages blown off course, enough vessels founder, to know the God
gives no guarantees, no matter who the captain or what the cargo.” He looked
back to Achamian. “There’s only one thing certain about this Holy War: there’s
never been a greater bloodletting.” Achamian knew different,
but refrained from saying as much. He resumed his study of the obliterated
fleet, suddenly resenting the Captain’s company. “Why would you say that?”
Xinemus asked. As always when he spoke, he turned his face from side to side.
For some reason, Achamian found the sight of this increasingly difficult to
bear. “What have you heard?” Meьmaras shrugged.
“Craziness, for the most part. There’s talk of hemoplexy, of disastrous
defeats, of the Padirajah marshalling all his remaining strength.” Caraskand “Pfah,” Xinemus spat with
uncharacteristic bitterness. “Everyone knows as much.“ Achamian now heard dread
in Xinemus’s every word. It was as though something horrific loomed in the
blackness, something he feared might recognize the sound of his voice. As the
weeks passed it was becoming more and more apparent: the Scarlet Spires had
taken more than his eyes; they had taken the light and devilry that had once
filled them as well. With the Cants of Compulsion, Iyokus had moved Xinemus’s
soul in perverse ways, had forced him to betray both dignity and love. Achamian
had tried to explain that it wasn’t he who’d
thought those thoughts, who’d uttered those words, but it didn’t matter. As
Kellhus said, men couldn’t see what moved them. The frailties Xinemus had
witnessed were his frailties. Confronted by the true dimensions of wickedness,
he’d held his own infirmity accountable. “And then,” the Captain
continued, apparently untroubled by Xinemus’s cholic, “there’s the stories of
the new prophet.” Achamian jerked his head
about so fast he wrenched his neck. “What about him?” he asked carefully. “Who
told you this?” It simply had to be Kellhus. And if Kellhus survived… Please, Esmi. Please be safe! “The carrack we exchanged
berths with in Iothiah,” Meьmaras said. “Her captain had just returned from
Joktha. He said the Men of the Tusk are turning to someone called Kelah, a
miracle worker who can wring water from desert sand.” Achamian found his hand
pressed against his chest. His heart hammered. “Akka?” Xinemus murmured. “It’s him, Zin… It has to
be him.” “You know him?” Meьmaras
asked with an incredulous grin. Gossip was a kind of gold among seamen. But Achamian couldn’t
speak. He clung to the wooden rail instead, battling a sudden, queerly euphoric
dizziness. Esmenet was alive. She lives! But his relief, he
realized, went even deeper… His heart leapt at the thought of Kellhus as well. “Easy!” the Captain
cried, seizing Achamian by the shoulders. Achamian stared at the
man dully. He’d nearly swooned… Kellhus. What was it the
man stirred within him? To be more than what he was? But who, if not a
sorcerer, knew the taste of those things that transcended men? If sorcerers
sneered at men of faith, they did so because faith had rendered them pariahs,
and because faith, it seemed to them, knew nothing of the very transcendence it
claimed to monopolize. Why submit when one could yoke? “Here,” Meьmaras was
saying. “Sit for a moment.” Achamian fended away the
man’s fatherly hands. “I’m okay,” he gasped. Esmenet and Kellhus. They
lived! The woman who could save his heart, and the man who could save the
world… He felt different,
stronger hands brace his shoulders. Xinemus. “Leave him be,” he heard
the Marshal saying. “This voyage has been but a fraction of our journey.” “Zin!” he exclaimed. He
wanted to chortle, but the pang in his throat forbade it. The Captain retreated,
whether out of compassion or embarrassment, Achamian would never know. “She lives,” Xinemus
said. “Think of her joy!” For some reason, these
words struck the breath from him. That Xinemus, who suffered more than he could
imagine, had set aside his hurt to… His hurt. Achamian
swallowed, tried to squeeze away an image of Iyokus, his red’irised eyes slack
with indolent regret. He reached out, clutched
his friend’s hand. They squeezed, each according to his desperation. “There will be fire when
I return, Zin.” He swept his dry eyes
across the wrecked warships of the Imperial Fleet. Suddenly they looked more a
transition and less an end—like the carapaces of monstrous beetles. The red-throated gulls
kept jealous watch. “Fire,” he said. HApTER Twenty-two Caraskand For all things there is a toll. We pay in breaths, and our
purse is soon empty. —SONGS 57:3, THE CHRONICLE
OF THE TUSK Like many old tyrants, I dote upon my grandchildren. I delight in their
tantrums, their squealing laughter, their peculiar fancies. 1 wilfully spoil
them with honey sticks. And I find myself wondering at their blessed ignorance
of the world and its million grinning teeth. Should 1, like my grandfather,
knock such childishness from them? Or should I indulge their delusions? Even now, as death’s shadowy pickets gather about me, I ask, Why should innocence answer to the world? Perhaps
the world should answer to innocence… Yes, I rather like that. I tire of bearing the blame. —STAJANAS II, RUMINATIONS Winter, 4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, Caraskand The following morning a
pall of smoke lay over Caraskand. The city quilted the distance, pocked here
and there by great, gutted structures. The dead lay everywhere, piled beneath
smoking tabernacles, sprawled through sacked palaces, scattered across the
reaches of Caraskand’s famed bazaars. Cats lapped blood from the grouting. Crows
pecked at sightless eyes. The Third March A single horn echoed
mournfully across the rooftops. Still groggy from the previous day’s debauch,
the Men of the Tusk stirred, anticipating a day of repentance and sombre
celebration. But from various quarters of the city more horns blared out,
sounding the call to arms. Iron-mailed knights clacked down streets, crying out
frantic alarums. Those who climbed the
southern walls saw divisions of many-coloured horsemen spilling across ridge
lines and down sparsely wooded hills. At long last, Kascamandri I, the
Padirajah of Kian, had taken the field against the Inrithi. The Great Names
desperately tried to muster their thanes and barons, but with their men
scattered throughout the city, it was hopeless. Gothyelk, still distraught over
the loss of his youngest, Gurnyau, couldn’t be roused, and the Tydonni refused
to leave the city without the beloved Earl of Agansanor. With the recent death
of Prince Skaiyelt, the long-haired Thunyeri had disintegrated into clannish mobs,
and, unaccountably, had renewed their bloody sack of the city. And the Ainoni
Palatines, with Chepheramunni on his death bed, had fallen to feuding amongst
themselves. The horns called and called, but far too few answered. The Fanim horsemen
descended so quickly that most of the Holy War’s siege camps had to be
abandoned, along with the war engines and the food supplies amassed within
them. Retreating knights set several of the camps ablaze to prevent them from
falling into the heathen’s hands. Hundreds of those too sick to flee the camps
were left to be massacred. Those bands of Inrithi knights who dared contest the
Padirajah’s advance were quickly thrown back or overrun, encompassed by waves
of ululating horsemen. By mid-morning the Great Names frantically recalled
those remaining outside Caraskand and bent themselves to defending the vast
circuit of the city’s walls. Celebration had turned to
terror and disbelief. They were imprisoned in a city that had already been
besieged for weeks. The Great Names ordered hasty surveys of the remaining food
stores. They despaired after learning that Imbeyan had burned the city’s
granaries when he realized he’d lost Caraskand. And of course, the vast
storerooms of the city’s final redoubt, the Citadel of the Dog, had been
destroyed by the Scarlet Spires. The broken fortress burned still, a beacon on
Caraskand’s easternmost hill. Caraskand Seated upon a lavish
settee, surrounded by his counsellors and his many children, Kascamandri ab
Tepherokar watched from the terrace of a hillside villa as the great horns of
his army inexorably closed about Caraskand. Propped against his whale-like
belly, his lovely girls peppered him with questions about what happened. For
months he’d followed the Holy War from the fleshpot sanctuaries of the Korasha,
the exalted White-Sun Palace in Nenciphon. He’d trusted the sagacity and
warlike temper of his subordinates. And he’d scorned the idolatrous Inrithi,
thinking them barbarous and hapless in the ways of war. No longer. To redress his negligence,
he’d raised a host worthy of his jihadic fathers: the survivors of Anwurat,
some sixty thousand strong, under the peerless Cinganjehoi, who had set aside
his enmity to his Padirajah; the Grandees of Chianadyni, the Kianene homeland,
with some forty thousand horsemen under Kascamandri’s own ruthless and
brilliant son, Fanayal; and Kascamandri’s old tributary, King Pilasakanda of
Girgash, whose vassal Hetmen marched with thirty thousand black-skinned Fanim
and one hundred mastodons from pagan Nilnamesh. These last, in particular,
caused the Padirajah to take pride, for the lumbering beasts made his daughters
gape and giggle. As evening fell, the
Padirajah ordered an assault on Caraskand’s walls, hoping to use the disarray
of the idolaters to his advantage. Ladders made by Inrithi carpenters were
drawn up, as well as the single siege tower they’d captured intact, and there
was fierce fighting along the walls around the Ivory Gates. The mastodons were
yoked to a mighty iron-headed ram made by the Men of the Tusk, and soon
drumming thunder and elephant screams could be heard above the roar of battling
men. But the iron men refused to yield the heights, and the Kianene and
Girgashi suffered horrendous losses—including some fourteen mastodons, burned
alive by flaming pitch. Kascamandri’s youngest daughter, beautiful Sirol, wept. When the sun finally set,
the Men of the Tusk greeted the darkness with both relief and horror. For they
were saved and they were doomed. ihird march The deep, staccato
thunder of drums. With Cnaьir standing
behind him, Proyas leaned against a limestone battlement on the summit of the
Gate of Horns, peering through an embrasure at the muddy plains below. Kianene
teemed across the landscape, dragging Inrithi wares and shelters to immense bonfires,
pitching bright pavilions, reinforcing palisades and earthworks. Bands of
silver-helmed horsemen patrolled the ridge lines, galloped through orchards or
across fields between byres. The Inrithi had chosen
the same plains to launch their assaults: the burned hulk of a siege tower
stood no more than a stone’s throw from where Proyas had positioned himself. He
squeezed shut his burning eyes. This
can’t be happening! Not this! First the euphoria—the
rapture!—of Caraskand’s fall. Then the Padirajah, who’d for so long been little
more than a rumour of terrible power to the south, had materialized in the
hills above the city. At first Proyas could only think that someone had made a
catastrophic mistake, that everything would resolve itself once the chaos of
the city’s ransacking passed. Those silk-cowled divisions couldn’t be Kianene
horsemen… The heathen had been mortally wounded at Anwurat—undone! The Holy War
had taken mighty Caraskand, the great gate of Xerash and Amoteu, and now stood
poised to march into the Sacred Lands! They were so close … So close that Shimeh, he
was certain, could see Caraskand’s smoke on the horizon. But the horsemen had been Kianene. Riding beneath the White Padirajic
Lion, they streamed about the great circuit of the city’s walls, burning the
impoverished Inrithi camps, slaughtering the sick, and riding down those
foolish enough to resist their advance. Kascamandri had come; both the God—and
hope—had forsaken them. “How many do you
estimate?” Proyas asked the Scylvendi, who stood, his scarred arms folded
across his scale harness. “Does it matter?” the barbarian replied. Unnerved by the man’s
turquoise gaze, Proyas turned back to the smoke-grey vista. Yesterday, while
the dimensions of the disaster slowly unfolded, he’d found himself asking why
over and over again. Like a wronged child, his thoughts had stamped about the
fact of his piety. Who among the Great Names had toiled as he’d toiled? Who’d
burned Caraskand more sacrifices, intoned
more prayers? But now he no longer dared ask these questions. Thoughts of Achamian and
Xinemus had seen to that. “It is you,” the Marshal of Attrempus had said, “who surrender every‘ thing…“ But in the God’s name!
For the God’s glory! “Of course it matters,”
Proyas hissed. He knew the Scylvendi would bristle at his tone, but he neither
worried nor cared. “We must find some way out!“ “Exactly,” Cnaьir said,
apparently unperturbed. “We must find some way out… No matter how large the
Padirajah’s host.” Scowling, Proyas turned
back to the embrasure. He was in no mood to be corrected. “What of Conphas?” he
asked. “Is there any chance he lies about the food?” The barbarian shrugged
his massive shoulders. “The Nansur are good counters.” “And they’re good liars
as well!” Proyas exclaimed. Why couldn’t the man just answer his questions? “Do
you think Conphas tells the truth?” Cnaьir spat across the
ancient stonework. “We’ll have to wait… See if he stays fat while we grow
thin.” Curse the man! How could he bait him at such a time, in such
straits? “You are besieged,” the
Scylvendi warrior continued, “within the very city you have spent weeks
starving. Even if Conphas does hoard food, it would not be of consequence. You
have only one alternative, and one alternative only. The Scarlet Spires must be
roused, now, before the Padirajah can assemble his Cishaurim. The Holy War must
take to the field.” “You think I disagree?”
Proyas cried. “I’ve already petitioned Eleazaras—and do you know what he says?
He says, ‘The Scarlet Spires have already suffered too many needless losses…’
Needless losses! What? Some dozen or so dead at Anwurat—if that! A handful more
in the desert—not bad compared to a hundred thousand faithful souls lost! And what? Five or so struck by Chorae
yesterday—heaven forfend! Killed while destroying the only remaining stores of
food in Caraskand… All wars should be so bloodless!” Ihe Third March Proyas paused, realized
he was panting. He felt crazed and confused, as though he suffered some residue
of the fevers. The great, age-worn stones of the barbican seemed to wheel about
him. If only, he thought madly, Triamis had built these walls with bread! The Scylvendi watched him
without passion. “Then you are doomed,” he said. Proyas raised his hands
to his face, scratched his cheeks. It can’t be!
Something… I’m missing
something! “We’re cursed,” he
murmured. “They’re right… The God does punish us!” “What are you saying?” “That maybe Conphas and
the others are right about him!” The brutal face hardened into a scowl. “Him?” “Kellhus,” Proyas
exclaimed. He clutched trembling hands, ground one palm against the other. I falter… 1 fail! Proyas had read many
accounts of other men floundering in times of crisis, and absurdly, he realized
that this—this!—was his moment of weakness. But contrary
to his expectation, there was no strength to be drawn from this knowledge. If
anything, knowing he faltered threatened to hasten his collapse. He was too
sick… Too tired. “They rail against him,”
he explained, his voice raw. “First Conphas, but now even Gothyelk and Gotian.”
Proyas released a shuddering breath. “They claim he’s a False Prophet.” “This is no rumour?
They’ve told you this themselves?” Proyas nodded. “With my support, they think
they can openly move against him.” “You would risk a war within these walls? Inrithi against Inrithi?” Proyas
swallowed, struggled to shore up his gaze. “If that’s what the God demands of
me.” “And how does one know
what your God demands?” Proyas stared at the Scylvendi in horror. “I just…” A pang welled
against the back of his throat. Hot tears flooded across his cheek. He inwardly
cursed, opened his mouth again, sobbed instead of spoke… Please God! Caraskand It had been too long. The
burden had been too great. Everything! Every day, every word a battle! And the
sacrifices—they had cut too deep. The desert, even the hemoplexy, had been
nothing. But Achamian—ah, that was something! And Xinemus, whom he’d abandoned.
The two men he respected most in the world, given up in the name of Holy War…
And still it wasn’t enough! Nothing… Never good enough! “Tell me, Cnaьir,” he
croaked. A strange tooth-baring smile seized his face, and he sobbed again. He
covered his eyes and cheeks with his hands, crumpled against the parapet.
“Please!” he cried to the stone. “Cnaьir… You must tell me what to do!” Now it was the Scylvendi
who looked horrified. “Go to Kellhus,” the
barbarian said. “But I warn you”—he raised a mighty, battle-scarred
fist—“secure your heart. Seal it tight!” He lowered his chin and glared, the
way a wolf might… “Go, Proyas. Go ask the
man yourself.” Like something carved out
of living rock, the bed rose from a black dais set in the chamber’s heart. The
veils, which usually trailed between the bed’s five stone posts, had been
pinned to the emerald and gold canopy. Lying with one leg kicked free of the
sheets, Kellhus stroked Esmenet’s cheek, saw past her flushed skin, beyond her
beating heart, following the telltale markers all the way to her womb. Our blood, Father… In a world of maladroit and bovine souls, nothing
could be more precious. The House of
Anasurimbor. The Dunyain not only saw
deep, they saw far. Even if the Holy War survived Caraskand, even if Shimeh was
reconquered, the wars were only beginning… Achamian had taught him that much. And in the end, only sons
could conquer death. Was this why you summoned me? Do you
die? “What is it?” Esmenet
asked, drawing sheets up to her breast. Kellhus had jerked
forward, sitting cross-legged upon the bed. He peered across the candle-lit
gloom, tracking the muffled sounds of some commotion beyond the doors. What does he— The Third March Caraskand Without warning, the
double doors burst open, and Kellhus saw] Proyas, still weak from his
convalescence, struggling with two of the Hundred Pillars. “Kellhus!” the Conriyan
Prince barked. “Tell your dogs to kennel, or by the God there’ll be blood!” At a word, the bodyguards
released him, assumed positions at either side of the door. The man stood, his
chest heaving, his eyes searching through the shadows of the lavish bedchamber.
Kellhus encircled him with his senses… The man shouted desperation from every
pore, but the wildness of his passion made the specifics difficult to
ascertain. He feared the Holy War was lost, as did all men, and that Kellhus
was somehow to blame—as did many. He needs to know what I am. “What happens, Proyas?
What ails you, that you’d commit such an outrage?” But the Prince’s eyes had
found Esmenet, rigid with shock. Kellhus instantly saw the peril. He searches for excuses. An interior porch had
been raised about the doors; Proyas took an unsteady step toward the railing.
“What’s she doing?” He blinked in confusion. “Why’s she in your bed?” He doesn’t want to understand. “She’s my wife… What
business—” “Wife?” Proyas exclaimed.
He raised a half-opened hand to his brow. “She’s your wife?” He’s heard the stories… But all this time he’s afforded me his doubt. “The desert, Proyas. The
desert marked us all.” He shook his head. “Fie
on the desert,” he murmured, then looked up in sudden fury. “Fie on the desert!
She’s… She’s… Akka loved her! Akka! Don’t you recall ? Your friend …” Kellhus lowered his eyes
in penitent sadness. “We thought he would want this.” “Want? Want his best
friend fucking the wo—” “Who,” Esmenet spat, “are
you to speak of Akka to me!” “What do you say?” Proyas
said, blanching. “What do you mean?” His lips pursed; his eyes slackened. His
right hand fell to his chest. Horror had opened a still
point in the throng of his passions—an opportunity… “But you already know,”
Kellhus said. “Of all people, you’ve no right to judge.“ The Conriyan Prince
flinched. “What do you mean?” Now… Offer him truce. Show him
understanding. Make stark his tres‘ passes… “Please,” Kellhus said,
reaching out with word, tone, and every nuance of expression. “You let your
despair rule you… And me, I succumb to ill manners. Proyas! You’re among my
dearest friends…” He cast aside the sheets, swung his feet to the floor. “Come,
let us drink and talk.” But Proyas had fastened
on his earlier comment—as Kellhus had intended. “I would know why I’ve no right
to judge. What’s that supposed to mean, ‘dear friend’?” Kellhus drew his lips
into a pained line. “It means that you,
Proyas, not we, have betrayed Achamian.” The handsome face
slackened in horror. His pulse drummed. I must move
carefully. “No,” Proyas said. Kellhus closed his eyes
as though in disappointment. “Yes. You accuse us because you hold yourself
accountable.” “Accountable? Accountable
for what?” He snorted like a frightened adolescent. “I did nothing.” “But you did everything,
Proyas. You needed the Scarlet Spires, and the Scarlet Spires needed Achamian.”
; “No one knows what happened to Achamian!” “But you know… I can see this knowledge within you.” The
Conriyan Prince stumbled backward. “You see nothing!” So close… “Of course I do, Proyas.
How, after all this time, could you still doubt?” But as he watched,
something happened: an unforeseen flare of recognition, a cascade of
inferences, too quick to silence. That word… “Doubt?” Proyas fairly
cried. “How could I not doubt? The Holy War stands upon the precipice,
Kellhus!“ Kellhus smiled the way
Xinemus had once smiled at things both touching and foolish. The Third March “The God tries us, Proyas. He’s yet to pass sentence! Tell me, how
can there be trial without doubt?” “He tries us…” Proyas
repeated, his face blank. “Of course,?‘ Kellhus said plaintively. ”Simply open your heart
and you’ll see!“ “Open my…” Proyas
trailed, his eyes brimming with incredulous dread. “He told me!” he abruptly
whispered. “This is what he meant!” The yearning in his look, the ache that had
warred against his misgivings, suddenly collapsed into suspicion and disbelief. Someone has warned him… The Scylvendi? Has
he wandered so far? “Proyas…” I should have killed him. “And how about you, Kellhus?” Proyas spat. “Do you doubt? Does the great
Warrior’Prophet fear for the future?” Kellhus looked to
Esmenet, saw that she wept. He reached out and clasped her cold hands. “No,” he said. I do not fear. Proyas was already
backing out the double doors, into the brighter light of the antechamber. “You
will.” For over a thousand years
Caraskand’s great limestone walls had stared across the broken countryside of
Enathpaneah. When Triamis I, perhaps the greatest of the Aspect-Emperors, had
raised them, his detractors in Imperial Cenei had scoffed at the expenditure,
claiming that he who conquers all foes has no need of walls. Triamis, the
chroniclers write, had dismissed them by saying, “No man can conquer the
future.” And indeed, over the ensuing centuries Caraskand’s “Triamic Walls,” as
they were called, would blunt the rush of history many times, if not redirect
it altogether. And sometimes, they would cage it. Day after day, it seemed,
Inrithi horns blared from the high towers, calling the Men of the Tusk to the
ramparts, for the Padirajah threw his people at Triamis’s mighty fortifications
with reckless fury, each time convinced the strength of the starving idolaters
would fail. Haggard Caraskand and hungry, Galeoth,
Conriyans, and Tydonni manned the war engines abandoned by Caraskand’s
erstwhile defenders, casting pots of flaming pitch from mangonels, great iron
bolts from ballistae. Thunyeri, Nansur, and Ainoni gathered on the walls,
crowding beneath the battlements and huddling beneath shields to avoid volleys
of arrows that at times darkened the sun. And day after day, it seemed, they
beat the heathen back. Even as they cursed them,
the Kianene could only marvel at their desperate fury. Twice young Athjeari led
daring sorties across the rutted plain, once seizing the sappers’ trenches and
collapsing their tunnels, once charging over slovenly earthworks and sacking an
isolated encampment. All the world could see they were doomed, and yet they
fought as though they knew it not. But they knew—as only men
stalked by famine could know. The hemoplexy, or the
hollows, was running its course. Many, such as Chepheramunni, the King-Regent
of High Ainon, lingered on death’s marches, while others, such as Zursodda,
Palatine-Governor of Koraphea, or Cynnea, Earl of Agmundr, finally succumbed.
The funeral pyres still burned, but more and more they took casualties, and not
the sick, as their fuel. As the flames consumed the Earl of Agmundr, his famed
longbow-men launched burning arrows over the walls, and the Kianene wondered at
the madness of the idolaters. Cynnea would be among the last of the great
Inrithi lords to perish in the grip of the Disease. But even as the plague
waned, the threat of starvation waxed. Dread Famine, Bukris, the God who
devoured men and vomited up skin and bones, walked the streets and halls of
Caraskand. Throughout the city, men
began hunting cats, dogs, and finally even rats for sustenance. Poorer
caste-nobles had taken to opening veins in their mounts. The horses themselves
quickly consumed what thatched roofs could be found. Many bands began holding
lotteries to see who would butcher their horse. Those without horses scratched
through the dirt, looking for tubers. They boiled grapevines and even thistles
to quiet the nagging madness of their bellies. Leather—from saddles, jerkins, or
elsewhere—was also boiled and consumed. When the horns sounded the harnesses of
many would swing like skirts, having lost their straps and buckles to some
steaming pot. Gaunt men roamed the streets, looking for ihe Ihird March anything to eat, their
faces blank, their movements sluggish, as though they walked through sand.
Rumours circulated of men feasting on the bloated corpses of the Kianene, or
committing murder in the dead of night to quiet their mad hunger. In the wake of Famine,
foul Disease returned, preying on the weak. Men, particularly among the
caste-menials, began losing teeth to scurvy. Dysentery punished others with
cramps and bloody diarrhea. In many quarters, one could find warriors wandering
without their breeches, wallowing, as some are wont to do, in their
degradation. During this time, the
furor surrounding Kellhus, Prince of Atrithau, and the tensions between those
who acclaimed him and those who condemned him, escalated. In Council, Conphas,
Gothyelk, and even Gotian relentlessly denounced him, claiming he was a False
Prophet, a cancer that must be excised from the Holy War. Who could doubt the
God punished them? The Holy War, they insisted, could have only one Prophet,
and his name was Inri Sejenus. Proyas, who’d once eloquently defended Kellhus,
withdrew from all such debates, and refused to say anything. Only Saubon still
spoke in his favour, though he did so halfheartedly, not wishing to alienate
those whose approval he needed to secure his claim to Caraskand. Despite this, none dared
move against the so-called Warrior-Prophet. His followers, the Zaudunyani,
numbered in the tens of thousands, though they were less numerous among the
upper castes. Many still remembered the Miracle of Water in the desert, how
Kellhus had saved the Holy War, including those miscreants who now called him
anathema. Strife and riot broke out, and for the first time Inrithi swords shed
Inrithi blood. Knights repudiated their lords. Brothers forsook brothers.
Countrymen turned upon one another. Only Gotian and Conphas, it seemed, were
able to command the loyalty of their men. Nevertheless, when the
horns sounded, the Inrithi forgot their differences. They roused themselves
from the torpor of disease and sickness, and they battled with a fervour only
those truly wracked by the God could know. And to the heathens who assailed
them, it seemed dead men defended the walls. Safe about their fires, the
Kianene whispered tales of wights and damned souls, of a Holy War that had
already perished, but fought on, such was its hate. Caraskand Caraskand, it seemed,
named not a city, but misery’s own precinct. Her very walls—walls raised by
Triamis the Great—seemed to groan. The luxury of the place
reminded Serwe of her indolent days as a concubine in House Gaunum. Through the
open colonnade on the far side of the room she could see Caraskand wander
across the hills beneath the sky. She was reclined on a green couch, her arms
drawn out of her gown’s shoulders so that it hung from the gorgeous sash about
her waist. Her pink son squirmed against her naked chest, and she had just
begun feeding when she heard the latch drawn. She had expected it to be one of
the Kianene house slaves, so she gasped in surprise and delight when she felt
the Warrior-Prophet’s hand about her bare neck. The other brushed her bare
breast as he reached to draw a gentle finger along the infant’s chubby back. “What are you doing here
?” she asked, as she raised her lips through his beard to give him a kiss. “Much happens,” he said
gently. “I wanted to know you were safe… Where’s Esmi?“ It always seemed so
strange to hear him ask such simple questions. It reminded her that the God was
still a man. “Kellhus,” she asked pensively, “what’s your father’s name?” “Moenghus.” Serwe furrowed her brow.
“I thought his name was… Aethel, or something like that.” “Aethelarius,” the
Warrior-Prophet said. “In Atrithau, Kings take a great ancestor’s name when
they ascend the throne. Moenghus is his true name.“ “Then,” she said, running
fingers over the fuzz of the infant’s pale scalp, “that’s what his name will be
when he’s anointed: Moenghus.” This wasn’t an assertion. In the
Warrior-Prophet’s presence all declarations became questions. Kellhus grinned. “That’s
what we shall name our child.” “What kind of man is your
father, my Prophet?” “A most mysteriouSjone,
Serwe.” Serwe laughed softly.
“Does he know that he fathered the voice of the God?“ I he Ihird March Kellhus pursed his lips
in mock concentration. “Perhaps.” Serwe, who’d grown accustomed to cryptic
conversations such as thь smiled. She blinked at the tears in her eyes. With
her child warm agai her breast, and the breath of the Prophet warmer still
across her neck, thi World seemed a closed circle, as though woe had been
exiled from joy a long last. No longer taxed by cruel and distant things, the
hearth no‘ answered to the heart. A sudden pang of guilt
struck her. “I know that you grieve,” she said “So many suffer…” He lowered his face. Said
nothing. “But I’ve never been so
happy,” she continued. “So whole… Is that sin? To find rapture where others
suffer?” “Not for you, Serwe. Not
for you.” Serwe gasped and looked
down at her suckling babe. “Moenghus is hungry,” she
laughed. Glad to have concluded
their long search, Rash and Wrigga paused along the crest of the wall. Dropping
his shield, Rash sat with his back to the parapet, while Wrigga stood, leaning
against the stonework, staring through an embrasure at the fires of the enemy
across the Tertae Plain. Neither man paid heed to the shadowy figure crouched
beneath the battlements farther down. “I saw the child,” Wrigga
said, still staring into the dark. “Did you?” Rash asked
with genuine interest. “Where?” “Before the lower gates
of the Fama Palace. The Anointing was public… You didn’t know, did you?” “Because no one tells me
anything!” Wrigga resumed his
scrutiny of the night. “Surprisingly dark, I thought.” “What?” “The child. The child
seemed so dark.” Rash snorted. “Birth
hair… It’ll soon fall out. I swear my second daughter had sideburns!” Friendly laughter.
“Someday, when all this is over, I’ll come and woo your hairy daughters.” “Please… Start with my
hairy wife!” Caraskand More laughter, choked by
a sudden realization. “Oh ho! So that’s how you got your nickname!” “Saucy bastard!” Rash
cried. “No, my skin’s just—” “The child’s name,” a
voice grated from the darkness. “What is it?” Both men started, turned
to the towering spectre of the Scylvendi. They’d seen the man before—few Men of
the Tusk hadn’t—but neither had ever found themselves so close to the
barbarian. Even in moonlight, his aspect was unnerving. The wild black hair.
The fuming brow above eyes like chips of ice. The powerful shoulders, faintly
stooped, as though bent by the preternatural strength of his back. The lean,
adolescent waist. And the arms, thatched by scars both ritual and incidental,
strapped by unfatted muscle. He seemed a thing of stone, ancient and famished. “Wh-what’s this?” Rash
stammered. “The name!” Cnaьir
snarled. “What did they name it?” “Moenghus!” Wrigga
blurted. “They anointed him by the name, Moenghus…” The air of menace
suddenly vanished. The barbarian became curiously blank, motionless to the
point where he seemed inanimate. His manic eyes looked through them, to places
far and forbidding. A taut moment passed,
then without a word, the Scylvendi turned and walked into the darkness. Sighing, the two men
looked to each other for what seemed a long time, then just to be certain, they
resumed their fabricated conversation. As they’d been
instructed. Some other way, Father. There must be. No one came to the
Citadel of the Dog, not even the most desperate of the rat eaters. Standing high upon the
crest of a ruined wall, Kellhus gazed across the dark expanse of Caraskand with
her thousand points of smouldering light. Beyond the walls, particularly across
the plains to the north, he could see the innumerable fires of the Padirajah’s
army. The path, Father… Where’s the path? No matter how many times
he submitted to the rigours of the Probability Trance, all the lines were
extinguished, either by disaster or by The Third March the weight of excessive
permutations. The variables were too many, the possibilities too precipitous. Over the past weeks he’d
exerted whatever influence he’d possessed, hoping to circumvent what now seemed
more and more inevitable. Of the Great Names, only Saubon still openly
supported him. Though Proyas had so far refused to join Conphas’s coalition of
caste-nobles, the Conriyan Prince continued to rebuff Kellhus’s every overture.
Among the lesser Men of the Tusk, the divisions between the Zaudunyani and the
Orthodox, as they were now calling themselves, were deepening. And the threat
of further, more determined attacks by the Consult made it impossible for him
to move freely among them—as he must to secure those he already possessed and
to conquer those he did not. Meanwhile, the Holy War
died. You told me mine was the Shortest Path … He’d relived his brief
encounter with the Cishaurim messenger a thousand times, analyzing, evaluating,
weighing alternate interpretations—all for naught. Every step was darkness now,
no matter what his father said. Every word was risk. In so many ways, it
seemed, he was no different from these world-born men… What is the Thousandfold Thought? He heard the rattle of
rock against rock, then a small cascade of gravel and grit. He peered through
the shadows amassed about the ruin’s roots. The blasted walls formed a roofless
labyrinth beyond the Nail of Heaven’s pale reach. A darker shadow clambered
across heaped debris. He glimpsed a round face in starlight… He called down. “Esmenet?
How did you find me?” Her grin was pure
mischief, though Kellhus could see the concern beneath. She’s never loved another as she loves
me. Not even Achamian. “Werjau told me,” she
said, picking her way up and along the truncated wall. “Ah, yes,” Kellhus said,
understanding immediately. “He fears women.” Esmenet wobbled for a
moment, threw out her arms. She caught herself, but not before Kellhus found
himself puzzled by a sudden shortness of breath. The fall would have been fatal. Caraskand “No…” She concentrated
for a moment, her tongue between her lips. Then she danced up the remaining
length. “He fears me!” She threw herself into his arms, laughing. They held
each other tight on the dark and windy heights, surrounded by a city
and a world—by Caraskand and the Three Seas. She knows…She knows I struggle. “We all fear you,”
Kellhus said, wondering at the clamminess of his skin. She comes to comfort. “You tell such delicious
lies,” she murmured, raising her lips to his. They arrived shortly
after dusk, the nine Nascenti, the senior disciples of the Warrior-Prophet. A
grand teak-and-mahogany table, no higher than their knees, had been pulled onto
the terrace of the merchant palace Kellhus had taken as their base and refuge
in Caraskand. Standing unnoticed in the shadows of the garden, Esmenet watched
them as they knelt or sat cross-legged upon the cushions set about the table.
These days worry lined the faces of most everyone, but the nine of them seemed
particularly upset. The Nascenti spent their time in the city, organizing the
Zaudunyani, consecrating new Judges, and laying the foundation of the
Ministrate. They knew better than most, she imagined, the straits of the Holy
War. Raised about the northern
face of the Heights of the Bull, the terrace overlooked a greater part of the
city. The labyrinthine streets and byways of the Bowl, which formed the heart
of Caraskand, ascended into the distance, hanging from the surrounding heights
like a cloth draped between five stumps. The ruined shell of the Citadel reared
to the east, the wandering lines of her blasted walls etched in moonlight. To
the northwest, the Sapatishah’s Palace sprawled across the Kneeling Heights,
which were low enough to afford glimpses of lamp-lit figures over rose marble
walls. The night sky was rutted by black clouds, but the Nail of Heaven was
clear, brilliant, sparkling from the dark depths of the firmament. A sudden hush fell across
the Nascenti; as one they lowered their chins to their breast. Turning, Esmenet
saw Kellhus stride from the The Third March L^araskana golden interior of the
adjacent apartments. He cast a fan of shadows before him as he walked past a
row of flaming braziers. Two bare-chested Kianene boys flanked him, bearing
censers that boiled with steely blue smoke. Serwe followed in his train, along
with several men in hauberks and battle helms. Esmenet cursed herself
for catching her breath. How could he make her heart pound so? Glancing down,
she realized she’d folded her right hand over the tattoo marring the back of
her left. Those days are over. She stepped from the
garden and greeted him at the head of the table. He smiled, and holding the
fingers of her left hand, seated her to his immediate right. His white silk
robe swayed in the breeze that touched them all, and for some reason, the Twin
Scimitars embroidered about its hems and cuffs did not seem incongruous in the
least. Someone, Serwe likely, had knotted his hair into a Galeoth war braid.
His beard, which he now wore plaited and square-cut like the Ainoni, gleamed
bronze in the light of nearby braziers. As always, the long pommel of his sword
jutted high over his left shoulder. Enshoiya, the Zaudunyani now called it:
Certainty. His eyes twinkled beneath
heavy brows. When he smiled, nets of wrinkles flexed about the corners of his
eyes and mouth—a gift of the desert sun. “You,” he said, “are
branches of me.” His voice was deep and many-timbred, and somehow seemed to
speak from her breast. “Of all peoples only you know what comes before. Only
you, the Thanes of the Warrior-Prophet, know what moves you.” While he briefed the
Nascenti on those matters he and she had already discussed, Esmenet found
herself thinking about Xinemus’s camp, about the differences between those
gatherings and these. Mere months had passed, and yet it seemed she’d lived an
entire life in the interim. She frowned at the strangeness of it: Xinemus
holding court, calling out in mirth and mischief; Achamian squeezing her hand
too tightly, as he sometimes did, searching for her eyes too often; and Kellhus
with Serwe… still little more than a promise, though it seemed Esmenet had
loved him even then—secretly. For some strange reason,
she was overcome by a sudden yen to see the Marshal’s wry Captain, Bloody
Dench. She remembered her final glimpse of him, as he waited with
Zenkappa for Xinemus to rejoin them, his short-cropped hair silver in the
Shigeki sun. How black those days now seemed. How heartless and cruel. What had happened to
Dinchases? And Xinemus… Had he found Achamian? She suffered a moment of
gaping horror… Kellhus’s melodic voice retrieved her. “If anything should
happen,” he was saying, “you shall hearken to Esmenet as you hearken to
me…“ For I’m his vessel. The words triggered an
exchange of worried looks. Esmenet could read the sentiment well enough: what
could the Master mean, placing a woman before his Holy Thanes? Even after all
this time, they still struggled with the darkness of their origins. They had
not utterly embraced him, as she had… Old bigotries die hard, she thought with more than a
little resentment. “But Master,” Werjau, the boldest among them, said, “you
speak as though you might be taken from us!” A heartbeat passed before
she realized her mistake: what worried them was what his words implied, not the prospect of subordinating themselves to his Consort. Kellhus was silent for a
long moment. He looked gravely from face to face. “War is upon us,” he said
finally, “from both without and within.” Even though she and
Kellhus had already discussed the danger he spoke of, chills pimpled her skin.
Cries erupted around the table. Esmenet felt Serwe’s hands clasp about her own.
She turned to reassure the girl, only to realize that Serwe had reached to
reassure her. just listen, the girl’s beautiful eyes said.
The lunatic dimensions of Serwe’s belief had always baffled and troubled
Esmenet. The girl’s conviction was more than monu mental—it seemed continuous
with the ground, it was so immovable. She let me into her bed, Esmenet thought. For love of him. “Who assails us?”
Gayamakri was crying. “Conphas,” Werjau spat.
“Who else? He’s been working against u since Shigek…“ “Then we must strike!”
white-haired Kasaumki shouted. “The Hoi War must be cleansed before the siege
can be broken! Cleansed!” H1KD MARCH “Errant madness!”
Hilderuth barked. “We must negotiate… You must go to them, Master.” Kellhus silenced them
with little more than a look. It frightened her,
sometimes, the way he effortlessly commanded these men. But then it could be no
other way. Where others blundered from moment to moment, scarcely understanding
their own wants, hurts, or hopes, let alone those of others, Kellhus caught
each instant—each soul—like a fly. His world, Esmenet had realized, was one
without surfaces, one where everything—from word and expression to war and
nation—was smoky glass, something to be peered through… He was the
Warrior-Prophet… Truth. And Truth commanded all things. She quashed a sudden urge
to hug herself in joy and astonishment. She was here—here!—at the right hand of the most glorious soul to have
walked the world. To kiss Truth. To take Truth between her thighs, to feel him
press deep into her womb. It was more than a boon, more than a gift… “She smiles,” Werjau
exclaimed. “How can she smile at a time such as this?” Esmenet glanced at the
burly Galeoth, flushing in embarrassment. “Because,” Kellhus said indulgently,
“she sees what you cannot, Werjau.” But Esmenet wasn’t so
sure… She simply daydreamed, didn’t she? Werjau had simply caught her mooning
over Kellhus like an addled juvenile… But then, why did the
ground thrum so? And the stars… What did she
see? Something… Something without compare. Her skin tingled. The
Thanes of the Warrior-Prophet watched her, and she looked through their faces,
glimpsed their yearning hearts. To think! So many deluded souls, living
illusory lives in unreal worlds! So many! It both boggled her and broke her
heart. And at the same time, it
was her triumph. Something absolute. Her heart fluttered,
pinioned by Kellhus’s shining gaze. She felt at once smoke and naked
flesh—something seen through and something desired. Caraskand There’s more than me… More than this—yes! “Tell us, Esmi,” Kellhus
hissed through Senve’s mouth. “Tell us what you see!” There’s more than them. “We must take the knife to
them,” she said, speaking as she knew her Master would have her speak. “We must
show them the demons in their midst.“ So much more! The Warrior-Prophet
smiled with her own lips. “We must kill them,” her
voice said. The thing called
Sarcellus hurried through the dark streets toward the hill where the
Exalt-General and his Columns had quartered. The letter Conphas had sent was
simple: Come quickly. Danger
stalks us. The
man had neglected to sign the letter, but then he didn’t need to. His
meticulous handwriting was unmistakable. Sarcellus turned down a
narrow street that smelled of unwashed Men and animal grease. More derelict
Inrithi, he realized. As the Holy War starved, more and more Men of the Tusk
had turned to an animal existence, hunting rats, eating things that should not
be eaten, and begging… The starving wretches
came to their feet as he walked between them. They congregated about him,
holding out filthy palms, tugging at his sleeves. “Mercy…” they moaned and
muttered. “Merceeee.” Sarcellus thrust them back, made his way forward. He
struck several of the more insistent. Not that he begrudged them, for they’d
often proved useful when the hunger grew too great. No one missed beggars. Besides, they were apt
reminders of what Men were in truth. Pale hands reached from
looted silks. Piteous cries seethed through the gloom. Then, in the gravelly
voice of a drunkard, a rag-draped man before him said, “Truth shines.” “Excuse me?” Sarcellus
snapped, coming to a halt. He seized the speaker by
the shoulders, jerked his head up. Though bitten, the man’s face hadn’t been
battered into submission—far from it. His eyes looked hard as iron. This,
Sarcellus realized, was a man who battered. Ihe Ihird March “Truth,” the man said,
“does not die.” “What’s this?” Sarcellus
asked, releasing the warrior. “Robbery?” The iron-eyed man shook
his head. “Ah,” Sarcellus said,
suddenly understanding. “You belong to him What is it you call yourselves?” “Zaudunyani.” The man
smiled, and for a moment, it seemed the most terrifying smile Sarcellus had
ever witnessed: pale lips pressed into a thin, passionless line. Then Sarcellus remembered
the purpose of his fashioning. How could he forget what he was? His phallus
hardened against his breeches… “Slaves of the
Warrior-Prophet,” he said, sneering. “Tell me, do you know what I am?” “Dead,” someone said from
behind. Sarcellus laughed,
sweeping his gaze over the necks he would break. Oh, rapture! How he would
shoot hot across his thigh! He was certain of it! Yes! With so many! This time… But his humour vanished
when his look returned to the man with the iron eyes. The face beneath his face
twitched into a vestigial frown… They’re
not af— Something rained down
from above… Suddenly he found himself drenched. Oil! They’d doused him in oil!
He looked from side to side, blowing fluid from his lips, shaking it from his
fingertips. His would-be assassins, he saw, had been doused as well. “Fools!” he exclaimed.
“Burn me, and you burn too!” At the last instant, Sarcellus heard the bowstring
twang, the flaming arrow zip through the air. He jerked to the side. The shaft
struck the iron-eyed man. Flame leapt up his soiled robes, twined about his
cowl. But rather than fall, the
man lunged, his eyes fixed upon Sarcellus, his arms closing in an embrace. The shaft
snapped between them. Burning breast met burning breast. Flame consumed them both.
The thing called Sarcellus howled, shrieked with its entire face. It stared in
horror at the iron eyes, now wreathed in blazing fire… “Truth…” the man
whispered. Caraskand Ikurei Conphas. How like
a child he looked, his naked form half-twisted in sheets, his face tipped
gently back, as though he peered into some distant sky in his dreams. General
Martemus stood in the shadows, gazing down at the sleeping form of his Exalt-General,
silently rehearsing the command that had brought him here—knife in hand. “Tonight, Martemus, I will reach out my hand…” It was unlike any he’d ever been given. Martemus had spent most
of his life following commands, and though he’d unstintingly tried to execute
each and every one, even those that proved disastrous, their origins had always
haunted him. No matter how tormented or august the channels, the commands he
followed had always come from somewhere, from someplace within a beaten
and debauched world: peevish officers, spiteful apparati, vainglorious
generals… As a result, he had often thought that thought, so catastrophic for a
man who’d been
bred to serve: I am greater
than what 1 obey.
But the
command he followed this night… “Tonight, Martemus…” It came from nowhere
within the circle of this world. “I will
take a life.” To answer such a command,
he’d decided, was more than merely akin to worship—it was worship made flesh.
All meaningful things, it now seemed to him, were but forms of prayer. Lessons
of the Warrior-Prophet. Martemus raised the
silvery blade to a shaft of moonlight, and for a shining moment it seemed to fit Conphas’s throat. In his soul’s eye, he saw the
Imperial Heir dead, beautiful lips perched open in the memory of a final
breath, glassy eyes staring far, far into the Outside. He saw blood pooled in
folded linen sheets, like water between the petals of a lotus. The General
glanced about the luxurious bedchamber, at the dim frescoes prancing along the
walls, at the dark carpets swimming across the floor. Would it seem a simpler
place, he wondered, when they found his corpse in blooded sheets? Commands. Through them a
voice could become an army, a breath could become blood. Think of how long you’ve wanted this! U8 The Third March| Dread and exhilaration. You’re a practical man. Strike and be
done with it! Conphas groaned, shifted
like a naked virgin beneath the sheets. His eyes fluttered open. Stared at him
in dull incomprehension. Flickered to the accusatory knife. “Martemus?” the young man
gasped. “Truth,” the General
grated, striking downward. But there was a flash,
and though his arm continued arcing downward, his hand tumbled outward, the
knife slipping from nerveless fingers. Dumbstruck, he raised his arm, stared in
horror at the stump of his wrist. Blood spilled along the back of his forearm,
dribbled like piss from his elbow. He whirled to the
shadows, saw the glistening demon, its skin puckered by hell’fire, its face
impossibly extended, clawing the air like a crab… “Fucking Dunyain,” it
growled. Something passed through
Martemus’s neck. Something sharp… Martemus’s head bounced
from the side of the mattress into the shadows, a living expression still
flexing across its face. Too horrified to cry out, Conphas scrambled through
the tangled sheets, away from the figure th.. had killed his General. The form
backed into the blackness of a far corne: but for an instant Conphas glimpsed
something naked and nightmarish something impossible. “Who?” he cried. “Silence!” a familiar voice
hissed. “It’s me!” “Sarcellus?” The horror slackened
somewhat. But the bewilderment remained… Martemus dead? “This is a nightmare!”
Conphas exclaimed. “I still sleep!” “You don’t sleep, I assure you. Though you
came close to never awakening…” “What happens?” Conphas
cried. Despite hollow legs, he strode around the far mahogany post of his bed,
stood naked over the crumpled form of his General. The man still wore his field
uniform. “Martemus?” Uaraskand “Belonged to him,” the voice from the dark corner said. “Prince Kellhus,” Conphas
said in dawning recognition. Suddenly he understood all that he needed to know:
a battle had just been fought— and won. He grinned in relief—and wondrous
admiration. The man had used Martemus! Martemus! And here 1 thought I’d won the battle for
his soul! “I need a lantern,” he
snapped, recovering his imperious mien. What was that smell? “Strike no light!” the
disembodied voice cried. “They attacked me tonight as well.“ Conphas scowled. Saviour
or not, Sarcellus had no business barking commands at his betters. “As you can see,” he said
graciously, so as not to imply ingratitude, “my most trusted General is dead. I
will have light.” He turned to call for his guards… “Don’t be a fool! We must
act fast, otherwise the Holy War is doomed!“ Conphas paused, looked to
the corner concealing the Shrial Knight, his head tilted in morbid curiosity.
“They burned you, didn’t they?” He took two steps toward the shadows. “You
smell of pork.” There was a rattle, like
that of a bolting beast, and something slick barrelled across the bedchamber,
disappeared out the balcony… Roaring for his guards,
Conphas raced after him, waving past the gossamer sheers. Though he saw nothing
in the Caraskand night, he noticed the spray of Martemus’s blood across his
arms. He heard his guards explode into the room behind him, grinned at their
shouts of dismay. “General Martemus,” he
called, stepping out of the chill air into their astonished presence, “was a
traitor. Bring his body to the engines. See that it’s cast to the heathens,
where it belongs. Then send for General Sompas.” The truce had ended. “And the General’s head,”
his towering Captain, Triaxeras, asked in an unsteady voice, “do you wish that
cast to the heathens as well?” “No,” Ikurei Conphas
said, slipping into a robe held out by one of his haeturi. He laughed at the
absurdity of the man’s head, which lay like a • ‘■ The General neve, leaves m,
side, Tnah. Ґ<)uknQw Fustaras was a zealous
soldier. As a Proadjunct in the third maniple of the Selial Column, he was what
others in the Imperial Army called a “Threesie,” someone who’d signed a third
indenture—a third fourteen-year term—rather than taking his Imperial Pension.
Though often the bane of junior officers, Threesies like Fustaras were prized
by their generals, so much so they were often issued more shares than their
titular superiors. Everyone knew Threesies formed the stubborn heart of any
Column. They were the men who saw things through. Which was why, Fustaras
supposed, General Sompas had chosen him and several of his fellows for this
mission. “When children go astray,” the man had said, “they must be beaten.” Dressed, like most Men of
the Tusk, in looted Kianene robes, Fustaras and his band prowled the street
commonly known as the Galleries—so named, Fustaras supposed, because of the
innumerable, tenement-lined alleyways that wound about it. Located in the southeast
quarter of the Bowl, it was a notorious gathering place for the Zaudunyani—the
cursed heretics. Many would crowd the tenement rooftops and call out prayers to
the nearby Heights of the Bull, where that obscene fraud, Prince Kellhus of
Atrithau, continued to cower. Others would listen to deranged enthusiasts—they
called them Judges—preach from the mouth of various alleyways. Following his
instructions to the letter, Fustaras halted and accosted a Judge where the
heretics were most concentrated. “Tell me, friend,” he asked in an amiable
manner. “What do they say of Truth?” The emaciated man turned,
his pate gleaming pink through a froth of wild, white hair. Without hesitation,
he replied, “That it shines.” As though reaching for
coppers to toss to beggars, Fustaras clasped the ash club hanging beneath his
cloak. “Are you sure?” he asked, his demeanour at once casual and dangerous. He
hefted the polished haft. “Perhaps it bleeds.” The man’s sparkling gaze
darted from Fustaras’s eyes to the club, then back. “That too,” he said in the
rigid manner of someone resolved to Caraskand master their quailing
heart. He pitched his voice so those nearby could hear. “If not, then why the
Holy War?” This particular heretic,
Fustaras decided, was too clever by a half. He hoisted the club high, then
struck. The man fell to one knee. Blood trickled across his right temple and
cheek; he raised two glistening fingers to Fustaras, as though to say, See… Fustaras struck him
again. The Judge fell to the cracked cobble. Shouts echoed through the street,
and Fustaras glimpsed half-starved men running from all directions. Clubs
bared, his troop closed in formation about him. Even so, he found himself
reconsidering the merits of the General’s plan… There were so many. How could
there be so many? Then he remembered he was
a Threesie. He wiped the flecks of
blood from his face with a stained sleeve. “To all those who heed the so-called
Warrior-Prophet,” he cried. “Know that we, the Orthodox, will doom you as you
have doomed—” Something exploded
against his jaw. He pitched backward, clutching his face, stumbled over the
inert form of the Judge. He rolled across the hard ground, felt blood pulse
over his fingertips. A rock… Someone had thrown a rock! His ears ringing, clamour
roaring about him, he pressed himself to one knee, then found his feet.
Clutching his jaw, he stood, looked around… and saw his men being cut down.
Terror bolted through him. But
the general said— A wild-eyed Thunyeri with
three shrivelled Sranc heads jangling between his thighs reached out and seized
him by the throat. For an instant, the man looked scarcely human, he was so
tall and so thin. “Ream thuning praussa!” the flaxen-haired barbarian roared, swinging him
about. Fustaras glimpsed armed shadows behind, felt his cry gagged into a cough
by the thumb crushing his windpipe. “Fraas kaumrut!” There was an instant
where he could actually feel the cold of the iron spear tip against the small
of his back. A sensation, like sucking deep icy air. Howling faces. The hot rush
of blood. jM Caraskand A wheezing, huffing
animal ruled its black heart, mewling in pain and fury. The thing called
Sarcellus shuffled through the ruined precincts of some nameless tabernacle.
For three days it had skulked through the dark places of the city, unable to
close its face for pain. Now, kicking through a clutch of blackened human
skulls, it thought of the snow that whistled across the Plains of Agongorea, of
white expanses bruised black by pitch. It could remember leaping through the
cool cool drifts, soothed rather than bitten by the icy winds. It could
remember blood jetting across pristine white, fading into lines of rose. But the snow was so very
far—as far as Holy Golgotterath!—and the fire, it flared as near as his
blistered skin. The fire still burned! Curse’him,‘Curse’hirri’Curse’hirn’Curse’hirn!
Let me gnaw his tongue! Fuck his wounds! “Do you suffer, Gaorta?” It jerked like a cat,
peered through the cramped digits of its outer face. As still and glossy black
as a statue of diorite, the Synthese regarded him from the summit of several
heaped and charred bodies. Its face looked white and wet and inscrutable in the
gloom, like something carved from a potato. The shell of the Old
Father… Aurang, Great General of the World‘ Breaker, ancient Prince of the
Inchoroi. “It hurts, Old Father! How it hurts!” “Savour it, Gaorta, for
it’s but a taste of what is to come.” The thing called
Sarcellus snuffled and blubbered, rolled its inner and outer faces beneath the
merciless stars. “No,” it moaned, beating petulant fingers through the
debris at its feet. “Nooo!” “Yes,” the tiny lips
said. “The Holy War is doomed… You have failed. You, Gaorta.” Wild terror lanced
through its cringing thoughts: it knew what failure meant, but it couldn’t
move. There was only obedience before the Architect, the Maker. “But it wasn’t me! It was
them! The Cishaurim command the
Padirajah! It was their—” “Fault, Gaorta?” the Old Father said. “The very poison we
would suck from this world?” The thing called
Sarcellus raised its hands in desperate warding. All the monstrous and
monumental glory of the Consult seemed to crash down upon him. “I’m sorry,
please!” The tiny eyes closed, but
whether in weariness or in contemplation, the thing called Sarcellus could not
tell. When they opened, they were as blue as cataracts. “One more task, Gaorta.
One more task in the name of spite.” It fell to its belly
before the Synthese, writhed and grovelled in agony. “Anything!” it gasped.
“Anything! I would cut out any heart! Pluck any eye! I would drag the whole
world to oblivion!” “The Holy War is doomed.
We must deal with the Cishaurim some other way…” Again, the eyes clicked shut.
“You must ensure this Kellhus dies with the Men of the Tusk. He must not
escape.” And the thing called
Sarcellus forgot about snow. Vengeance! Vengeance would balm his blasted skin! “Now,” the palm-sized expression grated, and Gaorta had
the sense of vast power, ancient and hoary, forced through a reed throat. Here
and there, small showers of dust trailed down the broken walls. “Close your face.” Gaorta obeyed as he must,
screamed as he must. Proyas’s missive crumpled
in his right hand, Cnaьir strode through a carpeted corridor belonging to the
humble but strategically located villa where the Conriyan had chosen to sequester
his household—or what remained of it. He paused before entering the bright
square of the courtyard, stooping beneath the florid double-arched vaults
peculiar to Kianene architecture. A dried orange peel, no longer than his
thumb, lay curled in the dust encircling the black marble base of the left
pilaster. Without thinking, he scooped it into his mouth, winced at the
bitterness. Every day he grew more
hungry. M^ son! How could he so name my son? He found Proyas awaiting
him near one of three brackish pools at the centre of the courtyard, loitering
with two men he didn’t recognize: an imperial officer and a Shrial Knight.
Mid-morning clouds formed a ponderous procession across the sky, drawing their
shadows across the sun-bright confusion of
the hills that loomed over the courtyard’s shadi porticos, particularly to the
south and west. Caraskand. The city that
had become their tomb. He does
this to gall me. To remind me of the object of my hate! Proyas caught sight of him
first. “Cnaьir, good—” “I don’t read,” he growled, tossing the
crumpled sheaf at the Prince’s feet. “If you wish to confer with me, send word,
not scratches.” Proyas’s expression
darkened. “But of course,” he said tightly. He nodded to the two strangers, as
though trying to salvage some rigid semblance of jnanic decorum. “These men
have made a claim—of sorts— in a bid to secure my support. I would have you
confirm it.” Struck by a sudden
horror, Cnaьir stared at the imperial officer, recognizing the insignia stamped
into the collar of his cuirass. And of course, there was the blue mantle… The man frowned,
exchanged a smiling, significant look with his companion. “He grows lean in wits as
well,” the officer said in a voice Cnaьir recognized all too well.
He suddenly remembered it floating across the corpses of his kinsmen—at
the Battle of Kiyuth. Ikurei Conphas… The Exalt-General stood
before him! But how could he fail to recognize him? But the madness lifts! It lifts! Cnaьir blinked, saw
himself seated upon Conphas’s chest, carving off his nose the way a child might
draw in the mud. “What does he want.?” he barked at Proyas. He glanced at the
Shrial Knight, realizing he’d seen the man before as well, though he couldn’t
recall his name. A small, golden Tusk hung about the Knight-Commander’s neck,
cupped in the folds of his white surcoat. Conphas answered in
Proyas’s stead. “What I want, you barbaric lout, is the truth.” “The truth?” “Lord Sarcellus,” Proyas
said, “claims to have news of Atrithau.” Cnaьir stared at the man,
for the first time noticing the bandages about his hands and the odd network of
angry red lines across his sumptuous face. “Atrithau? But how is that
possible?” “Three men have come
forward,” Sarcellus said, “out of the piety of their hearts. They swear that a
man—a veteran of the northern caravans Caraskand who perished in the
desert—told them there was no way Prince Kellhus could be who he claims to be.“
The Shrial Knight smiled in a peculiar fashion—obviously the burns, or whatever
marred his face, were quite painful. ”Apparently the scandal of Atrithau,“
Sarcellus continued inexorably, ”is that its King, Aethelarius, has no live heirs. The House of Morghund is about to flicker
out—forever, they say. And this means that Anasurimbor Kellhus is a pretender.“ The faint throb of
Kianene drums filled the silence. Cnaьir turned back to Proyas. “You said they
want your support… For what?” “Just answer the blasted
question!” Conphas exclaimed. Ignoring the
Exalt-General, Cnaьir and Proyas exchanged a look of honesty and admission. Despite
their quarrels, such looks had become frighteningly common over the course of
the past weeks. “With my support,” Proyas
said, “they think they can prosecute Kellhus without inciting war within these
cursed walls.” “Prosecute Kellhus?” “Yes… As a False Prophet,
according to the Law of the Tusk.” Cnaьir scowled. “And why
do you need my word?” “Because I trust you.” Cnaьir swallowed. (Jutland dogs! someone raged. Kine! For some reason a look of
alarm flickered across Conphas’s face. “Apparently the illustrious
Prince of Conriya,” Sarcellus said, “will have no truck with hearsay…” “Not,” Proyas snapped,
“on a matter as ill-omened as this!” Working his jaw, Cnaьir
glared at the Shrial Knight, wondering what could cause such a strange
disposition of burns across a man’s face. He thought of the Battle of Anwurat,
of the relish with which he’d driven his knife into Kellhus’s chest—or the
thing that had looked like him. He thought of Serwe‘ gasping beneath him, and a
pang watered his eyes. Only she knew his heart. Only she understood when he
awoke weeping… Serwe, first wife of his
heart. I will have her! someone within him wept. She belongs to me! So beautiful… My proof-Suddenly everything seemed to slump, as though the world
itself had been soaked in numbness and lead. And he realized—without anguish, int imiku MARCH without heartbreak—that
Anasurimbor Moenghus was beyond him. Despite all his hate, all his
tooth-gnashing fury, the blood trail he followed ended here… In a city. We’re dead. All of us… If Caraskand was to be
their tomb, he would see certain blood spilled first. But Moenghus.‘ someone
cried. Moenghus must die! And yet he could no longer
recall the hated face. He saw only a mewling infant… “What you say is true,”
he finally said. He turned to Proyas, held his astonished, brown-eyed gaze. It
seemed he could taste the orange peel anew, so bitter were the words. “The man you call Prince
Kellhus is an imposter… A prince of nothing.” Never, it seemed, had his
heart felt so flaccid and cold. The many-pillared
audience hall of the Sapatishah’s Palace was as immense as old King Eryeat’s
dank gallery in Moraor, the ancient Hall of Kings in Oswenta, and yet the glory
of the Warrior-Prophet made it seem the hearth room of a hovel. Seated upon
Imbeyan’s throne of ivory and bone, Saubon watched his approach with
trepidation. Cupped in gigantic bowls of iron, the King-Fires crackled in his
periphery. Even after all this time they seemed to offend the surrounding
magnificence—the imposition of a crude and backward people. But still, he was King!
King of Caraskand. Draped in white samite,
the man who’d once been Prince Kellhus paused beneath him, standing on the
round crimson rug the Kianene had used for obeisance. He did not kneel, nor did
he seem to blink. “Why have you summoned
me?” “To warn you… You must
flee. The Council convenes shortly…” “But the Padirajah
commands the approaches, rules the countryside. Besides, I cannot abandon those
who follow me. I cannot abandon you.” “But you must! They will
condemn you. Even Proyas!” “And you, Coithus Saubon?
Will you condemn me?” “No… Never!” “But you’ve already given
them your guarantees.” “Who said this? What liar
dares—” “You. You say this.” “But… But you must understand!” “I understand. They’ve
ransomed your city. All you need do is pay.” “No! It’s not that way. It’s not!” “Then what way is it?” “It… It… It is what it is!” “For all of your life,
Saubon, you’ve ached for this, the trappings of a tyrant—the effects of old
Eryeat, your father. Tell me, to whom did you run, Saubon, after your father
beat you? Who dabbed your cuts with fleece? Was it to your mother? Or was it to
Kussalt, your groom? ”No one beat me! He… He…“ “Kussalt, then. Tell me,
Saubon, what was more difficult? Losing him on the Plains of Mengedda, or
learning of his lifelong hate?” “Silence!” “All your long life, no
one has known you.” “Silence!” “All your long life
you’ve suffered, you’ve questioned—” “No! No! Silence!” “—and you’ve punished
those who would love you.” Saubon slapped burly hands about his ears. “Cease! I
command it!” ■ “As you punished Kussalt, as you punish—” “Silence-silence-silence! They told me you would do this!
They warned me!“ “Indeed. They warned you
against the truth. Against wandering into the nets of the
Warrior-Prophet.“ “How can you know this?”
Saubon cried, overcome by incredulous woe. “How?” “Because it’s Truth.” “Then fie on it! Fie on the truth!” “And what of your
immortal soul?” “Then let it be damned!”
he roared, leaping to his feet. “I embrace it— embrace it all! Damnation in
this life! Damnation in all
others! Torment
heaped upon torment! I would bear all to be King for a day! I would see you
broken and blooded if that meant I could own this throne! I would see the God’s own eyes plucked out!” The Third March This last scream pealed
through the hollow recesses of the audience hall, returned to him in a haunting
shiver: pluck-plucked-out-out… He fell to his knees
before his throne, felt the heat of his King-Fires bite tear-soaked skin. There
was shouting, the clank of armour and weaponry. Guards had come rushing… But of the
Warrior-Prophet there was no sign. “He-he’s not real,”
Saubon mumbled to the hollows of his court. “He doesn’t exist!” But the gold-ringed fists
kept falling. They would never stop. He’d spent days seated upon
the terrace, lost in whatever worlds he searched in his trances. At sunrise and
sunset, Esmenet would go to him and leave a bowl of water as he’d directed. She
brought him food as well, though he’d asked her not to. She would stare at his
broad, motionless back, at his hair waving in the breeze, at the dying sun upon
his face, and she would feel like a little girl kneeling before an idol,
offering tribute to something monstrous and insatiable: salted fish, dried
prunes and figs, unleavened bread—enough to cause a small riot in the lower
city. He touched none of it. Then one dawn she went
out to him, and he wasn’t there. After a desperate rush
through the galleries of the palace, she found him in their apartments, unkempt
and rakish, joking with Serwe, who had just arisen. “Esmi-Esmi-Esmi,” the
swollen-eyed girl pouted. “Could you bring me little Moenghus?” Too relieved to feel
exasperated, Esmenet ducked into the adjoining nursery and plucked the
black-haired babe from his cradle. Though his dumbfounded stare made her smile,
she found the winter blue of his eyes unnerving. “I was just saying,”
Kellhus said as she delivered the child to Serwe, “that the Great Names have
summoned me…” He reached out a haloed hand. “They want to parley.” He mentioned nothing, of
course, about his meditation. He never did. Esmenet took his hand,
sat beside him on their bed, only just understanding the implications of what
he had said. “Parley?” she suddenly
cried. “Kellhus, they summon you to condemn you!“ “Kellhus?” Serwe asked.
“What does she mean?” “That this parley is a trap,” Esmenet exclaimed. She stared hard at Kellhus. “You
know this!” “What can you mean?”
Serwe exclaimed. “Everyone loves Kellhus… Everyone knows now.“ “No, Serwe. Many hate
him—very many. Very many want him dead!” Serwe laughed in the oblivious way of
which only she seemed capable. “Esmenet…” she said,
shaking her head as though at a beloved fool. She boosted little Moenghus
into the air. “Auntie Esmi forgets,” she cooed to the infant. “Yeeesss. She
forgets who your father is!” Esmenet watched
dumbstruck. Sometimes she wanted nothing more than to wring the girl’s
neck. How? How could he love such a simpering fool? “Esmi…” Kellhus said
abruptly. The warning in his voice chilled her heart. She turned to him, shouted
Forgive me! with her eyes. But at the same time, she
couldn’t relent, not now, not after what she had found. “Tell her, Kellhus!
Tell her what’s about to happen!” Not again.
Not again! “Listen to me, Esmi.
There’s no other way. The Zaudunyani and the Orthodox cannot go to war.” “Not even for you?” she
cried. “This Holy War, this city, is but a pittance compared to you! Don’t you
see, Kellhus?” Her desperation swelled into sudden anguish and desolation, and
she angrily wiped at her tears. This was too important for selfish grief! But I’ve lost so many! “Don’t you see how
precious you are? Think of what Akka said! What if you’re the world’s only
hope?” He cupped her cheek,
brushed her eyebrow with his thumb, which he held warm against her temple. “Sometimes, Esmi, we must
cross death to reach our destination.” She thought of King Shikol in The Tractate, the demented Xerashi King who’d commanded the Latter
Prophet’s execution. She thought of his gilded thighbone, the instmment of
judgement, which to this day remained the most potent symbol of evil in
Inrithidom. Was this what Inri Sejenus had said to his nameless lover? That
loss could somehow secure glory? HE 1HIRD MARCH But this is madness! “The Shortest Path,” she
said, horrified by the teary-eyed contemptu-ousness of her tone. But the blond-bearded
face smiled. “Yes,” the
Warrior-Prophet said. “The Logos.” “Anasurimbor Kellhus,”
Gotian intoned in his powerful voice, “I hereby denounce you as a False
Prophet, and as a pretender to the warrior-caste. It is the judgement of the
Council of Great and Lesser Names that you be scourged in the manner decreed by
Scripture.” Serwe heard a wail pierce
the thunderous outcry, and only afterward realized that it was her own.
Moenghus sobbed in her arms, and she reflexively began rocking him, though she
was too frightened to coo reassurances. The Hundred Pillars had drawn their
swords, and now thronged to either side of them, trading fierce glares with the
Shrial Knights. “You judge no one!” someone was bellowing. “The Warrior-Prophet alone
speaks the judgement of the Gods! It is you who’ve been found wanting! You who
shall be punished!” “False! False! — ” It seemed a thousand
half-starved faces cried a thousand hungry things. Accusations. Curses.
Laments. The air was flushed by humid cries. Hundreds had gathered within the
ruined shell of the Citadel of the Dog to hear the Warrior-Prophet answer the
charges of the Great and Lesser Names. Hot in the sun, the black ruins towered
about them: walls uncon-summated by vaults, foundations obscured by heaped
wreckage, the side of a fallen tower bare and rounded against the debris, like
the flanks of a whale breaching the surface of a choppy sea. The Men of the
Tusk had congregated across every pitched slope and beneath every monolithic
remnant. Fist-waving faces packed every pocket of clear ground. Instinctively pulling her
baby tight to her breast, Serwe glanced around in terror. Esmi was right… We shouldn’t have come! She looked up to Kellhus, and
wasn’t surprised by the divine calm with which he observed the masses. Even
here, he seemed the godlike nail which fastened what happened to what should happen. He’ll make them see! Caraskand But the roar was
redoubled, and reverberated through her body. Several men had drawn their knives,
as though the sound of fury were grounds enough for murderous riot. So much hatred. Even the Great Names,
gathered in the clear centre of the fortress’s courtyard, looked apprehensive.
They gazed blank-faced at the thundering mobs, almost as though they were
counting. Already several fights had broken out; she could see the flash of
steel and flailing monkey limbs amidst the packed mobs—believers beset by
unbelievers. A starved fanatic with a
knife managed to slip past the Hundred Pillars, rushed the Warrior-Prophet… … who pinched the knife
from his hand as though he were a child, clasped his throat with one hand and
lifted him from the ground, like a gasping dog. The pocked grounds
gradually quieted as more and more turned their horrified eyes to the Warrior-Prophet
and his thrashing burden—until shortly only the would-be assassin could be
heard, gagging. Serwe’s skin pimpled in dread. Why do they do this? Why do they dare his wrath? Kellhus tossed the man to
the ground, where he lay inert, a heap of slack limbs. “What is it that you
fear?” the Warrior-Prophet asked. His tone was both plaintive and imperious—not
the overbearing manner of a King certain of his sanction, but the despotic
voice of Truth. Gotian shouldered his way
passed the interceding onlookers. “The wrath of the God,” he cried, “who
punishes us for harbouring an abomination!” “No.” His flashing eyes
found them from among the masses: Saubon, Proyas, Conphas, and the others. “You
fear that as my power waxes, yours will wane. You do what you do not in the
name of the God, but in the name of avarice. You wouldn’t tolerate even the God
to possess your Holy War. And yet, in each of your hearts there is an itch, an
anguished question that I alone can see: What if he truly is the Prophet? What doom awaits us
then?” “SILENCE.1”
Conphas roared, spittle flying from his contorted lips. “And you, Conphas? What
is it that you hide?” “His words are spears!”
Conphas cried to the others. “His very voice is an outrage!” int 1H1KU MARCH “But I ask only your question: What if you are wrong?” Even Conphas was
dumbstruck by the force of these words. It was as though the
Warrior-Prophet had made this demand in the God’s own voice. “You turn to fury in the
absence of certainty,” he continued sadly. “I only ask you this: What moves
your soul/ What moves you to condemn me/ Is it indeed the God? The God strides
with certainty, with glory, through the hearts of men! Does
the God so stride through you/ Does
theGod so stride through you?” Silence. The poignant
hush of dread, as though they were a congregation of debauched children
suddenly confronted by the rebuke of their godlike father. Serwe felt tears
flood her cheeks. They see! They at last see! But then a Shrial Knight,
the one named Sarcellus, whose face alone remained pious and devoid of
hesitation, answered the Warrior-Prophet in a loud, clear voice. ‘“All things both sacred
and vile,’” the Knight-Commander said, quoting the Tusk, ‘“speak to the hearts
of Men, and they are bewildered, and holding out their hands to darkness, they name it light.’” The Warrior-Prophet
stared at him sharply, and quoted in turn: ‘“Hearken Truth, for it strides
fiercely among you, and will not be denied.’” Possessed of beatific
calm, Sarcellus answered: ‘“Fear him, for he is the deceiver, the Lie made
Flesh, come among you to foul the waters of your heart.’” And the Warrior-Prophet
smiled sadly. “Lie made flesh, Sarcellus/” Serwe watched his eyes search the
crowds, then settle on the nearby Scylvendi. “Lie made flesh,” he repeated,
staring into the fiend’s embattled face. “The hunt need not end… Remember this
when you recall the secret of battle. You still command the ears of the Great.” “False Prophet,” Sarcellus continued. “Prince
of nothing.” As if these words had been a sign, the Shrial Knights
rushed the Hundred Pillars, and there was the clash of fierce arms. Someone
shrieked, and one of the Knights fell to his knees, grasping in his left hand
the gushing stump where his right hand should have been. Another shriek, and
then yet another, and then the starving mobs, as though sobered from a drunken
stupor by the sight of blood, surged forward. Caraskand Serwe screamed, clawed at
the Warrior-Prophet’s white sleeve, grasped her baby with fierce desperation.
This isn’t happening… But it was hopeless.
After several moments of howling butchery, the Shrial Knights were upon them.
With nightmarish horror she watched the Warrior-Prophet catch a blade in his
palms, break it, and then touch the neck of his assailant. The man crumpled.
Another he caught by the arm, which suddenly went limp as sackcloth, and then
drove his fist through his face, as though the man’s head were a melon. Somewhere impossibly far
away, she heard Gotian roar at his men, thunder at them to stop. She saw a manic-faced
Knight rush her, sword raised to the sun, but then he was on the ground,
fumbling with a fountain of blood that had bloomed from his side, and then a
rough arm was about her, tiger-striped by scars and impossibly strong. The Scylvendi? The
Scylvendi had saved her? At last bridled by their
Grandmaster, the Shrial Knights relented, and stood back. They were lean and
wolfish beneath their hauberks. The Tusks they bore on their stained and
tattered surcoats looked threadbare and wicked. It seemed the whole world
had erupted in a chorus of howling throats. Gotian stepped from the
sweaty thunder beyond his men, and after glancing a dark moment at
Cnaiur, he turned to the Warrior-Prophet. His once aristocratic face
looked haggard and bitter, the look of a man who had been harrowed by a
hateful world. “Yield, Anasurimbor
Kellhus,” he said hoarsely. “You will be scourged according to Scripture.” Serwe thrashed against
the plainsman until he released her. He stared at her with savage horror, and
she felt only hate—bone-snapping hate. She stumbled, to Kellhus’s side, and
buried her face and her child against his robes. “Yield!” she sobbed. “My lord and master you must yield! Do
not die in this place! You must not die!” She could feel her
Prophet’s tender eyes upon her, his divine embrace encompass her. She looked up
into his face and saw love in his shining, god-remote eyes. The love of the God
for her! For Serwe, first wife and lover of the
Warrior-Prophet. For the girl who was nothing… inc iniKU 1V1ARCH Glittering tears branched
across her cheeks. “I love you!” she cried. “I love you and you cannot die!” She looked down at the
squalling babe between them. “Our son!” she sobbed. “Our son needs the God!” She felt rough hands pull
her back, and an ache such as she’d never suffered as they pulled her from his
embrace. My heart! They tear
me from my heart! “He’s the God!” she
shrieked. “Can’t you see? He’s the
God!” She struggled against the
man who held her, but he was too strong. “The God!” The man who held her
spoke: “According to Scripture?” It was Sarcellus. “According to Scripture,”
the Grandmaster replied, but there was now pity in his voice. “But she has a newborn
child!” another cried—the Scylvendi… What did he mean? She looked to him, but
he was a dark shadow against the congregation of warlike men, spliced by tears
and sunlight. “It matters not,” Gotian
replied, his voice hardening with mad resolve. “My child!” Was there
desperation, pain in the Scylvendi’s voice? No… not your child. Kellhus? What happened? “Then take it.” Curt, as
though seeking to snuff further mortification. Someone pulled her
wailing son from her arms. Another heart gone. Another ache. No… Moenghus? What’s happening? Serwe shrieked, until it
seemed her eyes must shimmer into flame, her face crumble into dust. The flash of sunlight
across a knife. Sarcellus’s knife. Sounds. Celebratory and horrified. Serwe felt her life spill
across her breasts. She worked her lips to speak to him, that godlike man so
near, to say something final, but there was no sound, no breath. She raised her
hands and beads of dark wine fell from her outstretched fingers… My Prophet, my love, how could this be? I know not, sweet Serwe… And as sky and the
howling faces beneath darkened, she remembered his words, once spoken. Caraskand “You are innocence, sweet Serwe, the one heart I need
not teach ” Last
flare of sunlight, drowsy, as though glimpsed by a child stirring from dreams
beneath an airy tree. Innocence, Serwe. The limb-vaulted canopy, growing
darker, warm-woollen like a shroud. ]‘t[o more sun. You are the mercy you seek. But my baby,
my — Twenty-three Caraskand For Men, no circle is ever closed. We
walk ever in spirals. —DRUSAS ACHAMIAN, THE
COMPENDIUM OF THE FIRST HOLY WAR Bring he who has spoken prophecy to the
judgement of the priests, and if his prophecy is judged true, acclaim him, for
he is clean, and if his prophecy is judged false, bind him to the corpse of his
wife, and hang him one cubit above the earth, for he is unclean, an anathema
unto the Gods. —WARRANTS 7:48, THE CHRONICLE
OF THE TUSK Late Winter, 4112 Year-of-the-Tusk,
Caraskand It was as though someone
had struck the back of his knees with a staff. Eleazaras stumbled forward, but
was steadied by the strong arms of Lord Chinjosa, Count-Palatine of Antanamera. No…No. “Do you know what this
means/” Chinjosa hissed. Eleazaras pushed the
Palatine away and took two more drunken steps toward Chepheramunni’s body. The
gloom of his sickroom was alleviated by a cluster of candles at the head of his
bed. The bed itself was lavish, set between four marble columns that braced the
low vaults of the ceiling. But it reeked of feces, blood, and pestilence. Caraskand dli Chepheramunni’s head lay
beneath the congregated candles, but his face… It was nowhere to be
seen. Where his face should have been lay what resembled an overturned spider,
its legs clutched in death about its abdomen. What had been Chepheramunni’s
face lay unspooled across the knuckles and shins of the steepled limbs.
Eleazaras saw familiar fragments: a lone nostril, the haired ridge of an
eyebrow. Beneath he glimpsed lidless eyes and the shine of human teeth, bared
and lipless. And just as that fool
Skalateas had claimed, nowhere could he sense the bruise of sorcery. Chepheramunni—a Cishaurim
skin-spy. Impossible. The Grandmaster of the
Scarlet Spires coughed, blinked back uncharacteristic tears. This was too much.
The very air seemed nightmarish with mad implication. The ground tipped beneath
his feet. Once again, he felt Chinjosa steady him. “Grandmaster! What does
this mean?” That we’re doomed.
That I’ve led my School to its destruction. A string of catastrophes. The disastrous losses at the
battle of Anwurat. General Setpanares killed. Fifteen sorcerers of rank dead
between the desert and the plague. And the disaster at Iothiah, which had
claimed the lives of two others. The Holy War besieged and starving. And now this… To find
their hated enemy here, standing with him upon the summit. How much did the
Cishaurim know? “We’re doomed,” Eleazaras muttered. “No, Grandmaster,”
Chinjosa replied, his own deep voice still tight with horror. Eleazaras turned to him.
Chinjosa was a large, burly man geared for war in his ring-mail hauberk, over
which he wore an open Kianene coat of red silk. The white cosmetics made his
strong-featured face stark against his black, square-cut beard. Chinjosa had
proven himself indomitable in battle, an able commander, and in Iyokus’s
absence, a shrewd adviser. “We would be doomed had this abomination led us into battle.
Perhaps the Gods have favoured us with their afflictions.” Eleazaras stared numbly
into Chinjosa’s face, struck by a further terrifying thought. “You are who you
are, Chinjosa?” The Palatine of
Antanamera, the province that had so often proven itself the spine of High
Ainon, looked at him sternly. “It is me,
Grandmaster.” Eleazaras studied the
caste-noble, and it seemed as though the man’s simple, warlike strength pulled
him back from the brink of despair. Chinjosa was right. This wasn’t yet another
catastrophe; it was a… blessing of a sort. But if Chepheramunni could be
replaced… There must be others. “No one is to know of
this, Chinjosa. No one.” The Palatine nodded in the dim
light. // only that Mandate ingrate had broken! “Remove its head,”
Eleazaras said, his voice terse with growing outrage, “then throw the carcass
onto the pyre.” Achamian and Xinemus
walked the ways of twilight, between light and dark, where only shadows are
known. There was no food in this place, no life-giving water, and their bodies,
which they carried across their backs the way one might carry a corpse,
suffered horribly. The twilight way. The
shadow way. From the port city of Joktha to Caraskand. When they passed near the
camps of the enemy, they could feel the Cishaurim’s plucked eyes—brilliant,
pure, like a lamplight before a silvered mirror—search for them from beyond the
horizon. Many times Achamian felt that otherworldly light throw shadows from
their shadows. Many times Achamian thought they were doomed. But always those
eyes turned away their inhuman scrutiny, either deceived or… Achamian could not
say why. Gaining the walls, they
revealed themselves beneath a small postern gate. It was night, and torches
glittered between the battlements above. With Xinemus slumped against him,
Achamian called to the astonished guards: “Open the gates! I am Drusas
Achamian, a Mandate Schoolman, and this is Krijates Xinemus, the Marshal of
Attrempus… We have come to share your plight!” Caraskand “This city is both doomed
and damned,” someone shouted down. “Who seeks entry to such a place? Who but
madmen or traitors?” Achamian paused before
answering, struck by the bleak conviction of the man’s tone. The Men of the
Tusk, he realized, had lost all hope. “Those who would attend
their loved ones,” he said. “Even unto death.” After a pause, the outer
doors burst open and a troop of hollow-cheeked Tydonni seized them. At long
last they found themselves inside the horror of Caraskand. The temple-complex of
Csokis, Esmenet had heard some say, was as old as the Great Ziggurat of Xijoser
in Shigek. It occupied the heart of the Bowl, and from the limestone-paved
reaches of its central campus, the Kalaul, all five of the surrounding heights
could be seen. In the centre of the campus rose a great tree, an ancient
eucalyptus that Men had called Umiaki since time immemorial. Esmenet wept in
its cavernous shadow, staring up at the hanging forms of Kellhus and Serwe. The
infant Moenghus dozed in her arms—oblivious. “Please… Please wake up,
Kellhus, please!” Before roaring mobs,
Incheiri Gotian had stripped Kellhus of his clothing, then whipped him with
cedar branches until he’d bled from a hundred places. Afterward, they bound his
bleeding body to Serwe’s nude corpse, ankle to ankle, wrist to wrist, face to
face. Then they lashed the two of them, limbs outstretched, to a great bronze
ring, which they hoisted and chained—upside down no less—to the winding girth
of Umiaki’s lowest and mightiest limb. Esmenet had wailed her voice to nothing. Now they spun in slow
circles, their golden hair mingling in the breeze, their arms and legs sweeping
out like those of dancers. Esmenet glimpsed ashen breasts crushed against a
shining ribcage, armpit hair twisted into horns, then Serwe’s slender back
rolled into view, almost mannish because of the deep line of her spine. She
glimpsed her sex, bared between outspread legs, pressed against the confusion
of Kellhus’s genitalia… Serwe… Her face
blackening as the blood settled, her limbs and torso carved in grey marble, as
perfect in form as any artifice. And Kellhus… i>30 The Third March His face sheened in
sweat, his muscular back gleaming white between lines of angry red. His eyes
swollen shut. “But you said!” Esmenet
wailed. “You said Truth can’t die!” Serwe dead. Kellhus
dying. No matter how long she looked, no matter how deep her reason, no matter
how shrill her threats… Around and around, the
dying and the dead. A mad pendulum. Holding Moenghus close,
Esmenet curled across the waxy mat of leaves. They smelled bitter where her
body bruised them. “Remember when you recall the secret of
battle…” The Inrithi fell silent
as he passed, their eyes following him as they followed kings. Cnaьir knew well
the effect his presence worked on other men. Even beneath starred skies, he
needed no gold, no herald or banner, to announce the fact of his station. He
wore his glory on the skin of his arms. He was Cnaьir urs Skiotha,
breaker-of-horses-and-men; others need only look to fear him. “The hunt need not end …” Shut up! Shut up! The Kalaul, the broad
central campus of Csokis, teemed with piteous and despicable humanity. Along
the terminus of the campus, Inrithi crowded the monumental steps of temples
that looked, to Cnaьir’s eyes, as ancient as any he’d seen in Shigek or Nansur.
Others skulked beneath the pillared facades of dormitories and half-ruined
cloisters. Across the outskirts, Inrithi sat upon mats and muttered to one
another. Some even tended small fires, burning aromatic resins and
woods—oblations, no doubt, for their Warrior-Prophet. The crowds thickened as
he neared the great tree in the Kalaul’s heart. He saw men wearing only shirts,
their hindquarters smeared with shit. He saw others whose stomachs seemed
pinned to their spines. He encountered one bare-chested fool who leapt up and
down shaking cupped hands over his head like a rattle. When Cnaьir shouldered
the imbecile aside, something like pebbles scattered across the paving stones.
He heard the madman wailing about teeth in his wake. “… the secret of battle…” Lies! More lies! Heedless of the threats
and curses that greeted his passage, Cnaьir continued battling forward,
pressing through what seemed a malodorous sea of heads, elbows, and shoulders.
He paused only when he could clearly view the mighty tree that men called
Umiaki. Like an immense, upturned root, it rose black and leafless into the
night sky, shrouding its precincts in impenetrable darkness. “You still command the ears of the
Great…” No matter how hard Cnaьir
peered, he could see nothing of the Dunyain—or Serwe. “Does he still breathe?”
he cried. “Does his heart still beat?” The Inrithi massed about
him turned to one another, shared looks of anxious bewilderment. No one
replied. Dog-eyed drunks. He plowed through them in
disgust, yanking men aside to move forward. Finally he reached the perimeter of
Shrial Knights, one of whom pressed a palm to his chest to hold him back.
Cnaьir scowled until the man withdrew his hand, then peered yet again into the
darkness beneath Umiaki. He could see nothing. For a time, he pondered
cutting his way to the tree. Then a procession of Shrial Knights bearing
torches passed on the far side of Umiaki, and for a fleeting moment Cnaьir
glimpsed his sprawled silhouette—or was it hers?—against the glittering lights. The forward ranks of
Inrithi began shouting, some in rapture, others in derision. Through the
uproar, Cnaьir heard a velvety voice, spoken in timbres only his heart could
hear. “It’s good that you’ve come… Proper.” Cnaьir stared in horror
at the figure across the ring. Then the string of torches marched on, and darkness
reclaimed the ground beneath Umiaki. The surrounding clamour subsided,
fractured into individual shouts. “All men,” the voice said, “should know their work.” “I come to watch you suffer!” Cnaьir cried. “I come
to watch you die!” In his periphery, he glimpsed men turning to him in alarm.
“But why? Why would you want
such a thing?”
“Because you betrayed me!” “How.? How
have 1 betrayed you?” The Third March “You need only speak! You’re Dunyain!” “You make too much of me… More even then
these Inrithi.” “Because I know! 1 alone know what you are! I alone can destroy you!” He
laughed as only a many-blooded Chieftain of the Utemot could, then gestured to
the darkness beneath Umiaki. “Witness…” “And my father? The hunt need not end—you
know this.” Cnaьir stood breathless,
as motionless as a horse-laming stone hidden among the Steppe grasses. “I’ve made a trade,” he
said evenly. “I’ve yielded to the greater hate.” “Have you?” “Yes! Yes! Look at her!
Look at what you’ve done to her!” “What I’ve done,
Scylvendi? Or what you’ve done?” “She’s dead. My Serwe! My
Serwe is dead! My prize!” “Oh, yes… What will they whisper, now that your proof has
passed? How will they measure?” “They killed her because
of you!” Laughter, full and
easy-hearted, like that of a favourite uncle just into his cups. “Spoken like a true Son of
the Steppe!” “You mock me?” A heavy hand seized his
shoulder. “Enough!” someone was shouting. “Stow your madness! Cease speaking
that foul tongue!” In a single motion,
Cnaьir snatched the hand and twisted it about, wrenching tendon and bone. He
effortlessly wheeled the fool who’d grabbed him from his place among the
others. He struck the cow-faced ingrate to the ground. “Mock? Who would dare mock a murderer?” “You!” Cnaьir screamed at
the tree. He reached out neck-breaking arms. “You killed her!” “No, Scylvendi. You did… When you sold
me.” “To save my son!” And Cnaьir saw her, limp
and horrified in Sarcellus’s arms, blood spouting across her gown, her eyes
drowning in darkness… The darkness! How many eyes had he watched it consume? He heard a babe bawling
from the black. “They were supposed to
kill the whore!” Cnaьir screamed. Several Inrithi were
shouting at him now. He felt a blow glance his cheek, glimpsed the flash of
steel. He grabbed a man about the head, drove his thumbs into his eyes.
Something sharp pricked his thigh. Fists pounded against his back. Something—a
club or a pommel—cracked against his temple; he released the man, reeling
backward. He glimpsed black Umiaki, and heard the Dunyain laughing, laughing as
the Utemot had laughed. “Weeper!” “You!” he roared, beating
down men with stone-fisted blows. “YOU!” Suddenly the clutching,
cutting mob scrambled back from a brawling figure to his right. Several cried
out in apology. Cnaьir glanced at the man, who stood almost as tall as he,
though not so broad. “Have you lost your wits,
Scylvendi? It’s me! Me!” “You murdered Serwe.” And suddenly, the
stranger became Coithus Saubon, dressed in a penitent’s shabby robes. What kind
of devilry? “Cnaьir,” the Galeoth
Prince exclaimed, “who are you speaking to?” “You…” the darkness cackled. “Scylvendi?” Cnaьir shook free of the
man’s firm grip. “This is a fool’s vigil,” he grated. He spat, then turned to
fight his way free of the stink. Esmi… His heart leapt at the thought. I’m coming, my sweet. I’m so very close! <■ It seemed he
could smell the musky orange of her scent. It seemed he could hear her gasps
hot against his cheek, feel her grind against his loins, desperately, as though
to smother a perilous fire. It seemed he could see her throwing back her hair—a
glimpse of sultry eyes and parted lips. So very close! The Tydonni—five
Numaineiri knights and a motley of men-at-arms—escorted them through the dark
streets. The Tydonni had been courteous enough, given the circumstances of
their arrival, but until someone in authority vouched for the two of them, the
knights refused to Ihe Third March say much of anything.
Achamian saw other Men of the Tusk on their route, most of them as wretched as
the guards upon the gate. Whether sitting in windows, or leaning with others
against the pilasters, they stared, their faces pale and blank, their eyes
impossibly bright, as though housing the fires that wasted their frames. Achamian had seen such
looks before. On the Fields of Eleneot, after the death of Anasurimbor
Celmomas. In great Tryse, watching the fall of the Shinoth Gate. On the Plains
of Mengedda, awaiting the approach of dread Tsurumah. The look of horror and
fury, of Men who could only exact and never overcome. The look of Apocalypse. Whenever Achamian matched
their gazes, no threat or challenge was exchanged, only the thoughtless
understanding of exhausted brothers. Something—demon or reptile—crawled into
the skulls of those who endured the unendurable, and when it looked out their
eyes, as it inevitably did, it could recognize itself in others. He belonged,
Achamian realized. Not just here in Caraskand with those he loved, but here
with the Holy War. He belonged with these men—even
unto death. We share the same doom. Moving slowly for
Xinemus’s sake, they trudged between two heights whose names Achamian didn’t
know, and into an area one of the Numaineiri had called the Bowl—where Proyas
and his household were supposedly quartered. They passed through a veritable
labyrinth of streets and alleyways, and more than once the knights had to ask
passersby for directions. Despite everything—the prospect of finding Kellhus
and Esmenet, of seeing Proyas after so many bitter months—Achamian found
himself pondering the carelessness of his declaration beneath Caraskand’s walls: “1 am Drusas Achamian, a Mandate Schoolman…” How long had it been
since he’d last spoken those words aloud? A Mandate Schoolman… Was that what he was? And
if so, why did he shy from the thought of contacting Atyersus? In all
likelihood, they’d learned of his abduction. They were certain to have
informants he knew nothing about among the Conriyan contingent at least. He
imagined they assumed him dead. So why not contact them?
The threat of the Second Apocalypse hadn’t dwindled during his captivity. And
the Dreams, they wracked him as they ever did… Because I’m no longer one of them. For all the ferocity with
which he’d defended the Gnosis—to the point of sacrificing Xinemus!—he’d
forsaken the Mandate. He’d forsaken them, he realized, even before his
abduction by the Scarlet Spires. He’d forsaken them for Kellhus… I was going to teach him the Gnosis. Even to think this stole
his breath, reminded him that so much more than Esmenet awaited him within
these walls. The old mysteries surrounding Maithanet. The threat of the Consult
and their skin-spies. The promise and enigma of Anasurimbor Kellhus. The
premonitions of the Second Apocalypse! But even as his skin
pimpled with dread, something balked within him, something old and obdurate, as
callous as crocodiles. Let the
mysteries rot!
he found himself thinking. Let the world crash about us! For he was Drusas Achamian, a man like any other,
and he would have his lover, his wife— his Esmenet. Like so many things in the
aftermath of Iothiah, the rest seemed childish, like tropes in an over-read
book. I know you live. 1 know it! At long last, their small
troop came to a pause before the faceless walls of some compound. Xinemus at
his side, Achamian watched while two of the Numaineiri knights fell to arguing
with the guards posted before the compound’s gate. He turned at the sound of
his friend’s voice. “Akka,” Xinemus said,
scowling in his queer, eyeless fashion. “When we walked as shadows…“ The Marshal hesitated,
and for a moment Achamian feared ar onslaught of recriminations. Before
Iothiah, the notion of using sorcery tc slip past the enemy would have been
unthinkable for Xinemus. And yei he’d acquiesced with scarcely a complaint when
Achamian had suggested the possibility in Joktha. Did he repent? Or had he,
like Achamian, beer gouged of his previous cares as well? “I’m blind,” Xinemus
continued. “Blind as blind could be, Akka! Am yet I saw them… The Cishaurim. I saw them seeing!” VIAKUH Achamian pursed his lips,
troubled by the fear-to-hope tone of the Marshal’s voice. “You did see,” he said carefully, “in a manner… There’s many
ways of seeing. And all of us
possess eyes that never breach skin. Men are wrong to think nothing lies
between blindness and sight.“ “And the Cishaurim?”
Xinemus pressed. “Is that… Is that how they__” “The Cishaurim are
masters of this interval. They blind themselves they say, to better see
the World Between. According to some, it’s the key to their metaphysics.“ “So…” Xinemus began,
unable to contain the passion in his voice. “Not now, Zin,” Achamian said,
watching the most senior of the Tydonni knights, a choleric thane called
Anmergal, stride toward them from the compound gate. “Some other time…” In broken but workable
Sheyic, Anmergal stated that Proyas’s people had agreed to take them—despite
their better judgement. “No one steals into Caraskand,” he explained. “Only out.” Then, heedless
of any reply they might make, he barged past them, yelling out to his troops.
At the same time, men-at-arms, dressed as Kianene but bearing the Black Eagle
of House Nersei on their shields, appeared from the darkness. Within moments,
Achamian and Xinemus found themselves ushered into the compound. They were greeted by an
emaciated steward dressed in the threadbare yet lustrous white and black livery
of Proyas’s House. Soldiers in tow, the man led them down a carpeted hallway.
They passed a Kianene woman— a slave, no doubt—kneeling in the doorway of an
adjoining chamber, and Achamian found himself shocked, not by her obvious
terror, but by the fact that she was the first Kianene he’d seen since entering
Caraskand… No wonder the city seemed a tomb. They rounded a corner and
found themselves in a tall antechamber. Set between two corpulent
pillars—Nilnameshi by the look of them—a door of greening bronze lay partially
ajar. The steward ducked his head in. Nodding to someone unseen, he pressed the
door open and, after a nervous glance at Xinemus, gestured for them to follow.
Achamian cursed the knot in his gut… Then found himself
staring at Nersei Proyas. Though more haggard and
far thinner—his linen tunic hung from shoulders like sword pommels—the Crown
Prince of Conriya still looked Caraskand much the same. The shock
of curly black hair, which his mother had both cursed and adored. The trim
beard etching a jaw that, though not as youthful as it once was, remained set
in the old way. The nimble brow. And of course the lucid brown eyes, which were
deep enough, it seemed, to contain any admixture of passion, no matter how
contradictory. “What is it?” Xinemus
asked. “What happens?” “Proyas…” Achamian said.
He cleared his throat. “It’s Proyas, Zin.” The Conriyan Prince
stared at Xinemus, his face expressionless. He advanced two steps from a
lavishly worked table in what must have been his bedchamber. As though from a
stupor, he said, “What happened?” Achamian said nothing,
struck dumb by a rush of unexpected passions. He felt his face grow hot with
fury. Xinemus stood beside him, absolutely motionless. “Speak up,” Proyas
commanded, his voice ringing with desperation. “What happened?” “The Scarlet Spires took
his eyes,” Achamian said evenly. “As a… As a way to—” Without warning, the
young Prince flew to Xinemus, clutched him in a wild embrace, not cheek to
cheek as between men, but as a child might, with his forehead pressed against
the Marshal’s collar. He shuddered with sobs. Xinemus clutched the back of his
head with thick fingers, crushed his beard against his scalp. A moment of fierce
silence passed. “Zin,” Proyas hissed.
“Please forgive me! Please, I beg
of you!” “Shhh… It’s enough to
feel your embrace… To hear your voice.” “But Zin! Your eyes! Your
eyes!” “Shush, now… Akka will
fix me. You’ll see.” Achamian flinched at the
words. Hope was never so poison as when it deluded loved ones. Gasping, Proyas pressed
his cheek against the Marshal’s shoulder. His glittering look found Achamian,
and for a moment they gazed unblinking each at the other. “You too, Old Teacher,”
the young man croaked. “Can you find it ir your heart to forgive?” Though Achamian heard the
words clearly, they seemed to reach hirr as though from a great distance, their
speaker too distant to truly matter No, he realized, he
couldn’t forgive, not because his heart had hardened, but because it had
receded. He saw the boy, Prosha, whom he’d once loved, but he saw a stranger as
well, a man who walked questionable and competing paths. A man of faith. A murderous fanatic. How could he think these
men were his brothers? With his face as blank as
he could manage, Achamian said, “I’m a teacher no longer.” Proyas squeezed shut his
eyes. They were hooded in the old way when he opened them. Whatever hardships
the Holy War had endured, Proyas the Judge had survived. “Where are they?”
Achamian asked. The circles were so much clearer now. Aside from Xinemus, only
Esmenet and Kellhus possessed any claim to his heart. In the whole world, only
they mattered. Proyas visibly stiffened,
pressed himself from Xinemus’s breast. “Hasn’t anyone told you?” “No one would tell us
anything,” Xinemus said. “They feared we were spies.” Achamian couldn’t
breathe. “Esmenet?” he gasped. The Prince swallowed, a
stricken look upon his face. “No… Esmenet is safe.” He
ran a hand through his cropped hair, both anxious and ominous. Somewhere, a wick sizzled
in a guttering candle. “And Kellhus?” Xinemus
asked. “What about him?” “You must understand.
Much, very much, has happened.” Xinemus pawed the air
before him, as though needing to touch those he spoke to. “What are you saying,
Proyas?” “I’m saying Kellhus is dead.” Of all Caraskand, only
the great bazaar carried any memory of the Steppe, and even then it was only
the bones of such a memory: its flatness purchased by masons, its openness
enclosed by dark-windowed facades. No grasses grew between the paving stones. “Swazond,” he had said. “The man you have killed is gone from
the world, Serwe. He exists only here, a scar upon your arm. It is the mark of Caraskand his absence, of all the ways his soul will not move, and of all
the acts he will not commit. A mark of the weight you now bear.“ And she had replied, “I
don’t understand…” Such a dear fool, that
girl. So innocent. Cnaьir lay against the
ribbed belly of a dead horse, surrounded by ever-widening circles of Kianene
dead—victims of the city’s glorious sack three weeks before. “I will bear you,” he
said to the blackness. And never, it seemed, had he uttered a mightier oath.
“You will not want, so long as my back is strong.” Traditional words,
uttered by the groom as the memorialist braided his hair in marriage. He raised the knife to
his throat. Bound to a circle,
swinging from the limb of a dark tree. Bound to Serwe. Cold and lifeless against
him. Serwe. Spinning in slow circles. A fly crawled across her
cheek, paused before a breathless nostril. He puffed air across her dead skin,
and the fly was gone. Must keep
her clean. Her eyes half-open,
papyrus-dry. Serwe! Breathe girl, breathe! I command
it! I come before you. I come before! Bound skin-to-skin to
Serwe. What have I… What? What? A convulsion of some kind. No… No! I must
focus. I must assess… Unblinking eyes, staring
down black cheeks, out to the stars. There’s no circumstance beyond… No circumstance beyond… Logos. I’m one of the Conditioned! From his shins to his
cheek, he could feel her, radiating a cold as deep as her bones. Breathe! Breathe! Dry… And so still! So
impossibly still! The Third March Father, please! Please make her breathe! I… I can walk no farther. Face so dark, mottled
like something from the sea… How had she ever smiled? Focus! What happens? All is in disarray. And they’ve killed
her. They’ve murdered my wife. I gave her to them. What did you say? gave her to them. Why? Why would you do this? For you… For them. Something dropped within
him, and he tumbled into sleep, cold water rinsing bruised and broken skin. Dreams followed. Dark
tunnels, weary earth. A ridge, curved like a
sleeping woman’s hip, against the night sky. And upon it two
silhouettes, black against clouds of stars, impossibly bright. The figure of a man
seated, shoulders crouched like an ape, legs crossed like a priest. And a tree with branches
that swept up and out, forking across the bowl of the night. And about the Nail of
Heaven, the stars revolved, like clouds hurried across winter skies. And Kellhus stared at the
figure, stared at the tree, but he could not move. The firmament cycled, as
though night after night passed without day. Framed by the wheeling
heavens, the figure spoke, a million throats in his throat, a million mouths in
his mouth… WHAT DO YOU SEE? The silhouette stood,
hands clasped like a monk, legs bent like a beast. TELL ME… Whole worlds wailed in
terror. The Warrior-Prophet
awoke, his skin tingling against a dead woman’s cheek… More convulsions. Caraskand Ml Father!.What happens to me? Pang upon pang, wresting
away his face, beating it into a stranger’s. You weep. The Zaudunyani on the
Heights of the Bull immediately recognized him as a friend of the
Warrior-Prophet, and Achamian found himself in a bright reception hall blinking
at ivory plaques set in glossy black marble. After several moments, an Ainoni
caste-noble called Gayamakri—one of the Nascenti, the others said—arrived and
escorted him down dark halls. When Achamian asked him about the white-clad
warriors he saw posted throughout the palace, the man yammered on about riots
and the evil machinations of the Orthodox. But Achamian only had ears for his
leaping heart… At long last they paused
before two grand doors—cherrywood beneath bronze fretting—and Achamian found
himself thinking of jokes he could use to make her laugh… “From a sorcerer’s tent to a caste-noble’s suite… Hmm.” He could almost hear her laughter,
almost see her eyes, wanton with love and devilry. “So what will it be the next time I die? The Andiamine
Heights?” “She likely sleeps,” Gayamakri
said apologetically. “Things have been especially hard on her.” Jokes… What could he be
thinking? She would need him, fiercely if what Proyas had said was true. Serwe
dead and Kellhus dying. The Holy War starving… She would need him to hold her.
How he would hold her! Without warning Gayamakri whirled, clutched his hands.
“Please!” he hissed. “You must save him! You must!” The man fell to his knees,
held him with white-knuckled fervour. “You were his teacher!” “I-I’ll do what I can,”
Achamian stammered. “On that I give you my word.“ Tears branched across the
man’s cheeks into his beard. He pressed his forehead to Achamian’s hands.
“Thank you! Thank you!” At a loss for words,
Achamian pulled the Nascenti to his feet. The man fussed with his yellow and
white robes, pathetically, as though just remembering a lifetime obsession with
jnan. The Third March Caraskand “You’ll remember?” he
gasped. “Of course,” Achamian
replied. “But first I must confer with Esmenet. Alone… Do you understand?” Gayamakri nodded. He backed
away three steps, then turned and fled down the hall. He stood before the tall
doors, breathing. Esmi. He would hold her while
she sobbed. He would speak his every thought, tell her what she’d meant to him
through his captivity. He would tell her that he, a Mandate Schoolman, would
take her as his wife—Ins wife! And her eyes would weep wonder… He almost
laughed with joy. At last.‘ Rather than knocking, he
pressed through the doors the way a husband might. Gloom and the scent of
vanilla and balsam greeted him. Only six scattered candles illuminated the
suite, which was broad with vaulted ceilings and decked with a luxurious array
of carpets, screens, and hangings. Set upon a raised dais, a great pentagonal
bed dominated the room’s heart, its sheets and blankets knotted as though by
passion. To the left, the panelled walls opened onto what looked like a private
garden. Outside the sky was bright with stars. A sorcerer’s tent indeed! He stepped from the lane
of light thrown by the doors, peering into the suite’s deeper reaches. The bed
was empty; he could see that through the gauze. The doors rattled shut behind
him, giving him a start. Where was she? Then his eyes found her
on the far side of the room, curled up on a small couch with her back to the
doors—to him. Her hair looked longer, almost purple in the gloom. Her loose
gown had fallen, revealing a slender shoulder, both brown and pale. His arousal
was immediate, both joyous and desperate. How many times had he
kissed that skin? Kissing. That was how he
would awaken her, crying while kissing her naked shoulder. She would stir,
think he was a dream. “No… It
can’t be you. You’re dead.” Then he would take her, with slow, fierce
tenderness, wrack her with voluptuous rapture. And she would know that at long last
her heart had returned. I’ve come back for you Esmi… From death
and agony. He
descended the landing before the doors, only to halt when she suddenly bolted
upright. She looked about in alarm, then stared at him with swollen and
incredulous eyes. For an instant, she
seemed a stranger to him; he saw her with the same youthful and ardent eyes
that had discovered her in Sumna so many years ago. Coltish beauty. Freckled
cheeks. Full lips and perfect teeth. There was a breathless moment between
them. “Esmi…” he whispered,
unable to say anything else. He’d forgotten how beautiful… For a heartbeat she
radiated abject horror, as though she looked upon a wraith. But then,
miraculously it seemed, she flew to him, her small bare feet winglike with
desperation. Then they were together,
recklessly clutching one another. She felt so small, so slender in his arms! “Oh Akka!” she sobbed,
“You were dead! Dead!” “No-no-no, my sweet,” he
murmured, and let loose a shuddering breath. “Akka, Akka, oh Akka!” He ran a shaking hand
across the back of her head. Her hair felt like silk against his palm, soothing
silk. And her smell—incense soft and woman musky. “Shush, Esmi,” he whispered.
“Everything will be all right. We’re together again!” Please let me kiss you. But she cried louder.
“You must save him, Achamian! You
must save him!” Small confusions,
stirring like vermin. “Save him? Esmi… What do
you mean?” His arms slackened. She thrust herself from his embrace, stumbled
back in terror, as though remembering some horrible truth. “Kellhus,” she said, her
lips trembling. Achamian beat at the
whining fear that flared through him. “What do you mean, Esmi?” He could feel the blood
drop from his face. “Don’t you see! They’re killing him!” “Kellhus? Yes… Of course
I’ll do everything 1 can to save him! But please, Esmi! Let me hold you! I need to hold you!” • Dtt ihe Ihird March “You must save him
Achamian! You can’t let them
kill him!” Flare
of dread, undeniable this time. No.
Must be reasonable. She‘: suffered as much as I have. She’s just not as strong. “I won’t let anyone do
anything to him. I swear it. But just… please…‘ Esmi… What have you done? Her face collapsed about
some impossible fact. She sobbed. “He’s…| H-he’s…” Curious sensation—as
though submerged in water with lungs emptied! of air. “Yes, Esmi… He’s the
Warrior-Prophet. I too believe! I’ll do every-| thing I can to save him.” “No, Achamian…” Her face was now dead, in
the way of those who must carve distances, | cut wide what was once close. Don’t say it! Please don’t say it!( He looked about the
extravagant room, gesturing with his hands. He tried to laugh, then said,
“S-some sorcerer’s tent, eh?” A sob knifed the back of his throat. “Wha-what
will it be the next time I die? The Andi… Th-the Andiamine…” He tried to smile. “Akka,” she whispered. “I
carry his child.” Whore after all. Achamian passed between
the congregated Inrithi, between the signal fires of the Shrial Knights, little
more than a shadow thrown by an otherworldly sun. He remembered the screams and
crashing walls of Iothiah. He remembered blasting hallways through stone and
burnt brick. Oh, he knew the might of his song, the thunder of his
world-breaking voice! And he knew the bitter
rapture of vengeance. A great tree soared into
the night sky, a hoary old eucalyptus, too ancient not to be named. His first
thought was to set it alight, to transform it into a blazing beacon of his
wrath—a funeral pyre for the betrayer, the seducer! But he could sense the
absences that encircled the man, the three Chorae the Men of the Tusk had bound
to his bronze ring. And he could see that he suffered… Achamian crept beneath
the tree, onto the mat of fallen leaves. He Caraskand clutched his knees and
rocked to and fro in the darkness. There she was, an impossible fact made
flesh. Serwe dead. And there he was, hanging
with her, limb to limb, breast to breast… Kellhus… Naked, slowly rolling as though the ring unravelled
the long string of his life. How could such things
come to pass? Achamian ceased rocking
and sat still. He listened to the hemp creak in the breeze. He smelled
eucalyptus and death. His body calmed, became the cold vessel of his fury and
heartbreak. Beyond the Shrial Knights
encircling the tree, thousands packed the surrounding campus, singing hymns and
dirges for their Warrior-Prophet. The cry of a flute pierced the din,
wandering, trailing, rising in grief-stricken crescendos, calling out the same
godless prayer, the howl, almost animal in its intensity… Achamian hugged himself
in the darkness. How could such things… Thumb and forefinger
pressed hard against his eyes. Shivering. Cold. Heart like rags bundled about
cold stone. He lifted his face,
raised chin and brow to his hate. Tears streamed down his cheeks. “How? How could you
betray me like this? You… You! The two people—the only two! You kn-knew how
empty my life had been. You knew! I c-can’t understand… I try and I try but I
can’t understand! How could
you do this to me!” Images boiled through his
thoughts… Esmenet gasping beneath the hot plunge of Kellhus’s hips. The
brushing of breathless lips. Her startled cry. Her climax. The two of them,
naked and entwined beneath blankets, staring at the light of a single candle,
and Kellhus asking: “How did
you bear that man? How did you ever bring yourself to lie with a sorcerer?” “He fed me. He was a warm plump pillow with gold in his
pockets… But he
wasn’t you, my love. No one is
you.” His mouth was wrenched
open by a soft inarticulate cry… How. Why. Then savagery. “I could break you, Kellhus. See you burn! Burn until your eyes burst! Dog! Treacherous dog! I’ll see you shriek until you gag
on your The Third March own heart, until your
limbs snap for agony! I can do
it! I can burn
hosts with my song! I can pack the anguish of a thousand men into your skin! With tongue and teeth, I can peel you to nothing! Grind your corpse to chalk!“ He began weeping. The
dark world about him buzzed and burned. “Damn you…” he gasped. He
couldn’t breathe… Where was the air to breathe? He rolled his head, like
a boy whose anger had been stripped hollow by hurt… He beat an awkward fist
against the dead leaves. “Damn-yoU’damn-you’damn-you…” He looked around numbly,
and wiped at his face with a half-hearted sleeve. Sniffled and tasted the salt
of tears in the back of his throat… “You’ve made a whore of
her, Kellhus… You’ve made a whore of my Esmi…” They swayed round in
shadowy circles. The sound of laughter carried on the night wind. The dark tree
seemed to exhale an endless, ambient breath. “Achamian…” Kellhus whispered. The words winded him,
struck him dumb with horror. No… He’s not allowed to speak… “He said you would come.” Spoken from a dead woman’s cheek. Kellhus stared as though
from the surface of a coin, his dark eyes glittering, his face pressed against
Serwe’s, whose head had drawn back in rigor, gaping mouth filled with dusty
teeth. For a moment, it seemed that he lay spread-eagle across a mirror, and
that Serwe was no more than his reflection. Achamian shuddered. What have they done to you? Impossibly, the ring had
ceased its ponderous revolutions. “I see them, Achamian. They walk among us, hidden in ways
you cannot see The Consult. His hackles stirred. Cold
sweat set his skin afire. “The
No-God returns, Akka… I’ve seen him! He is as you said. Tsurumah. Mog-Pharau…” “Lies!” Achamian cried.
“Lies to spare you my wrath!” “M31 N’ascend… Tell them to show you what lies in the
garden.” Caraskand 54/ “What? What lies in the
garden?” But the shining eyes were
closed. A grievous howl echoed
across the Kabul, chilling blood and drawing men with torches to the blackness
beneath Umiaki. The ring continued its endless roll. Dawn light streamed over
the balcony and through the gauze, etching the bedchamber in radiant surfaces
and pockets of black shadow. Stirring in his bed, Proyas scowled at the light, raised
an arm against it. For several heartbeats, he lay utterly still, trying to
swallow away the pain at the back of his throat—the last residue of the
hemoplexy. Then the shame and remorse of the previous evening came flooding back. Achamian and Xinemus had
returned. Akka and Zin… Both of them irrevocably transformed. Because of me. A cold morning breeze
tossed through the sheers. Proyas huddled, hoarding whatever warmth his
blankets offered. He tried to doze, but found himself fencing with worry and
dismay instead. In his boyhood, he’d cherished the luxurious laziness of such
mornings. He drifted through legends and fancies, dreaming of all the great
things he was destined to accomplish. He studied the shadows thrown by the
morning sun and wondered at the way they crept across the walls. On cold
mornings like this one, he wrapped his blankets about him, savouring them the
way the elderly savoured hot baths. The warmth had never stopped shori of his
bones as it did now. Some time passed before
Proyas realized someone watched him. At first he simply blinked, too astonished
to move or shout. Both the decor and the design of the compound were
Nilnameshi. Aside frorr extravagantly detailed imagery, the chamber possessed
low ceiling propped with fat and fluted columns imported, no doubt, from
Invishi o Sappathurai. Almost invisible for the morning glare, a figure
recline* against one of the columns flanking the balcony… Proyas shot forward
from the covers. “Achamian?” i H1K1J MARCH Several heartbeats passed
before his eyes adjusted enough to recognize the man. “What are you doing,
Achamian? What do you want?” “Esmenet,” the sorcerer said. “Kellhus has
taken her as his wife… Pjy you know that?” Proyas gaped at the
Schoolman, robbed of his outrage by something in his voice: a queer
kind of drunkenness, a recklessness, but born of loss instead of drink. “I knew,” he admitted,
squinting at Achamian’s figure. “But I thought that…” He trailed and swallowed.
“Kellhus will soon be dead.” He immediately felt a
fool: it sounded like he offered compensation. “Esmenet is lost to me,”
Achamian said. The sorcerer’s expression was little more than a shadow against
the glare, but somehow Proyas could see its exhausted resolve. “But how could you say
that? You don’t—” “Where’s Xinemus?” the Schoolman interrupted.
Proyas raised his eyebrows, gestured with a leftward tilt of his head. “One
wall over,” he said. “The next room.” Achamian pursed his lips. “Did he tell
you?” “About his eyes?” Proyas
looked to the outline of his feet beneath the vermilion covers. “No. I hadn’t
the courage to ask. I assumed that the Spires…” “Because of me, Proyas.
They blinded him as a way to coerce me.” The message was obvious. It’s not your fault, he was saying. Proyas raised a hand as
though to pinch more sleep from his eyes. He wiped away tears instead. Damn you, Akka… I don’t need your
protection! “For the Gnosis?” he
asked. “Was that what they wanted?” Krijates Xinemus, a
Marshal of Conriya, blinded for blasphemy’s sake. “In part… They also
thought I had information regarding the Cishaurim.” “Cishaurim?” Achamian snorted. “The
Scarlet Spires are terrified, did you know that? Terrified of what they cannot
see.” “It stands to reason: all
they do is hide. Eleazaras still refuses to take the field, even though I’m
told they’ve begun boiling their books out of hunger.” Caraskand “I doubt they stray far
from their latrines,” Achamian said, the old twinkle surfacing through the
exhaustion of his voice, “the rot they read.“ Proyas laughed, and an
almost forgotten sense of comfort stole over him. This, he realized, was how
they’d once talked, their cares and worries directed outward rather than at
each other. But instead of taking heart at the realization, Proyas suffered
only more dismay, understanding that what trust and camaraderie had once given
them, only dread and exhaustion could now deliver. A long silence passed
between them, fuelled by the sudden collapse of their good humour. Proyas found
his gaze wandering to the trains of priapic revellers, brown-skinned and
half-nude, that marched across the painted walls, their arms filled with
various bounty. With every passing heartbeat it seemed the silence buzzed
louder. Then Achamian said,
“Kellhus cannot die.” Proyas pursed his lips.
“But of course,” he said numbly. “I say he must die, so you say he must live.” He glanced, not without
nervousness, at his nearby work table. The parchment sat in plain view, its
raised corners translucent in the sun: Maithanet’s letter. “This has nothing to do
with you, Proyas. I am past you.” The tone as much as the
words chilled Proyas to the pith. “Then why are you here?” “Because of all the Great
Names, only you can understand.” “Understand,” Proyas
repeated, feeling the old impatience rekindle in his heart. “Understand what?
No, let me guess… Only I can understand the significance of the name
‘Anasurimbor.’ Only I can understand the peril—” “Enough!” Achamian
shouted. “Can’t you see that when you make light of these matters you make light of me? When have I ever scoffed at the Tusk? When have I
ever mocked the Latter Prophet? When?” Proyas caught his retort,
which had been all the harsher for the truth of what Achamian said. “Kellhus,” he said, “has
already been judged.” “Have care, Proyas.
Remember King Shikol.” For the Inrithi, the name
“Shikol,” the Xerashi King who had condemned Inri Sejenus, was synonymous with
hatred and tragic HE 1HIRD MARCH presumption. The thought
that his own name might someday possess the same poison caused Proyas no small
terror. “Shikol was wrong… I am right!” It all came down to
Truth. “I wonder,” Achamian
said, “what Shikol would say…” “What?” Proyas exclaimed.
“So the great sceptic thinks a new prophet walks among us? Come, Akka… It’s too
absurd!” These are Conphas’s words… Another unkind thought. Achamian paused, but
whether out of care or hesitation Proyas couldn’t tell. “I’m not sure what he is…
All I know is that he’s too important to die.” Sitting rigid in his bed,
Proyas peered against the sun, struggling to see his old teacher. Aside from
his outline against the blue pillar, the most he could discern were the five
lines of white that streaked the black of his beard. Proyas sighed loudly
through his nostrils, looked down to his thumbs. “I thought much the same
not so long ago,” he admitted. “I worried that what Conphas and the others said
was true, that he was the reason the anger of the God burned against us. But
I’d shared too many cups with the man not to… not to realize he’s more than
simply remarkable… “But then…” From nowhere, it seemed,
a great cloud crawled before the sun, and a dim chill fell across the room. For
the first time, Proyas could see his old teacher clearly: the haggard face, the
forlorn eyes and meditative brow, the blue smock and woollen travel robes,
soiled black about the knees… So poor. Why did Achamian
always look so poor? “Then what?” the
Schoolman asked, apparently unconcerned with his sudden visibility. Proyas heaved another
sigh, glanced once again at the parchment upon his table. Distant thunder
rumbled in on the wind, which whisked through the black cedars below. “Well,” he continued,
“first there was the Scylvendi… His hatred of Kellhus. I thought to myself,
‘How could this man, this man who knows Kellhus better than any other, despise
him so?’” Caraskand “Serwe‘,” Achamian said.
“Kellhus once told me the barbarian loved Serwe.” “Cnaьir said much the
same when I first asked him… But there was something, something about his
manner, that made me think there was more. He’s such a fierce and melancholy
man. And complicated—very complicated.” “His skin is too thin,”
Achamian said. “But I suppose it scars well.” A sour smirk was the most
Proyas could afford. “There’s more to Cnaьir urs Skiotha than you know, Akka.
Mark me. In some ways, he’s as extraordinary as Kellhus. Be thankful he’s our
pet, and not the Padirajah’s.” “Your point, Proyas?” The Conriyan Prince
frowned. “The point is that I questioned him about Kellhus again, shortly after
we found ourselves besieged…” “And?” “And he told me to go ask
Kellhus himself. That was when…” He hesitated, groping in vain for some
delicate way to continue. More thunder piled through the balcony doorways. “That was when I found
Esmenet in his bed.” Achamian closed his eyes
for a moment. When he opened them, his gaze was steady. “And your misgivings
became genuine doubts… I’m touched.” Proyas chose to ignore
the sarcasm. “After that, I no longer
dismissed Conphas’s arguments out of hand. I mulled things over for a time, at
once anguished by all that happened— that happens still!—and terrified that if
I sided with Conphas and the others, I would be striking sparks over tinder.” “You feared war between
the Orthodox and the Zaudunyani.” “And I fear it still!”
Proyas fairly cried. “Though it scarcely seems to matter with the Padirajah
waiting with his desert wolves.” How could it all come to
this? Such a pass! “So what decided you?” “The Scylvendi,” Proyas
said with a shrug. “Conphas brought forward witnesses who claimed to know a man
from the northern caravans, a man who, before he died in the desert, claimed
that Atrithau had no princes.” The Third March “Hearsay,” Achamian said.
“Worthless… You know that. It was probably a ploy on Conphas’s part. Dead men
have a habit of telling the most convenient tales.” “Which is what I thought,
until the Scylvendi confirmed the story.” Achamian leaned forward,
his brow knotted in angry shock. “Confirmed? What do you mean?” “He called Kellhus a
prince of nothing.” The Schoolman sat rigid
for a time, his eyes lost in the space between them. He knew the penalties for
transgressing caste. All men did. The caste-nobles of the Three Seas cherished
their ancestor scrolls for more than spiritual or sentimental reasons. “He could be lying,”
Achamian mused. “As a way to regain possession of Serwe, maybe?” “He could be… Given the
way he reacted to her execution—” “Serwe executed!” the
sorcerer exclaimed. “How could such a thing happen? Proyas? How could you let such a thing happen? She was just—” “Ask Gotian!” Proyas
blurted. “Trying them according to the Tusk was his idea—his! He thought it
would legitimize the affair, make it seem less like… less—” “Like what it was?”
Achamian cried. “A conspiracy of frightened caste-nobles trying to protect
their power and privilege?” “That depends,” Proyas
replied stiffly, “on whom you ask… Either way, we needed to forestall war. And
so far—” “Heaven forfend,”
Achamian snapped, “that men murder men for faith.” “And heaven forfend that
fools perish for their folly. And heaven forfend that mothers miscarry, that
children put out their eyes. Heaven forfend that anything horrible happen! I
couldn’t agree with you more, Akka…” He smiled sarcastically. To think he’d
almost missed the blasphemous old bastard! “But back to the point. I
did not condemn Kellhus out of hand, old tutor. Many things—many!—compelled me
to vote with the others. Prophet or not, Anasurimbor Kellhus is dead.” Achamian had been
watching him, his face emptied of expression. “Who said he was a prophet?” “Enough, Akka, please…
You just said he was too important to die.” Caraskand “He is, Proyas! He is! He’s our only hope!” Proyas rubbed more sleep
from the corner of his eyes. He let go a long, exasperated breath. “So? The Second
Apocalypse, is it? Is Kellhus the second coming of Seswatha?” He shook his
head. “Please… Please tell—” “He’s more!” the
Schoolman cried with alarming passion. “Far more than Seswatha, as he must be…
The Heron Spear is lost, destroyed when the Scylvendi sacked ancient Cenei. If
the Consult were to succeed a second time, if the No-God were to walk again…”
Achamian stared, his eyes rounded in horror. “Men would have no hope.” Proyas had endured many
of these small rants since his childhood. What made them so uncanny, and at the
same time so intolerable, was the way Achamian spoke: as though he recounted rather
than conjectured. Just then the morning sun flashed anew between a crease in
the accumulating clouds. The thunder, however, continued to rumble across
wretched Caraskand. “Akka…” The Schoolman silenced
him with an outstretched hand. “You once asked me, Proyas, whether I had more
than Dreams to warrant my fears. Do you remember?” All too well. It was the
same night Achamian had asked him to write to Maithanet. “I remember, yes.” Without warning, Achamian
stood and stepped out onto the balcony. He vanished into the morning glare only
to reappear moments afterward, hoisting something dark in his hands. By some coincidence, the
sun vanished the moment Proyas reached out to shield his eyes. He stared at the soil-
and blood-stained bundle. A pungent odour slowly filled the room. “Look at it!” Achamian
commanded, brandishing it. “Look! Then send your quickest riders out to the
Great Names!” Proyas recoiled, clutched
at the covers about his knees. Suddenly he realized what it seemed he’d known
all along: Achamian wouldn’t relent. And of course not: he was a Mandate
Schoolman. il-lfc 1HIRU MARCH Maithanet… Most Holy Shriah. Is this what
you would have me do? h jtl Certainty
in doubt. That was what was holy! That! “Save your warrant for the others,”
Proyas muttered. With a flourish h kicked free the sheets and strode naked to
the nearby table. The floor wa cold enough to ache. Shivers chattered across
his skin.i He snatched Maithanet’s
missive, held it out to the scowling sorcererj “Read it,” he murmured. Lightning
threaded the sky beyond the ruine Citadel of the Dog. Achamian set down his
reeking bundle, grasped the parchment, scanned it. Proyas noticed the black
crescents under his fingernails. Instead of looking up in stunned shock as
Proyas had expected, the sorcerer frowned and squinted at the sheet. He even
held it to what light remained. The room trembled to the crack of thunder. “Maithanet?” the sorcerer
asked, his eyes still rivetted to the Shriah’s flawless script. Proyas knew the
line he pondered. The impossible always left the deepest marks on the soul. Assist Drusas Achamian, though he is a
blasphemer, for in this wickedness, the Holy shall also follow … Achamian set the sheet
upon his lap, though he still pinched the corner with his thumb and forefinger.
The two men shared a thoughtful gaze… Confusion and relief warred in his old
teacher’s eyes. “Aside from my sword, my
harness, and my ancestors,” Proyas said, “that letter is the only thing I
brought across the desert. The only thing I saved.” “Call them,” Achamian
said. “Summon the others to Council.” Gone was the golden morning. Rain poured
from black skies. HApTER Twenty-four Caraskand They strike down the weak and call it
justice. They ungird their loins and call it reparation. They hark like dogs and
call it reason. —ONTILLAS, ON THE FOLLY OF
MEN Late Winter, 4112 Year-of-the-Tusk, Caraskand Rain fell in windswept
skirts of grey. It sizzled across the rooftops and the streets. It gurgled
through the gutters, rinsing away flakes of dried blood. It pattered against
the still-skinned skulls of the dead. It both kissed the uppermost twigs of
ancient Umiaki and plummeted through his darkest hollows. A million beads of
water. Converging at the forks between branches, twining into strings,
threading the darkness with lines of glittering white. Soon rivulets spiralled
down the hemp rope and dropped like marbles along the bronze ring, whence they
branched across skin, both living and dead. Across the Kalaul,
thousands ran for cover, shielding themselves with wool cloaks and mantles.
Others wailed, held out their hands, beseeching, wondering what the rains
omened. The lightning blinded them. The waters bit their cheeks. And the
thunder muttered secrets they could not fathom. They held out their
hands, beseeching. ihe Ihird March His sleep was fitful,
haunted by dreams of Dunyain words and Dunyain deeds. You, the abomination said, sti’Ii command the ears of the Great. Serwe slumped in Sarcellus’s
arms, showering blood. Remember
the secret of battle—remember! Cnaьir woke to rain and
whispers. The secret of
battle… The ears of the Great. Not finding Proyas at his
compound, he rode with all due haste to the Sapatishah’s Palace on the Kneeling
Heights, where the Prince’s terrified steward had said he could be found. The
rain had started to trail by the time he reached the first echelons of
residences about the base of the heights. Momentary sunlight cast fingers of
brilliance across the otherwise dark city. As he urged his famished mount
upward, Cnaьir cast a look over his shoulder, saw the sun battle through clouds
of mountainous black. From height to height, across the confusion of the Bowl
all the way to the dark and hazy line of the Triamic Walls, pools of rainwater
flashed white, like a thousand coins of silver. He dismounted in the
anarchy of the palace’s outer campus. Every heartbeat, it seemed, saw another
band of armed riders clack through the gates. With the exception of the Galeoth
guardsmen and several near-skeletal Kianene slaves, everyone carried either the
mark or the air of caste-nobility. Cnaьir recognized many from previous
Councils, though for some reason, none dared to hail him. He followed the
Inrithi into the shadows of the Entry Hall, where he fairly collided with a
crimson-clad Gaidekki. The Palatine halted,
stared at him agog. “Sweet Sejenus!” he
exclaimed. “Are you well? Was there more fighting on the walls?” Cnaьir looked down to his
chest: red had soaked the white of his tunic almost to his iron-plated girdle. “Your throat’s been cut!”
Gaidekki said wondrously. “Where’s Proyas?” Cnaьir
snapped. “With the other dead,”
the Palatine said darkly, gesturing to the files of men disappearing into the
palace’s frescoed inner sanctums. L^araskana Cnaьir found himself
following a band of wild-tempered Thunyeri led by Yalgrota Sranchammer, his
flaxen braids adorned with iron nails bent like tusks and the shrunken heads of
heathen. At one point, the giant jerked his head about and glared at him.
Cnaьir matched his gaze, his soul boiling with thoughts of murder. “Ushurrutga!” the man
snorted and turned away, smiling at the guttura laughter of his compatriots. Cnaьir spat on the walls,
then stared wildly about. Wherever hi looked, it seemed, he saw men glance
away. Ail 0/ them! All of them! Somewhere, he could hear
the tribesmen of the Utemot whisper .. Weeper… The vaulted corridor
ended in bronze doors, which had been proppei open with two busts kicked face
down onto the carpets. Old Sapatishah carved in diorite, Cnaьir imagined, or
relics of the Nansur occupatior Through the doors, he found himself in a great
chamber, shoulderin his way through a crowd of milling caste-nobles. The air
hummed wit reverberating voices. Faggot weeper! The room was circular,
and far more ancient in construction than tin greater palace—Kyranean or
Shigeki, perhaps. A table carved of whi looked like white gypsum dominated the
central floor, which w; covered by a magnificent rug of copper and gold
embroidery. Ju beyond the rug’s outer fringe, a series of concentric tiers rose
in tr fashion of amphitheatres, providing an unobstructed view of the tab
below. Constructed of monumental blocks, the encircling wall soar* above the
back tier, set with sconces and adorned with the distinctiv streamer-like
tapestries favoured by the Kianene. A pointed dome corbelled stone loomed
overhead, hanging, it seemed, without tl luxury of mortar or vaults. A series
of wells about its base providi light, diffuse and white, while high above the
central table heathi banners swayed in unseen drafts. Cnaьir found Proyas
standing near the table, his head bent in conce tration as he listened to a
stocky man in blue and grey. The man’s rot were soiled about the knees, and
compared with the rakish frames of the about him, he looked almost obscenely
fat. Someone shouted from’t The Third March tiers, and the man turned
to the sound, revealing the five white lines that marred his unplaited beard.
Cnaiur stared incredulously. It was the sorcerer. The
dead sorcerer… What happened here? “Proyas!” he shouted, for
some reason loath to come any closer. “We must speak!” The Conriyan Prince
looked about, and upon locating him, scowled much as Gaidekki had. The
sorcerer, however, continued speaking, and Cnaiur found himself waved away with
a harried gesture. “Proyas!” he barked, but the
Prince spared him only a furious glance. Fool.1 Cnaiur
thought. The siege could be broken! He knew what they must do! The secret of battle. He
remembered… He found a spot on the
tiers with the other Lesser Names and their retinues, and watched the Great
Names settle into their usual bickering. The hunger in Caraskand had reached
such straits that even the great among the Inrithi had been reduced to eating
rats and drinking the blood of their horses. The leaders of the Holy War had
grown hollow-cheeked and gaunt, and the hauberks of many, particularly those
who’d been fat, hung loosely from their frames, so they resembled juveniles
playing in their father’s armour. They looked at once foolish and tragic,
possessed of the shambling pageantry of dying rulers. As Caraskand’s titular
king, Saubon sat in a large black-lacquered seat at the head of the table. He
leaned forward, gripping the arms of his chair, as though preparing to exercise
a pre-eminence no one else recognized. To his right reclined Conphas, who
looked about with the lolling impatience of someone forced to treat lessers as
equals. To his left sat Prince Skaiyelt’s surviving brother, Hulwarga the
Limper, who’d represented Thunyerus ever since Skaiyelt had succumbed to the
hemoplexy. Next to Hulwarga sat Gothyelk, the grizzled Earl of Agansanor, his
wiry beard as unkempt as usual, his combative look more menacing. To his left
sat Proyas, his manner both wary and thoughtful. Though he spoke to the
sorcerer, who sat on a smaller seat immediately next to him, his eyes continued
to search the faces of those about the table. And lastly, positioned between
Proyas and Conphas, sat the decorous Palatine of Caraskand Antanamera, Chinjosa,
whom according to rumour the Scarlet Spires had installed as interim King-Regent
in the wake of Chepheramunni’s demise—also to the hemoplexy. “Where’s Gotian?” Proyas
demanded of the others. “Perhaps,” Ikurei Conphas said with droll sarcasm, “the
Grandmaster learned it was a sorcerer you’d summoned us to hear. Shrial Knights,
I fear, tend to be rather Shrial …” Proyas called out to
Sarcellus, who sat on the lowest tier, clad ankle to wrist in the white Shrial
vestments he typically wore to Council. Bowing low to the Great Names, the
Knight-Commander professed ignorance as to his Grandmaster’s whereabouts.
Cnaiur looked down at his right forearm while he spoke, not so much listening
to as memorizing the hateful timbre of the man’s voice. He watched the veins
and scars ripple as he clenched and unclenched his fist. When he blinked, he saw
the knife gashing Serwe’s throat, the shining, spilling red… Cnaiur scarcely heard the
procedural arguments that followed: something regarding the legalities of
continuing without the Holy Shriah’s representative. Instead, he watched
Sarcellus. Ignoring the Great Names and their debate, the dog was engrossed in
counsel with some other Shrial Knight. The spidery network of red lines still
marred his sensuous face, though much fainter than when Cnaiur had last seen
the man with Proyas and Conphas. His expression appeared calm, but his large
brown eyes seemed troubled and distant, as though he pondered matters that
rendered this spectacle irrelevant. What was it the Dunyain had said? Lie made
flesh. Cnaiur was hungry, very
hungry—he hadn’t eaten a true meal for several days now—and the gnawing in his
belly lent a curious edge to everything he witnessed, as though his soul no
longer had the luxury of fat thoughts and fat impressions. The taste of his
horse’s blood was fresh upon his lips. For a mad moment, he found himself
wondering what Sarcellus’s blood would taste like. Would it taste like lies?
Did lies have a taste? Everything since Serwe’s
murder seemed unclear, and no matter how hard Cnaiur tried, he could not
separate his days from his nights. Everything overflowed,
spilled into everything else. Everything had been fouled—fouled! And the
Dunyain wouldn’t shut up! And then this morning,
for no reason whatsoever, he’d simply understood. He’d remembered the secret of
battle… / told him! I showed
him thesecret! And the cryptic words
that Kellhus had spoken on the ruined heights of the Citadel became plain as
lead. The hunt need not end! He understood the
Dьnyain’s plan—or part of it… If only Proyas would have listened! Suddenly the shouting
about the table trailed, as did the rumbling along the tiers. An astonished
hush fell across the ancient chamber, and Cnaьir saw the sorcerer, Achamian,
standing at Proyas’s side, glaring at the others with the grim fearlessness of
an exhausted man. “Since my presence so
offends you,” he said in a loud clear voice, “I will not mince words. You have
all made a ghastly mistake, a mistake which must be undone, for the sake of the Holy War, and for the
sake of the World.” He paused to appraise their scowling faces. “You must free
Anasurimbor Kellhus.” Cries of outrage and
reproach exploded from those about the table and those along the tiers alike.
Cnaьir watched, rivetted to his seat, to his martial posture. He did not, it
seemed, need to speak to Proyas after all. “LISTEN to him!” the Conriyan Prince screeched over the warring
voices. Astonished by the savagery of this outburst, the entire room seemed to
catch its breath. But Cnaьir was already breathless. He seeks to free him! But did this mean they
also knew the Dunyain’s plan? In the Councils of the Holy War, Proyas had
always played the sober foil for the excessive passions of the other Great
Names. To hear the man scream in this way was a dismaying thing. The other
Great Names fell silent, like children chastised not by their father but by
what they’d made their father do. “This is no travesty,”
Proyas continued. “This is no joke meant to gall or offend. More, far more,
than our lives depend on what decision we make here today. I ask you to decide
with me, as does any man with arguments to make. But I demand—7 demand!—that you listen before L^araskand making that decision! And
this demand, I think, is no real demand at all, since listening without bias,
without bigotry, is simply what all wise men do.“ Cnaьir glanced across the
chamber, noted that Sarcellus watched the drama as intently as any of the
others. He even angrily waved at his retinue to fall silent. Standing before the great
Inrithi lords, the sorcerer looked haggard and impoverished in his soiled gear,
and he appeared hesitant, as though only now realizing how far he’d strayed
from his element. But with his girth and unbroken health, he looked a king in
the trappings of a beggar. The Men of the Tusk, on the other hand, looked like
wraiths decked in the trappings of kings. “You’ve asked,” Achamian
called out, “why the God punishes the Holy War. What cancer pollutes us? What
disease of spirit has stirred the God’s wrath against us? But there are many
cancers. For the faithful, Schoolmen such as myself are one such cancer. But
the Shriah himself has sanctioned our presence among you. So you looked
elsewhere, and found the man many call the ‘Warrior-Prophet,’ and you asked
yourself, ‘What if this man is false? Would that not be enough for the God’s
anger to burn against us? A False Prophet?’” He paused, and Cnaьir could see
that he swallowed behind pursed lips. “I haven’t come to tell you whether
Prince Kellhus is truly a Prophet, nor even whether he’s a prince of anything
at all. I’ve come, rather, to warn you of a different cancer… One that you’ve
overlooked, though indeed some of you know of its presence. There are spies
among us, my lords…”—a collective murmur momentarily filled the
chamber—“abominations that wear false faces of skin.” The sorcerer bent beneath
the table, hoisted a fouled sack of some kind. In a single motion, he unfurled
it across the table. Something like silvery eels about a blackened cabbage
rolled onto the polished surface, came to rest against an impossible
reflection. A severed head? Lie made flesh… A cacophony of
exclamations reverberated beneath the chamber’s dome. “—Deceit! Blasphemous deceit! —” “—is madness! We cannot—” “—but what could it—” The Third March Surrounded by astonished
cries and brandished fists, Cnaьir watched Sarcellus stand, then press his way
through the clamour toward the exit. Once again, Cnaiur glimpsed the inflamed
lines that marred the Knight-Commander’s face… Suddenly he realized he’d seen
the pattern before… But where? Where? Anwurat … Serwe bloodied and screaming. Kellhus naked, his
groin smeared red, his face jerking open like fingers about a coal… A Kellhus
who was not Kellhus. Overcome by a trembling,
wolfish hunger, Cnaiur stood and hurried to follow. At last he fathomed
everything the Dunyain had said to him the day he was denounced by the Great
Names—the day of Serwe’s death. The memory of Kellhus’s voice pierced the
thunder of the assembled Inrithi… Lie made flesh. A name. Sarcellus’s name. Sinerses fell to his
knees just beyond the raised threshold of the entryway, then pressed his head
to the faux-carpet carved into the stone. The Kianene, like most other peoples,
considered certain thresholds sacred, but rather than anoint them on the
appropriate days as did the Ainoni, they adorned them with elaborately carved
renditions of reed’Woven rugs. It was, Hanamanu Eleazaras had decided, a worthy
custom. The passage from place to place, he thought, should be marked in stone.
Notice needed to be served. “Grandmaster!” Sinerses
gasped, throwing back his head. “I bear word from Lord Chinjosa!” Eleazaras had expected
the man, but not his agitation. His skin crawling, he looked to his secretaries
and ordered them from the room with a vague wave. Like most men of power in
Caraskand, Eleazaras had found himself very interested in the specifics of his
dwindling supplies. Everything it seemed, had
conspired against him these past months. Caraskand’s slow starvation had
reached such a pitch that even sorcerers of rank went hungry—the most desperate
had started boiling the leather binding and vellum pages of those texts that
had survived the desert. The ^arasKana most glorious School in
the Three Seas had been reduced to eating their books! The Scarlet Spires
suffered with the rest of the Holy War, so much so that they now discussed
meeting with the Great Names and declaring that henceforth the Scarlet Spires
would war openly with the Inrithi— something that had been unthinkable mere
weeks ago. Wagers beget wagers, each
typically more desperate than the last. In order to preserve his first wager,
Eleazaras now must make a second, one that would expose the Scarlet Spires to
the deadly Trinkets of the Padirajah’s Thesji Bowmen, who’d so decimated the
Imperial Saik, the Emperor’s own School, during the Jihads. And this, he knew, could
very well weaken the Scarlet Spires beyond any hope of overcoming the Cishaurim. Chorae! Accursed things.
The Tears of the God cared nothing for those who brandished them, Inrithi or
Fanim, so long as they weren’t sorcerers. Apparently one didn’t need to
interpret the God correctly to wield Him. Wager upon wager.
Desperation upon desperation. The situation had become so dire, things had been
stretched so tight, that any news, Eleazaras realized, could break the back of
his School. The more pinched the note, the more the string could snap. Even the words of this
slave-soldier kneeling at his feet could signal their doom. Eleazaras fought for his
breath. “What have you learned, Captain?” “Proyas has brought the Mandate Schoolman to
the Council,” the man said. Eleazaras felt his skin
pimple. Ever since hearing of their mission’s destruction in Iothiah, he’d
found himself dreading the Mandati’s return… “You mean Drusas
Achamian?” He’s come to exact vengeance. “Yes, Grandmaster. He’s—” “Has he come alone? Are there
any others?” Please, please … Achamian on his own, they could
easily manage. A corps of Mandate sorcerers, however, could prove ruinous. Too
many had died already. No more! We can afford to lose no more! “No. He seems to be
alone, but—” “Does he bring charges
against us? Does he malign our exalted School? “He speaks of skin-spies,
Grandmaster! Skin-spies!” Eleazaras stared
uncomprehending. “He says they walk among
us,” Sinerses continued. “He says they’re everywhere! He even brought one of their heads in a sack—so
hideous Master! That such a thing—but-but I forget myself! Lord Chinjosa himsel
sent me… He seeks instruction. The Mandate sorcerer is demanding the Great
Names free the Warrior-Prophet…” Prince Kellhus? Eleazaras
blinked, still struggling to make sense of the man’s blather… Yes! Yes! His friend! They were friends
before… The Mandate fiend was his teacher. “Free?” Eleazaras managed
to say with some semblance of reserve. “Wh-what are his grounds?” Sinerses’s eyes bulged
from his half-starved face. “The skin-spies … He claims this Warrior-Prophet
is the only one who can see them.” The Warrior-Prophet.
Since marching from the desert, they’d watched the man with growing
trepidation—especially when it became apparent how many of their Javreh were secretly
taking the Whelming and becoming Zaudunyani. When Ikurei Conphas had come to
him promising to destroy the man, Eleazaras had commanded Chinjosa to support
the Exalt-General in all ways. Though he still fretted over the possibility of
war between the Orthodox and the Zaudunyani, he’d thought the matter of
Anasurimbor Kellhus’s fate, at least, had been sealed. “What do you mean?” “He argues that since
only this Prophet can see them, he must be released so that the Holy War might
be cleansed. Only this way, he claims, will the God turn his anger from us.” As an old master at jnan,
Eleazaras was loath to allow his true passions to surface in the presence of
his slaves, but these past days… had been very hard. The face he showed
Sinerses was bewildered—he seemed an old man who’d grown very afraid of the
world. “Muster as many men as
you can,” he said distantly. “Immediately!” Sinerses fled. Spies… Everywhere spies!
And if he couldn’t find them… If he couldn’t find them… L^araskana DOD The Grandmaster of the
Scarlet Spires would speak to this Warrior-Prophet—to this holy man who could
see what was hidden in their midst. Throughout his life, Eleazaras, a sorcerer
who could peer into the world’s smokiest recesses, had wondered what it was the
Holy thought they saw. Now he knew. Malice. It hungered, the thing
called Sarcellus. For blood. For fucking things living and dead. But more than
anything it hungered for consummation. All of it, from its anus to the sham it
called its soul, was bent to the ends of its creators. Everything was twisted
to the promise of climax, to the jet of hot salt. But the Architects had
been shrewd, so heartlessly astute, when they laid its foundations. So few
things—the rarest of circumstances!—could deliver that release. Killing the woman,
the Dunyain’s wife, had been such a moment. The mere recollection was enough to
make its phallus arch against its breeches, gasp like a fish… And now that the Mandate
sorcerer—accursed Chigra!—had returned seeking to deliver the Dunyain… The
promise! The fury! It had known instantly what it must do. As it strode from
the Sapatishah’s Palace, the air swam with its yearning, the sun shimmered with
its hate. Although subtle beyond
reason, the thing called Sarcellus walked a far simpler world than that walked
by men. There was no war of competing passions, no need for discipline or
denial. It lusted only to execute the will of its authors. In appeasing its
hunger, it appeased the good. So it had been forged.
Such was the cunning of its manufacture. The Warrior-Prophet must
die. There were no interfering passions, no fear, no remorse, no competing
lusts. It would kill Anasurimbor Kellhus before he could be saved, and in so
doing… Find ecstasy. Cnaьir need only see the
route Sarcellus took down the Kneeling Heights to know where the dog was
headed. The man rode into the Bowl, which meant he rode to the temple-complex
where Gotian and the Shrial Ihe Ihird March Knights were
stationed—and where the Dunyain and Serwe hung from black-limbed Umiaki. Cnaьir spat, then
hollered for his horse. By the time he clattered
free of the outer campus, he could no longer find the man. He barrelled
downward, through the welter of structures that crowded the slopes below the
Sapatishah’s Palace. Despite his mount’s perilous condition, he whipped it to a
gallop. They raced past spiked garden walls, along abandoned shop fronts, and
beneath looming tenements, turned only where the streets seemed to descend.
Csokis, he remembered, lay near the bottom of the Bowl. The very air seemed to buzz
with omens. Over and over, like a
shard of glass in his stomach, images of Kellhus cycled through his thoughts.
It seemed he could feel the man’s hand clamped about his neck, holding him,
impossibly, over the precipice in the Hethanta Mountains. For a panicked
moment, he even found it difficult to breathe, to swallow. The sensation passed
only when he ran his fingertips along the clotted gash about his throat—his
most recent swazond. How? How can he afflict me so? But then that was
Moenghus’s lesson. The Dunyain made disciples of all men, whether they revered
him or no. One need only breathe. Even my hate! Cnaьir thought. Even
my hate he uses to his advantage! Though his heart rankled at this, it rankled far more
at the thought of losing Moenghus. Kellhus had spoken true those long months
past in the Utemot camp: his heart had only one quarry, and it could not be fed
on surrogates. He was bound to the Dunyain as the Dunyain was bound to Serwe’s
corpse—bound by the cutting ropes of an unconquerable hate. Any shame. Any indignity.
He would bear any injury, commit any atrocity, to whet his vengeance. He would
see the whole world burn before he would surrender his hate. Hate! That was the
obsessive heart of his strength. Not his blade. Not his frame. His neck-breaking,
wife-striking, shield-cracking hate! Hatred had secured him the White Yaksh.
Hatred had banded his body with the Holy Scars. Hatred had preserved him from
the Dunyain when they crossed the Steppe. Hatred had inured him to the claims
these outlanders made on his heart. Hatred, and hatred alone, had kept him
sane. Of course the Dunyain had
known this. After Moenghus, Cnaьir
had fled to the codes of the People, thinking they could preserve his heart.
Having been cheated of them, they’d seemed all the more precious, akin to water
in times of great thirst. For years he’d whipped himself down the tracks
followed by his tribesmen— whipped himself bloody! To be a man, the
memorialists said, was to take and not to be taken, to enslave and not to be
enslaved. So he would be first among warriors, the most violent of all men! For
this was the most paramount of the Unwritten Laws: a man—a true man!—conquered,
and did not suffer himself to be used. Hence the torment of his
pact with Kellhus. All this time Cnaьir had jealously guarded his heart and
soul, spitting upon the fiend’s every word, never thinking that the man could
rule him by manipulating the circumstances about him. The Dunyain had unmanned him no differently than he
had these Inrithi fools. Moenghus! He named him Moenghus.1 M} son! What better way to gall
him? What better way to gull? He had been used. Even now, thinking these very
thoughts, the Dunyain used him! But it did not matter… There were no codes.
There was no honour. The world between men was as trackless as the Steppe—as
the desert! There were no men… Only beasts, clawing, craving,
mewling, braying. Gnawing at the world with their hungers. Beaten like bears
into dancing to this absurd custom or that. All these thousands, these Men of
the Tusk, killed and died in the name of delusion. Save hunger, nothing
commanded the world. This was the secret of
the Dunyain. This was their monstrosity. This was their fascination. Ever since Moenghus had
abandoned him, Cnaьir had thought himself the traitor. Always one thought too
many, always one lust, one hunger! But now he knew that the treachery dwelt in
the chorus of condemning voices, the recriminations that howled out from
nowhere, calling him names, such hateful names! She was my proof! Liars! Fools! He would
make them see! Any shame. Any indignity.
He would strangle infants in their cribs. He would kneel beneath the fall of
hot seed. He would see his hate through! L^araskand There was no honour. Only
wrath and destruction. Only hate. The hunt need not end!■« The abandoned tenements
fell away, and Cnaiur found himself ‘, galloping across one of Caraskand’s
bazaars. Corpses, little more than sodden bundles of skin, bone, and fabric,
flashed beneath. Halfway across the grim expanse, he spied the obelisks of Csokis
rising above a low scarp of buildings. After passing through a complex of
several mud-brick storehouses, decrepit to the point of collapse, he found an
avenue he recognized and whipped his horse along a row of what looked like
fire-gutted residences. After a sharp right, his mount was forced by momentum
to leap an overturned piss basin, a great stone bowl that must have belonged to
a nearby launderer. He felt before he heard his Eumarnan white throw a shoe.
The horse screamed, faltered, then limped to a halt—apparently lamed.I Cursing the thing, he
leapt to the ground and began sprinting,! knowing there was no way for him to
overtake the Knight-Commander now. Beyond the first turn, however, the white
Kalaul miraculously yawned wide before him, criss-crossed by the water-soaked
joints between paving stones and darkened by crowds of starving thousands. At first, he didn’t know
whether he should be dismayed or heartened by the sight of so many Inrithi.
Most of them, he imagined, would be Zaudunyani, which might prevent Sarcellus
from killing the Dunyain outright—if that was what the man in fact intended to
do. Thrusting his way between startled onlookers, Cnaiur gazed across the
crowds, searching in vain for the Shrial Knight. He saw the tree, Umiaki, in the
distance, dark and hunched against a hazy band of colonnades and temple
facades. The sudden certainty that the Dunyain was dead struck him breathless. It’s over. It seemed he’d never
suffered such a harrowing thought. He frantically peered across the distances.
The unobscured sun was boiling steam from the damp masses. He looked to the men
crowding about him, and felt a sudden, dizzying relief. Many chanted or sang.
Others simply looked to the branches reaching skyward. All seemed anxious with
hunger, but nothing more. He lives still, or there would be a riot… Cnaiur barged his way
forward, was shocked to find the half-starved Inrithi scrambling from his path.
He heard voices cry out “Scylvendi!” not in salute as they had at
Anwurat, but as a curse or a prayer. Soon a great train of men followed him,
some jeering, others crying out in exultation. Every face, it seemed, turned to
his passage. A broad lane opened before him, reaching nearly all the way to the
black tree. “Scylvendi!” the Men of the Tusk shouted. “Scylvendi!” As before, Shrial Knights guarded the tree, only now
arrayed in ranks some three or four men deep—a battle line, in effect. Mounted
patrols waded through the near distance. Alone among the Inrithi, the Knights
of the Tusk had refused to don Kianene garments, so they looked threadbare in
their tattered gold and white surcoats. Their helms and chainmail, however,
still gleamed in the sunlight. As he approached them,
Cnaiur spied Sarcellus standing with Gotian amid a clot of other Shrial officers.
The forward Shrial Knights recognized him, and granted him a wide if suspicious
berth as he strode toward Sarcellus and the Grandmaster. The two men seemed to
be arguing. Umiaki reared behind them, branching dark across sea-blue skies.
Glancing across the great mat of leaves, Cnaiur glimpsed the ring hanging
beneath Umiaki’s chapped bowers. He saw Serwe and the Dunyain slowly spinning,
like two sides of a coin. How can she be dead! “Because of you,” the Dunyain whispered. “Weeper …” “But why this moment?”
Cnaiur heard the Grandmaster cry over the growing thunder of the masses. “Because!” Cnaiur boomed
in his mightiest battlefield voice. “He bears a grudge no man can fathom!” Despite the added censers
the Great Names had summoned, Achamian found himself gagging at the stench of
the thing. He explained how the limbs folded into a sheath, even propping the
rotted head to demonstrate the way two limbs fit about a viscous eye socket.
Save the odd exclamation of disgust, the assembled caste-nobles watched in mute
horror. At some point, a slave had offered him an orange-scented kerchief. When
he The Third March could tolerate no more,
he pressed it to his face, and gestured for the hideous thing’s removal. For several moments,
astonished silence ruled the ancient council chamber. The censers hissed and
steamed, fogging the nightmarish air. Smeared across the table, the thing’s
residue, which resembled black mould, continued to reek. “So this,” Conphas
finally said, “is the reason we must free the Deceiver?” Achamian stared at the
man, sensing some kind of verbal trap. He’d known from the start that Conphas
would be his primary adversary. Proyas had warned him, saying he’d never
encountered anyone as formidable in the ways of jnan. Rather than answer,
Achamian decided to draw him out, to reveal his role in these weighty matters. I must discredit him. “The time for playing
your peers for fools is at an end, Ikurei.” The Exalt-General leaned back in
his chair. He drew lazy fingertips across the Imperial Suns stamped on the
cuirass of his field armour, as though to remind Achamian of the Chorae that
lay hidden beneath. It was a gesture as good as any sneer. “You make it sound,”
Proyas said, “as though he already knows about these things.” “He does.” “The sorcerer refers to
ancient history,” Conphas replied. He’d been wearing his blue general’s cloak
in the traditional Nansur fashion, thrown forward over his left shoulder. He
now cast it back with a brisk motion, letting it trail across the copper
carpet. “Some time ago, back when the Holy War still camped about Momemn’s
walls, my uncle discovered that his Prime Counsel was in truth one of these…
things.” “Skeaos?” Proyas
exclaimed. “Are you saying Skeaos was one of these skin-spies?” “None other. Since he
proved improbably difficult to restrain for someone so aged, my uncle summoned
his Imperial Saik. When they insisted no sorcery was involved, I was sent to
fetch the good blasphemer, Achamian here, to confirm their assessment. Things
became…” He paused, then actually had the temerity to wink at Achamian. “Messy.” “So?” Gothyelk cried in his gruff manner.
“Was there any sorcery?” “No,” Achamian replied.
“And that’s the very thing that makes them so deadly. If they were sorcerous
artifacts, they’d be quickly uncovered. As it stands, they’re impossible to detect… And this,” he said, turning to glare at
the Exalt-General, “is precisely what these things have to do with Anasurimbor
Kellhus… ”Only he can see them.“ Several shouts rang
beneath the corbelled dome. “How do you know this?” Hulwarga asked. Achamian stiffened, once
again seeing Kellhus and Serwe swaying beneath the black tree. “He told me.” “Told you?” Gothyelk
growled. “When? When?” “But what are they?” Chinjosa said. “He’s right,” Saubon
exclaimed. “This! This is the cancer that pollutes us! It’s as I said all
along: the Warrior-Prophet has come to cleanse us!” “You move too fast,”
Conphas snapped. “You gloss over the most important questions!” “Indeed!” Proyas said.
“Such as why, when you knew these things were among us, you said nothing to the
Council!” “Please,” the Exalt-General replied, his brows knitted in
derision. “What was I to do? For all we know, several of these creatures sit
among us this very moment…” He looked to the rapt faces, mostly bearded, rising
around them. “Among you on the tiers,” he called with a sweep of his hand. “Or
even about this very table…” A concerned rumble broke across the room. “So tell me,” Conphas
continued, “given the sorcerer’s own estimation of these things, whom could I
trust? You heard what he said: they’re impossible to detect. I did all that I
could in fact do…” He turned his sly eyes to Achamian, though he continued
speaking to his fellow Great Names. “I watched, carefully, and when I at last
knew who the lead agent was, I acted.” Achamian bolted erect in
his chair. He opened his mouth to protest, but it was too late. “Who?” Chinjosa,
Gothyelk, and Hulwarga cried out in near unison. Conphas shrugged. “Why,
the man who calls himself the Warrior-Prophet… Who else?” oil Ihe Ihird March A single jeer pealed
through the air, only to be shouted down by a chorus of rebukes. “Nonsense!” Achamian
cried. “This is rank foolishness!” The Exalt-General’s
eyebrows popped up, as though amazed that something so obvious could be
overlooked. “But you just said that only he could see these abominations, did
you not?” “Yes, but—” “Then tell us, how does he see them?” Caught unawares, Achamian
could only stare at the man. Never, it seemed, had he come to loathe someone so
quickly. “Well, the answer,”
Conphas said, “seems plain enough to me. He sees them because he knows who they are.” Exclamations rang out. Flummoxed, Achamian
looked up across the raucous tiers, glancing from face to bearded face.
Suddenly he realized that what Conphas had said moments earlier was true. Even now, skin-spies watched him—he was certain of
it! The Consult watched him… And laughed. He found himself
clutching the table’s edge. “So how,” Saubon was
crying, “did he know I would prevail on the Plains of Mengedda? How did he know
where to find water in desert sands? How does he know the truth in men’s
hearts?” “Because he’s the
Warrior-Prophet!” someone bellowed from the tiers. “Truth-Bearer!
Light-Bringer! The Salvation of—” “Blasphemy!” Gothyelk
roared, beating the table twice with his great fist. “He is False! False! There can be no more Prophets! Sejenus is the true
voice of God! The only—” “How can you say that?”
Saubon said, as though mourning a wayward brother. “How many times—” “He’s ensorcelled you!”
Conphas shouted in the tones of a High Imperial Officer. “Bewitched you all!”
When the uproar abated somewhat, he continued, projecting his voice with the
same ringing forceful-ness. “As I said earlier, we’ve forgotten the single most
important question! Who? Who are these abominations that hound us, that skulk
unseen in our most secret councils?” “Just as I said,”
Chinjosa seconded. “Who?” Ikurei Conphas looked
pointedly at Achamian, daring him to answer… “Eh, Schoolman?” He’d been outmatched,
Achamian realized. Conphas knew his answer, knew how the others would scoff and
dismiss. The Consult was the stuff of children’s tales and Mandate madmen. He
stared wordlessly at the Exalt-General, struggling to mask his dismay with
contempt. Even with proof, they could undo him with mere words. Even with
proof, they refused to believe! The man’s eyes mocked him, seemed to say, You make it too easy… Conphas abruptly turned to the others. “But you’ve
already answered my question, haven’t you? When you said these things aren’t
the issue of sorcery—or at least any sorcery that Schoolmen can see!” “Cishaurim,” Saubon said.
“You’re saying these things are Cishaurim.” In his periphery, Achamian could
see Proyas glaring at him in alarm. Why don’t you speak? But an exhaustion had
welled through him, a numbing sense of defeat. In his soul’s eye, he saw
Esmenet beseeching him, her gaze alien with heartbreaking thoughts, treacherous
desires… How could this happen? “What else could they be?” Conphas
asked, the very voice of sober reason. “You saw it.” “Aye,” Chinjosa said, his
eyes strangely hesitant. “They belong to the Eyeless Ones. The Snakeheads!
There can be no other explanation.” “Indeed,” Conphas said,
his voice resonating with oratorical gravity. “The man the Zaudunyani call the
Warrior-Prophet, the liar who came to us claiming the privileges of a prince,
is an agent of the Cishaurim, sent to corrupt us, to sow dissension among us,
to destroy the Holy War!” “And he’s succeeded” Gothyelk cried out in dismay. “On all points!” Denials and lamentations
shivered through the air. But doom, Achamian knew, had drawn its circle far
beyond Caraskand’s walls. I must find
some way… “If Kellhus…” Proyas
shouted, commanding the room with rarity of his voice. “If Kellhus is a
Cishaurim agent, then why did
he save us in the desert?“ Achamian turned to his
former student, heartened… “To save his own skin,”
the Exalt-General snapped impatiently. “Why else? As much as you distrust my
wiles, Proyas, you must believe me on this. Anasurimbor Kellhus is a Cishaurim
spy. We’ve been watching ihe Ihird March him ever since Momemn,
ever since his wandering eye revealed Skeaos to my uncle.“ “What do you mean?”
Achamian blurted. The Exalt-General looked
to him contemptuously. “How do you think my uncle, the glorious Emperor of these
lands, identified Skeaos as a spy? He saw your Warrior-Prophet exchanging
glances far out of proportion to their acquaintance.” “He’s not,” Achamian
found himself shouting, “my Warrior-Prophet!” He looked about,
blinking, as shocked by his outburst as the others around the table. AM this time! He could
see them from the very beginning… And yet, the man had said
nothing. Throughout the march, throughout their endless discussions of the past
and the present, Kellhus had
known about the
skin-spies. Heedless of the
caste-nobles’ scrutiny, Achamian gasped for breath, clutched his chest. Dread
pimpled his skin. Suddenly, so many of Kellhus’s questions, especially those
regarding the Consult and the No-God, made a different kind of sense… He was working me! Using me for my knowledge! Trying to
understand what it was he saw! And he saw Esmenet’s soft
lips parting about those words, those impossible words… “I carry his child.” How? How could she betray
him? He could remember those
nights lying side by side in the darkness of his poor tent, feeling her slender
back against his chest, and smiling at the press of her toes, which she always
pushed between his calves when they were frigid. Ten little toes, each as cold
as a raindrop. He could remember the wan yet breathless wonder that would seep
through him. How could such a beauty choose him? How could this woman—this
world!—feel safe in his wretched arms? The air would be warm with their
exhalations, while beyond the stained canvas, across a thousand silent miles, everything
would become strange and chill. And he would clutch her, as though they both
plummeted… And he would curse
himself, thinking, Don’t be a
fool! She’s here! Sheswore you’d never be
alone! Caraskand But he was. He was alone. He blinked absurd tears
from his eyes. Even his mule, Daybreak, was dead… He looked to the Great
Names, who watched him from about the table. He felt no shame. The Scarlet
Spires had carved that from him— or so it seemed. Only desolation, doubt, and
hatred. He did it! He took her! Achamian remembered
Nautzera, in what seemed another lifetime, asking him if the life of Inrau, his
student, was worth the Apocalypse. He’d conceded then, had admitted that no
man, no love, was worth such a risk. And here, he’d conceded once again. He would
save the man who had halved his heart, because his heart was not worth the
world, not worth the Second Apocalypse. Was it? Was it? Achamian had slept only a
short while the previous night, dozing while Proyas slumbered. And for the
first time since becoming a sorcerer of rank within the Mandate, there had been
no Dreams of the Old Wars. He had dreamed, rather, of Kellhus and Esmenet
gasping and laughing in sweaty sheets. Sitting speechless before
the Great Names, Drusas Achamian realized that he held his Heart in. one hand
and Apocalypse in the other. And as he hefted them in his soul, it seemed that
he couldn’t tell which was the heavier. It was no different for
these men. The Holy War suffered,
and someone must die. Even if it meant the World. They were only one small
pocket of confrontation amid a thousand of such pockets scrawling across the
Kalaul. But they were, Cnaьir knew, the centre all the same. Dozens of Shrial
Knights milled about them, their faces blank and guarded, their eyes wide with
looks of worried concentration. Something was about to
happen. “But he must die,
Grandmaster!” Sarcellus cried. “Kill him and save the Holy War!” /0 Ihe Jhird March Gotian glanced nervously
at Cnaьir before looking back to his Knight-Commander. He ran thick fingers
through his short, greying hair. Cnaьir had always thought the Shrial
Grandmaster a decisive man, but he seemed old and unsure now—even cowed in some
strange way by his subordinate’s zeal. All the Men of the Tusk had suffered,
some more than others, and some in different ways than others. Gotian, it
seemed, bore his scars on his spirit. “I appreciate your concern, Sarcellus,
but it has been agreed that—” “But that’s just my point, Grandmaster! This
sorcerer offers the Great Names reasons to spare the Deceiver. He gives them
incentives. Contrived stories of evil spies that only the Deceiver can see!” “What do you mean,”
Cnaьir snapped, “that only he can see them?” Sarcellus turned
to him in a manner that smelled wary, though nothing about him appeared troubled. “This is what the
sorcerer argues,” he said in a sneering tone. “Perhaps he does,” Cnaьir
replied, “but I followed you from the council chamber. The sorcerer had said
only that there were spies in our midst, nothing more.” “Are you suggesting,” Gotian
asked sharply, “that my Knight-Commander is lying?” “No,” Cnaьir replied with
a shrug. He felt the deadly calm settle about him. “I merely ask how he knows
what he did not hear.” “You’re a heathen dog,
Scylvendi,” Sarcellus declared. “A heathen! By what’s right and holy, you
should be rotting with the Kianene of Caraskand, not calling the word of a
Shrial Knight into question.” With a feral grin, Cnaьir
spat between Sarcellus’s booted feet. Over the man’s shoulder, he saw the great
tree, glimpsed Serwe’s willowy corpse bound upside down to the Dьnyain—like
dead nailed to dead. Let it be
now. A series of cries erupted
from the nearby crowds. Distracted, Gotian commanded both Cnaьir and Sarcellus
to lower their hands from their pommels. Neither man complied. Sarcellus glanced to
Gotian, who peered across the crowd, then back to Cnaьir. “You know not what
you do, Scylvendi…” His face flexed, twitched like a dying insect.
“You know not what you do.” Cnaьir stared in horror,
hearing the madness of Anwurat in the surrounding roar. Caraskand j Lie made flesh… Shouts added to shouts,
until the air fairly hissed with cries and howls. Following Gotian’s gaze,
Cnaьir turned and glimpsed a cohort of scale-armoured men in blue and scarlet
coats through the screen of Shrial Knights: a few at first, clearing away
throngs of Inrithi, then hundreds more, forming almost cheek to jowl opposite
Gotian’s men. So far no blades had been drawn. Gotian hurried along his
ranks, shouting orders, bellowing to the barracks for reinforcements. Swords were drawn,
flourished so they flashed in the sun. More of the strange warriors approached,
a deep phalanx of them shoving their way through the crowds of gaunt Inrithi.
They were ]avreh, Cnaьir realized, the
slave-soldiers of the Scarlet Spires. What was happening here? The masses surged about
several brawls. Swords rang and clattered— off to the left. Gotian’s cries
pierced the din. Bewildered, the ranks of Shrial Knights immediately before
Cnaьir suddenly broke, rolled back by Javreh with brandished broadswords. United by shock, both
Cnaьir and Sarcellus drew their swords. But the slave-soldiers
halted before them, making way for the sudden appearance of a dozen emaciated
slaves bearing a silk- and gauze-draped palanquin with an intricately carved,
black-lacquered frame. In one rehearsed motion, the cadaverous men lowered the
litter to the ground. A sudden hush fell over
the crowds, so absolute Cnaьir thought he could hear the wind rattle and click
through Umiaki behind him. Somewhere in the distance, some wretch shrieked,
either wounded or dying. Dressed in voluminous
crimson gowns, an old man stepped from the shrouded litter, looking about with
imperious contempt. The breeze wafted through his silky white beard. His eyes
glittered dark from beneath painted brows. “I am Eleazaras,” he
declared in a resonant patrician’s voice, “Grandmaster of the Scarlet Spires.”
He glanced over the dumbstruck crowds, then levelled his hawkish eyes on
Gotian. “The one who calls
himself the Warrior-Prophet. You will cut him down and deliver him to me.” The Third March L^araskand “Well, it seems the
matter is settled,” Ikurei Conphas said, his solemn tone belied by the hyena
laughing in his gaze. “Akka?” Proyas whispered.
Achamian looked to him, bewildered. For a moment, the Prince had sounded
twelve… It was strange the way
memory cared nothing for the form of the past. Perhaps this was why those dying
of old age were so often incredulous. Through memory, the past assailed the
present, not in queues arranged by calender and chronicle, but as a hungry mob
of yesterdays. Yesterday Esmenet had
loved him. Just yesterday she’d begged him not to leave her, not to go to the
Sareotic Library. For the rest of his life, he realized, it would always be
yesterday. He looked to the
entryway, his attention caught by movement in his periphery. It was Xinemus…
One of Proyas’s men—Iryssas, he realized— led him across the threshold, then up
into the packed tiers. He was dressed in full panoply, wearing the shin-length
skirt of a Conriyan knight and a harness of silvered ring-mail beneath a
Kianene vest. His beard was oiled and braided, and fell in a fan of ringlets
across his upper chest. Compared with the half-wasted Men of the Tusk, he
looked robust, majestic, at once exotic and familiar, like an Inrithi prince
from faraway Nilnamesh. The Marshal stumbled
twice passing through his fellow caste-nobles, and Achamian could see torment
on his blinded face—torment and a curious, almost heartbreaking stubbornness. A
determination to resume his place among the mighty. Achamian swallowed at the
knife in his throat. Zzn… Breathless, he watched
the Marshal settle between Gaidekki and Ingiaban, then turn his face to open
air, staring out as though the Great Names sat before him rather than below.
Achamian remembered the indolent nights he’d spent at Xinemus’s coastal villa
in Conriya. He remembered drinking anpoi, eating wild hen stuffed with oysters,
and their endless talk of things ancient and dead. And suddenly Achamian
understood what he had to do… He had to tell a story. Esmenet had loved him
just yesterday. But then so too had the world ended! “I’ve suffered,” he
called abruptly, and it seemed he heard his voice through Xinemus’s ears. It
sounded strong. “I have suffered,” he
repeated, pushing himself to his feet. “All of us have suffered. The time for
politics and posturing has passed. ‘Those who speak truth,’ the Latter Prophet
tells us, ‘have naught to fear, though they should perish for it…’” He could feel their eyes:
sceptical, curious, and indignant. “It surprises you, doesn’t it, hearing a
sorcerer, one of the Unclean, quoting Scripture. I imagine it even offends some
of you. Nevertheless, I shall speak the truth.” “So you lied to us
before?” Conphas said with the semblance of sombre tact. Always a true son of
House Ikurei. “No more than you,”
Achamian said, “nor any other man in these chambers. For all of us parse and
ration our words, pitch them to the ears of the listener. All of us play
jnan—that cursed game! Even though men die, we play it… And few, Exalt-General,
know it better than you!” Somehow, he’d found that
tone or note that stilled tongues and stirred hearts to listen—that voice, he
realized, that Kellhus so effortlessly mastered. “Men think us Mandate
Schoolmen drunk on legend, deranged by history. All the Three Seas laugh at us.
And why not, when we weep and tug on our beards at the tales you tell your
children at night? But this— this.1—isn’t the Three Seas. This is
Caraskand, where the Holy War lies trapped and starving, besieged by the fury
of the Padirajah. In all likelihood, these are the last days of your life!
Think on it! The hunger, the desperation, the terror flailing at your bowel,
the horror bolting through your heart!” “That’s enough!” an
ashen-faced Gothyelk cried. “No!” Achamian boomed. “It isn’t enough! For what
you suffer now, I’ve suffered my entire life—day and night! Doom! Doom lies
upon you, darkening your thoughts, weighing your steps. Even now, your heart
quickens. Your breath grows tight… ”But you’ve still much, much to learn! “Thousands of years ago,
before Men had crossed the Great Kayarsus, before even The Chronicle of the Tusk was written, the Nonmen ruled The Third March these lands. And like us,
they warred amongst themselves, for honour, for riches, and yes, even for
faith. But the greatest of their wars they fought, not against themselves, or
even against our ancestors—though we would prove to be their ruin. The greatest
of their wars they fought against the Inchoroi, a race of monstrosities. A race
who exulted in the subtleties of the flesh, forging perversities from life the
way we forge swords from iron. Sranc, Bashrag, even Wracu, dragons, are relics
of their ancient wars against the Nonmen. “Led by the great
Cu’jara-Cinmoi, the Nonmen Kings battled them across the plains and through the
high and deep places of the earth. After ordeal and grievous sacrifice, they
beat the Inchoroi back to their first and final stronghold, a place the Nonmen
called Min-Uroikas, the ‘Pit of Obscenities.’ I’ll not recount the horrors of
that place. Suffice to say the Inchoroi were overthrown, extinguished—or so it
was thought. And the Nonmen cast a glamour about Min-Uroikas so that it would
remain forever hidden. Then, exhausted and mortally weakened, they retired to
the remnants of their ruined world, a triumphant, yet broken, race. “Centuries later the Men
of Eanna descended the Kayarsus, howling multitudes of them, led by their
Chieftain-Kings—our fathers of yore. You know their names, for they’re
enumerated in The Chronicle of
the Tusk:
Shelgal, Mamayma, Nomur, Inshull… They swept the dwindling Nonmen before them,
sealing up their great mansions and driving them into the sea. For an age,
knowledge of the Inchoroi and Min-Uroikas passed from all souls. Only the Nonmen
of Injor-Niyas remembered, and they dared not leave their mountain fastnesses. “But as the years passed,
the enmity between our races waned. Treaties were forged between the remaining
Nonmen and the Norsirai of Tryse and Sauglish. Knowledge and goods were
exchanged, and Men learned for the first time of the Inchoroi and their wars
against the Nonmen. Then under the heirs of Nincaeru-Telesser, a Nonman
sorcerer named Cet’ingira—whom you know as Mekeritrig from The Sagas—revealed the location of Min-Uroikas to Shaeonanra,
the Grandvizier of the ancient Gnostic School of Mangaecca. The glamour about
the wicked stronghold was broken, and the Schoolmen of the Mangaecca reclaimed
Min-Uroikas—to the woe of us all. Caraskand “They called it
Anochirwa, ‘Hornsreaching,’ though to the Men who warred against them, it came
to be called Golgotterath… A name we use to frighten our children still, though
it is we who should be frightened.” He paused, searching from face to face. “I say this because the
Nonmen, even though they destroyed the Inchoroi, could not undo Min-Uroikas,
for it wasn’t—isn’t—of this world. The Mangaecca ransacked the place,
discovering much that the Nonmen had overlooked, including terrible armaments
never brought to fruition. And much as a man who dwells in a palace comes to
think himself a prince, so the Mangaecca came to think themselves the
successors of the Inchoroi. They became enamoured of their inhuman ways, and
they fell upon their obscene and degenerate craft, the Tekne, with the curiosity
of monkeys. And most importantly—most tragically!—they discovered Mog-Pharau…” “The No-God,” Proyas said
quietly. Achamian nodded.
“Tsurumah, Mursiris, World-Breaker, and a thousand other hated names… It took
them centuries, but just over two thousand years ago, when the High Kings of
Kyraneas exacted tribute from these lands, and perhaps raised this very council
hall, they finally succeeded in awakening Him… The No-God… Near all the world
crashed into screams and blood ere his fall.” He smiled and looked at
them, blinked tears across his cheeks. “What I’ve seen in my Dreams,” he said
softly. “The horrors I have seen…” He shook his head,
stepped forward as though stumbling clear of some trance. “Who among you forgets
the Plains of Mengedda? Many of you, I know, suffered nightmares, dreams of
dying in ancient battles. And all of you saw the bones and bronze arms vomited
from that cursed ground. Those things happened, I assure you, for a reason. They are the echoes of terrible deeds, the spoor of
dread and catastrophe. If any of you doubt the existence or the power of the
No-God, then I bid you only recall that ground, which broke for the mere
witness of His passing! “Now everything I’ve told
you is fact, recorded in annals of both Men and Nonmen. But this isn’t, as you
might think, a story of doom averted—not in the least! For though Mog-Pharau
was struck down on the Plains of Mengedda, his accursed attendants recovered
his remains. The Third March And this, great lords, is
why we Mandate Schoolmen haunt your courts and wander your halls. This is why
we bear your taunts and bite our tongues! For two thousand years the Consult
has continued its wicked study, for two thousand years they’ve laboured to
resurrect the No-God. Think us mad, call us fools, but it’s your wives, your
children, we seek to protect. The Three Seas is our charge! “This is why I come to
you now. Heed me, for I know of what I speak! “These creatures, these
skin-spies, that infiltrate your ranks have no relation to the Cishaurim. By
calling them such, you simply do what all men do when assailed by the Unknown:
you drag it into the circle of what you know. You clothe new enemies in the
trappings of old. But these things hail from far outside your circle, from time
out of memory! Think of what we saw moments ago! These skin-spies are beyond
your craft or ken, beyond that even of the Cishaurim, whom you fear and hate. “They are agents of the
Consult, and their mere existence omens disaster! Only deep mastery of the
Tekne could bring such obscenities to life, a mastery that promises the
Resurrection of Mog-Pharau is nigh… “Need I tell you what
that means? “We Mandate Schoolmen, as
you know, dream of the ancient world’s end. And of all those dreams, there’s
one we suffer more than any other: the death of Celmomas, High-King of Kuniuri,
on the Fields of Eleneot.” He paused, realized that he panted for breath. “Anasurimbor Celmomas,” he said. There was an anxious
rustle through the chamber. He heard someone muttering in Ainoni. “And in this dream,” he
continued, pressing his tone nearer to its crescendo, “Celmomas speaks, as the
dying sometimes do, a great prophecy. Do not to grieve, he says, for an
Anasurimbor shall return at the end of the world… “An Anasurimbor!” he cried, as though that name held the secret of
all reason. His voice resounded through the chamber, echoed across the ancient
stonework. “An Anasurimbor shall
return at the end of the world. And
he has ■■■ He hangs dying even as we speak! Anasurimbor Kellhus,
the man you’ve condemned, is what we in
the Mandate call the Harbinger, the living sign of the end of days. He is our
only hope!“ Achamian swept his gaze
from the table to the tiers, lowered his opened palms. “So you, the Lords of the Holy War, must ask yourself, what’s
the wager you would make? You who think yourselves doomed, and your wives and
children safe… Are you so certain this man is merely what you think? And whence comes this certainty? From
wisdom? Or from desperation? ”Are you willing to risk the very world to see your bigotries through?“ The silence that
closed about his voice was leaden. It was as though a wall of stone faces and
glass eyes regarded him. For a long moment no one dared speak, and with
startled wonder, Achamian realized he had actually reached them. For once they’d
listened with their hearts! They
believe! Then Ikurei Conphas began
stamping his foot and slapping his thigh, calling, “Hussaa! Hu-hu’hussaaa!” Another on the tiers, General Sompas, joined him… “Hussaa! Hu-hu-hussaaa!” A mockery of the
traditional Nansur cheer. The laughter was hesitant at first, but within
moments, it boomed through the chamber. The Lords of the Holy War had made
their wager. His crimson gown
shimmering in the sunlight, the Grandmaster of the Scarlet Spires took two
steps toward them. “You will deliver him,” he repeated darkly. “Sarcellus!” Incheiri
Gotian roared, brandishing a Chorae in his left hand. “Kill him! Kill the False
Prophet!” But Cnaьir was already
sprinting toward the tree. He whirled, falling into stance several paces before
the Knight of the Tusk. Arrythtng… Any indignity. Any price! Sarcellus lowered his
sword, opened his arms as though in fellowship. Beyond him, the masses surged
and howled across the reaches of the Kalaul. The air hummed with their growing
thunder. Smiling, the Knight-Commander stepped closer, pausing at the extreme
limit of any sudden lunge. ‘We worship the same God,
you and I.“ The Third March The breeze had calmed,
and the sun’s heat leapt into its wake. It seemed to Cnaьir that he could smell
rotting flesh—rotting flesh mingled with the bitter spit of eucalyptus leaves. Serwe… “This,” Cnaьir said
calmly, “is the sum of my worship.” Rest my sweet, for I shall bear you… He clutched his tunic
about its blood-clotted collar, tore it to his waist. He raised his broadsword
straight before him. I shall avenge. Beyond the
Knight-Commander, Gotian exchanged shouts with the crimson-gowned Grandmaster.
The Javreh, the slave-soldiers of the Scarlet Spires, threw themselves against
the ranks of Shrial Knights, who’d linked arms in an effort to hold them—and
the surrounding fields of shrieking and bellowing Inrithi—at bay. The
surrounding temples and cloisters of Csokis reared in the distance, impassive
in the haze. The Five Heights loomed against the surrounding sky. And Cnaьir grinned as
only a Chieftain of the Utemot could grin. The neck of the world, it seemed,
lay pressed against the point of his sword. I shall butcher. All hungered here. All
starved. Everything, Cnaьir
realized, had transpired according to the Dunyain’s mad gambit. What difference
did it make whether he perished now, hanging from this tree, or several days
hence, when the Padirajah at last overcame the walls? So he’d given himself to
his captors, knowing that no man was so innocent as the accused who exposed his
accusers. Knowing that if he
survived… The secret of battle! Sarcellus swept his
longsword in a series of blinding exercises. His arms snapped out and down,
like bolts thrown from siege engines. There was something inhuman to his
movements. Cnaьir neither flinched
nor moved. He was a Son of the People, a prodigy born of desolate earth, sent
to kill, to reave. He was a savage from dark northern plains, with thunder in
his heart and murder in his eyes… He was Cnaьir urs Skiotha, most violent of
all men. He shrugged his bronzed
limbs and planted his feet. “You will fear,”
Sarcellus said, “before this is over.” Caraskand “I cut you once,” Cnaьir
grated. He could clearly see the
threads of inflamed red branching across his face now. They were creases, he
realized. Creases he’d seen open before… “I know why you loved
her,” the Shrial Knight snarled. “Such a peach! I think I’ll chase the dogs
from her corpse—after—and love her again…” Cnaьir stared, unmoved.
Howls rifled the air. Upraised fists hammered the distances—thousands of them. Just the space of breaths
between them now. Breaths. Their blades cut open
space. Kissed. Circled. Kissed again. Whirling geometries, shocking the air
with the staccato ring of steel. Leap. Crouch. Lunge… With bestial grace, the
Scylvendi pounded the abomination, pressing him back. But the Shrial Knight’s
sword was sorcery—it dazzled the air. Cnaьir fell back,
gathered his breath, shook sweat from his mane. “My flesh,” Sarcellus
whispered, “has been folded more times than the steel of your sword.” He
laughed as though utterly unwinded. “Men are dogs and kine… But my kind, we’re
wolves in the forest, lions on the plain. We’re sharks in the sea…” Emptiness always laughed. Cnaьir charged the
creature, his sword pummelling the space between them. Feint, then a
breathtaking sweep. The Shrial Knight leapt, batted away the thunder of his
steel. Iron honed to the absence
of surface, sketching circles and points in the air, reaching, probing… They locked hilts. Leaned
against each other. Cnaьir heaved, but the man seemed immovable. “Such talent!” Sarcellus
cried. Concussion in his face.
How? Cnaьir stumbled across leaves and hot stone, rolled to his feet. He
glimpsed Umiaki, clutching the sun with a tree’s crone fingers. Then Sarcellus’s
blade was everywhere, cutting, hammering down his guard. A string of
desperations saved his life. He leapt clear. The famished mobs
yammered and shrieked. The very ground thrummed beneath his sandals. Exhaustion and stings,
the weight of old wounds. The Third March Their blades scissored,
winced apart, brushed sweaty skin, then circled round the sun. Like teeth they
clacked and gnashed. Lathered in sweat. Each
breath a knife in his chest. Pressed to the bowers of
Umiaki, he glimpsed Serwe sagging against the Dunyain, her face black and bent
back, her teeth leering from shrunken lips. The surrounding riot thinned. The
boundaries between him, the ground, and the black tree crumbled. Something
filled him, swept him forward, unleashed his corded arms. And he howled, the
very mouth of the Steppe, his sword raping
the air between… One. Two. Three… Blows
that could have halved bulls. Sarcellus faltered,
stumbled—saved himself with an inhuman leap. Back, pirouetting through the air.
Landing in a crouch. The smile was gone. His black mane ribboned
by sweat, his chest heaving over the hollow of his belly, Cnaьir raised his
arms to the tumultuous mobs. “Who?” he screamed. “Who will take the knife to my heart?” Again he fell upon the
Shrial Knight, battered him back from the shadows of Umiaki, from the leaves
curled about palmed water. But even as the man’s style crumbled beneath his
frothing attack, it revealed something beautiful in its precision—as beautiful
as it was unconquerable. Suddenly, Sarcellus was swatting his blade as though
it were a game. The man’s longsword became a glittering wind, scoring his
cheek, clipping his shin… Cnaьir fell back, wailed
rabid frustration, bellowed defiance. A sword tip sheared
through his thigh. He skidded in blood, fell forward, bare throat exposed…
Stone bruised his bones. Grit gouged his skin. No… A powerful voice pierced
the roar of the Holy War. “Sarcellus!” It was Gotian. He’d
broken with Eleazaras, and was warily approaching his zealous Knight-Commander.
The crowds abruptly grew subdued. “Sarcellus…” The
Grandmaster’s eyes were slack with disbelief. “Where…”—a hesitant
swallow—“where did you learn to fight so?” The Knight of the Tusk
whirled, his face the very mask of reverent subservience. Sarcellus suddenly
convulsed, coughed blood through grated teeth. Cnaiur guided his thrashing body
to the ground with h,s sword. Tfcen %n reach
of the dumbstruck Grandmaster, he hacked off as head wab ITngle stroke. He
gathered the thick maul of black ha, in his hand ased the severed head high.
Like bowels from a split belly as fac, axed, opened like a harem of limbs.
Gotian fell to his knees. Eleazara: stumbled back into his slaves. The mob’s
thunder-horror, exultauon-broke across the Scylvendi. The riot of revelation.
He tossed the hoary thing at the sorcerer’s feet. HApTER Twenty-five CaraskandI What is the meaning of a deluded life? —AJENCIS, THE THIRD ANALYTIC OF MEN Late Winter, 4112 Year-of-the-Tusfc, Caraskand Crying out to one another
in eager terror, the Nascenti cut the Warrior-Prophet from his dead wife. A
hush, it seemed, had settled across the whole of Caraskand. He knew he should be weak
unto death, but something inexplicable moved him. He rolled from Serwe, braced
his arms against his knees, then waving his frantic disciples away, stood
impossibly erect. Hands wrapped him in a shroud of white linen. He stumbled
clear of Umiaki’s gloom, lifted his face to sun and sky. He could feel awe
shiver through the masses—awe of him. He raised his palms to the great hollows
of the earth, and it seemed he embraced all the Three Seas. I think I see, Father… Cries of rapture and
disbelief rang across the packed reaches of the Kalaul. Several paces away
Cnaьir stood dumbstruck, as did Eleazaras a length behind him. Incheiri Gotian
staggered forward, fell to his knees and wept. Kellhus smiled with boundless
compassion. Everywhere he looked, he saw men kneeling… Yes… The Thousandfold Thought. And it seemed there was
nothing, no dwarfing frame, that could restrict him to this place, to any
place… He was all things, and all things were his… He was one of the
Conditioned. Dunyain. He was the
Warrior-Prophet. Tears roared down his
cheeks. With a haloed hand, he reached beneath his breast, firmly wrested the
heart from his ribs. He thrust it high to the thunder of their adulation. Beads
of blood seemed to crack the stone at his feet… He glimpsed Sarcellus’s
uncoiled face. see … “They said!” he cried in
a booming voice, and the howling chorus trailed into silence. “They said that 1 was
False, that I caused the anger of the God to burn against us!“ He looked into their
wasted faces, answered their fevered eyes. He brandished Serwe’s
burning heart. “But I say that
we—WE!—are that anger!” Kascamandri, the
indomitable Padirajah of Kian, sent a message to the Men of the Tusk, whom he
knew were doomed. The message was an offer—an extremely gracious one, the
Padirajah thought. If the Holy War relented, yielded Caraskand and forswore
their idolatrous worship of False Gods, they would be spared and given lands. They
would be made Grandees of Kian as befitted their rank among the idolatrous
nations. Kascamandri was not so
foolish as to think this offer would be accepted outright, but he knew
something of desperation, knew that in the competition of hungers, piety often
lost in the end. Besides, news that the Holy War had been defeated, not by the
swords of the Prophet Fane but by his words, would shake the wicked Thousand
Temples to the core. The reply came in the
form of a dozen almost skeletal Inrithi knights, dressed in simple cotton
tunics and wearing only knives. After disputing the knives, which the idolaters
refused to relinquish, Kascamandri’s Ushers received them with all jnanic
courtesy and brought them directly to the great Padirajah, his children, and
the ornamental Grandees of his court. The Third March There was a moment of
astonished silence, for the Kianene could scarce believe the bearded wretches
before them could author so much woe. Then, before the first ritual
declaration, the twelve men cried out, “Satephikos
kana ta yerishi ankapharas!” in unison, then drew their knives and cut their own throats. Horrified, Kascamandri
clasped his two youngest daughters tight in his elephantine arms. They sobbed
and cried out, while his older children, especially his boys, chirped in
excited tones. He turned to his dumbstruck interpreter… “Th-they said,” the
ashen-faced man stammered, ‘“the Warrior-Prophet shall… shall come before you …’” He gazed helplessly at his Padirajah’s
gold-slippered feet. When he demanded to know
just who this Warrior-Prophet was, no one could answer him. Only when little
Sirol began crying anew did he cease ranting. Dismissing his slaves, he rushed
her to the incense-fogged chambers of his pavilion, promising sweets and other
beautiful things. The following morning the
Men of the Tusk filed from the Ivory Gate onto the greening Tertae Plain. War
horns pealed from hill to hill. Thousand-throated songs drifted on the breeze.
No longer would the Holy War endure hunger and disease. No longer would it
suffer itself to be besieged. It would march. The tattered columns
wound from the gates onto the fields. Stricken with illness, Gothyelk was too
weakened to battle, so his middle son, Gonrain, rode in his stead. The Great
Names had agreed to give the Tydonni the right flank, so the Earl of Agansanor
could watch his son from Caraskand’s walls. Then came Ikurei Conphas, flanked
by the Sacred Suns of his Imperial Columns. Nersei Proyas followed, at the head
of the once magnificent knights of Conriya. And after him came Hulwarga the
Limper, whose Thunyeri looked more like savage wraiths than men. Then rode
Chinjosa, the Count-Palatine of Antanamera, who’d been appointed King-Regent of
High Ainon after Chepheramunni’s death. The great army the Scarlet Spires had
brought from High Ainon was but a ruined shadow of what it had once been,
though those who remained possessed bitter strength. King Saubon was the last
to issue from Caraskand’s great Ivory Gate, leading trains of wild-eyed
Galeoth. (^arasKana Worried that a
precipitous attack would simply drive the idolaters back to the shelter of
Caraskand’s walls, Kascamandri let the Inrithi form unmolested across the
fields. The Men of the Tusk mustered between byres and before abandoned
farmsteads, their lines somewhat over a mile in length. The weak stood next to
the strong, hauberks rusted, jerkins rotted. Strapless harnesses swung from
emaciated frames. The arms of some, it seemed, were no thicker than their
swords. Knights wearing Enathpanean vests, cassocks, and khalats milled on
horses that looked like starved nags. Even those few noncombatants who’d
survived— women and priests for the most part—stood among them. Everyone had
come to the Fields of Tertae—all those with strength to bear arms. Everyone had
come to conquer or to perish. They formed long, haggard ranks, singing hymns,
beating blades against shoulder and shield. Some one hundred thousand
Inrithi had stumbled from the Carathay, and less than fifty thousand now ranged
across the plain. Another twenty thousand remained within Caraskand, too weak
to do more than cheer. Many had dragged themselves from their sickbeds and now
crowded the Triamic Walls, especially about the Ivory Gate. Some cried out
encouragement and prayers, while others wept, tormented by the collision of
hope and hopelessness. But on wall and field
alike, everyone looked anxiously to the centre of the battle line, hoping for a
glimpse of the new banner that graced the threadbare standards of the Holy War.
There! through budding grove or across rolling pasture, flaring in the breeze:
black on white, a ring bisected by the figure of a man, the Circumfix of the
Warrior-Prophet. The glory of it scarcely seemed possible… War horns sounded the
advance, and the grim ranks began marching forward, into distances screened by
orchards and copses of ash and sycamore. Kascamandri had ordered his host to
draw up more than two miles distant, where rolling plain broadened between the
city and the surrounding hills, knowing it would be difficult for the Inrithi
to cover the intervening distance without exposing their flanks or opening gaps
in their line. Songs keened over the
throbbing of Fanim drums. The deep war chants of the Thunyeri, which had once
filled the forests of their homeland with the sound of doom. The keening hymns
of the Ainoni, The Third March whose cultivated ears
savoured the dissonance of human voices. The dirges of the Galeoth and the
Tydonni, solemn and foreboding. They sang, the Men of the Tusk, overcome with
strange passions: joy that knew no laughter, terror that knew no fear. They
sang and they marched, walking with the grace of almost-broken men. Hundreds collapsed, faint
for the lack of food. Their kinsmen hauled them to their feet, dragged them
forward through the muck of fallow fields. First blood was shed to
the north, nearest the Triamic Walls. The Tydonni under Thane Unswolka of
Numaineiri sighted waves of Fanim cresting the hillocks before them, their
black-braided goatees bouncing to the rhythm of their trotting horses. The Numaineiri,
their faces painted red to terrify their foes, braced their great kite shields
with gaunt shoulders. Their archers loosed thin volleys at the advancing Fanim,
only to be answered by dark clouds of arrows fired from horseback. Led by
Ansacer, the exiled Sapatishah of Gedea, the dispossessed Grandees of Shigek
and Enathpaneah charged with fury into the tall warriors of Ce Tydonn. Near the centre, opposite
the Circumfix, screaming mastodons lumbered forward, their howdahs packed with
black-faced Girgashi wearing blue turbans and bearing shields of red-lacquered
cowhide. But daring outriders, Anpliean knights under Palatine Gaidekki, had
raced forward, setting dead winter grasses and thickets aflame. Oily smoke
tumbled skyward, pulled to the southeast by the wind. Several mastodons
panicked, causing uproar among King Pilaskanda’s Hetmen. But most crashed
through the smoke and stamped trumpeting into the Inrithi’s midst. Soon little
could be seen. Smoke and chaos enveloped the Mark of the Circumfix. Everywhere along the line
Fanim horsemen crested rises, burst from citrus groves, or galloped clear of
drifting smoke—magnificent divisions of them. Great Cinganjehoi, leading the
proud Grandees of Eumarna and Jurisada, swept into the walking lines of Ainoni:
Kishyati and Moserothu under Palatines Soter and Uranyanka. Farther to the
south, the Grandees of Chianadyni assembled along the summits of the rising
hills, awaiting King Saubon and his marching ranks of Galeoth. Wearing
wide-sleeved khalats and Nilnameshi chainmail, they charged down the slopes,
riding thoroughbreds raised on the hard frontiers of the Great Salt. Crown i^araskana Prince Fanayal and his
Coyauri struck Earl Anfirig’s blue-tattooed Gesindalmen, then swept into the
confused lines of the Agmundrmen under Saubon’s personal command. Along Caraskand’s walls
the infirm cried and howled to their kinsmen, struggling to see what happened.
But through the thundering drums, over the ululating war cries of the heathen,
they could hear their brothers sing. Smoke obscured the centre, but nearer the
walls they saw the Tydonni stand firm before flurries of Fanim horsemen,
fighting with grim and preternatural determination. Suddenly Earl Werijen
Greatheart and the knights of Plaideol broke forward, riding what few nags they
possessed, and shattered the astonished Kianene. Then far to the south, someone
sighted Athjeari and the inveterate knights of Gaenri streaming down dark
slopes, crashing into the rear of the Chianadyni. Saubon had sent his young
nephew to counter any flanking manoeuvres in the hills. After breaking and
pursuing the division of cavalry Kascamandri had sent for this very purpose,
the brash Earl of Gaenri found himself auspiciously positioned in the heathen’s
rear. The Fanim fell back in
disarray, while before them, all across the Fields of Tertae, the singing
Inrithi resumed their forward march. Many upon the walls limped eastward,
toward the Gate of Horns, where they could see the first Men of the Tusk fight
clear the smoke of the centre and press onward in the wake of retreating
Girgashi horsemen. Then they saw it, the Circumfix, fluttering white and
unsullied in the wind… As though driven by
inevitability, the iron men marched forward. When the heathen charged, they
grabbed at bridles and were trampled. They punched spears deep into the
haunches of Fanim horses. They fended hacking swords, pulled heathen shrieking
to the ground, where they knifed them in the armpit, face, or groin. They
shrugged off piercing arrows. When the heathen relented, some Men of the Tusk,
the madness of battle upon them, hurled their helms at the fleeing horsemen.
Time and again the Kianene charged, broke, then withdrew, while the iron men
trudged on, through the olive trees, across the fallow fields. They would walk
with the God—whether he favoured them or no. But the Kianene were a
proud, warlike people, and the host the Padirajah had assembled was great both
in number and in heart. Though dismayed, the pious Warriors of the Solitary God
were not undone. The Third March Kascamandri himself took
to the field, hoisted by his slaves upon the back of a massive horse.
Outdistancing the Inrithi, division after division of Fanim horsemen reformed
on the outskirts of the Padirajah’s camp. Men cast about for sign of the Cishaurim.
Then King Pilaskanda, the Padirajah’s tributary and friend, loosed the last of
the mastodons upon the black-armoured Thunyeri. The beasts stormed into
the Auglishmen under Earl Goken the Red. Men were gored on great winding tusks,
tossed and broken by trunks, split like sacks of fruit beneath colossal
stamping feet. From the armoured howdahs strapped to the animals’ backs,
Girgashi sent arrows into the faces of those shouting below. Then the giant
Yalgrota felled one singlehanded, hammering the beast’s head with a mighty
cudgel. The flint-hearted Auglishmen rallied, hewing the trumpeting beasts with
axe and sword. Some mastodons toppled, pulled down by a hundred wounds; others
panicked before the fire Prince Hulwarga brought against them and began rampaging
through the Girgashi horsemen crowded in their rear. Across the Tertae Plain,
waves of Kianene cavalrymen descended upon the advancing Inrithi. Those
watching from the Gate of Horns saw the Padirajah’s White Tiger close with the
Circumfix. They saw the standards of Gaidekki and Ingiaban falter while those
of the Nansur crept forward. The stout-hearted infantrymen of the Selial Column
hacked their way into the Padirajah’s camp. Then the drums of the heathen went
silent, and all the world seemed awash in Inrithi voices raised in triumph and
song. Cinganjehoi fled the field. The giant Cojirani, the bloodthirsty Grandee
of Mizrai, was slain by Proyas, the Prince of Conriya. Kascamandri, the
glorious Padirajah of Kian, fell jawless and dying at the sandalled feet of the
Warrior-Prophet. His jowled head was mounted upon the standard of the
Circumfix. But his precious children escaped, spirited away by slippery
Fanayal, the oldest of his sons. Pinioned between the
advancing Inrithi and the fallen camp, the Grandees of Chianadyni and Girgash
charged and charged, but the Galeoth and Ainoni shrugged away their desperation
and closed with them. The Men of the Tusk wept as they butchered the despairing
heathen, for never had they known such dark glory. Garaskan And in the wake of the
battle, some climbed the mastodon c held their swords out to the glare of the
sun, and understood thi did not know. The Holy War had been
absolved. Forgiven. The surviving Grandees
were strung from many-boughed syc and in the evening light they hung, like
drowned men floating i the deep. And though years would pass, none would dare
toucl They would sag from the nails that fixed them, collapse into hear, the
base of their trees. And to anyone who listened, they would ■ a
revelation… The secret of battle. Indomitable conviction.
Unconquerable belief. Early Spring, 4112, Year’of’the-Tusk, Akssersia Woollen cloak and furs
raised against the rain, Aengelas rode, pЈ long file of horsemen plodding
across the Plains of Gal through ending curtains of falling grey. They followed
a wide trail of trs grasses. Now and anon someone would find the untrammelled
foe of a child, small and innocent, dimpling the mud. Men Aengeli known his
entire life—strong men—wept aloud at the sight. They called themselves the
Werigda, and they searched for missing wives and children. Two days before they
had returned tc camp, warriors flushed with success in the ways of small war,
an found destruction and slaughter instead of their loved ones. Inve fighters
became panicked husbands and fathers, sprinting throug wreckage crying names.
But when they realized their families had taken and not killed, they became
warriors again. And they’d ri driven by love and terror. By mid-morning, colossal
stoneworks resolved from the sheets o and reared above them: the moss- and
lichen-crowded ruins of M once the capital of Akssersia and the greatest city
of the Ancient Is save Tryse. Aengelas knew nothing of the Old Wars,
or of ancieni proud Akssersia, but he understood his people were descendants o
Apocalypse. They dwelt among the unearthed bones of greater thin; The Third March Caraskand They followed the track
over mounds, beneath headless pillars, and along walls spilling into gravel.
The Sranc they followed, Aengelas knew, were neither Kig’krinaki nor Xoagi’i,
the clans that had been their rivals since time immemorial. They followed a
different, more wicked clan— one never before encountered. Some of them were
even horsed—something unheard of for the Sranc. They passed through dead
Myclai in silence, deaf to her rebuke for the unruined. By evening the rains had
stopped, but deepening cold was added to their horror, and their shivers became
shudders. That night they found a firepit, and Aengelas, poking through the
black ash with his knife, retrieved a small pile of little bones. Children’s
bones. The Werigda gnashed their teeth and howled at the dark heavens. There could be no sleep
that night, so they rode on. The plains seemed a heart-stopping hollow, a great
funerary shroud, exposed at all points to abyssal portent, to impossibly cruel
designs. What had they done? How had they angered the man-pummelling Gods? Had
the Stag-Flame burned too low? Had the sacrificial calves been diseased? Two more days of wet,
shivering fury. Two more days of trembling horror. Aengelas would see the
tracks of barefoot women and children, and he would remember their burnt homes,
the bodies of the tribe’s adolescents strewn amidst the wreckage, desecrated in
unspeakable ways. And he would remember his wife’s frightened eyes before he’d
left with the others to raid the Xoagi’i. He would remember her words of
premonition. “Do not leave us, Aenga… The Great Ruiner
hunts for us. I’ve seen him in my dreams‘.” Another firepit, more
small bones. But this time the ashes were warm. The very ground seemed to
whisper with the screams of their loved ones. They were near. But both
they and their horses, Aengelas told them, were too weary for the grim work of
battle. Many were dismayed by these words. Whose child would the Sranc eat,
they cried, while they tossed on the hard ground? All of them, Aengelas said,
if the Werigda failed to win the morrow’s battle. They must sleep. That night anguished
cries awakened him. Pale, callused hands dragged him from his mat, and he drove
his knife through the belly of his assailant. The thunder of hooves crashed
around him, and he was struck face first into
the turf. He struggled to his knees, crying out ti men, but the gibbering
shadows were upon him. His arms were wreni behind him and cruelly bound. He was
stripped of his clothes. With the other survivors,
Aengelas was driven through the n pulled by a leather thong cut into his lips.
He wept as he ran, knowir was lost. No more would he make love to Valrissa, his
wife. No i would he tease his sons as they sat about the evening fire. Over and
through the agony of his face, he asked: What have we done to deserveWhat have we done? By the wicked glare of
torchlight he saw the Sranc, with their ne shoulders and dog-deep chests,
surfacing from the night as though the depths of the Sea. Inhumanly beautiful
faces, as white as pol bone; armour of lacquered human skin; necklaces of human
teeth the shrunken faces of men stitched into their round shields. He sm their
sweet stench—like feces and rotted fruit. He heard the nightm clacking of their
laughter, and from somewhere in the night, the sr of the Werigda’s horses as
they were slaughtered. And periodically he saw
the Nonmen, tall upon their silk-black si What Valrissa had dreamed, he
realized, was true: the Great R hunted them! But why? They reached the Sranc
encampment in the grey light of da‘ string of naked, brutalized men. A great
chorus of wails greeted th women crying names, children howling “Da! Daal” The Sranc led into the midst of their huddled loved
ones, and in an act of curious n cut them loose. Aengelas flew to Valrissa and
his only remaining Wracked by sobs he hugged both of them, clutched at their
bent I And for an instant he felt hope in the pale warmth of degraded boc “Where’s Ileni?” he
hissed. But his wife could only
cry “Aenga! Aengaaa!” The respite, however, was
short-lived. Those men who couldn‘ their families, who either knelt alone in
the frozen mud or raced sc ing and searching for faces now dead, were
butchered. Then those and children without husbands were also hacked to
silence, unti those who had been reunited remained. Under the dark eyes of
the Nonmen, the Sranc then began b< the survivors into two rows, until the
Werigda were drawn ir I The Third March threads across snow and
dead winter grasses, husbands opposite their wives and children. Leashed to an iron spike
hammered into the ground, Aengelas cringed from the cold and threw himself over
and over against the braided thongs that held him from his wife and son. He
spat and raged at the passing Sranc. He tried to summon heartening words, words
that might let his family endure, that might grace them with dignity for what
was about to come. But he could only weep their names, and curse himself for
not strangling them earlier, for not saving them from what was about to happen. And then, for the first
time, he heard the question—even though it was not spoken. An uncanny silence fell
across the Werigda, and Aengelas understood that all of them had heard the
impossible voice… The question had resounded through the souls of all his
suffering people. Then he saw… it. An abomination walking through dawn twilight. It was half-again taller
than a man, with long, folded wings curved like scythes over its powerful
frame. Save where it was mottled by black, cancerous spots, its skin was
translucent, and sheathed about a great flared skull shaped like an oyster set
on edge. And within the gaping jaws of that skull was fused another, more manlike, so that an almost human face grinned
from its watery features. The Sranc howled with
rapture as it passed, and jerked at their groups as they fell to their knees.
The mounted Nonmen lowered their shining scalps. It studied the rows of hapless
humans, and then its great black eyes fell upon Aengelas. Valrissa sobbed, a
mere length away. You… We sense the old fire in you,
manling… “I am Werigda!” Aengelas
roared. Do you know what uie are? “The Great Ruiner,”
Aengelas gasped. Noooo, it cooed, as though his mistake had aroused a
delicious shiver. We are not
He… We are His servant. Save my Brother, we are the last of those who descended
from the void… “The Great Ruiner!”
Aengelas cried. The abomination had
walked ever closer throughout this exchange, until it loomed over his wife and
child. Valrissa clutched Bengulla to her bosom, held out a tragic warding hand
against the hoary figure. Will you tell us, manling? Tell us what
we need to know? “But I don’t know!”
Aengelas cried. “I know nothing of what you asl Effortlessly, the
Xurjranc snapped Valrissa’s tether, and hoisted 1 before him, held her as
though she were a doll. Bengulla shriek “Mama! Mama!” Once again the question
thundered through Aengelas’s soul. He we tore at the turf. “1 don’t know! I don’t
know!” Beneath the monstrosity’s
claws, Valrissa went very still, like a i caught in the jaws of a wolf. Her
terrified eyes turned from Aengelas,; rolled upwards beneath their lids, as
though trying to peer at the fig behind her. “Valrissa!” Aengelas
screamed. “Valrissssaa!” Holding her by the throat, the
thing languorously picked her clotr away, like the skin of a rotten peach. As
her breasts fell free, round-w1 with soft-pink nipples, a sheet of
sunlight flickered across the hori: and illuminated her lithe curves… But the
hunger that held her f behind remained shadowy—like glistening smoke. Animal violence overcame
Aengelas, and he strained at his le gagged inarticulate fury. And a husky voice in his
soul said: We are a race of
lovers, manlin
“Beaaassee!” Aengelas wept. “I don’t knoooowww…” The thing’s free hand traced a
thread of blood between her be across the plane of her shuddering belly.
Valrissa’s eyes retume Aengelas, thick with something impossible. She moaned
and partec hanging legs to greet the abomination’s hand. A race of lovers… “I don’t know! I don’t! I
don’t! Beaase stop! Beaasse!” The thing screeched like a thousand falcons as it
plunged into Glass thunder. Shivering sky. She bent back her head, her face
conti in pain and bliss. She convulsed and groaned, arched to meet the ture’s
thrusts. And when she climaxed, Aengelas crumpled, graspe head between his
hands, beat his face against the turf. The cold felt good against his broken
lips. With an inhuman, dragon
gasp, the thing pressed its bruised pr up across her stomach and washed her
sunlit breasts with pun The Third March black seed. Another
thunderous screech, woven by the thin human wail of a woman. And again it asked the
question. I don’t know… These things make you weak, it said, tossing her like a sack
to cold grasses. With a look, it gave her to the Sranc—to their licentious
fury. Once again, it asked the question. The abomination then gave
his weeping son—sweet, innocent Bengulla—to the Sranc, and once again asked the
question. I don’t know what you mean … And when the Sranc made a
womb of Aengelas himself, it asked— with each raper’s thrust, it asked… Until the gagging shrieks
of his wife and child became the question. Until his own deranged howls became
the question… His wife and child were
dead. Sacks of penetrated flesh with faces that he loved, and still… they did
things. Always, the same mad,
incomprehensible question. Who are the Dunyain? X,