Read Midnight Tides Page 49


  Bugg sniffed the air, seeking something beyond the blood.

  ‘It ripped Strong Rall to pieces, it did, then went into that building.’

  The manservant swung his gaze to where the man pointed. A derelict temple, sunken down at one corner, the peaked roof tilted sharply on that side. Bugg grunted. ‘That was the last temple of the Fulcra, wasn’t it?’

  ‘Don’t ask us.’

  ‘That cult’s been dead a hundred years at least,’ the manservant continued, scowling at the dilapidated structure. The entranceway, wide and gaping, capped in a solid lintel stone, was once three steps higher than street level. Back when this alley had been a street. He could just make out the right corner of the top step. There seemed to be a heap of rubbish piled up just within, recently disturbed. Bugg glanced back at the five thugs. ‘What were you doing skulking around here, anyway?’

  An exchange of looks, then the look-out shrugged. ‘We was hiding.’

  ‘Hiding?’

  ‘This little girl… well, uh…’

  ‘Ah. Right.’ Bugg faced the entrance once again.

  ‘Hold on, old man,’ the man said. ‘You ain’t goin’ in there, are you?’

  ‘Well, why else did you call for me?’

  ‘We expected you to, uh, to get the city guards or something. Maybe a mage or three.’

  ‘I might well do that. But first, better to know what we’re dealing with.’ Bugg then clambered into the ruined temple. Thick, damp air and profound darkness. A smell of freshly turned earth, and then, faintly, the sound of breathing. Slow and deep. The manservant fixed his gaze on the source of that sound. ‘All right,’ he said in a murmur, ‘it’s been some time since you last breathed the night air. But that doesn’t give you the right to kill a hapless mortal, does it?’

  A massive shape shuffled to one side near the far wall. ‘Don’t hurt me. I’m not going back. They’re killing everyone.’

  Bugg sighed. ‘You’ll have to do better than that.’

  The shape seemed to break apart, and the manservant saw motion, fanning out. At least six new, smaller forms, each low and long. The gleam of reptilian eyes fixed on him from all along the back wall.

  ‘So that is why you chose this temple,’ Bugg said. ‘Alas, your worshippers are long gone.’

  ‘You may think so.’ A half-dozen voices now, a whispered chorus. ‘But you are wrong.’

  ‘Why did you kill that mortal?’

  ‘He was blocking the doorway.’

  ‘So, now that you’re here…’

  ‘I will wait.’

  Bugg considered this, and the implications inherent in that statement. He slowly frowned. ‘Very well. But no more killing. Stay in here.’

  ‘I will agree to that. For now.’

  ‘Until what you’re waiting for… arrives.’

  ‘Yes. Then we shall hunt.’

  Bugg turned away. ‘That’s what you think,’ he said under his breath.

  He reappeared outside the temple. Studied the five terrified faces in the gloom. ‘Spread the word that no-one is to enter that temple.’

  ‘That’s it? What about the guards? The mages? What about Strong Rall?’

  ‘Well, if you’re interested in vengeance, I suggest you find a few thousand friends first. There will be a reckoning, eventually.’

  The look-out snorted. ‘The Waiting Man wants us to wait.’

  Bugg shrugged. ‘The best I can do. To oust this beast, the Ceda himself would have to come down here.’

  ‘So send for him!’

  ‘I’m afraid I don’t possess that sort of clout. Go home, all of you.’

  Bugg moved past them and made his way down the alley. Things were getting decidedly complicated. And that was never good. He wondered how many more creatures were escaping the barrows. From the Pack’s words, not many. Which was a relief.

  Even so, he decided, he’d better see for himself. The rendezvous awaiting him would have to wait a little longer. That would likely earn him an earful, but it couldn’t be helped. The Seventh Closure was shaping up to be eventful. He wondered if that prophecy, of empire reborn, was in some way linked to the death of the Azath tower. He hoped not.

  The night was surprisingly quiet. The usual crowds that appeared once the day’s heat was past were virtually absent as Bugg made his way down the length of Quillas Canal. He came within sight of the Eternal Domicile. Well, he reminded himself, at least that had been a success.

  The Royal Engineer, aptly named Grum, had been a reluctant, envious deliverer of a royal contract, specifying Bugg’s Construction to assume control of shoring up the compromised wings of the new palace. He had been even less pleased when Bugg ordered the old crews to vacate, taking their equipment with them. Bugg had then spent most of the following day wading flooded tunnels, just to get a feel of the magnitude of the task ahead.

  True to Tehol’s prediction, Bugg’s modest company was climbing in the Tolls, frighteningly fast. Since the list of shares was sealed, Bugg had managed to sell four thousand and twenty-two per cent of shares, and still hold a controlling interest. Of course, he’d be headlining the Drownings if the deceit was ever discovered. ‘But I’m prepared to take that risk,’ Tehol had said with a broad smile. Funny man, his master.

  Nearing the old palace, then into the wending alleyways and forgotten streets behind it. This part of the city seemed virtually lifeless, no-one venturing outside. Stray dogs paused in their scavenging to watch him pass. Rats scurried from his path.

  He reached the wall of the square tower, walked along it until he was at the gateway. A pause, during which he wilfully suppressed his nervousness at entering the grounds. The Azath was dead, after all. Taking a deep breath and letting it out slowly, he strode forward.

  The barrows to either side were strangely crumpled, but he could see no gaping holes. Yet. He left the path. Insects crunched or squirmed underfoot. The tufts of grass looked macerated and were crawling with life.

  Bugg arrived at one barrow where the near side was gone, in its place a black pit across which was the toppled bole of a dead tree. There was the sound of scrabbling from within.

  Then Kettle clambered into view. Clumps of white worms writhed in her straggly, matted hair, rode seething on her shoulders. She pulled herself up using a branch of the tree, then paused to brush the worms off, the gesture dainty and oddly affecting. ‘It’s gone,’ she said. ‘Uncle Bugg, this one’s gone.’

  ‘I know.’

  ‘I didn’t see it. I should have seen it.’

  He shook his head. ‘It is very stealthy, Kettle. And fast. All it needed was a moment when your back was turned. A single moment, no more. In any case, I’ve met it, and, for now at least, it won’t be bothering anyone.’

  ‘Nothing’s working, Uncle Bugg. I need the one below. I need to get him out.’

  ‘What is impeding him, do you know?’

  She shook her head, the motion shedding more worms. ‘At least he’s got swords now. Uncle Brys brought them. I pushed them into the barrow.’

  ‘Brys Beddict? Lass, you are finding worthy allies. Has the Ceda visited?’

  ‘I don’t know any Ceda.’

  ‘I am surprised by that. He should come soon, once he finds out about you.’

  ‘Me?’

  ‘Well, more specifically, your heart.’

  She cocked her head. ‘I hear thumps. In my chest. Is that my heart?’

  ‘Yes. How often are the thumps coming?’

  ‘Maybe eight a day. Now. Before, maybe four. To start, once. Loud, hurting my head.’

  ‘Hurting? You are feeling pain, lass?’

  ‘Not so much any more. Aches. Twinges. That’s how I know something’s wrong with me. Used to be I didn’t feel anything.’

  Bugg ran a hand through his thinning hair. He looked up, studied the night sky. Cloud-covered, but the clouds were high, flat and un-wrinkled, a worn blanket through which stars could be seen here and there. He sighed. ‘All right, lass, show me where you b
uried the swords.’

  He followed her to a barrow closer to the tower.

  ‘He’s in this one.’

  But the manservant’s gaze was drawn to an identical barrow beside the one she indicated. ‘Now, who does that one belong to, I wonder.’

  ‘She’s always promising me things. Rewards. The five who are killing all the others won’t go near her. Sometimes, her anger burns in my head like fire. She’s very angry, but not at me, she says. Those bitches, she says, and that tells me she’s sleeping, because she only says that when she’s sleeping. When she’s awake, she whispers nice things to me.’

  Bugg was slowly nodding. ‘It sounds absurd,’ he said, mostly to himself. ‘Absurd and mundane.’

  ‘What does, Uncle?’

  ‘She’s got him by the ankles. I know. It’s ridiculous, but that’s why he’s having trouble getting out. She’s got him by the ankles.’

  ‘To keep him where he is?’

  ‘No. To make sure she follows him out.’

  ‘She’s cheating!’

  Despite his unease, Bugg smiled. ‘So she is, lass. Of course, she may only end up keeping both of them trapped.’

  ‘Oh no, he’s got the swords now. He just has to work them down. That’s what he said. I didn’t understand before, but I do now. He said he was going to do some sawing.’

  Bugg winced.

  Then he frowned. ‘The five, how close are they to escaping?’

  Kettle shrugged. ‘They’ve killed most everything else. I don’t know. Soon, I guess. They are going to do terrible things to me, they say.’

  ‘Be sure to call for help before they get out.’

  ‘I will.’

  ‘I have to be going now.’

  ‘Okay. Goodbye, Uncle.’

  ****

  Awakened by one of the Preda’s corporals, Brys quickly dressed and followed the young soldier to the Campaigns Room, where he found King Ezgara Diskanar, the Ceda, Unnutal Hebaz and the First Concubine Nisall. The king and his mistress stood at one side of a map table, opposite the Preda. Kuru Qan paced a circle around the entire ensemble, removing his strange eye-lenses for a polish every now and then.

  ‘Finadd,’ Unnutal Hebaz said, ‘join us, please.’

  ‘What has happened?’ Brys asked.

  ‘We are, it seems, at war,’ the Preda replied. ‘I am about to inform the king of the disposition of our forces at present.’

  ‘I apologize for interrupting, Preda.’

  Ezgara Diskanar waved a hand. ‘I wanted you here, Brys. Now, Unnutal, proceed.’

  ‘Divisions, battalions and brigades,’ she said. ‘And garrisons. Our land forces. I will speak of the fleets later. Thus, from west to east along the frontier. On the Reach, First Maiden Fort, its defences still under construction and nowhere near complete. I have judged it indefensible and so am sending the garrison to reinforce Fent Reach. Second Maiden Fort has a garrison of six hundred indicted soldiers, presently being retrained. The island is a penal fortress, as you know. The willingness of the prisoners to fight is of course problematic. None the less, I would suggest we leave them there. Third Maiden Fort will remain active, but with a nominal presence, there to act as forward observers should an Edur fleet round the island and make for the city of Awl.’

  ‘Where we have an army,’ the king said.

  ‘Yes, sire. The Snakebelt Battalion, stationed in the city. The Crimson Rampant Brigade is in Tulamesh down the coast. Now, eastward from the Reach, the port of Trate. Cold Clay Battalion and the Trate Legion, with the Riven Brigade and the Katter Legion down in Old Katter. High Fort has, in addition to its rotating garrison forces, the Grass Jackets Brigade. Normally, we would have the Whitefinder Battalion there as well, but they are presently conducting exercises outside First Reach. They will of course be moving north immediately.

  ‘Further east, the situation is more satisfactory. At Fort Shake is the Harridict Brigade, with the Artisan Battalion encamped outside the Manse – more exercises.’

  ‘How long will it take the Whitefinders to reach High Fort?’ the king asked.

  ‘Reach and Thetil Roads are in good repair, sire. Five days. They leave tomorrow. I would emphasize again, the Ceda’s mages are a major tactical advantage. Our communications are instantaneous.’

  ‘But I want something more,’ Ezgara said in a growl. ‘I want something pre-emptive, Preda. I want them to change their minds on this damned war.’

  Unnutal slowly turned to catch Kuru Qan with her gaze. ‘Ceda?’

  ‘Relevant? Less than we would hope. You want their villages struck? Those just beyond the mountains? Very well.’

  ‘How soon can you arrange it?’ the king asked.

  ‘The cadre in Trate is assembling, sire. Dawn, three days from now.’

  ‘Pray to the Errant that it dissuades them.’ The king managed a wry grin as he watched the Ceda resume his pacing. ‘But you are not confident that it will, are you, Kuru Qan?’

  ‘I am not, sire. Fortunately, I do not believe even Hull would suspect that we would attack the Edur villages.’

  Brys felt his blood grow cold. ‘Ceda? Has my brother…?’

  A sorrowful nod. ‘This is a path Hull Beddict has been walking on for a long time. No-one here is surprised, Finadd.’

  Brys swallowed, then struggled to speak, ‘I would have… thought… given that knowledge—’

  ‘That he would have been assassinated?’ Ezgara asked. ‘No, Brys. His presence is to our tactical advantage, not this damned upstart emperor’s. We are well aware he is advising the Edur on our manner of waging war, and we mean to make use of that.’ The king paused, looked up. ‘Hull’s actions in no way impugn you in our eyes, Brys. Be assured of that.’

  ‘Thank you, sire.’ And to prove your word, you invite me to this meeting. ‘It is unfortunate that Nifadas failed in his mission. What do we know of this new “upstart” emperor you mentioned?’

  ‘He has vast magic at his command,’ Kuru Qan replied distractedly. ‘We can discern little more than that.’

  The First Concubine moved from the king’s side, seemingly distracted.

  ‘The most relevant detail for us,’ Unnutal Hebaz added, ‘is that he is in possession of absolute loyalty among the Edur tribes. And, although Hannan Mosag has been usurped, the Warlock King now stands at the emperor’s side as his principal adviser.’

  Brys was startled by that. ‘The Warlock King simply stepped aside? That is… extraordinary.’

  The Preda nodded. ‘Sufficient to give us pause. Our forward posts have reported sightings along the frontier. Shadows moving at night.’

  ‘The wraiths,’ the Ceda said, his expression souring. ‘We have dealt with them before, of course, and effectively so. None the less, they are an irritant.’

  ‘Do the Tiste Edur have sacred sites?’ Nisall asked from where she now stood, close to the far wall. Faces turned towards her. Arms crossed, she shrugged. ‘Sorcery that annihilates those sites might well weaken their hold on these wraiths. Wasn’t something similar done to the Nerek and the Tarthenal?’

  The Ceda seemed saddened by the suggestion, but he nodded and said, ‘An interesting notion, First Concubine. The Edur are very secretive regarding their sacred sites. Although it does appear to be the case that the very ground beneath their villages is sanctified. Thus, when we destroy those villages, the result may well prove more profound than we imagine. This is a relevant consideration. As for the hidden groves and such, we should make use of the various Acquitors who are familiar with that territory.’

  ‘How soon will the delegation reach the Mouth at Gedry?’ Brys asked the Preda.

  She nodded towards Kuru Qan. ‘The return journey is being hastened. A week, no more.’

  Then three days up the river to arrive here. The war would be well under way by then. ‘Sire, may I ask a question of you?’

  ‘Of course, Brys.’

  ‘Where is the Queen’s Battalion?’

  A momentary silence, then the P
reda cleared her throat. ‘If I may, sire…’

  Thin-lipped, the king nodded.

  ‘Finadd, the queen has taken personal command of her forces, along with the Quillas Brigade. She insists on independence in this matter. Accordingly, we are not factoring those assets into our discussion.’

  ‘My dear wife has always held them to be her own, private army,’ Ezgara Diskanar said. ‘So be it. Better to have them pursuing her ambitions in the field than here in Letheras.’

  ‘That being said,’ Unnutal Hebaz added, ‘we believe they are less than a league south of High Fort, marching northward to meet the Edur in the pass. Her doctrine seems to be one of striking first and striking hard. She will set her mages to clearing the wraiths from her path, which will no doubt be telling enough to eliminate the element of surprise.’

  ‘Is she leading them in person?’

  ‘She and her retinue departed four days ago,’ the king said.

  Brys thought back to that time. ‘The royal visit to her keep at Dissent?’

  ‘That was the pretext.’

  ‘Then will Prince Quillas make an effort to join her?’

  ‘My son has separated his ship from the delegation and now makes for Trate.’

  ‘To what extent,’ Brys asked, ‘has her battalion made use of the caches in the region?’

  ‘Knowing her,’ the king snapped, ‘she’s damn near emptied them.’

  ‘We are hastening to replace the depleted stocks,’ Unnutal Hebaz said. ‘Obviously, we are forced to adjust our tactics as a consequence. We will fight defensively, in keeping with our doctrine, and, yes, the Edur will be expecting that. But we will not roll back. We will not retreat. Once engaged, we intend to maintain that contact. This will be, I believe, a brutal war – perhaps the most vicious war we have fought since conquering Bluerose’s League of Duchies.’

  ‘Now,’ the king said, ‘I would hear details on the defence of our frontier cities and the Sea of Katter. As well, the disposition of the fleets…’

  Brys found the words that followed drifting into a formless murmur somewhere in the background. He was thinking of his brother, marching with the Tiste Edur to wage war on his homeland. On the kingdom that had so cruelly betrayed him. The queen and the prince would want him, desperately… or, at the very least, his head. And through Hull’s crimes, they would seek to strike at Brys, at his position as the king’s protector. They might well send soldiers to round up Tehol as well, on some fabricated pretext. The added pleasure of avenging financial losses incurred as a result of Tehol’s brilliant chaos. They would, in fact, waste little time.