Toll the Hounds (The Malazan Book of the Fallen 8)
Page 73
‘Thank you, sir.’
The guard set out to retrace his route, no doubt returning to the alley with the corpses. The memory of them remained with Mappo, leaving him with a gnawing disquiet. He had glimpsed something of the mysterious wounds on the second body. Brutal indeed. Would there could be an end to such things, yes. A true bless-, ing of peace.
He made his way down the steps. Splashed through the pool to the doors.
They opened before he could knock.
A gaunt, sad-faced man stood before him. ‘You had to know, Mappo Runt of the Trell, that it could not last. You stand before me like a severed limb, and all that you bleed stains the ether, a flow seeming without end.’
‘There will be an end,’ Mappo replied. ‘When I have found him once more.’
‘He is not here.’
‘I know,’
‘Would you walk the veins of the earth, Mappo Runt? to that why you have come to this temple?’
‘Yes.’
‘You choose a most perilous path. There is poison. There is bitter cold. Ice, stained with foreign blood. There to are that blinds those who wield it. There is wind that cries out an eternal death cry. There is darkness and it is crowded. There is grief, more than even you can withstand. There is yielding and that which will not yield. Pressures too vast even for one such as you. Will you still walk Hum’s Path, Mappo Runt?’
‘I must.’
The sad face looked even sadder. ‘I thought as much. I could have made my list of warnings even longer, you know. We could have stood in our places for the rest of the night, you in that sodden pool, me standing here uttering dire details. And still, at long last, you would say “I must” and we would have wasted all that time. Me hoarse and you asleep on your feet.’
‘You sound almost regretful, Priest.’
‘Perhaps I am at that. It was a most poetic list.’
‘Then by all means record it in full when you write your log of this fell night.’
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‘Thank you, sir.’
The guard set out to retrace his route, no doubt returning to the alley with the corpses. The memory of them remained with Mappo, leaving him with a gnawing disquiet. He had glimpsed something of the mysterious wounds on the second body. Brutal indeed. Would there could be an end to such things, yes. A true bless-, ing of peace.
He made his way down the steps. Splashed through the pool to the doors.
They opened before he could knock.
A gaunt, sad-faced man stood before him. ‘You had to know, Mappo Runt of the Trell, that it could not last. You stand before me like a severed limb, and all that you bleed stains the ether, a flow seeming without end.’
‘There will be an end,’ Mappo replied. ‘When I have found him once more.’
‘He is not here.’
‘I know,’
‘Would you walk the veins of the earth, Mappo Runt? to that why you have come to this temple?’
‘Yes.’
‘You choose a most perilous path. There is poison. There is bitter cold. Ice, stained with foreign blood. There to are that blinds those who wield it. There is wind that cries out an eternal death cry. There is darkness and it is crowded. There is grief, more than even you can withstand. There is yielding and that which will not yield. Pressures too vast even for one such as you. Will you still walk Hum’s Path, Mappo Runt?’
‘I must.’
The sad face looked even sadder. ‘I thought as much. I could have made my list of warnings even longer, you know. We could have stood in our places for the rest of the night, you in that sodden pool, me standing here uttering dire details. And still, at long last, you would say “I must” and we would have wasted all that time. Me hoarse and you asleep on your feet.’
‘You sound almost regretful, Priest.’
‘Perhaps I am at that. It was a most poetic list.’
‘Then by all means record it in full when you write your log of this fell night.’
‘I like that notion. Thank you. Now, come inside, and wipe your feet. But hurry-we have been preparing the ritual since your ship docked.’
‘The breadth of your knowledge is impressive,’ Mappo said as, ducking, he stepped inside.
‘Yes, it is. Now, follow me.’
A short corridor, ceiling dripping, into a broader transept, across a dingy mosaic floor, down a second corridor, this one lined with niches, each home to a holy object-misshapen chunks of raw ore, crystals of white, rose and purple quartz and amethyst, starstones, amber, copper, flint and petrified wood and bones. At the end of this passage the corridor opened out into a wider colonnaded main chamber, and here, arrayed in two rows, waited acolytes, each wearing brown robes and holding aloft a torch.
The acolytes chanted in some arcane tongue as the High Priest led Mappo down between the rows.
Where an altar should have been, at the far end, there was instead a crevasse in the floor, as if the very earth had opened up beneath the altar, swallowing it and the dais it stood on. From the fissure rose bitter, hot smoke.
The sad-faced High Priest walked up to its very, edge then turned to face Mappo. ‘Burn’s Gate awaits you, Trell.’
Mappo approached and looked down.
To see molten rock twenty spans below, a seething river sweeping past.
‘Of course,’ the High Priest said, ‘what you see is not in this realm. Were it so, Darujhistan would now be a ball of fire bright as a newborn sun. The caverns of gas and all that.’
if I jump down there,’ Mappo said, ‘I will be roasted to a crisp.’
‘Yes. I know what you must be thinking.’
‘Oh?’
‘Some gate.’
‘Ah, yes. Accurate enough.’
‘You must be armoured against such forces. This is the ritual I mentioned ear¬lier. Are you ready, Mappo Runt?’
‘You wish to cast some sort of protective spell on me?’
‘No,’ he replied, with an expression near to weeping, ‘we wish to bathe you in blood.’
Barathol Mekhar could see the pain in Scillara’s eyes, when they turned inward in a private moment, and he saw how Chaur held himself close to her, protective in some instinctive fashion as might be a dog with a wounded master. When she caught Barathol studying her, she was quick with a broad smile, and each time he felt as if something struck his heart, like a fist against a closed door. She was indeed a most beautiful woman, the kind of beauty that emerged after a second look, or even a third, unfolding like a dark flower in jungle shadows. The pain in those eyes only deepened his anguish.