Deadhouse Gates (The Malazan Book of the Fallen #2)
Deadhouse Gates (The Malazan Book of the Fallen #2) Page 13
Deadhouse Gates (The Malazan Book of the Fallen #2) Page 13
'That's no ordinary beast,' Kalam muttered. 'You smelling what I'm smelling, Fiddler?'
Spicy, bitter. 'Hood's breath, that's a Soletaken!'
'A what?' Crokus asked.
'Shapeshifter,' Kalam said.
A rasping voice filled Fiddler's mind – and the expressions on his companions' faces told him they heard as well – Mortals, unfortunate for you to witness my passage.
The sapper grunted. The creature did not sound at all regretful.
It continued, For this you must all die, though I shall not dishonour your flesh by eating you.
'Kind of you,' Fiddler muttered, setting a solid quarrel in the crossbow's slot. The iron head had been replaced with a grapefruit-sized clay ball.
Another fisherboat mysteriously lost, the Soletaken mused ironically. Alas.
Fiddler scrambled to the stern, crouching down beside Kalam. The assassin straightened to face the dhenrabi, one hand on the tiller. 'Soletaken! Be on your way – we care nothing for your passage!'
I shall be merciful when killing you. The creature rushed the barque from directly astern, cutting through the water like a sharp-hulled ship. Its jaws opened wide.
'You were warned,' Fiddler said as he raised the crossbow, aimed and fired. The quarrel sped for the beast's open mouth. Lightning fast, the dhenrabi snapped at the shaft, its thin, sawedged teeth slicing through the quarrel and shattering the clay ball, releasing to the air the powdery mixture within the ball. The contact resulted in an instantaneous explosion that blew the Soletaken's head apart.
Fragments of skull and grey flesh raked the water on all sides. The incendiary powder continued to burn fiercely all it clung to, sending up hissing steam. Momentum carried the headless body to within four spans of the barque's stern before it dipped down and slid smoothly out of sight even as the last echoes of the detonation faded. Smoke drifted sideways over the waves.
'You picked the wrong fishermen,' Fiddler said, lowering his weapon.
Kalam settled back at the tiller, returning the craft to a southerly course. A strange stillness hung in the air. Fiddler disassembled his crossbow and repacked it in oilcloth. As he resumed his seat amidships, Moby crawled back into his lap. Sighing, he scratched it behind an ear. 'Well, Kalam?'
'I'm not sure,' the assassin admitted. 'What brought a Soletaken into the Kansu Sea? Why did it want its passage secret?'
'If Quick Ben was here ...'
'But he isn't, Fid. It's a mystery we'll have to live with, and hopefully we won't run into any more.'
'Do you think it's related to ... ?'
Kalam scowled. 'No.'
'Related to what?' Crokus demanded. 'What are you two going on about?'
'Just musing,' Fiddler said. 'The Soletaken was heading south. Like us.'
'So?'
Fiddler shrugged. 'So ... nothing. Just that.' He spat again over the side and slumped down. 'The excitement made me forget my seasickness. Now the excitement's faded, dammit.'
Everyone fell silent, though the frown on the face of Crokus told the sapper that the boy wasn't about to let the issue rest for long.
The gale remained steady, pushing them hard southward. Less than three hours after that Apsalar announced that she could see land ahead, and forty minutes later Kalam directed the craft parallel to the Ehrlitan coastline half a league offshore. They tacked west, following the cedar-lined ridge as the day slowly died.
'I think I see horsemen,' Apsalar said.
Fiddler raised his head, joining the others in studying the line of riders following a coastal track along the ridge.
'I make them six in all,' Kalam said. 'Second rider's—'
'Got an Imperial pennon,' Fiddler finished, his face twisting at the taste in his mouth. 'Messenger and Lancer guard—'
'Heading for Ehrlitan,' Kalam added.
Fiddler turned in his seat and met his corporal's dark eyes. Trouble?
Maybe.
The exchange was silent, a product of years fighting side by side.
Crokus asked, 'Something wrong? Kalam? Fiddler?'
The boy's sharp. 'Hard to say,' Fiddler muttered. 'They've seen us but what have they seen? Four fisherfolk in a barque, some Skrae family headed into the port for a taste of civilization.'
'There's a village just south of the tree-line,' Kalam said. 'Keep an eye out for a creek mouth, Crokus, and a beach with no driftwood – the houses will be tucked leeward of the ridge, meaning inland. How's my memory, Fid?'
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