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    Assail


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      About the Book

      Tens of thousands of years of ice is melting, and the land of Assail, long a byword for menace and inaccessibility, is at last yielding its secrets. Tales of gold discovered in the region's north circulate in every waterfront dive and sailor's tavern and now adventurers and fortune-seekers have set sail in search of riches. And all they have to guide them are legends and garbled tales of the dangers that lie in wait - hostile coasts, fields of ice, impassable barriers and strange, terrifying creatures. But all accounts concur that the people of the north meet all trespassers with the sword - and should you make it, beyond are rumoured to lurk Elder monsters out of history's very beginnings.

      Into this turmoil ventures the mercenary company, the Crimson Guard. Not drawn by contract, but by the promise of answers: answers that Shimmer, second in command, feels should not be sought. Also heading north, as part of an uneasy alliance of Malazan fortune-hunters and Letherii soldiery, comes the bard Fisher kel Tath. With him is a Tiste Andii who was found washed ashore and cannot remember his past and yet commands far more power than he really should.

      It is also rumoured that a warrior, bearer of a sword that slays gods and who once fought for the Malazans, is also journeying that way. But far to the south, a woman patiently guards the shore. She awaits both allies and enemies. She is Silverfox, newly incarnate Summoner of the undying army of the T'lan Imass, and she will do anything to stop the renewal of an ages-old crusade that could lay waste to the entire continent and beyond.

      Casting light on mysteries spanning the Malazan empire, and offering a glimpse of the storied and epic history that shaped it, Assail brings the epic story of the Empire of Malaz to a thrilling close.

      Contents

      Cover

      Title Page

      Dedication

      Acknowledgements

      Dramatis Personae

      Prologue

      Chapter I

      Chapter II

      Chapter III

      Chapter IV

      Chapter V

      Chapter VI

      Chapter VII

      Chapter VIII

      Chapter IX

      Chapter X

      Chapter XI

      Chapter XII

      Chapter XIII

      Chapter XIV

      Chapter XV

      Epilogue

      Glossary

      About the Author

      Also by Ian C. Esslemont

      Copyright

      This one is for the old gaming gang at the University of Manitoba: Doug and Doug, Jeff, Oliver, Grant, Ron, Martin, Henry, Craig, Laurence, Neil, Shurjeel and Arne.

      ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

      I wish to offer my gratitude to my advance readers for their observations and comments, Sharon Sasaki and A. P. Canavan. You helped more than you think.

      I give my love to my wife, Gerri Brightwell, without whose support and understanding this novel, and those preceding it, would never have been possible.

      And to you Malaz readers. It has been a privilege to unveil these stories. I hope you have enjoyed them as much as I.

      DRAMATIS PERSONAE

      Lady’s Luck

      Kyle

      Given name, Kylarral-ten, of Bael lands, south of Assail

      Tulan Orbed

      Master of the Lady’s Luck

      Reuth

      Ship’s navigator, and Tulan’s nephew

      Storval

      First Mate

      Gren

      Steersman

      In the North

      Orman

      Son of Orman Bregin

      Old Bear

      A legendary man of the mountains

      Keth and Kasson

      The Reddin brothers

      Gerrun

      Also known as Shortshanks

      King Ronal

      Also known as ‘King Ronal the Bastard’

      Lotji Bain

      Nephew of Jorgan Bain

      Of the Iceblood Holdings

      The Sayers

      Buri

      Legendary elder of the clan

      Jaochim

      Master of the clan

      Yrain

      Mistress of the clan

      Vala

      Sister to Yrain

      Jass

      Son of Vala

      Bernal Heavyhand

      A clan retainer, or hearthguard

      The Heels

      Cull Heel

      Also known as Cull the Kind

      Yullveig

      Wife of Cull, also known as Yullveig the Fierce

      Erta

      Daughter of Cull and Yullveig

      Baran

      Son of Cull and Yullveig

      The Overland Raiders

      Marshal Teal

      A Letherii aristocrat

      Enguf the Broad

      A Genabackan pirate

      Malle of Gris

      A Malazan aristocrat

      Holden of Cawn

      A mage of Serc

      Alca of Cat

      A mage of Telas

      The Sea Raiders

      The Sea Strike

      Burl Tardin

      Captain

      Whellen

      First Mate

      Gaff

      Second Mate

      The Silver Dawn

      Jute Hernan

      Captain

      Ieleen

      Navigator, wife of Jute

      Lurjen

      Steersman

      Buen

      First Mate

      Letita

      Master of weapons

      Dulat

      A sailor

      The Resolute

      Tyvar Gendarian

      Commander of the Blue Shields and Mortal Sword of Togg

      Haagen Vantall

      Steward of the Blue Shields

      The Ragstopper

      Cartheron Crust

      Captain

      Orothos

      First Mate

      The Supplicant

      Timmel Orosenn

      Also known as the Primogenitrix, ruler of the island of Umryg

      Velmar

      Priest and servant to Lady Orosenn

      The T’lan Imass

      The Kerluhm

      Ut’el Anag

      Lanas Tog Bonecaster

      The Ifayle

      Tolb Bell’al

      Bonecaster

      The Kron

      Pran Chole

      Bonecaster

      The Crimson Guard

      K’azz D’Avore

      Commander

      Shimmer

      Second-in-command

      Blues

      New captain of the Second Company

      Bars

      Also known as ‘Iron Bars’, formerly of the Fourth Company

      Cowl

      High Mage and Master Assassin

      Gwynn

      A mage

      Petal

      A mage

      Black the Elder

      Black the Lesser

      Sept

      Cole

      Amatt

      Lean

      Keel

      Turgal

      The Crimson Guard Fourth Company

      Cal-Brinn

      Captain and mage

      Jup Alat

      Lieutenant

      Laurel

      Leena

      Of Mael’s Greetings

      Ghelath Keer

      Master

      Havvin

      Ship’s pilot

      Levin

      Apprentice pilot

      Others

      Silverfox

      The ‘Summoner’ created to end the T’lan Imass war

      Luthal Canar

      Representative of the Canar trading house, of Lether

      Lyan

      A female warrior from north Genabackis, a shieldmaiden

      Dorrin

      King in exile of Anklos, Lyan’s ward

      Fishe
    r kel Tath

      A well-travelled bard

      Jethiss

      A Tiste Andii castaway

      Kilava

      Ancient living Bonecaster of the Imass

      Mist

      A sorceress

      Anger and Wrath

      Mist’s sons

      The Sharrs

      A mage family

      The Sheers

      A mage family

      Giana Jalaz

      A former lieutenant in the Malazan army

      PROLOGUE

      North territory of a new land

      Of the Jaghut wars:

      Seventh century of the 12th Lamatath campaign

      33,421 years before Burn’s Sleep

      THE WOMAN RAN at a steady unhurried pace. Her breath came as long level inhalations through the mouth and out through her wide nostrils. Sweat darkened the front and back of her buckskin shirt. Her moccasins padded silently over stones and pockets of exposed sandy soil. That she was running up a wide rocky mountain slope, and had been for most of the day, attested to iron strength and endurance. She dodged round slim poles of young pine, white spruce and birch. She jumped rocks and slid and scrambled up steep gravel talus fans. She knew she could outpace her pursuers, but that she would never shake them from her trail. Yet still she ran on.

      She knew that once they tired of the chase, they would take her. She judged it ironic that the same desperate urge to continued existence that drove her also lay behind their relentless pursuit – though they had relinquished their claim to it long ago.

      Still she scrambled on up the slope, for one hope remained. One slim unlikely chance. Not for her survival; she had given that up the moment she glimpsed the hoary eldritch silhouettes of her pursuers. The one slim chance lay for vengeance.

      Knife-edged broken rock cut her fingers as she scrabbled for handholds. It flayed her moccasins. The surrounding steep slopes of tumbled stone and talus heaps were just now emerging from winter; ice clung to shadowed hollows and behind the taller boulders. Snow still lay in curved dirty heaps, almost indistinguishable from the surrounding gravel. She took vigour from the chill bite of the high mountain air, knowing it perfectly natural rather than any invoked glacial freeze. Taking cover in a stand of pine, she paused to risk a glance behind: no movement stirred upon the slope below, other than a smallish herd of elk just now clattering their way down-valley. No doubt disturbed by her passage.

      Yet she knew she was not alone. She also knew her pursuers need not show themselves to run her down. She’d hoped, though, they would at least grant her this one small gesture.

      A lone figure did then step out from the cover of tumbled glacial moraine. It was as if she’d willed its appearance. The tattered remains of leathers flapped about its impossibly lean frame. A dark ravaged visage scanned the slope, rising to her. The white bear hide that rode atop the head and shoulders hung as aged and wind-dried as its wearer. She and he locked gazes across the league that separated them – and across a far larger unbridgeable gulf as well.

      So far behind? she wondered. Then she understood and in that instant threw herself flat.

      Something shattered against the rocks next to her. Flint shards thinner than any blade sliced her buckskins and flenced the skin beneath.

      She jumped to her feet and returned to scrambling up the slope. She reached a ridge that was a mere shoulder of the far taller slope: a jagged peak that reared far above. Here she paused a second time, exhausted, her lungs working, drawing in the icy air.

      Then she screamed as a spear lanced through her thigh, pinning her to the bare stony surface. She fell back against a rock and took hold of the polished dark haft to draw it. A skeletal hand knocked hers aside.

      The same fleshless visage that had caught her gaze below now peered down at her. Empty dark sockets regarded her beneath the rotting brow of a white tundra bear. Necklaces of yellowed claws hung about the figure’s neck – presumably the claws of the very beast it wore – while the scraped hide of the beast’s forelimbs rode its arms down to the paws tied with leather bindings to its own hands. Ribs darkened with age peeked through the mummified flesh of its torso. Rags of leather buckskin lay beneath the hide, all belted and tied off by numerous leather thongs. A long blade of knapped flint, creamy brown, its tang wrapped in leather, stood thrust through a belt. ‘Why flee you here, Jaghut?’ the Imass demanded.

      ‘I flee destruction,’ she answered, her voice tight with suppressed pain.

      Others of the Imass warband now walked the ridge. The bones of their feet clattered on the rocks like so many stones. ‘Caves above, Ut’el,’ one of their number announced, pointing a flint blade higher up.

      The Imass, Ut’el, returned its attention to her. ‘You would seek to lure us to ambush,’ it announced.

      ‘If you say so.’

      ‘I am disappointed. You have brought death to your kin as well.’ It faced one of the band. ‘Take scouts. They are occupied?’

      This Imass dipped its hoary skull where the flesh and hair had fallen away in patches. ‘Yes, Bonecaster.’

      Bonecaster! the woman marvelled. A mage, shaman, of the breed! If she should bring this one to destruction then all would have been worth the struggle.

      The bonecaster returned its attention to her. She sensed its mood of disappointment. ‘I had thought you a more worthy prize,’ it murmured, displeased.

      ‘As we had hoped for more worthy successors.’

      ‘Victory is the only measure of that, Jaghut.’

      ‘So the victors would soothe themselves.’

      The undying creature raised its bony shoulders in an eloquent shrug. ‘It is simply existence. Ours or yours.’

      She allowed herself to slump back as if in utter defeat. ‘You mean the elimination of all other than you. That is the flaw of your kind. You can only countenance your family or tribe to live.’

      ‘So it is with all others.’

      ‘No, it is not. You are merely unable to see this.’

      ‘Look about, Jaghut. Raw nature teaches us …’ Ut’el’s whisper-faint voice dwindled away as he slowly raised his fleshless face to the higher slope.

      ‘How fare your scouts, Bonecaster?’ she asked, unable to keep a savage grin from her face.

      ‘They are gone,’ he announced. His gaze fell to her. ‘Others are there.’ He now shook his nearly fleshless head in admiration, and, it seemed to her, even horror. ‘My apologies, Jaghut. I would never have believed any entity would dare …’ He drew his flint blade. ‘You are a desperate fool. You have doomed us all – and more.’

      ‘I am merely returning the favour.’

      All about, the remaining Imass warriors flinched as if stung, drawing their blades of razor-thin flint. ‘Purchase us what moments you can,’ he told them flatly. His brown tannin-stained visage remained fixed upon her.

      The warriors dipped their heads. ‘Farewell,’ one answered, and they disappeared into snatches of dust.

      Above, figures now came pouring from the cave mouths: stone-grey shapes that ran on oddly jointed legs, or all four limbs at a time.

      ‘I am tempted to leave you to them,’ Ut’el said. ‘But we Imass are not a cruel people.’

      ‘So you would absolve yourselves over the centuries, yes?’ She took hold of the spear haft. ‘That is fortunate. Because we Jaghut are not a judgemental people.’ And she heaved herself backwards in one motion, yanking the spearhead from the ground to tumble off the ledge, spear in hand.

      He swung, but the blade cut just short of her as she fell off the narrow ridge. Her buckskins snapped in the wind. ‘I leave you to …’ she yelled as she plummeted from sight down the sheer thousand-foot drop.

      … your doom, Ut’el Anag, Bonecaster to the Kerluhm T’lan Imass, finished for her. He turned to face the high slope. The grey tide of creatures had finished his band and now closed upon him.

      In what he considered his last moments, he raised his flint blade to his face. He watched how the knapped facets reflected the clouds overhead, how the reflections
    rippled like waves on clear lake water.

      No. This is not yet done. I so swear.

      He stepped into the realm of Tellann as the first of the clawed hands snapped closed upon the space he once occupied.

      * * *

      Hel’eth Jal Im (Pogrom of the White Stag)

      51st Jaghut War

      6,031 years before Burn’s Sleep

      Here evergreen forest descended mountain slopes to a rocky shore. Shorebirds hunted for crabs and beetles among tide-pools and stretches of black sand beaches. From their perches on tree limbs and among the taller rocks larger birds of prey watched the shorebirds and the glimmer of fingerlings in the shallows.

      A morning mist hung over the bay. The air was still enough for sounds to cross from one curve of the shore to the other. The figure that arose from the seaweed-skirted boulders was not out of keeping with the scene. The tattered remains of leathers hung from its withered, mummified shoulders and hips. A nut-brown flint blade hung thrust through a crude twisted-hair belt tied about its fleshless waist. Over its head of patches of stringy hair and exposed browned skull it wore a cap cut from the cured grey hide of a beast more at home on sundrenched savanna than temperate boreal forest.

      Similar figures arose, one by one, here and there about the shore. They gathered around the first arrival, and though gender was almost impossible to tell among their fleshless desiccated bodies, skin little more than paper-thin flesh over bone, this one was female and her name was Shalt Li’gar, and she was of the Ifayle T’lan Imass.

     


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