displaced burghers — and to them, if the army had any leader, it was Martal.
The potential for confusion or outright argument troubled him. An army was like a snake; it should not have two heads.
Ivanr and Carr’s place in the column reached a curve in a hillside offering a view east of the city of Blight and the Bay of Blight beyond. The city’s stone walls were tall. But now smoke wreathed them, billowing in plumes from almost everywhere within. It drifted inland, a great dark pall, driven by the prevailing wind that held from the north-east during this season of storms. The south gate gaped open, a dark invitation. The Army of Reform was ordering ranks before it. Seeing this, Ivanr cursed and pushed ahead. Carr followed.
Ivanr tracked Martal simply by keeping an eye on all the messengers coming and going. He found the woman mounted, surrounded by staff and bodyguards, dressed as always in her blackened armour, black boots and blackened gauntlets, her short night-dark hair touched with grey. Such martial imagery was all in keeping with some kind of legendary warrior-princess, until one saw her face: the lips full, yes, but habitually grim, drawn down as if constantly displeased; the eyes dark, but sharp and dismissive, not mysterious or alluring; and the nose what one would expect to see sported by some grizzled campaigner, canted and flattened. The Black Queen indeed.
A queen of war.
The guards allowed Ivanr and Carr through. When Martal finished with a messenger Ivanr cleared his throat. She nodded distractedly for him to speak.
‘You’re not going in there,’ his said, his disapproval clear.
A faint near-smile, her gaze scanning the broad columns of infantry. ‘No, Ivanr. We’re forming up. I’m told the adherents of the Lady are withdrawing to the north.’ She spared him a quick glance. ‘They need time to complete their flight.’
Ivanr grunted his appreciation. ‘You would burden the Jourilan Imperials with them.’
‘Yes. Why should we be the only force herding civilians along? The difference being ours fight.’
‘Once they withdraw the city will be ours,’ Carr said, triumphant.
‘So we’ll own a burned-out ruin,’ Ivanr added, sour.
Martal was reading a scrap of vellum brought in by a messenger. Its contents twisted her lips into an ugly scowl. ‘For Hegil,’ she told the messenger, who snapped his reins and charged off. She blinked now at Carr as if seeing him for the first time. ‘If we own it already, Lieutenant, then we can ignore it.’
‘You mean to just go round,’ Ivanr breathed, impressed.
‘In conquering a nation, squatting in the towns and cities is the surest route to failure.’
Ivanr’s breath caught. He eyed the woman anew, her heavy outland armour of iron bands over mail, black- lacquered, battered by years of service. That opinion had the sound of quoted text. ‘What would you know of conquering nations?’
The woman merely smiled. But it was not a reassuring smile; it spoke of secrets and a dark humour. She pointed a gauntleted hand to the west. ‘Jourilan lancers are harassing our flank. That would be the 10th Company, the Green Wall. Your lads and lasses, yes, Carr, Ivanr?’
The two exchanged alarmed looks. ‘Gods beyond, Martal,’ Ivanr exploded. ‘Why didn’t you say so?’ They pushed their way out of the ring of guards.
Tenth Company, which had selected the nickname the Green Wall, was formed up in a wide front, pikes and spears facing west. Beyond their ranks skirmishing Jourilan cavalry raced back and forth across open ground of burned fields. Edging his way through, Ivanr reached the front rank. He’d already collected a spear. ‘Lights,’ Carr said, drawing his sword. ‘They won’t press a charge.’
‘They’re pinning us down, though. Can’t advance. Where’s Hegil’s cav?’
Carr shrugged. ‘Occupied elsewhere, perhaps. We’ve few enough.’
‘Can’t just sit here. Martal’s damned wagons are about to roll up our backsides.’
Carr glanced behind: the entire mass of the Army of Reform was lurching west, groping its way round the city, about to run them over.
Ivanr straightened, taking a great breath. ‘Company! Broaden line! On my mark! Now!’ He watched to the right and left while the rows adjusted their spacing to allow an extra pace between them. It was one of the most difficult manoeuvres he’d covered with them. He’d never dare attempt it facing a body of heavies awaiting a chance for a charge. As it was, the movement caught the eye of the lights and they raced over, forming a chase line, swinging close, lances still held tall. Ivanr bellowed: ‘Company, brace!’ Carr raised his sword.
The flying chevron of lights charged obliquely across the line of the levelled pikes and spearheads. Lances and javelins flew. Men and women screamed, impaled. The clean line of bristling pikeheads shook, rattling. A second charge was swinging in behind the first. Ivanr fumed. Archers! Where was their support? They needed archers to drive these skirmishers off. ‘Steady, company! Brace!’
The second charge circled past. Another flight of javelins and lances drove ferocious punishment into the column. Ivanr saw the wall of pikes waver like wind-tossed grasses. ‘Steady, Lady damn you all! Break and you’re trampled!’
Then a wall of smoke came streaming down from the plumes overhead, obscuring everything. The thick greasy fumes stank of awful things. Things Ivanr didn’t want to imagine burning. He covered his mouth. Soot darkened his hands. Everyone was coughing and cursing. Blind to everything, he heard dropped pikes clattering to the ground. Somewhere in the dark horses shrieked their terror. He glimpsed a smudged light off to his right and staggered to it. Here in a small depression he found an old woman hunched over a smoking fire, blowing on the glowing brands.
‘What are you doing here?’ he demanded.
The old woman blinked up at him. She wore the tattered remains of layered wraps over frayed skirts. ‘Making lunch.’ She dropped handfuls of freshly cut green grass and green leaves on the fire. A great gout of white smoke billowed up.
‘Would you stop that!’
‘Stop it? I’m hungry.’
‘You’re making all this smoke!’
‘Don’t be ridiculous. All this smoke is from the city.’
Carr came running up, waving the fumes from his face and coughing. ‘The cavalry has fled. The field is clear.’
Ivanr eyed the old woman crouched before the fire like a penitent, bony elbows sticking out like wings. She gave Ivanr a wink. ‘Horses, they say, are in a terrible fear of fire.’
‘What is your name?’
‘Sister Gosh.’
‘Well, Sister Gosh. If the Lady knew there was magery here on this field, you’d be a dead woman.’
‘Then it’s a good thing there was none o’ that. Just an errant gust of wind and smoke from the city, hey?’
‘You play a dangerous game, Sister.’
‘Now’s the time for it.’
Ivanr grunted his agreement. He faced Carr. ‘Have the company form up for advance. Martal wants us past the city.’
Carr saluted. ‘Aye, sir.’
Sir? When did that happen? And what did that make him? Ivanr frankly had no idea and he decided he didn’t care.
Those veterans who managed to doze off below decks were woken in the late afternoon just before evening. Some twenty Malazan squads and a horde of Blue marines crowded the two dromonds that constituted the ungainly catamaran. A meal of watery soup came around in pots and ladles. Sails were trimmed. The bow-crest eased to almost nothing. Suth nudged Len while they ate their flat hardbread. ‘We’ve slowed, yes?’
‘Yeah. Have to give the others time to catch up, hey? And the sun’s setting — can’t have that in our eyes.’
Suth returned to the grainy bread. He hadn’t thought of that. To the west the shore passed as distant green hills, wooded, with few signs of habitation. Beyond rose a crest of tall misted mountains, dark and snow-peaked. Goss came round, gripping shoulders and making a last equipment check. He and Len grasped forearms. ‘We’re