She led them each by the arm through the narrow canted streets. Light now shone from a few high windows. Everything was quiet, hushed. Antsy imaged everyone huddled in their rooms, waiting. What was out there in the dark? What were they afraid of? The dark itself?
‘These are quarters for servants, guards, and others of lesser status,’ Orchid whispered as she yanked them along. ‘Mostly abandoned for centuries. The Moon’s population was always low. The Andii have few children.’
Antsy wondered whether she spoke to distract herself from the fear that surely must be writhing in her guts. They twisted and turned up the narrow tilting stone streets. Antsy was completely lost. Then Orchid slowed, hesitated, came to a halt. ‘Where are we going?’ Antsy asked.
‘I don’t know,’ she hissed, low. ‘Just away from there for now. I thought …’
‘What?’
‘I thought I saw something. A dark shape.’
Antsy barked a near-hysterical laugh. ‘
‘No. Not at all. I can’t explain it. I can see well enough. Textures, shapes, even shadows. But that one seemed … deep.’
‘Deep,’ Antsy echoed, uncomprehending. ‘Where is it?’
‘Gone now.’
Totally blind, Antsy felt as if he was about to be jumped at any instant. He gripped the still-warm lantern as if he could squeeze comfort from it. ‘Well, where will you meet Malakai?’
‘Nowhere. Anywhere. He said he’ll find us.’
‘Then let’s just get into cover. A small room. Defensible.’
‘Yes,’ Corien said in support, his voice tight with pain.
‘Well … okay.’
A shriek tore through the blackness then, echoing, trailing off into hoarse gurgling. A chorus of terrified screams and sobbing erupted in response as the locals broke into a gibbering panic.
‘I don’t think that’s Malakai’s doing,’ Corien said.
‘No …’ Antsy agreed. He sheathed the shortsword and took a tight grip of his pannier.
Orchid rushed them into a room. Antsy wanted to light the lantern so badly he could taste the oil and smell the smoke. But he set it aside; the light would only bring their pursuers like flies. They waited, he and Corien covering the open doorless portal. No further screams lifted the hair on his neck, though he did hear distant voices raised in argument.
Then, down the street, the scuff of footsteps. ‘Company,’ he hissed, crouching, drawing his shortsword.
‘Red?’ came Malakai’s voice, whispering.
A nasty suspicion born of years of warfare among the deceptions of magery made Antsy ask, ‘Red who?’
‘Red … whose name that isn’t.’
Antsy grunted his assent, backed away from the portal.
Orchid gasped as Malakai came shuffling noisily into the room.
Antsy and Corien demanded together: ‘What? What is it?’
‘Company,’ Malakai said, the familiar acid humour in his voice. ‘Your friend Panar. And Red, I like that counter-sign. Speaks of a sneaky turn of mind. I like it. We’ll adopt it.’
‘Fine,’ Antsy answered, impatient. ‘But what’s the idea dragging this guy off? Now they’ll come after us.’
‘No, they won’t. They’re too busy fighting over who’s in charge now. Isn’t that so, Panar?’
A pause, cloth tearing, then Panar’s voice, rather blurry and slurred: ‘They’ll ransom me.’
‘No, they won’t. You’re dead and buried to them.’
‘They’ll ransom me with information. Just go back and ask.’
Malakai laughed quietly at that. ‘You’ll give us all the information we need.’
‘I won’t talk.’
‘Then,’ Malakai whispered, ‘I’ll have to do …
From behind a hand or a balled cloth erupted a gurgled muted scream of agony. Feet kicked against the stone floor.
Orchid gagged. ‘Gods, no! Stop him! Stop him, Red!’
Then silence and heavy breathing. Antsy imagined Orchid covering her eyes. Malakai’s voice came low and cold — as when they’d met and he’d warned her he might leave her to die: ‘If you don’t like it, Orchid, then I suggest you step outside.’
‘Red?’ she hissed. ‘
Antsy fumbled for words. ‘I’m sorry … I’ve questioned men myself. Has to be done.’
‘Oh, you’ve
She had his sympathy. He’d lived his entire adult life in the military and he’d long ago been hardened to brutality. But men — and women — like Malakai left him squeamish.
‘What do you say now, Panar?’ Malakai asked. ‘Tell us what we want. After all, what does it matter? We’re all dead anyway, yes?’
Silence in the room’s darkness. Then a groan, someone shifting. ‘Fine. Yes. What do you want?’
‘Let’s start at the beginning,’ Malakai said conversationally. ‘Who are you?’
‘Panar Legothen, of March.’
Antsy grunted at that: March was one of the so-called Confederation of Free Cities.
‘How did you get out here?’
A laugh full of self-mockery. ‘You won’t believe me, but I was one of the first. I came out in my own boat.’
‘And?’
Silence, followed by a long wistful sigh. ‘What a sight it was then. A glittering mess. Everywhere you looked, pearls, moonstones, tiger-eye, sapphires, gold and silver. Silver everything! You could scoop it up by the armload.’
Antsy stopped himself from barking at the man to go on. Where was it all? What happened? He wanted to take the fellow by the shirt and shake him, but Malakai was obviously just letting him talk himself out.
‘There were others, of course. Sometimes I fought — most times I just ran. Where could I keep it all, though? We all had too much to carry, so we started to strike bargains, band together. Stake out territories. This here, this town — Pearl Town, we call it — is just a little place. The bottom of things. Where I’ve ended up.’
‘What happened?’ Orchid prompted gently.
Another groan from the dark. ‘Me and a few partners, we’d cleaned out our stake. When we saw more dangerous fortune-hunters arriving we knew things would be goin’ downhill fast. So we made for the Gap. But we’d waited just a touch too long. Got greedy. I caught that particular fever when I arrived. I think if I’d just picked up the first thing I found … a beautiful statuette in silver, such a sweet piece … if I’d just climbed back down to my boat and left right then and there I’d be a rich and happy man right now.’
‘But?’ Orchid prompted again after a long silence.
Stirring, the man roused himself. ‘Well … first we met the Malazans. They controlled about a third of the isle then. We bribed our way past them. Then a band of other looters jumped us. I guess they waited there for fools like us to go to all the effort to bring the riches to them. I got away with a bare fraction and reached the Gap.’
‘What is it?’ Malakai demanded.
‘It’s just what it says — an exit. A big series of terraces open to the outside. I guess the Andii used them to view the night sky or some such thing. The water comes right up to them now. They pull their boats up there, take their cut then take you out. Least, that’s what everyone said happens …’
‘But … that’s not what happened,’ Corien said.
‘No. That’s not what happened.’ The man’s voice thickened, almost choking. ‘I handed over all my best pieces, the cream of the riches — and do you know what they said?’
‘It wasn’t enough,’ Malakai said.
‘That’s right. It wasn’t enough. I threw them everything I had, even my weapons. They still claimed I was short of the payment for passage.’ The man sounded as if he was on the verge of tears. ‘You’ve all probably figured it out, haven’t you? But only then did I realize what was going on. Up until that moment I truly believed they would