their heads, ears twitching, nostrils wide.
The lead carriage was no more than fifteen paces from where Duiker and the others stood.
The historian saw a severed hand clinging to an ornate projection on one side of the carriage. After a moment it fell to the ground.
A tiny barred door opened and a man emerged, with difficulty squeezing his considerable bulk through the aperture. He was dressed in silks that were drenched in sweat. His round, glistening face revealed the passing echoes of some immense, all-consuming effort. In one hand he carried a stoppered bottle.
Stepping clear, he faced Coltaine and raised the bottle. 'You, sir,' he said in strangely accented Malazan, 'have much to answer for.' Then he grinned, displaying a row of gold-capped, diamond-studded teeth. 'Your exploits tremble the warrens! Your journey is wildfire in every street in Darujhistan, no doubt in every city, no matter how distant! Have you no notion how many beseech their gods on your behalf? Coffers overflow! Grandiose plans of salvation abound! Vast organizations have formed, their leaders coming to us, to the Trygalle Trade Guild, to pay for our fraught passage — though,' he added in a lower tone, 'all the Guild's passages are fraught, which is what makes us so expensive.' He unstoppered the bottle. 'The great city of Darujhistan and its remarkable citizens — dismissing in an instant your Empire's voracious desires on it and on themselves — bring you this gift! By way of the shareholders — ' he waved back at the various men and women behind him, now gathering into a group — 'of Trygalle — the foulest-tempered, greediest creatures imaginable, but that is neither here nor there, for here we are, are we not? Let it not be said of the citizens of Darujhistan that they are insensitive to the wondrous, and, dear sir, you are truly wondrous.'
The preposterous man stepped forward, suddenly solemn. He spoke softly. 'Alchemists, mages, sorcerers have all contributed, offering vessels with capacities belying their modest containers. Coltaine of Crow Clan, Chain of Dogs, I bring you food. I bring you water.'
Karpolan Demesand was one of the original founders of the Trygalle Trade Guild, a citizen of the small fortress city of the same name, situated south of the Lamatath Plain on the continent of Genabackis. Born of a dubious alliance between a handful of mages, Karpolan among them, and the city's benefactors — a motley collection of retired pirates and wreckers — the Guild came to specialize in expeditions so risk-laden as to make the average merchant pale. Each caravan was protected by a heavily armed company of shareholders — guards who possessed a direct stake in the venture, ensuring the fullest exploitation of their abilities. And such abilities were direly needed, for the caravans of the Trygalle Trade Guild — as was clear from the very outset — travelled the warrens.
'We knew we had a challenge on our hands,' Karpolan Demesand said with a beatific, glittering smile as they sat in Coltaine's command tent, with only the Fist and Duiker for company because everyone else was working outside, dispensing the caravan's life-giving supplies with all speed. 'That foul Wan-en of Hood is wrapped about you tighter than a funeral shroud on a corpse … if you'll forgive the image. The key is to ride fast, to stop for nothing, then get out as soon as humanly possible. In the lead wagon, I maintain the road, with every sorcerous talent at my command — a gruelling journey, granted, but then again, we don't come cheap.'
'I still find it hard to fathom,' Duiker said, 'that the citizens of Darujhistan, fifteen hundred leagues distant, should even know of what's happening here, much less care.'
Karpolan's eyes thinned. 'Ah, well, perhaps I exaggerated somewhat — the heat of the moment, I confess. You must understand — soldiers who not long ago were bent on conquering Darujhistan are now locked in a war with the Pannion 'Domin, a tyranny that would dearly love to swallow the Blue City if it could. Dujek Onearm, once Fist of the Empire and now outlaw to the same, has become an ally. And this, certain personages in Darujhistan know well, and appreciate…'
'But there is more to it,' Coltaine said quietly.
Karpolan smiled a second time. 'Is this water not sweet? Here, let me pour you another cup.'
They waited, watching the trader refill the three tin cups arrayed on the small table between them. When he was done, Karpolan sighed and sat back in the plush chair he had had removed from the carriage. 'Dujek Onearm.' The name was spoken half in benediction, half in wry dismay. 'He sends his greetings, Fist Coltaine. Our office in Darujhistan is small, newly opened, you understand. We do not advertise our services. Not openly, in any case. Frankly, those services include activities that are, on occasion, clandestine in nature. We trade not only in material goods but in information, the delivery of gifts, of people themselves … and other creatures.'
'Dujek Onearm was the force behind this mission,' Duiker said.
Karpolan nodded. 'With financial assistance from a certain cabal in Darujhistan, yes. His words were thus: 'The Empress cannot lose such leaders as Coltaine of the Crow Clan.'' The trader grinned. 'Extraordinary for an outlaw under a death sentence, wouldn't you say?' He leaned forward and held out a hand, palm up. Something shimmered into existence on it, a small oblong bottle of smoky grey glass on a silver chain. 'And, from an alarmingly mysterious mage among the Bridgeburners, this gift was fashioned.' He held it out to Coltaine. 'For you. Wear it. At all times, Fist.'
The Wickan scowled and made no move to accept it.
Karpolan's smile was wistful. 'Dujek is prepared to pull rank on this, friend-'
'An outlaw pulling rank?'
Ah, well, I admit I voiced the same query. His reply was this: 'Never underestimate the Empress.''
Silence descended, the meaning behind that statement slowly taking shape.
The Wickan reached out and received the gift.
'The Empress
'Your point is made,' Duiker cut in.
Coltaine placed the chain around his neck and slipped the bottle beneath his buckskin shirt.
'A dire battle awaits you come dawn,' Karpolan said after a time. 'I cannot stay, will not stay. Though mage of the highest order, though merchant of ruthless cunning, I admit to a streak of sentimentality, gentlemen. I will not stand witness to this tragedy. More, we have one more delivery to make before we begin our return journey, and its achievement shall demand all of my skills, indeed, may exhaust them.'
'I had never before heard of your Guild, Karpolan,' Duiker said, 'but I would hear more of your adventures, some day.'
'Perhaps the opportunity will arise, Historian. For now, I hear my shareholders gathering, and I must see to reviving and quelling the horses — although, it must be said, they seem to have acquired a thirst for wild terror. No different from us, eh?' He rose.
'My thanks to you,' Coltaine growled, 'and your shareholders.'
'Have you a word for Dujek Onearm, Fist?'
The Wickan's response startled Duiker, slipping a rough blade of suspicion into him that would remain, nagging and fearful.
'No.'
Karpolan's eyes widened momentarily, then he nodded. 'We must be gone, alas. May your enemy pay dearly come the morrow, Fist.'
'They shall.'
Sudden bounty could not affect complete rejuvenation, but the army that rose with the dawn revealed a calm readiness that Duiker had not seen since Gelor Ridge.
The refugees remained tightly packed in a basin just north of the valley mouth. The Weasel and Foolish Dog