knows outright, doesn't she?'
Baudin shrugged. 'I'll ask next time we chat.'
'My need for a bodyguard is ended,' Felisin said. 'Get out of my sight, Baudin. Take my
'Lass-'
'Shut up, Heboric. I will try to kill you, Baudin. Every chance I get. You'll have to kill me to save your own skin. Go away. Now.'
The big man surprised her again. He made no appeal to the others, but simply turned away, taking a route at right angles to the one they had been travelling.
That's
'Damn you, Felisin,' the ex-priest snarled. 'We need him more than he needs us.'
Kulp spoke. 'I've a mind to join him and drag you with me, Heboric. Leave this foul witch to herself and Hood take her with my blessings.'
'Go ahead,' Felisin challenged.
The mage ignored her. 'I took on the responsibility of saving your skin, Heboric, and I'll stick to it because Duiker asked me. It's your call, now.'
The old man hugged himself. 'I owe her my life-'
'Thought you'd forgotten that,' Felisin sneered.
He shook his head.
Kulp sighed. 'All right. I suspect Baudin will do better without us, in any case. Let's get going before I melt, and maybe you can explain to me your comment about Dancer still being alive, Heboric? That's a very intriguing idea…'
Felisin shut their words away as she walked. This
'-sorcery.'
The word jarred her into awareness. She looked over at Kulp. The mage had quickened his step, his face pale.
'What did you say?' she asked.
'I said that storm rolling up behind us isn't natural, that's what I said.'
She glanced back. A bruised wall of sand cut the valley down its length — the hills she and Baudin had left earlier had vanished. The wall rolled towards them like a leviathan.
'Time to run, I think,' Heboric gasped at her side. 'If we can reach the hills-'
'I know where we are!' Kulp shouted. 'Raraku! That's the Whirlwind!'
Ahead, two hundred or more paces away, rose the ragged, rock-strewn slopes of the hills. Deep defiles cut between each hump, like the imprint of vast ribs.
The three of them ran, knowing that they would not make it in time. The wind that struck their back howled like a thing demented. A moment later, the sand engulfed them.
'The truth of it was, we were out hunting Sha'ik's corpse.'
Fiddler frowned at the Trell sitting opposite him. 'Corpse? She's dead? How? When?'
'Iskaral Pust claims she was murdered by a troop of Red Blades from Ehrlitan. Or so the Deck whispered to him.'
'I had no idea the Deck of Dragons could be so precise.'
'As far as I know, it cannot.'
They were sitting on stone benches within a burial chamber at least two levels below the Shadow priest's favoured haunts. The benches were attached alongside a rough-hewn wall that had once held painted tiles, and the indents in the limestone beneath them made it clear that the benches were actually pedestals, meant to hold the dead.
Fiddler flexed his leg, reached down and kneaded his knuckles in the still-swollen flesh around the mended bone.
The High Priest made his head spin.
Tremorlor, a House of the Azath.
'Something on your mind, soldier?' Mappo Runt quietly asked. 'I've been watching such a progression of expressions on your face as to fill a wall in Dessembrae's temple.'
'It appears I've just said something unwelcome to your ears,' Mappo continued.
'Eventually a man reaches a point where every memory is unwelcome,' Fiddler said, gritting his teeth. 'I think I've reached that point, Trell. I'm feeling old, used up. Pust has something in mind — we're part of some colossal scheme that'll likely see us dead before too long. Used to be I'd get a sniff or two of stuff like that. Had a nose for trouble, you might say. But I can't work it out — not this time. He's baffled me, plain and simple.'
'I think it's to do with Apsalar,' Mappo said after a time.
'Aye. And that worries me. A lot. She don't deserve any more grief.'
'Icarium pursues the question,' the Trell said, squinting down at the cracked, worn pavestones. The lantern's oil was getting low, deepening the chamber's gloom. 'I admit I have been wondering if the High Priest is intending to force Apsalar into a role she seems made for..'
'A role? Like what?'
'Sha'ik's prophecy speaks of a rebirth.. '
The sapper paled, then vehemently shook his head. 'No. She wouldn't do it. This land's not hers, the goddess of the Whirlwind means nothing to her. Pust can try and force it all he wants, the lass will turn her back — mark my words.' Suddenly restless, Fiddler stood up and began pacing. His foot-falls whispered with faint echoes in the chamber. 'If Sha'ik's dead, she's dead. Hood take any obscure prophecies! The Apocalypse will fizzle out, the Whirlwind sink back into the ground to sleep another thousand years or however long it is until the next Year of Dryjhna comes around …'
'Yet Pust seems to place much significance on this uprising,' Mappo said. 'It's far from over — or so he seems to believe.'
'How many gods and Ascendants are playing in this game, Trell?' Fiddler paused, eyeing the ancient warrior. 'Does she physically resemble Sha'ik?'
Mappo shrugged his massive shoulders. 'I saw the Whirlwind Seer but once, and that at a distance. Light- skinned for a Seven Cities native. Dark eyes, not especially tall or imposing. It's said the power is — was — within her eyes. Dark and cruel.' He shrugged a second time. 'Older than Apsalar. Perhaps twice her years. Same black hair, though. Details are irrelevant in matters of faith and attendant prophecies, Fiddler. Perhaps only the role need be reborn.'
'The lass ain't interested in vengeance against the Malazan Empire,' the sapper growled, resuming his pacing.
