'When the fingers wear through, I guess,' a guard replied, frowning at the arm. 'Gonna be a lumpy ride for a while, dear. Sorry about that.'
A troop of riders approached from the army's train.
'Your escort's arrived,' Whiskeyjack noted. 'We will ask for a detailed report of the journey, mistress — I suggest you stand down until this evening, and leave the details of distribution to your second.'
She nodded. 'Good idea.'
The commander searched for Silverfox. She had resumed her march, the two marines trailing. The blood of the god had stained the marines' boots and the Rhivi's legs.
Across the plain, for two hundred or more paces, the earth looked like a red matted, tattered blanket, plucked and torn into dissolving disarray.
As ever, Kallor's thoughts were dark.
The lone candle, streaked with the crushed fragments of a rare sea-worm, gusted thick, heavy smoke, filling the tent. Shadows crawled beneath the drifting plumes. Flickering yellow light glinted off ancient, oft-mended armour.
Seated on the ornate, ironwood throne, Kallor breathed deep of the invigorating fumes.
No matter the stretch of decades and centuries, no matter the interminable boredom of inactivity that was so much a part of living, there were moments …
Pale hands gripping the arms of the throne, he sat unmoving, stalking the landscape of his own memories, dragging them forth like corpses pulled from the ground, drawing their visages close for a moment before casting them away and moving on.
A faint smile spread across his withered, pallid face.
His eyes narrowed as a portal began to take shape before him. Miasmic power swirled from it. A figure emerged, tall, gaunt, a face shattered — massive cuts gaping red, the shards of broken bone glimmering in the candlelight. The portal closed behind the Jaghut, who stood relaxed, eyes flickering pools of darkness.
'I convey greetings from the Crippled God,' the Jaghut said, 'to you, Kallor' — he paused to survey the tent's interior — 'and your vast empire.'
'You tempt me,' Kallor rasped, 'to add to your … facial distress, Gethol. My empire may be gone, but I shall not yield this throne. You, of all people, should recognize that I am not yet done in my ambitions, and I am a patient man.'
Gethol grunted a laugh. 'Ah, dear Kallor. You are to me the exception to the rule that patience is a virtue.'
'I can destroy you, Jaghut, no matter who you call master these days. I can complete what your capable punisher began. Do you doubt me?'
'Most certainly not,' Gethol replied easily. 'I've seen you wield that two-handed sword of yours.'
'Then withdraw your verbal knives and tell me what you do here.'
'Apologies for disrupting your … concentration. I shall now explain. I am Herald to the Crippled God — aye, a new House has come to the Deck of Dragons. The House of Chains. The first renditions have been fashioned. And soon every Reader of the Deck will be seeking their likenesses.'
Kallor snorted. 'And you expect this gambit to work? That House shall be assailed. Obliterated.'
'Oh, the battle is well under way, old man. You cannot be blind to that, nor to the fact that
Kallor's eyes thinned to slits. 'The poisoning of the warrens? The Crippled God is a fool. What point in destroying the power he requires to assert his claim? Without the warrens, the Deck of Dragons is nothing.'
'The appellation 'poison' is erroneous, Kallor. Rather, consider the infection one of enforcing a certain … alteration … to the warrens. Aye, those who resist it view it as a deadly manifestation, a 'poison' indeed. But only because its primary effect is to make the warrens impassable to them. Servants of the Crippled God, however, will find themselves able to travel freely in the paths.'
'I am servant to no-one,' Kallor growled.
'The position of High King is vacant within the Crippled God's House of Chains.'
Kallor shrugged. 'None the less requiring that I stain my knees before the Chained One.'
'No such gestures are demanded of the High King. The House of Chains exists beyond the Crippled God's influence — is that not obvious? He is
'If so,' Kallor rumbled after a long moment, 'why are you not the King?'
Gethol bowed his head. 'You honour me, sir,' he said drily. 'I am, however, content to be Herald-'
'Under the delusion that the messenger is ever spared, no matter what the message? You were never as smart as your brother, were you? Somewhere, Gothos must be laughing.'
'Gothos never laughs. But, given that I know where he languishes, I do. Often. Now, should I remain here much longer awaiting your answer, my presence may well be detected. There are Tiste Andii nearby-'
'Very near. Not to mention Caladan Brood. Lucky for you Anomander Rake has left — returned to Moon's Spawn, wherever it is-'
'Its location must be discovered, revealed to the Crippled God.'
The grey-haired warrior raised an eyebrow. 'A task for the King?'
'Does betrayal sting your sense of honour, Kallor?'
'If you call it a sudden reversal of strategy, the sting fades. What I require, in exchange, is an opportunity, arranged howsoever the Crippled God pleases.'