‘Still have your crossbows?’ Urb asked.
No one spoke.
‘First task, then, off to the armoury. Then back here, and clean up this sty. The Twenty-second is retired. Welcome to the Thirteenth. Saltlick, keep them company. Clasp, you’re now corporal. Congratulations.’
When they’d all trooped off, Urb stood alone, motionless, and for a long time, unnoticed by anyone, he stared at nothing.
Someone nudged her shoulder. She moaned and rolled on to her side. A second nudge, harder this time. ‘G’way. Still dark.’
‘Still dark, Sergeant, because you blindfolded yourself.’
‘I did? Well, why didn’t you do the same, then we’d all be sleeping still. Go away.’
‘It’s morning, Sergeant. Captain Fiddler wants-’
‘He always wants. Soon as they turn inta officers, it’s do this do that alla time. Someone gimme a jug.’
‘All gone, Sergeant.’
She reached up, felt at the rough cloth covering her eyes, pulled one edge down, just enough to uncover one eye. ‘That can’t be right. Go find some more.’
‘We will,’ Brethless promised. ‘Soon as you get up. Someone’s been through the squads, doing counts. We don’t like it. Makes us nervous.’
‘Why?’ The lone eye blinked. ‘I got me eight marines-’
‘Four, Sergeant.’
‘Fifty per cent losses ain’t too bad, for a party.’
‘A party, Sergeant?’
She sat up. ‘I had eight last night.’
‘Four.’
‘Right, four twice over.’
‘There wasn’t no party, Sergeant.’
Hellian tugged to expose her other eye. ‘There wasn’t, huh? Thas what you get for wand’ring off, then, Corporal. Missed the good times.’
‘Aye, I suppose I did. We’re melting a lump of chocolate in a pot — thought you might like some.’
‘That stuff? I remember now. Balklo chocolate. All right, get outa my tent so I can get decent.’
‘You’re not in your tent, Sergeant, you’re in our latrine ditch.’
She looked round. ‘That explains the smell.’
‘None of us used it yet, Sergeant, seeing as how you were here.’
‘Oh.’
His stomach convulsed again, but there was nothing left to spit up, so he rode it out, waited, gasping, and then slowly settled back on his haunches. ‘Poliel’s prissy nipples! If I can’t keep nothing down I’ll waste away!’
‘You already have, Widder,’ observed Throatslitter from a few paces upwind, his voice a cracking rasp. The old scars on his neck were inflamed; he’d taken a shot to his chest, hard enough to dent his sternum with matted rows from the mail’s iron links, and something from that trauma had messed up his throat.
They were away from the camp, twenty paces beyond the eastern picket. Widdershins, Throatslitter, Deadsmell and Sergeant Balm. The survivors of the 9th Squad. The regulars crouched in their holes had watched them pass with red-shot eyes, saying nothing. Was that belligerence? Pity? The squad mage didn’t know and at the moment was past caring. Wiping his mouth with the back of one forearm, he looked past Throatslitter to Balm. ‘You called us up here, Sergeant. What now?’
Balm drew off his helm, scratched vigorously at his scalp. ‘Just thought I’d tell you, we ain’t breaking the squad up and we ain’t picking up any new bodies. It’s just us, now.’
Widdershins grunted. ‘We took a walk for that?’
‘Don’t be an idiot,’ said Deadsmell in a growl.
Balm faced his soldiers. ‘Talk, all of you. You first, Throatslitter.’
The tall man seemed to flinch. ‘What’s to say? We’re chewed to pieces. But Kindly hogtying Fid like that, well, bloody genius. We got ourselves a captain, now-’
‘There wasn’t anything wrong with Sort,’ Deadsmell interjected.
‘Not saying there was. Definite officer, that woman. But maybe that’s the point. Fid’s from the ground up a marine, through and through. He was a sapper. A sergeant. Now he’s captain of what’s left of us. I’m settled with that.’ He shrugged, facing Balm. ‘Nothing more to say, Sergeant.’
‘And when he says it’s time to go, you gonna bleat and whine about it?’
Throatslitter’s brows lifted. ‘Go? Go where?’
Balm squinted and then said, ‘Your turn, Deadsmell.’
‘Hood’s dead. Grey riders patrol the Gate. In my dreams I see faces, blurred, but still. Malazans. Bridgeburners. You can’t imagine how comforting that feels, you just can’t. They’re all there, and I think we got Dead Hedge to thank for that.’
‘How do you mean?’ Widdershins asked.
‘Just a feeling. As if, in coming back, he blazed a trail. Six days ago, well, I swear they were close enough to kiss.’
‘Because we all almost died,’ Throatslitter snapped.
‘No, they were like wasps, and what was sweet wasn’t us dying, wasn’t the lizards neither. It was what happened at the vanguard. It was Lostara Yil.’ His eyes were bright as he looked to each soldier in turn. ‘I caught a glimpse, you know. I saw her dance. She did what Ruthan Gudd did, only she didn’t go down under blades. The lizards recoiled — they didn’t know what to do, they couldn’t get close, and those that did, gods, they were cut to pieces. I saw her, and my heart near burst.’
‘She saved the Adjunct’s life,’ said Throatslitter. ‘Was that such a good thing?’
‘Not for you to even ask,’ said Balm. ‘Fid’s calling us together. He’s got things to say. About that, I expect. The Adjunct. And what’s to come. We’re still marines. We’re
He turned then, since two regulars from the pickets were approaching. In their arms, two loaves of bread, a wrapped brick of cheese, and a Seven Cities clay bottle.
‘What’s this?’ Deadsmell wondered.
The two soldiers halted a few paces away, and the one on the right spoke. ‘Guard’s changed, Sergeant. Came out with some breakfast for us. We weren’t much hungry.’ They then set the items down on a bare patch of ground. Nodded, set off back for camp.
‘Hood’s pink belly,’ Deadsmell muttered.
‘Save all that,’ Balm said. ‘We’re not yet done here. Widdershins.’
‘Warrens are sick, Sergeant. Well, you seen what they’re doing to us mages. And there’s new ones, new warrens, I mean, but they ain’t nice at all. Still, I might have to delve into them, once I get tired of being completely useless.’
‘You’re the best among us with a crossbow, Widder, so you ain’t useless even without any magic.’
‘Maybe so, Throatslitter, but it doesn’t feel that way.’
‘Deadsmell,’ said Balm, ‘you’ve been doing some healing.’
‘I have, but Widder’s right. It’s not fun. The problem — for me, that is — is that I’m still somehow bound to Hood. Even though he’s, uh, dead. Don’t know why that should be, but the magic when it comes to me, well, it’s cold as ice.’
Widdershins frowned at Deadsmell. ‘Ice? That makes no sense.’
‘Hood was a damned Jaghut, so yes, it does. And no, it doesn’t, because he’s … well, gone.’
Throatslitter spat and said, ‘If he really died, like you say, did he walk into his realm? And didn’t he have to be dead in the first place, being the God of Death and all? What you’re saying makes no sense, Deadsmell.’
The necromancer looked unhappy. ‘I know.’
‘Next time you do some healing,’ said Widdershins, ‘let me do some sniffing.’
‘You’ll heave again.’
‘So what?’
‘What are you thinking, Widder?’ Balm asked.
