face devoid of ornament barring a bronze nose-ring. Yet her eyes were startlingly beautiful, emerald green.
‘Have you heard of another heavy, Flashwit? Neffarias Bredd?’
Those extraordinary eyes widened. ‘Killed fifty raiders, they say.’
‘Which legion?’ Moak asked.
She shrugged. ‘Don’t know.’
‘Not ours, though.’
‘Not sure.’
‘Well,’ Moak snapped, ‘what
‘He killed fifty raiders. Can I go now? I have to pee.’
They watched her walk away.
‘Standing up, do you think?’ Thorn Tissy asked the others in general.
Moak snorted. ‘Why don’t you go ask her.’
‘Ain’t that eager to get killed. Why don’t you, Moak?’
‘Here come the heavy’s sergeants,’ Balm observed.
Mosel, Sobelone and Tugg could have been siblings. They all hailed from Malaz City, typical of the mixed breed prevalent on the island, and the air of threat around them had less to do with size than attitude. Sobelone was the oldest of the three, a severe-looking woman with streaks of grey in her shoulder-length black hair, her eyes the colour of the sky. Mosel was lean, the epicanthic folds of his eyes marking Kanese blood somewhere in his family line. His hair was braided and cut finger-length in the fashion of Jakatakan pirates. Tugg was the biggest of the three, armed with a short single-bladed axe. The shield strapped on his back was enormous, hardwood, sheathed in tin and rimmed in bronze.
‘Which one of you is Strings?’ Mosel asked.
‘Me. Why?’
The man shrugged. ‘Nothing. I was just wondering. And you’-he nodded at Gesler-‘you’re that coastal guard, Gesler.’
‘So I am. What of it?’
‘Nothing.’
There was a moment of awkward silence, then Tugg spoke, his voice thin, emerging from, Strings suspected, a damaged larynx. ‘We heard the Adjunct was going to the wall tomorrow. With that sword. Then what? She stabs it? It’s a storm of sand, there’s nothing to stab. And aren’t we already in Raraku? The Holy Desert? It don’t feel any different, don’t look any different, neither. Why didn’t we just wait for ’em? Or let ’em stay and rot here in this damned wasteland? Sha’ik wants an empire of sand, let her have it.’
That fractured voice was excruciating to listen to, and it seemed to Strings that Tugg would never stop. ‘Plenty of questions there,’ he said as soon as the man paused to draw a wheezing breath. ‘This empire of sand can’t be left here, Tugg, because it’s a rot, and it will spread-we’d lose Seven Cities, and far too much blood was spilled conquering it in the first place to just let it go. And, while we’re in Raraku, we’re on its very edge. It may be a Holy Desert, but it looks like any other. If it possesses a power, then that lies in what it does to you, after a while. Maybe not what it does, but what it gives. Not an easy thing to explain.’ He then shrugged, and coughed.
Gesler cleared his throat. ‘The Whirlwind Wall is sorcery, Tugg. The Adjunct’s sword is otataral. There will be a clash between the two. If the Adjunct’s sword fails, then we all go home… or back to Aren-’
‘Not what I heard,’ Moak said, pausing to spit before continuing. ‘We swing east then north if we can’t breach the wall. To G’danisban, or maybe Ehrlitan. To wait for Dujek Onearm and High Mage Tayschrenn. I’ve even heard that Greymane might be recalled from the Korelri campaign.’
Strings stared at the man. ‘Whose shadow have you been standing in, Moak?’
‘Well, it makes sense, don’t it?’
Sighing, Strings straightened. ‘It’s all a waste of breath, soldiers. Sooner or later, we’re all marching in wide- eyed stupid.’ He strode over to where his squad had set up the tents.
His soldiers, Cuttle included, were gathered around Bottle, who sat cross-legged and seemed to be playing with twigs and sticks.
Strings halted in his tracks, an uncanny chill creeping through him.
‘What are you doing, Bottle?’
The young man looked up guiltily. ‘Uh, not much, Sergeant-’
‘Trying a divination,’ Cuttle growled, ‘and as far as I can tell, getting nowhere.’
Strings slowly crouched down in the circle, opposite Bottle. ‘Interesting style there, lad. Sticks and twigs. Where did you pick that up?’
‘Grandmother,’ he muttered.
‘She was a witch?’
‘More or less. So was my mother.’
‘And your father? What was he?’
‘Don’t know. There were rumours…’ He ducked his head, clearly uncomfortable.
‘Never mind,’ Strings said. ‘That’s earth-aspected, the pattern you have there. You need more than just what anchors the power…’
All the others were staring at Strings now.
Bottle nodded, then drew out a small doll made of woven grasses, a dark, purple-bladed variety. Strips of black cloth were wrapped about it.
The sergeant’s eyes widened. ‘Who in Hood’s name is
‘Well, the hand of death, sort of, or so I wanted it to be. You know, where it’s going. But it’s not co- operating.’
‘You drawing from Hood’s warren?’
‘A little…’
Bottle flinched. ‘The Rope? That’s too, uh, close…’
‘What do you mean by that?’ Smiles demanded. ‘You said you knew Meanas. And now it turns out you know Hood, too. And witchery. I’m starting to think you’re just making it all up.’
The mage scowled. ‘Fine, then. Now stop flapping your lips. I’ve got to concentrate.’
The squad settled down once more. Strings fixed his gaze on the various sticks and twigs that had been thrust into the sand before Bottle. After a long moment, the mage slowly set the doll down in their midst, pushing the legs into the sand until the doll stood on its own, then carefully withdrew his hand.
The pattern of sticks on one side ran in a row. Strings assumed that was the Whirlwind Wall, since those sticks began waving, like reeds in the wind.
Bottle was mumbling under his breath, with a growing note of urgency, then frustration. After a moment the breath gusted from him and he sat back, eyes blinking open. ‘It’s no use-’
The sticks had ceased moving.
‘Is it safe to reach in there?’ Strings asked.
‘Aye, Sergeant.’
Strings reached out and picked up the doll. Then he set it back down… on the other side of the Whirlwind Wall. ‘Try it now.’
Bottle stared across at him for a moment, then leaned forward and closed his eyes once more.
The Whirlwind Wall began wavering again. Then a number of the sticks along that row toppled.
A gasp from the circle, but Bottle’s scowl deepened. ‘It’s not moving. The doll. I can feel the Rope… close, way too close. There’s power, pouring into or maybe out of that doll, only it’s not moving-’
‘You’re right,’ Strings said, a grin slowly spreading across his features. ‘It’s not moving. But its shadow is…’
Cuttle grunted. ‘Queen take me, he’s right. That’s a damn strange thing-I’ve seen enough.’ He rose suddenly,