The Edur was studying the slave from about fifteen paces away, with sufficient intent to make the slave begin to feel nervous. Finally, Udinaas casually turned away, and stared out towards the hills to the south.
A dozen heartbeats later, Trull Sengar came to stand beside him.
‘It seems,’ the Edur said after a time, ‘that you, for all that you are a slave, possess talents verging on genius.’
‘Master?’
‘Enough of this “master” shit, Udinaas. You are now a… what is the title? A chancellor of the realm? Principal Adviser, or some such thing?’
‘First Eunuch, I think.’
Trull glanced over. ‘I did not know you’d been-’
‘I haven’t. Consider it symbolic’
‘All right, I understand, I think. Tell me, are you so certain of yourself, Udinaas, that you would stand between Rhulad and Hannan Mosag? Between Rhulad and Theradas Buhn and those rabid pups who are the chosen brothers of the emperor? You would stand, indeed, between Rhulad and his own madness? Sister knows, I’d thought the Warlock King arrogant
‘It is not arrogance, Trull Sengar. If it was, I’d be entirely as sure of myself as you seem to think I am. But I am not. Do you believe I have somehow manipulated myself into this position? By choice? Willingly? Tell me, when have any of us last had any meaningful choices? Including your young brother?’
The Edur said nothing for a while. Then he nodded. ‘Very well. But, none the less, I must know your intentions.’
Udinaas shook his head. ‘Nothing complicated, Trull Sengar. I do not want to see anyone hurt more than they already have been.’
‘Including Hannan Mosag?’
‘The Warlock King has not been hurt. But we have seen, this day, what he would deliver upon others.’
‘Rhulad was… distressed?’
‘Furious.’
‘That answer leaves me feeling… relief, Udinaas.’
‘Udinaas.’
‘Yes?’
‘I fear for what will come. In Letheras.’
‘Yes.’
‘I feel the world is about to unravel.’
The Tiste Edur’s eyes held his, then Trull nodded. ‘Beware your enemies, Udinaas.’
The slave did not reply. Alone once more, he studied the distant hills, the thinning smoke from the fires somewhere in the belly of the fallen keep rising like mocking shadows from earlier this day.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
Five wings will buy you a grovel, There at the Errant’s grubby toes The eternal domicile crouching low In a swamp of old where rivers ran out And royal blood runs in the clearest stream Around the stumps of rotted trees Where forests once stood in majesty Five roads from the Empty Hold Will lay you flat on your back With altar knives and silver chased The buried rivers gnawing the roots All aswirl in eager caverns beneath Where kingly bones rock and clatter In the silts, and five are the paths To and from this chambered soul For all you lost hearts bleeding out Into the wilderness.
THE FRESH, WARM WATER OF THE RIVER BECAME THE DEMON’S BLOOD, a vessel along which it climbed, the current pushing round it. Somewhere ahead, it now knew, lay a heart, a source of power at once strange and familiar. Its master knew nothing of it, else he would not have permitted the demon to draw ever closer, for that power, once possessed, would snap the binding chains.
Something waited. In the buried courses that ran ceaselessly beneath the great city on the banks of the river. The demon was tasked with carrying the fleet of ships – an irritating presence plying the surface above – to the city. This would be sufficient proximity, the demon knew, to make the sudden lunge, to grasp that dread heart in its many hands. To feed, then rise, free once again and possessing the strength of ten gods. To rise, like an elder, from the raw, chaotic world of long ago. Dominant, unassailable, and burning with fury.