A moment later, an apparition shambled into view, blood pouring down from its gauntleted hands. Nearly the size of a Tarthenal, it was sheathed in black, stained iron plates, studded with green rivets. A great helm with caged eye-slits hid the face within, the grille-work hanging ragged on its shoulders and beneath its armoured chin. The figure was encrusted with barnacles at the joins of its elbows, knees and ankles. In one hand it carried a sword of Letherii steel, down which the blood flowed ceaselessly.
Rhulad hissed, ‘What is it, Trull? What has come?’
The monstrosity paused just within the entrance. Head creaking as it looked round, it fixed its focus, it seemed, on the corpse of the King’s Champion. It resumed walking forward, leaving twin trails of blood.
‘Trull!’ Rhulad shrieked.
The creature halted, looked down at the emperor lying on the floor. After a moment, a heavy voice rumbled from within the helm. ‘You are gravely injured.’
Trembling, Rhulad laughed, a sound close to hysteria. ‘Injured? Oh yes.
‘You will live.’
Hannan Mosag said in a growl, ‘Begone, demon. Lest I banish you.’
‘You can try,’ it said. And moved forward once more. Until it stood directly in front of the Champion’s body. ‘I see no wounds, yet he lies dead. This honourable mortal.’
‘Poison,’ said the Letherii at the far wall.
The creature looked over. ‘I know you. I know all your names.’
‘I imagine you do, Guardian,’ the man replied.
‘Poison. Tell me, did you… push him in that direction?’
‘It is my aspect,’ the Letherii said, shrugging. ‘I am driven to… poignancy. Tell me, does your god know you are here?’
‘I will speak to him soon. Words of chastisement are necessary.’
The man laughed, crossing his arms as he leaned back against the wall. ‘I imagine they are at that.’
The Guardian looked once more upon the Champion. ‘He held the names. Of all those who were almost forgotten. This… this is a great loss.’
‘No,’ the Letherii said, ‘those names are not lost. Not yet. But they will be… soon.’
‘I need… someone, then.’
‘And you will find him.’
The Guardian regarded the Letherii once more. ‘I am… pushed?’
The man shrugged again.
The Guardian reached down, closed a firm grip on the Champion’s sword-belt, then lifted him from the floor and slung him over its left shoulder. Standing in a spreading pool of blood, it turned about.
And looked upon Rhulad Sengar. ‘They show no mercy, your friends,’ it said.
‘No?’ Rhulad’s laugh became a cough. He gasped, then said, ‘I am beginning to see… otherwise-’
‘I have learned mercy,’ the Guardian said, and thrust down with his sword.
Into Rhulad’s back, severing the spine.
Trull Sengar lurched to his feet, stared, disbelieving-
– as the Letherii man whispered, ‘And… once more.’
The Guardian walked towards the entrance, ignoring Hannan Mosag’s enraged bellow as it passed the Warlock King.
Trull stumbled forward, around the motionless form of his brother, until he reached Hannan Mosag. Snapped a hand down and dragged the Warlock King up, until he held him close. ‘The throne?’ Trull asked in a rasp. ‘You just lost it, bastard.’ He flung Hannan Mosag back down onto the floor. ‘I need to find Fear. Tell him,’ Trull said as he walked to the entranceway, ‘tell him, Mosag, that I went to find Fear. I am sending in the others-’
Rhulad spasmed behind him, then shrieked.
The Wyval clawed its way free from the barrow, dripping red-streaked mud, flanks heaving. A moment later the wraith appeared, dragging the unconscious form of a Letherii man.
Shurq Elalle rose from where she had crouched beside Ublala, stroking his brow and wondering at the stupid smile plastered on his features, and, placing her hands on her hips, surveyed the scene. Five sprawled bodies, toppled trees, the stench of rotting earth. Two of her employees near the facing wall of the Azath tower, the mage tending to the Avowed’s wounds.
Closer to the gate, Kettle and the tall, white-skinned warrior with the two Letherii swords.
Impressively naked, she noted, walking over. ‘If I am not mistaken,’ she said to him, ‘you are of the same blood as the Tiste Edur.’
A slight frown as he looked down upon her. ‘No. I am Tiste Andii.’
‘If you say so. Now that you have finished off those… things, I take it your allegiance to the Azath tower is at an end.’
He glanced over at it with his strange, red eyes. ‘We were never… friends,’ he said, then faintly smiled. ‘But it is dead. I am not bound to anyone’s service but my own.’ Studied her once again. ‘And there are things I must do… for myself.’
Kettle spoke. ‘Can I come with you?’
‘That would please me, child,’ the warrior said.
Shurq Elalle narrowed her eyes. ‘You made a promise, didn’t you?’ she asked him. ‘To the tower, and though it is dead the promise remains to be honoured.’
‘She will be safe, so long as she chooses to remain with me,’ the warrior said, nodding.