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    The Crippled God


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      About the Book

      The Bonehunters are marching to Kolanse, and to an unknown fate. Tormented and exhausted, they are an army on the brink of mutiny. But Adjunct Tavore will not relent. If she can hold her forces together, if the fragile alliances she had forged can survive and if it is within her power, one final act remains. For Tavore Paran means to challenge the gods.

      Ranged against Tavore and her allies are formidable foes. The Fokrul Assail are drawing upon a terrible power; their desire is to cleanse the world – to eradicate every civilization, to annihilate every human – in order to begin anew. The Elder Gods, too, are seeking to return. And to do so, they will shatter the chains that bind a force of utter devastation and release her from her eternal prison. It seems that, once more, there will be dragons in the world.

      And in Kurald Galain, where the once-lost city of Kharkanas has been found, thousands have gathered upon the First Shore. Commanded by Yedan Derryg, they await the coming of the Tiste Liosan. Are they truly ready to die in the name of an empty city and a queen with no subjects?

      In every world there comes a time when choice is no longer an option – a moment when the soul is laid bare and there is nowhere left to turn. And when this last hard truth is faced, when compassion is a virtue on its knees, what is there left to do? Now that time is come – now is the moment to proclaim your defiance and make a stand…

      And so begins the final cataclysmic chapter in Steven Erikson’s extraordinary, genre-defining ‘Malazan Book of the Fallen’.

      ABOUT THE AUTHOR

      A graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, archaeologist and anthropologist Steven Erikson recently moved back to the UK from Canada and now lives in Cornwall. His début fantasy novel, Gardens of the Moon, marked the opening chapter in the epic ‘Malazan Book of the Fallen’ sequence, which has been hailed as one of the most significant works of fantasy of this millennium.

      To find out more, visit www.stevenerikson.com and www.malazanempire.com

      Also by Steven Erikson

      GARDENS OF THE MOON

      DEADHOUSE GATES

      MEMORIES OF ICE

      HOUSE OF CHAINS

      MIDNIGHT TIDES

      THE BONEHUNTERS

      REAPER’S GALE

      TOLL THE HOUNDS

      DUST OF DREAMS

      THE FIRST COLLECTED TALES OF

      BAUCHELAIN & KORBAL BROACH

      THE CRIPPLED GOD

      A Tale of the Malazan Book of the Fallen

      Steven Erikson

      This eBook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.

      Version 1.0

      Epub ISBN 9781409010845

      www.randomhouse.co.uk

      TRANSWORLD PUBLISHERS

      61–63 Uxbridge Road, London W5 5SA

      A Random House Group Company

      www.rbooks.co.uk

      First published in Great Britain in 2011 by Bantam Press an imprint of Transworld Publishers

      Copyright © Steven Erikson 2011

      Steven Erikson has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the author of this work.

      This book is a work of fiction and, except in the case of historical fact, any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

      A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

      ISBNs 9780593046357 (cased)

      9780593046364 (tpb)

      This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition, including this condition, being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

      Addresses for Random House Group Ltd companies outside the UK can be found at: www.randomhouse.co.uk

      The Random House Group Ltd Reg. No. 954009

      2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1

      Contents

      Acknowledgements

      Map

      Dramatis Personae

      Book One: ‘He was a soldier’

      Chapter One

      Chapter Two

      Chapter Three

      Chapter Four

      Book Two: All the takers of my days

      Chapter Five

      Chapter Six

      Chapter Seven

      Book Three: To charge the spear

      Chapter Eight

      Chapter Nine

      Chapter Ten

      Book Four: The fists of the world

      Chapter Eleven

      Chapter Twelve

      Chapter Thirteen

      Book Five: A hand upon the fates

      Chapter Fourteen

      Chapter Fifteen

      Chapter Sixteen

      Book Six: To one in chains

      Chapter Seventeen

      Chapter Eighteen

      Chapter Nineteen

      Chapter Twenty

      Book Seven: Your private shore

      Chapter Twenty-One

      Chapter Twenty-Two

      Chapter Twenty-Three

      Chapter Twenty-Four

      Epilogue I

      Epilogue II

      Appendix

      About the Author

      Many years ago one man took a chance on an unknown writer and his first fantasy novel – a novel that had already gone the rounds of publishers a few times without any luck. Without him, without his faith and, in the years that followed, his unswerving commitment to this vast undertaking, there would be no ‘Malazan Book of the Fallen’. It has been my great privilege to work with a single editor from start to finish, and so I humbly dedicate The Crippled God to my editor and friend, Simon Taylor.

      Acknowledgements

      My deepest gratitude is accorded to the following people. My advance readers for their timely commentary on this manuscript which I foisted on them at short notice and probably inopportune times: A. P. Canavan, William Hunter, Hazel Hunter, Baria Ahmed and Bowen Thomas-Lundin. And the staff of The Norway Inn in Perranarworthal, the Mango Tango and Costa Coffee in Falmouth, all of whom participated in their own way in the writing of this novel.

      Also, a heartfelt thank you to all my readers, who (presumably) have stayed with me through to this, the tenth and final novel of the ‘Malazan Book of the Fallen’. I have enjoyed our long conversation. What’s three and a half million words between friends?

      I could well ask the same question of my publishers. Thank you for your patience and support. The unruly beast is done, and I can hear your relieved sighs.

      Finally, my love and gratitude to my wife, Clare Thomas, who suffered through the ordeal of not just this novel, but all those that preceded it. I think it was your mother who warned you that marrying a writer was a dicey proposition …

      DRAMATIS PERSONAE

      In addition to those in Dust of Dreams

      THE MALAZANS

      Himble Thrup

      Seageant Gaunt-Eye

      Corporal Rib

      Lap Twirl

      Sad

      Burnt Rope

      THE HOST

      Ganoes Paran, High Fist and Master of the Deck

      High Mage Noto Boil

      Outrider Hurlochel

      Fist Rythe Bude

      Captain Sweetcreek

      Imperial Artist Ormulogun

      Warleader Mathok

    />   Bodyguard T’morol

      Gumble

      THE KHUNDRYL

      Widow Jastara

      THE SNAKE

      Sergeant Cellows

      Corporal Nithe

      Sharl

      THE T’LAN IMASS: THE UNBOUND

      Urugal the Woven

      Thenik the Shattered

      Beroke Soft Voice

      Kahlb the Silent Hunter

      Halad the Giant

      THE TISTE ANDII

      Nimander Golit

      Spinnock Durav

      Korlat

      Skintick

      Desra

      Dathenar Gowl

      Nemanda

      THE JAGHUT: THE FOURTEEN

      Gathras

      Sanad

      Varandas

      Haut

      Suvalas

      Aimanan

      Hood

      THE FORKRUL ASSAIL: THE LAWFUL INQUISITORS

      Reverence

      Serenity

      Equity

      Placid

      Diligence

      Abide

      Aloft

      Calm

      Belie

      Freedom

      Grave

      THE WATERED: THE TIERS OF LESSER ASSAIL

      Amiss

      Exigent

      Hestand

      Festian

      Kessgan

      Trissin

      Melest

      Haggraf

      THE TISTE LIOSAN

      Kadagar Fant

      Aparal Forge

      Iparth Erule

      Gaelar Throe

      Eldat Pressan

      OTHERS

      Absi

      Spultatha

      K’rul

      Kaminsod

      Munug

      Silanah

      Apsal’ara

      Tulas Shorn

      D’rek

      Gallimada

      Korabas

      BOOK ONE

      ‘HE WAS A SOLDIER’

      I am known

      in the religion of rage.

      Worship me as a pool

      of blood in your hands.

      Drink me deep.

      It’s bitter fury

      that boils and burns.

      Your knives were small

      but they were many.

      I am named

      in the religion of rage.

      Worship me with your

      offhand cuts

      long after I am dead.

      It’s a song of dreams

      crumbled to ashes.

      Your wants overflowed

      but now gape empty.

      I am drowned

      in the religion of rage.

      Worship me unto

      death and down

      to a pile of bones.

      The purest book

      is the one never opened.

      No needs left unfulfilled

      on the cold, sacred day.

      I am found

      in the religion of rage.

      Worship me in a

      stream of curses.

      This fool had faith

      and in dreams he wept.

      But we walk a desert

      rocked by accusations,

      where no man starves

      with hate in his bones.

      Poet’s Night i.iv

      The Malazan Book of the Fallen

      Fisher kel Tath

      CHAPTER ONE

      If you never knew

      the worlds in my mind

      your sense of loss

      would be small pity

      and we’ll forget this on the trail.

      Take what you’re given

      and turn away the screwed face.

      I do not deserve it,

      no matter how narrow the strand

      of your private shore.

      If you will do your best

      I’ll meet your eye.

      It’s the clutch of arrows in hand

      that I do not trust

      bent to the smile hitching my way.

      We aren’t meeting in sorrow

      or some other suture

      bridging scars.

      We haven’t danced the same

      thin ice

      and my sympathy for your troubles

      I give freely without thought

      of reciprocity or scales on balance.

      It’s the decent thing, that’s all.

      Even if that thing

      is a stranger to so many.

      But there will be secrets

      you never knew

      and I would not choose any other way.

      All my arrows are buried and

      the sandy reach is broad

      and all that’s private

      cools pinned on the altar.

      Even the drips are gone,

      that child of wants

      with a mind full of worlds

      and his reddened tears.

      The days I feel mortal I so hate.

      The days in my worlds,

      are where I live for ever,

      and should dawn ever arrive

      I will to its light awaken

      as one reborn.

      Poet’s Night iii.iv

      The Malazan Book of the Fallen

      Fisher kel Tath

      COTILLION DREW TWO DAGGERS. HIS GAZE FELL TO THE BLADES. The blackened iron surfaces seemed to swirl, two pewter rivers oozing across pits and gouges, the edges ragged where armour and bone had slowed their thrusts. He studied the sickly sky’s lurid reflections for a moment longer, and then said, ‘I have no intention of explaining a damned thing.’ He looked up, eyes locking. ‘Do you understand me?’

      The figure facing him was incapable of expression. The tatters of rotted sinew and strips of skin were motionless upon the bones of temple, cheek and jaw. The eyes held nothing, nothing at all.

      Better, Cotillion decided, than jaded scepticism. Oh, how he was sick of that. ‘Tell me,’ he resumed, ‘what do you think you’re seeing here? Desperation? Panic? A failing of will, some inevitable decline crumbling to incompetence? Do you believe in failure, Edgewalker?’

      The apparition remained silent for a time, and then spoke in a broken, rasping voice. ‘You cannot be so … audacious.’

      ‘I asked if you believed in failure. Because I don’t.’

      ‘Even should you succeed, Cotillion. Beyond all expectation, beyond, even, all desire. They will still speak of your failure.’

      He sheathed his daggers. ‘And you know what they can do to themselves.’

      The head cocked, strands of hair dangling and drifting. ‘Arrogance?’

      ‘Competence,’ Cotillion snapped in reply. ‘Doubt me at your peril.’

      ‘They will not believe you.’

      ‘I do not care, Edgewalker. This is what it is.’

      When he set out, he was not surprised that the deathless guardian followed. We have done this before. Dust and ashes puffed with each step. The wind moaned as if trapped in a crypt. ‘Almost time, Edgewalker.’

      ‘I know. You cannot win.’

      Cotillion paused, half turned. He smiled a ravaged smile. ‘That doesn’t mean I have to lose, does it?’

      Dust lifted, twisting, in her wake. From her shoulders trailed dozens of ghastly chains: bones bent and folded into irregular links, ancient bones in a thousand shades between white and deep brown. Scores of individuals made up each chain, malformed skulls matted with hair, fused spines, long bones, clacking and clattering. They drifted out behind her like a tyrant’s legacy and left a tangled skein of furrows in the withered earth that stretched for leagues.

      Her pace did not slow, as steady as the sun’s own crawl to the horizon ahead, as inexorable as the darkness overtaking her. She was indifferent to notions of irony, and the bitter taste of irreverent mockery that could so sting the palate. In this there was only necessity, the hungriest of gods. She had known imprisonment. The memories remained fierce, but such recollections were not those of crypt walls and unlit tombs. Darkness, indeed, but also pressure. Terrible, unbearable pressure.

      Madness was a demon an
    d it lived in a world of helpless need, a thousand desires unanswered, a world without resolution. Madness, yes, she had known that demon. They had bargained with coins of pain, and those coins came from a vault that never emptied. She’d once known such wealth.

      And still the darkness pursued.

      Walking, a thing of hairless pate, skin the hue of bleached papyrus, elongated limbs that moved with uncanny grace. The landscape surrounding her was empty, flat on all sides but ahead, where a worn-down range of colourless hills ran a wavering claw along the horizon.

      She had brought her ancestors with her and they rattled a chaotic chorus. She had not left a single one behind. Every tomb of her line now gaped empty, as hollowed out as the skulls she’d plundered from their sarcophagi. Silence ever spoke of absence. Silence was the enemy of life and she would have none of it. No, they talked in mutters and grating scrapes, her perfect ancestors, and they were the voices of her private song, keeping the demon at bay. She was done with bargains.

      Long ago, she knew, the worlds – pallid islands in the Abyss – crawled with creatures. Their thoughts were blunt and simple, and beyond those thoughts there was nothing but murk, an abyss of ignorance and fear. When the first glimmers awakened in that confused gloom, they quickly flickered alight, burning like spot fires. But the mind did not awaken to itself on strains of glory. Not beauty, not even love. It did not stir with laughter or triumph. Those fires, snapping to life, all belonged to one thing and one thing only.

      The first word of sentience was justice. A word to feed indignation. A word empowering the will to change the world and all its cruel circumstances, a word to bring righteousness to brutal infamy. Justice, bursting to life in the black soil of indifferent nature. Justice, to bind families, to build cities, to invent and to defend, to fashion laws and prohibitions, to hammer the unruly mettle of gods into religions. All the prescribed beliefs rose out twisting and branching from that single root, losing themselves in the blinding sky.

      But she and her kind had stayed wrapped about the base of that vast tree, forgotten, crushed down; and in their place, beneath stones, bound in roots and dark earth, they were witness to the corruption of justice, to its loss of meaning, to its betrayal.

     

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