The sappers' encampment was set somewhat apart from the others — as far away as possible when they carried Moranth munitions. Though he looked, Duiker could not see its location, but he knew well what he'd find. Look for the most disordered collection of tents and foul-smelling vapours aswarm with mosquitoes and gnats and you'll have found Malazan Engineers. And in that quarter you'll find soldiers shaking like leaves, with splash-bum pockmarks, singed hair and a dark, manic gleam in their eyes.
Corporal List stood with Captain Lull at one end of the Marine encampment, close to the attachment of loyal Hissari Guards — whose soldiers were readying their tulwars and round shields in grim silence. Coltaine held them in absolute trust, and the Seven Cities natives had proved themselves again and again with fanatic ferocity — as if they had assumed a burden of shame and guilt and could only relieve it by slaughtering every one of their traitorous kin.
Captain Lull smiled as the historian joined them. 'Got a cloth for your face? We'll be eating dust today, old man, in plenty.'
'We will be the back end of the wedge, sir,' List said, looking none too pleased.
'I'd rather swallow dust than a yard of cold iron,' Duiker said. 'Do we know what we're facing yet, Lull?'
'That's "Captain" to you.'
'As soon as you stop calling me "old man", I'll start calling you by your rank.'
'I was jesting, Duiker,' Lull said. 'Call me what you like, and that includes pig-headed bastard if it pleases you.'
'It just might.'
Lull's face twisted sourly. 'Didn't get any sleep, did you?' He swung to List. 'If the old codger starts nodding off, you've my permission to give him a clout on that bashed-up helmet of his, Corporal.'
'If I can stay awake myself, sir. This good cheer is wearing me out.'
Lull grimaced at Duiker. 'The lad's showing spark these days.'
'Isn't he just.'
The sun was burning clear of the horizon. Pale-winged birds flitted over the humped hills to the north. Duiker glanced down at his boots. The morning dew had seeped through the worn leather. Strands of snagged spiderwebs made a stretched, glittering pattern over the toes. He found it unaccountably beautiful. Gossamer webs. . intricate traps. Yet it was my thoughtless passage that left the night's work undone. Will the spiders go hungry this day because of it?
'Shouldn't dwell on what's to come,' Lull said.
Duiker smiled, looked up at the sky. 'What's the order?'
'The Seventh's marines are the spear's point. Crow riders to either side are the flanking barbs. Foolish Dog — now a Toggthundering heavy cavalry — are the weight behind the marines. Then come the wounded, protected on all sides by the Seventh's infantry. Taking up the tail are the Hissari Loyals and the Seventh's cavalry.'
Duiker was slow to react, then he blinked and faced the captain.
Lull nodded. 'The refugees and herds are being held back, this side of the valley but slightly south, on a low shelf of land the maps call the Shallows, with a ridge of hills south of that. The Weasel Clan guards them. It's the safest thing to do — that clan's turned dark and nasty since Sekala. Their horsewarriors have all filed their teeth, if you can believe that.'
'We go to this battle unencumbered,' the historian said.
'Excepting the wounded, aye.'
Captains Sulmar and Chenned emerged from the infantry encampment. Sulmar's posture and expression radiated outrage, Chenned's was mocking if slightly bemused.
'Blood and guts!' Sulmar hissed, his greased moustache bristling. 'Those damned sappers and their Hood-spawned captain have done it this time!'
Chenned met Duiker's gaze and shook his head. 'Coltaine went white at the news.'
'What news?'
'The sappers lit out last night!' Sulmar snarled. 'Hood rot the cowards one and all! Poliel bless them with pestilence, pox their illegitimate brood with her pus-soaked kiss! Togg trample that captain's ba-'
Chenned was laughing in disbelief. 'Captain Sulmar! What would your friends in the Council say to such foul-mouthed cursing?'
'Burn take you, too, Chenned! I'm a soldier first, damn you. A trickle to a flood, that's what we're facing-'
'There won't be any desertions,' Lull said, his battered fingers slowly raking through his beard. 'The sappers ain't run away. They're up to something, I'd hazard. It's not easy reining in that unwashed, motley company when you can't even track down its captain — but I don't imagine Coltaine will make the same mistake again.'
'He'll not have the chance,' Sulmar muttered. 'The first worms will crawl into our ears before the day's done. It's the oblivious feast for us all, mark my words.'
Lull raised his brows. 'If that's as encouraging as you can manage, Sulmar, I pity your soldiers.'
'Pity's for the victors, Lull.'
A lone horn wailed its mournful note.
'Waiting's over,' Chenned said with obvious relief. 'Save me a patch of grass when you go down, gentlemen.'
Duiker watched the two Seventh captains depart. He'd not heard that particular send-off in a long time.
'Chenned's father was in Dassem's First Sword,' Lull said.
'Or so goes the rumour — even when names are swept from official histories, the past shows its face, eh, old man?'
Duiker was in no mood to rise to either jibe. 'Think I'll check my gear,' he said, turning away.
It was noon before the final positioning was completed. There had been a near riot when the refugees finally understood that the main army was to make the crossing without them. Coltaine's selection of the Weasel Clan as their escort — the horsewarriors presented a truly terrifying visage with their threaded skin, black tattooing and filed teeth — proved his cunning yet again, although the Weasel riders almost took it too far with their bloodthirsty taunts flung at the very people they were sworn to protect. Desultory calm was established, despite the frenzied, fear-stricken efforts of the noble-born's Council and their seemingly inexhaustible capacity to deliver protests and writs.
With the main force finally assembled, Coltaine issued the command to move forward.
The day was blisteringly hot, the parched ground rising in clouds of dust as soon as the brittle grass was worn away by hooves and tramping boots. Lull's prediction of eating dust proved depressingly accurate, as Duiker once more raised his tin belt-flask to his lips, letting water seep into his mouth and down the dry gully of his throat.
Marching on his left was Corporal List, his face caked white, helmet sliding down over his sweat-sheened forehead. On the historian's right strode the veteran marine — he did not know her name, nor would he ask. Duiker's fear of what was to come had spread through him like an infection. His thoughts felt fevered, spinning around an irrational terror of … of knowledge. Of the details that remind one of humanity. Names to faces are like twinned serpents threatening the most painful bite of all. I'll never return to the List of the Fallen, because I see now that the unnamed soldier is a gift. The named soldier — dead, melted wax — demands a response among the living … a response no-one can make. Names are no comfort, they're a call to answer the unanswerable. Why did she die, not him? Why do the survivors remain anonymous — as if cursed — while the dead are revered? Why do we cling to what we lose while we ignore what we still hold?
Name none of the fallen, for they stood in our place, and stand there still in each moment of our lives. Let my death hold no glory, and let me die forgotten and unknown. Let it not be said that I was one among the dead to accuse the living.