On the terrace crumpled bodies lay in grotesque piles, none moving.
Everyone else had fled.
«Mammot recovers,» the woman said desperately. «I have nothing left, Wizard. You must do something now, yes?»
He stared at her.
Paran stumbled, slid across greasy clay and rolled up against a bank of tufted reeds. A storm racked the sky above him. He scrambled to his feet, the sword Chance hot and moaning in his hand. A calm shallow lake stretched out on his left, ending in a distant ridge of faintly luminescent green. To his right the marshes continued out to the horizon. The air was cool, sweet with decay.
Paran sighed shakily. He studied the storm overhead. jagged arcs of lightning warred with each other, the clouds dark and twisting as if in agony. A concussion sounded to his right and he spun. A thousand paces away, something had appeared. The captain squinted. It rose above the marsh grasses like an animated tree, gnarled and black, pulling at the roots that gripped it and flinging them aside. Another figure appeared, danced lithely around it, a brown-bladed jagged sword in its hands. This figure was clearly in retreat, as the gnarled man-shape lashed at it with miasmic waves of power. They were approaching Paran's position.
He heard bubbling, sucking sounds behind him and turned. «Hood's Breath!»
A house was rising out of the lake. Swamp grass and mud slid from its battered stone walls. A huge stone doorway gaped black, hissing with steam. The second level of the structure looked misshapen, scarred, the cut stones melted away here and there, revealing a skeletal wooden Another explosion drew his attention back to the fighters. They were much closer now, and Paran could see the figure with the two-handed sword clearly. A T'lan Imass. Despite its awesome skill with the chalcedony weapon in its hands, it was being driven back. Its attacker was a tall, lean creature with flesh like oak. Two gleaming tusks rose from its lower jaw, and it was shrieking with rage. It struck the T'lan Imass again, flinging the warrior fifteen paces, to roll through the muck and come to rest almost at Paran's feet.
The captain found himself staring down into depthless eyes.
«The Azath is not yet ready, mortal,» the T'lan Imass said. «Too young, not yet of strength to imprison that which called it into being-the Finnest. When the Tyrant fled, I sought out its power.» It tried to rise, failed. «Defend the Azath, the Finnest seeks to destroy it.»
Paran looked up to see the apparition stalking towards him. Defend? Against that? The choice was taken from him. The Finnest roared and a sizzling wave of power rolled towards him. He swung Chance into its path.
The blade slid through the energy. Unaffected, the power swept over, then into Paran. Blinded, he screamed as bitter cold lanced through him, shattering his thoughts, his sense of self. An invisible hand closed around his soul. Mine! The word rang in his head, triumphant and filled with savage glee. You are mine!
Paran dropped Chance, fell to his knees. The grip on his soul was absolute. He could only obey. Fragments of awareness reached through.
A tool, nothing more. All I have done, all I have survived, to reach but this.
Deep within him he heard a sound, repeating again and again, growing louder. A howl. The chill of his blood that had seamlessly filled every part of his body began to break apart. Flashes of heat, bestial and defiant, ripped through the cold. He threw back his head, the howling reaching his throat. As it broke loose, the Finnest staggered back.
Blood of a Hound! Blood no one can enslave-Paran launched himself at the Finnest. His muscles filled with pain as overwhelming strength flowed into them. You dare! He struck the creature, driving it to the ground, battering its oak flesh with his fists, sinking his teeth into the bark of its face. The Finnest tried to push him away, and failed. It screamed, flailing its limbs. Paran began ripping it methodically to pieces.
A hand closed on the collar of his cloak, pulled him from the tattered body. Frenzied, Paran tried to twist round, to rend the creature holding him. The T'lan Imass shook him. «Cease!»
The captain blinked.
«Cease! You cannot destroy the Finnest. But you have held it. Long enough. The Azath will take it now. Do you understand?»
Paran sagged, the fires within him ebbing. Glancing down at the Finnest, he saw roots and fibrous tendrils rising from the wet earth to wrap themselves around the battered apparition and begin to pull their captive down into the cloying mud. In a moment, the Finnest was gone.
The T'lan Imass released Paran and stepped back. It regarded him steadily for a long moment.
Paran spat blood and splinters from his mouth, wiped his lips with the back of a hand. He bent down and retrieved Chance. «Damned luck turned,» he mumbled, sheathing the weapon. «Do you have something to say, Imass?»
«You are a long way from home, mortal.»
Paran reappeared a moment later, staggering half-blind across the terrace, then collapsing in a heap. Quick Ben scowled. What in Hood's Breath happened to him?
A Jaghut curse escaped Mammot, fierce as if ripped from the soul. The old man regained his feet, trembling with rage. Then his hooded eyes were on the wizard.
«Awaken the Seven within me!» Quick Ben roared, then shrieked as seven Warrens opened within him. His agonized scream rode the cascading waves of power as they swept across the terrace.
The Jaghut Possessed threw up his arms before his face as the waves struck. Mammot's body withered beneath the clambering, frenzied attack. Flesh was ripped away, fires lancing, boring holes through him.
He was driven to his knees, a vortex swirling like madness around him. Mammot howled, raising a fist that was nothing but charred bone.
The fist spasmed and one of Quick Ben's Warrens slammed shut. The fist jerked again.
Quick Ben sagged. «I'm done.»
Derudan grabbed a handful of the wizard's cloak. «Wizard! Listen to me!»
Another Warren was driven away. Quick Ben shook his head. «done.»
«Listen! That man-the one over there-what's he doing?»
Quick Ben looked up. «Hood's Breath!» he yelled, in sudden terror. A dozen paces away crouched Hedge, only his head and shoulders showing behind a bench. The saboteur's eyes shone with a manic glaze that the wizard recognized, and a large, bulky arbalest was in his hands, point directly at Mammot.
A wordless, wailing scream came from Hedge.
The wizard shouted and dived for the woman a second time. As he flew through the air, he heard the thock of the saboteur's crossbow. Quick Ben closed his eyes before colliding once again with the woman.
Crone flew tight circles over the plain where the Jaghut Tyrant had been.
He had reached to within fifty paces of Silanah, then vanished. Not a flight through a Warren, but a vanishing more complete, more absolute and all the more fascinating for that.
It had been a glorious night, a battle worthy of remembrance, and its end proved no end at all. «Delicious mystery,» she cackled. Crone knew her presence was demanded elsewhere, but she was reluctant to leave.
«Such terrible energies I have witnessed.» She laughed. «I mock the waste, the sheer foolishness! Ah, and now all that remains is questions, questions!»
She craned her head upward. Her lord's two Tiste And? Soletaken remained overhead. No one wanted to leave before the truth of the Jaghut Tyrant's fate was revealed. They'd earned the right to witness it, though Crone was beginning to suspect such answers would never come.
Silanah loosed a keening cry, then rose from the ground, the Warren that birthed her flight a strong, pungent exhalation. The red dragon's head swung westward, and she voiced a second cry.