But what really caught Antsy’s attention was the wonderful scent of fresh fruit and cooked meat. His stomach lurched and grumbled and his mouth, dry for days, now flooded.
‘Prisoners, sir,’ their captor grunted.
The man did not look up from the document. ‘Very good, Lieutenant.’
The lieutenant promptly slouched into a chair, one of slung cured leather over carved dark wood that itself looked like a work of art. He helped himself to a cut-crystal jug of red wine, pouring it into a cup that appeared to have been carved from jade. He waved away the guards.
The man tossed down the sheet. He was unshaven, his face glistening in the candlelight. His hair hung in a tangled mess around a bald dome. He rubbed his sunken red-ringed eyes with a pudgy hand thick with gem-studded rings. He blinked at them. ‘A Darujhistan dandy, a Malazan deserter, and some rich merchant’s plaything. How can any of you be of use to me?’
‘Torbal Loat,’ Antsy blurted, the name suddenly coming to him.
The man cocked one bloodshot eye. ‘Met before, have we?’
‘This fellow carved out quite the territory for himself up north during the wars,’ Antsy told Corien and Orchid.
‘Before you Malazans drove me out.’
Antsy raised his hands. ‘Hey, I chucked that in. No percentage there.’
The man merely grunted. He raised his chin to Corien. ‘You can use a blade, I assume?’
The youth bowed. ‘At your service.’
The lieutenant laughed a harsh bray and raised his glass in salute.
‘And you?’ Torbal demanded of Orchid.
‘She’s a mage of Rashan,’ Antsy said before she could answer.
Torbal’s heavy mouth twisted his irritation. ‘This true? If not, I’ll kill you myself.’
‘I have some small gifts, yes,’ she stammered.
He grunted, unimpressed. ‘Well … it’s the usual deal. You swear to fight for me and you’ll receive your fair share of food and shares in the profits. As you can see, we control the majority of the Spawn. Most of all that is worth anything is with us. Fight well and eventually your original gear will be returned. Though,’ and he glared at Antsy, ‘not all of it. Desertion is of course punishable by immediate execution,’ he added, continuing to give Antsy a hard eye.
‘For a share of the total profits I’m your man,’ Antsy said.
‘As am I,’ Corien added.
‘And I.’
‘Now,’ Torbal began, picking up a star fruit and examining it. ‘Our lookouts report that there was someone else with you … What happened to him?’
Antsy could not take his eyes from the ripe yellow star-shaped fruit. ‘He ran off.’
‘Ran off? You won’t mind then if we have a look for him?’
Antsy kept his face dead straight as he said: ‘No. We don’t mind at all.’
‘Where do you get all this food?’ Corien breathed, his voice thick with longing.
Torbal’s expression said that he was very pleased his little demonstration had had the desired effect. He sat back and took a bite of the fruit. ‘I have contacts with the Confederation boys. For a few trinkets I get regular shipments. My people eat well — remember that.’ He gestured to the lieutenant. ‘Get them rooms.’
The lieutenant pushed himself up. ‘Let’s go.’
He marched them back through the rambling living quarters. Antsy quickly became lost though he was doing his best to keep his bearings; he suspected the man was leading them in circles. Eventually he stopped before a portal covered by a hanging — a hacked portion of a tapestry that must once have been worth a fortune before such desecration. ‘You have a name?’ Antsy asked him.
The man pulled off his helmet and shook out long thick hair around his scarred and pitted face. ‘Otan.’
‘Otan of Genalle?’
‘The same.’
‘You gave us — ah, the Malazans — a lot of trouble.’
‘I still do,’ the man said, eyeing Antsy with obvious distaste. ‘Listen … Torbal says you live for now, but I don’t like you. Spy or deserter, whichever you are, I’ll be keeping an eye on you. Be sure of that.’
‘That’ll keep me warm at night, friend.’
‘We’ll settle this. Don’t worry. We’ll settle up.’ He ambled off, his armour rattling and creaking.
It was a plain living chamber. A side room allowed the option of privacy for Orchid. They remained together in the main room talking in low voices while Corien kept a watch at the hanging.
‘What now?’ Orchid asked. ‘We’re captives.’
‘Are we at the top?’ Antsy asked.
‘No. According to all the descriptions I’ve heard there’s still a way to go.’
‘Thought so.’
‘Why?’
He gestured back the way they’d come. ‘I didn’t think this lot would be in charge.’
‘They have a lot of swords,’ Corien pointed out.
‘Yeah. But they’re fighting someone for control of the rock.’
‘Who?’
Antsy rubbed his slick forehead; his fingers came away greasy and sticky. He sighed. ‘I think maybe Malazans.’
‘Malazans?’ Orchid echoed in disbelief.
‘Yeah.’ Antsy sat on a stone sleeping ledge. ‘I heard that a while back a Malazan man-of-war bulled its way through to here. That would be maybe some two hundred fighting men. That’s why old Otan there’s accusing me of being a spy.’
Corien raised a hand for silence. Someone approached and he opened the hanging. It was a slave, a skinny crippled fellow with one hand and one bandaged eye. He was hugging a platter containing a hunk of cheese, dry hardtack, smoked meat, and a ceramic pot of water.
‘What’s your story, old man?’ Antsy asked him.
The man’s answer was the sad wreckage of a smile. A stream of clear fluid ran down his cheek from under the bandage. ‘Came out to make my fortune. Like a gold rush, everyone said. Jewels to be plucked from the streets of the Spawn.’ With his remaining hand he gestured to himself. ‘But, as I found, riches don’t come cheap.’
‘I hear you, old man. What about weapons?’
‘When there’s an attack.’
Corien swore, then apologized to Orchid.
‘An attack?’ Antsy continued. ‘Who?’
The man shook his battered head. ‘Can’t say. Talk means punishment.’
‘I understand. Thanks for the food.’
The old fellow bowed and padded off into the darkness. Antsy used his short eating knife to cut slices from the lump of cheese. Chewing, he squinted into the dark side room. ‘I think your night vision thing is still working, Orchid.’
‘Me too,’ Corien affirmed.
‘Good,’ she said bleakly.
Antsy turned his squint on her. ‘Could you give us darkness?’
‘There’s plenty of that.’
He cut and handed out slivers of the hard meat. Tasting it he wasn’t sure what it was. Horse? ‘No. Real darkness. The kind that light can’t penetrate — would we still be able to see in that?’
‘I think so, yes. I believe you should.’
‘Good. That might be enough to get us out of here.’
‘Darkness?’ Corien said. ‘We have no weapons.’
‘Then we’ll bash people over the head and take theirs!’ Antsy answered, a touch irritated.
Corien inclined his head. ‘Of course. A sophisticated plan. When?’
Antsy scratched his own thickening beard. ‘Yeah. When. Common wisdom says we should wait a while — look like we’re fitting in. But I can’t shake the feeling that time’s not on our side. This whole rock is unstable. Who knows what might happen to it? Every day we’re stuck here we’re tempting Oponn and I don’t like that.’
‘So … we don’t wait?’
‘No.’ He wrapped the food to pack it away. ‘We go now.’
‘But our supplies. Your munitions!’
‘I’m happier keeping my head, thanks.’
Corien smiled his rueful admiration. ‘You’ve weathered more reversals than we have, Red.’
Antsy shoved the food into a roll of the tattered blankets and tied it off. ‘Aw, Hood. It ain’t Red. It’s Antsy.’