Charon Deep Dives Malazan Book of the Fallen (Part Three)
Posted: Tue Apr 02, 2024 4:16 pm
Bam!
*slams down book*
Memories of Ice. What a whopper. 1200 pages of epic fantasy, here we go. Part three of our Malazan deep dive.
We open 298'665 years BEFORE Burn's Sleep. Way before humans infest the globe. Two Imass are talking, Cannig Tol and the bonecaster Pran Chole, at this point still mortal. They discuss the foolishness of their ways, hunting various species to extinction in order to feed their ever growing population, in turn removing the food for other creatures, driving them to extinction too as the food chain collapses. The parallel between destruction of prey and predator and the war against the Jaghut is floated. Indeed, these two are on the trail of a Jaghut that they expect to catch tomorrow. Pran Chole laments that Cannig Tol's tribe has barely twelve members remaining. He also thinks he can sense another bonecaster nearby.
The Jaghut is female, a mother with two tots of around 4 or 5 years old and apparently the last of her kind. She runs afoul of the second bonecaster, Kilava. As they bandy words it becomes clear that Kilava is offering mercy, not for the mother, but for the bairns. The mother agrees and Kilava gathers up the children and makes her escape. The bonecaster takes them to a rent in the air near an old Jaghut tower with a ruined city beyond, believing it to be a portal into Omtose Phellack. She tosses the children through, ostensibly to their salvation.
Pran Chole and Cannig Tol catch up to the mother. Suspicious as to the absence of the children they approach to speak with her. She admits the children are safe, taken to the gate of Omtose Phellack by Kilava. The Imass kill her, thus ending the 33rd Jaghut War. Pran Chole insists he must go quickly, to Morn. Cannig Tol pales at that and tells him to be swift for they are not cruel. Pran Chole opens the Tellan warren and steps through.
He emerges near the tower and confronts Kilava. He warns her that the rent in the sky is the wound that destroyed this city and it is not Omtose Phellack. Indeed, though the tower is Jaghut, the ruined city beyond is not. They realise that if it was a wound, then it was sealed with a soul...
Sidestep: Remember how we saw this happen in the broken fragment of Kurald Emurlahn in the previous book. One of the Imass went to seal the wound but sneakily used a Tiste Edur soul instead.
Well, this wound was sealed the same way. Pran Chole explains that when Kilava tossed the children through there would have been an exchange, releasing the soul and trapping the children in an eternity of agony. Pran Chole wonders whether Kilava's compassion would extend so far that she would now free the children their eternal torture by taking their place but it seems not. She asks what has been freed but Pran Chole doesn't know and says they'll find out soon enough in time, which they will soon have plenty of, due to the ritual of Tellan. Kilava calls it madness and states she intends to refuse to attend. Pran Chole tells her he has seen his own dessicated face, two hundred thousand years hence and knows the ritual will be successful. Kilava says her brother will be pleased at least, for her brother is...
Onos T'oolan.
Pran Chole is disgusted as he realises this makes Kilava the Defier, who slew her kin.
Kilava asks who built the city if not the Jaghut and Pran Chole tells her it is K'Chain Che'Malle. Neither know anything about them beyond the name but Pran Chole suggests they may learn.
We bounce forward a hundred millennia or so to 119'736 years before Burn's Sleep, which is three years after the fall of the Crippled God.
Oh shit, here we go.
As the opening line states "The Fall had shattered a continent."
Yeah, this has really made a mess. Long story short, the god was summoned by spellcasters working in unison. They tore a rift through to chaos and pulled him through, hoping he would defeat Kallor. Yes, that Kallor who we saw briefly in book one cosying up with Caladan Brood.
Unfortunately, the God splatting into the earth kinda fucked the planet, now wracked by firestorms that have burned up the forests and left it a wasteland. It also kinda fucked the god, who has himself been shattered by the impact.
We see K'rul wandering and finding the lumps of meat that are the god's body and he muses that even if he pulls his body together, his mind might be shattered too. K'rul is one of three Elder Gods here and they are converging in order to go deal with Kallor themselves. K'rul can also sense a fourth presence, some form of savage ancient beast.
He meets the other two, Draconus and a female they both call Sister. They confront Kallor and rather than kill him outright, they curse him. K'rul curses him with eternal mortal life, never to die of old age but with all the ravages of age one would normally accrue. Draconus curses him never to ascend. The sister curses him to fall every time he rises, that all he achieves shall turn to dust in his hands and that everything he has wilfully done so far will be revisited back upon him.
In rage, Kallor curses them back.
He curses K'rul to fade from memory.
He curses Draconus that what he creates shall turn on him.
He curses the Sister of Cold Nights that unhuman hands will tear her apart on the field of battle and yet she shall know no respite.
Oddly specific that one, huh? We already know K'rul's curse becomes true and in a moment you might be able to piece together what happens to Draconus.
Looking out on the shattered Earth, K'rul intends to create a new warren and sweep the shattered terrain into it so that the earth can heal from the wound. The others know that this is a monumental feat that will nearly kill K'rul but he insists. Draconus mentions that since the time of All Darkness he has been forging a sword. It has taken a long time and has a sense of finality about it. K'rul suggests he reshape it slightly, the implication being it will house the warren.
Sound familiar?
What if I told you we've already seen the sister too. It's easy to miss how that name could change over the years.
Off in the distance, this is all observed by the beast who has white fur and a missing eye where it too was damaged by the fall of the crippled god. It has also lost its mate. As it watches these young gods leave via their warrens, it too decides to leave and look for its mate. It opens a warren to Chaos and steps through.
Damn. And that was just the prologue.
It' the 1164th Year of Burn's Sleep.
That's ten years since Laseen took the throne.
We're gonna start with a new group of characters because why not. Gruntle is guarding a caravan with his associates, Harllo and Stonny Menackis, who gets two names for some reason. They are working for a mysterious man called Keruli.
Gruntle is approached by a manservant named Emancipor Reese. He wants Gruntle to meet his masters and Keruli seems keen for Gruntle to go (seemingly aware of the situation from inside his wagon). Reese takes him to meet Bauchelain and Korbal Broach, a pair of shady, black wearing dudes that we will later learn are necromancers. There's a bunch of novellas about these two guys which is a shame because I was never particularly interested in them. Anyway, they intend to visit Raest's now empty barrow and wanted Gruntle to go with them, ostensibly because Keruli would wish it. Gruntle refuses and returns to the wagons. Basically our takeaway is that the two necromancers don't know the full story about the events in Darujhistan from Book One and are now investigating.
Meanwhile, in the warren of Chaos... A familiar massive one eyed white wolf has found a one eyed man. How portentous.
Toc the Younger awakes. He remembers being attacked by Hairlock. He's not sure where he is, seemingly a landscape of broken volcanic glass. The string on his bow has dried out and stretched which suggests he's been out of it for weeks and yet he isn't overly hungry or thirsty, which makes that seem unlikely. He wanders around a bit and bumps into Onos T'oolan. Tool tells Toc that they are in Morn, 200 leagues south of Darujhistan and that two months have passed. He also tells Toc that the tower nearby has become occupied by a woman who is now approaching. The young, slim, attractive woman, with two dogs at her side, is introduced by Tool as Lady Envy. The Imass is full of exposition as he reveals she is one of Draconus' daughters, making her much older than her appearance might suggest. He also explicitly states that Draconus forged Dragnipur and then Anomander Rake killed him with it, which as we know, means Draconus is within the sword, pulling the wagon along with everyone else Rake has killed over the hundreds of millennia he's been alive. We also learn that Draconus has two daughters that he named Spite and Envy. Nice.
Envy invites the pair into her tower for refreshments and inside we find she has three servants, members of a warrior race called the Seguleh. They wear masks on their faces and we'll find out more about their culture later. For now, what's important is that Envy seems to be magically forcing them to do her bidding. Separately to that, the three warriors seem intend on challenging Onos T'oolan and despite Envy ordering them to stand down,t he tension increases until one of the Seguleh, Senu, attacks him. Tool delivers one blow with the flat of his blade and knocks the Seguleh unconscious. Tool makes it clear he knows that Envy is here studying the rent, which surprises her. Envy seems to think a K'Chain Che'Malle escaped from the rift. The tombs nearby have also been empty for decades, to which Tool asks "Only decades?". Given what we saw going on with this rift all those years ago, this is intriguing. Did the two Jaghut children replace the K'Chain Che'Malle matron as the rift seal?
Time for some more Bridgeburners. Picker and Blend who seem to be shaking down a merchant at a checkpoint between Darujhistan and Pale, supposedly seeking out smugglers. The merchant sells them a torc, an arm ring supposedly blessed by Treach, the Tiger of Summer. Picker is derisive, pointing out that Treach isn't a god, just a soletaken ascendant, but ultimately ends up purchasing the torc and putting it on. It clicks into place on her arm.
The merchant takes his leave and we find out he wanted the money to have his tumours healed which are implied to be testicular. He finds a gate to a warren and enters, meeting up with a mysterious god with a bad cough. The merchant hands the god a package containing cards, presumably a deck of dragons, but the pictures have been made flawed on purpose. The god congratulates the merchant on his skill. In return, the god heals his tumours, painfully, in such a way that leaves the merchant without the use of his legs. The merchant accepts his gift, seemingly still worshipping this "fallen one" as he calls him. It seems we have finally met the Crippled God. I always picture him as like Mumm-Ra the Everliving.
Back with Picker and Blend we find out that Quick Ben had them insert a pebble into the merchants pack so he could track him.
Quick Ben arrives and is horrified to see the magic coming from Picker's new torc. Picker thought the blessing would be fine for a soldier, Treach being the Lord of Battle but Quick Ben says Treach has been insane for about five thousand years as he hasn't gone back to his human form since. Either way, the torc is on Picker's arm now and she's stuck with it.
Quick Ben follows the tracking pebble by astrally projecting his soul, slipping into the warren and meeting the Crippled God. Quick Ben accesses his warrens, or at least seven of them, the most he can safely handle at once. The two converse and Quick realises that the Crippled God has infected Burn herself. The Crippled God confirms that in this realm, he is a cancer and that Burn cannot awaken while he is here. But the other gods chained him here. Quick Ben hits him with everything he has, grabs his tracking pebble back and tries to cheese it. The Crippled God tries to pull Quick back to him with sorcery but the earth opens and swallows the wizard. He finds himself deep within the earth and looks up to see ribs above him. He realises he is within Burn , who he calls a living warren. More, there are giants inside her, seemingly holding the ceiling up. One of them is melting as they speak and tells Quick Ben that they are dying and so is Burn. She has only tens of years left and requires help. Unsure how to help, Quick promises he'll try, then opens another warren and steps through, returning to his body. He tells Picker and Blend they're all in danger, not the Bridgeburners, not the Malazans, ALL of them.
We get a quick scene showing Whiskeyjack, Paran and some of our other Bridgeburners who are preparing for a parley with Caladan Brood. Our main takeaway is that Whiskeyjack is still injured as is Paran.
I'm gonna condense a lot of this down so here's what happens. The parley is between three leaders. Caladan Brood, Dujek Onearm and the seemingly ten year old Silverfox. Some other key figures are present, Whiskeyjack, Crone, Kallor, the Tiste Andii Korlat. We learn that Silverfox is growing rapidly as her biological mother is ageing relatively, essentially a parasitic sucking of energy and that she was only born six months ago. What's more, she is two souls in one body, mostly Tattersail but with a lot of Nightchill's knowledge. Kallor recognises her for that and is openly hostile. What's more, because she was born twice, once in the real world and once in the Tellan warren with K'rul and Pran Chole, she is also a bonecaster and essentially a mortal T'lan Imass.
The group discuss the upcoming campaign against the Pannion Seer. Brood has a unit called the Mott Irregulars that the Bridgeburners have faced previously.
We also learn some secrets. Dujek has a standard-bearer with him and Silverfox suspects he is not who he seems. Silverfox and Korlat know that Crone and her great ravens were born from the rotting flesh of the Crippled God after he smashed into the earth. We learn that Silverfox in theory commands all the T'lan Imass and they are supposed to be arriving for the second gathering, the first gathering being back when they turned themselves undead. We learn that the warren K'rul made by sweeping up Kallor's ruined empire is actually the Imperial Warren.
We also learn that the Pannion Seer has an army of peasants called the Tenescowri that he doesn't feed or equip making them angry, violent and possibly cannibalistic.
With Gruntle's group we see another guard called Buke that the two necromancers have hired. He apparently is somewhat suicidal, taking on dangerous assignments since his family died in Darujhistan. Gruntle chats with Buke and it seems Buke thinks Korbal Broach might be the murderer who killed his family. We don't know if there's any truth to this at the moment, it could just be co-incidence, but what we do know is Buke is probably seeking revenge. We also find out that Stonny Menackis feels sorry for him, which Gruntle thinks is because she's interested in him romantically.
Quick Ben meets up with a witch in Pale. He's trying to find out why exactly Burn is sleeping but the witch can only give him cryptic answers. Despite this, Quick wants to be allies and gives her a pebble. She agrees she'll be available to assist when the time comes. There's a real weird part here where the witch says she prefers the cold which gnaws at Quick when he leaves because old folk usually prefer to seek warmth. It doesn't seem that unusual to be honest but I guess its intended for us, the reader, to have some suspicions. For now, just remember it.
Back with the Bridgeburners, we meet Spindle, a mage who wears a disgusting shirt made of his dead mother's hair. Paran learns about Felisin being sent to the mines and realises Tavore was saving her from death while showing her best face to the Empress. He also surmises that, like himself, Tavore will take her position seriously and though she may attempt to rescue Felisin, she will not want to jeopardise her role as Adjunct.
Paran also learns that the young girl Silverfox is Tattersail which leaves him conflicted to say the least. Whiskeyjack also tells him that Quick Ben thinks Paran is ascending after his jaunt through Dragnipur, being the only person to ever escape it.
I'm gonna gloss over the table thing for now so if you have read the book, I'm just not getting into it. What's important here is that the Malazans learn that there might be a new unaligned card in the Deck of Dragons, a Deck Master of sorts... yeah, this is getting some major Yugioh vibes.
Silverfox and Paran discuss the Deck. Silverfox, or more specifically, Tattersail, believes that each card is a gate into a warren and that there may have been more cards and other decks, possibly that there are still other decks. More, she has theories about the suits. House Light, House Dark, etc. She draws a parallel with the finnest of Raest. Finnest means "hold of ice" and supposedly, historically, holds were synonymous with houses and warrens. So the Finnest means hold or house or warren of ice. She also says that Tremorlor is Trellish for House of Life. In Malaz City there is the Deadhouse, aka the House of Death. What's more, though Kellanved and Dancer entered the Deadhouse, they didn't become gods of Death because Hood already holds the position. She believes each Azath has entries to each realm and thus they found Shadow empty and settled in. Paran is surprised to learn the Emperor is Shadowthrone because I guess no one filled him in yet. She says the house of shadow used to be a hold because it doesn't share the same hierarchical structure as the other houses. This whole house/hold thing is gonna be annoying as shit for a while, sorry. Anyway, the pair of them speculate that Kurald Galain (The warren of Darkness) might have its entrance hidden in Dragnipur, with the souls inside essentially sealing it shut. Ultimately, Silverfox thinks the new Unaligned card in the deck is Paran.
Ok, back over to Envy and co. We learn a bit about the Seguleh. They are a warrior nation who maintain a strict hierarchy of skill. The less decorated their mask is, the more skilled they are. Of the three Seguleh there, one has only two lines on his mask, marking him as third in the overall hierarchy. His name is Mok, the other two are Thurule and Senu, the one Tool already defeated. We learn that Tool attempted to finish that fight quickly because otherwise it would have gone on forever. Tool explains that while it seemed like one blow was struck what actually happened was that as Senu began to draw his swords, Tool struck out three times. Senu blocked two of the blows with the partially drawn weapons and the third knocked him out before he could fully commit. Regardless, Tool defeated him and now stands above him which means Senu will converse with Tool as he is his superior. We also learn they have not attacked Toc because he is uneasy around them rather than confident which marks him as inferior and not worth the challenge. We learn from Envy that Rake once visited the Seguleh island and unaware of their customs and arrogant as he is, ended up fighting constantly while he was there, eventually retreating after two hours without realising he holds the rank of seventh and while that was centuries ago, the Seguleh still honour him that rank, referring to him as Blacksword. We also learn that the Seguleh were on their way to war with the Pannion Domin. It seems the Tenescowri came to their island and tried to convert them but as they were unarmed, the Seguleh ignored them. The Tenescowri promised the Pannion army would come to the Seguleh, which naturally, they welcomed, but as the army has not arrived, they have now taken the initiative although obviously these three have become ensnared by Envy.
While this conversation is happening Thurule attacks Tool and the pair drift off into the darkness as they fight. Tool finally returns with an unconscious Thurule. Tool has taken a fair bit of damage. As Mok starts to rise behind him, Tool mentions it was a more difficult fight than anticipated because he used the flat of his blade only. Mok sits back down. Despite the non-lethal blows, Tool had had to do a number on Thurule to take him down. Envy heals him and Mok protests that he must not be magically healed but Envy freaks out and hits him with some sorcery to force obedience back onto him.
Back with the Malazans, the consensus among the bridgeburners is that Paran is resisting ascendancy which is what is making him sick. Quick Ben is worried a little about Nightchill after he realises that there have been multiple Nightchill's throughout history and that they may all be the same one. No shit, Sherlock. We also learn that Caladan Brood's hammer might be blessed by Burn and that its believed the hammer is the one thing that can wake her.
A group of delegates from Darujhistan arrive to meet with Brood and who should emerge from the carriage but Kruppe. Silverfox's mother, Mhybe, greets him, saying she was in his dreams. Kruppe doesn't remember at first until she points out she was younger and pregnant and K'rul and Pran Chole where there. Kruppe realises who she is instantly and moreso, seems to realise why she has aged so. We also see the rest of the delegates who just so happen to be Coll, Murillio and Estraysian D'Arle. It seems Darujhistan is going to be funding this campaign against the Pannion Seer's forces, providing supplies but Caladan's plans have rendered the logistics somewhat tricky. Ultimately Kruppe suggests the use of the Trygalle Trade Guild after the success of providing aid to Coltaine.
Crone learns about the new card in the deck and Spindle has done multiple deck readings that keep throwing out Obelisk as the first card, convincing him it is now active. He also notices that the Assassin of House Shadow looks like Kalam.
As people mill about the camp, Spindle sees Paran and realises he's the new unaligned card.
The Bridgeburners are heading out to recruit allies. Specifically, their Barghast member, Trotts, is going to speak with the White Face Barghast clan to recruit their assistance.
Anomander Rake arrives in dragon form, sembling back into a Tiste Andii as he lands 'cos he's so cool. Kallor toadies up to him, trying to persuade him to kill Silverfox with Dragnipur, relying on Rake's famous impartiality to see Silverfox for the threat she might become. Other characters arrive to take a stance by Silverfox and Caladan warns Rake that if he draws Dragnipur, Brood will draw his hammer. It's clear that Rake doesn't like Kallor but he is suspicious of Silverfox. He tries to sense her with sorcery but Silverfox magically swats his attempt aside. Rake is impressed at the strength and temerity but also wonders what she is so eager to hide. He reaches for Dragnipur, Brood grabs his hammer, even Whiskeyjack draws his blade. Before it can all kick off, Kruppe appears in the air, dangling from a table which has the unaligned card of Ganoes Paran painted on the underside. It's not super important why its a table, I glossed over it to save time, point is, everyone sees it and the tension is broken.
Paran is off preparing to leave with the Bridgeburners when he is suddenly teleported to the standoff where he too now sees the card and can confirm it's him. As Paran doubles up in pain, sorcery leaking from the card to him, Quick Ben teleports in and defuses the situation, suggesting to everyone that given the importance of all this, now might not be the time for fighting. Rake relinquishes his grip on Dragnipur.
Paran on the other hand finds himself teleported to another location. Or rather falling until he lands, hitting the floor hard enough for his armour to make noise but not causing him any direct pain. He finds himself in an Azath and as he discovers the unconscious forms of Rallick Nom and Vorcan, surmises that this is the Finnest house in Darujhistan. He then meets the Finnest's new guardian, Raest or rather what's left of him, shredded and torn to bits as he was. He has Paran follow him as he explains that the Azath chose him as its guardian (ironic I guess, since it grew from his Finnest) and that the other two are held in an unconscious state as potential servants. He also affirms that Paran is the Deck Master. Paran isn't keen, attempting to refuse this destiny as he states he has enough wars to deal with as it is. Raest replies:
"They are all one."
It's easy to overlook this line, delivered as it is, so swiftly, the scene moving onto more dramatic moments, but I found this quite interesting. There's the obvious implication about the interlocking nature of all the events, which is true and raises some interesting questions about predestination or who is really the driving force behind the entire thing but my other takeaway is how easily Raest has grasped this concept. Either the Jaghut has instantly chilled out and accepted the knowledge given him by the Azath or the Azath is speaking through him. Given that Raest makes a comment about his Jaghut nature moments earlier, I feel like its the former, which suggests that whatever Raest saw or was informed of, the realisation really struck home.
Anyway, Paran is escorted into and left in a room with flagstones that have cards inscribed on them. Not just the Deck of Dragons but lost houses and countless forgotten unaligned. Touching one, he enters and finds himself standing in front of twin thrones, their bone and hide nature suggesting an ancient and primal place. Paran finds knowledge entering him. This is the Hold of the Beasts, which used to belong to the T'lan Imass before their undead ritual created them a new warren. He realises that the T'lan Imass have outlived their gods and he wonders why there are two thrones. It's not explicitly stated, but the thrones belong to Togg and his mate Fanderay. Although the name has yet to be put to him, we have seen Togg, the one eyed white wolf who wanders the warren of chaos and rescued Toc the Younger, possibly taking him as a champion. He goes back to Azath and looks at another card, seeing Burn. He sees the Crippled God, chained to her flesh and along the chains, poison flowing from him to her. What's more he realises she forged the hammer to shatter the chains and found Caladan Brood to wield it. And he has refused. Torn between two terrible options, literally a dilemma. To break the chains of the Crippled God would be to release him from Burn ensuring her survival, but at the cost of him clearing the world of life. Or leave him down there, kill Burn so that the world can live, at least, for a time.
He finds himself back with the others, where it seems mere moments have passed. The others do not seem to have noticed his absence. Rake basically tells Kallor that if they try and kill Silverfox now and fail, they will only have added to their list of enemies. For now, the alliance shall proceed. The meeting comes to an end and the groups disperse.
Rake and Brood meet in private where they discuss what we just learned from Paran, Brood's refusal to commit to freeing the Crippled God and killing everyone in the world. We learn that Brood's warren is Tennes, which is the same as the witch Quick Ben met with, so now we know that's Burn's warren. The way Rake phrases it suggests that he, Brood, The Queen of Dreams and Hood all agreed on something 1200 years ago. It's not clear yet if this is the chaining or an agreeance not to break the chains. Although we don't know it yet, it helps understand this timeframe once you know that the Crippled God wasn't chained all in one go. Rather bits of him have been chained across history. Rake is referring to the most recent chaining. Super confusing without this context. It's not super clear that Hood was present as people often use his name in speech as a curse or exclamation, but the hyphen here makes it obvious on a reread that Rake is saying Hood was present. So we now know that both Rake and Brood have met Hood, in person.
I can't wait til we meet Hood. He's very cool.
Anyway, the pair point out the Hobson's choice of the whole deal. The Crippled God wins either way. If Brood shatters the chains, the god is free, he poisons every warren, sorcery dies and with it, everyone on the planet. Or they wait, people live and Burn eventually dies... to the same end. They also worry that the Pannion Domin is using the warren of chaos, which is close to the Crippled God as his poison is that of chaos. Rake seems to think the Crippled God is the power behind the Pannion Domin.
Back with the Bridgeburners, Kallor is still being a douchecanoe so Quick Ben drops him into a magical hole and then scarpers before he can climb out.
Later, Quick Ben meets with Whiskeyjack where the ex-sergeant points out that Quick Ben seems awfully eager to escape Silverfox's presence. Quick points out she's aged five years in the last day or so. Whiskeyjack is suspicious that Quick Ben has yet more layers of plans going on, pointing out that he knows the mage visited every temple and seer in Pale, spent a small fortune on deck readings and has even sacrificed a goat at dawn atop a barrow. Quick admits the goat thing reeks of desperation. He claims he tried to contact the spirits in the barrow but someone had taken them. That has roused his curiosity. We close out this chapter as Onearm's host, ten thousand strong, joins Brood's forces to begin the march.
Back with Gruntle and co. They arrive in Saltoan where their master, Keruli, has a meeting with the city's criminal underbelly. It becomes clear that Keruli is a priest of sorts though Gruntle isn't sure which God he serves. Keruli points out to the Saltoans that the Pannion Domin come offering promises but the end result is that everyone ends up in the Tenescowri. He wants these criminals to pre-emptively turn public opinion against the Pannion. We also learn that among the Tenescowri are the Children of the Dead Seed. Simply put, the women of the Tenescowri rape the freshly killed male soldiers and get pregnant.
After this weird diversion, the wagon gets back on track, coming across some dead bandits that Gruntle thinks Bauchelain and Korbal Broach have killed. Even further on, they meet up with a trio of White Face Barghast. These are basically humans with white face paint resembling skulls, rather than the blue woad worn by other Barghast such as Trotts. These three are Hetan and her brothers, Cafal and Netok. We quickly learn that Hetan is incredibly horny and ends up having sex with Gruntle and Harllo on successive nights. This may be one of the most awful moments of foreshadowing ever and I don't mean awful as in poor quality.
The barghast travel with the wagon and the group come across Bauchelain's coach which seems to have been attacked. Long story short, the two necromancers pulled over to converse with some dead barghast spirits and were attacked by mysterious undead creatures with swords for arms. Weird. Anyway, Bauchelain and co warn Gruntle and co that the attackers are returning. While the necromancers seem calm, Buke tells Gruntle that the two are spooked, having used everything they had pretty much to drive the attackers off. The attackers are undead servants of the Pannion Domin and they killed the demons unleashed by the necromancers. There are three of these enemies and they're coming back. The whole menagerie prepares to defend against the attack, even Keruli who admits his god is Elder, but specifies no further. The creatures eventually attack. They are undead lizards with swords for hands. Basically, imagine a velociraptor twice the height of a man, with blades for arms, but also wearing a helm and armour. These are K'Chain Che'Malle, presumably resurrected by the Pannion Domin and they are deadly. As the mages unleash sorcery, one of the creatures clever girls them, attacking from behind. Gruntle is attacked. He blocks the blade swing with his own blade but the force breaks his left wrist. The follow up kick crushing his ribs and the talons slash him open. He lands in a heap and we close out the first part of the book with Gruntle's life force ebbing as he lays dying amidst the chaos.
*slams down book*
Memories of Ice. What a whopper. 1200 pages of epic fantasy, here we go. Part three of our Malazan deep dive.
We open 298'665 years BEFORE Burn's Sleep. Way before humans infest the globe. Two Imass are talking, Cannig Tol and the bonecaster Pran Chole, at this point still mortal. They discuss the foolishness of their ways, hunting various species to extinction in order to feed their ever growing population, in turn removing the food for other creatures, driving them to extinction too as the food chain collapses. The parallel between destruction of prey and predator and the war against the Jaghut is floated. Indeed, these two are on the trail of a Jaghut that they expect to catch tomorrow. Pran Chole laments that Cannig Tol's tribe has barely twelve members remaining. He also thinks he can sense another bonecaster nearby.
The Jaghut is female, a mother with two tots of around 4 or 5 years old and apparently the last of her kind. She runs afoul of the second bonecaster, Kilava. As they bandy words it becomes clear that Kilava is offering mercy, not for the mother, but for the bairns. The mother agrees and Kilava gathers up the children and makes her escape. The bonecaster takes them to a rent in the air near an old Jaghut tower with a ruined city beyond, believing it to be a portal into Omtose Phellack. She tosses the children through, ostensibly to their salvation.
Pran Chole and Cannig Tol catch up to the mother. Suspicious as to the absence of the children they approach to speak with her. She admits the children are safe, taken to the gate of Omtose Phellack by Kilava. The Imass kill her, thus ending the 33rd Jaghut War. Pran Chole insists he must go quickly, to Morn. Cannig Tol pales at that and tells him to be swift for they are not cruel. Pran Chole opens the Tellan warren and steps through.
He emerges near the tower and confronts Kilava. He warns her that the rent in the sky is the wound that destroyed this city and it is not Omtose Phellack. Indeed, though the tower is Jaghut, the ruined city beyond is not. They realise that if it was a wound, then it was sealed with a soul...
Sidestep: Remember how we saw this happen in the broken fragment of Kurald Emurlahn in the previous book. One of the Imass went to seal the wound but sneakily used a Tiste Edur soul instead.
Well, this wound was sealed the same way. Pran Chole explains that when Kilava tossed the children through there would have been an exchange, releasing the soul and trapping the children in an eternity of agony. Pran Chole wonders whether Kilava's compassion would extend so far that she would now free the children their eternal torture by taking their place but it seems not. She asks what has been freed but Pran Chole doesn't know and says they'll find out soon enough in time, which they will soon have plenty of, due to the ritual of Tellan. Kilava calls it madness and states she intends to refuse to attend. Pran Chole tells her he has seen his own dessicated face, two hundred thousand years hence and knows the ritual will be successful. Kilava says her brother will be pleased at least, for her brother is...
Onos T'oolan.
Pran Chole is disgusted as he realises this makes Kilava the Defier, who slew her kin.
Kilava asks who built the city if not the Jaghut and Pran Chole tells her it is K'Chain Che'Malle. Neither know anything about them beyond the name but Pran Chole suggests they may learn.
We bounce forward a hundred millennia or so to 119'736 years before Burn's Sleep, which is three years after the fall of the Crippled God.
Oh shit, here we go.
As the opening line states "The Fall had shattered a continent."
Yeah, this has really made a mess. Long story short, the god was summoned by spellcasters working in unison. They tore a rift through to chaos and pulled him through, hoping he would defeat Kallor. Yes, that Kallor who we saw briefly in book one cosying up with Caladan Brood.
Unfortunately, the God splatting into the earth kinda fucked the planet, now wracked by firestorms that have burned up the forests and left it a wasteland. It also kinda fucked the god, who has himself been shattered by the impact.
We see K'rul wandering and finding the lumps of meat that are the god's body and he muses that even if he pulls his body together, his mind might be shattered too. K'rul is one of three Elder Gods here and they are converging in order to go deal with Kallor themselves. K'rul can also sense a fourth presence, some form of savage ancient beast.
He meets the other two, Draconus and a female they both call Sister. They confront Kallor and rather than kill him outright, they curse him. K'rul curses him with eternal mortal life, never to die of old age but with all the ravages of age one would normally accrue. Draconus curses him never to ascend. The sister curses him to fall every time he rises, that all he achieves shall turn to dust in his hands and that everything he has wilfully done so far will be revisited back upon him.
In rage, Kallor curses them back.
He curses K'rul to fade from memory.
He curses Draconus that what he creates shall turn on him.
He curses the Sister of Cold Nights that unhuman hands will tear her apart on the field of battle and yet she shall know no respite.
Oddly specific that one, huh? We already know K'rul's curse becomes true and in a moment you might be able to piece together what happens to Draconus.
Looking out on the shattered Earth, K'rul intends to create a new warren and sweep the shattered terrain into it so that the earth can heal from the wound. The others know that this is a monumental feat that will nearly kill K'rul but he insists. Draconus mentions that since the time of All Darkness he has been forging a sword. It has taken a long time and has a sense of finality about it. K'rul suggests he reshape it slightly, the implication being it will house the warren.
Sound familiar?
What if I told you we've already seen the sister too. It's easy to miss how that name could change over the years.
Off in the distance, this is all observed by the beast who has white fur and a missing eye where it too was damaged by the fall of the crippled god. It has also lost its mate. As it watches these young gods leave via their warrens, it too decides to leave and look for its mate. It opens a warren to Chaos and steps through.
Damn. And that was just the prologue.
It' the 1164th Year of Burn's Sleep.
That's ten years since Laseen took the throne.
We're gonna start with a new group of characters because why not. Gruntle is guarding a caravan with his associates, Harllo and Stonny Menackis, who gets two names for some reason. They are working for a mysterious man called Keruli.
Gruntle is approached by a manservant named Emancipor Reese. He wants Gruntle to meet his masters and Keruli seems keen for Gruntle to go (seemingly aware of the situation from inside his wagon). Reese takes him to meet Bauchelain and Korbal Broach, a pair of shady, black wearing dudes that we will later learn are necromancers. There's a bunch of novellas about these two guys which is a shame because I was never particularly interested in them. Anyway, they intend to visit Raest's now empty barrow and wanted Gruntle to go with them, ostensibly because Keruli would wish it. Gruntle refuses and returns to the wagons. Basically our takeaway is that the two necromancers don't know the full story about the events in Darujhistan from Book One and are now investigating.
Meanwhile, in the warren of Chaos... A familiar massive one eyed white wolf has found a one eyed man. How portentous.
Toc the Younger awakes. He remembers being attacked by Hairlock. He's not sure where he is, seemingly a landscape of broken volcanic glass. The string on his bow has dried out and stretched which suggests he's been out of it for weeks and yet he isn't overly hungry or thirsty, which makes that seem unlikely. He wanders around a bit and bumps into Onos T'oolan. Tool tells Toc that they are in Morn, 200 leagues south of Darujhistan and that two months have passed. He also tells Toc that the tower nearby has become occupied by a woman who is now approaching. The young, slim, attractive woman, with two dogs at her side, is introduced by Tool as Lady Envy. The Imass is full of exposition as he reveals she is one of Draconus' daughters, making her much older than her appearance might suggest. He also explicitly states that Draconus forged Dragnipur and then Anomander Rake killed him with it, which as we know, means Draconus is within the sword, pulling the wagon along with everyone else Rake has killed over the hundreds of millennia he's been alive. We also learn that Draconus has two daughters that he named Spite and Envy. Nice.
Envy invites the pair into her tower for refreshments and inside we find she has three servants, members of a warrior race called the Seguleh. They wear masks on their faces and we'll find out more about their culture later. For now, what's important is that Envy seems to be magically forcing them to do her bidding. Separately to that, the three warriors seem intend on challenging Onos T'oolan and despite Envy ordering them to stand down,t he tension increases until one of the Seguleh, Senu, attacks him. Tool delivers one blow with the flat of his blade and knocks the Seguleh unconscious. Tool makes it clear he knows that Envy is here studying the rent, which surprises her. Envy seems to think a K'Chain Che'Malle escaped from the rift. The tombs nearby have also been empty for decades, to which Tool asks "Only decades?". Given what we saw going on with this rift all those years ago, this is intriguing. Did the two Jaghut children replace the K'Chain Che'Malle matron as the rift seal?
Time for some more Bridgeburners. Picker and Blend who seem to be shaking down a merchant at a checkpoint between Darujhistan and Pale, supposedly seeking out smugglers. The merchant sells them a torc, an arm ring supposedly blessed by Treach, the Tiger of Summer. Picker is derisive, pointing out that Treach isn't a god, just a soletaken ascendant, but ultimately ends up purchasing the torc and putting it on. It clicks into place on her arm.
The merchant takes his leave and we find out he wanted the money to have his tumours healed which are implied to be testicular. He finds a gate to a warren and enters, meeting up with a mysterious god with a bad cough. The merchant hands the god a package containing cards, presumably a deck of dragons, but the pictures have been made flawed on purpose. The god congratulates the merchant on his skill. In return, the god heals his tumours, painfully, in such a way that leaves the merchant without the use of his legs. The merchant accepts his gift, seemingly still worshipping this "fallen one" as he calls him. It seems we have finally met the Crippled God. I always picture him as like Mumm-Ra the Everliving.
Back with Picker and Blend we find out that Quick Ben had them insert a pebble into the merchants pack so he could track him.
Quick Ben arrives and is horrified to see the magic coming from Picker's new torc. Picker thought the blessing would be fine for a soldier, Treach being the Lord of Battle but Quick Ben says Treach has been insane for about five thousand years as he hasn't gone back to his human form since. Either way, the torc is on Picker's arm now and she's stuck with it.
Quick Ben follows the tracking pebble by astrally projecting his soul, slipping into the warren and meeting the Crippled God. Quick Ben accesses his warrens, or at least seven of them, the most he can safely handle at once. The two converse and Quick realises that the Crippled God has infected Burn herself. The Crippled God confirms that in this realm, he is a cancer and that Burn cannot awaken while he is here. But the other gods chained him here. Quick Ben hits him with everything he has, grabs his tracking pebble back and tries to cheese it. The Crippled God tries to pull Quick back to him with sorcery but the earth opens and swallows the wizard. He finds himself deep within the earth and looks up to see ribs above him. He realises he is within Burn , who he calls a living warren. More, there are giants inside her, seemingly holding the ceiling up. One of them is melting as they speak and tells Quick Ben that they are dying and so is Burn. She has only tens of years left and requires help. Unsure how to help, Quick promises he'll try, then opens another warren and steps through, returning to his body. He tells Picker and Blend they're all in danger, not the Bridgeburners, not the Malazans, ALL of them.
We get a quick scene showing Whiskeyjack, Paran and some of our other Bridgeburners who are preparing for a parley with Caladan Brood. Our main takeaway is that Whiskeyjack is still injured as is Paran.
I'm gonna condense a lot of this down so here's what happens. The parley is between three leaders. Caladan Brood, Dujek Onearm and the seemingly ten year old Silverfox. Some other key figures are present, Whiskeyjack, Crone, Kallor, the Tiste Andii Korlat. We learn that Silverfox is growing rapidly as her biological mother is ageing relatively, essentially a parasitic sucking of energy and that she was only born six months ago. What's more, she is two souls in one body, mostly Tattersail but with a lot of Nightchill's knowledge. Kallor recognises her for that and is openly hostile. What's more, because she was born twice, once in the real world and once in the Tellan warren with K'rul and Pran Chole, she is also a bonecaster and essentially a mortal T'lan Imass.
The group discuss the upcoming campaign against the Pannion Seer. Brood has a unit called the Mott Irregulars that the Bridgeburners have faced previously.
We also learn some secrets. Dujek has a standard-bearer with him and Silverfox suspects he is not who he seems. Silverfox and Korlat know that Crone and her great ravens were born from the rotting flesh of the Crippled God after he smashed into the earth. We learn that Silverfox in theory commands all the T'lan Imass and they are supposed to be arriving for the second gathering, the first gathering being back when they turned themselves undead. We learn that the warren K'rul made by sweeping up Kallor's ruined empire is actually the Imperial Warren.
We also learn that the Pannion Seer has an army of peasants called the Tenescowri that he doesn't feed or equip making them angry, violent and possibly cannibalistic.
With Gruntle's group we see another guard called Buke that the two necromancers have hired. He apparently is somewhat suicidal, taking on dangerous assignments since his family died in Darujhistan. Gruntle chats with Buke and it seems Buke thinks Korbal Broach might be the murderer who killed his family. We don't know if there's any truth to this at the moment, it could just be co-incidence, but what we do know is Buke is probably seeking revenge. We also find out that Stonny Menackis feels sorry for him, which Gruntle thinks is because she's interested in him romantically.
Quick Ben meets up with a witch in Pale. He's trying to find out why exactly Burn is sleeping but the witch can only give him cryptic answers. Despite this, Quick wants to be allies and gives her a pebble. She agrees she'll be available to assist when the time comes. There's a real weird part here where the witch says she prefers the cold which gnaws at Quick when he leaves because old folk usually prefer to seek warmth. It doesn't seem that unusual to be honest but I guess its intended for us, the reader, to have some suspicions. For now, just remember it.
Back with the Bridgeburners, we meet Spindle, a mage who wears a disgusting shirt made of his dead mother's hair. Paran learns about Felisin being sent to the mines and realises Tavore was saving her from death while showing her best face to the Empress. He also surmises that, like himself, Tavore will take her position seriously and though she may attempt to rescue Felisin, she will not want to jeopardise her role as Adjunct.
Paran also learns that the young girl Silverfox is Tattersail which leaves him conflicted to say the least. Whiskeyjack also tells him that Quick Ben thinks Paran is ascending after his jaunt through Dragnipur, being the only person to ever escape it.
I'm gonna gloss over the table thing for now so if you have read the book, I'm just not getting into it. What's important here is that the Malazans learn that there might be a new unaligned card in the Deck of Dragons, a Deck Master of sorts... yeah, this is getting some major Yugioh vibes.
Silverfox and Paran discuss the Deck. Silverfox, or more specifically, Tattersail, believes that each card is a gate into a warren and that there may have been more cards and other decks, possibly that there are still other decks. More, she has theories about the suits. House Light, House Dark, etc. She draws a parallel with the finnest of Raest. Finnest means "hold of ice" and supposedly, historically, holds were synonymous with houses and warrens. So the Finnest means hold or house or warren of ice. She also says that Tremorlor is Trellish for House of Life. In Malaz City there is the Deadhouse, aka the House of Death. What's more, though Kellanved and Dancer entered the Deadhouse, they didn't become gods of Death because Hood already holds the position. She believes each Azath has entries to each realm and thus they found Shadow empty and settled in. Paran is surprised to learn the Emperor is Shadowthrone because I guess no one filled him in yet. She says the house of shadow used to be a hold because it doesn't share the same hierarchical structure as the other houses. This whole house/hold thing is gonna be annoying as shit for a while, sorry. Anyway, the pair of them speculate that Kurald Galain (The warren of Darkness) might have its entrance hidden in Dragnipur, with the souls inside essentially sealing it shut. Ultimately, Silverfox thinks the new Unaligned card in the deck is Paran.
Ok, back over to Envy and co. We learn a bit about the Seguleh. They are a warrior nation who maintain a strict hierarchy of skill. The less decorated their mask is, the more skilled they are. Of the three Seguleh there, one has only two lines on his mask, marking him as third in the overall hierarchy. His name is Mok, the other two are Thurule and Senu, the one Tool already defeated. We learn that Tool attempted to finish that fight quickly because otherwise it would have gone on forever. Tool explains that while it seemed like one blow was struck what actually happened was that as Senu began to draw his swords, Tool struck out three times. Senu blocked two of the blows with the partially drawn weapons and the third knocked him out before he could fully commit. Regardless, Tool defeated him and now stands above him which means Senu will converse with Tool as he is his superior. We also learn they have not attacked Toc because he is uneasy around them rather than confident which marks him as inferior and not worth the challenge. We learn from Envy that Rake once visited the Seguleh island and unaware of their customs and arrogant as he is, ended up fighting constantly while he was there, eventually retreating after two hours without realising he holds the rank of seventh and while that was centuries ago, the Seguleh still honour him that rank, referring to him as Blacksword. We also learn that the Seguleh were on their way to war with the Pannion Domin. It seems the Tenescowri came to their island and tried to convert them but as they were unarmed, the Seguleh ignored them. The Tenescowri promised the Pannion army would come to the Seguleh, which naturally, they welcomed, but as the army has not arrived, they have now taken the initiative although obviously these three have become ensnared by Envy.
While this conversation is happening Thurule attacks Tool and the pair drift off into the darkness as they fight. Tool finally returns with an unconscious Thurule. Tool has taken a fair bit of damage. As Mok starts to rise behind him, Tool mentions it was a more difficult fight than anticipated because he used the flat of his blade only. Mok sits back down. Despite the non-lethal blows, Tool had had to do a number on Thurule to take him down. Envy heals him and Mok protests that he must not be magically healed but Envy freaks out and hits him with some sorcery to force obedience back onto him.
Back with the Malazans, the consensus among the bridgeburners is that Paran is resisting ascendancy which is what is making him sick. Quick Ben is worried a little about Nightchill after he realises that there have been multiple Nightchill's throughout history and that they may all be the same one. No shit, Sherlock. We also learn that Caladan Brood's hammer might be blessed by Burn and that its believed the hammer is the one thing that can wake her.
A group of delegates from Darujhistan arrive to meet with Brood and who should emerge from the carriage but Kruppe. Silverfox's mother, Mhybe, greets him, saying she was in his dreams. Kruppe doesn't remember at first until she points out she was younger and pregnant and K'rul and Pran Chole where there. Kruppe realises who she is instantly and moreso, seems to realise why she has aged so. We also see the rest of the delegates who just so happen to be Coll, Murillio and Estraysian D'Arle. It seems Darujhistan is going to be funding this campaign against the Pannion Seer's forces, providing supplies but Caladan's plans have rendered the logistics somewhat tricky. Ultimately Kruppe suggests the use of the Trygalle Trade Guild after the success of providing aid to Coltaine.
Crone learns about the new card in the deck and Spindle has done multiple deck readings that keep throwing out Obelisk as the first card, convincing him it is now active. He also notices that the Assassin of House Shadow looks like Kalam.
As people mill about the camp, Spindle sees Paran and realises he's the new unaligned card.
The Bridgeburners are heading out to recruit allies. Specifically, their Barghast member, Trotts, is going to speak with the White Face Barghast clan to recruit their assistance.
Anomander Rake arrives in dragon form, sembling back into a Tiste Andii as he lands 'cos he's so cool. Kallor toadies up to him, trying to persuade him to kill Silverfox with Dragnipur, relying on Rake's famous impartiality to see Silverfox for the threat she might become. Other characters arrive to take a stance by Silverfox and Caladan warns Rake that if he draws Dragnipur, Brood will draw his hammer. It's clear that Rake doesn't like Kallor but he is suspicious of Silverfox. He tries to sense her with sorcery but Silverfox magically swats his attempt aside. Rake is impressed at the strength and temerity but also wonders what she is so eager to hide. He reaches for Dragnipur, Brood grabs his hammer, even Whiskeyjack draws his blade. Before it can all kick off, Kruppe appears in the air, dangling from a table which has the unaligned card of Ganoes Paran painted on the underside. It's not super important why its a table, I glossed over it to save time, point is, everyone sees it and the tension is broken.
Paran is off preparing to leave with the Bridgeburners when he is suddenly teleported to the standoff where he too now sees the card and can confirm it's him. As Paran doubles up in pain, sorcery leaking from the card to him, Quick Ben teleports in and defuses the situation, suggesting to everyone that given the importance of all this, now might not be the time for fighting. Rake relinquishes his grip on Dragnipur.
Paran on the other hand finds himself teleported to another location. Or rather falling until he lands, hitting the floor hard enough for his armour to make noise but not causing him any direct pain. He finds himself in an Azath and as he discovers the unconscious forms of Rallick Nom and Vorcan, surmises that this is the Finnest house in Darujhistan. He then meets the Finnest's new guardian, Raest or rather what's left of him, shredded and torn to bits as he was. He has Paran follow him as he explains that the Azath chose him as its guardian (ironic I guess, since it grew from his Finnest) and that the other two are held in an unconscious state as potential servants. He also affirms that Paran is the Deck Master. Paran isn't keen, attempting to refuse this destiny as he states he has enough wars to deal with as it is. Raest replies:
"They are all one."
It's easy to overlook this line, delivered as it is, so swiftly, the scene moving onto more dramatic moments, but I found this quite interesting. There's the obvious implication about the interlocking nature of all the events, which is true and raises some interesting questions about predestination or who is really the driving force behind the entire thing but my other takeaway is how easily Raest has grasped this concept. Either the Jaghut has instantly chilled out and accepted the knowledge given him by the Azath or the Azath is speaking through him. Given that Raest makes a comment about his Jaghut nature moments earlier, I feel like its the former, which suggests that whatever Raest saw or was informed of, the realisation really struck home.
Anyway, Paran is escorted into and left in a room with flagstones that have cards inscribed on them. Not just the Deck of Dragons but lost houses and countless forgotten unaligned. Touching one, he enters and finds himself standing in front of twin thrones, their bone and hide nature suggesting an ancient and primal place. Paran finds knowledge entering him. This is the Hold of the Beasts, which used to belong to the T'lan Imass before their undead ritual created them a new warren. He realises that the T'lan Imass have outlived their gods and he wonders why there are two thrones. It's not explicitly stated, but the thrones belong to Togg and his mate Fanderay. Although the name has yet to be put to him, we have seen Togg, the one eyed white wolf who wanders the warren of chaos and rescued Toc the Younger, possibly taking him as a champion. He goes back to Azath and looks at another card, seeing Burn. He sees the Crippled God, chained to her flesh and along the chains, poison flowing from him to her. What's more he realises she forged the hammer to shatter the chains and found Caladan Brood to wield it. And he has refused. Torn between two terrible options, literally a dilemma. To break the chains of the Crippled God would be to release him from Burn ensuring her survival, but at the cost of him clearing the world of life. Or leave him down there, kill Burn so that the world can live, at least, for a time.
He finds himself back with the others, where it seems mere moments have passed. The others do not seem to have noticed his absence. Rake basically tells Kallor that if they try and kill Silverfox now and fail, they will only have added to their list of enemies. For now, the alliance shall proceed. The meeting comes to an end and the groups disperse.
Rake and Brood meet in private where they discuss what we just learned from Paran, Brood's refusal to commit to freeing the Crippled God and killing everyone in the world. We learn that Brood's warren is Tennes, which is the same as the witch Quick Ben met with, so now we know that's Burn's warren. The way Rake phrases it suggests that he, Brood, The Queen of Dreams and Hood all agreed on something 1200 years ago. It's not clear yet if this is the chaining or an agreeance not to break the chains. Although we don't know it yet, it helps understand this timeframe once you know that the Crippled God wasn't chained all in one go. Rather bits of him have been chained across history. Rake is referring to the most recent chaining. Super confusing without this context. It's not super clear that Hood was present as people often use his name in speech as a curse or exclamation, but the hyphen here makes it obvious on a reread that Rake is saying Hood was present. So we now know that both Rake and Brood have met Hood, in person.
I can't wait til we meet Hood. He's very cool.
Anyway, the pair point out the Hobson's choice of the whole deal. The Crippled God wins either way. If Brood shatters the chains, the god is free, he poisons every warren, sorcery dies and with it, everyone on the planet. Or they wait, people live and Burn eventually dies... to the same end. They also worry that the Pannion Domin is using the warren of chaos, which is close to the Crippled God as his poison is that of chaos. Rake seems to think the Crippled God is the power behind the Pannion Domin.
Back with the Bridgeburners, Kallor is still being a douchecanoe so Quick Ben drops him into a magical hole and then scarpers before he can climb out.
Later, Quick Ben meets with Whiskeyjack where the ex-sergeant points out that Quick Ben seems awfully eager to escape Silverfox's presence. Quick points out she's aged five years in the last day or so. Whiskeyjack is suspicious that Quick Ben has yet more layers of plans going on, pointing out that he knows the mage visited every temple and seer in Pale, spent a small fortune on deck readings and has even sacrificed a goat at dawn atop a barrow. Quick admits the goat thing reeks of desperation. He claims he tried to contact the spirits in the barrow but someone had taken them. That has roused his curiosity. We close out this chapter as Onearm's host, ten thousand strong, joins Brood's forces to begin the march.
Back with Gruntle and co. They arrive in Saltoan where their master, Keruli, has a meeting with the city's criminal underbelly. It becomes clear that Keruli is a priest of sorts though Gruntle isn't sure which God he serves. Keruli points out to the Saltoans that the Pannion Domin come offering promises but the end result is that everyone ends up in the Tenescowri. He wants these criminals to pre-emptively turn public opinion against the Pannion. We also learn that among the Tenescowri are the Children of the Dead Seed. Simply put, the women of the Tenescowri rape the freshly killed male soldiers and get pregnant.
After this weird diversion, the wagon gets back on track, coming across some dead bandits that Gruntle thinks Bauchelain and Korbal Broach have killed. Even further on, they meet up with a trio of White Face Barghast. These are basically humans with white face paint resembling skulls, rather than the blue woad worn by other Barghast such as Trotts. These three are Hetan and her brothers, Cafal and Netok. We quickly learn that Hetan is incredibly horny and ends up having sex with Gruntle and Harllo on successive nights. This may be one of the most awful moments of foreshadowing ever and I don't mean awful as in poor quality.
The barghast travel with the wagon and the group come across Bauchelain's coach which seems to have been attacked. Long story short, the two necromancers pulled over to converse with some dead barghast spirits and were attacked by mysterious undead creatures with swords for arms. Weird. Anyway, Bauchelain and co warn Gruntle and co that the attackers are returning. While the necromancers seem calm, Buke tells Gruntle that the two are spooked, having used everything they had pretty much to drive the attackers off. The attackers are undead servants of the Pannion Domin and they killed the demons unleashed by the necromancers. There are three of these enemies and they're coming back. The whole menagerie prepares to defend against the attack, even Keruli who admits his god is Elder, but specifies no further. The creatures eventually attack. They are undead lizards with swords for hands. Basically, imagine a velociraptor twice the height of a man, with blades for arms, but also wearing a helm and armour. These are K'Chain Che'Malle, presumably resurrected by the Pannion Domin and they are deadly. As the mages unleash sorcery, one of the creatures clever girls them, attacking from behind. Gruntle is attacked. He blocks the blade swing with his own blade but the force breaks his left wrist. The follow up kick crushing his ribs and the talons slash him open. He lands in a heap and we close out the first part of the book with Gruntle's life force ebbing as he lays dying amidst the chaos.