{"id":1033,"date":"2026-01-03T21:09:54","date_gmt":"2026-01-03T21:09:54","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/the-prince-of-nothing-03-bakker-scott\/"},"modified":"2026-01-03T21:09:54","modified_gmt":"2026-01-03T21:09:54","slug":"the-prince-of-nothing-03-bakker-scott","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/the-prince-of-nothing-03-bakker-scott\/","title":{"rendered":"The Prince of Nothing 03 &#8211; Bakker, Scott"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class='book-preview'>\n<h3>Book Preview<\/h3>\n<div class=\"calibre1\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none\">Scanned and proofed (version 1.0) by Nizhny<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none1\">R. Scott Bakker<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none1\">The Thousandfold Thought<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">To Keith and Tina<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none2\">ACKNOWLEDGMENTS<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none3\">To think I started this journey almost twenty years ago &#8230;<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none3\">Like anything else, life has a life of its own. If anyone had told me years back that the summer of 2005 would find me completing <\/span><span class=\"none4\">The Prince of Nothing, <\/span><span class=\"none3\">I likely would have coughed beer out of my nose. But here I am, and I have a long list of debts to prove it.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none3\">First, to my wife, Sharron, who has literally supported me unto the brink of insolvency. Even after so many years, I stand tallest when she&#8217;s at my side.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none3\">Then, the usual suspects: my brother, Bryan Bakker, for the gift of second sight; my friend, Roger Eichorn, for the gift of his second sight; and my agent, Chris Lotts, for his honesty and his acumen, not to mention the odd eleventh-hour bombshell!<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none3\">I would also like to thank:<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none3\">Steve Erikson.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none3\">My family and friends, for indulging my obsession in conversation after conversation. Joe Edmiston, for his squash-court criticisms. And my neighbour, Mike Brown, for helping me sort out the difference between mystery and obscurity.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none3\">The entire crew at Penguin Canada: Barbara Berson, Tracy Bordian, Karen Alliston, and Leslie Horlick. As well as Darren Nash and everyone at Orbit, U.K.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none3\">But the people I most need to thank are the <\/span><span class=\"none4\">fans <\/span><span class=\"none3\">of the series. This includes everyone at <\/span><span class=\"none3\">www.three-seas.com<\/span><span class=\"none3\"> and the &#8220;other author&#8221; forum at <\/span><span class=\"none3\">sffworld.com<\/span><span class=\"none3\">. The names that come immediately to mind are: Jack Brown, Wil Horsley, Gary Wassner, White Lord, Dylanfanatic, Ainulindale, Mithfanion, Leiali, Texmex, and, of course, Saintjon. Through innumerable discussions across several different venues, you have all made your mark.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none3\">These aren&#8217;t what you might call &#8220;normal&#8221; books. And in a world bent on reaping the efficiencies of standardization, only fans can make something as demented as <\/span><span class=\"none4\">The Prince of Nothing <\/span><span class=\"none3\">possible.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none3\">In pursuing yonder what they have lost, they encounter only the nothing they have. In order not to lose touch with the everyday dreariness in which, as irremediable realists, they are at home, they adapt the meaning they revel in to the meaninglessness they flee. The worthless magic is nothing other that the worthless existence it lights up.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none3\">THEODOR ADORNO, <\/span><span class=\"none4\">MINIMA MORALIA<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none3\">All progressions from a higher to a lower order are marked by ruins and mystery and a residue of nameless rage. So. Here are the dead fathers.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none3\">CORMAC MCCARTHY, <\/span><span class=\"none4\">BLOOD MERIDIAN<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none5\">What has come before &#8230;<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The First Apocalypse destroyed the great Norsirai nations of the North. Only the South, the Ketyai nations of the Three Seas, survived the onslaught of the No-God, Mog-Pharau, and his Consult of generals and magi. The years passed, and the Men of the Three Seas forgot, as Men inevitably do, the horrors endured by their fathers.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Empires rose and empires fell: Kyraneas, Shir, Cenei. The Latter Prophet, Inri Sejenus, reinterpreted the Tusk, the holiest of artifacts, and within a few centuries, the faith of Inrithism, organized and administered by the Thousand Temples and its spiritual leader, the Shriah, came to dominate the entire Three Seas. The great sorcerous Schools, such as the Scarlet Spires, the Imperial Saik, and the Mysunsai, arose in response to the Inrithi persecution of the Few, those possessing the ability to see and work sorcery. Using Chorae, ancient artifacts that render their bearers immune to sorcery, the Inrithi warred against the Schools, attempting, unsuccessfully, to purify the Three Seas. Then Fane, the Prophet of the Solitary God, united the Kianene, the desert peoples of the southwestern deserts, and declared war against the Tusk and the Thousand Temples. After centuries and several jihads, the Fanim and their eyeless sorcerer-priests, the Cishaurim, conquered nearly all the western Three Seas, including the holy city of Shimeh, the birthplace of Inri Sejenus. Only the moribund remnants of the Nansur Empire continued to resist them.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Now war and strife rule the South. The two great faiths of Inrithism and Fanimry continually skirmish, though trade and pilgrimage are tolerated when commercially convenient. The great families and nations vie for military and mercantile dominance. The minor and major Schools squabble and plot, particularly agains<span class=\"none6\">t the upstart Cishaurim, whose sorcery, the Ps\u044bkhe, the Schoolmen cannot distinguish from the God&#8217;s own world. And the Thousand Temples pursue earthly ambitions under the leadership of corrupt and ineffectual Shriahs.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The First Apocalypse has become little more than legend. The Consult, which had survived the death of the Mog-Pharau, has dwindled into myth, something old wives tell small children. After two thousand years, only the Schoolmen of the Mandate, who relive the Apocalypse each night through the eyes of their ancient founder, Seswatha, recall the horror and the prophecies of the No-God&#8217;s return. Though the mighty and the learned consider them fools, their possession of the Gnosis, the sorcery of the Ancient North, commands respect and mortal envy. Driven by nightmares, they wander the labyrinths of power, scouring the Three Seas for signs of their ancient and implacable foe\u2014 for the Consult.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">And as always, they find nothing.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none7\">Book One: The Darkness That Comes Before<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The <span class=\"none\">Holy War <\/span>is the name of the great host called by Maithanet, the Shriah of the Thousand Temples, to liberate Shimeh from the heathen Fanim of Kian. Word of Maithanet&#8217;s call spreads across the Three Seas, and faithful from all the great Inrithi nations\u2014Galeoth, Thunyerus, Ce Tydonn, Conriya, High Ainon, and their tributaries\u2014travel to the city of Momemn, the capital of the Nansur Empire, to become Men of the Tusk.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Almost from the outset, the gathering host is mired in politics and controversy. First, Maithanet somehow convinces the Scarlet Spires, the most powerful of the sorcerous Schools, to join his Holy War. Despite the outrage this provokes\u2014sorcery is anathema to the Inrithi\u2014the Men of the Tusk realize they need the Scarlet Spires to counter the heathen Cishaurim, the sorcerer-priests of the Fanim. The Holy War would be doomed without one of the Major Schools. The question is one of why the Scarlet Schoolmen would agree to such a perilous arrangement. Unknown to most, <span class=\"none6\">Ele\u0434zaras<\/span>, the Grandmaster of the Scarlet Spires, has waged a long and secret war against the Cishaurim, who for no apparent reason assassinated his predecessor, Sasheoka, some ten years previously.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Second, Ikurei Xerius III, the Emperor of Nansur, hatches an intricate plot to usurp the Holy War for his own ends. Much of what is now heathen Kian once belonged to the Nansur, and Xerius has made recovering the Empire&#8217;s lost provinces his heart&#8217;s most fervent desire. Since the Holy War gathers in the Nansur Empire, it can only march if provisioned by the Emperor, something he refuses to do until every leader of the Holy War signs his Indenture, a written oath to cede all lands conquered to him.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Of course, the first caste-nobles to arrive repudiate the Indenture, and a stalemate ensues. As the Holy War&#8217;s numbers swell into the hundreds of thousands, however, the titular leaders of the host begin to grow restless. Since they war in the God&#8217;s name, they think themselves invincible, and as a result see little reason to share the glory with those yet to arrive. A Conriyan noble named Nersei Calmemunis comes to an accommodation with the Emperor, and convinces his fellows to sign the Imperial Indenture. Once provisioned, most of those gathered march, even though their lords and a greater part of the Holy War have yet to arrive. Because the host consists primarily of lordless rabble, it comes to be called the Vulgar Holy War.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Despite Maithanet&#8217;s attempts to bring the makeshift host to heel, it continues marching southward, and passes into heathen lands, where\u2014precisely as the Emperor has planned\u2014the Fanim destroy it utterly.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Xerius knows that in military terms, the loss of the Vulgar Holy War is insignificant, since the rabble that largely constituted it would have proven more a liability than an advantage in battle. In political terms, however, the Vulgar Holy War&#8217;s destruction is invaluable, since it has shown Maithanet and the Men of the Tusk the true mettle of their adversary. The Fanim, as the Nansur well know, are not to be trifled with, even with the God&#8217;s favour. Only an outstanding general, Xerius claims, can assure the Holy War&#8217;s victory\u2014a man like his nephew, Ikurei Conphas, who, after his recent victory over the dread Scylvendi at the Battle of Kiyuth, has been hailed as the greatest tactician of his age. The leaders of the Holy War need only sign the Imperial Indenture, and Conphas&#8217;s preternatural skill and insight will be theirs.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Maithanet, it seems, now finds himself in a dilemma. As Shriah, he can compel the Emperor to provision the Holy War, but he cannot compel him to send Ikurei Conphas, his only living heir. The first truly great Inrithi potentates of the Holy War\u2014Prince Nersei Proyas of Conriya, Prince Coithus Saubon of Galeoth, Earl Hoga Gothyelk of Ce Tydonn, King-Regent Chepheramunni of High Ainon\u2014 arrive in the midst of this controversy, and the Holy War amasses new strength, though it remains a hostage in effect, bound by the scarcity of food to the walls of Momemn and the Emperor&#8217;s granaries. To a man, the caste-nobles repudiate Xerius&#8217;s Indenture and demand that he provision them. The Men of the Tusk begin raiding the surrounding countryside. In retaliation, the Emperor calls in elements of the Imperial Army. Pitched battles are fought.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">In an effort to forestall disaster, Maithanet calls a Council of Great and Lesser Names, and all the leaders of the Holy War gather in the Emperor&#8217;s palace, the Andiamine Heights, to make their arguments. Here Nersei Proyas shocks the assembly by offering a many-scarred Scylvendi Chieftain, a veteran of past wars against th<span class=\"none6\">e Fanim, as a surrogate for the famed Ikurei Conphas. The Scylvendi, Cnai\u044cr urs Ski\u0446tha, shares hard words with both the Emperor and his nephew, and the leaders of the Holy War are impressed. The Shriah&#8217;s Envoy, however, remains undecided: the Scylvendi are as apostate as the Fanim, after all. Only the wise words of the Prince Anas\u044brimbor Kellhus of Atrithau settle the matter. The Envoy reads the decree demanding that the Emperor, under pain of Shrial Censure, provision the Men of the Tusk.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The Holy War will march.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none\">Drusas Achamian<\/span> is a sorcerer sent by the School of Mandate to investigate Maithanet and his Holy War. Though he no longer believes in his School&#8217;s ancient mission, he travels to Sumna, where the Thousand Temples is based, in the hope of learning more about the mysterious Shriah, whom the Mandate fears could be an agent of the Consult. In the course of his probe, he resumes an old love affair with a harlot named Esmenet, and despite his misgivings he recruits a former student of his, a Shrial Priest named Inrau, to report on Maithanet&#8217;s activities. During this time, his nightmares of the Apocalypse intensify, particularly those involving the so-called &#8220;Celmomian Prophecy,&#8221; which foretells the return of a descendant of <span class=\"none6\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span> Celmomas before the Second Apocalypse.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Then Inrau dies under mysterious circumstances. Overcome by guilt, and heartbroken by Esmenet&#8217;s refusal to cease taking custom, Achamian flees Sumna and travels to Momemn, where the Holy War gathers under the Emperor&#8217;s covetous and uneasy eyes. A powerful rival of the Mandate, a School called the Scarlet Spires, has joined the Holy War to prosecute its long contest with the sorcerer-priests of the Cishaurim, who reside in Shimeh. Nautzera, Achamian&#8217;s Mandate handier, has ordered him to observe them and the Holy War. When he reaches the encampment, Achamian joins the fire of Xinemus, an old friend of his from Conriya.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Pursuing his investigation of Inrau&#8217;s death, Achamian convinces Xinemus to take him to see another old student of his, Prince Nersei Proyas of Conriya, who&#8217;s become a confidant of the enigmatic Shriah. When Proyas scoffs at his suspicions and repudiates him as a blasphemer, Achamian implores him to write Maithanet regarding the circumstances of Inrau&#8217;s death. Embittered, Achamian leaves his old student&#8217;s pavilion certain his meagre request will go unfulfilled.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Then a man hailing from the distant north arrives\u2014a man calling himself <span class=\"none8\">Anas\u044brimbor <\/span>Kellhus. Battered by his recurrent dreams of the Apocalypse, Achamian finds himself fearing the worst: the Second Apocalypse. Is Kellhus&#8217;s arrival a mere coincidence, or is he the Harbinger foretold in the Celmomian Prophecy? Achamian questions the man, only to find himself utterly disarmed by his humour, honesty, and intellect. They talk history and philosophy long into the night, and before retiring, Kellhus asks Achamian to be his teacher. Inexplicably awed and affected by the stranger, Achamian agrees &#8230;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">But he finds himself in a dilemma. The reappearance of an <span class=\"none6\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span> is something the School of Mandate simply has to know\u2014few discoveries could be more significant. But he fears what his brother Schoolmen will do: a lifetime of dreaming horrors, he knows, has made them cruel and pitiless. And he blames them, moreover, for the death of Inrau.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none6\">Before he can resolve this dilemma, Achamian is summoned by the Emperor&#8217;s nephew, Ikurei Conphas, to the Imperial Palace in Momemn, where the Emperor wants him to assess a highly placed adviser of his\u2014an old man called Skea\u0446s\u2014for the Mark <\/span>of sorcery. The Emperor himself, Ikurei <span class=\"none6\">Xerius III, brings Achamian to Skea\u0446s, demanding to know whether the old man bears the blasphemous taint of sorcery. Achamian sees nothing amiss.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Skeaos, however, sees something in Achamian. He begins writhing agains<span class=\"none6\">t his chains, speaking a tongue from Achamian&#8217;s ancient dreams. Impossibly, the old man breaks free, killing several before being burned by the Emperor&#8217;s sorcerers. Dumbfounded, Achamian confronts the howling Skea\u0446s, only to watch horrified as his face pee<\/span>ls apart and opens into scorched limbs &#8230;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The abomination before him, he realizes, <span class=\"none8\">is a Consult spy, <\/span>one who can mimic and replace others without bearing sorcery&#8217;s telltale Mark. A skin-spy. Achamian flees the palace without warning the Emperor and his c<span class=\"none6\">ourt, knowing they would think his conviction nonsense. For them, Skea\u0446s can only be an artifact of the heathen Cishaurim, whose art also bears no Mark. Senseless to his surroundings, Achamian wanders back to Xinemus&#8217;s camp, so absorbed by his horror that <\/span>he fails to see or hear Esmenet, who has come to rejoin him at long last.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The mysteries surrounding Maithanet. The coming of <span class=\"none6\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span> Kellhus. The discovery of the first Consult spy in generations &#8230; How could he doubt it any longer? The Second Apocalypse is about to begin.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Alone in his humble tent, he weeps, overcome by loneliness, dread, and remorse.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none\">Esmenet <\/span>is a Sumni prostitute who mourns both her life and her dead daughter. When Achamian arrives on his mission to learn more about Maithanet, she readily takes him in. During this time, she continues to take and service her customers, knowing full well the pain this causes Achamian. But she really has no choice: sooner or later, she realizes, Achamian will be called away. And yet she falls ever deeper in love with the hapless sorcerer, in part because of the respect he accords her, and in part because of the worldly nature of his work. Though her sex has condemned her to sit half naked in her window, the world beyond has always been her passion. The intrigues of the Great Factions, the machinations of the Consult: these are the things that quicken her soul.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Then disaster strikes: Achamian&#8217;s informant, Inrau, is murdered, and the bereaved Schoolman is forced to travel to Momemn. Esmenet begs him to take her with him, but he refuses, and she finds herself once again marooned in her old life. Not long after, a threatening stranger comes to her room, demanding to know everything about Achamian. Twisting her desire against her, the man ravishes her, and Esmenet finds herself answering all his questions. Come morning he vanishes as suddenly as he appears, leaving only pools of black seed to mark his passing.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Horrified, Esmenet flees Sumna, determined to find Achamian and tell him what happened. In her bones, she knows the stranger is somehow connected to the Consult. On her way to Momemn, she pauses in a village, hoping to find someone to repair her broken sandal. When the villagers recognize the whore&#8217;s tattoo on her hand, they begin stoning her\u2014the punishment the Tusk demands of prostitutes. Only the sudden appearance of a Shrial Knight named Sarcellus saves her, and she has the satisfaction of watching her tormentors humbled. Sarcellus takes her the rest of the way to Momemn, and Esmenet finds herself growing more and more infatuated with his wealth and aristocratic manner. He seems so free of the melancholy and indecision that plague Achamian.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Once they reach the Holy War, Esmenet stays with Sarcellus, even though she knows that Achamian is only miles away. As the Shrial Knight continually reminds her, Schoolmen such as Achamian are forbidden to take wives. If she were to run to him, he says, it would be only a matter of time before he abandoned her again.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Weeks pass, and she finds herself esteeming Sarcellus less and pining for Achamian more and more. Finally, on the night before the Holy War is to march, she sets off in search of the portly sorcerer, determined to tell him everything that has happened. After a harrowing search, she finally locates Xinemus&#8217;s camp, only to find herself too ashamed to make her presence known. She hides in the darkness instead, waiting for Achamian to appear, and wondering at the strange collection of men and women about the fire. When dawn arrives without any sign of Achamian, Esmenet wanders across the abandoned site, only to see him trudging toward her. She holds out her arms to him, weeping with joy and sorrow &#8230;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">And he simply walks past her as though she were a stranger.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Heartbroken, she flees, determined to make her own way in the Holy War.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr urs Ski\u0446tha is a Chieftain of the Utemot, a tribe of Scylvendi, who are feared across the Three Seas for their skill and ferocity in war. Because of the events surrounding the death of his father, Ski\u0446tha, some thirty years previously, Cnai\u044cr is despised by his own people, though none dare challenge him because of his savage strength and his cunning in war. Word arrives that the Emperor&#8217;s nephew, Ikurei Conphas, has invaded the Holy Steppe, and Cnai\u044cr rides with the Utemot to join the Scylvendi horde on the distant Imperial frontier. Knowing Conphas&#8217;s reputation, Cnai\u044cr senses a trap, but his warnings go unheeded by Xunnurit, the chieftain elected King-of-Tribes for the coming battle. Cnai<\/span><span class=\"none6\">\u044c<\/span>r can only watch as the disaster unfolds.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none6\">Escaping the horde&#8217;s destruction, Cnai\u044cr returns to the pastures of the Utemot more anguished than ever. He flees the whispers and the looks of his fellow tribesmen and rides to the graves of his ancestors, where he finds a grievously wounded man sitting upon his dead father&#8217;s barrow, surrounded by circles of dead Sranc. Warily approaching, Cnai\u044cr nightmarishly realizes he <\/span><span class=\"none8\">recognizes <\/span><span class=\"none6\">the man\u2014or almost recognizes him. He resembles Anas\u044brimbor Mo\u043bnghus in almost every respect, save that he is too youn<\/span>g &#8230;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus had been captured thirty years before, when Cnai\u044cr was little more than a stripling, and given to Cnai\u044cr&#8217;s father as a slave. He claimed to be D\u044bnyain, a people possessed of an extraordinary wisdom, and Cnai\u044cr spent many hours with him, speaking of things forbidden to Scylvendi warriors. What happened afterward\u2014the seduction, the murder of Ski\u0446tha, and Mo\u043bnghus&#8217;s subsequent escape\u2014has tormented <\/span><span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> ever since. Though he once loved the man, he now hates him with a deranged intensity. If o<span class=\"none6\">nly he could kill Mo\u043bnghus, he believes, his heart could be made whole.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Now, impossibly, this double has come to him, travelling the same path as the original.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none6\">Realizing the stranger could make possible his vengeance, Cnai\u044cr takes him captive. The man, who calls himself Anas\u044brimbor Kellhus, claims to be Mo\u043bnghus&#8217;s son. The <\/span><span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span>, he says, have sent him to assassinate his father in a faraway city called Shimeh. As much as <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> wants to believe this story, however, he&#8217;s wary and troubled. After years of obsessively pondering <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span>, he&#8217;s come to realize the <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span> are gifted with preternatural skills and intelligence. Their sole purpose, he now knows, is domination, though where others used force and fear, they used deceit and love.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The story Kellhus has told him, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> realizes, is precisely the story a <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span> seeking escape and safe passage across Scylvendi lands would tell. Nevertheless, he makes a bargain with the man, agreeing to accompany him on his quest. The two of them strike out across the Steppe, locked in a shadowy war of word and passion. Time and again, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> finds himself drawn into Kellhus&#8217;s insidious nets, only to recall himself at the last moment. Only his hatred of <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span> and knowledge of the <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span> preserve him.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Near the Imperial frontier, they encounter a party of hostile Scylvendi raiders. Kellhus&#8217;s unearthly skill in battle both astounds and terrifies <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span>. In the battle&#8217;s aftermath, they find a captive concubine, a woman named <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span>, cowering among the raiders&#8217; chattel. Struck by her beauty, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> takes her as his prize, and through her he learns of Maithanet&#8217;s Holy War for Shimeh, the city where <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span> supposedly dwells &#8230; Can this be a coincidence?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Coincidence or not, the Holy War forces <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> to reconsider his original plan to travel around the Empire, where his Scylvendi heritage will mean almost certain death. With the Fanim rulers of Shimeh girding for war, the only possible way they can reach the holy city is to become Men of the Tusk. They have no choice, he realizes, but to join the Holy War, which, according to <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span>, gathers about the city of Momemn in the heart of the Empire\u2014the one place he cannot go. Now that they have safely crossed the Steppe, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> is convinced Kellhus will kill him: the <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span> brook no liabilities.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Descending the mountains into the Empire, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> confronts Kellhus, who claims he has use of him still. While <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span> watches in horror, the two men battle on the mountainous heights, and though <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> is able to surprise Kellhus, the man easily overpowers him, holding him by the throat over a precipice. To prove his intent to keep their bargain, he spares <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span>&#8216;s life. After so many years among worldborn men, Kellhus claims, <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span> will be far too powerful for him to face alone. They will need an army, he says, and unlike <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> he knows nothing of war.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Despite his misgivings, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> believes him, and they resume their journey. As the days pass, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> watches <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span> become more and more infatuated with Kellhus. Though troubled by this, he refuses to admit as much, reminding himself that warriors care nothing for women, particularly those taken as the spoils of battle. What does it matter that she belongs to Kellhus during the day? She is <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span>&#8216;s at night.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">After a desperate journey and pursuit through the heart of the Empire, they at last find their way to Momemn and the Holy War, where they are taken before one of the Holy War&#8217;s leaders, a Conriyan Prince named Nersei Proyas. In keeping with their plan, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> claims to be the last of the Utemot, travelling with <span class=\"none6\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span> Kellhus, a Prince of the northern city of Atrithau, who has dreamed of the Holy War from afar. Proyas, however, is far more interested in <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span>&#8216;s knowledge of the Fanim and their way of battle. Obviously impressed by what he has to say, the Conriyan Prince takes <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> and his companions under his protection.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Soon afterward, Proyas takes <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> and Kellhus to a meeting of the Holy War&#8217;s leaders and the Emperor, where the fate of the Holy War is to be decided. Ikurei Xerius III has refused to provision the Men of the Tusk unless they swear to return all the lands they wrest from the Fanim to the Empire. The Shriah, Maithanet, can force the Emperor to provision them, but he fears the Holy War lacks the leadership to overcome the Fanim. The Emperor offers his brilliant nephew, Ikurei Conphas, flush from his spectacular victory over the Scylvendi at Kiyuth, but only\u2014once again\u2014if the leaders of the Holy War pledge to surrender their future conquests. In a daring gambit, Proyas offers <span class=\"none8\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span><span class=\"none8\"> <\/span>in Conphas&#8217;s stead. A vicious war of words ensues, and <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> manages to best the precocious Imperial Nephew. The Shriah&#8217;s representative orders the Emperor to provision the Men of the Tusk. The Holy War will march.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">In a mere matter of days, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> has gone from a fugitive to a leader of the greatest host ever assembled in the Three Seas. What does it mean for a Scylvendi to treat with outland princes, with peoples he is sworn to destroy? What must he surrender to see his vengeance through?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">That night, he watches <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span> surrender to Kellhus body and soul, and he wonders at the horror he has delivered to the Holy War. What will <span class=\"none6\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span> Kellhus\u2014a <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span>\u2014 make of these Men of the Tusk? No matter, he tells himself, the Holy War marches to distant Shimeh\u2014to <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span> and the promise of blood.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span><span class=\"none\"> Kellhus <\/span>is a monk sent by his order, the <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span>, to search for his father, <span class=\"none6\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span> <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span>.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none6\">Since discovering the secret redoubt of the K\u044bni\u044cric High Kings during the Apocalypse some<\/span> two thousand years previously, the <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span> have concealed themselves, breeding for reflex and intellect, and continually training in the ways of limb, thought, and face\u2014all for the sake of reason, the sacred Logos. In the effort to transform themselves into the perfect expression of the Logos, the <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span> have bent their entire existence to mastering the irrationalities that determine human thought: history, custom, and passion. In this way, they believe, they will eventually grasp what they call the Absolute, and so become true self-moving souls.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">But their glorious isolation is at an end. After thirty years of exile, one of their number, <span class=\"none6\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span> <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span>, has reappeared in their dreams, demanding they send to him his son. Knowing only that his father dwells in a distant city called Shimeh, Kellhus undertakes an arduous journey through lands long abandoned by men. While wintering with a trapper named Leweth, he discovers he can read the man&#8217;s thoughts through the nuances of his expression. Worldborn men, he realizes, are little more than children in comparison to the <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span>. Experimenting, he finds that he can exact anything from Leweth\u2014any love, any sacrifice\u2014with mere words. So what of his father, who has spent thirty years among such men? What is the extent of <span class=\"none6\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span> <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span>&#8216;s power?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">When a band of inhuman Sranc discovers Leweth&#8217;s steading, the two men are forced to flee. Leweth is wounded, and Kellhus leaves him for the Sranc, feeling no remorse. The Sranc overtake him, and after driving them away, he battles their leader, a deranged Nonman, who nearly undoes him with sorcery. Kellhus flees, racked by questions without answers: Sorcery, he&#8217;d been taught, was nothing more than superstition. Could the <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span> have been wrong? What other facts had they overlooked or suppressed?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Eventually he finds refuge in the ancient city of Atrithau, where, using his <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span> abilities, he assembles an expedition to cross the Sranc-infested plains of Suskara. After a harrowing trek he crosses the frontier, only to be captured by a mad Scylvendi Chieftain named <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> urs Skiotha\u2014 a man who both knows and hates his father, <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span>.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Though his knowledge of the <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span> renders <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> immune to direct manipulation, Kellhus quickly realizes he can turn the man&#8217;s thirst for vengeance to his advantage. Claiming to be an assassin sent to murder <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span>, he asks the Scylvendi to join him on his quest. Overpowered by his hatred, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span><span class=\"none6\"> reluctantly agrees, and the two men set out across the Ji\u044cnati Steppe. Time and again, <\/span>Kellhus tries to secure the trust he needs to possess the man, but the barbarian continually rebuffs him. His hatred and his penetration are too great.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Then, near the Imperial frontier, they find a concubine named <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span>, who informs them of a Holy War gathering about Momemn\u2014a Holy War for <span class=\"none8\">Shimeh. <\/span>The fact that his father has summoned him to Shimeh at the same time, Kellhus realizes, can be no coincidence. But what could <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span> be planning?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">They cross the mountains into the Empire, and Kellhus watches Cna<span class=\"none6\">i\u044cr<\/span> struggle with the growing conviction that he&#8217;s outlived his usefulness. Thinking that murdering Kellhus is as close as he&#8217;ll ever come to murdering <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span>, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> attacks him, only to be defeated. To prove that he still needs him, Kellhus spares his life. He must, Kellhus knows, dominate the Holy War, but he as yet knows nothing of warfare. The variables are too many. Though <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span>&#8216;s knowledge of <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span> and the <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span> renders him a liability, his skill in war makes him invaluable. To secure this knowledge, Kellhus starts seducing <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span>, using her and her beauty as detours to the barbarian&#8217;s tormented heart.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Once in the Empire, they stumble across a patrol of Imperial cavalrymen; their journey to Momemn quickly becomes a desperate race. When they finally reach the encamped Holy War, they find themselves before Nersei Proyas, the Crown Prince of Conriya. To secure a position of honour among the Men of the Tusk, Kellhus lies, and claims to be a Prince of Atrithau. To lay the groundwork for his future domination, he claims to have suffered dreams of the Holy War\u2014implying, without saying as much, that they were <span class=\"none8\">godsent. <\/span>Since Proyas is more concerned with <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> and how he can use the barbarian&#8217;s knowledge of battle to thwart the Emperor, these claims are accepted without any real scrutiny. Only the Mandate Schoolman accompanying Proyas, Drusas Achamian, seems troubled by him\u2014especially by his name.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The following evening, Kellhus dines with the sorcerer, disarming him with humour, flattering him with questions. He learns of the Apocalypse and the Consult and many other sundry things, and though he knows Achamian harbours some terror regarding the name <span class=\"none6\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span>, he asks the melancholy man to become his teacher. The <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span>, Kellhus has come to realize, have been mistaken about many things, the existence of sorcery among them. There is so much he must know before he confronts his father &#8230;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">A final gathering is called to settle the issue between the Lords of the Holy War, who want to march, and the Emperor, who refuses to provision them. With <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> at his side, Kellhus charts the souls of all those present, calculating the ways he might bring them under his thrall. Among the Emperor&#8217;s advisers, however, he observes an expression he cannot read. The man, he realizes, possesses a <span class=\"none8\">false face. <\/span><span class=\"none6\">While Ikurei Conphas and the Inrithi caste-nobles bicker, Kellhus studies the man, and determines that his name is Skea\u0446s by reading the lips of his interlocutors. Could this Skea\u0446s be an agent of his father?<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Before he can draw any conclusions, however, his scrutiny is noticed by the Emperor himself, who has the adviser seized. Though the entire Holy War celebrates the Emperor&#8217;s defeat, Kellhus is more perplexed than ever. Never has he undertaken a study so deep.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">That night he consummates his relationship with <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span>, continuing the patient work of undoing <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span>\u2014as all Men of the Tusk must be undone. Somewhere, a shadowy faction lurks behind faces of false skin. Far to the south in Shimeh, <span class=\"none6\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span> <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span> awaits the coming storm.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none7\">Book Two: The Warrior-Prophet<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Free of the Emperor&#8217;s machinations, the Lords of the Holy War fall to squabbling among each other, and the <span class=\"none\">Holy War <\/span>fractures into its various nationalities as it marches toward the heathen frontier. Contingent by contingent, it gathers beneath Asgilioch on the heathen frontier.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">But Prince Saubon, the leader of the Galeoth contingent, is too impatient, and on the prophetic advice of Prince Kellhus, he marches with the Tydonni, the Thunyeri, and the Shrial Knights. The Imperial Army under Ikurei Conphas and the Conriyans under Prince Proyas remain at Asgilioch, awaiting the Ainoni and the all-important Scarlet Spires.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Skauras, the leader of the Kianene host, surprises Saubon and his impetuous peers on the Plains of Mengedda. A desperate battle follows, where, just as Prince Kellhus predicted, the Shrial Knights suffer grievously saving the Holy War from a cadre of Cishaurim. As the day wanes, the rest of the Holy War appears in the hills, and the Fanim host is completely routed.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The Governorate of Gedea falls, though the Emperor manages to take her capital, Hinnereth, through trickery. The Men of the Tusk continue south. Broken by their defeat on the Plains of Mengedda, the Kianene fall back to the south bank of the River Sempis, yielding northern Shigek to the Inrithi invaders. Prince Kellhus begins giving regular sermons beneath the famed Ziggurats of Shigek. Many in the Holy War begin referring to him as the &#8220;Warrior-Prophet.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">With <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> as their general, the Men of the Tusk cross the Sempis Delta, and a second great battle is fought beneath the Kianene fortress of Anwurat. Despite the dissolution of <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span>&#8216;s command and the martial cunning of Skauras, the Men of the Tusk prevail once again. The sons of Kian are hacked to ruin.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Anxious to press the advantage, the Great Names then lead the Holy War south across the coastal deserts of Khemema, depending on the Imperial Fleet to keep them supplied with fresh water. The Padirajah, however, surprises the fleet at the Bay of Trantis, and the Men of the Tusk find themselves stranded in the burning wastes without water. Thousands upon thousands die. Only Prince Kellhus&#8217;s discovery of water beneath the dunes saves the Inrithi from total annihilation.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The remnants of the Holy War drift from the desert and descend upon the great mercantile city of Caraskand. After a number of abortive assaults, the Men of the Tusk prepare for a long siege. The winter rains come, and with them, disease. At the height of the plague, hundreds of Inrithi perish every night. Only a Fanim traitor allows the Holy War to breach Caraskand&#8217;s mighty fortifications. The Men of the Tusk show no quarter.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">But even as the city falls, Kascamandri, the Padirajah himself, approaches with another great host. Suddenly the besiegers find themselves besieged in a sacked city. Diseases of malnutrition, then outright starvation soon begin afflicting them. Meanwhile, the tensions between traditional Inrithi and those acclaiming Prince Kellhus as a prophet\u2014 the Orthodox and the Zaudunyani\u2014grow to the point of riot and violence.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Incited by the accusations of Sarcellus and Ikurei Conphas, the Lords of the Holy War turn against Prince Kellhus. He is denounced, declared a False Prophet, and, in accordance with <span class=\"none8\">The Chronicle of the Tusk, <\/span>seized and bound to the corpse of his wife, <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span>, who is executed by Sarcellus. He is then lashed to an iron ring\u2014a circumfix\u2014and hung from a tree. Thousands gather in solemn vigil.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">After <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> reveals Sarcellus as a skin-spy, the Men of the Tusk repent, and the Warrior-Prophet is cut down from the Circumfix. Moved by a profound fervour, they assemble outside the gates of Caraskand. The Grandees of Kian charge their grim ranks and are utterly undone. The Padirajah himself falls before the Warrior-Prophet, though his son, Fanayal, survives to flee east with the remnants of the heathen army.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The road to Holy Shimeh is now open.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">But far to the north, in the shadow of dread Golgotterath, the Consult rides openly once again, torturing those Men they find with a single, implacable question: &#8221;Who are the <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span>?&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none\">Drusas Achamian <\/span>faces a dilemma, the greatest he&#8217;s ever encountered. Using the Cants of Calling, he contacts the Mandate and informs them of his dread discovery beneath the Andiamine Heights, but he says nothing of <span class=\"none6\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span> Kellhus, even though the man&#8217;s name could very well mean the Celmomian Prophecy\u2014that an <span class=\"none6\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span> would return at the end of the world\u2014has been fulfilled.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The omission torments him, but the more time he spends<span class=\"none6\"> teaching Kellhus on the march, the more he finds himself in awe of the man. With strokes of a stick across the ground, Kellhus rewrites classical logic, devises new and more subtle geometries. He regularly anticipates the insights of E\u0434rwa&#8217;s greatest thi<\/span>nkers, even extends them in astonishing ways. And he never forgets anything.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian, especially after the debacle with Inrau in Sumna, is under no illusions regarding his School. He knows what they would do with Prince <span class=\"none6\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span> Kellhus. So he convinces himself that he needs time to determine whether Kellhus is in fact the Harbinger of the Apocalypse. He decides to betray the Mandate, to risk the very future of humanity, for the sake of a single, remarkable man.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">While the Holy War awaits the arrival of the last stragglers about Asgilioch, he turns to drink and whores to silence his misgivings, only to find Esmenet among the camp-followers. Their reunion is both ardent and awkward. Afterward, Achamian takes her to his tent as his wife. After a lifetime of fruitless wandering, he finds himself terrified by the prospect of happiness. How can anyone be happy in the shadow of the Apocalypse?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">As the Holy War marches ever deeper into Fanim territory, he continues teaching Kellhus. During this time, Achamian and Esmenet make a game of interpreting Kellhus, becoming more and more convinced of his divinity. In the course of these ruminations, Achamian confesses his fear that Kellhus may be one of the Few\u2014those who can work sorcery. When Kellhus claims as much shortly after, Achamian insists on proof, using a small, demon-haunted Wathi Doll he obtained in High Ainon. Xinemus is outraged by the blasphemous demonstration, and Achamian finds himself estranged from his old friend.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">When the Holy War reaches Shigek, Kellhus finally asks Achamian to teach him the Gnosis\u2014something that would complete his betrayal of the Mandate. Needing solitude, Achamian travels alone to the Sareotic Library, where the sorcerers of the Scarlet Spires ambush and abduct him.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The torment drag<span class=\"none6\">s on for weeks. Iyokus, the lead interrogator, even captures and blinds Xinemus in an attempt to wring more information from Achamian. The Scarlet Spires, it seems, have learned of the events beneath the Andiamine Heights. They know about Skea\u0446s and the skin-spies, and with the very future of his School at stake, Ele\u0434zaras is desperate to extract as much intelligence as possible.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Despite his sorcerous constraints, Achamian is able to call out to his Wathi Doll, which has been buried in the ruins of the Sareotic Library. After a long wait the Doll arrives and breaks the Uroborian Circle that imprisons him. Achamian at last shows the Gnosis to the Scarlet Spires. Though Iyokus escapes his vengeance, he and Xinemus are at last free.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">After recuperating, the two friends set out to rejoin the Holy War, their relationship now marred by the resentment Xinemus bears for losing his eyes. They find the Men of the Tusk trapped and starving in Caraskand and learn of the Circumfixion of Kellhus and <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span>. Achamian immediately sets out to find Esmenet, relieved beyond words to discover that she survived the desert.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He finds her with the Zaudunyani. She tells him that she is pregnant with Kellhus&#8217;s child.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian goes to the ring-bound Kellhus thinking only of murder. Instead he learns that Consult skin-spies riddle the Holy War. Kellhus, it seems, can see them. He tells Achamian that the Second Apocalypse has in fact begun.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Despite his sorrow and hatred, Achamian goes to Proyas arguing that Kellhus must be saved. Proyas agrees to summon the other Great Names, and Achamian presents his case, arguing that the world is doomed without <span class=\"none6\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span> Kellhus, only to be made a laughingstock by Ikurei Conphas.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He fails to convince the Lords of the Holy War.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Thinking Achamian has repudiated her, <span class=\"none\">Esmenet<\/span> loses herself in the Holy War and eventually joins a troop of camp prostitutes. But at Asgilioch, she finds Achamian kneeling in the crowds, drunk and beaten. Never has she seen him so desperate. They reconcile, even though she cannot confess the truth of her affair with Sarcellus.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none6\">He tells her about Skea\u0446s and the events beneath the Andiamine Heights, about his failure to tell the Mandate about Kellhus. She consoles him even as she struggles to grasp the dread import of his words.<\/span> He insists the Second Apocalypse is coming, and though it seems something too horrific, too abstract, to be real, she finds herself believing him. She joins him in his humble tent, and becomes his wife in spirit if not in ritual.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian introduces her to Kellhus, <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span>, Xinemus, and everyone else about their motley yet extraordinary camp fire. At first she regards Kellhus with suspicion, but she soon finds the wonder of the man as irresistible as everyone else.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">As the Holy War marches across Gedea, she watches as Kellhus grows in prestige and reputation, becoming more and more convinced that he must be the prophet he claims not to be. During the same time her love of Achamian deepens, though she has difficulty trusting it.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Then, in Shigek, Kellhus asks Achamian to teach him the Gnosis. Since this would represent a final, ultimate betrayal of the Mandate, Achamian leaves for the Sareotic Library to meditate alone. He and Esmenet exchange hard words. The following night Kellhus awakens her with grim tidings: the Sareotic Library burns, and Achamian is missing.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">She mourns him the way she once mourned her dead daughter. While the Men of the Tusk assail the South Bank, she remains alone in Achamian&#8217;s tent, refusing, despite Xinemus&#8217;s entreaties, to rejoin the Holy War. How would Achamian find her if she moved? After the Battle of Anwurat, Kellhus comes to her with <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span>, and with reason and compassion convinces her to join them on the continued march.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">She finds their company awkward at first, but Kellhus is able to make sense of her melancholy, to give shape to the morass of accumulated sorrow that burdens her heart. He begins teaching her how to read\u2014as a way to distract her, she suspects. As the weeks pass and the Holy War begins its disastrous march across the desert, she starts to resign herself to the fact that Achamian is dead.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">She also finds herself more and more attracted to Kellhus.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Despite her shame, despite her resolutions, the chance intimacies accumulate. His words seem to carve her at the joints, cutting ever closer to truths she cannot bear. She admits her affair with Sarcellus, all her small betrayals of Achamian. Then, at last, overcome by shame and grief, she confesses the truth about her daughter: Mimara didn&#8217;t die all those years ago. Esmenet sold the girl to slavers to forestall starvation.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">She and Kellhus make love the following morning.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The long suffering in the desert seems to sanctify their relationship. Everything appears transformed. She even casts away her Whore&#8217;s Shell, the contraceptive charm used by most prostitutes, something she never even considered with Achamian. Esmenet becomes the Warrior-Prophet&#8217;s second wife. For the first time in her life she feels shriven\u2014pure.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Caraskand is besieged and overcome. <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span> gives birth to the infant <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span>. And Kellhus yields Esmenet more and more power within the growing ranks of Zaudunyani, raising her above even his closest disciples, the Nascenti. She becomes pregnant.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Then suddenly everything seems to collapse. The Padirajah traps the Holy War in Caraskand. Misery and riot own the streets. The Great Names execute <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span> and condemn Kellhus to the Circumfix. All seems lost &#8230;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Until Achamian returns.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span><span class=\"none\"> urs Skiotha&#8217;s <\/span>torment deepens. Though the Men of the Tusk mean nothing to him, he sees his own undoing in their slow capitulation to Kellhus. He alone knows the truth of the <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span>, which means he knows that Kellhus will eventually betray him in the prosecution of his obscure ends. Just as he knows the man will betray the Holy War.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">As the Holy War marches deeper into Fanim territory, he tries to teach Prince Proyas the rudiments of war as practised by the Kianene. Assigned by Proyas to command a cohort of Conriyan outriders, he returns to the camp he shares with Kellhus, Achamian, and the others of the less and less. He knows that Kellhus now possesses <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span> body and soul, and when he returns, he finds himself punishing her for Kellhus&#8217;s outrage. Secretly he loves her, or so he tells himself.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">In the arid highlands of Gedea, he decides he can tolerate no more. He refuses to share Kellhus&#8217;s fire, and demands that <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span>, whom he claims as his prize, come with him. Kellhus denies him. Since concern for women is unmanly, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> relinquishes her, though she continues to tyrannize his thoughts. His madness burns brighter. Some nights he roams the countryside, raping and murdering indiscriminately.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">After the Holy War seizes the north bank of the River Sempis, the Lords of the Holy War assign <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> the task of planning the assault on southern Shigek. Impressed by his insight and cunning, they acclaim him their general for the impending battle. Kellhus comes to him, offering <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span> in exchange for the secrets of battle. <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> knows that his knowledge of war is the last advantage he possesses over the <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span>, the only thing Kellhus still needs from him, but <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span> has somehow become more important than anything. She is his prize, his proof &#8230;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> agrees. Riven by recriminations, he teaches Kellhus the principles of war.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Despite all his efforts, Skauras outwits him on the battlefield; only determination and good fortune save the Holy War from defeat. Something breaks within <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span>. At the height of the crisis he leaves Kellhus and the others, abandons his command to collect his prize. But when he finds <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span>, <span class=\"none8\">another Kellhus <\/span>is beating her, demanding information. He surprises the second Kellhus, stabbing him in the shoulder. The man flees, but not before <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> glimpses his face crack open &#8230;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> seizes <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span>, begins dragging her to his camp. She rages at him, tells him that he beats her because she lies with Kellhus the way he had lain with Kellhus&#8217;s father. She tries to cut her own throat.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Bewildered and undone, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> wanders aimlessly through the camp. Later that night, as the Men of the Tusk celebrate their victory, Kellhus finds him at the edge of the Meneanor, howling at the breakers. Thinking he is <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span>, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> begs him to end his misery. The <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span> refuses.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Throughout the disastrous desert march and the siege of Caraskand, madness rules <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span>&#8216;s heart. Not until the city falls does he recover some semblance of his former self. Fomenting against Kellhus, the Great Names come to him, hoping to confirm rumours that Kellhus is not a true prince of Atrithau. The estrangement between Cna<span class=\"none6\">i\u044cr<\/span> and Kellhus is no secret. Thinking the Holy War doomed, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> decides to take what compensation he can. He names Kellhus a &#8220;prince of nothing.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Only when <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span> is murdered by Sarcellus does he realize the consequences of his betrayal. &#8220;Lie made flesh,&#8221; Kellhus calls out to him before he is seized. &#8220;The hunt need not end.&#8221; <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> flees, and in a moment of resurgent madness cuts a swazond across his own throat.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He obsesses over the <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span>&#8216;s final words. When the Mandate Schoolman confronts the Lords of the Holy War with the severed head of a Consult skin-spy, he finally grasps their meaning. He follows Sarcellus, who hastens from the assembly to the temple-complex where his brother Shrial Knights guard .Kellhus upon the Circumfix. Knowing he intends to kill the <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span>, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> intercepts him, and they duel before the starving masses gathered about the dying Warrior-Prophet. But the skin-spy is too fast, too skilled. <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> is saved only when Gotian, the Grandmaster of the Shrial Knights, distracts Sarcellus by demanding to know how he learned to fight so. Exhausted, bloodied, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> beheads the counterfeit Shrial Knight.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Raising its severed head to the sky, he shows the Holy War the true face of the Warrior-Prophet&#8217;s adversary. The hunt for <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span> need not end.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span><span class=\"none\"> Kellhus<\/span> requires three things to prepare for his father in Shimeh: knowledge of battle and of sorcery, and possession of the Holy War.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">From the outset, he uses his claim to caste-nobility to insinuate himself into the councils of Proyas and the other Great Names. He proceeds cautiously, patiently laying the groundwork of his domination. From his readings of Inrithi scripture, he learns what the Men of the Tusk expect from a prophetic figure, so he sets out to emulate\u2014as far as he can\u2014all of those characteristics. He becomes a pilot of souls, crafting others&#8217; impressions of him with subtle inflections of word, tone, and expression. Soon, almost all those who know him find themselves in <span class=\"none8\">awe. <\/span>Throughout the Holy War men whisper that a prophet walks among them.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">At the same time, he plies Achamian with particular care. While mining him for his knowledge of the Three Seas, Kellhus subtly conditions him, instilling the passions and beliefs that will eventually force him to do the impossible: teach Kellhus the Gnosis, the deadly sorcery of the Ancient North.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">In the course of his study, however, he discovers dozens of skin-spies mimicking men in various positions of power. He realizes, moreover, that they now <span class=\"none8\">know <\/span>he can see them. One of them, a high-ranking Shrial Knight called Sarcellus, approaches him, probing for details. Kellhus uses the opportunity to make himself even more enigmatic, into a puzzle the Consult will be loath to destroy before solving. As long as he remains a benign mystery to the Consult, Kellhus realizes, they will not move against him.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He needs time to consolidate his position. Until the Holy War is his, he cannot risk an open confrontation.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He says nothing to Achamian for much the same reason. He knows the Mandate Schoolman believes him to be the Harbinger of the Second Apocalypse, and that the only thing preventing Achamian from telling this to his Mandate handlers is the recent death of his former student, Inrau, as a result of their machinations. Knowing that Kellhus could actually <span class=\"none8\">see <\/span>Consult agents in their midst would prove too much. And as Achamian himself admits, the Mandate would likely seize Kellhus rather than treat with him as an equal.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Once the Holy War secures Shigek, Kellhus begins asserting himself more and more, giving what are called the Sermons of the Ziggurat. Though many now refer to him openly as the Warrior-Prophet, he continues to insist he is simply a man like any other. Knowing that Achamian has succumbed\u2014that he believes him to be the world&#8217;s only hope\u2014Kellhus finally asks the Schoolman to teach him the Gnosis. But when Achamian leaves for the Sareotic Library to meditate on this request, he is abducted by the Scarlet Spires.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Assuming Achamian lost, Kellhus turns to Esmenet, not out of any errant sense of lust, but because her extraordinary native intelligence makes her useful both as a subordinate and as a potential mate. The differences between the <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span> and the worldborn makes his bloodline invaluable. He knows that whatever sons he produces, especially by a woman of Esmenet&#8217;s intellect, will prove powerful tools.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">So he begins seducing her by teaching her to read, by showing the hidden truths of her own heart, and by drawing her ever deeper into his circle of power and influence. Far from proving an obstacle, her bereavement actually facilitates his plan by rendering her more emotionally vulnerable and prone to suggestion. By the time the Holy War enters the desert, she has willingly joined him and <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span> in their bed.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Despite its calamities, the journey across the desert provides ample opportunity for him to exercise his otherworldly abilities. He rallies the Men of the Tusk with demonstrations of indomitable will and courage. He even saves them, using his preternatural senses to find well-springs beneath the sand. By the time the remnants of the Holy War fall upon Caraskand, thousands upon thousands openly hail him as the Warrior-Prophet. At long last he yields to the title.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He names his followers the Zaudunyani, the &#8220;Tribe of Truth.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">But now he faces an added danger. As the numbers of Zaudunyani swell, so too do the misapprehensions of the Great Names. For many, following the dictates of a living\u2014 as opposed to a long-dead\u2014prophet proves too much. Ikurei Conphas becomes the de facto leader of the Orthodox, those Men of the Tusk who repudiate Kellhus and his revisionary Inrithism. Even Proyas finds himself increasingly troubled.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The Consult, as well, have been watching Kellhus with growing trepidation. In the confusion of Caraskand&#8217;s fall, Sarcellus leads several of his brother skin-spies in an assassination attempt that very nearly costs Kellhus his life. Knowing that it might prove useful, Kellhus saves one of their severed heads.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Shortly after this attempt, Kellhus is finally contacted by one of his father&#8217;s agents: a Cishaurim fleeing the Scarlet Spires. He tells Kellhus that he follows the Shortest Path, and that soon he will comprehend something called the Thousandfold Thought. Kellhus has innumerable questions, but it is too late: the Scarlet Spires approach. To avoid compromising his position, Kellhus beheads the man.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">When the Padirajah arrives and seals the Holy War up within Caraskand, the situation becomes even more dire. According to Conphas and the Orthodox, the God punishes the Men of the Tusk for following a False Prophet. To defuse their threat, Kellhus plots the assassination of both Conphas and Sarcellus. Neither attempt succeeds, and General Martemus, Conphas&#8217;s closest adviser, is killed.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The dilemma now facing Kellhus is almost insuperable. The Holy War starves. The Zaudunyani and the Orthodox stand upon the brink of open war. And the Padirajah continues to assail Caraskand&#8217;s walls. For the first time, Kellhus is confronted by circumstances he cannot master.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He sees only one possible way to unify the Holy War under his leadership: he must let the Men of the Tusk condemn him and <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span>, and trust that <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span>, driven to avenge <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span>, will save him. Only a dramatic reversal and vindication can possibly win over the Orthodox in time.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He must make a leap of faith.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span> is executed, and Kellhus is bound to her naked corpse. Then he is lashed to a circumfix and hung from a great tree to die of exposure. Visions of the No-God plague him, as does <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span> pressed dead against him. Never has he suffered so &#8230;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">For the first time, <span class=\"none6\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span> Kellhus weeps.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian comes to him wild with rage because of Esmenet. Kellhus tells him about the skin-spies, about his visions of the impending Apocalypse.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Then, miraculously, he is cut down, and he knows that at last the Holy War is his, and that they will have the ardour and conviction they need to overcome the Padirajah.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Standing before the exultant masses, he grasps the Thousandfold Thought.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none9\">The<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none9\">Final<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none9\">March<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none10\">Chapter One<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none11\">Caraskand<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">My<\/span> <span class=\"none8\">heart shrivels even as my intellect bristles. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Reasons<\/span>\u2014<span class=\"none8\">I find myself desperate for reasons.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\"> Sometimes I think every word written is written for shame.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">\u2014DRUSAS ACHAMIAN, <span class=\"none8\">THE COMPENDIUM OF THE FIRST HOLY WAR<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none7\">Early Spring, 4112 Year-of-the-Tusk, Enathpaneah<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">There had been a time, for Achamian, when the future had been a habit, something belonging to the hard rhythm of his days toiling in his father&#8217;s shadow. His fingers had stung in the morning, his back had burned in the afternoon. The fish had flashed silver in the sunlight. Tomorrow became today, and today became yesterday, as though time were little more than gravel rolled in a barrel, forever brightening what was the same. He expected only what he&#8217;d already endured, prepared only for what had already happened. His past had enslaved his future. Only the size of his hands had seemed to change.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">But now &#8230;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Breathless, Achamian walked across the rooftop garden of Proyas&#8217;s compound. The night sky was clear. The constellations glittered against the black: Uroris rising in the east, the Flail descending to the west. The encircling heights of the Bowl reared across the distance, a riot of blue structures pricked by distant points of torchlight. Hoots and cries floated up from the streets below, sounding at once melancholy and besotted with joy.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Against all reason, the Men of the Tusk had triumphed over the heathen. Caraskand was a great Inrithi city once again.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian pressed through a hedge of junipers, fouled his smock in the sharp branches. The garden was largely dead, the ground rutted and overturned during the height of the hunger. He stepped across a dusty gutter, then stomped about, making a carpet of grasses gone to hay. He knelt, still searching for his breath.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The fish were gone. His palms no longer bled when he clenched his fists in the morning. And the future had been &#8230; unleashed.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;I am,&#8221; he murmured through clenched teeth, &#8220;a Mandate Schoolman.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The Mandate. How long since he had last spoken to them? Since it was he who travelled, the onus was on him to maintain contact. His failure to do so for so long would strike them as an unfathomable dereliction. They would think him mad. They would demand of him impossible things. And then, tomorrow &#8230;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">It always came back to tomorrow.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He closed his eyes and intoned the first words. When he opened them, he saw the pale circle of light they cast about his knees, the shadows of grass combed through grass. A beetle scrambled through the chiaroscuro, mad to escape his sorcerous aspect. He continued speaking, his soul bending to the sounds, giving inner breath to the Abstractions, to thoughts that were not his own, to meanings that limned the world to its foundation. Without warning, the ground seemed to pitch, then suddenly here was no longer <span class=\"none8\">here, <\/span>but everywhere. The beetle, the grasses, even Caraskand fell away.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He tasted the dank air of Atyersus, the great fortress of the School of Mandate, through the lips of another&#8230; <span class=\"none8\">Nautzera.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The fetor of brine and rot tugged vomit to the back of his throat. Surf crashed. Black waters heaved beneath a darkling sky. Terns hung like miracles in the distance.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">No &#8230; not here.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He knew this place well enough for terror to loosen his bowels. He gagged at the smell, covered his mouth and nose, turned to the fortifications &#8230; He stood upon the top tier of a timber scaffold. A shroud of sagging corpses loomed over him, to the limits of his periphery.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Dagliash.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">From the base of the walls to the battlements, wherever the fortress&#8217;s ramparts faced the sea, countless thousands had been nailed across every surface: here a flaxen-maned warrior struck down in his prime, there an infant pinned through the mouth like a laurel. Fishing nets had been cast and fixed about them\u2014to keep their rotting ligature intact, Achamian supposed. The netting sagged near the wall&#8217;s base, bellied by an accumulation of skulls and other human detritus. Innumerable terns and crows, even several gannets, darted and wheeled about the macabre jigsaw; it seemed he remembered them most of all.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian had dreamed of this pla<span class=\"none6\">ce many times. The Wall of the Dead, where Seswatha, captured after the fall of Trys\u043b, had been tacked to ponder the glory of the Consult.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Nautzera hung immediately before him, suspended by nails through his thighs and forearms, naked save for the Agonic Collar about his throat. He seemed scarcely conscious.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian clutched shaking hands, squeezed them bloodless. Dagliash had been a great sentinel once, staring across the wastes of Agongorea toward Golgotterath, her turrets manned by the hard-hearted men<span class=\"none6\"> of A\u0446rsi. Now she was but a way station of the world&#8217;s ruin. A\u0446rsi was dead, her people <\/span><span class=\"none6\">extinct, and the great cities of K\u044bni\u044cri were little more than gutted shells. The Nonmen had fled to their mountain fastnesses, and the remaining High Norsirai nations\u2014E\u0434mnor and Akksersia\u2014battled for their very lives.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Three years had passed since the advent of the No-God. Achamian could feel him, a <span class=\"none8\">looming <\/span>across the western horizon. A sense of doom.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">A gust buffeted him with cold spray.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Nautzera &#8230; it&#8217;s me! Ach\u2014<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">A <\/span>harrowing cry cut him short. He actually crouched, though he knew no harm could befall him, peered in the direction of the sound. He gripped the bloodstained timber.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">On a different brace of scaffolding farther down the fortifications, a Bashrag stooped over a thrashing shadow. Long black hair streamed from the fist-sized moles that pocked its massive frame. A vestigial face grimaced from each of its great and brutal cheeks. Without warning, it stood\u2014each leg three legs welded together, each arm three arms\u2014and hoisted a pale figure over the heights: a man hanging from a nail as long as a spear. For a moment the wretch kicked air like a child drawn from the tub, then the Bashrag thrust him against the husk of corpses. Wielding an immense hammer, the monstrosity began battering the nail, searching for unseen mortises. More cries pealed across the heights. The Bashrag clacked its teeth in ecstasy.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Immobilized, Achamian watched the Bashrag raise a second nail to the man&#8217;s pelvis. The wails became raving shrieks. Then a shadow fell across the sorcerer. &#8220;Anguish,&#8221; a deep voice said, as close as a whisper in his ear.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Intake of breath, sharp and sudden. The incongruent taste of warm Caraskandi air &#8230;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">For an instant his Cant faltered at this memory of the world&#8217;s true order, and Achamian glimpsed the Heights of the Bull framed by a field of stars. Then there he was\u2014 <span class=\"none8\">Mekeritrig<\/span>\u2014standing over him, staring at Nautzera where he hung flushed and alive among gaping mouths and groping limbs.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Anguish and degradation,&#8221; the Nonman continued, his voice resonant with inhuman tones. &#8220;Who would think, Seswatha, that <span class=\"none8\">salvation <\/span>could be found in these words?&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Mekeritrig stood in the curiously affected manner of Nonmen Ishroi, his hands clasped and pressed into the small of his back. He wore a gown of sheer black damask beneath a corselet of nimil that had been worked into circles of interlocking cranes. Tails of nimil chain followed the gown&#8217;s pleats to the ground.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Salvation &#8230;&#8221; Nautzera gasped in Seswatha&#8217;s voice. He raised his swollen gaze to the Nonman Prince. &#8220;Has it progressed so far, Cet&#8217;ingira? Do you recall so little?&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">A flicker of terror marred the Nonman&#8217;s perfect features. His pupils became thin as quill strokes. After millennia of practising sorcery, the Quya bore a Mark that was far, far deeper than that borne by any Schoolmen\u2014like indigo compared with water. Despite their preternatural beauty, despite the porcelain whiteness of their skin, they seemed blasted, blackened, and withered, a husk of cinders at once animate and extinct. Some, it was said, were so deeply Marked that they couldn&#8217;t stand within a length of a Chorae without beginning to salt.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Recall?&#8221; Mekeritrig replied with a gesture at once plaintive and majestic. &#8220;But I have raised such a <span class=\"none8\">wall <\/span>&#8230;&#8221; As though to emphasize his declaration, the sun flared across the wall&#8217;s length, warming the dead with crimson.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;An obscenity!&#8221; Nautzera spat.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The nets flapped about the nailed corpses. To his right, near to where the wall curved out of sight, Achamian glimpsed a carrion arm waving back and forth, as though warning away unseen ships.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;As are all monuments, all memorials,&#8221; Mekeritrig replied, lowering his chin toward his right shoulder\u2014the Nonman gesture of assent. &#8220;What are they but prostheses that pronounce our impotence, our debility? I may live forever, but alas, what I have lived is mortal. Your suffering, Seswatha, <span class=\"none8\">is <\/span>my salvation.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;No, Cet&#8217;ingira &#8230;&#8221; Hearing the strain in Seswatha&#8217;s voice filled Achamian with an eye-watering ache. His body had not forgotten this Dream. &#8220;It need not be like this! I&#8217;ve read the ancient chronicles. I studied the engravings along the High White Halls before Celmomas ordered your image struck. You were great once. You were among those who raised us, who made the Norsirai first among the Tribes of Men! You were not this, my Prince! You were never this!&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Again the eerie sideways nod. A single tear scored his cheek. &#8220;Which is why, Seswatha. Which is why &#8230;&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">A cut scarred where a caress faded away. In this simple fact lay the tragic and catastrophic truth of the Nonmen. Mekeritrig had lived a hundred lifetimes\u2014more! What would it be like, Achamian wondered, to have every redeeming memory\u2014be it a lover&#8217;s touch or a child&#8217;s warm squeal\u2014blotted out by the accumulation of anguish, terror, and hate? To understand the soul of a Nonman, the philosopher Gotagga had once written, one need only bare the back of an old and arrogant slave. Scars. Scars upon scars. This was what made them mad. All of them.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;I am an Erratic,&#8221; Mekeritrig was saying. &#8220;I do that which I hate, I raise my heart to the lash, so that I might remember! Do you understand what this means? You are <span class=\"none8\">my children!&#8221;<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;There must be some other way,&#8221; Nautzera gasped.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The Nonman lowered his bald head, like a son overcome by remorse in the presence of his father. &#8220;I am an Erratic &#8230;&#8221; Tears sheened his cheeks when he looked up. &#8220;There is no other way.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Nautzera strained against the nails impaling his arms, cried out in pain, &#8220;Kill me, then! Kill me and be done with it!&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;But you <span class=\"none8\">know, <\/span>Seswatha.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;What? What do I know?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;The location of the Heron Spear.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Nautzera stared, eyes rounded in horror, teeth clenched in agony. &#8220;If I did, you would be the one bound, and I would be your tormentor.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Mekeritrig backhanded him with a ferocity that made Achamian jump. Droplets of blood sailed down the wall&#8217;s mangled length.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;I will strip you to your footings,&#8221; the Nonman grated. &#8220;Though I love, I will upend your soul&#8217;s foundation! I will release you from the delusions of this word &#8216;Man,&#8217; and draw forth the beast\u2014the soulless beast!\u2014that is the howling Truth of all things &#8230; You <span class=\"none8\">will <\/span>tell me!&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The old man coughed, drooled blood.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;And I, Seswatha &#8230; I <span class=\"none8\">will remember!&#8221;<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian glimpsed fused Nonman teeth. Mekeritrig&#8217;s eyes flared like spears of sunlight. Orange-burning circles appeared about each of his fingertips, boiling, seething with fractal edges. Achamian recognized the Cant immediately: a Quya variant of the Thawa Ligatures. With volcanic palms, Mekeritrig clenched Seswatha&#8217;s brow, serrated both body and soul.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Nautzera howled in voices not his own.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Shhhh,&#8221; Mekeritrig whispered, clutching the old sorcerer&#8217;s cheek. He squeezed away tears with his thumb. &#8220;Hush, child &#8230;&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Nautzera could only gag and convulse.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Please,&#8221; the Nonman said. &#8220;Please do not cry &#8230;&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">And Achamian howled, <span class=\"none8\">Nautzera! <\/span>He couldn&#8217;t watch this, not again, not after the Scarlet Spires. <span class=\"none8\">You dream, Nautzera! You dream!<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Great Dagliash stood mute. Terns and crows swept and battled through the air about them. The dead stared vacant across the thundering sea.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Nautzera turned from Mekeritrig&#8217;s palm to Achamian, heaving, heaving chill air. &#8220;But you&#8217;re dead,&#8221; he gasped.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">No, <\/span>Achamian said. <span class=\"none8\">I survived.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Gone was the scaffolding and the wall, the stench of rot and the shrill chorus of scavenger birds. Gone was Mekeritrig. Achamian stood nowhere, struck breathless by the impossibility of the transition.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">How is it you live? <\/span>Nautzera cried in his thoughts. <span class=\"none8\">We were told the Spires had taken you!<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">I <\/span>&#8230;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Achamian? Akka? Is everything okay?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Why did he feel so small? He had reasons for his deception\u2014<span class=\"none8\">reasons!<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">I-I&#8230;<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Where are you? We&#8217;ll send someone for you. All will be made right. Vengeance will be exacted!<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Concern? Compassion for him?<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">N-no, Nautzera. No, you don&#8217;t understand<\/span>\u2014<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">My<\/span> <span class=\"none8\">brother has been wronged! What more must I know?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">An instant of mad weightlessness.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">I<\/span> <span class=\"none8\">lied to you.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Then long, dark silence, at once perfect and raucous with inaudible things.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Lied? Are you saying the Spires didn&#8217;t seize you?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">No<\/span>\u2014<span class=\"none8\">I mean, yes, they did seize me! And I did escape &#8230;<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Images of the madness at Iothiah flashed through the blackness. Iyokus and his dispassionate torments. The blinding of Xinemus. The Wathi Doll, and the godlike exercise of the Gnosis.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Remembered men screamed.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Yes! You did well, Achamian\u2014well enough to be written! Immortalized in our annals! But what&#8217;s this about lies?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">There&#8217;s a<\/span>\u2014his body in Caraskand swallowed\u2014<span class=\"none8\">there&#8217;s a fact &#8230; a fact I&#8217;ve hidden from you and the others.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">A fact?<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">An <\/span><span class=\"none8\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span><span class=\"none8\"> has returned &#8230;<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">A long pause, strangely studied.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">What are you saying?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">The Harbinger has come, Nautzera. The world is about to end.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">The world is about to end.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Said enough times, any phrase\u2014even this one\u2014was sure to be leached of its meaning, which was why, Achamian knew, Seswatha had cursed his followers with the imprint of his battered soul. But now, confessing to Nautzera, it seemed he&#8217;d never uttered these words before.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Perhaps he&#8217;d simply never <span class=\"none8\">meant <\/span>them. Certainly not like this.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Nautzera had been too shocked to be outraged by his admission of betrayal. A troubling vacancy had dogged the tone of his Other Voice\u2014even a premonition of senility. Only afterward would Achamian realize that the old man had simply been terrified, that, like Achamian himself a mere few months earlier, he feared himself unequal to the events unfolding before him.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The world was about to end.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian began by describing his first meeting with Kellhus, that day outside Momemn&#8217;s walls when Proyas had summoned him to appraise the Scylvendi. He described the man&#8217;s intellect\u2014even explained the man&#8217;s improvements on Ajencis&#8217;s logic as proof of his preternatural intelligence. He narrated Kellhus&#8217;s inexorable rise to ascendancy in the Holy War, both from what he himself had witnessed and from what he&#8217;d subsequently learned through Proyas. Nautzera had heard, apparently through informants near to the Imperial Court, that a man claiming to be a prophet had grown to prominence among the Men of the Tusk, but the name <span class=\"none6\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span> had become Nasurius by the time it reached Atyersus. They had dismissed it as simply one more fanatic contrivance.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Then Achamian described everything that had happened in Caraskand: the coming of the Padirajah, the siege and starvation, the growing tension between the Orthodox and the Zaudunyani, Kellhus&#8217;s condemnation as a False Prophet\u2014. and ultimately, the revelation beneath dark-boughed Umiaki, where Kellhus had confessed to Achamian even as Achamian confessed now.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He told Nautzera about everything except Esmenet.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">After he was freed, even the most embittered of the Orthodox fell to their knees before him<\/span>\u2014<span class=\"none8\">and how could they not? The Scylvendi&#8217;s duel with Cutias Sarcellus\u2014the First Knight-Commander a skin-spy! Think, Nautzera! The Scylvendi&#8217;s victory proved that demons<\/span>\u2014demons!\u2014<span class=\"none8\">had sought the Warrior-Prophet&#8217;s death. It was exactly as Ajencis says: <\/span><span class=\"none8\">Men<\/span> <span class=\"none8\">ever make corruption proof of purity.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He paused, a peevish part of him convinced Nautzera had never read Ajencis.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Yes yes, <\/span>the old sorcerer said with soundless impatience.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">He came upon them like a fever after that. Suddenly the Holy War found itself unified as never before. All of the Great Names\u2014with the exception of Conphas, that is \u2014 knelt before him, kissed his knee. Gotian openly wept, offered his bared breast to the <\/span><span class=\"none8\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span><span class=\"none8\">&#8216;s sword. And then they marched. Such a sight, Nautzera! As great and terrible as anything in our Dreams. Starved. Sick. They shambled from the gates<\/span>\u2014<span class=\"none8\">dead men moved to war &#8230;<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Images of the already broken flickered through the black. Gaunt swordsmen draped in strapless hauberks. Knights upon the ribbed backs of horses. The crude standard of the Circumfix snapping in the air.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">What happened?<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">The impossible. They won the field. They couldn&#8217;t be stopped! I still can&#8217;t rub the wonder from my eyes &#8230;<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">And the Padirajah? <\/span>Nautzera asked. <span class=\"none8\">Kascamandri. What of him?<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Dead by the Warrior-Prophet&#8217;s own hand. Even now, the Holy War makes ready to march on Shimeh and the Cishaurim. There&#8217;s none left who might bar their passage, Nautzera. They&#8217;ve all but succeeded!<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">But why? <\/span>the old sorcerer asked. <span class=\"none8\">If this <\/span><span class=\"none8\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span><span class=\"none8\"> Kellhus knows of the Consult, if he too believes the Second Apocalypse is nigh, why would he continue this foolish war? Perhaps he said what he said to deceive you. Have you considered that?<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">He can see them. Even now, the purges continue. No <\/span>&#8230; <span class=\"none8\">I<\/span> <span class=\"none8\">believe him.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">After Sarcellus&#8217;s death, over a dozen men of rank and privilege had simply vanished, leaving their clients astonished and delivering even the most fanatical of the Orthodox to the Warrior-Prophet. In the wake of the Padirajah&#8217;s overthrow, both Caraskand and the Holy War had been ransacked, but as far as Achamian knew, only two of the abominations had been found and &#8230; exorcized.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">This .<\/span>.. <span class=\"none8\">this is extraordinary, Akka! What you say &#8230; soon all the Three Seas will believe!<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Either that or burn.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">There was grim satisfaction in thinking of the dismay and incredulity that would soon greet Mandate embassies. For centuries they&#8217;d been a laughingstock. For centuries they&#8217;d endured all manner of scorn, even those insults that jnan reserved for the most wretched. But now &#8230; Vindication was a potent narcotic. It would swim in the veins of Mandate Schoolmen for some time.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Yes! <\/span>Nautzera exclaimed. <span class=\"none8\">Which is why we mustn&#8217;t forget what&#8217;s important. The Consult is never so easily rooted out. They&#8217;ll try to murder this <\/span><span class=\"none8\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span><span class=\"none8\">\u2014there can be no doubt.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">No doubt, <\/span>Achamian replied, though for some reason the thought of further assassination attempts hadn&#8217;t occurred to him.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Which means that first and foremost, <\/span>Nautzera continued, <span class=\"none8\">you must do everything in your power to protect him. No harm must come to him!<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">The Warrior-Prophet has no need of my protection.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Nautzera paused. <span class=\"none8\">Why do you call him that?<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Because no other name seemed his equal. Not even <span class=\"none6\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span>. But something, a profound indecision perhaps, held him mute.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Achamian? Do you actually think the man&#8217;s a prophet?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">I don&#8217;t know what I think &#8230; Too much has happened.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">This is no time for sentimental foolishness!<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Enough, Nautzera. You haven&#8217;t seen the man.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">No &#8230; but I will.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">What do you mean? <\/span>His brother Schoolmen coming here? The thought troubled Achamian somehow. The thought that others from the Mandate might witness his &#8230;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8230; humiliation.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">But Nautzera ignored the question. <span class=\"none8\">So what does our cousin School, the Scarlet Spires, make of all this? <\/span>There was a note of sarcastic hilarity in his tone, but it seemed forced, almost painfully so.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">At <span class=\"none8\">Council, Ele<\/span><span class=\"none8\">\u0434<\/span><span class=\"none8\">zaras looks like a man whose children have just been sold into slavery. He can&#8217;t even bring himself to look at me, let alone ask about the Consult. He&#8217;s heard of the ruin I wrought in lothiah. I think he fears me.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">He will come to you, Achamian. Sooner or later.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Let him come.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Every night the ledgers were opened, the debtors called to account. There would be amends.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">There&#8217;s no room for vengeance here. You must treat with him as an equal, comport yourself as though you were never abducted, never plied &#8230; I understand your hunger for retribution\u2014but the stakes! The stakes of this game outweigh all other considerations. Do you understand this?<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">What did understanding have to do with hatred?<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">I understand well enough, Nautzera.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">And the <\/span><span class=\"none8\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span><span class=\"none8\">\u2014what do Ele\u0434zaras and the others make of him?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">They <\/span>want <span class=\"none8\">him to be a fraud, I know that much. What they think of him, I don&#8217;t know.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">You must make it clear to them that the <\/span><span class=\"none8\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span><span class=\"none8\"> is <\/span>ours, <span class=\"none8\">Achamian. You must let them know that what happened at Iothiah is but a trifle compared with what will happen if they try to seize him.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">The Warrior-Prophet cannot be seized. He&#8217;s &#8230; beyond that. <\/span>Achamian paused, struggled with his composure. <span class=\"none8\">But he can be purchased.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Purchased? What do you mean?<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">He wants the Gnosis, Nautzera. He&#8217;s one of the Few. And if I deny him, I fear he might turn to the Scarlet Spires.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">One of the Few? How long have you known this?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">For some time &#8230;<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">And even <\/span>then <span class=\"none8\">you said nothing! Achamian &#8230; Akka <\/span>&#8230;<span class=\"none8\"> I must know I can trust you with this matter!<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">As I<\/span> <span class=\"none8\">trusted you on the matter of Inrau?<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">A long pause, fraught with guilt and accusation. In the blackness, it seemed to Achamian that he could see the boy looking to his teacher in fear and apprehension.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Unfortunate, to be sure, <\/span>Nautzera said. But <span class=\"none8\">events have borne me out, wouldn&#8217;t you agree?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">I will warn you just this once, <\/span>Achamian grated. <span class=\"none8\">Do you understand?<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">How could he do this? How long must he wage two wars, one for the world, the other against himself?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">But I must know I can trust you!<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">What would you have me say? You haven&#8217;t met the man! Until then, you can never know.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Know what? Know <\/span>what?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">That he&#8217;s the world&#8217;s only hope. Mark me, Nautzera, he&#8217;s <\/span><span class=\"none8\">more than a mere sign, and he&#8217;ll be more than a mere sorcerer<\/span>\u2014<span class=\"none8\">far more!<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Harness your passions! You must see him as a tool\u2014a <\/span>Mandate <span class=\"none8\">tool!\u2014nothing more, nothing less. We must possess him!<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">And if the Gnosis is his price for &#8220;possession,&#8221; what then?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">The Gnosis is <\/span>our <span class=\"none8\">hammer. Ours! Only by submitting\u2014<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">And the Sp<\/span><span class=\"none8\">ires? If Ele\u0434zaras offers him the Anagogis?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Hesitation, both outraged and exasperated.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">This is madness! A prophet who would pit School against School for sorcery&#8217;s sake? A Wizard-Prophet? A <\/span>Shaman?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">This word forced a silence, one filled by the ethereal boiling that framed all such exchanges, as though the weight of the world inveighed against their impossibility. Nautzera was right: the circumstances were quite mad. But would he forgive Achamian the madness of the task before him? With polite words and diplomatic smiles Achamian had to court those who had <span class=\"none8\">tortured <\/span>him. What was more, he was expected to woo and win a <span class=\"none8\">prophet, <\/span>the man who had stolen from him his only love &#8230; Achamian beat at the fury that welled up through his heart. In Caraskand, twin tears broke from his sightless eyes.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Very well, then! <\/span>Nautzera cried, his tone disconcertingly desperate. <span class=\"none8\">The others will have my hide for this &#8230; Give him the Lesser Cants\u2014the denotaries and the like. Deceive him with dross into thinking you&#8217;ve traded our deepest secrets.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">You still don&#8217;t understand, do you, Nautzera? The Warrior-Prophet <\/span>cannot be deceived!<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">All men can be deceived, Achamian. All men.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Did I say he was a &#8220;man&#8221;? You haven&#8217;t yet seen him! There&#8217;s no other like him, Nautzera. I tire of repeating this!<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Nevertheless, you must yoke him. Our war depends upon it. <\/span>Everything <span class=\"none8\">depends upon it!<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">You must believe me, Nautzera. This man is beyond our abilities to possess. He &#8230;<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">An image of Esmenet flashed through his thoughts, unbidden, beguiling.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">He possesses.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none6\">The hills teemed with the herds of their enemy, and the Men of the Tusk rejoiced, for their hunger was like no other. The cows they butchered for the feast, the bulls they burned in offerings to flint-hearted Gilga\u0446l and the other Hundred Gods. They go<\/span>rged themselves to the point of sickness, then gorged again. They drank until unconsciousness overcame them. Many could be found kneeling before the banners of the Circumfix, which the Judges had raised wherever men congregated. They cried out to the image; they cried out in disbelief. When bands of revellers passed one another in the darkness, they shouted, &#8220;We! <span class=\"none8\">We<\/span> are the God&#8217;s fury!&#8221; in the argot of the camp. And they clasped arms, knowing they held their brothers, for together they had held their faces to the furnace. There were no more Orthodox, no more Zaudunyani.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">They were Inrithi once again.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The Conriyans, using inks looted from Kianene scriptoriums, tattooed circles crossed with an <span class=\"none8\">X <\/span>on their inner forearms. The Thunyeri, and the Tydonni after them, took knives drawn from the fire to their shoulders, where they cut representations of three Tusks\u2014one for each great battle\u2014scarring themselves in the manner of the Scylvendi. The Galeoth, the Ainoni\u2014all adorned their bodies with some mark of their transformation. Only the Nansur refrained.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">A band of Agmundrmen discovered the Padirajah&#8217;s standard in the hills, which they immediately brought to Saubon, who rewarded them with three hundred Kianene <span class=\"none8\">akals. <\/span>In an impromptu ceremony at the Fama Palace, Prince Kellhus had the silk cut from the ash pole and laid before his chair. He planted his sandals upon the image, which may have been a lion or a tiger, and declared, &#8220;All their symbols, all the sacred marks of our foemen, you shall deliver to my feet!&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">For two days the Fanim captives toiled across the battlefield, piling their dead kinsmen into great heaps outside Caraskand&#8217;s walls. Innumerable carrion birds\u2014kites and jackdaws, storks and great desert vultures\u2014harassed them, at times darkening the sky like locusts. Despite the bounty, they squabbled like gulls over fish.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The Men of the Tusk continued their revels, though many fell ill and a hundred or so actually died\u2014from eating too much after starving for so long, the physician-priests said. Then, on the fourth day following the Battle of Tertae Fields, they made a great train of the captives, stripping them naked to make manifest their humiliation. Once assembled, the Fanim were encumbered with all the spoils of camp and field: caskets of gold and silver, <span class=\"none6\">Ze\u044cmi silks, arms of Nenciphon steel, unguents and oils from Cingulat. Then they were driven with whips and flails through the Gate of Horns, across the city to the Kalaul, where the greater part of the Holy War greeted them with jeers and exaltation.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">By the score they were brought to the black tree, Umiaki, where the Warrior-Prophet sat upon a simple stool, awaiting their petitions. Those who fell to their knees and cursed Fane were led as dogs to the waiting slavers. Those who did not were cut down where they stood.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">When all was finished and the sun leaned crimson against the dark hills, the Warrior-Prophet walked from his seat and knelt in the blood of his enemies. He bid his people come to him, and upon the forehead of each he sketched the mark of the Tusk in Fanim blood.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Even the most manly wept for wonder.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Esmenet is his <\/span>&#8230;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Like all horrifying thoughts, this one possessed a will all its own. It snaked in and out of his awareness, sometimes constricting, sometimes lying still and cold. Though it seemed old and familiar, it possessed the urgency of things remembered too late. It was at once a screeching call to arms and grievous admission of futility. He had not simply lost her, he had lost her to <span class=\"none8\">him.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">It was as though his soul only had fingers for certain things, certain dimensions. And the fact of her betrayal was simply too great.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Old fool!<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">His arrival at the Fama Palace had thoroughly flummoxed the Zaudunyani functionaries. They treated him with deference\u2014he was their master&#8217;s erstwhile teacher\u2014 but there was, also trepidation in their manner, an <span class=\"none8\">anxious <\/span>trepidation. Had they acted suspicious, Achamian would have attributed their reaction to his sorcerous calling; they were religious men, after all. But they didn&#8217;t seem unnerved by him so much as they seemed troubled by their own thoughts. They knew him, Achamian decided, the way men knew those they derided in private. And now that he stood before them, a man who would figure large in the inevitable scriptures to follow, they found themselves dismayed by their own impiety.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Of course, they knew he was a cuckold. By now the stories of everyone who had broken bread or sawed joint at Xinemus&#8217;s fire would be known in some distorted form or another. There were no intimacies left. And his story in particular\u2014the sorcerer who loved the whore who would become the Prophet-Consort\u2014had doubtless come quick to a thousand lips, multiplying his shame.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">While waiting for the hidden machinery of messengers and secretaries to relay his request, Achamian wandered into an adjoining courtyard, struck by the other immensities that framed his present circumstance. Even if there were no Consult, no threat of the Second Apocalypse, he realized, nothing would be the same. Kellhus would change the world, not in the way of an Ajencis or a Triamis, but in the way of an Inri Sejenus.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">This, Achamian realized, was Year One. A new age of Men.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He stepped from the cool shade of the portico into crisp morning sunlight. For a moment he stood blinking against the gleam of white and rose marble, then his eyes fell to the earthen beds in the courtyard&#8217;s heart, which, he was surprised to note, had been recently turned and replanted with white lilies and spear-like agave\u2014wildflowers looted from beyond the walls. He saw three men\u2014penitents like himself, he imagined\u2014conferring in low tones on the courtyard&#8217;s far side, and he was struck that things had become so sedate\u2014 so <span class=\"none8\">normal<\/span>\u2014so quickly. The week previous, Caraskand had been a place of blight and squalor; now he could almost believe he await<span class=\"none6\">ed an audience in Momemn or A\u0446knyssus.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Even the banners\u2014white bolts of silk draped along the colonnades\u2014spoke of an eerie continuity, a sense that nothing had changed, that the Warrior-Prophet had always been. Achamian stared at the stylized likeness of Kellhus embroidered in black across the fabric, his outstretched arms and legs dividing the circle into four equal segments. The Circumfix.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">A cool breeze filtered through the courtyard, and a fold rolled across the image like a serpent beneath sheets. Someone, Achamian realized, must have started stitching these before the battle had even begun.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Whoever they were, they had forgotten <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span>. He blinked away images of her bound to Kellhus and the ring. It had been so very dark beneath Umiaki, but it seemed he could see her face arched back in rigour and ecstasy &#8230;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">&#8220;He is as you said,&#8221; <\/span>Kellhus had confessed that night. <span class=\"none8\">&#8220;Tsuramah. Mog-Pharau &#8230;&#8221;<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Master Achamian.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Startled, Achamian turned to see an officer decked in green and gold regalia stepping into the sunlight. Like all Men<span class=\"none8\"> <\/span><span class=\"none6\">of the Tusk, he was gaunt, though not nearly as cadaverous as many of those found outside the Fama Palace. The man fell to his knees at Achamian&#8217;s feet, spoke to the ground in a thick Galeoth accent. &#8220;I am Dun He\u0446rsa, Shield-Captain of<\/span> the Hundred Pillars.&#8221; There was little courtesy in his blue eyes when he looked up, and a surfeit of intent. &#8220;He has instructed me to deliver you.&#8221; Achamian swallowed, nodded.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">He&#8230;<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The sorcerer followed the officer into the gloom of scented<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">corridors.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">He. The Warrior-Prophet.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">His skin tingled. Of all the world, of all the innumerable men scattered about all the innumerable lands, he, <span class=\"none6\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span> Kellhus, communed with the God\u2014the <span class=\"none8\">God! <\/span>And how could it be otherwise, when he knew what no other man could know, when he spoke what no other man could speak?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Who could blame Achamian for his incredulity? It was like holding a flute to the wind and hearing song. It seemed beyond belief &#8230;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">A miracle. A prophet in their midst.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Breathe when you speak to him. You must remember to breathe.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The Shield-Captain said nothing as they continued their march. He stared forward, possessed of the same eerie discipline that seemed to characterize everyone in the palace. Ornate rugs had been set at various points along the floor; the man&#8217;s boots fell silent as they crossed each.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Despite his nerves, Achamian appreciated the absence of speech. Never, it seemed to him, had he suffered such a throng of conflicting passions. Hatred, for an impossible rival, for a fraud who had robbed him of his manhood\u2014of his wife. Love, for an old friend, for a student who was at once his teacher, for a voice that had quickened his soul with countless insights. Fear, for the future, for the rapacious madness that was about to descend upon them all. Jubilation, for an enemy momentarily undone.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Bitterness. Hope.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">And awe &#8230; Awe before all.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The eyes of men were but pinholes\u2014no one knew this better than Mandate Schoolmen. All their books, even their scriptures, were nothing more than pinholes. And yet, because they couldn&#8217;t see what was unseen, they assumed they saw everything, they confused pinpricks with the sky.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">But Kellhus was something different. A doorway. A mighty gate.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">He&#8217;s come to save us. This is what I must remember. I must hold on to this!<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The Shield-Captain escorted him past a rank of stone-faced guardsmen, their green surcoats also embroidered with the golden mark of the Hundred Pillars: a row of vertical bars over the long, winding slash of the Tusk. They passed through fretted mahogany doors and Achamian found himself on the portico of a much larger courtyard. The air was thick with the smell of blossoms.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">In the sunlight beyond the colonnade, an orchard soaked bright and motionless. The trees\u2014some kind of exotic apple, Achamian decided\u2014twined black beneath constellations of blooming flowers, each petal like a white swatch dipped in blood. At different points through the orchard, great sentinels of stone\u2014dolmens\u2014towered over the surrounding queues, dark and unwrought, more ancient than Kyraneas, or even Shigek. The remnants of some long-overthrown circle.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none6\">Achamian turned to Captain He\u0446rsa with questioning eyes, only to glimpse movement through braces of leaf and flower.<\/span> He turned\u2014and there she was, strolling beneath the boughs with Kellhus.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Esmenet.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">She was speaking, though Achamian could only hear the memory of her voice. Her eyes were lowered, thoughtfully studying the petalled ground as it passed beneath her small feet. She smiled in a manner at once rueful and heartbreaking, as though she answered teasing proposals with loving admissions.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">It was the first time, Achamian realized, that he&#8217;d seen the two of them together. She seemed otherworldly, self-assured, slender beneath the sheer turquoise lines of her Kianene gown\u2014something fitted, Acha<span class=\"none6\">mian had no doubt, for one of the dead Padirajah&#8217;s concubines. Graceful. Dark of eye and face, her hair flashing like obsidian between the golden ribs of her headdress\u2014a Nilnameshi Empress on the arm of a K\u044bni\u044cric High King. And wearing a Chorae\u2014a <\/span><span class=\"none8\">Trinket!<\/span>\u2014pressed against her throat. A Tear of God, more black than black.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">She was Esmenet and yet she wasn&#8217;t Esmenet. The woman of loose life had fallen away, and what remained was more, so much more, than she&#8217;d been at his side. Resplendent.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Redeemed.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">I dimmed her, <\/span>he realized. <span class=\"none8\">I was smoke and he <\/span>&#8230; <span class=\"none8\">is a mirror.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none6\">At the sight of his Prophet, Captain He\u0446rsa had fallen to his knees, his face pressed to the ground. Achamian found himself doing the same, though more because his legs refused to bear him.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">&#8220;So what will it be the next time 1 die?&#8221; <\/span>he had asked her that night she had broken him. <span class=\"none8\">&#8220;The Andiamine Heights?&#8221;<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">What a fool he&#8217;d been!<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He blinked womanishly, swallowed against the absurd pang that nettled the back of his throat. For a moment the world seemed nothing more than a criminal ledger, with all he&#8217;d surrendered\u2014and he&#8217;d surrendered so much!\u2014balanced against <span class=\"none8\">one <\/span>thing. Why couldn&#8217;t he have this <span class=\"none8\">one <\/span>thing?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Because he would ruin it, the way he ruined everything.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">&#8220;I carry his child.&#8221;<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">For a heartbeat her eyes met his own. She raised a hesitant hand only to lower it, as though recalling new loyalties. She turned to kiss Kellhus&#8217;s cheek, then fled, her eyes seemingly closed, her lips drawn into a heart-frosting line.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">It was the first time he had seen the two of them together.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">&#8220;So what will it be the next time I die?&#8221;<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Kellhus stood before one of the apple trees, watching him with gentle expectation. He wore a white silk cassock patterned with a grey arboreal brocade. As always, the pommel of his curious sword jutted over his left shoulder. Like Esmenet, he bore a Trinket, though he had the courtesy to keep it concealed against his chest.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;You need never kneel in my presence,&#8221; he said, waving for Achamian to join him. &#8220;You are my friend, Akka. You will always be my friend.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">His ears roaring, Achamian stood, glanced at the shadows where Esmenet had disappeared.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">How has it come to this?<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Kellhus had been little more than a beggar the first time Achamian had seen him, a puzzling accessory to the Scylvendi, whom Proyas had hoped to use in his contest with the Emperor. But even then there had been something, it now seemed, a glimpse of this moment in embryo. They had wondered why a Scylvendi\u2014and of Utemot blood, no less\u2014would seek employ in an Inrithi Holy War.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">&#8220;I am the reason,&#8221; <\/span>Kellhus had said.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The revelation of his name, <span class=\"none6\">Anas\u044brimbor<\/span>, had been but the beginning.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian crossed the interval only to feel strangely bullied by Kellhus&#8217;s height. Had he always been this tall? Smiling, Kellhus effortlessly guided him between a gap in the trees. One of the dolmens blackened the sun. The air hummed with the industry of bees. &#8220;How fares Xinemus?&#8221; he said.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian pursed his lips, swallowed. For some reason he found this question disarming to the point of tears.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;I\u2014I worry for him.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;You must bring him, and soon. I miss eating and arguing beneath the stars. I miss a fire nipping at my feet.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">And as easy as that, Achamian found himself tripping into the old rhythm. &#8220;Your legs always were too long.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Kellhus laughed. He seemed to shine about the pit of the Chorae. &#8220;Much like your opinions.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian grinned, but a glimpse of the welts about Kellhus&#8217;s wrists struck the nascent humour from him. For the first time he noticed the bruising about Kellhus&#8217;s face. The cuts.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">They tortured him &#8230; murdered <\/span><span class=\"none8\">Serw\u043b<\/span><span class=\"none8\">.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Yes,&#8221; Kellhus said, ruefully holding out his hands. He looked almost embarrassed. &#8220;Would that everything healed so quickly.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Somehow these words found Achamian&#8217;s fury.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;You could see the Consult all along\u2014all along!\u2014and yet you said nothing to me &#8230; Why?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Why Esmenet?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Kellhus raised his brows, sighed. &#8220;The time wasn&#8217;t right. But you already know this.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Do I?&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Kellhus smiled while pursing his lips, as though at once pained and bemused. &#8220;Now, you and your School must parlay, where before you would have simply seized me. I concealed the skin-spies from you for the same reason you concealed me from your Mandate masters.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">But you already know this, <\/span>his eyes repeated.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian could think of no reply.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;You&#8217;ve told them,&#8221; Kellhus continued, turning to resume their stroll between the blooming queues.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;I&#8217;ve told them.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;And do they accept your interpretation?&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;What interpretation?&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;That I&#8217;m more than the sign of the Second Apocalypse.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">More. A tremor passed through him, body and soul.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;They think it unlikely.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;I should imagine you find it difficult to describe me &#8230; to make them understand.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian stared for a helpless moment, then looked to his feet.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;So,&#8221; Kellhus continued, &#8220;what are your interim instructions?&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;To pretend to give you the Gnosis. I told them you would go to the Spires otherwise. And to ensure that nothing&#8221;\u2014. Achamian paused, licked his lips\u2014&#8221;that nothing happens to you.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Kellhus both grinned and scowled\u2014so like Xinemus before his blinding.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;So you&#8217;re to be my bodyguard?&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;They have good reason to worry\u2014as do you. Think of the catastrophe you&#8217;ve wrought. For centuries the Consult has hidden in the fat of the Three Seas, while we were little more than a laughingstock. They could act with impunity. But now that fat has been cooked away. They&#8217;ll do anything to recover what they&#8217;ve lost. <span class=\"none8\">Anything.&#8221;<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;There have been other assassins.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;But that was before &#8230; The stakes are far higher now. Perhaps these skin-spies act on their own. Perhaps they&#8217;re &#8230; directed.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Kellhus studied him for a moment. &#8220;You fear one of the Consult might be directly involved &#8230; that an Old Name shadows the Holy War.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He nodded. &#8220;Yes.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Kellhus did not immediately reply, at least not with words. Instead, everything about him\u2014his stance, his expression, even the fixity of his gaze\u2014grew sharp with monumental intent. &#8220;The Gnosis,&#8221; he finally said. &#8220;Will you give it to me, Akka?&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">He knows. He knows the power he would wield. <\/span>Somewhere, beneath some footing of his soul, the ground seemed to fall away.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;If you demand it &#8230; though I &#8230;&#8221; He looked to Kellhus, somehow understanding that the man already knew what he was about to say. Every path, it seemed, every implication, had already been travelled by those shining blue eyes. <span class=\"none8\">Nothing surprises him.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Yes,&#8221; Kellhus said with a peculiar moroseness. &#8220;Once I accept the Gnosis, I yield the protection afforded by the Chorae.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Exactly.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">In the beginning Kellhus would possess only the vulnerabilities of a sorcerer, none of the strengths. The Gnosis, far more than the Anagogis, was an analytic and systematic sorcery. Even the most primitive Cants required extensive precursors, components that damned nonetheless for being inert.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Which is why you must protect me,&#8221; Kellhus concluded. &#8220;Henceforth you will be my Vizier. You will reside here, in the Fama Palace, at my disposal.&#8221; Words spoken with the authority of a Shrial Edict, but infused with such force of certainty, such inevitability, that it seemed they <span class=\"none8\">described <\/span>more than they demanded, that Achamian&#8217;s compliance was some ancient and conspicuous fact.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Kellhus did not wait for his reply\u2014none was needed.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;<span class=\"none8\">Can<\/span> you protect me, Akka?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian blinked, still trying to digest what had just happened. <span class=\"none8\">&#8220;You will reside here &#8230;&#8221;<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">With her.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;F-from an Old Name?&#8221; he sputtered. &#8220;I&#8217;m not sure.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Where had this treacherous joy come from? <span class=\"none8\">You will show her! Win her!<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;No,&#8221; Kellhus said evenly. &#8220;From yourself.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian stared, glimpsed Nautzera screaming beneath Mekeritrig&#8217;s incandescent touch. &#8220;If I cannot,&#8221; he said with a voice that seemed a gasp, &#8220;Seswatha can.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Kellhus nodded. Motioning for Achamian to follow, he abruptly turned, pressing through interlocking branches, crossing rows. Achamian hastened after him, waving at the bees and fluttering petals. Three rows over, Kellhus paused before an opening between two trees.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian could only gape in horror.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The apple tree before Kellhus had been stripped of its blossoming weave, leaving only a black knotted trunk with three boughs bent about like a dancer&#8217;s waving arms. A skin-spy had been pulled naked across them, bound tight in rust-brown chains. Its pose\u2014one arm trussed back and the other forward\u2014reminded Achamian of a javelin thrower. Its head hung from drawn shoulders. The long, feminine digits of its face lay slack against its chest. Sunlight showered down upon it, casting inscrutable shadows.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;The tree was dead,&#8221; Kellhus said, as though in explanation.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;What &#8230;&#8221; Achamian began in a thin voice, but halted when the creature stirred, raised the shambles of its visage. The digits slowly clawed the air, like a suffocating crab. Lidless eyes glared in perpetual terror.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;What have you learned?&#8221; Achamian finally managed.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The abomination masticated behind lipless teeth. <span class=\"none8\">&#8220;Ahh,&#8221; <\/span>it said in a long, gasping breath. <span class=\"none8\">&#8220;Chigraaaa &#8230;&#8221;<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;That they are directed,&#8221; Kellhus said softly.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">&#8220;Woe comes, Chigraa. You have found us too late.&#8221;<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;By whom?&#8221; Achamian exclaimed, staring, clutching his hands before him. &#8220;Do you know by whom?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The Warrior-Prophet shook his head. &#8220;They&#8217;re conditioned\u2014powerfully so. Months of interrogation would be required. Perhaps more.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian nodded. Given time, he realized, Kellhus <span class=\"none8\">could <\/span>empty this creature, own it as he seemed to own everything else. He was more than thorough, more than meticulous. Even the swiftness of this discovery\u2014wrested, no less, from a creature that had been forged to deceive\u2014demonstrated his &#8230; inevitability.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">He makes no mistakes.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">For a giddy instant a kind of gloating fury descended upon Achamian. All those years\u2014centuries!\u2014the Consult had played them for fools. But now\u2014<span class=\"none8\">now! <\/span>Did they know? Could they sense the peril this man represented? Or would they underestimate him like everyone else had?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Like Esmenet.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian swallowed. &#8220;Either way, Kellhus, you must surround yourself with Chorae bowmen. And you need to avoid large structures, anyplace where\u2014&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;It troubles you,&#8221; Kellhus interrupted, &#8220;to see these things.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">A breeze had descended upon the grove, and countless petals spun through the air as though along unseen strings. Achamian watched one settle upon the skin-spy&#8217;s pubis.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Why bind the abomination here, amid such beauty and repose\u2014like a cancer on a young girl&#8217;s skin? Why? It seemed the act of someone who knew nothing of beauty &#8230; nothing.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He matched Kellhus&#8217;s gaze. &#8220;It troubles me.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;And your hatred?&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">For an instant it had seemed that everything\u2014who he was and who he would become\u2014wanted to love this godlike man. And how could he not, given the sanctuary of his mere presence? And yet intimations of Esmenet clung to him. Glimpses of her passion &#8230;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;It remains,&#8221; he said.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none6\">As though provoked by this response, the creature began jerking, straining against its fetters. Slick muscle balled beneath sunburned skin. Chains rattled. Black boughs creaked. Achamian stepped back, remembering the horror of Skea\u0446s b<\/span>eneath the Andiamine Heights. The night Conphas had saved him.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Kellhus ignored the thing, continued speaking. &#8220;All men surrender, Akka, even as they seek to dominate. It&#8217;s their nature to submit. The question is never <span class=\"none8\">whether <\/span>they will surrender, but rather <span class=\"none8\">to whom <\/span>&#8230;&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">&#8220;Your heart, Chigraa &#8230; I shall make it my apple &#8230;&#8221;<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;I\u2014I don&#8217;t understand.&#8221; Achamian glanced from the abomination to Kellhus&#8217;s sky-blue eyes.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Some, like so many Men of the Tusk, submit\u2014<span class=\"none8\">truly <\/span>submit\u2014only to the God. It preserves their pride, kneeling before what is never heard, never seen. They can abase themselves without fear of degradation.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">&#8220;I shall eat &#8230;&#8221;<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian held an uncertain hand against the sun to better see the Warrior-Prophet&#8217;s face.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;One,&#8221; Kellhus was saying, &#8220;can only be tested, never degraded, by the God.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;You said &#8216;some,'&#8221; Achamian managed. &#8220;What of the others?&#8221; In his periphery he saw the thing&#8217;s face knuckle as though into interlocking fists.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;They&#8217;re like you, Akka. They surrender not to the God but to those like themselves. A man. A woman. There&#8217;s no pride to be preserved when one submits to another. Transgress, and there&#8217;s no formula. And the fear of degradation is always present, even if not quite believed. Lovers injure each other, humiliate and debase, but they never <span class=\"none8\">test, <\/span>Akka\u2014not if they truly love.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The thing was thrashing now, like something brandished in an invisible fist. Suddenly the bees seemed to buzz on the wrong side of his skull.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Why are you telling me this?&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Because part of you clings to the hope that she tests you &#8230;&#8221; For a mad moment it seemed Inrau watched him, or Proyas as a boy, his eyes wide and imploring. &#8220;She does not.&#8217;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian blinked in astonishment. &#8220;What are you saying, then? That she degrades me? That <span class=\"none8\">you <\/span>degrade me?&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">A series of mewling grunts, as though beasts coupled. Iron rattled and screeched.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;I&#8217;m saying that she loves you still. As for me, I merely took what was given.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Then give it back!&#8221; Achamian barked with savagery. He shook. His breath cramped in his throat.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;You&#8217;re forgetting, Akka. Love <span class=\"none8\">is like sleep. <\/span>One can never seize, never force love.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The words were his own, spoken that first night about the fire with Kellhus and <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span> beneath Momemn. In a rush, Achamian recalled the sprained wonder of that night, the sense of having discovered something at once horrific and ineluctable. And.those eyes, like lucid jewels set in the mud of the world, watching from across the flames\u2014the same eyes that watched him this very moment &#8230; though a different fire now burned between them.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The abomination howled.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;There was a time,&#8221; Kellhus continued, &#8220;when you were lost.&#8221; His voice seethed with what seemed an inaudible thunder. &#8220;There was a time when you thought to yourself, &#8216;There&#8217;s no meaning, only love. There&#8217;s no world &#8230;'&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">And Achamian heard himself whisper, &#8220;Only her.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Esmenet. The Whore of Sumna.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Even now, murder stared from his sockets. He couldn&#8217;t blink without seeing them together, without glimpsing her eyes wide with bliss, her mouth open, his chest arching back, shining with her sweat &#8230; He need only speak, Achamian knew, and it would be all over. He need only sing, and the whole world would burn.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Not I, not even Esmenet, can undo what you suffer, Akka. Your degradation is your own.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Those <span class=\"none8\">grasping <\/span>eyes! Something within Achamian shrank from them, beseeched him to throw up his arms. He <span class=\"none8\">must not see!<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;What are you saying?&#8221; Achamian cried.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Kellhus had become a shadow beneath a tear-splintered sun. At long last he turned to the obscenity writhing across the tree, its face clutching at sun and sky.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;This, Akka &#8230;&#8221; There was a blankness to his words, as though he offered them up as parchment, to be rewritten as Achamian wished. &#8220;This is your test.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">&#8220;We shall cut you from your meat!&#8221; <\/span>the obscenity howled. &#8220;From <span class=\"none8\">your meat!&#8221;<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;You, Drusas Achamian, are a Mandate Schoolman.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">After Kellhus left him, Achamian stumbled to one of the massive dolmens, leaned against it, and vomited into the grasses about its base. Then he fled through the blooming trees, past the guards on the portico. He found some kind of pillared vestibule, a vacant niche. Without thinking, he crawled into the shadowy gap between wall and column. He hugged his knees, his shoulders, but he could find no sense of shelter.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Nothing was concealed. Nothing was hidden. <span class=\"none8\">They believed me dead! How could they know?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">But he&#8217;s a prophet &#8230; Isn&#8217;t he?<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">How could he <\/span>not <span class=\"none8\">know? How<\/span>\u2014<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian laughed, stared with idiot eyes at the dim geometries painted across the ceiling. He ran a palm over his forehead, fingers through his hair. The skin-spy continued to thrash and bark in his periphery.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Year One,&#8221; he whispered.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none10\">Chapter Two<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none11\">Caraskand<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">I tell you, guilt dwells nowhere but in the eyes of the<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\"> accuser. This men know even as they deny it, which is<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\"> why they so often make murder their absolution. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">The truth of crime lies not with the victim but with <\/span>the <span class=\"none8\">witness.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s1\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">\u2014HATATIAN, EXHORTATIONS<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none7\">Early Spring, 4112 Year-of-the-Tusk, Caraskand<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Servants and functionaries screamed and scattered as <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> barged past them with his hostage. Alarums had been raised throughout the palace\u2014he could hear them shouting\u2014but none of the fools knew what to do. He had saved their precious Prophet. Did that not make him divine as well? He would have laughed had not his sneer been a thing of iron. If only they knew!<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He halted at a juncture in the marmoreal halls, jerked the girl about by the throat. &#8220;Which way?&#8221; he snarled.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">She sobbed and gasped, looked wfth wide, panicked eyes down the hallway to their right. He had seized a Kianene slave, knowing she would care more for her skin than her soul. The poison had struck too deep with the Zaudunyani.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span> poison.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Door!&#8221; she cried, gagging. &#8220;There\u2014there!&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Her neck felt good in his hand, like that of a cat or a feeble dog. It reminded him of the days of pilgrimage in his other life, when he had strangled those he raped. Even still, he had no need of her, so he released his grip, watched her stumble backward then topple, skirts askew, across the black floor.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Shouts rang out from the galleries behind them.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He sprinted to the door she&#8217;d indicated, kicked it open.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The crib stood in the nursery&#8217;s centre, carved of wood like black rock, standing as high as his waist, and draped with gauze sheets that hung from a single hook set in the frescoed ceiling. The walls were ochre, the lamplight dim, The room smelled of sandalwood\u2014there was no hint of soil.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">All the world seemed to hush as he circled the ornate cradle. He left no track across the cityscapes woven into the carpet beneath his feet. The lamplights fluttered, but nothing more. With the crib between himself and the entrance, he approached, parted the gauze with his right hand.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span>.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">White-skinned. Still young enough to clutch his toes. Eyes at once vacant and lucid, in the way only an infant&#8217;s could be. The penetrating white-blue of the Steppe.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">My<\/span> <span class=\"none8\">son.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> reached out two fingers, saw the scars banding the length of his forearm. The babe waved his hands, and as though by accident caught <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span>&#8216;s fingertip, his grip firm like that of a father or friend in miniature. Without warning, his face flushed, became wizened with anguished wrinkles. He sputtered, began wailing.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Why, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> wondered, would the <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span> keep this child? What did he see when he looked upon it? What <span class=\"none8\">use <\/span>was there in a child?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">There was no interval between the world and an infant soul. No deception. No language. An infant&#8217;s wail simply <span class=\"none8\">was <\/span>its hunger. And it occurred to <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> that if he abandoned this child, it would become an Inrithi, but if he took it, stole away, and rode hard for the Steppe, it would become a Scilvendi- And his hair prickled across his scalp, for there was<span class=\"none8\"> <\/span>magic in that\u2014even doom.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">This wail would not always be one with the child&#8217;s hunger. The interval would lengthen, and the tracks between its soul and its expression would multiply, become more and more unfathomable. This singular need would be unbraided into a thousand strands of lust and hope, bound into a thousand knots of fear and shame. And it would wince beneath the upraised hand of the father, sigh at the soft touch of the mother. It would become what circumstance demanded. Inrithi or Scylvendi &#8230;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">It did not matter.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">And suddenly, improbably, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> understood what it was the <span class=\"none6\">D\u044bnyain<\/span> saw: a <span class=\"none8\">world <\/span>of infant men, their wails beaten into words, into tongues, into nations. Kellhus could see the measure of the interval, he could follow the thousand tracks. And <span class=\"none8\">that <\/span>was his magic, his sorcery: he could close the interval, answer the wail&#8230; Make souls one with their expression.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">As his father had before him. <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span>.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Stupefied, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> gazed at the kicking figure, felt the tug of its tiny hand about his finger. And he realized that though the child had sprung from his loins, it was more <span class=\"none8\">his <\/span>father than otherwise. It was his origin, and he, <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> urs Skiotha, was nothing but one of its possibilities, a wail transformed into a chorus of tortured screams.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He remembered a villa deep in the Nansurium, burning with a brightness that had turned the surrounding night into black. Wheeling to the laughing calls of his cousins, he had caught a babe on sword point &#8230;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">He yanked his finger free. In fits and starts, <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span> fell silent.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">\u201cYou are not of the land,&#8221; <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> grated, drawing high a scarred fist.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Scylvendi!&#8221; a voice cried out. He turned, saw the sor cerer&#8217;s whore standing on the threshold of an adjoining chamber. For a heartbeat they simply stared at each other, equally dumbfounded.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;You <span class=\"none8\">will not!&#8221; <\/span>she suddenly cried, her voice shrill with fury. She advanced into the nursery, and <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> found himself stepping back from the crib. He did not breathe, but then it seemed he no longer needed to.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;He&#8217;s all that remains <span class=\"none8\">of <\/span><span class=\"none8\">Serw\u043b<\/span><span class=\"none8\">,&#8221; <\/span>she said, her voice more wary, more conciliatory. &#8220;All that&#8217;s left &#8230; Proof that she <span class=\"none8\">was. <\/span>Would you take that from her as well?&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Her proof.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> stared at Esmenet in horror, then glanced at the child, pink and writhing in blue silk sheets.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;But its <span class=\"none8\">name!&#8221; <\/span>he heard someone cry. Surely the voice was too womanish, too weak, to be his.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">Something&#8217;s wrong with me &#8230; Something&#8217;s wrong &#8230;<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Her brows furrowed and she seemed about to speak, but at that instant the first of the guardsmen, garbed in the green-and-gold surcoat of the Hundred Pillars, burst through the shambles of the door <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> had kicked in.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Sheathe your weapons!&#8221; she cried as they tumbled into the chamber. They turned to her, stunned. &#8220;<span class=\"none8\">Sheathe!<\/span>&#8221; she repeated. Their swords were lowered and stowed, though their hands remained ready upon the pommels. One of the guardsmen, an officer, began to protest, but Esmenet silenced him with a furious look. &#8220;The Scylvendi came only to kneel,&#8221; she said, turning her painted face to <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span>, &#8220;to honour the first-born son of the Warrior-Prophet.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">And <span class=\"none6\">Cnai\u044cr<\/span> found that he was on his knees before the crib, his eyes blank, dry, and so very wide.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">It seemed he had never stood.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Xinemus sat at Achamian&#8217;s battered desk, squarely facing a wall whose fresco had largely sloughed away; aside from a speared leopard, random eyes and limbs were all that remained. &#8220;What are you doing?&#8221; he asked.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian wilfully ignored the warning in his tone. He spoke to his humble belongings, which he had spread across his bed. &#8220;I already told you, Zin &#8230; I&#8217;m gathering my things, going to the Fama Palace.&#8221; Esmenet had always teased him about the way he packed, for taking inventories of what he could count on his fingers. <span class=\"none8\">&#8220;Better hike your tunic,&#8221; <\/span>she would always say. &#8220;The <span class=\"none8\">little things are the easiest to forget.&#8221;<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">A bitch in heat &#8230; What else could she be?<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;But Proyas has forgiven you.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">This time he noticed the Marshal&#8217;s tone, but it caught his ire more than his concern. All the man did was drink anymore. &#8220;I haven&#8217;t forgiven Proyas.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;And me?&#8221; Xinemus finally said. &#8220;What of me?&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian&#8217;s scalp prickled. There was always something about the way drunks said <span class=\"none8\">me. <\/span>He turned to the man, trying to remind himself that this was his friend &#8230; his only friend.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;What of you?&#8221; he asked. &#8220;Proyas still has need of your counsel, your wisdom. <span class=\"none8\">You <\/span>have a place here. I don&#8217;t.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;That isn&#8217;t what I meant, Akka.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;But why would I &#8230;&#8221; Achamian trailed, suddenly realizing what his friend had in fact meant. He was accusing Achamian of abandoning him. Even still, after everything that had happened, the man dared blame. Achamian turned back to his pathetic estate.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">As though his life weren&#8217;t madness enough.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Why don&#8217;t you come with me?&#8221; he ventured, only to be shocked by the insincerity of his tone. &#8220;We can &#8230; we can <span class=\"none8\">talk<\/span> &#8230; talk with Kellhus.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;What need would Kellhus have of me?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">&#8220;You <\/span>need, Zin. You need to talk with him. You need\u2014&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Somehow, Xinemus had vacated the desk without making a sound. Now he loomed over Achamian, wild-haired, ghastly for more than the absence of his eyes.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">&#8220;You talk to him!&#8221; <\/span>the Marshal roared, seizing and shaking him. Achamian clawed at his arms, but they were as wood. &#8220;I begged you! Remember? I <span class=\"none8\">begged, and you watched while they gouged out my fucking eyes! <\/span>My fucking eyes, Akka! My fucking eyes are <span class=\"none8\">gone!&#8221;<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian found himself on the hard floor, scrambling backward, his face covered in warm spittle.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The great-limbed man sagged to his knees. &#8220;I <span class=\"none8\">can&#8217;t seeeee!&#8221; <\/span>he at once whispered and wailed. <span class=\"none8\">&#8220;I-haven&#8217;t-the-courage-I-haven&#8217;t-the-courage &#8230;&#8221; <\/span>He shook silently for several more moments, then became very still. When he next spoke, his voice was thick, but eerily disconnected from what had racked him only moments before. It was the voice of the old Xinemus, and it terrified Achamian.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;You need to talk to him for me, Akka. To Kellhus &#8230;&#8221;<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Achamian lacked the will either to move or to hope. He felt bound to the floor by his own entrails.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;What do you want me to say?&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The first flutter of the eyes against the morning light. The first tasted breath. The drowsy ache of cheek against pillow. These, and these alone, connected Esmenet to the woman\u2014 the whore\u2014she had once been.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Sometimes she would forget. Sometimes she would awaken to the old sensations: the anxiousness floating through her limbs, the reek of her bedding, the ache of her sex\u2014once she had even heard the tink-tink-tinking of the copper-smithies from the adjoining street. Then she would bolt erect, and muslin sheets would whisk from her skin. She would blink, peer across the dim chamber at the heroic narratives warring across her walls, and she would focus on her body-slaves\u2014three adolescent Kianene girls\u2014prostrate on the floor, their foreheads pressed down in morning Submission.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Today was no different. Squinting in disorientation, Esmenet arose to the fussing of their hands. They chattered in their curiously soothing tongue, venturing to explain what they said in broken Sheyic only when their tone prompted Esmenet to fix one of them\u2014usually Fanashila\u2014with a curious look. They brushed out her hair with combs of bone, rubbed life back into her legs and arms with quick little palms, then waited patiently as she urinated behind her privacy screen. Afterward, they attended to her bath in the adjacent chamber, scrubbing her with soaps, oiling and scraping her skin.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">As always, Esmenet endured their ministrations with quiet wonder. She was generous with her praise, delighted them with her own expressions of delight. They heard the gossip, Esmenet knew, in the slaves&#8217; mess. They understood that captivity possessed its own hierarchy of rank and privilege. As slaves to a queen, they had become queens\u2014of a sort\u2014 to their fellow slaves. Perhaps they were as astounded as she was.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">She emerged from the baths light-headed, slack-limbed, and suffused with that sense of murky well-being only hot water could instill. They dressed first her then her hair, and Esmenet laughed at their banter. Yel and Burulan teased Fanashila\u2014 who possessed that outspoken earnestness that condemned so many to be the butt of endless jokes\u2014with lighthearted mercilessness. About some boy, Esmenet imagined.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">When they were finished, Fanashila left for the nursery, while Yel and Burulan, still tittering, ushered Esmenet to her night table, and to an array of cosmetics that, she realized with some dismay, would have made her weep back in Sumna. Even as she marvelled at the brushes, paints, and powders, she worried over this new-found jealousy for things. <span class=\"none8\">I deserve this<\/span>, she thought, only to curse herself for blinking tears.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Yel and Burulan fell silent.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none8\">It&#8217;s just more &#8230; more that will be taken away.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">It was with awe that Esmenet greeted her own image in the mirror, an awe she saw reflected in the admiring eyes of her body-slaves. She was beautiful\u2014as beautiful as <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span>, only dark. Staring at the exotic stranger before her, she could almost believe she was worth what so many had made of her. She could almost believe that all this was real.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Her love of Kellhus clutched at her like the recollection of an onerous trespass. Yel stroked her cheek; she was always the most matronly of the three, the quickest to sense her afflictions. &#8220;Beautiful,&#8221; she cooed, staring at her with unwavering eyes. &#8220;Like goddess &#8230;&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Esmenet squeezed her hand, then reached down to her own still-flat belly. <span class=\"none8\">It is real.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Shortly before they finished, Fanashila returned with <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span> and Opsara, his surly wet nurse. Then a small train of kitchen slaves entered with her breakfast, which she took in the sunlit portico while asking Opsara questions about <span class=\"none6\">Serw\u043b<\/span>&#8216;s son. Unlike her body-slaves, Opsara continually <span class=\"none8\">counted <\/span>everything she rendered to her new masters: every step taken, every question answered, every surface scrubbed. Sometimes she fairly seethed with impertinence, but somehow she always managed to fall just short of outright insubordination. Esmenet would have replaced her long ago had she not been so obviously and so fiercely devoted to <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span>, whom she treated as a fellow captive, an innocent to be shielded from their captors. Sometimes, as he suckled, she would sing songs of unearthly beauty.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Opsara made no secret of her contempt for Yel, Burulan, and Fanashila, who for their part seemed to regard her with general terror, though Fanashila dared sniff at her remarks now and again.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">After eating, Esmenet took <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span> and retreated back to her canopied bed. For a time she simply sat, holding him on her knees, staring into his dumbstruck eyes. She smiled as tiny hands clutched tiny toes.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;I love you, <span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span>,&#8221; she cooed. &#8220;Yes I do-I-do-I-do-I<span class=\"none8\">-dooo.&#8221;<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Yet again, it all seemed a dream.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;You&#8217;ll never be hungry again, my sweet. I promise &#8230; I-do-I-do-I-<span class=\"none8\">dooo<\/span>!&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\"><span class=\"none6\">Mo\u043bnghus<\/span> squealed with joy beneath her tickling fingers. She laughed aloud, smirked at Opsara&#8217;s stern glare, then winked at the beaming faces of her body-slaves. &#8220;Soon you&#8217;ll have a little brother. Did you know that? Or perhaps a sister &#8230; And I&#8217;ll call her <span class=\"none8\">Serw\u043b<\/span><span class=\"none8\">, <\/span>just like your mother. <span class=\"none8\">I-will-I-will-I-will!<\/span>&#8220;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Finally she stood and, returning the babe to Opsara, announced her imminent departure. They fell to their knees, performed their mid-morning Submission\u2014the girls as though it were a beloved game, Opsara as though dragged down by gravel in her limbs.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">As Esmenet watched them, her thoughts turned to Achamian for the first time since the garden.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">By coincidence she met Werjau, scrolls and tablets bundled in his arms, in the corridors leading to her official chambers. He organized his materials while she mounted the low dais. Her scribal secretaries had already taken their places at her feet, kneeling before the knee-high writing lecterns the Kianene favoured. Holding the Reports in the crook of his left arm, Werjau stood between them some paces distant, in the heart of the tree that decorated the room&#8217;s crimson carpet. Golden branches curled and forked about his black slippers.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Two men, Tydonni, were apprehended last night painting Orthodox slogans on the walls of the Indurum Barracks.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">Werjau looked to her expectantly. The secretaries scribbled for a furious moment, then their quills fell still.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;What&#8217;s their station?&#8221; she asked.<\/p>\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Caste-menial.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">As always, such incidents filled her with a reluctant terror\u2014not at what might happen, but at what she might conclude. Why did this residue of defiance persist?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;So they could not read.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">&#8220;Apparently they simply painted figures written for them on scraps of parchment. It seems they were paid, though they know not by whom.&#8221;<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"s\">\n<p class=\"calibre2\">The Nansur, no doubt. More petty vengeance wreaked by Ikurei Conphas.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<hr style='margin: 30px 0; border-top: 1px solid #eee;'>\n<p style='text-align:center;'>Read the full book by downloading it below.<\/p>\n<p><a href='https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/download-is-starting\/?url=https%3A\/\/mega.co.nz\/%23%21N5YWXLbR%21MA8utMmOgQe8uwUuBUYhO9f7ucWXlNoazRTUoN4uacc' class='download-btn' target='_blank'>DOWNLOAD EPUB<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Book Preview \u00a0 Scanned and proofed (version 1.0) by Nizhny \u00a0 R. Scott Bakker The Thousandfold Thought \u00a0 To Keith and Tina ACKNOWLEDGMENTS To think I started this journey almost twenty years ago &#8230; Like anything else, life has a life of its own. If anyone had told me years back that the summer of &#8230; <a title=\"The Prince of Nothing 03 &#8211; Bakker, Scott\" class=\"read-more\" href=\"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/the-prince-of-nothing-03-bakker-scott\/\" aria-label=\"Read more about The Prince of Nothing 03 &#8211; Bakker, Scott\">Read more<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":1032,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[40],"class_list":["post-1033","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-uncategorized","tag-scott-bakker"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1033","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1033"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1033\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/1032"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1033"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1033"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/epub-book.com\/download\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1033"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}