the insect's back – or, alternatively, rub it the wrong way. 'Already? Well, how far under the river are you right now?'
'More than halfway.'
'And that is how many?'
'Vaults? Sixteen. Each one three man-heights by two.'
'All filled?'
'All.'
'Oh. So presumably it's starting to hurt.'
'Bugg's Construction will be the first major enterprise to collapse.'
'And how many will it drag down with it?'
'No telling. Three, maybe four.'
'I thought you said there was no telling.'
'So don't tell anyone.'
'Good idea. Bugg, I need you to build me a box, to very specific specifications which I'll come up with later.'
'A box, Master. Wood good enough?'
'What kind of sentence is that? Would good enough.'
'No, wood, you know, the burning kind.'
'Yes, would that wood will do.'
'Size?'
'Absolutely. But no lid.'
'Finally, you're getting specific.'
'I told you I would.'
'What's this box for, Master?'
'I can't tell you, alas. Not specifically. But I need it soon.'
'About the vaults . . .'
'Make ten more, Bugg. Double the size. As for Bugg's Construction, hold on for a while longer, amass debt, evade the creditors, keep purchasing materials and stockpiling them in storage buildings charging exorbitant rent. Oh, and embezzle all you can.'
'I'll lose my head.'
'Don't worry. Ezgara here has one to spare.'
'Why, thank you.'
'Doesn't even squeak, either.'
'That's a relief. What are you doing now, Master?'
'What's it look like?'
'You're going back to bed.'
'And you need to build a box, Bugg, a most clever box. Remember, though, no lid.'
'Can I at least ask what it's for?'
Tehol settled back on his bed, studied the blue sky overhead for a moment, then smiled over at his manservant – who just happened to be an Elder God. 'Why, comeuppance, Bugg, what else?'
CHAPTER TWO
The waking moment awaits us all upon a threshold or where the road turns if life is pulled, sparks like moths inward to this single sliver of time gleaming like sunlight on water, we will accrete into a mass made small, veined with fears and shot through with all that's suddenly precious, and the now is swallowed, the weight of self a crushing immediacy, on this day, where the road turns, comes the waking moment.
Winter Reflections
Corara of Drene
The ascent to the summit began where the Letheriibuilt road ended. With the river voicing its ceaseless roar fifteen paces to their left, the roughly shaped pavestones vanished beneath a black-stoned slide at the base of a moraine. Uprooted trees reached bent and twisted arms up through the rubble, jutting limbs from which hung root tendrils, dripping water. Swaths of forest climbed the mountainside to the north, on the other side of the river, and the ragged cliffs edging the tumbling water on that side were verdant with moss. The opposite mountain, flanking the trail, was a stark contrast, latticed with fissures, broken, gouged and mostly treeless. In the midst of this shattered façade shadows marked out odd regularities, of line and angle; and upon the trail itself, here and there, broad worn steps had been carved, eroded by flowing water and centuries of footfalls.
Seren Pedac believed that a city had once occupied the entire mountainside, a vertical fortress carved into living stone. She could make out what she thought were large gaping windows, and possibly the fragmented ledges of balconies high up, hazy in the mists. Yet something – something huge, terrible in its monstrosity – had impacted the entire side of the mountain, obliterating most of the city in a single blow. She could almost discern the outline of that collision, yet among the screes of rubble tracking down the sundered slopes the only visible stone belonged to the mountain itself.
They stood at the base of the trail. Seren watched the lifeless eyes of the Tiste Andii slowly scan upward.
'Well?' she asked.
Silchas Ruin shook his head. 'Not from my people. K'Chain Che'Malle.'
'A victim of your war?'
He glanced across at her, as if gauging the emotion behind her question, then said, 'Most of the mountains from which the K'Chain Che'Malle carved their sky keeps are now beneath the waves, inundated following the collapse of Omtose Phellack. The cities are cut into the stone, although only in the very earliest versions are they as you see here – open to the air rather than buried within shapeless rock.'
'An elaboration suggesting a sudden need for self-defence.'
He nodded.
Fear Sengar had moved past them and was beginning the ascent. After a moment Udinaas and Kettle followed. Seren had prevailed in her insistence to leave the horses behind. In a clearing off to their right sat four wagons covered with tarps. It was clear that no