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Silanah heard their songs and prayers.

And she watched.

Sometimes mortals did indeed forget. Sometimes, mortals needed. . reminding.

CHAPTER THREE

And he knew to stand there

Would be a task unforgiving

Relentless as sacrifices made

And blood vows given

He knew enough to wait alone

Before the charge of fury’s heat

The chants of vengeance

Where swords will meet

And where once were mortals

Still remain dreams of home

If but one gilded door

Could be pried open

Did he waste breath in bargain

Or turn aside on the moment

Did he smile in pleasure

Seeking chastisement?

(See him still, he stands there

While you remain, unforgiving

The poet damns you

The artist cries out

The one who weeps

Turns his face away

Your mind is crowded

By the inconsequential

Listing the details

Of the minuscule

And every measure

Of what means nothing

To anyone

He takes from you every rage

Every crime. .

Whether you like it

Or you do not. .

Sacrifices made

Vows given

He stands alone

Because none of you dare

Stand with him)

Fisher’s challenge to his listeners, breaking the telling of The Mane of Chaos


On this morning, so fair and fresh with the warm breeze coming down off the lake, there were arrivals. Was a city a living thing? Did it possess eyes? Could its senses be lit awake by the touch of footsteps? Did Darujhistan, on that fine morning, look in turn upon those who set their gazes upon it? Arrivals, grand and modest, footsteps less than a whisper, whilst others trembled to the very bones of the Sleeping Goddess. Were such things the beat of the city’s heart?

But no, cities did not possess eyes, or any other senses. Cut stone and hardened plaster, wood beams and corniced facades, walled gardens and quiescent pools beneath trickling fountains, all was insensate to the weathering traffic of its denizens. A city could know no hunger, could not rise from sleep, nor even twist uneasy in its grave.

Leave such things, then, to a short rotund man, seated at a table at the back of the Phoenix Inn, in the midst of an expansive breakfast, to pause with a mouth crammed full of pastry and spiced apple, to suddenly choke. Eyes bulging, face flushing scarlet, then launching a spray of pie across the table, into the face of a regretfully hungover Meese, who, now wearing the very pie she had baked the day before, simply lifted her bleary gaze and settled a basilisk regard upon the hack shy;ing, wheezing man opposite her.

If words were necessary, then, she would have used them.

The man coughed on, tears streaming from his eyes.

Sulty arrived with a cloth and began wiping, gently, the mess from a motionless, almost statuesque Meese.


On the narrow, sloped street to the right of the entrance to Quip’s Bar, the detritus of last night’s revelry skirled into the air on a rush of wild wind. Where a moment before there had been no traffic of any sort on the cobbled track, now there were screaming, froth-streaked horses, hoofs cracking like iron mallets on the uneven stone. Horses — two, four, six — and behind them, in a half-sideways rattling skid, an enormous carriage, its back end crashing into the face of a building in a shattering explosion of plaster, awning and window casement. Figures flew from the careering monstrosity as it tilted, almost tipping, then righted itself with the sound of a house falling over. Bodies were thumping on to the street, rolling desperately to avoid the man-high wheels.

The horses plunged on, dragging the contraption some further distance down the slope, trailing broken pieces, plaster fragments and other more unsightly things, before the animals managed to slow, then halt, the momentum, aided in no small part by a sudden clenching of wooden brakes upon all six wheels.

Perched atop the carriage, the driver was thrown forward, sailing through the air well above the tossing heads of the horses, landing in a rubbish cart almost buried in the fete’s leavings. This refuse probably saved his life, although, as all grew still once more, only the soles of his boots were visible, temporarily motionless as befitted an unconscious man.

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