Tavore's expression twisted, unveiling disgust as she looked upon the Jhistal priest. 'The empire has ever refused an immortal patron, Mallick Rel. For this reason more than any other, we have survived and, indeed, grown ever stronger. What are you doing here, priest?'
'Who do you now serve, woman?' Mallick Rel demanded.
'I am the Adjunct to the Empress.'
'Then you must do as she commands! Give us the Wickans!'
'Us? Ah, now I see. You were cheated of some of your glory outside Aren. Tell me, how long before an arrest writ is issued for Fist Blistig, the once-commander of the Aren Guard who defied the order to leave the city? Because of him, and him alone, Aren did not fall.'
Laseen asked, 'Were not the Red Blades in Aren arrested by Blistig, Tavore?'
'At Pormqual's command. Please, Empress, we must speak, you and I, alone.'
And Kalam saw then, in Laseen's eyes, something he thought he would never see. A flicker of fear.
But it was Korbolo Dom who spoke. 'Adjunct Tavore, I am now High Fist.
And, with Dujek's death, I am ranking High Fist. Furthermore, I have assumed the title and responsibilities of First Sword of the Empire, a post sadly vacant since Dassem Ultor's untimely death. Accordingly, I now assume command of the Fourteenth Army.'
'Tavore,' Laseen said quietly, 'it was never the function of an Adjunct to command armies. Necessity forced my hand with the rebellion in Seven Cities, but that is now over. You have completed all that I asked of you, and I am not blind to your loyalty. It grieves me that this meeting has become so overtly hostile – you are the extension of my will, Tavore, and I do not regret my choice. No, not even now. It seems I must make the details of my will clear to you. I want you at my side once more, in Unta. Mallick Rel may well possess talents in many areas of administration, but he lacks in others – I need you for those, Tavore, I need you at my side to complement the Jhistal priest.
You see before you the restructuring of the imperial high command. A new First Sword now assumes overall command of the Malazan Armies. The time has come, Tavore, to set aside your own sword.'
Silence. From Tavore, no movement, not a single twitch of emotion. 'As you command, Empress.'
Beneath his clothes, Kalam felt his skin grow hot, as if close to blistering flames. Sweat ran down his body; he could feel it beading on his face and neck. He stared down at his leather-clad hands, motionless on the worn wood of the tabletop.
'I am pleased,' Laseen said.
'It will be necessary,' Tavore said, 'for me to return, briefly, to the docks. I believe Fist Keneb will doubt the veracity of the change of command if informed by anyone but me.'
'A most loyal man,' Mallick Rel murmured.
'Yes, he is that.'
'And these Perish?' Korbolo Dom demanded. 'Are they worth the trouble?
Will they submit to my authority?'
'I cannot speak for them in that matter,' Tavore said tonelessly. 'But they will not reject any overtures out of hand. As for their prowess, I believe it will suffice, at least in an auxiliary function to our regulars.'
'There is nothing more to them?'
The Adjunct's shrug was careless. 'They are foreigners, First Sword.
Barbarians.'
Barbarians sailing the finest warships on the damned ocean, aye.
But Korbolo Dom, in all his percipience and razor-honed judgement, simply nodded.
Another moment of silence, in which so many things could have been said, in which the course of the Malazan Empire could have found firmer footing. Silence, and yet to Kalam it seemed he could hear the slamming of doors, the clatter and crunch of portcullis dropping, and he saw hallways, avenues, where the flickering light dimmed, then, vanished.
If the Empress were to speak then, with words for the Adjunct alone – anything, any overture that did not ring falseMallick Rel said, 'Adjunct, there is the matter of two Wickans, a warlock and a witch.'
Tavore's eyes remained on Laseen. 'Of course. Fortunately, they are ineffectual, a consequence of the trauma they experienced with Coltaine's death.'
'Nonetheless, the Claw will effect their arrest.'
The Empress said, 'It cannot be helped, Tavore. Even with a remnant of their old power, they could unleash slaughter upon the citizens of Malaz City, and that we cannot have.'
'The blood this night belongs to the Wickans and the Khundryl.' A statement from the Adjunct, devoid of all emotion.
'It must be so,' the Jhistal priest murmured, as if struck anew by grief.
'Tavore,' Laseen said, 'will the Khundryl prove recalcitrant in yielding their arms and armour? Do they not number two thousand, or more?'