Book
1: The Darkness that Comes Before
by
R. Scott Bakker
Part
4
The
Warrior
Chapter
13
The
Hethanta Mountains
Even the hard-hearted
avoid the heat of desperate men. For the bonfires of the weak crack
the most stone.
—Conriyan
Proverb
So who were the heroes
and the cravens of the Holy War? There are already songs enough to
answer that question. Needless to say, the Holy War provided further
violent proof of Ajencis’s old proverb, “Though all men be
equally frail before the world, the differences between them are
terrifying.”
—Drusas Achamian,
Compendium of the Holy War
My
Thoughts
Stay away from people who
are desperate. They will do stupid stuff and drag you down with them.
Good Proverb. These Conriyan are full of good advise. While Achamian
quote is obviously about the politics behind the Holy War, the
differences between Cnaiür and Kellhus are terrifying to Cnaiür
(and me). Glad I don't have to deal with a Dûnyain.
Spring,
4111 Year-of-the-Tusk, the Central Jiünati Steppe
Cnaiür and Kellhus
encounter fewer tribesman then they would have before the disaster of
Kiyuth. Those they did encounter were typically made up of youths. As
they travel, Kellhus presses Cnaiür for information on Shimeh.
Cnaiür informs him it is a holy city to the Inrithi but the Fanim
captured it. The Fanim believe it is their mission to the destroy the
Tusk and thus have been at war with the Nansur Empire for many years.
Cnaiür tells Kellhus of when he lead the Utemot in battle against
the Fanim at Zirkirta to the south.
Kellhus asks about the
Tusk and Cnaiür explains it is the first scripture of Men and the
Scylvendi followed it before the birth of Lokung, the Scylvendi's now
dead god. Kellhus asks about Lokung, and Cnaiür reveals that Lokung
is the Scylvendi name for the No-God. Kellhus then asks if the Fanim
will tolerate their presence.
Cnaiür thinks that he is
unsure because of the Holy War. The Fanim were supposedly very
tolerant of Inrithi pilgrims to Shimeh before the Holy War. Because
of this, Cnaiür has chosen to head to the Nansur Empire to learn
more about the situation instead of striking southeast across the
Steppes to Kian. Cnaiür tells Kellhus that Fanim are tolerant of
pilgrims.
As they travel, Cnaiür
constantly thinks of murdering Kellhus in his sleep, but fears he
would never find Moënghus without him. Occasionally, Kellhus would
break the silence by asking about sorcery and Cnaiür, thinking it
was harmless to speak of, would indulge Kellhus. After a few days,
Cnaiür realized that Kellhus used the subject of sorcery to
carefully guide the conversation to more important topics.
That night, Cnaiür tries
to murder Kellhus but a “paroxysms of self-doubt and fury” seized
him and he went back to his blankets. Weeks pass like this when they
encounter the camp of that Akkunihor tribe in the shadow of the
Hethanta Mountains. Xunnurit, King-of-the-Tribes, was the Chief of
the Akkunihor. The camp was abandoned, dead. Kellhus asks what
happened, and Cnaiür states “Ikurei Conphas.”
Then, with unaccountable
certainty, he realized that Kellhus would kill him.
The mountains were
looming, and the Steppe swept out behind them. Behind them.
The son of Moënghus no longer needed him.
He’ll kill me while
I sleep.
No. Such a thing could
not happen. Not after traveling so far, after enduring so much! He
must use the son to find the father. It was the only way!
“We must cross the
Hethantas,” he declared, pretending to survey the desolate yaksh.
“They look formidable,”
Kellhus replied.
“They are . . . But I
know the shortest way.”
They camped in an
abandoned yaksh and Cnaiür ignored Kellhus and pondered his
circumstances and question his own motives. He realizes how foolish
it is to use a Dûnyain and crawls out into the Steppes to cry and
beat the earth in fury while howls of wolves seemed to mock him.
Afterward, he put his
lips to the earth and breathed. He could feel him listening from
somewhere out there. He could feel him knowing.
What did he see?
It did not matter. The
fire burned and it had to be fed.
On lies if need be.
Because the fire burned
true. The fire alone.
So cold against swollen
eyes. The Steppe. The trackless Steppe.
The next morning, they
enter the foothills and encounter a group of Scylvendi returning from
pilgrimage. A group breaks off to ride towards them while others
guard a group of captives. Unlike other groups, these are young men,
not youths, of the Munuäti tribe. Cnaiür remembers the Munuäti
being decimated by the Imperial Saik. Their leader appears arrogant
and Kellhus warns he “sees us as an opportunity to prove himself.”
Cnaiür tells Kellhus to
be quite. The man introduces himself as Panteruth urs Mutkius and is
distrustful of Cnaiür. He tells him there are rumors of Scylvendi
spies for the Empire, which explains how they were defeated. An
argument ensues and the man mocks Cnaiür. Cnaiür strikes Panteruth
and then a fight breaks out.
Some charge at them while
others fire arrows which Kellhus easily swats out of the sky. Cnaiür
draws his own bow and uses his horse as cover and fires back while
Kellhus faces eight charging Munuäti. Cnaiür momentarily thinks
Kellhus is dead but Kellhus kills all of them. In the end, Cnaiür
and Kellhus killed or incapacitated all the Munuäti save one who
prepares to charge Kellhus.
Leaning into his lance,
the horseman howled, giving voice to the Steppe’s fury through the
thud of galloping hoofs. He knows, Cnaiür thought. Knows
he’s about to die.
As he watched, the
Dûnyain caught the iron tip of the man’s lance with his
sword, guiding it to turf. The lance snapped, jerking the Munuäti
back against his high cantle, and the Dûnyain leapt, impossibly
throwing a sandalled foot over the horse’s head and kicking the
rider square in the face. The man plummeted to the grasses, where his
leathery tumble was stilled by the Dûnyain’s sword.
What manner of man . .
. ?
Anasûrimbor Kellhus
paused over the corpse, as though committing it to memory. Then he
turned to Cnaiür. Beneath wind-tossed hair, streaks of blood scored
his face, so that for a moment he possessed the semblance of
expression. Beyond him, the dark escarpments of the Hethantas piled
into the sky.
Cnaiür kills the wounded
until only Panteruth is left. Cnaiür beats him and yells at him.
“Spies! … A woman's excuse!” Cnaiür beats and kicks the
man, who weeps and cries out in pain and then Cnaiür chokes the life
out of the man. Kellhus watches and realizes that Cnaiür is mad.
When Cnaiür finishes, he tells him the captives are all women.
Cnaiür states that the women are, “our prize.”
Serwë,
one of the female captives, begs for Cnaiür's
help as he approaches. The other women huddled in fear behind her.
Cnaiür
just slaps her to the ground. Cnaiür
and Kellhus make camp and Cnaiür
claims Serwë as his prize because she reminds him of Anissi.
Kellhus
feels a sense of outrage as he watches Cnaiür
rape Serwë and wonders from what darkness it comes from. Kellhus
believes something is happening to him. Kellhus observes that Serwë
has suffered much and has learned to hide it. He watches as Cnaiür
speaks to her in a foreign language that sounds like a threat. Then
Cnaiür
frees her.
“You’ve freed her,
then?” Kellhus asked, knowing this was not the case.
“No. She bears
different chains now.” After a moment he added, “Women are easy
to break.”
He does not believe
this.
Kellhus asks what
language they spoke, and Cnaiür
answers, Sheyic, the language of the Nansur Empire. Cnaiür
says he questioned Serwë about the state of the Empire and learned
that there is a Holy War against the Fanim to retake Shimeh. Kellhus
instantly wonders if this is why his father summoned him. Kellhus
asks what's Serwë's name. “I didn't ask,” answers Cnaiür.
That night, as Cnaiür
and Kellhus slumber, Serwë grabs a knife and goes to kill Cnaiür
but is stopped by Kellhus who disarms her and pulls her away. He
tells her his name and she replies with her own and starts to cry as
he gently covers her with a blanket and she falls a sleep sobbing.
The next morning, Serwë's
continues to feel the dread she's felt since she was capture by the
Munuäti and feels even more
scared with Cnaiür. She felt
utterly alone and thought her Gods had abandoned her. She watches
Cnaiür walk to the other
women, who, like Serwë, came from the Gaunum household. The women
begin to plead with Cnaiür,
including wives of several nobles who had hated Serwë. One had an
ugly bruise on her face and asked Serwë to tell Cnaiür
that she was beautiful. Serwë pretended not to hear, too scared.
Cnaiür
draws his knife and the women think he means to kill them when he
uses his knife to open their manacles and sets them free. He tells
the women that others will find them and that he will shoot any who
follow and now the women begin to beg for him to stay. The others
were envious that Serwë was staying with the Scylvendi and Serwë
felt glad.
Barastas's wife marched
forward, shrieking at Serwë to stay, that she owns her, and Cnaiür
causally fires an arrow and kills her and Serwë feels a surge of
terror and thinks she might vomit.
During the day, Serwë
passed the time talking to Kellhus, who seemed to exude trust to her.
She that she was a Nymbricani and was sold as a concubine to a the
Nansur House of Gaunum. The wives of the Gaunum nobles were jealous
of her beauty and how they strangled her first child when it was
born. She was told “Blue babies … That's all you'll ever bear,
child.” After three days, Kellhus had mastered Sheyic. At night,
Serwë belonged to the Scylvendi.
She could not fathom the
relationship between these two men, though she pondered it often,
understanding that her fate somehow lay between them. Initially,
she’d assumed that Kellhus was the Scylvendi’s slave, but this
was not the case. The Scylvendi, she eventually realized, hated the
Norsirai, even feared him. He acted like someone trying to preserve
himself from ritual pollution.
At first this insight
thrilled her. You fear! she would silently howl at the Scylvendi’s
back. You’re no different from me! No more than I am!
But then it began to
trouble her—deeply. Feared by a Scylvendi? What kind of man is
feared by a Scylvendi?
She dared ask the man
himself.
“Because I’ve come,”
Kellhus had replied, “to do dreadful work.”
Serwë begins to wonder
why Kellhus doesn't take her from the Scylvendi and she knew the
reason. “She was Serwë. She was nothing.” A lesson she learned
early on. She had a happy childhood. Her parents, particularly her
mother, doted on her. When she was fourteen, her father sold her and
she had much of her delusions knocked out of her. Her life as a
concubine was fool of anxiety, she was trapped between the wives, who
hated her beauty, and the husbands who lusted for her. She begin to
take pride in seducing their husbands, it was all that was left to
her.
Once, she was taken to
Peristus's bed with his wife. Peristus's wife was an ugly woman and
Peristus was using Serwë to get him ready. Serwë, out of spite,
excited Peristus to much and stole his seed. She became pregnant, and
Peristus's wife spent the entire time tormenting her about her
child's death. She went to Peristus who just slapped her for
bothering him. Serwë prayed to the gods for mercy but her child was
“born blue.”
Serwë begin to pray for
vengeance on the Gaunum and a year later all the men rode off to join
the Holy War and the Scylvendi raided the villa and learned a new
level of suffering with the Munuäti
and she was filled with outrage.
Despite all her vanities
and all her peevish sins, she meant something. She was something. She
was Serwë, daughter of Ingaera, and she deserved far more than what
had been given. She would have dignity, or she would die hating.
But her courage had come
at a horrible time. She had tried not to weep. She had tried to be
strong. She had even spit in the face of Panteruth, the Scylvendi who
claimed her as his prize. But Scylvendi were not quite human. They
looked down on all outlanders as though from the summit of some
godless mountain, more remote than the most brutal of the
Patridomos’s sons. They were Scylvendi, the
breakers-of-horses-and-men, and she was Serwë.
But she had clung to the
word—somehow. And watching the Munuäti die at the hands of these
two men, she had dared rejoice, had dared believe she would be
delivered. At last, justice!
When Cnaiür
raped her after killing the Munuäti,
Serwë realized that there was no justice, just the whim of powerful
men. Serwë thought she was nothing, that was why everyone hurt her.
Even Kellhus abandoned her at night.
When the crossed the
Hethantas, Cnaiür confronts
Kellhus, telling him he brought him to the Empire to kill him.
Kellhus asks if Cnaiür
actually wants to be killed by Kellhus. Kellhus had known for days
that Cnaiür feared that
Kellhus would kill him once they crossed the mountains. If Cnaiür
could not kill the father, he would settle for the son. Crossing the
Empire with a Scylvendi will just get you killed and Cnaiür
knows there is nothing but the mission for a Dûnyain.
Such penetration. Hatred,
but pleated by an almost preternatural cunning. Cnaiür urs Skiötha
was dangerous . . . Why should he suffer his company?
Because Cnaiür still
knew this world better than he. And more important, he knew war. He
was bred to it.
I have use for him
still.
Kellhus knows now he must
join the Holy War to reach Shimeh. Kellhus doesn't know enough about
war to properly harness it. Kellhus points out to Cnaiür
his father has had thirty years to build his power base. Kellhus has
need of a man who is as immune to Moënghus's methods. Cnaiür
thinks Kellhus is trying to lull him into lower his guard.
Kellhus decides to
demonstrate his skill and attacks Cnaiür
with his sword. Serwë cheers for Kellhus to kill him as the pair
trade blows. At the right moment, Kellhus grabbed Cnaiür
sword arm but is not quick enough to stop Cnaiür
landing a punch to his face and Kellhus realized he misjudged Cnaiür
reflexes. Kellhus drops his sword and catches Cnaiür
blade between his hands and disarms him and Kellhus proceeds to beat
him on the ground on the ledge of a cliff. Kellhus subdues Cnaiür
and holds him out over the edge.
“Do it!” Cnaiür
gasped through snot and spittle. His feet swayed over nothingness.
So much hatred.
“But I spoke true,
Cnaiür. I do need you.”
The Scylvendi’s eyes
rounded in horror. Let go, his expression said. For that
way lies peace. And Kellhus realized he’d misjudged the
Scylvendi yet again.
He’d thought him immune
to the trauma of physical violence when he was not. Kellhus had
beaten him the way a husband beats his wife or a father his child.
This moment would dwell within him forever, in the way of both
memories and involuntary cringes. Yet more degradation for him to
heap on the fire.
Kellhus hoisted him to
safety and let him drop. Another trespass.
Serwë is weeping because
Kellhus spared Cnaiür. Kellhus
asks Cnaiür if he believes him
know. Cnaiür finally answer
that Kellhus thinks he needs him. Kellhus is perplexed and
thinks Cnaiür becomes more
erratic. Cnaiür points out
that he is a heathen, no better than a Fanim. Kellhus tells him to
pretend to convert. “... the Inrithi think they are the
chosen ones … Lies that flatter are rarely disbelieved.” Cnaiür
points out the Nansur won't care.
Kellhus doesn't
understand Cnaiür reluctance
to find Moënghus and then Kellhus realizes that Cnaiür
despaired and had abandoned hope. Kellhus momentarily contemplates
disposing of Cnaiür but knows
he must posses the Holy War to succeed, but he would need instruction
on how to properly wield it and thinks the odds of finding someone
else with Cnaiür experience are slim. For now, he will stay this
course unless crossing the Empire with a Scylvendi proves to
difficult. Kellhus tells him their story, that Cnaiür
is the last of his tribe who found Kellhus, a prince traveling from
Atrithau to join the Holy War.
Though
Cnaiür now understood, even appreciated, the path laid for him,
Kellhus knew that the debate raged within him still. How much would
the man bear to see his father’s death avenged?
The
Utemot chieftain wiped a bare forearm across his mouth and nose. He
spat blood. “A prince of nothing,” he said.
The
next morning, the trio finds the spiked Scylvendi's heads that
Conphas had lined the road to Momemn with. Serwë urges Kellhus to
kill Cnaiür before the Nansur find them and Kellhus tells her
that she mustn’t betray them. Serwë would never betray Kellhus,
who she has fallen in love with. Kellhus tells her she must suffer
and she weeps bitterly. Cnaiür
tells her “Hold tight this moment, women … it will be your only
measure of this man.”
Cnaiür
gestures to the road line with spiked heads and says, “This is the
way to Momemn.”
My
Thoughts
Fanim tolerant are
tolerant of Inrithi pilgrims. I bet the economy of Shimeh is
dependent on these wealthy Inrithi coming to Shimeh, buying
supposedly holy trinkets. Even in horribly dysfunctional fantasy
worlds its funny to think the tourist trap exists and that bridges
religious differences. Historically, Muslims have been tolerant of
Christian pilgrims to the Holy Lands at times.
Kellhus relates his
encounter with the non-man from the prologue, trying to learn
everything he can about sorcery. However, Cnaiür is so distrustful
of Kellhus that even when Kellhus tells a true story, Cnaiür doesn't
believe him. Kellhus, this is the same problem people have with
politicians. I just assume there lying whenever they speak, which is
the same policy one should take with a Dûnyain.
When they approach the
mountains, Cnaiür suddenly realizes his danger. Cnaiür is right,
once his usefulness is over, Kellhus will discard him. However,
Cnaiür, just because Kellhus doesn’t need you doesn't mean he'll
kill you. However, given how much Dûnyain philosophy that Cnaiür
knows, it might be a safe bet. It is great how he use Dûnyain Logos
to continue his usefulness by pointing out Kellhus still doesn't know
the paths through the mountains. Way to go, Cnaiür!
Wow! Cnaiür is starting
to crack under the pressure.
When they enter the
foothills, Cnaiür thinks of it as Dûnyain country because anything
could be concealed around the corner but one might also climb a
summit and see. It's a nice analogy that is proven right as they
wonder right into the hostile Munuäti.
Cnaiür's battle madness
and Kellhus's inhuman Dûnyain training all the pair to destroy the
Munuäti. Cnaiür has no fear in the battle. As we see later on in
the chapter, Cnaiür has a death wish. When Cnaiür beats Panteruth,
he starts to beat him more harshly for crying. Cnaiür is beating
Panteruth for displaying his own perceived weakness, that he cries.
Poor Serwë. Your life
sucks. I'm so sorry.
Kellhus, its called
compassion. That's what you feel when you watch Serwë's rape. Maybe
embrace this feeling of caring for others instead of being a damned
robot.
Kellhus instantly
recognizes that the Holy War and his summons are not a coincidence.
As Serwë works up the
nerve to kill Cnaiür she remembers his warning, “If you leave, I
will hunt you, girl. As sure as the earth, I will find you . . . Hurt
you as you have never been hurt.” It gives her the courage to
attempt to kill him. Shame Kellhus stopped her. Kellhus begins his
work on Serwë that very night. Don't be fooled, Serwë, the man
doesn't care about you.
These poor women. To face
the choice of being abandoned in the wilderness or staying with your
rapist is terrible. Living is better than dieing, even if that life
isn't very great. Interesting that the only one Serwë names is a
fellow concubine, the other's she just thinks of as So-and-so's wife.
Wow, starting not to feel
so bad for Barastas's wife know. Not cool killing babies. All Serwë
known her entire life is rape. Sold by her father to be a concubine,
which is nothing more than sex slave. No wonder Serwë is a little
glad that they got left behind, up until Cnaiür put an arrow through
Barastas's wife's throat.
You are worth something
Serwë!
Cnaiür-Kellhus throw
down is a great fight. Cnaiür holds his own for a while and even
lands a blow, much to Kellhus surprise. In the end, Kellhus pulls off
the ninja blade catch, which Mythbusters had a great episode on.
Serwë has fallen in love
with Kellhus so the Dûnyain seduction is well underway. Now, Kellhus
is starting to get her to understand that being raped nightly by
Cnaiür is important and that there is a promise at the end of it.
She is still bitter that he won't rescue her from the Sclyvendi.
Cnaiür even tries to warn her about Kellhus, letting her know that
tears is all she'll really get from the man. Poor Serwë. She's
trapped between two despicable men.
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