Ahead, the morning's light bled across the sky.
Book Three
When the sands
Danced blind,
She emerged from the face
Of a raging goddess
Bidithal
CHAPTER ELEVEN
If you seek the crumbled bones
of the T'lan Imass,
gather into one hand
the sands of Raraku
Anonymous
Kulp felt like a rat in a vast chamber crowded with ogres, caged in by shadows and but moments away from being crushed underfoot. Never before when entering the Meanas Warren had it felt so …
There were strangers here, intruders, forces so inimical to the realm that the very atmosphere bridled. The essence of himself that had slipped through the fabric was reduced to a crouching, cowering creature. And yet, all he could feel was a series of fell passages, the spun wakes that marked the paths the unwelcome had taken. His senses shouted at him that — for the moment at least — he was alone, the dun sprawled-out landscape devoid of all life.
Still he trembled with terror.
Within his mind he reached back a ghostly hand, finding the tactile reassurance of the place where his body existed, the heave and slush of blood in his veins, the solid weight of flesh and bone. He sat cross-legged in the captain's cabin of the
They needed a way out. The entire Elder Warren they'd found themselves in was flooded, a soupy, shallow sea. The oarsmen could propel
Kulp cursed his own limitations. Had he been a practitioner of Sere, or Denul or D'riss or indeed virtually any of the other warrens accessible to humans, he would find what they needed.
They were bound by peculiar laws, by rules of nature that seemed to play games with the principles of cause and effect. Had they been riding a wagon, the passage through the warrens would unerringly have taken them on a dry path. The primordial elements asserted an intractable consistency across all warrens. Land to land, air to air, water to water.
Kulp had heard of High Mages who — it was rumoured — had found ways to cheat those illimitable laws, and perhaps the gods and other Ascendants possessed such knowledge as well. But they were as beyond a lowly cadre mage as the tools of an ogre's smithy to a cowering rat.
His other concern was the vastness of the task itself. Pulling a handful of companions through his warren was difficult, but manageable. But
Kulp sourly admitted that he felt as stupid within Meanas as he did sitting in the captain's cabin.