'Something's wrong,' Minala persisted. 'I can see it in your face. We should have arrived by now.'
The taste of ash, its smell, its feel, had become a part of him, and he knew it was the same for the others. The lifeless grit seemed to stain his very thoughts. Kalam had suspicions of what that ash had once been — the heap of bones they had stumbled onto when arriving had not proved unique — yet he found himself instinctively shying from acknowledging those suspicions. The possibility was too ghastly, too overwhelming, to contemplate.
Keneb grunted, then sighed. 'Well, Corporal, shall we continue on?'
Kalam glanced at the captain. The fever from his head wound was gone, though a barely perceptible slowness to his movements and expressions betrayed a healing yet incomplete. The assassin knew he could not count on the man in a fight. And with the apparent loss of Apt, he felt his back exposed. Minala's inability to trust him diminished the reliance he placed in her: she would do what was necessary to protect her sister and the children — that and nothing more.
The Imperial Warren was a realm with neither day nor night, just a perpetual dusk, its faint light sourceless — a place without shadows. They measured the passage of time by the cyclical demands imposed by their bodies. The need to eat and drink, the need to sleep. Yet, when gnawing hunger and thirst grew constant and unappeased, when exhaustion pulled at every step, the notion of time sank into meaninglessness; indeed, it revealed itself as something born of faith, not fact.
And there, plainly carved in his thoughts as if with a dagger-point, stretched the thin, straight track that would lead him to Laseen. Every justification he needed rode unerring within that fissure.
'I see clouds ahead,' Minala said, now riding beside him.
Ridges of low-hanging dust crisscrossed the area before them. Kalam's eyes narrowed. 'As good as footprints in mud,' he muttered.
'What?'
'Look behind us — we leave the selfsame trail. We've company in the Imperial Warren.'
'And any company's unwelcome,' she said.
'Aye.'
Arriving at the first of the ragged ruts only deepened Kalam's unease. More
'Look,' Minala said, pointing.
Thirty paces ahead was what appeared to be a sinkhole or dark stain on the ground. Suspended ash rimmed the pit in a motionless, semi-translucent curtain.
'Is it just me,' Keneb growled behind them, 'or is there a new smell to this Hood-rotted air?'
'Like wood spice,' Minala agreed.
Hackles rising, Kalam freed his crossbow from its binding on the saddle, cranked the claw back until it locked, then slid a quarrel into the slot. He felt Minala's eyes on him throughout and was not surprised when she spoke.
'That particular smell's one you're familiar with, isn't it? And not from rifling some merchant's bolt-chest, either. What should we be on the lookout for, Corporal?'
'Anything,' he said, kicking his horse into a walk.
The pit was at least a hundred paces across, the edges heaped in places with excavated fill. Burned bone jutted from those mounds.