Draconus stumbled away from Pearl’s side. He could not bear the emotions the demon stirred to life within him. He could not understand such a power to forgive, never mind the sheer madness of finding something worthwhile in this cursed realm. And to see Pearl standing there, almost crushed beneath the twitching, dripping bodies of fallen comrades, no, that too was too much.
Kadaspala had failed. The pattern was flawed; it had no power to resist what was about to assail them. It had been a desperate gambit, the only kind Draconus had left, and he could not even rail at the blind, legless Tiste Andii.
And yet, he found he had no rage left in him when he thought of Anomander Rake. In fact, he had begun to understand, even sympathize, with that exhausted desire to end things. To end
Yes, Draconus understood Rake. Any game that played with grief was a foul thing, an abomination.
The force that suddenly descended upon the realm of Dragnipur was of such magnitude that, for an instant, Draconus believed the chaos had finally reached them, and he was driven to his knees, stunned, half blinded. The immense pressure bore down, excruciating, and Draconus ducked his head, covered it with his arms, and felt his spine bowing beneath a crushing presence.
If there was sound, he heard nothing. If there was life, he saw only darkness. If there was air, he could not draw it into his lungs. He felt his bones groaning-
The torture eased with the settling of a skeletal, long-fingered hand on his right shoulder.
Sounds rose once more, strangely muted. A renewed storm of wailing terror and dismay. In front of Draconus the world found its familiar details, although they seemed ghostly, ephemeral. He was able, at last, to breathe deep — and he tasted death.
Someone spoke above him. ‘He is indeed a man of his word.’
And Draconus twisted round, lifted his gaze — the hand on his shoulder rasping away with a rustle of links — and stared up at the one who had spoken. At Hood, the Lord and High King of the Dead.
‘
Hood half raised his arms and seemed to be staring down at the manacles enclosing his gaunt wrists.
Disbelief collapsed into shock, and then raw horror. This made no sense. Draconus did not understand. He could not — gods — he could not believe-
He spun round, then, and stared at the legions of chaos — oh, they had been pushed back, a league or more, by the arrival of this singular creature, by the power of Hood. The actinic stormclouds had tumbled in retreat, building anew and seeming to thrash in frustration — yes, an interlude had been purchased. But — ‘Wasted. All wasted! Why? This has achieved
‘I have missed you, Draconus,’ Hood said.
And he twisted round once more, glaring at the god. Jaghut. Yes, the mad, unknowable Jaghut. ‘You damned fool! You
‘A bargain, old friend,’ Hood replied, still studying the chains on his wrists. ‘A. . gamble.’
‘What will happen? When chaos claims you? When chaos devours the realm of death itself? You have betrayed the gods, all of them. You have betrayed all life, When you fall-’
‘Draconus,’ Hood cut in with a sigh, reaching up now to pull back the hood, re shy;vealing that withered Jaghut face, the clawed lines of eternal sorrow. ‘Draconus, my friend,’ he said softly, ‘surely you do not think I have come here alone?’
He stared at the god, for a moment uncomprehending. And then — he caught a distant roar of sound, edging in from three of the four horizons, and those indistinct skylines were now. .
As the armies of the dead marched at the behest of their Lord.