Okay. *clears throat*
Among my favorite parts dealing with the Tanno song is this. I just figured I'd let you all read it again. Excellent not only for the song, but for Fiddler and Bottle, too.
Strings sat on the boulder, his head in his hands. He had flung off the helm but had no memory of having done so, and it lay at his feet, blurry and wavering behind the waves of pain that rose and fell like a storm-tossed sea. Voices were speaking around him, seeking to reach him, but he could make no sense of what was being said. The song had burgeoned sudden and fierce in his skull, flowing through his limbs like fire.
A hand gripped his shoulder, and he felt a sorcerous questing seep into his veins, tentatively at first, then flinching away entirely, only to return with more force - and with it, a spreading silence. Blissful peace, cool and calm.
Finally, the sergeant was able to look up.
He found his squad gathered around him. The hand fixed onto his shoulder was Bottle's, and the lad's face was pale, beaded with sweat. Their eyes locked, then Bottle nodded and slowly withdrew his hand.
"Can you hear me, Sergeant?"
"Faint, as if you were thirty paces away."
"Is the pain gone?"
"Aye - what did you do?"
Bottle glanced away.
Strings frowned, then said, "Everyone else, back to work. Stay here, Bottle."
Cuttle cuffed Tarr and the corporal straightened and mumbled, "Let's go, soldiers. There's pits to dig."
The sergeant and Bottle watched the others head off, retrieving their picks and shovels as they went. Etc.
"All right, Bottle," Strings said, "out with it."
"Spirits, Sergeant. They're... awakening."
"And what in Hood's name has that got to do with me?"
"Mortal blood, I think. It has its own song. They remember it. They came to you, Sergeant, eager to add their voices to it. To... uh... to you."
"Why me?"
"I don't know."
Strings studied the young mage for a moment, mulling on the taste of that lie, then grimaced and said, "You think it's because I'm fated to die here - at this battle."
Bottle looked away once more. "I'm not sure, Sergeant. It's way beyond me... this land. And its spirits. And what it all has to do with you-"
"I'm a Bridgeburner, lad. The Bridgeburners were born here. In Raraku's crucible."
Bottle's eyes thinned as he studied the desert to the west. "But... they were wiped out."
"Aye, they were."
Neither spoke for a time. Koryk had broken his shovel on a rock and was stringing together an admirable list of Seti curses. The others had stopped to listen. On the northern edge of the island Gesler's squad was busy building a wall of rubble, which promptly toppled, the boulders tumbling down the far edge. Distant hoots and howls sounded from the tel across the way.
"It won't be your usual battle, will it?" Bottle asked.
Strings shrugged. "There's no such thing, lad. There's nothing usual about killing and dying, about pain and terror."
"That's not what I meant-"
"I know it ain't, Bottle. But wars these days are fraught with sorcery and munitions, so you come to expect surprises."
Gesler's two dogs trotted past, the huge cattle dog trailing the Hengese Roach as if the hairy lapdog carried its own leash.
"This place is... complicated," Bottle sighed. He reached down and picked up a large, disc-shaped rock. "Eres'al," he said. "A hand-axe - the basin down there's littered with them. Smoothed by the lake that once filled it. Took days to make one of these, then they didn't even use them - they just flung them into the lake. Makes no sense, does it? Why make a tool then not use it?"
Strings stared at the mage. "What are you talking about, Bottle? Who are the Eres'al?"
"Were, Sergeant. They're long gone."
"The spirits?"
"No, those are from all times, from every age this land has known. My grandmother spoke of the Eres. The Dwellers who lived in the time before the Imass, the first makers of tools, the first shapers of their world." He shook his head, fought down a shiver. "I never expected to meet one - it was there, she was there, in that song within you."
"And she told you about these tools?"
"Not directly. More like I shared it - well, her mind. She was the one who gifted you the silence. It wasn't me - I don't have that power - but I asked, and she showed mercy. At least" - he glanced at Strings - "I gather it was a mercy."
"Any, lad, it was. Can you still... speak with that Eres?"
"No. All I wanted to do was get out of there - out of that blood-"
"My blood."
"Well, most of it's your blood, Sergeant."
"And the rest?"
"Belongs to that song. The, uh, Bridgeburners' song."
Strings closed his eyes, settled his head against the boulder behind him. Kimloc, that damned Tanno Spiritwalker in Ehrlitan. I said no, but he did it anyway. He stole my story - not just mine, but the Bridgeburners' - and he made of it a song. The bastard's gone and given us back to Raraku...
"Go help the others, Bottle."
"Any, Sergeant."
"And... thanks."
"I'll pass that along, when next I meet the Eres witch."
Strings stared after the mage. So there'll be a next time, will there? Just how much didn't you tell me, lad? He wondered if the morrow would indeed be witness to his last battle. Hardly a welcome thought, but maybe it was necessary. Maybe he was being called to join the fallen Bridgeburners. Not so bad, then. Couldn't ask for more miserable company. Damn, but I miss them. I miss them all. Even Hedge.
The sergeant opened his eyes and climbed to his feet, collecting then donning his helm. He turned to stare out over the basin to the northeast, to the enemy emplacements and the dust and smoke of the city hidden within the oasis. You too, Kalam Mekhar. I wonder if you know why you're here...
That's so cool! I love Fiddler being so lost in that pain and the song, and Bottle's questing, flinching, then returning.
But while I was reading it again, I realized we have our answer to Ted's question:
Farm Ur-Ted wrote:I'm about 180 pages out from the end. Things have picked up, but for the life of me, I can't remember who the godess was that cured Fiddler. Was it the Goddess of Dreams? Soliel? Some other freak? Or did they not tell us? It's bugging me.
Onos T'oolan wrote:If you mean healed him from the injuries at Y'Ghatan, I guess it was the honey.
Farm Ur-Ted wrote:I forgot about the honey. Well, as you'll find out, some mystery goddess (at least she's a mystery to me) becomes a major plot-point in book 4. I feel like I must've missed or forgotten something, but maybe Erikson hasn't revealed who she is yet.
But how did you know it happened in book 4?
"You have no understanding of what his title of Sword signifies - he is without equal in this world." -- K'rul