Brutus, on 24 November 2009 - 11:03 PM, said:
Wampyry, on 18 June 2009 - 04:15 PM, said:
BurnedBridge: "One question that was never really answered for me was WHY did Nightchill want Dragnipur?"
To break it and free her brother, Dranconus. Paran didn't think it such a good idea because it would also free all the bad guys
On the note about who was responsible fo the mage deaths outside pale, one thing i was always confused about with Tays story was it involves no betrayal for the death of nightchill. When you read GotM you belive that kallors curse has come true that she has been betrayed and ripped apart by deamons. But if she was infact lashing out at the other mages with Tay only acting in defence, then its hardly betrayal that lead to her death. Making me doubt this version more.
There is a betrayal. Nightchill intends to betray the Malazans. However, the mistake made here is that Nightchill was *not* cursed to fall to betrayal. K'rul and Draconus both said that she could only fall to betrayal, and she believed so as well. Kallor merely cursed her thusly:
Quote
"And as for you, woman, unhuman hands shall tear your body into pieces, upon a field of battle, yet you shall know no respite - thus my curse upon you, Sister of Cold Nights."
MoI, UK mmpb, p.40
See also, how her return as Silverfox and the subsequent troubles are also part of Kallor's curse, yet no betrayal is mentioned.
The other thing that I've decided with this whole sequence of events, is that we are mistaking the order they appear in the text as being the exact order they occurred in reality. Tattersail is remembering things, her mind is jumping, and there is no clear passage of time. Nightchill can be killing A'karonys concurrently with the demon rising up beneath her. Tattersail is just registering it via her memories after Nightchill's death - it would be strange to have a sudden break in her demise to talk about A'karonys, and would also give the game away.
Tay's version of events is then very acceptable, and indeed likely.
Also, we build bomb shelter's underground, so why not assume tunnels will save the BB's? It is a very logical conclusion with no flaw in it at all. Sure, cave-in is possible, but that is simple failure to predict the intensity of the magic and falling debris. Or perhaps failure to properly build the tunnels on the BB's part, even.
The entire revenge agenda of the BB's in GotM is labelled a mistake, both in DG and MoI, and we can see from the events and reasoning that this is the most likely course. True, we could be mistaken, and deceived by the Empress/Tay as they want us to be, but that's half the point of the series; people lie. Historical accounts do not always tally up. We're left looking for the 'correct' version when in fact both may be in error. However logic is on Tay's side. And despite residual feelings displayed in MoI, he is shown to be much less of a villain than he was made out to be.
The rest is read and find out, I'm afraid.