Posted 25 June 2018 - 03:34 PM
What a great clarification. Thanks, James!
Chain of Dogs - Chapter 12
The chapter opens with Duiker and Coltaine's chain of refugees fighting their way through Semk and Tithansi warriors. Why does Duiker think Coltaine, Sha'ik, and Laseen ascend to stand alongside the Shrouded One? Who's that - is it Hood? Do you ascend into the House of Death by doing a lot of killing? Also I learned that the "Abyss," or the "Abyss below," whatever that is, is "Hood's Abyss." Duiker is apparently making a "List of the Fallen," and he used to be a soldier until Kellanved asked him to be trained by Toc the Elder (and then Younger) to be a historian. Toc the Elder mysteriously disappeared, of course. They won the battle but they think they received unexpected help from a Claw. A very interesting point is that Sormo and other warlocks used spirits to make the tunnel leading to the site of the battle and also used spirits to help fight. For instance a bear was used to attack the Semk possessed by the Semk god. Also the spirits were used in a previous chapter to come out of the Jaghut ice and destroy the Semk Ascendant. First of all, I am assuming the Semk Ascendant destroyed by the ice spirits and the one possessing the man attacked by the bear are both the same entity. Also, it is subtle, but the one out of the ice is called an Ascendant; the one possessing the man is called a god. Is that an intentional distinction? Regardless, if the entity trapped in the ice and the one possessing the man are truly the same, then how did it survive the onslaught of spirits in Sormo's vision to then possess this guy?
Secondly, Sormo says the god is not dead despite his host being destroyed. Sormo says his magic comes from a time before warrens, which makes me think that "Holds" are associated with Sormo's kind of magic, while "Houses" are associated with warrens. It is interesting because there are Elder Warrens that of course date back to the founding races, three hundred thousand years ago, which makes me wonder if Holds are even older than that. I find warrens difficult to understand - specifically how they work in time and space. I find Sormo's magic much harder to grasp. It seems to focus on spirits (raising zombies, using trapped spirits to kill Ascendants, using spirit bears to attack) and it also seems to bring the past to the present. The raised zombies were mirroring the scenes upon their death from the past, the ice scene with the Semk Ascendant was from the past but brought to the present (and affects the present literally, since the blood splattered on Duiker). So manipulating spirits and entering the past to bring it to the present - these two things seem to be the common theme of Sormo's magic. Also, if this type of magic is actually "Hold" magic, and we do know that there is a "Hold-style" Deck of Dragons carving in the Shadow Temple, then this means the Deck of Dragons - and thus the dragons - is the oldest of all. Thus the order of existence seems to be: 1) dragons, 2) Holds, and warlock-style magic, and the old Deck of Dragons, 3) Elder Races and their warrens, and 4) Houses and warren-style magic, and the new Deck of Dragons. This is all vast speculation and it may be inaccurate, of course. It is just what I'm thinking now.
Finally, Duiker remarks that the "spirits did not look among their own kin," which implies that spirits could switch sides or inhabit different bodies. In fact, he closes his section by observing "wild goats switching sides." In other words, these goats are occupied by spirits, like the bear was, switching sides of the Apocalypse forces vs. Malazans?
We move to Felisin and friends who are in Raraku, and they stumble across a hidden city that seems to be nine thousand years old, preserved by alchemy. We learn that there was once a bond between the T'lan Imass and Soletaken/D'ivers, but the shapeshifters claimed the title of the First Empire. We also learn the undead dragon was a T'lan Imass Bonecaster Soletaken. Fiddler, Crokus, Icarium, and Mappo are chasing after Apsalar and her father Servant (and I still wonder if Servant was ever possessed by Shadowthrone). Kalam and his Malazan friends are making their way through the Imperial Warren toward Aren, and so are Lostara Yil (Red Blade) and her Claw named Pearl. They lose Kalam (who is lost himself) and come out at the site of a battle. I think it is the same battle as earlier in the chapter, and I think Pearl is the Claw that helped out Coltaine's army. Except from this perspective we see Apt kill the person possessed by the Semk god. Oh, I also learned that Kalam got a lone Obelisk card drawn from his last reading, but so did one of his Malazan friends - even though Kalam thinks Obelisk should be inactive in Seven Cities, he wonders if Obelisk refers to Icarium. Obelisk means time, and Icarium represents time (he made the Wheel of Seasons etc.), and "time has no allies," and Icarium's alliance with Mappo may be false... oh and according to the Glossary, Obelisk is also Burn.
There is so much stuff going on. My head is spinning trying to make sense of it all! Two more chapters left in the Chain of Dogs.