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Crope stared at his feet. Chicken-brained fool. Brought down the whole henhouse now. "Go away," he offered, "take lord and never come back."

Tutting impatiently, Quill peeled back the curtain and glanced down at the street. "As I said, hardly reassuring" He seemed to be speaking to himself. Letting the curtain drop he spun around to face Crope. "Look. Leave the city and you might as well light a signal fire and holler at the top of your lungs. Come get me. Last time I counted, giants hauling cripples on their backs were few and far between. Dozens saw you that night. Now granted some may have exaggerated your considerable charms, but there's two things they all agree on. One, that the man seen escaping from the collapsing tower was an unnaturally big bastard. And two, he's as guilty as sin.

"Every watch brother, bounty hunter and bailiff in the city hold is looking for you. You're as easy to spot as a pig in a snake basket, and neither you nor his lordship there should be going anywhere anytime soon."

Once again Quill's gaze rested upon Baralis. The thief was deeply interested in him, Crope had noticed, but pretended otherwise. Baralis lay silent and unmoving, his eyes closed, breath hissing faintly from his lips.

Listening.

Quill continued. "Matters may have died a death if the carter hadn't sang his song with you as chord and chorus. Now the watch is at our heels and they're knocking door-to-door. They're going to be on that stoop this very night and unless we do something sharpish we're all gonna hang."

Crope knew some kind of response was called for, but he was having difficulty keeping up. Quill spoke fast and fancy, and the word bailiff had been spoken and it was getting hard to think. "No hang."

"Too right no hang." Quill was beginning to get animated. "I haven't sneaked these streets for twenty years to get a necking for mischief I didn't make. Abetting a friend of a friend, I was. The King of Thieves himself, Scurvy Pine. That's the way things work in the back alleys: you help someone, I help you, and when time comes when I require a little assistance meself my dues are paid in full. Course the system starts to break down when one good deed turns into an ongoing concern. I have to ask myself 'What's in it for me? and from where I'm standing now—between an eight-foot stack-o-hay and death on two sticks—it ain't looking good."

"No good," Crope echoed in deep agreement.

This response appeared to exasperate Quill, who began to pace the room. "So all the time you hauled rocks in the diamond pipe you never stashed a little cream for yourself?"

Morose now, Crope shook his head. "Had diamond … lost it"

"And what about his lordship there. Lord of what? Lord of where? Has he holdings, land, goods?"

Crope continued shaking his head. Baralis had been a powerful man once, in the land south of the mountains. Kings had waited upon his word. But the old kings were dead now and those who had taken their place had ill-liked Baralis and his methods. All had been lost. It hardly seemed real. A castle had burned to the ground and Baralis had burned along with it, and while everyone else was fleeing the flames, Crope had run toward them. It was the smoke, he remembered, thick and hot like boiling wool. The first time he breathed it in, his gums had shrank away from his teeth. Eighteen years later and they still hadn't sprung back.

Nothing had sprung back. Crab had pulled Baralis from the flames but even though his body had been saved the losses were still being counted. Crope believed he would never know all the ways in which his lord had shrunk. Land and titles could be counted, a body seared by flames and then broken could be seen and reckoned, but the other things—the mind, the will, the power of his lord—were beyond his ability to comprehend. Some of his lord was still there, lying behind the slow-tracking gaze, but how much was impossible to know. Even though Crope knew it was a mistake to think of the bad man, the one with pale eyes who Quill called the Surlord, he couldn't seem to stop himself. That man had destroyed his lord. Ridden them down, he had, coolly keeping his distance while his armsmen had drawn swords. Wittle-wattle. Wittle-wattle. Chicken jowls for brains. Crope flushed with shame as he remembered his lord's capture. It was all his fault. After he'd rescued his lord he could have gone anywhere in the Known Lands. Flee, that was the important thing. Escape from the walled city and the men who were enemies of his lord. North, south, east, west: it hardly mattered which way. So why had he chosen to head north into the mountains? Because he was stupid, that was why. Any other direction and they would have been high and dry. Wet and low was what they got though. Eighteen years of wet and low.

The pale-eyed man's capture of his lord had just been the beginning. While Baralis was hauled off to the pointy tower, Crope had been left for dead in a dry gully. Arrows, four of them, had punctured his giant man's hide. Crope could not say how long they rendered him unconscious, but what he did know was that his first and only thought upon waking was Now I must rescue my lord. The hijack had been sprung in foothills northwest of Hound's Mire and Crope knew with certainty that his lord had been taken west. So west he went, toward the city with the gray limestone walls he stood within this very night Within less than a day he'd run afoul of the slavers. Years later, Crope learned that slaving companies regularly patrolled the lawless country known as the Mirelands. According to Scurvy Pine, anyone crossing the mountains on their own or in small, undefended companies was judged fair game. Hobbled, blindfolded, and harnessed to the back of a wagon, Crope had been hauled east to Trance Vor, The Vor was an outlaw city financed with diamonds, tin, mercury and gold—anything that could be dug from the earth. Scurvy Pine said that slaving was illegal there, fust like in most other cities in the North, but tin Vor lords turned a blind eye to it. Slaves were needed to break the stone.

Crope had been sold to the tin mines. Eight years later when the seam had run dry, he'd been traded along with his chain brothers to the diamond pipe north of Drowned Lake. Rumor had it that mining diamonds was easier than mining tin, but Crope soon learned those rumors were false. Eighteen hours a day you broke rock. An hour to eat and piss, and five to sleep. After nearly a decade of living underground, working in the open pit of the diamond pipe had first seemed a blessing. Then autumn's cool sunshine fled and half a year of winter began. Ice storms, blizzards, northern winds and freezing fog: rock had to be broken through it all. Crope had watched men's hands turn bright pink and then white, and known that within a week they would rot and have to be amputated with the pipe surgeon's bone saw. Bitterbean called it the miner's farewell, for even one who went under that green-toothed saw died.

In the eight years he mined the pipe, Crope had seen all the ways a man could die. He knew he was lucky to be here, lucky to have a hide so thick it defied freezing, lucky to have a back so strong that after eighteen hours of breaking rock, it would straighten like a bivouacked birch. He'd been lucky to have Scurvy Pine, the King of Thieves, as his protector, and lucky to know that one day he would escape and find his lord.

That knowledge had sustained him better than warm blankets and lamb stew. When Scurvy Pine had come up with the escape plan, Crope had agreed to everything he'd asked. His job-had been to break the leg irons that bound the slaves Into a line, "Dont you go forgetting, giant man. You be ready when I give the word." When the word came Crope had been ready. He and Scurvy had escaped, and while the King of Thieves fled north, Crope had headed west.

Come to me, his lord had commanded. Now Crope was here and his lord was free, and things were still wet and low. Stupidly, he had imagined that once he and his lord were reunited their problems would disappear.