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“Hoy, brother!” shouted a gruff female voice. “I’m-a com­ing up.”

Ebenezer lifted his hand to his lips to hide his smirk. He’d been too long among humans, if he found humor in the usual dwarven method of “asking permission.”

Tarlamera huffed up to his side. For several moments they marched in silence as he waited for her to speak her mind. “We gotta go back to the clanhold,” she decreed.

He’d been afraid of that. Knew it was coming. Even so, he tried to scoff away the notion. “And how might you be plan­ning to do that? There’s not enough of us left to take back the tunnels, much less hold them secure. The men that stole you away in the first place would be back, and the second harvest would be all the easier.”

The dwarf woman scowled and folded her arms. “What are we to do, then?”

“There’s dwarves in the city,” he told her. “Bronwyn has friends what can find us work. We’ll fit in, make our way. Make a life.”

Tarlamera glowered. “Seems to me like you’re putting too much weight in that human’s say-so. Mountain dwarves in a city? What kind of life is that?”

“Better’n the one ‘that human’ stole you from, I’ll tell you that for free,” he shot back.

She shrugged. “There’s that. But all I got to say is— Almighty Clangeddin by the short hairs!”

Ebenezer pulled up short, startled by his sister’s oath and the force with which it was delivered. “How’s that again?”

She seized his arm and pointed. The road had widened up into a broad, cobblestone courtyard. At the far end was the enormous, elaborate palace built for the first lord of the city, and behind that swept the majestic summit of Mount Waterdeep. But somewhat closer was the sight peculiar enough to stop Tarlamera in mid-complaint, a tall, slender tower before which stood a skeleton, arms raised high and feet not quite touching the ground.

“Don’t be going too close to that tower,” Ebenezer said casually. “Alghairon’s Tower, it’s called. Been empty for a long time. Seems it used to belong to some big-axe wizard, long since gone to his ancestors. It’s a monument now. The folks hereabouts let it alone mostly, except for the fellow you see there.”

“Good warding sign,” one of the dwarves behind them offered. That sent a weak chuckle rippling through the group.

The company got some strange looks as they marched in formation through the courtyard. Ebenezer didn’t suppose they looked like much of a threat, as scrawny as they were, and not more than three weapons among the lot of them, but still he raised his hand in a conciliatory salute when­ever a curious member of the guard looked their way.

They veered east onto Waterdeep Way, toward the mas­sive castle that was the heart and strength of the city. Ebenezer had always admired that castle. “Lookit that,” he said grandly, pointing up at the far towers. “Four hundred feet high, that is.”

Tarlamera sniffed. Dwarves, as a rule, weren’t terribly impressed with up. They were more interested in through.

“Got walls some sixty feet thick,” he added.

“That’s a wall,” she admitted, impressed at last.

Ebenezer pointed ahead. “See that sign what’s a-hanging from that lantern pole? Marks the Way of the Dragon. Big street. Goes down to the Trade Ward and the man we gotta see.”

“I seen a man already,” the dwarf maid grumbled. “Seen hundreds of ‘em so far today.”

“This one’s a smith. They say his pieces are as good as any human can make. Better than some dwarves.”

She scoffed. “I’m not buying that at the asking price. How can you get a good forge going without the tunnels to pull a powerful updraft?”

Ebenezer pointed up toward the blue dome of the sky. “Got lots a wind.”

“Yeah.” She scowled and plucked at her ruined clothes. “And I’m feeling every breath of it in these rags. Back at the clanhold, I got me a new linen kirtle and a leather apron.”

A bleak, wistful note crept into her voice. Though her eyes kept steadily fixed ahead, Ebenezer could read the pain in them. The kirtle and apron were part of every dwarf maid’s wedding chest. By all that was right, she should be home scrapping happily with her new-made husband. But Frod­winner was dead, as were their four brothers and their sis­ter, their mother, their da. They hadn’t spoken of their slain kin, not once since the day Ebenezer had chopped her loose from the slave ship.

“Frodwinner fought well,” Tarlamera said. A struggling smile rippled across her face, as if she were trying to accept that this was enough. “I saw that much before they dropped me. How many did he take?”

“Fifteen,” Ebenezer said promptly, upping the number without a qualm.

“Good,” she said. “That’s good.”

They walked in silence for a while. “I made them a cairn,” he said softly. “Just one, for all of them.”

“That’s the way things are done in time of battle,” she agreed. “You accounted for all?”

“Not all,” he said grimly. “Didn’t see old Hoshal, but I’m pretty sure they got to him ahead of time. Found one of his chisels in an osquip trove.”

“They got him,” Tarlamera agreed. “Hoshal’s particular about his tools. Da always said Hoshal could put a hand to any one of his tools quicker than he could grab his own—”

She broke off, her jaw dropping in astonishment. Ebenezer tracked her gaze into a side alley, and his own eyes widened in astonishment. “Now, that’s something you don’t see every day,” he admitted.

An enormous, disembodied hand, each finger longer than a dwarf was tall, floated aimlessly down the alley. In the center of the palm was a huge mouth that worked its way through some silly tavern tune. Ebenezer shook his head in utter bemusement.

“What does it want?” one of the dwarves behind him hissed.

“A better song?” snapped Ebenezer. “Do I know every­thing there is to know about this city? Step lively, now!”

They stepped, with a liveliness that had the lot of them huffing like a gnome-built tea kettle.

“Gotta get back to the clanhold,” Tarlamera moaned.

Ebenezer shook his head and pointed to the road ahead. The streets were getting narrower, and the tall, timber-framed buildings crowded so close that dwellers in the top floors could lean out and kiss their neighbors, providing they were on good enough terms. They were coming up on the Street of Smiths, and black smoke from a dozen forges rose into the sky.

Many of the houses—the foundations at least and some­times up to the second floor—were masoned over with stone as a deterrent to fire. If a body squinted just so, he could pretend they were cavern walls.

“Kinda cozy, isn’t it?” he said hopefully.

Tarlamera snorted again.

As they rounded the corner to Brian’s Street, a huge, utterly bald man came striding to meet them. He came to Ebenezer and stuck out his hand. “You’d be the Stoneshaft clan,” he said. “Brian here. Been expecting you.”

Ebenezer gave the ham-sized hand a good squeeze, which was returned with a force that made his eyes cross. “He’s a smith, all right,” he told Tarlamera.

His sister was doing her own evaluation. Her eyes scanned the man from his bald head to his massive, gray­streaked black beard, measuring the width of his shoulders and arms heavily corded with muscle and blackened with soot. “He’s a likely-looking lad,” she admitted, and then sighed. “All right, boy, let’s see this forge of yours.”

* * * * *

During the voyage back to Waterdeep, Bronwyn had man­aged to decipher some of the code in the slave ship’s log. Enough, at least, to assure her that Grunion was owned by the Zhentarim. No large surprise, that, considering the destruction of Thornhold and the capture of the dwarves by Zhentish soldiers.