herdsman, as they had been even during the centuries before the Lord Ruler's Ascension. A hearty, short-legged breed of sheep mulled about on the hills, chewing down the uncovered stalks of scrub.
His approach soon attracted attention. Children ran for their parents, and heads poked from shacks. Sheep began to gather around Sazed as he walked, as if hoping that he had come bearing treats of some sort.
Several aged men rushed up the hillside, moving as quickly as their gnarled limbs would allow. They-like Sazed-still wore their steward's robes. And, like Sazed, they kept them cleaned of ash, showing the colorful V- shaped patterns that ran down the fronts. Those patterns had once indicated the noble house that the steward served.
'Lord Sazed!' one of the men said eagerly.
'Your Majesty!' said another.
The two aged stewards glanced at each other. 'Please, Master Keeper. Let us get you something warm to eat.'
19
'Get up!'
Everything was dark.
'
Spook opened his eyes. Everything seemed so dull, so muted. He could barely see. The world was a dark blur. And. . he felt numb. Dead. Why couldn't he feel?
'Spook, you need to get up!'
The voice, at least, was clear. Yet, everything else felt muddy. He couldn't quite manage to think. He blinked, groaning quietly. What was wrong with him? His spectacles and cloth were gone. That should have left him free to see, but everything was so dark.
He was out of tin.
There was nothing burning in his stomach. The familiar flame, a comforting candle within, was no longer there. It had been his companion for over a year, always there. He'd feared what he was doing, but had never let it die. And now it was gone.
That was why everything seemed so dull. Was this really how other people lived? How he used to live? He could barely see-the sharp, rich detail he'd grown accustomed to was gone. The vibrant colors and crisp lines. Instead, everything was bland and vague.
His ears felt clogged. His nose. . he couldn't smell the boards beneath him, couldn't tell the species of wood by scent. He couldn't smell the bodies that had passed. He couldn't feel the thumpings of people moving about in other rooms.
And. . he
'You've lost a lot of blood,' the voice said. 'You'll die soon, even if the flames don't take you. Don't bother to look for the pouch of tin at your belt-they took that.'
'Flames?' Spook croaked, blinking. How did people survive in a world that was this dark?
'Can't you feel them, Spook? They're near.'
There
And they're burning it down.
This, finally, gave him motivation to stand, though he immediately dropped again, his body too weak-his mind too fuzzy-to keep him on his feet.
'Don't walk,' the voice said. Where had he heard that voice before? He trusted it. 'Crawl,' it said.
Spook did as commanded, crawling forward.
'No, not
'Window,' Spook croaked, turning to the side, crawling toward one of them.
'Boarded shut,' the voice said. 'You saw this before, from the outside. There's only one way to survive. You have to listen to me.'
Spook nodded dully.
'Go out the room's other door. Crawl toward the stairs leading to the second floor.'
Spook did so, forcing himself to keep moving. His arms were so numb they felt like weights tied to his shoulders. He'd been flaring tin so long that normal senses just didn't seem to work for him anymore. He found the stairs, though he was coughing by the time he got there. That would be because of the smoke, a part of his mind told him. It was probably a good thing he was crawling.
He could feel the heat as he climbed. The flames seemed to be chasing him, claiming the room behind him as he moved up the stairs, still dizzy. He reached the top, then slipped on his own blood, slumping against the side of the wall, groaning.
'Get up!' the voice said.
'Second room on the left,' the voice commanded.
Spook crawled without thinking. Flames crept up the stairs, flickering across the walls. His nose was weak, like his other senses, but he suspected that the house had been soaked with oil. It made for a faster, more dramatic burn that way.
'Stop. This is the room.'
Spook turned left, crawling into the room. It was a study, well furnished. The thieves in the city complained that ransacking places like this one wasn't worth the effort. The Citizen forbade ostentation, and so expensive furniture couldn't be sold, even on the black market. Nobody wanted to be caught owning luxuries, lest they end up burning to death in one of the Citizen's executions.
'Spook!'
Spook had heard of those executions. He'd never seen one. He'd paid Durn to keep an eye out for the next one. Spook's coin would get him advance warning, as well as a good position to watch the building burn down. Plus, Durn promised he had another tidbit, something Spook would be interested in. Something worth the coin he'd paid.
Count the skulls.
'Spook!'
Spook opened his eyes. He'd fallen to the floor and begun to drift off. Flames were already burning the ceiling. The building was dying. There was no way Spook would get out, not in his current condition.
'Go to the desk,' the voice commanded.