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But I knew even as he spoke that there would never be that time. Too many other things demanded his attention. As always, he immediately plunged into his concern. "Forged ones," he said. I felt a chill of foreboding run up my spine.

"The Red-Ships have struck again? This deep in winter?" I asked incredulously.

"No. At least we are still spared that. But it seems that the Red-Ships can leave us and go home to their hearths, and still leave their poison among us." He paused. "Well, go on. Warm yourself and eat. You can chew and listen at the same time."

As I helped myself to the mulled wine and food, Verity lectured me. "It is the same problem as before. Reports of Forged ones, robbing and despoiling, not just travelers, but isolated farms and houses. I have investigated, and must give credence to the reports. Yet the attacks are happening far from the sites of any raids; and in every case the folk claim there are not one or two Forged ones, but groups of them, acting in concert."

I considered for a moment, swallowed, then spoke. "I don't think Forged ones are capable of acting in bands or even as partners. When one encounters them, one finds they have no sense of ... community. Of shared humanity. They can speak, and reason, but only selfishly. They are as wolverines would be if given human tongues. They care for nothing but their own survival. They see each other only as rivals for food or comfort of any kind." I refilled my mug, grateful for the spreading warmth of the wine. At least it pushed aside the physical cold. The chill thought of the bleak isolation of the Forged ones it could not touch.

It was the Wit that had let me discover this about Forged ones. So deadened were they to all sense of kinship with the world that I could scarcely sense them at all. The Wit gave me a certain access to that web that bound all creatures together, but the Forged ones were separate from that net, as isolated as stones, as hungry and merciless as an unthinking storm or a river in flood. To encounter one unexpectedly was as startling to me as if a stone rose up to attack me.

But Verity only nodded thoughtfully. "Yet even wolves, animals as they are, attack as a pack. As do tearfish on a whale. If these animals can band together to bring down food, why not the Forged ones?"

I set down the bread I had picked up. "Wolves and tearfish do as they do by their nature, and share the flesh with their young. They do not kill, each for his own meat, but for meat for the pack. I have seen Forged ones in groups, but they do not act together. The time I was attacked by more than one Forged one, the only thing that saved me was that I was able to turn them against each other. I dropped the cloak they desired, and they fought over it. And when they came after me again, they more got in one another's way than helped one another." I fought to keep my voice steady as the memory of that night rose up in me. Smithy had died that night, and I had first killed. "But they do not fight together. That is what is beyond the Forged ones; the idea of cooperating so that all might benefit."

I looked up to find Verity's dark eyes full of sympathy. "I had forgotten that you had had some experience fighting them. Forgive me. I don't dismiss it. There is just so much besieging me lately." His voice dwindled away and he seemed to be listening to something far away. After a moment he came back to himself. "So. You believe they cannot cooperate. And yet it seems to be happening. See, here," and he brushed his hand lightly over a map spread out on his table. "I have been marking the places of the complaints, and keeping track of how many are said to be there. What do you think of this?"

I went to stand beside him. Standing next to Verity was now like standing next to a different sort of hearth. The strength of the Skill radiated from him. I wondered if he strove to hold it in check, if it always threatened to spill out of him and spread his consciousness over the whole kingdom.

"The map, Fitz," he recalled me, and I wondered how much he knew of my thoughts. I forced myself to concentrate on the task at hand. The map showed Buck, done in wondrous detail. Shallows and tide flats were marked along the coast, as well as inland landmarks and lesser roads. It was a map made lovingly, by a man who had walked and ridden and sailed the area. Verity had used bits of red wax as markers. I studied them, trying to see what his real concern was.

"Seven different incidents." He reached to touch his markers. "Some within a day's ride of Buckkeep. But we have had no raids that close, so where would these Forged ones be coming from? They might be driven away from their home villages, true, but why would they converge upon Buckkeep?"

"Perhaps these are desperate people pretending to be Forged ones when they go out to steal from their neighbors?"

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