“I found it, dammit.” Moria wiped back a stringing lock and brought the hand hard onto the table. “Don’t treat me like a damn fool, Stilcho, don’t tell me how to manage! I carried it clean across town! We melt it-“
“What with, for godssakes? On the damned little firepot we cook on? We just get a damned hot lump of-“
“Hssssst!” Her hand came up out-turned toward his mouth, her face twisted in fury. “These walls! These walls, dammit, how many times do I have to tell you keep your voice down! I’ll steal us the stuff, how do you think we come by anything lately, except / steal it, and you live on it! Don’t you tell me what to do! I’ve had it all my life, and I’m not taking it, I’m not taking any of it, not from you and not from anybody!”
“Don’t be a damned fool! You go flashing gold bits around this town you’ll get your throat cut, this isn’t silver, dammit, listen. Listen! You-” Of a sudden, even in the gray morning light filtering through the window, the vision of the lost eye shifted in, stronger than the living one. He stopped, his heart laboring in terror.
“Stilcho?” Moria’s voice was higher, frightened. “Stilcho?”
“Something’s wrong,” he said. In that inner eye, soiled, filmy shapes went streaming like smoke through the gates, the gates-the fires, the lost reaches…. “A lot of people just died.” He swallowed hard, tried to calm his shaking, tried to get back the sight of Moria across the table, and not that black vision where Something waited, where by the riverside-in the woods-