We’re used up. Bah, listen to me! Starting to sound like Cuttle there. ‘I’m ready to die now, Fid. Happy to, aye. Now that I seen-’ ‘Enough of that,’ he snapped. ‘Sergeant?’ ‘Stop asking me anything, Bottle. And stop looking at me like I’ve gone mad or something.’ ‘You’d better not, Sergeant. Go mad, that is. You’re the only sane one left.’ ‘Does that assessment include you?’ Bottle grimaced, then spat out another wad of the grass he’d taken to chewing. Reached for a fresh handful. Aye, answer enough. ‘Almost dark,’ Fiddler said, eyeing once more the quaint village ahead. Crossroads, tavern and stable, a smithy down the main street, in front of a huge pile of tailings, and what seemed too many residences, rows of narrow-laned mews, each abode looking barely enough for a small famil

